earth of the grave impacted under their fingernails.
Their numbers swelled.
People died, but they didn't stay dead; the newly resurrected kept busy at their graves.
A week after the balloting, the Supreme Court handed down a decision overturning the election. Congress, meeting in emergency session, set a new date for the first week of January. If nothing else, the year 2000 debacle in Florida had taught us the virtue of speed.
Lewis came to my hotel room at dusk to tell me.
"We're in business," he said.
When I didn't answer, he took a chair across from me. We stared over the fog-shrouded city in silence. Far out above the lake, threads of rain seamed the sky. Good news for the dead. The digging would go easier.
Lewis turned the bottle on the table so he could read the label. I knew what it was: Glenfiddich, a good single malt. I'd been sipping it from a hotel tumbler most of the afternoon.
"Why'nt you turn on some lights in here?" Lewis said.
"I'm fine in the dark."
Lewis grunted. After a moment, he fetched the other glass. He wiped it out with his handkerchief and poured.
"So tell me."
Lewis tilted his glass, grimaced. "January fourth. The president signed the bill twenty minutes ago. Protective cordons fifty yards from polling stations. Only the living can vote. Jesus. I can't believe I'm even saying that." He cradled his long face in his hands. "So you in?"
"Does he want me?"
"Yes."
"What about you, Lewis? Do you want me?"
Lewis said nothing. We just sat there, breathing in the woodsy aroma of the scotch, watching night bleed into the sky.
"You screwed me at staff meeting the other day," I said. "You hung me out to dry in front of everyone. It won't work if you keep cutting the ground out from under my feet."
"Goddamnit, I was right . In ten seconds, you destroyed everything we've worked for. We had it won."
"Oh come on, Lewis. If Crossfire never happened, it could have gone either way. Five points, that's nothing. We were barely outside the plus and minus, you know that."
"Still. Why'd you have to say that?"
I thought about that strange sense I'd had at the time: another voice speaking through me. Mouthpiece of the dead.
"You ever think about that little girl, Lewis?"
He sighed. "Yeah. Yeah, I do." He lifted his glass. "Look. If you're angling for some kind of apology—"
"I don't want an apology."
"Good," he said. Then, grudgingly: "We need you on this one, Rob. You know that."
"January," I said. "That gives us almost two months."
"We're way up right now."
"Stoddard will make a run. Wait and see."
"Yeah." Lewis touched his face. It was dark, but I could sense the gesture. He'd be fingering his acne scars, I'd spent enough time with him to know that. "I don't know, though," he said. "I think the right might sit this one out. They think it's the fuckin' Rapture, who's got time for politics?"
"We'll see."
He took the rest of his scotch in a gulp and stood. "Yeah. We'll see."
I didn't move as he showed himself out, just watched his reflection in the big plate glass window. He opened the door and turned to look back, a tall man framed in light from the hall, his face lost in shadow.
"Rob?"
"Yeah?"
"You all right?"
I drained my glass and swished the scotch around in my mouth. I'm having a little trouble sleeping these days, I wanted to say. I'm having these dreams.
But all I said was, "I'm fine, Lewis. I'm just fine."
I wasn't, though, not really.
None of us were, I guess, but even now—maybe especially now—the thing I remember most about those first weeks is how little the resurrection of the dead altered our everyday lives. Isolated incidents made the news—I remember a serial killer being arrested as his victims heaved themselves bodily from their shallow backyard graves—but mostly people just carried on. After the initial shock, markets stabilized. Stores filled up with Thanksgiving turkeys; radio stations began counting the shopping days until Christmas.
Yet I think the
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