I hung up with a bad taste in my mouth—I realized it wasn’t Warren’s poetry
that would take me to Margo. I kept thinking about those lines at the end Margo
had underlined: “I bequeath myself to the dirt to grow from the grass I love, / If
you want me again look for me under your bootsoles.” That grass, Whitman
writes in the first few pages, is “the beautiful uncut hair of graves.” But where
were the graves? Where were the paper towns?
I logged onto Omnictionary to see if it knew anything more about the phrase
“paper towns” than I did. They had an extremely thoughtful and helpful entry
created by a user named skunkbutt: “A Paper Town is a town that’s got a paper
mill in it.” This was the shortcoming of Omnictionary: the stuff written by Radar
was thorough and extremely helpful; the unedited work of skunkbutt left
something to be desired. But when I searched the whole Web, I found something
interesting buried forty entries down on a forum about real estate in Kansas.
Looks like Madison Estates isn’t going to get built; my husband and I
bought property there, but someone called this week to say they’re
refunding us our deposit because they didn’t presell enough houses to
finance the project. Another paper town for KS! —Marge in Cawker, KS
A pseudovision! You will go to the pseudovisions and you will never come
back. I took a deep breath and stared at the screen for a while.
The conclusion seemed inescapable. Even with everything broken and
decided inside her, she couldn’t quite allow herself to disappear for good. And
she had decided to leave her body—to leave it for me—in a shadow version of
our subdivision, where her first strings had broken. She had said she didn’t want
her body found by random kids—and it made sense that out of everyone she
knew, she would pick me to find her. She wouldn’t be hurting me in a new way.
I’d done it before. I had experience in the field.
I saw that Radar was online and was clicking over to talk to him when an IM
from him popped up on my screen.
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