Font Size:

This seemed to throw off his rhythm. It put a halt to his listing.

Who?

The missing girl in the picture.

I wrote again:

The one who isn’t there.

Now his rhythm was definitely off. The streaming sentences of description came to a stop, and the screenremained unchanged. I wondered for a moment if I’d shut it down completely, but another reply came eventually.

I wish sometimes I could pretend again.

Pretend what?

That I’m him. It was easier that way. Easier than being me. And maybe you’d be happier.

It’s not the right kind of happiness.

A few seconds passed. Then he responded:

I was hoping I’d know him completely after coming here. That I would get all the answers and it would all finally make sense.

He wrote again:

I thought I would solve the mystery. But there aren’t any real clues here. Just airplanes.

I leaned my head against the armrest of the couch. It was hard against my neck. I wrote without thinking much.I just let the words unfold from my fingertips.

We’re not going to plan a funeral here, are we?

No.

I could feel my palms starting to sweat.

I have an idea that I can’t get out of my head. I don’t even want to say it.

His response came quickly.

Say it.

You already know what it is, don’t you?

I think I do.

But it’s crazy, right? It’s not going to happen.

Why not?

There was a pause as I collected my thoughts for a moment.

If we’re on the same page here, and I’m not sure that we are, I don’t know what to tell my dad. How will we convince him?

It seemed like a long time before his next message arrived, but it was probably only twenty seconds or so.

I don’t know. Maybe we shouldn’t.

My head was starting to feel light.