by J. S. Bailey
I stand up. “I’m sorry that I must leave so soon, but I really need to get to town. They have a motel there, and I know I can get plenty of rest there, and—”
“There is no town,” the man says. There is a glint in his eyes that I do not like.
His words startle me. “What?”
“I said, there is no town.”
I feel indignant. “Of course there is a town! Swanson Springs, it’s called. I was on my way there when I ran out of water and found this house!”
The man makes a show of shaking his head as if in pity. “Poor child, you must have become delusional out there in the heat. I don’t know of any Swanson Springs, but if you need a place to sleep, you are welcome to stay here. After all, we have already prepared your room.”
And just like that, as if I have been instantly transported through space, I find myself lying atop the blankets on the four-poster bed in the room connecting to the bath. My head is foggy, and I am so thirsty I cannot stand it. I pull myself to my feet and run into the bathroom. I turn the hot water knob on the bathtub so hard that it breaks off in my hands, yet no water comes out. I run to the sink to try it again, which is silly because I already know it has not been repaired. Oh, why did I stop here? I was so close to the town! If I had held out for another quarter-hour I could have made it to a restaurant or convenience store and gotten water there. But now I am trapped.
The room turns gray and starts to spin. I must get out of here. I muster every gram of my remaining strength and flee the room, back down the stairs, and oh, where is the door? I can hear laughter, and now I’ve stubbed my foot on something, and I don’t remember the way out because the rooms are all in a different order than they were before…
I hear a squeak, and night air hits my face. I am free. Funny, how I cannot see anything. Something hard smacks into the front of me and I smell the earthy odor of forest soil. I stick out my tongue and taste dirt. I dig my hands into the ground to pull myself forward. The rumble of traffic on the highway sounds close by. I can get there if I try hard enough. I know I can.
Time has passed, but I don’t know how much. I hear something beating far away. Ba-dump. Ba-dump. I don’t know what it is. It’s slowing down now. I try to suck in a breath of air but my chest doesn’t move. Ba…dump. Maybe if I just rest awhi—
THEY found the body at daybreak.
“God in heaven!”
The lead hiker, Ben, knelt down beside the still form on the ground, hardly believing what he saw. The woman lay on her stomach with one arm stretched out before her. The other arm clutched a dusty canteen. Her skin was badly sunburned.
“What is it?” Another hiker, a middle-aged man named Carson, puffed his way up the incline and halted in a cloud of dust. “Oh my—”
Ben scooted the woman’s backpack aside with one foot and gently touched two fingers to her neck. Skin too cool, no pulse. He patted his pocket for his cell phone. He would have to call the authorities as soon as he regained his composure and made sure this wasn’t a crime scene.
“Whaddaya think happened?” Carson asked. His eyes were as round as dinner plates.
Ben shrugged. There was no blood or bruises on the woman as far as he could see. “Sunstroke. Dehydration. It was awful hot yesterday.” He picked up the canteen and gave it a shake. “Empty.” Which was too bad, really. The ill-prepared woman had perished on the bank of a creek. Water trickled by just inches from her outstretched fingertips.
He glanced back at the gray abandoned house that lay ten yards or so to the west of them. Most of the panes in the white-trimmed windows were shattered, and the forgotten lane leading to the porch was overgrown with weeds that would have come to his waist had he been standing in them. He took a deep breath, closed his eyes, and faced the body once more. He wondered who the woman was, and if somewhere, someone missed her.
As he started to call 911, he could hear Carson murmuring, “If she’d held out another second, she’d have made it. This is just too bad.”
The 911 operator said something in his ear. Ben snapped back to attention and explained the situation as best he could.
It was too bad, indeed.
[Entry not dated]
I DIDN’T USED to be immortal. I used to be as normal as the next person.
Everything that has happened to me is all my fault.
My name was Samantha Carwell. I grew up in a middle-class suburban neighborhood in a place called Virginia. I had parents (Monica and Dominic) and a brother (Kevin). I supposed I lucked out being born when I was. I came into the world after the downfall of the so-called “Jim Crow” laws that targeted people of my skin color, so my life went fairly easy.
The four of us traveled every chance we got. Some of my childhood’s fondest memories were of visiting the Grand Canyon, hiking through the Smoky Mountains and sneaking off-trail with Kevin, and exploring Mammoth Cave. I filled scrapbook after scrapbook with all the pictures I’d taken, and on those inevitable days when school was in session, I would come home and pore over each page reliving the memories conserved within.
Somehow, eventually, Kevin and I grew up. He moved to another city to study law, and I took a job at a local library. Despite my desires, I could only afford to travel once a year. I went to the Colorado Rockies at the age of twenty, Alaska at twenty-one, and Los Angeles at twenty-two. I filled more scrapbooks, and I was happy. I remember one time I even—
[Page too scorched to be readable]
—comes a time when you realize you can’t do everything. You will never read all the books you want, watch all the movies you want, or paint all the pictures you want. There simply isn’t enough time to do it all. We may live our lives to the fullest, but we still die with that stack of unread books sitting on our bedside tables.
