5th
May 2010. It’s been two weeks now
since I first met Charlotte. I use the term ‘met’ in the loosest
possible
sense, for lack of a better way of describing our initial encounter.
It’s the
same with everything to do with Charlotte.There
just aren’t enough words to describe her. An immediate
obstacle is that until now I had no idea what she looked like; another
is that
I’d never heard her voice. Most of the time, when we were ‘together’
(again, I
use the term loosely) I’d worry that I was just talking to myself. But
something I was always sure of is that she’s utterly remarkable. I’ve
never
known anyone else like her. How many ‘probably-dead’ people can you say
that
about?
It was
early on Monday morning, the day
I met Charlotte and my life changed forever - but I’ll warn you now, it
was far
from love at first sight.
I like
the University Library first
thing in the morning. If you can get there before 9am you literally
have the
place to yourself. I can see why some people might not like that; how
they
could feel lonely or dislike the quiet, but not me. I like to climb the
staircase to the fourth floor, not seeing another soul along the way. I
walk in
and scan the empty room, admiring the 50 or so PC’s all waiting
patiently for
the day to begin. And then I choose one of them, any one, on which to
work for
the morning. If you come later in the day, even just an hour later, it
is a
completely different scene; the staircase crowded with students, this
room
crawling with them, all but one or two monitors taken. If you’re lucky.
Often
there aren’t any PC’s left and you have to look elsewhere, which I
always think
a great shame, because I do love that room. Not because of the
computers, but
because of the ceiling-high windows that make up the east wall. Sat
there, you
can see far out into the city, and beyond.
I
paused for a moment, admiring the
stillness of the room, before making my way over to a PC in the corner,
directly beside the window. However, as I walked over I stopped again.
There
was something strange about the room today. It had come over me all of
a
sudden, a feeling I was unsure of. At first I thought it was someone
else in
the room. Something made me look around. Perhaps there was another
student here
already, crouching down behind his computer? After scanning the room I
was
satisfied I was alone. But there was something else. There was
something in the
air. The room suddenly felt very close, as if amped up by a static
charge. It
reminded me of standing in my garden as a child just after a thunder
storm; the
clamminess of the air making it feel like the last raindrops were
somehow
slowed or suspended in the air. I opened a window. Perhaps that would
help.
Finally
I sat at my desk. Touching the
mouse I was surprised to find the computer already on but in sleep
mode. The
screen jumped to life, prompting me to sign in. This was unusual.
Ordinarily at
this time the computers had yet to be turned on for the day. Someone
must have
been in before me, and by chance chosen the very same computer and left
it on
stand-by. Unusual, but to be fair, stranger things have happened. Or
rather,
stranger things would happen.
After
sitting through the start-up
routine I pulled out my notes and clicked on Word, ready to start
typing up my
lecture notes. However, when Word opened I found a document already
waiting.
This was odd because I hadn’t opened any documents yet, and I had only
just
signed into my computer account. There couldn’t be a document open
already. I
quickly read through the opening paragraph. It was something about
Peter the
Great, clearly not mine because I’m a medic. Intrigued, I scrolled down
to the
final paragraph, where I was shocked to find new letters appearing at
the end
of the latest line. The letters were popping into existence, quickly
turning to
words and gradually pushing the newly formed sentences across the page.
This
was weird.
I’d
heard of things like this; PC
technicians viewing your account from their office and communicating
with you
by writing on your screen. But why would a PC technician be writing to
me about
Peter the Great? I noticed that the words were forming independent of
the
cursor, so I clicked a few lines beneath them and wrote: ‘Who is this?’
The
typing stopped. There was a long
pause. And then it replied: ‘I’m Charlotte. Who are you?’
Charlotte?
What did that mean? What
good did that do me at all in understanding what was happening? I was
undecided
as to whether I should reveal my own name. What if ‘Charlotte’ was some
kind of
computer hacker after my personal details? But why would a computer
hacker be
writing about Peter the Great? Misdirection? She must be a clever
hacker.
