A Question of Soul Mates by Kristie Macris Consorting with a devil. Not a devil of any common man's making, but of his own making. He sits, burning the tip of a well gnawed-on pen. Flick, his only pen melts in the blue flame. Flick, he chars the pen into his soul. Can't find a suitable surface to write on, so he might as well mar his spirit. He turns when he feels the stares of a lonely girl. She stands lost amidst a jumble of abstract art and noiseless music. Her essence shines through pale blue eyes into his open hands. He thinks he knows her, but he is only half right. She is scared, lost, afraid. He knows how she is feeling. A million truths pass between them with one flick of his lighter. They once knew each other, but it's not the same, not now. Recognition is so frightening that neither one can grasp each other's reality. He wants to speak, call out her name, pull her toward him, but he knows not her name and fear overwhelms any desire; his voice is gone. He leans into the table wanting it to swallow him. Wishing he could dissolve or disappear. Fading until he was nothing, no one. The girl turns, and he sees her profile. She is not a girl at all, but older, mature. He suddenly senses that she wanted him to perceive this. She wanted him to see she's changed. Changed from when or what, he thinks. He wants to remember her, but can't. She looks down at her feet. New shoes on an old body. An older soul. She knows the truth. He knows nothing. When she lifts her head to accept the past that had seemed lost, he looks away. There is a brief moment of nervous energy, excitement spurned from ever being exciting. He calls out a name. One singular name. The only one that has entered his mind. "Mariah!" She laughs a strained laugh that is marred with relief and slides to the floor. He worries, did he call out the wrong name? He somehow knows he didn't. Did he offend her by easily embracing the unknown that has come to pass between them? No, she's crying. Crying tears of a past he can't remember. He's always been half asleep in a world of constants, but now he can grasp some shred of understanding. Some small sliver of a reality that he once knew, before he became who he is now, but she clearly remembers everything. She remembers his gentle voice, the slowness of his walk, and the deliberate way he made love. He stands, not wanting to disturb her, and walks away. Not away from the girl, but away from the confusion that he's been carrying around in the present. The devils call him back, beckoning him to return. Shattered remnants of lost hopes, dreams, and wishes that had never made sense to him anyway, fall away into a chasm of open silence. So deep and hostile that nothing can return the same. He kneels beside the broken down excuse for a human being. She is beautiful. The most beautiful thing he has ever experienced. Underneath her present decrepit form, she is magnificent, and he suddenly remembers. Memories of a life he never lived flood his senses. He's reaching down to hug her, but stops midway, hanging in the air like a puppet held by strings of a lost god, or a lost idol. This realization is so slight it passes him by. She looks up into his now empty eyes and sees the same baby blues that used to watch her sleep. They are on a younger body, even younger than he was before, but the eyes are still the same. She gazes into them and smiles. Smiles for the first time in years. The first time since his death. Time goes mad. Ice breaks, windows shatter, suddenly the art isn't quite so abstract, and he isn't quite so alone. Fear surrounds the newly reacquainted lovers, but they feed on it. The years time forgot slip away to mingle with the dread. They know they are both tools in a dysfunctional set, but is it possible to be both the tool and the carpenter at the same time? Somehow they overcame the impossible. His last breath had been a wish to see her again. They laugh at the mystical bargain they just signed with a mere glance and think about being no one and nothing together, just like they use to be, in another life.