Perhaps I am wrong. Perhaps heaven is full of books, and its residents are free to read to their hearts’ content for all of eternity.
I wouldn’t know. I’ve never been there.
I digress.
When I turned twenty-six, I sank into a despondency no amount of traveling or reading could lift. I found joy in nothing, knowing my time here would run out eventually. I suppose I’ve always been a melancholic at heart. On my good days joy could overflow my soul but I still felt a deeper sadness knowing it all must come to an end.
Endings may bring about sorrow, but they exist for a reason. I’ve found that out too late.
I knew a fellow library employee (Joan) who claimed to know magick. (I’d seen her work apparent spells on our coworkers, curing menstrual cramps and skin conditions and the like.) I confessed my woes to her one night over drinks at a music-themed bar called The Metronome, and she nodded and listened like my problems were of grave importance. When I finished, she sat in a pondering silence, then said, “What you’re telling me is you fear dying before you can have all the experiences you desire.”
I nodded, dreading the lecture that would surely follow. Joan was at least two decades older than I and likely thought me a whiny, ungrateful child.
She surprised me by saying, “There might be something I can do about that.”
“There is?”
Her hazel eyes sparkled. “Of course there is. I can stop you from dying.”
I think I laughed at her. “Make me immortal, you mean. Like a vampire.”
“Don’t be ridiculous. You won’t need to drink blood to survive, and you can lounge around in the sun whenever you want.”
When she’d once told me she knew magick, I’d assumed she simply whipped up so-called “potions” that could cure warts and varicose veins and things. (That was before I saw her cure our head librarian’s psoriasis before my eyes.)
Perhaps I’d underestimated her abilities. “How can you do that?” I asked.
She pushed a strand of silver hair out of her face and tucked it behind a gauged ear. “If I told you, it would take away the mystery, wouldn’t it?”
“I guess. What’s the catch?”
Her lips twisted into a
wry smile. “Once it’s done, it can’t be undone. You’ll literally live forever.”
I tried to imagine what forever might be like but stopped because it made me feel sick. But not dying? Getting to live long enough to visit every place I’d ever heard of? That sounded like a deal to me.
“Have you done this to anyone else?” I asked.
“No, but I’ve made the offer.”
“When can we do it?”
“As soon as you know you’re ready—and I mean that. This isn’t a decision you should make lightly.”
“I know.”
She raised her eyebrows. “Do you, now?”
I was twenty-six years old. Of course I knew. I knew everything.
I didn’t feel any different after Joan cast her spell. I almost wondered if she made the whole thing up just to make me feel better about my mortality.
I worked at the library a little longer, then got a passport and visa and moved to Wales to study film and screenwriting. People back home asked me why Wales and not England, and I told them that Wales had always seemed left out in the stories and movies I’d seen, so I thought I would give it a bit of company. I lived in a village called—
[Page(s) missing]
After I finished school, I traveled to England and Scotland as often as I could. The new scenery and cultures inspired me like nothing else before. I wrote a film about a black American “finding herself” in the UK (original, I know) and a miniseries about a young British woman who longed to be immortal. I did a lot of freelance work and garnered a few awards for my screenplays, which made me prouder than I like to admit.
I traveled to mainland Europe and spent time in Spain and Portugal to research some screenplays I’d been hired to write. I flew back to the States every so often to see my family who, over the years, seemed to grow more and more suspicious of me.
I wasn’t sure why until I turned forty-five and realized I looked exactly like the twenty-six-year-old who had supposedly been granted immortality. I didn’t have a single line on my face, and my ebony skin positively glowed.
“How do you do it?” my mother asked me over video chat one summer, her voice frail with age. “How do you stay looking so young?”
“Constant exposure to the Welsh countryside and loads of tea,” I joked.
She squinted at me. “No, that’s not it. You’ve had work done, or something.”
“Well, maybe a bit,” I admitted. It wasn’t technically a lie.
“It’s getting spooky, Samantha. You’re fifty and look half your age.”
I blinked. Was I fifty now? I’d been so busy with work I’d forgotten to keep track.
My parents passed away when I was in my sixties. I dyed my dreadlocks gray before I flew out to their respective funerals, but I couldn’t fake wrinkles without hiring a professional makeup artist. I received accusing stares from my silver-haired brother and his wife, and their children and grandchildren eyed me with wonder.
I wished I could tell them, especially Kevin. We’d kept no secrets with each other as children, and it felt wrong to hide the truth now.
He wouldn’t have believed me if I told him.
Sometime before, I’d started hearing idle gossip about myself among my circle of fellow screenwriters.
“Exactly how old is Samantha?” I heard one of them say when I got up from a restaurant table to use the loo.
I stopped in my tracks and strained my ears to hear the rest through the divider separating our table from my current position. “Not sure,” someone else said, “but I’ve known her twenty years now. Hasn’t aged a day.”
“Must be genetics. Lucky girl. She could be her own daughter.”
