The Whispers Read online

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  Lying on the bed is my secret roommate who we pretend does not live here. His name is John. We’re sort of lovers and sort of friends. It’s complicated. It’s against some rule that he, a non-student, lives here in a campus-issued condominium, but he’s yet to be caught because I’m smart and my roommate, loyal. Watching him sleep brings me a strange and relieving sense of joy. I can’t explain it other than to state the obvious: he’s beautiful when he sleeps. For all his brawn and ruggedness, he appears so innocent and gentle lying there in my bed cuddling one of my pillows and breathing softly.

  But if I’m completely honest with myself, our little … arrangement, should I call it? … does not come without its due doubts. Is John just using me? Sure, he cleans the place up while I’m in class and sometimes he’ll even cook a meal in our kitchen for all of us (using the ingredients that I buy, no less), but is he only playing nice because we haven’t reported him to the university? Am I just a means by which he can stay close to the school that he so desperately wants to attend? If he ever gains acceptance to the Engineering program and the financial aid decide that he’s worthy enough to assist, will he simply go, leaving me in the dust of his dreams? Though Marianne is too polite to say so, I know the doubt has crossed both our minds. He’s just for now, I worry and fear most nights. He’s biding his time. He’s tolerating you. He doesn’t love you.

  Then again, when John draws his warm, beefy body against mine in the night and I feel his strong arms wrap tight around me, a thrill chases its way through my stomach and up my throat, stealing all of my breath. My heart dances and a stupid smile breaks across my face.

  Maybe I should rather be asking: am I using him?

  My whole room smells like him now. I don’t mind at all. We share things. One time, we revisited the gardens, my favorite place on campus. The day John and I met, we sorta kinda stole a tiny insignificant rock from the gardens that was encased in special glass. The ugly thing now sits on my nightstand and watches over me as I sleep. It may look dull on the outside, but that rock carries within it a deep, precious sentiment.

  Maybe someday, I won’t have to doubt that he’s just here for now. Maybe someday, John will say he loves me.

  “Jen?”

  I turn. Marianne is standing at her door, now open. Her puffy cheeks are glowing red. Literally. It’s a fashion trend that I’m not particularly taken by, but Marianne is, and she now has a vast collection of glow-in-the-dark makeup that she proudly wears, making her cheeks look like two enormous demon’s eyes that jiggle as she speaks.

  “Marianne,” I whisper, stepping back out of my room and quietly shutting the door so as not to disturb John. “I brought croissants. Help yourself.”

  “Oh, okay.” She stares at them, not helping herself.

  I study her for a moment. “Something wrong?”

  Before she answers, the device in my pocket vibrates with alarm. I pull it out and look at the new message.

  “Oh, crap.” I toss the last bite of bread onto the table. “Professor. I’m being called to his office. The deadline for my dissertation is fast approaching. Algebra final’s coming up too, and I have this dumb essay I have to write for my Archaic Languages class. I wish the only thing I had to worry about was my Histories dissertation. Really, the school expects us undergrads to study so much all at once, while all we want to do is follow our main studies, and—” I look up at my roommate. “Sorry, I’m rambling. Are you okay? Did you want to tell me something?”

  She takes my last bite and crams it into her mouth with the deftness of an assassin. The chewing movement of her glowing red cheeks combined with a queer look in her eye is all the answer I’ll get, apparently.

  “I’ll be back in an hour.”

  I don my black coat once again, then quickly check the condition of my face in the long mirror by the door. My white-blonde hair runs in tragic tangles to my waist, and my pale, slender face looks as if I haven’t touched a full meal in days. I am the Living Dead, I jest to myself.

  “Need a little touch?” Marianne offers sympathetically. “Some eyes? A color for your cheeks, maybe?”

  “Desperately as I wish to have mine glowing like pink light bulbs for my professor, I’ll pass.” I blow Mari a kiss. “If John wakes before I’m back, tell him the diviner was a total fake. It’ll crush him, but he was eager to know.”

