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  “Oh, right, right. I haven’t seen it. So, you dreamed about Doctor Who.”

  “And his long, striped scarf,” I said, remembering. “He wore a long dark coat and a long, striped scarf.”

  “Hey, Johnny wears a long black coat and a striped scarf,” Jen said.

  I looked at her. “Yeah. I know.”

  “You think, what, your kiddie dreams made you fall in love with him because of that?”

  “No.” I shook my head. “It’s just coincidence. That’s what I remember from the time in the hospital. When I got out, I’d go dark pretty often, sometimes a couple times in a day, usually once a week, then once a month, for the first year or so after. I missed a lot of school but got caught up over the summer because my mom was determined I wasn’t going to be held back. And by that time, I’d had a hundred tests that showed nothing, not even brain damage, and they’d started me on meds that kept the fugues from happening. At least, the ones anyone could tell. I got really used to pretending I knew exactly what was going on in a conversation even if I’d missed a couple minutes of it.”

  She made another face. “God, that sucks.”

  “Yeah, well. It could’ve been worse. I could’ve had permanent brain damage that left me disabled. More disabled,” I said, allowing bitterness to edge my words. “Because, yeah, it’s pretty much fucked up my life.”

  She reached for my hand and squeezed it.

  “Thanks. Anyway, I’m getting to my point, and that is that as I got older, the dark times often also led to hallucinations. Not really dreams, because they were almost always cohesive, and I almost always knew I wasn’t really doing whatever it was my brain told me I was doing. It was really helpful in a way, because if suddenly in the middle of class I found myself in a field of flowers, chasing a butterfly, I knew I was dark and I could try to get myself back right away.”

  “Can you do that? Make yourself come out of it?”

  “Sometimes. Sort of. Other times…” I shrugged, thinking of waking up in the hospital with Johnny holding my hand. “Not.”

  “Phew.” Jen sighed and looked sympathetic, but not pitying.

  “Before I moved up here I hadn’t had any fugues in over a year, and not any major ones in a couple years. I hadn’t had any hallucinations in a much longer time. Maybe three or four years.”

  “And now?”

  “I’ve been hallucinating about Johnny.”

  Her brows went up again. “Yeah? Like what?”

  “The first one was really just a mess. I was on that train from Train of the Damned, and I was the countess or whatever she was. And we were…you know.”

  “Ooh, girl, you were banging him on the train? That’s the kind of dream I wouldn’t mind having.”

  “Yeah.” I smiled. “It was good. Except for the part where it meant I was having a fugue, it was really good. But that one was normal. Since then, I’ve had more. They’re not like the others I’ve ever had. But they’re all the same. I’m always at Johnny’s house, back in the seventies. Usually there’s a party going on. I think sometimes it’s the same party, I’m just popping in and out of it at different times. At least, it’s always within a few days or hours of the same timeline. And there are other people there. Paul Smiths, Candy Applegate.”

  “Shit, you mean like from the Enclave? All those people?”

  “Yes. Ed D’Onofrio, too.”

  “The writer? The one who died?”

  “Yes. Him.” I thought of the last time I’d gone dark, of standing in Johnny-then’s kitchen with Ed, watching him self-destruct. “And Sandy.”

  “His first wife?”

  I made a face like I’d tasted something bad. “Yeah. Her.”

  “She was in Night of a Hundred Moons with him, right? Her? Kimmy’s mother.”

  “Yeah. And the thing is, Jen, the really weird thing is, I was having these hallucinations about that movie, people in it and stuff, before I even saw it for myself. I guess I pieced it together from the internet stuff.”

  “You could’ve seen it on TV, late-night. Like Train of the Damned, maybe you’d seen it a long time ago and hadn’t remembered until we watched it.”

  “I guess so,” I said, though that explanation didn’t feel quite right. “It’s more like I’ve put together this world, though. Johnny’s world, back then. The man he was with the movies and the modeling. The super-sexed-up version of him. And in these hallucinations, I go back to that time and just…fuck him silly.”

  She laughed. “And this is bad? I mean, yeah, aside from the fact you’re having the fugues.”

  “In my head, we have this great, sexy thing going on. It’s all really free. Sex, drugs. Rock and roll. It’s this whole other world. But it’s not real,” I told her. “And it was great at first—if I have to be a brain-damaged freak and suffer blackouts, it’s pretty sweet to also get to hang out with Johnny fucking Dellasandro.”

  “I hear that,” she said, again sympathetically and not with pity. “So, what’s the issue with it? I know you’d rather not have them at all.”

  I laughed harshly. “Sort of. It’s easier in those dreams. I don’t have to worry about anything, and I still get Johnny.”

  “You have him in real life, too,” she pointed out.

  “I haven’t told him about the hallucinations. I don’t want him to think that it’s just all about the movies, or the modeling, or about all that stuff he’s kind of put behind him, you know? I love Johnny-now,” I said. “At least, I think I do.”

  “Is it so wrong to be into him because of who he was, too?” Jen asked. “Admiring his accomplishments isn’t a bad thing. Johnny’s not ashamed of what he did, he’s just moved on, right?”

  “I guess so.” I couldn’t describe why all of this felt so tangled up and twisted. “I should just tell him that when I go dark, I end up fucking him with his seventies sideburns and long hair. And that it’s totally hot, by the way. So fucking hot.”

  She giggled. “So long as it’s not hotter than it is in real life, right?”

  “Definitely. And it’s not. It’s just different. Also, not real,” I said drily. “So, you don’t think I should tell him?”

  “I don’t know if you should keep it a secret, but then again, I’m not sure you have to tell him. Would you tell him if the fantasies were about something else?”

  “Maybe. Maybe not, if they were as nasty dirty sexy as the ones I have about him.”

  “You think he might, what, get jealous of…himself?”

  I giggled, too. “Maybe. Or just get a weird feeling. And it’s not always sex. The last time I went dark I had this whole involved thing with Ed D’Onofrio, and let me tell you, that was just fucking creepy, not sexy at all. I know he’s supposed to be a genius of his time and whatever, but his poems freak me out. And get this, I imagined he was writing a poem about me.”

  “Gross!”

  “Yeah. See, I don’t want to tell Johnny stuff like that. It’s embarrassing and just gross, and it’s bad enough he’s putting up with me blanking out on him and having to drive me all over and stuff. I don’t want to tell him that my brain makes up shit about him and his old friends, you know? It feels creepy to me. It is creepy,” I said sort of miserably. “Totally feels like a stalker.”

  “Which you weren’t. At all.” Jen rolled her eyes.

  “That was different,” I told her. “And I blame you.”

  She laughed and tipped the last of her beer down her throat before setting the bottle down. “Yeah, yeah, I infected you with Johnny-itis. You want a cure, bitch? I didn’t think so.”

  We laughed together. Telling her, at least, had lifted some of the weight from my mind. “You don’t think it’s totally sick? What I imagine when I go dark? It doesn’t mean I’m not happy with what I have now, with him. The real him. Because that’s better than anything I even imagined, ever.”

  “If you were trying to make yourself spend so much time in this fantasy world, I’d be worried, but you’re not. You don’t try to