Waking up after a night in Megan's dreams—no, of actual sleep and my own dreams—was an incredible thing. I tried to hold on to pieces of the experience, the strange images floating through my own fragmented dreams. Finn had been there, and I think Addie and my parents. We were by an ocean. I wanted to tuck every detail away somewhere safe where no one could ever take them from me again.
It'd been so long since my brain had slept that I couldn't remember any of my dreams from before I became a Watcher. Now I knew what I'd been missing. Every part of my body felt rested and alive instead of dragging with the exhaustion I'd become accustomed to. I didn't understand it, but Megan had somehow made this possible.
I lay on my bed, reveling in the refreshed feeling and dreamy oblivion. Sleeping was good. I loved sleep. Best. Thing. Ever.
Stretched out against my dark blue sheets, I didn't want to get up. I didn't want to ever move again. It was nearly impossible to think about doing anything except going back to sleep.
Thud. Thud. Thud.
"Parker!" Mom's shout shattered my happy haze like a bazooka. "Your alarm went off thirty minutes ago. You up yet?"
I bolted out of bed, fully alert for the first time in months— probably years. "I'm up." A small grin crept across my face. I'd slept through my alarm? How . . . normal.
Tugging a gray long-sleeved shirt and jeans out of the closet, I was through the door, past my Mom, and into the shower in under a minute. I would be late for school, but the sudden urgency that filled me had nothing to do with that.
It was Megan. I had to find her and make eye contact again. I had to find out if all her dreams were like the one last night.
My brain whirred as it sorted the information: her approximate age, where I'd seen her, what direction she was heading in and why. She didn't seem older than me, but I knew I'd never seen her before. That meant she could be new in town. She was old enough to drive, so chances were fifty/fifty she'd be attending my high school. I would find her.
Doubt flooded me as I stepped out of the shower. I forced aside nagging thoughts that maybe it wouldn't be that easy, maybe she was only passing through town. Maybe I'd never see her again. No matter what it took, though, I had to find her. I had to get answers.
Why could I sleep in her dream? Could I do it again?
For a moment, the whirring in my mind stopped and my stomach clenched. What was I planning to do? Hunt her down? Force her to make eye contact with me? It felt wrong. But something else inside me spoke, something deep-rooted and instinctual. This was a possible means of survival. It could mean a real life for me.
I had to find out, but I'd need to be careful.
* * *
I ran through the front doors of Oakville High School. Fifteen minutes late wasn't too bad. Everything seemed oddly hushed, though. I peered in the classrooms as I jogged down the hall, but they were all empty.
By the time I got to my locker, I wondered if it was some kind of holiday I'd forgotten about. My heart pounded and I racked my brain for what holiday it could possibly be. It was Monday, the first week of October. Why would there be no school?
I closed my locker and turned around, leaning against it to think. A mirror lined the back of the trophy case on the opposite wall, but my reflection looked nothing like me. There was color in my cheeks I hadn't seen in a year or more; my dark hair glistened. I looked almost healthy.
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Insomnia
Mystery / Thriller"It's been four years since I slept, and I suspect it is killing me." Instead of sleeping, Parker Chipp spends each night trapped in the dream of the last person he's made eye contact with. Every night he is crushed by other people's fear and pain...