Playlist for the Dead. Michelle Falkoff
back when he was a junior; Trevor would probably skip college and go straight to the NHL; Jason was the best-looking guy in school and the treasurer of student council. They could do whatever they wanted, and no one seemed to care that they weren’t such good people, that they had secrets. Whenever I got online I set up quests that pitted me against guys I figured were like them, players who wanted to be the center of attention, good at everything. And then I destroyed them.
Today I’d set myself up against a team of Alliance warriors. It was three on one, just like it had always been for Hayden when Ryan and his buddies singled him out, but I was determined to kick some ass anyway. I was making such good progress I’d barely noticed how dark it had gotten until I heard the ping of my Gchat window. At first that seemed totally normal; I’d been playing for a while, and that was when Hayden would usually check in.
Except Hayden was dead, so it couldn’t be Hayden.
I paused the game and looked away from the computer. It wasn’t just darker than I thought; it was pitch black. I’d been playing longer than I realized. I rubbed my eyes and looked back at the computer.
Someone named Archmage_Ged was IMing me.
That made no sense. Archmage_Ged was Hayden’s name in Mage Warfare—he’d based it on a character he loved from the Wizard of Earthsea books I’d loaned him as a kid, books he’d struggled to read. But he’d used his real name for Gchat.
I glanced up at the shelf where I’d put the wizard figurine, then looked back at the screen. Who would know to sign up for an account with that name? The glow of the computer monitor started to feel creepy, and the hairs on my arm were starting to stand on end.
The message said, How do?
I shivered, and all of a sudden I realized I was still alone in the house. Rachel hadn’t come home, and Mom was still at work.
The cursor was blinking at me. How do?
That was how Hayden and I always started our Gchat conversations. We’d picked it up after spending a series of weekends powering through all five seasons of The Wire. But no one would know to start a conversation with me that way.
I looked at the computer screen again. It was still there. My job was usually to come up with something witty in response, but I just stared at the blinking cursor. There was no way it could be Hayden.
Archmage_Ged: You there?
Of course I was there; where else would I be? Hanging out with all my other friends? Oh, no, wait—I didn’t have any.
Sam_Goldsmith: Who is this?
Archmage_Ged: Who do you think?
That was the thing—I couldn’t think of who it could be. No one from school knew us well enough to imitate Hayden. Someone from Mage Warfare? We chatted inside the game all the time, so someone could have seen us use that name. But the chat request hadn’t come from inside the game. This was my private email account. No one from the game had that info except Hayden.
Someone at school could have gotten it, though. Could it be one of the bully trifecta? Was this Ryan’s way of getting back at me for yelling at him? As much as I disliked Ryan, though, I couldn’t imagine him being evil enough to sneak away from his family the night of his brother’s funeral just to screw with my head. Trevor was too stupid to pull off something like this, and from what Hayden had told me, Jason had his own stuff going on. It was possible; it just didn’t seem all that likely. But I couldn’t imagine who else it might be.
Sam_Goldsmith: Well, I know who it isn’t.
Archmage_Ged: Are you sure?
Sure I was sure.
Sam_Goldsmith: Look, I don’t know who you are or why you’re doing this, but cut it out. Things are crappy enough as it is.
Archmage_Ged: Not messing with you. I’m here to help.
Sam_Goldsmith: What’s that supposed to mean?
Archmage_Ged: Just what I said.
Sam_Goldsmith: I don’t see how you can help when you won’t tell me who you are.
This was just too weird.
Sam_Goldsmith: Signing off now.
Archmage_Ged: Wait, don’t.
And for some reason, with that, I had the sense that I really was talking to Hayden. I mean, I knew it was impossible, and yet it sounded so much like him, teasing me for a while but quick to get serious, especially if he could tell I was getting annoyed at him. My heart started racing.
Sam_Goldsmith: Are you ready to be straight with me now? Who are you?
Archmage_Ged: I’m Archmage_Ged.
Interesting. He hadn’t said he was Hayden.
Sam_Goldsmith: Prove it.
The cursor blinked. The air in the room seemed to grow colder, and the goose bumps rose on my arms again. I looked at the clock on my computer screen. Somehow it was two in the morning. I’d been sitting here for hours and hadn’t even realized it. Hell, I was probably hallucinating; I’d barely slept in days, and it didn’t look like I’d be making up any ground tonight.
And then, all of a sudden, a song began playing, the music streaming through my computer speakers.
It was that Skylar Grey song I’d never heard before from the playlist. But the playlist had stopped playing hours ago. The room had been quiet since I paused the game. The song felt almost like an assault on the silence.
Archmage_Ged: See?
Sam_Goldsmith: That doesn’t tell me anything. I don’t even know that song.
It was some chick I’d never heard before, and I had no idea why Hayden would be listening to her.
Archmage_Ged: That’s the whole point. There’s a lot you don’t know. But I want you to.
Sam_Goldsmith: So tell me!
But the cursor just kept blinking.
Sam_Goldsmith: Are these songs supposed to mean something? Seems pretty obvious to play me some dumb chick music about invisibility when I can’t even see you.
Archmage_Ged: Lots of people want to be invisible. Maybe they even think they can pretend to be. But someone always sees.
Now the hairs on my neck were standing up. I must have looked like a plucked chicken. A scared, probably hallucinating chicken. But the thing was, whoever this Archmage_Ged was sounded an awful lot like Hayden. Especially because I had no idea what he was talking about.
Archmage_Ged: You’ll figure it out.
As if he’d read my mind.
ARCHMAGE_GED HAD ME SO FREAKED OUT that I got almost no sleep the whole weekend, and I was terrified to turn on my computer—I wasn’t sure whether I wanted the Gchat window to pop up again. In the light of day it seemed clear to me that there was no way it could have been Hayden. Better to focus on things that were real, like the fact that I had to go to school.
For my first day back I put on my favorite jeans, a zip-up hoodie, and my Metallica T-shirt—one of their songs had come on the playlist as I was getting ready, and it made me think of Hayden. They were one of the bands we fought about; Hayden was strongly in