Still, I reasoned that she wouldn’t be able to do much with just my
name.
‘I’m
Dean.’ There was another pause.
Eventually I wrote again: ‘Why are you writing on my screen?’
‘I’m
not. This is mine. Why are you
writing on mine?’
I
thought for a moment. Maybe this was
starting to make sense. I typed out my thoughts for Charlotte.
‘I
think there’s been some kind of
mistake. Your work is appearing on my screen. Maybe our accounts have
gotten
mixed up or something.’ To be on the safe side I reasoned that it was
probably
best to check she was a student, but I didn’t want to sound paranoid. I
decided
on a simple ‘Where are you writing from?’
Pause.
‘University
Library.’
I
smiled. It seems I wasn’t the first
person here today after all.
‘Oh
really? That’s handy. I’m here too.
Where are you? If we meet it might be easier to work out what’s going
on?’
‘I’m
in the computer room, on the fourth
floor.’
My
heart skipped a beat. I jumped back
from the screen and sat up, looking again around the room. I was alone.
‘Are
you sure? I’m in the computer room
on the fourth floor and there’s no one else here.’
Nothing.
She was probably confused or
mistaken. She must be on a different floor and maybe just thought it
was the fourth.
Then I remembered all of the computers are numbered, with a white plate
beneath
each monitor sporting the unique number of that particular PC. The one
I was on
was 1044. If I knew which PC she was on, I could probably find her.
‘What’s
the reg. no of your PC? Tell me
and I’ll come find you.’
Pause.
‘1044.’
I felt
the blood freeze in my veins.
Was this some kind of a joke? That was my PC. She was typing on my PC.
There
had to be something wrong going on. Either this was a joke or a con.
Whichever
it was, I wasn’t too keen to find out. I closed the document, signed
off and
left the library.
It was
less than twenty minutes later
when I arrived at computer services and asked to speak to a technician.
I
quickly explained what had just happened. At first he seemed perplexed,
but
then I saw the faint indication of smile playing at the corners of his
mouth.
He either thought I was joking, or someone had played a joke on me.
Regardless,
he agreed to open up my profile and have a look. We signed in using his
personal computer in the workshop, and he opened up Word. It was a
blank
document. We waited for a few moments but nothing happened. I could
feel my
cheeks begin to burn with embarrassment.
‘Whatever
it was it looks like it’s
over now,’ he said in a mock-serious tone. He turned to me, and I must
have
looked shaken because he softened slightly. ‘You know, if it makes you
feel
better I can run a full diagnostic on your profile? Just to check
you’re free
of spyware or anything like that?’
I
nodded gratefully.
‘I’ll
check the computer in the library
too. Which one did you say it was?’
‘1044,’
I confirmed. He scribbled it
down, gave me a hearty pat on the shoulder and told me to check in next
week to
see what he’d found.
After
that I just forgot about it all
for a few days. It’s funny how easily the mind can normalise the
abnormal.
Admittedly,
I was uneasy for the rest of the morning, and I told my housemates
the whole story that night, but that’s all it was. A story. An amusing
anecdote
that might as well have happened to someone else. That was, until I was
in the
library again.
I
needed to check my emails at about
midday. I knew the library would be filling up by now, but I also knew
that the
computers on the lower floors go first. An unspoken law dictates that
the
so-called lazy students only go as far as they have too, and in this
instance
the logic proved right. If there was to be a free computer it would
probably be
on the fourth floor.
I
entered the room, and unsurprisingly
found it almost full. There was one free PC though, in the corner by
the
window. 1044. Typical.
Despite
events earlier in the week I
went over anyway. I hesitantly signed in, and quickly checked and
replied to my
emails. Everything seemed to be running fine this time. But there
again, I hadn’t
opened a Word document. My eyes fell upon the desktop icon. I watched
as I
moved the cursor across the screen; curiosity drew me like a moth to
the flame.
I double-tapped, and sure enough, rather than a new document opening
the same
text as before flashed up on the screen. I scrolled down again, this
time the
last word being ‘1044’: the point at which Charlotte had revealed her
alleged
location.
