I follow it, chase him—wherever he went.
He’s dead, I think, his trillions of cells sprinkled in Lake Michigan, and that little girl back there hasn’t existed in ten years. But still I’m running down the steps, searching for him, dodging the pile of shoes at the bottom, though it’s unnecessary because, somehow, all those shoes have vanished.
I don’t understand.
Why is this happening?
Why did I see him, and why is he gone again so soon?
I spin uselessly, tear through the dark kitchen. Dining room. Living room. The sunroom off the side of the house, its windows overlooking the hill and woods and stars. I find nothing. No one.
I barrel back up to my bedroom.
The lamp’s off. The window’s shut, the Whites gone. I’m alone.
But he was here.
At least I think he was