  “Oh … That’s too bad. I’d hoped she was real.”

  Me too, I might say, but instead I just give Mari a little wink before slipping out the door.

  The morning air is as crisp as I’d left it just a moment ago. I move across campus with a swiftness, passing the Floating Fountain on the way, as well as the Trim Tree, which is visible from the window of my condominium. The Courtyard of Steel makes a tap with my every step as I cross it on my way to the Histories building where, at its topmost spire, Professor Praun awaits.

  To stand in the presence of Professor Praun is to know whether one’s wobbly knees can actually support one’s weight. Though many are intimidated by his mere presence, others tremble at his reputation for keeping a strict classroom and stricter grade book. Perpetually foul of eye and mood, the man wears a razor-sharp black goatee dusted lightly with silver. That’s the only bit of hair on his smooth, dark head. Even his eyebrows are shaven; strange as it looks, it’s a unique style they used to take on when he himself was a student.

  “Jennifer,” he says, his cool voice ringing across the unnecessarily enormous and reverberant office he keeps.

  “Professor.” I stop halfway across the room, unable to bear the sound of my footsteps echoing loudly.

  He’s facing away from me, staring out of the glass wall that forms the north side of his office, his hands clasped behind his back. With the glow of the sun on his skin, in this moment he appears godly.

  “You came to me as a Theories major,” he states.

  I swallow once. “Yes, professor.”

  “Specialized in History and Mythology.”

  “Yes. Right.”

  “As a studier of Mythology, you further specialized in the … Undead.”

  Just that tiny pause in his sentence pours a cold and discomforting stream of anxiety down my body. It does not matter the progress I’ve made in my time here nor how much of a grown woman I think I’ve become; in this instant, I’m an unlearned child with noodles for knees.

  He turns finally, gracing me with his cold, stern eyes, the whites flashing brightly in contrast with his dark skin.

  “Tell me, Jennifer. What first inspired you to abandon your course of study and shift to a pure Histories major?”

  Unable to meet his eyes, I address the general vicinity of his throat when I answer. “I found it fascinating.”

  “And you felt that a wise decision?”

  Obviously it wasn’t, as is evidenced by this meeting. Of course, that’s not what I answer. Still staring at his throat, I say, “I … felt at the time that I connected more with … with studies of our past … and—”

  “Your dissertation is due in just one week’s time.” He takes a few steps in my direction, coming around the front of his desk. “There is quite a stirring in the conversations of my students. I may speak all day in auditoriums, but I listen twice as well. That’s why we’re born with two ears and one mouth.”

  “A stirring in conversations of your students?” I echo, afraid to connect the dots.

  “Everyone is so very, very, very curious about … one particular part of your dissertation.”

  “I know,” I say at once, caving, trembling, suffocating. Is there any air in this room at all? “I know what you said. I remember every word of our conversation, but I—”

  “Come.”

  He moves across the office, drawing close to a round table upon which a holograph of our planet floats lazily. I stand on the other side of the table. Sweat has gathered under my arms. My throat is clenching shut, as if refusing me the right to breathe.

  “Here,” he says, pointing at the holograph. It shows
the planet glimmering in hues of green and gold. “See?”

  I nod wordlessly.

  “Our university, right by the ocean, edge of the world. Look at our forests. Look at Crystal River, see it?”

  I nod again, staring listlessly at the professor’s jacket visible through the flickering holographic image.

  “We have water. We have food in ample supply, and we mind the recycling of our resources. We are a diligent, self-sustaining society. Do you know who wasn’t?”

  Obviously. Everyone does. It’s half my dissertation.

  “Them,” he mutters, spinning the holograph of the planet around with one dramatic wave of his hand. In striking contrast, the other side of the world is dark and colorless, its landmasses appearing like giant blots of ink and ruin, its oceans a sickening, mottled purple.