I
couldn’t resist. My fingers took
charge and danced across the keyboard.
‘Charlotte?
Are you still there?’
Pause.
‘Dean?’
My
body took a sharp deep breath,
seemingly working of its own accord.
‘Yes.
This is Dean.’
Pause.
‘Are
you a student here Dean?’
I felt
my spine run cold. Why does she
want to know about me? I could hardly resist the notion that she was
some kind
of hacker and that this was all a con. She probably wanted to steal my
identity. But the technician hadn’t found anything. What else could be
going on
here?
‘Yes.’
‘I’m
so lonely Dean. I know I don’t
know u, but will u
please listen? It’s so long since any 1
has listened. I don’t want 2 b alone.’
My
throat went dry. Suddenly I remembered a
ghost tour of the city I’d
been on the previous year. At the time I thought it was nonsense. Just
a bit of
fun. The man who arrived to give the tour had turned up in full
Victorian dress,
complete with top hat and cane. Only an
idiot would take it seriously. But now, as Charlotte’s
words played across my screen, one story in particular came to mind.
The
guide had walked us to a phone box
in the centre of town, and told us about a man who had been calling
this very
phone when his wife’s lover had entered their home and killed him in
cold
blood. No explanation was given for why he called this particular phone
box,
but the guide went on, explaining that the man’s dying soul had been
captured
in the phone lines, and every now and then the phone would ring. He
said that
if a passer-by answered the phone they could speak to the man, and
listen as he
lamented the mistakes of his life, particularly his marriage, that had
led him
to his death. And then, as if on cue, the phone had rung, and the guide
encouraged one fearless volunteer to answer it.
One of
my friends had, and he later
told us it was just a guy talking about his wife. It was easy to see
through
the set up. The guide just had to make sure he had gotten his group to
the
phone box at roughly the right time, and then keep on talking until his
accomplice
rang the number. Or so I thought at the time. Now, as a mysterious
writer who
proclaimed to be sat in the very spot I was in explained to me her
inability to
make any friends or find anyone to hear her laments upon arrival at a
strange
and desolate place; I was beginning to wonder.
Perhaps
Charlotte had died while
working on the Peter the Great document. Surely she couldn’t have died
in the
University Library, but if her computer was somehow linked to this
computer…
Maybe, if she’d been talking on Live Messenger to someone using this PC
that
would have provided a strong enough connection?, I couldn’t help
smiling to
myself, surprised by how quickly I’d accepted the idea that I was
conversing
with the dead.
For
the next few days I would return to
1044 each morning and talk to Charlotte. Even when I wasn’t talking to
her I
would be thinking of things to say, questions to ask. I avoided the
subject of
her death. I didn’t want to bring back traumatic memories unnecessarily
or
force her into the light before her time. Sometimes she would ask about
me. We’d
talk about our childhoods, what our interests were, and our tastes in
music, TV
and film. She never asked what I’d been doing recently though, never
asked
about the last few weeks or what I’d been doing when I wasn’t in the
library.
It was fun. Every now and then a sadness would creep into the back of
my mind.
Charlotte had died. I would never actually get to meet her. She’d never
get to
leave the library.
After
a week I was passing by computer
services and I decided to drop in and see if the technician had found
anything
strange. Perhaps there would be some clue as to exactly what was going
on.
‘Your
account’s fine,’ he smiled. His
smile faded, as instead of relief I had an expression of disappointment.
‘And
1044?’ I asked? He looked
surprised that I was bothered about the status of a random computer in
the
library, but then his eyes widened as if he’d suddenly remembered that
he’d
left the gas on at home.
‘Actually,
the computer’s fine, but I
did notice something weird when I was clearing out our inbox the other
day,’ he
smiled, suddenly glad of a captive audience.
He
swivelled in his chair and turned to
his computer, bringing up the email inbox for computer services. I
could see
that the inbox was full of messages, scoring in the thousands.
