The next day, a boy from school — earnest, gap-toothed Milo — showed her a stone he’d found with the number 7 scratched into it. He said he wanted to be an archaeologist someday. Kristy smiled and told him to keep it. That night, the number 7 from Milo’s stone crawled into her dream and took on a meaning she couldn’t articulate but felt in the bones.
On a rain-silver Thursday, a man in a navy coat sat at the counter and ordered eggs in a voice that made the diner fall quieter by degrees. He had a scar along his jaw and eyes like wet slate. When his plate arrived, he glanced at Kristy and asked for the sugar. “Do you work here?” he asked without waiting for the response. She said yes, then asked his name because manners mattered even when they were small. He told her: Elias Crowe.
— End of Part 1
So she did what she always did when the edges of things began to fray: she walked. She walked to the bridge at dusk, carrying only the camera and the notebook with her dream list, and she watched the water where the river folded into itself. The light bent into a blue that matched her vase. On the far bank, where the old watchtower leaned like an elbow against the sky, a light blinked once — slow, deliberate — and then again.
Elias lingered for three weeks. He asked about photographs hung on the diner’s walls, commented on an old poster advertising a band that had been popular before Kristy’s time. He told stories with gaps like missing teeth; Kristy filled them in with questions that never quite matched the answers. When she confessed one evening, over cold coffee, that she collected songs on her phone like keepsakes, he smiled as if a private joke had been shared.
But Kristy had rules. She answered direct questions with short sentences and never mentioned what she’d left. She declined invitations to town parties with a simple, “Not yet.” That reserve was a thin glass wall; sometimes she let strangers see the seams by handing over a cup of coffee to a homeless man and listening longer than was necessary. She paid attention to names and birthdays and the way grief smelled like lemon oil and piano polish.
People remarked on Kristy the way you remark on a new flavor in a familiar recipe: curious but cautious. Children loved her because she had an old camera and taught them how to make pretend monsters with shadows. The florist, Mara, sold Kristy a bundle of bluebells and told her, almost conspiratorially, that blue was a good color for new things. The bluebells went into a chipped vase beside her bed; their stems bent toward the window as if listening.
One evening, a postcard slid under her door. On the front, someone had scribbled a lighthouse in blue ink; on the back: Welcome to Newbridge. —A Friend. No return address. Kristy turned the card over in her hand until fingerprints smeared the ink. It could have been a prank. It could have been coincidence. But the lighthouse in her dream that night was taller and closer than before.