There was a knock on the door to Fiona’s room. Alistair paused the tape.
“Who’s in there?” came Dorian’s voice.
“Um, I…” Alistair ejected the tape and put it back into the book, which he tucked under one arm. He tucked the tape player under the other.
The door opened and a glassy-eyed, older version of Fiona’s uncle Dorian stood in the threshold. “Alistair?” he asked.
“Yes.”
“You look so…”
“Young?”
Dorian nodded. “I’m dreaming, aren’t I?”
“No. I’m real.” Alistair stood from Fiona’s bed.
“You find the fountain of youth or something?” Dorian reached out as if to touch Alistair’s face, but decided against it at the last moment, and his hand withered back.
“The Alistair you know is still here. He went home. I’m a different person. I realize that must seem strange.”
Dorian ran a hand across his stubbly face. “I’ve seen stranger. I’ve seen things that’ll curl your nose hairs. A time-traveling doppelgänger ain’t about to throw me for a loop.”
“That’s not what I am.”
“Then what are you?”
“I’m Fiona’s friend from her … Well, what’s important is that I’m here to find her.”
“You’re looking in the wrong place.”
* * *
They drove in Dorian’s pickup slowly through the neighborhood. “She didn’t age,” Dorian said, one hand on the wheel, “which weirded people out. And she had magic, control over her mom and dad. My brother and his wife, that is. Fiona was wise beyond her years. Not quite one of us, if you catch my drift.”
“I’m not quite one of you either.”
“Figured. Don’t really care. You’re Alistair. That’s clear enough.”
“And you’re not afraid of me. You’ve seen ciphers around here, haven’t you?”
“No clue what you mean.”
“Monsters,” Alistair said. “Things that’ll curl your nose hairs.”
“I’ve been to war. To prison. You want monsters, look there. Around here, there ain’t nothin’ like that.”
“Did Fiona ever tell you about the Riverman?” Alistair asked. “About the Solid World?”
Dorian shook his head. “Fiona asked me to tell her stories. She loved to hear me ramble on. And I was happy to ramble on. She didn’t confide much of nothin’ in me. And I was cool with that. Her smiles and laughs were enough. I liked her the way she was.”
Lights were on in most of the houses in the neighborhood. Dogs sniffed about in yards. The windows on the truck were down and the smell of lighter fluid lingered, remnants of late evening barbecues.
Dorian had told him where they were going, but Alistair hardly saw the point. “Won’t it be too dark out there?” Alistair asked.
“Naw,” Dorian said. “We’re equipped for the dark.”
* * *
They pulled into a muddy parking lot next to a grassy runway. Lights mounted on short posts drenched everything in pale orange. Dorian cut the engine, jumped down, and retrieved a remote control and a model airplane from the bed of the truck.
“An expensive demo, but seeing is believing,” Dorian said.
He led Alistair out into the field, where the grass was mown short. The model was a bright pink biplane with a white lightning stripe down the side. Dorian set it in the grass and used a small device from his pocket to flick the propeller to life. The plane buzzed, vibrated, and waited.
“Why do you play … I mean, why do you fly … remote control airplanes?” Alistair asked.
Dorian shrugged and poised the remote. “Clears my mind. Never had the eyes to fly in the service. Guess this is the next best thing.”
The plane rolled down the runway, hopped twice, and took off, buzzing its way out of the glow of the lights.
“How will you know where it is?” Alistair asked.
“I’ve flown here so much, I could do it blindfolded,” Dorian said. “And the target is easy enough to hit.”
“The target?”
The buzzing of the plane was loud, and then suddenly the sound was gone. Dorian set the remote control down and put his hands in the pockets of his jeans. Alistair surveyed the dark sky with a furrowed brow.
“Don’t worry,” Dorian said. “It ain’t gonna crash.”
“Where is it?”
Dorian shrugged. “Not long after Fiona left us, I was piloting out here and I noticed this low cloud. Flew the plane into it and zip zap zoom. Gone.”
“Disappeared?”
“Off the face of the Earth. Haven’t seen it since. And that cloud hasn’t blown away. Hangs there in fair weather and foul. I’ve flown close to twenty planes into that thing, and they all suffer the same fate.”
“Does anyone else know about this?” Alistair asked.
Dorian shrugged again. “Not sure anyone else would care. Not many people miss her. Me, the other Alistair, maybe a few others. I got an instinct about that cloud, though. I’m guessing it’s a crack in our world, and I don’t know how she woulda got there, but I’m also guessing that Fiona is on the other side of that crack.”
“Have you ever tried to get up to it?”
Dorian chuckled, a phlegmy rumble. “How? With a ladder? It’s low, but not that low.”
“And nothing weird has ever come out of the cloud?” Alistair asked.
“Not even rain,” Dorian said. “You have a lot of questions, don’t you?”
“Like I said, I’m trying to find her.”
“Build a stairway to heaven, then,” Dorian said. “If you think you can do it. I certainly couldn’t.”
Alistair didn’t know whether he could do it. He didn’t know if he should even try. But he knew he had to learn at least a little more. “If I were to stay for a few days, where could I sleep?” he asked.
“You’re not crashing with … other Alistair?”
“That might be a little strange.”
“True enough,” Dorian said as he put the remote under his arm and moved back toward the truck. “There’s room in my house, obviously. The fact that you’re a stranger don’t mean I’m leaving you out on the street. Not decent.”
“Thank you.”
“But I’d prefer you not bunk in Fiona’s room.”
“Of course.”
* * *
Alistair stayed in a room that was once occupied by Fiona’s sister, Maria. The walls were covered in prints of paintings—hay bales and ballet dancers—and posters of heartthrobs—young men with feathery hair and tasseled jackets. The blankets were billowy, and he hid the tape player beneath them. When he was sure Dorian was well out of earshot, he finished listening to the tapes. The recordings had been more infrequent, spread out over twelve years.
Some of it was mundane: “I love tomato sauce, but not tomatoes.”
At times, it was a bit cryptic: “Late at night, I use my finger to write poems on the wall. Invisible ones. Free verse or iambic pentameter. Invisible ink, but I know it’s there.”
Often, melancholy: “Now that Chua, Fay-Renee, Boaz, and all of them have grown up and I still have the body of a kid, we don’t talk anymore. Sure, there are new kids. But I don’t have anything in common with them.”
Mostly they were an account of life in a small town, from the perspective of an observer, an outcast, a freak. People got older, friendships bloomed and faded. People left, though it was never clear exactly where they went. Fiona watched it all and commented. Or didn’t. There were gaps, things that Fiona either didn’t know or didn’t want to tell.
By the time Alistair had gotten to the last entry, he knew infinitely more about Fiona than he had ever known at home. He knew her pet peeves, her guilty pleasures. He knew the things that Charlie said he should know. She did love archery. And purple and neon green. And so much else.
Then he listened to the last entry.