  I would never dream of disrespecting Professor Praun, but how can he call into question all of my work when I haven’t even yet presented it to him? “Please, professor,” I begin to beg. “I know what they’re all saying, but I—”

  “It’s an embarrassment to the Histories department,” he declares, each of his words like an icicle into my chest; I feel their effect in my fingertips. “Nothing can survive there, living or dead. It’s a ruined realm beyond the sun’s reach, nothing more. It’s a reminder of our past mistakes, and how greedy our ancestors were. Nothing. More.”

  “The Sunless Reach,” I recite. “They call it the Sunless Reach, where the Dead live and the Living die, and—”

  “Your Beautiful Dead do not exist.”

  I swallow hard. I feel the hint of tears grace my eyes, which frustrates me to no end, how my face betrays me. The last thing I want is for Professor Praun to witness me cry; he wouldn’t spare an inch of sympathy for me.

  “I warned you, Jennifer Steel.”

  I can’t meet his eyes, nor speak. I’m struggling to keep all the tears in my face and not allow a single one to spill.

  “I warned you when you began your dissertation. I witnessed the embarrassment of your first presentation at the start of last term, and when you shifted your studies to the Histories, I warned you to tread lightly in my department, yet your arrogance persists.”

  Staring at the holographic world—one half alive, one half not—I manage one last plea: “P-Professor …”

  He steps close, too close. “If you print a word about your so-named Beautiful Dead, you will be expelled from Skymark University. If I so much as hear a word like ‘Undead’ uttered from your lips, I will personally escort you off the campus myself. Am I made clear, Ms. Steel?”

  Unable to speak, I nod once.

  Professor Praun studies me a while, perhaps waiting for me to humiliate myself further with a spilling of tears and snot and grossness from my indignant face. Then, unexpectedly, he puts a hand on either of my shoulders and lowers his chin, eyeing me directly.

  In a calm, softer voice, he says, “You are an intelligent young woman. You are capable of great things, Jennifer. You have excellent grades. Please, don’t let your potential go to waste. Focus your dissertation on the survival of the Living, and what we’ve learned from our Histories. Do not waste it on the Dead. The Dead do not live. That is why we bury them, so that they may rest for all of eternity.”

  His gentle, well-meaning words sting me worse than a condescending pat on the head. It does nothing to ward away the tears that still threaten to spill, nor does it do a thing to help my ever-clenching nerves.

  “I look forward to your presentation next week.” He drops his hands from my shoulders. “Good day.”

  The walk back home is slow and frigid. Surprisingly, the tears never spill. As the sun now paints the campus in a zillion shades of gold, my mind fights with every last word that my professor uttered. No matter how furious I am, I know I have no recourse. Why did he pick now to put an end to my dreams? What harm was my innocent studying going to cause? Was he afraid of waking the Dead … which he doesn’t believe in, anyway? Is he secretly scared of ghosts? Did he just lose a loved one and resents my interest in the subject? Why do books exist on the Living Dead if we weren’t meant to believe them?

  I only make it halfway back to the condominium before dropping onto a bench at the edge of the campus, suffering with the weight of my professor’s disapproval. I hug myself and stare into the sky and the fire that now bleeds across it. My attention is caught by a hovercraft floating through the field of trees beyond the perimeter of campus. I wonder for a while what it’s doing there, resorting to making up hilarious reasons for its existence. It is transporting more oxygen from the forest to us, the Living, I decide. The hum of the machine soothes me somehow, and I find myself closing my eyes, seduced into a state of half-sleep. Waking up so early to visit Dana the Diviner certainly did a number to my sleep schedule. I feel myself tilting back, my head threatening to float me into a realm of dreams if I’m not careful.

  A gust of wind rouses me, and I open my eyes just in time to witness the hovercraft soar high above my head on its trek over the campus. I stare after it for a while, watching as it disappears, taking with it the gentle hum I was so enjoying. And there goes my peace.

  “He didn’t even give me a decent reason,” I complain to Marianne when I meet her and John at the dormitory cafeteria for an early lunch. “Just a general ‘Stop or else!’ sort of spiel.”

  “So awful. And after all your inquiries and books and things,” agrees Marianne sympathetically, forking a bite of sugared fruit past her lips.

