Allie sat at the edge of the disc,
dangling her feet over the edge. A hundred miles below, she could see the
clouds, a thin white blanket stretched over the Atlantic.
She sighed, and thought about how much she needed to fix her toenails (that one
on the right especially, it's starting to look like a friggin' talon) and lay
back on the cool, metallic surface. Above her, there were so many stars it was
difficult to pick out constellations, even the ones she knew by heart. Not the
real ones, like Cassiopeia or Orion, but the ones everyone knows by heart: the
Big W, The Saucepan, the Wiggly Line. Like every time she looked up from the
disc, she felt a sudden lurch of nausea, of awareness of her impossible
location, but it passed. Fear is made in the lizard part of our brain, Allie remembered. Lizards
can be frightened of drowning, but show them the vacuum of space and they'll
just stare blankly at you.
Allie's shadow tapped her politely
on the shoulder and cleared its throat in a meaningful fashion. Allie sighed
and rolled over- the constant company of her shadow was the only thing she
didn't like about the disc. She'd been coming here for a few years, spending
longer and longer here each visit just to spend some time by herself, and since
the very start her shadow had followed her about. It was the only thing she
couldn't shake- the only thing that stopped her coming here and just letting
herself unravel out into the darkness, letting all pretence of self and thought
and flesh spiral off like a loose thread. Allie knows that she could unravel
quite happily, if her shadow would just let her.
I Think You've Been Up Here Quite
Long Enough, said her shadow. Allie didn't hear it- she wasn't that crazy yet,
thank you very much, but she knew that's what it was saying. You Have To Meet
Your Friends At The Bar. They Worry That You Are Becoming Distant (I am
becoming distant! I'm a thousand miles in the god damn air!) And That There Is
Some Awful Reason For It.
Allie knew why she'd decided that
her shadow was so infuriatingly logical (still don't know where the Gravestone
Headline Voice came from though) - her shadow was where she put the bits of
herself that still stuck to the ground when she came up here. Her first visit was
entirely accidental, a fit of bad hallway planning, running late to a lecture
and misreading the byzantine campus map. She'd pulled open the door to
"Observation deck 6" to ask if someone there could help her out, and
stepped through while she was looking in her bag for her timetable. She'd found
herself here, a thousand miles above the ocean, with a warm breeze dusting her
hair across her face, and she'd fainted dead away. When Allie woke up, she
panicked less- it felt dream-like, utterly fantastic. Here on the disc was a
door at one side, supported by nothing, and a forty-foot wide space just for
her. It gleamed in the sunlight, and Allie's boots clicked on it as she walked.
There was nothing else but Allie and her shadow, and after another moment's
dizziness Allie decided that her shadow could do the worrying and the
panicking, and she'd just sit down and look around for a little bit. So she
did.
Half an hour later, she’d
almost jumped off the edge to wake up, but decided instead to drop a pencil
sharpener from her case over the side. It fell realistically enough that a rush
of vertigo made her lie down flat on the disc for a minute, eyes buried in the
firm opalescent surface of it, suddenly gnawingly aware of the gaping chasm
beneath her. After that, she went back through the door, it clicked shut behind
her and locked, and she was left with a thoroughly bizarre sense of loss.
Her shadow cleared its throat again, in an annoyingly polite way, and Allie slipped back on her flip flops and huffed through the door. Next time, she decided to herself, I am going to stay out there and my stupid shadow can come back if it's so important.
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