Nick, and even Lief were at a disadvantage.
Vari went over to a cabinet, and pulled out three books. âHere; a crash course in Everlost.â He handed them each a book. âYou have to forget what you know about the living world, and get used to the way things are here.â
âWhat if I donât want to forget the living world?â Allie asked.
Mary smiled politely. âI understand how you feel,â she said. âLetting go is hard.â
âTips For Taps,â
Nick said, reading from the cover of thebook. âBy Mary Hightower.â Thatâs you?â
Mary smiled. âWe all must do something with our afterlife,â she said. âI write.â
Allie looked at her own volume, impressed in spite of herself. She leafed through the book. Three hundred pages at least, and each page handwritten, with painstakingly perfect penmanship.
Well,
thought Allie,
we came here looking for answersâand now weâre in the company of the Authority of Everlast. What could be better?
Yet for some reason Ailie didnât feel all that comforted.
----
In her book
Death Be Not Dull,
Mary Hightower writes, âAfterlight Greensouls are precious. They are fragile. There are so many hazards for them here in Everlost, for they are like babies with no knowledge of the way things areâand like babies they must be nurtured and guided with a loving, but firm hand. Their eternity rests on how well they adjust to life in Everlost. A poorly adjusted Afterlight can warp and distort in horrifying ways. Therefore Greensouls must be treated with patience, kindness, and charity. Itâs the only way to properly mold them.â
----
CHAPTER 8
Dominant Reality
M ary Hightower detested being called Mary Queen of Snots, although there was some truth to it. Most of the Afterlights in her care were much younger than her. At fifteen, she was among the oldest residents of Everlost. So when kids closer to her age arrived in her towering domain, she paid extra-special attention to them.
She sensed, however, that Allie was going to be a problem. To say that Mary didnât like Allie would be a stretch. Mary, quite simply, liked everyone. It was her job to like everyone, and she took it very seriously. Allie, however, was dangerously willful, and could spell disaster. Mary hoped she was wrong, but had to admit that she seldom was. Even her worst predictions came trueânot because she had any glimpse into the futureâbut because her many years in Everlost had made her a keen judge of character.
âThe Greensouls are taken care of,â Vari announced after he returned. âThe boys chose a room together facing south, the girl chose a room alone facing north. All on the ninety-third floor.â
âThank you, Vari.â She gave him a kiss on the top of his curly head, as she often did. âWeâll give them a few hours to settle in, and Iâll pay them a visit.â
âWould you like me to play for you?â Vari asked. âMozart, maybe.â
Although Mary didnât feel like listening to music, she told him yes. It gave him pleasure to bring her happiness, and she didnât want to deny him that. He had been her right-hand man since before she could remember, and she often forgot that he was only nine years old, forever trapped at that age where he wanted to please. It was wonderful. It was sad. Mary chose to focus on the wonderful. She closed her eyes and listened as Vari raised his violin, and played a concerto she had heard a thousand times, and would probably hear a thousand times more.
When the sun sank low, she went to visit the three Greensouls. The boys first.
Their âapartmentâ was sparsely furnished with flotsam and jetsam furniture that had crossed over. A chair here, a desk there, a mattress, and a sofa that would have to suffice as a second bed.
Lief sat on the floor trying to make sense of a Game Boy. It was an old device by living-world