  John shakes his head. “He can’t just do that.”

  “He did.” I sip on my mint-and-water.

  “No.” John folds his muscular arms, tensing up in that way that pops out a vein or two in his forehead. He turns his handsome face, his lips pursed in frustration, which shows off his stubble and chiseled jawline. “You have a right to study whatever you want,” he says, brooding. “That’s the whole damn purpose of the university … of education. I think for myself. I’m innovative. What the hell do I have to do to prove myself to the university? To earn the damn financial aid? I know I’m better than half their Engineering students. They have no new ideas.”

  I study the side of his fuming face, that nagging worry chasing its way into my chest again. Is it really all about John? As soon as the university does accept him, is he out of my life forever?

  “At least you have a place to stay,” I point out, then realize how badly I sound like I’m fishing for gratitude. “And a salad,” I add quietly, my eyes dropping to the tasty one that sits on the table before him.

  He regards it with a smirk, then channels all his fury at the university into that salad, as if its innocent greens and berries were now to blame.

  “I told you, you could sneak into my biology classes,” says Marianne with a shrug. “My professor doesn’t know any of our names or faces. I don’t even know if she knows her own. She wears blouses backwards sometimes. I don’t think it’s intentional. You’d be perfectly hidden.”

  John rolls his eyes irritably. “Thanks, but I haven’t yet grown a fondness for Anatomy or Biology or Blood.”

  “I love Blood,” she whispers while sucking the dear life out of an innocent strawberry.

  I take John’s hand. He seems startled by the action at first, as if a spider had just leapt upon his fingers. “We will sort out this ridiculous situation with your acceptance and with the financial aid, John. We’ll write a letter showing all your accomplishments and Engineering knowhow and your … your hunger for more. It’ll be a dissertation of your own,” I insist. “We’ll change their minds.”

  “As certainly as you’ll change Praun’s,” agrees John with acid sarcasm, then pulls his hand from mine.

  I frown, annoyed by his reaction. Does he think of me at all? Does it occur to him how much I’ve done for him? “I’m trying to help, John. I know you’re upset, but—”

  “What I mean is, I’m not allowed to be a student,” he goes on bitterly, “and you can’t study what you want to study because yo
ur professor finds it embarrassing. I think the concept of the Beautiful Dead is so … brilliant. Who does this school serve? Its brilliant students, or itself?”

  I wonder for a second if John just called me brilliant, or if it was just a passing, general remark. With a sigh, I set down my spoon, creating a metal bridge from one side of my noodle-and-berry soup to the other, then express my complete and utter surrender to Praun’s philosophy. “You know, I think my professor … has a point.”

  Marianne and John face me as one, surprised.

  “After all,” I continue, “no one has ever seen the Dead. Seeing is believing, is it not? The Sunless Reach is only half an ocean that way,” I say, pointing. “There’s no evidence of their existence. None. After all these years, why have we seen nothing of their kind here on our side of the planet? Don’t they … thirst? What sustains them? Wouldn’t they smell our blood half a world away and swim across the ocean to feast on us?” I look at either of my friends, beseeching them. “Doesn’t it make sense? Professor Praun’s doubts are not unfounded. In fact … maybe, if I were to be honest, I … I share his doubts.”

  “This is about the dumb diviner,” says John.

  I wrinkle my face. “What? No. I just meant—”

  “She turned out to be a fake, just like the last four crazy fanatics you met with, and now you’re discouraged and calling it quits.” John leans across the table, his face drawing close to mine. “The Jennifer I know doesn’t quit. She fights. Her heart still beats.”

  The Jennifer he knows …? My heart still beats. Does John really know me at all? Maybe I’m the one who’s holding back. Maybe he’s waiting for me to open up.

  I turn my head, pulled by the deep purring of an engine just outside the cafeteria. Though I know it’s likely my imagination, the engine sends a vibration through the whole room. I feel the vibrations in my fingers, in my toes, in my eyelashes …