‘We
get a lot of emails,’ the
technician said apologetically, looking back with an expression like
that of
child explaining to his mother why his bedroom is such a mess.
‘Here.’
He pointed to an email dated
April 2007. He opened it up. ‘So, this girl sends us an email saying
that
writing had started appearing on her Word documents while she was
working on
them, asking who she was, where she was, kind of like what happened to
you,
right?’
I
nodded. He continued.
‘She
goes on to say it doesn’t happen
on her laptop or in the Student Union, only when she’s in the library.
Only
when she’s using one computer in particular.’
‘1044?’
I asked, already knowing the
answer.
‘Yep,
1044.’ Silence fell as we
considered the implications. I leaned over to get a closer look at the
email,
my eyes falling to the bottom: ‘Best wishes, Charlotte Woodward.’
‘Thanks.
I have to go,’ I quickly
excused myself, dashing outside to get some air. What could this mean?
I’d
already decided Charlotte was a student here, but now I knew she was
here in
2007. That kind of made sense. But how could she be talking to me in
the
library before she died? How could I be writing now, and it be
appearing
on her PC in 2007?
‘Oh
God,’ I cursed, in realisation.
That explained how we could be in the same place. She wasn’t dead. She
just
hadn’t got here yet.
I ran
over to the library and up the
stairs to the fourth floor. Out of breath I burst into the room,
heading
immediately for 1044. Someone was sat on it, checking their Facebook.
‘Excuse
me, I need to use this
computer,’ I asked, the urgency evident in my tone.
The
guy looked up at me
unapologetically.
‘Sorry
pal, you should have booked it.’
‘You’re
not even using it for work!’ I
argued, motioning to the social networking site open on his screen.
‘Find
another computer mate, I’m using
this one.’ He held my stare for a second before looking back to the
screen.
Frustrated,
I picked up his bag and
made for the stairs outside. I could hear his protests and a sudden
shuffle of
movement as he clambered to his feet, still reeling from the shock that
I’d
stood up to him. Once at the stairwell I dropped his bag into the void,
watching as it fell down past each of the four floors. The guy careered
onto
the stairs just as his bag hit the ground floor with a dull thud.
‘Not
cool, man,’ I heard him snarl as
he ran off down the stairs. He’d be back, I didn’t have much time.
Sat at
1044 I quickly signed in and
opened up the Word document. Sure enough our last conversation was
still there.
‘What
year is it?’ I typed frantically.
‘2007,
why?’ She replied.
‘It’s
2010 here. You’re alive aren’t
you, in 2007?’
‘Of
course I’m alive. You’re the
ghost aren’t you?’ I smiled at the irony.
‘I’m
alive too, in 2010. I’m in the Library,
on the same computer as you, but three years later.’
There
was a pause as I waited for her
to reply. I couldn’t help thinking of the guy on the stairs, he must
have got his
bag by now.
‘Sorry,
I don’t have much time. Meet
me, outside the University Library,’ I looked at my watch, it was
2.20pm on the
5th May, ‘Meet me at 2.30pm, on the 5th May 2010.’
‘But
that’s ages away. I’ll be in my
final year.’
‘That’s
where I am. Sorry. You’ll have
to wait, but please, do meet me.’
I
could hear the angry footsteps on the
stairs. Quickly I signed out and took the exit to the opposite
stairwell,
heading further up to the fifth floor. There I hopped in the lift and
went all
the way down to ground level. With any luck I’d never see that guy
again; I
might have to avoid the fourth floor computer room for a little while,
though.
I
walked briskly through the electric
doors and out onto the library steps, I checked my watch, 2.28pm.
‘Dean?’
It was a soft feminine voice. I
turned quickly, and stood before me was a young woman in her early
twenties: about
right for someone in her final year by now. She had pale skin and dark
black
hair. She’d applied extra make-up to her eyes to make them look even
darker in
contrast to her white skin. She wore a black dress which stopped short
of the
knee, where equally black tights carriedmy eyes down to her polished
black military style boots. I wasn’t
surprised that this girl would
assume the person writing in her essay was a ghost.