I was a very lucky girl: due to a defect, I was unable to have children. I don’t know how I could have coped watching them die. Losing my occasional lovers proved difficult enough.
I kept dyeing my hair gray. The gossip about me continued relentlessly. Eventually Tina Jones, a writer I’d considered a close friend, confronted me at my house on the Welsh coast.
“Samantha, we’ve all been talking, and I think it’s time you told us who you really are,” Tina said in her singsong accent.
I tried to act surprised. “Who I really am?”
She looked me straight in the eye. “How old are you?”
“I think…about fifty, I suppose. It’s hard to keep track; I don’t celebrate birthdays.”
Tina withdrew some papers from her handbag. One was a photo of me shortly after my high school graduation. “Nigel and I have been doing a bit of research, we have, and the real Samantha Carwell was born in 1990. Those of us who can count know that was seventy-five years ago.”
I examined a fingernail. “Was it?”
“You’re not seventy-five, Sam. If I had to guess, I’d say you couldn’t be more than thirty.”
I shrugged. “I’m just lucky.”
We got into a full-blown argument after that, Tina accusing me of stealing Samantha Carwell’s identity and even going so far as to say I must have had surgery before I came to Wales to make myself look like the “real” Samantha. Tina finally stormed off in a huff, and I knew then that I had to make a change, and not one I desired.
I’d fallen in love with the Welsh countryside and its quaint villages with unpronounceable names, but it was time to move on.
[Page(s) missing]
I hope it doesn’t bore you that I’ve summed up my life in such a way. I’ve lived far too long, and if I described everything in intricate detail, this journal entry would overflow the largest library.
I wish I could say that the details faded with time. On the contrary: immortality has sharpened the details. I remember nearly everything.
I left Wales behind with a heavy heart and returned to America, even daring to return to that town where I’d been raised to find I scarcely recognized it. My childhood home was gone, replaced with a charming two-story with solar panels mounted on the roof.
I stood at the fence trying to reconcile this new structure with the small ranch in my memory when a man emerged from the house and walked out to meet me.
“Can I help you?” he asked. He wore overalls and might have been fifty.
“Oh, no,” I laughed. It sounded wooden in my ears. “I was just reminiscing, I was. I grew up in the house that used to be here.”
The man narrowed dark eyes at me. “Are you sure about that?”
“Fairly.” I felt a prickle of unease. It dawned on me that I’d developed a Welsh accent over the decades I’d lived there.
The man puffed up his chest like he thought himself the most important person who’d ever lived and gave me a condescending grin. “Well, you’re wrong—house that stood here burned to the ground forty years ago. You wouldn’t have been born yet.”
I knew the house had caught fire but hadn’t considered how long ago it had been now. “I—I’m older than I look,” I stammered before hurrying off.
[Next few lines scorched]
I bought a change of identity and a house in Maine. I called myself Samantha Cornell now, and I enrolled in college to study music. I became skilled at piano and violin, playing in various ensembles whenever invited to do so.
I searched for Joan a few years later only to learn she had died peacefully in her sleep at the age of a hundred and five. Her surviving sister told me she’d renounced her occult practices some decades before, becoming a devout Lutheran and teaching Sunday school until the very end.
The things you learn about people.
Once I visited Kevin in the nursing home where his children had interred him. We were both in our nineties at that point, and he looked so fragile and broken it made me cry.
“Samantha?” he whispered, his eyes wide as he lay on his bed. “Is that really you?”
I nodded, the lump in my throat obstructing the words I wanted to say.
“How do you do it?” he asked.
And I finally told him.
MY memories of life as a screenwriter in Wale
s seemed both distant and close at the same time. At night I dreamed of the house I’d owned by the sea and I would fill with joy over my apparent return, but then I’d wake and reality would crash back down like a smothering wave. I’d been happy in Wales—happier than I was before or have been since—and it broke my heart that I’d had to leave it behind in order to protect my secret.
To cheer myself up, I started traveling again. I went to Costa Rica, to Peru, to Brazil and Argentina. I made brief friendships with my fellow travelers but never let anyone become close enough to start asking too many questions. I published a few travel memoirs under pen names. I took more pictures and made more scrapbooks.
I’d never felt so empty.
As I passed my hundredth year and went about my life pretending to be normal, it occurred to me I was never meant to see these days. These days belonged to a new generation, not mine, and at times I felt like an intruder in an alien world, a sensation I could feel the strongest whenever I opened my eyes and saw new fashions, new vehicles, new forms of entertainment, and new gadgets. Language changed, too. I found myself adopting slang that sounded absurd at first until it became so common as to be unnoticed.
One time I watched one of the films I’d written the screenplay for and laughed at the quaintness of people’s mannerisms and speech.
Laughed, and then cried.
People think one hundred years is a long time. It is not. Nor is two hundred years, or three hundred.
I don’t know what to consider “a long time” anymore.
Sometimes I wonder if this is what God feels like, plodding through the ages without a great deal of notice while civilizations rise and fall like the tide; although I’ve heard it said that God exists outside of time.