‘Charlotte?’
I asked. She beamed a
smile and hugged me tightly.
‘I
can’t believe it’s you!’ I heard her
say, her voice muffled as she buried her head in my sweatshirt. I think
she was
crying. ‘It all seems so long ago now, when you last contacted me.’
For me
it had been less than five
minutes. When she softened her grip I suggested we go for a coffee.
There
was an awkward silence as we
stood in the coffee queue. I’d know her for weeks, and she’d known me
for years,
but we were strangers meeting for first time. In a way, there was so
much to
say, it seemed easier not to talk. I caught her eye a few times,
prompting her
to smile shyly, and I knew I must have been smiling in the same way. We
were
finally seated.
‘Why
didn’t you say you weren’t dead?’
She laughed.
‘I’d
forgotten you thought I was dead.
I thought you were dead.’
I was
still amazed by this.
‘Why?’
‘Well,’
she took a sip of her coffee ‘I
was only 18, and I was feeling low, and then my computer mysteriously
starts
writing me messages. A computer going by the name Dean.’ We both
laughed. ‘I
thought you were drawn to me, like some kind of guardian angel.’
There
was a short silence. I rested my
hand on hers and smiled.
‘I’m
sorry; I’m not a guardian angel.’
She looked up, slightly raising one eyebrow.
‘Maybe
not officially. But you were there
for me when nobody else was. I’d just arrived at Uni, nobody in halls
would
speak to me, I pretty much missed the whole of freshers’ week, I was
missing home—’
I
couldn’t help interrupting.
‘Sorry,
University is the place you’d
just arrived at? You were lonely because you’d just arrived at University?’
She
nodded.
‘Why,
where did you think I was?’
My
head fell in embarrassment.
‘Oh,’
I heard her stifle a giggle ‘You
thought I was in heaven?’ She laughed.
I
looked up defensively.
‘Well,
we have been talking to each
other through some kind of rift in time and space!’
She
controlled herself, an expression
that spoke of important business masking her sense of humour.
Eventually
she spoke again.
‘If
you thought I was dead, and I was
talking to you from heaven,’ she fought off a smile ‘then, why didn’t
you just
ask?’
‘You
thought I was dead as well, why
didn’t you ask me?’
She
considered.
‘I
didn’t think you’d want to talk
about it.’
I
nodded.
‘Exactly.’
I put
some more sugar in my coffee,
still trying to grasp all the elements of our situation.
‘So,
how come you were always on 1044?
Whenever I signed in you were always there. That’s partly why I thought
you
were haunting it.’
Charlotte
stared into her coffee a
moment before speaking.
‘In
first year, back when I was a
fresher, I didn’t have many friends. Partly because at first I wasn’t
big on
the whole socialising thing. I never knew how to start a conversation,
and when
I did I’d scare people off by talking about the ghost boy in my
computer.’
My
heart sank.
‘I’m
sorry,’ I offered.
‘Not
your fault,’ she countered, slowly
looking up ‘Anyway, the result was, I spent my whole time in the
library. And
after the first time you spoke to me I made sure I used that PC.’
That
made sense.
‘There’s
one other thing.’ I waited
until I had her full attention. ‘You had to wait three years to meet
me. That’s
almost the entire time of your degree. How did you know it was going to
work?
How did you know it was worth waiting for, and you weren’t going to
wait three
years and then nobody turn up?’
She
laughed.
‘I
knew because you told me.’
I
didn’t understand.
‘What?’
‘A few
hours after you told me where,
and when to meet you, you told me it had worked. You said you were with
me,
that you’d arrived outside the library a few minutes early and I’d
found you
straight away.’
And
that’s where we are.
We
just left the coffee shop and now we’re
back in the Library.
That’s
the story of how I met
Charlotte, the remarkable probably-dead girl who isn’t dead, but just
from the
past. We’re together, sat in front of PC 1044, and our document is on
the
screen.
Now, with a few words I’m going to ensure that
we do finally
meet.