“And that makes it all better, no?” the old man said. “Leadership provided by your president here in Paris failed at home, so the fact that the other countries-”
“
“They are all responsible,” the old man said.
Decker was frowning now.
“You were telling me about soldiers and little boys,” Decker said, trying to get past this confusion. “Soldiers, little boys, and backwards nightmares.”
“They are not nightmares,” the younger man said. “They are visions. The future, haunting us here and now.”
Decker frowned. “The future?”
The young man nodded. “Events so powerful they reach backwards to us. We have seen the soldiers for generations now. We have not understood them until-what is it you call it?-the Peace of Paris.”
“You understand it now?” Decker asked.
“We understand that they are Germans.”
“Marching into Paris.” Decker snorted. “Are you hoping for this?”
Three men from nearby tables stared. Most everyone here served in the War or had lost someone who had.
“No,” the younger man said, holding up his hands. “It is the worst kind of tragedy. But we do know, from the students who are also a vision leaching backwards, that Paris herself will stand.”
“The students.” Decker wasn’t going to ask any more and he wasn’t going to reveal what he had seen. He was assuming the younger man meant the grubby students he had seen some nights as he walked up the Boulevard St. Michel.
“St. Sulpice stands. Notre Dame stands. Le Tour Eiffel stands. In the distance, away from the shouting, you can see Sacre Coeur. The bridges remain. If the Germans were to destroy Paris, they would bomb the bridges so that no army could follow. Then they would destroy the monuments to destroy our souls.”
Decker couldn’t resist any longer. “How do you know the students appear later?”
“They are less solid.”
“You can’t touch them?” Decker asked.
“No,” the younger man said. “You have not tried?”
He had avoided everything. He had avoided the students and the soldiers and the flags. He heard the whispery voices, and figured they had come from his own drunkenness.
“Can you touch current nightmares?” Decker asked.
“Only reality,” the old man said.
Her skin, cold against Decker’s fingers. So she
Why would he have spoken to her? He wasn’t yet working for the
“Ah,” the old man said, peering into Decker’s face. “Something precipitated your visions. You did not see them when you first came to Paris.”
Decker looked at him. The old man’s skin was papery thin, his eyebrows so bushy they seemed to grow toward his scalp.
Paris had been clean. Paris had been pure. Truly the City of Light, all beauty and glistening stone, history calling to him.
Not like Milwaukee. Milwaukee had turned dark, especially near the lakefront. He had seen corpses of sailors, washed against the rocks, their uniforms still sodden with the waters of Lake Michigan. He had screamed the first time, and people had run to him, not to them, not even when he pointed…
He shook his head. He did not want to think of this. He did not want to remember it, how each street had something, someone, who sprawled along a road or had been shot on apartment steps or had been squashed flat by a new-fangled motorcar.
Sometimes two, sometimes three per block. He had walked with his eyes closed, and his mother-his beautiful tiny mother-whispering that he had to do something else, something that took him away from death.
And she had given him all of her pin money, money he knew she relied upon to get away from his father.
His father, who drank.
“What was it that precipitated these visions?” the old man asked. “A drink, perhaps. You like your drink.”
Decker stared at him, feeling his gaze go flat with anger.
“No, it could not be drink,” the younger man said. “Or he wouldn’t continue drinking. It’s got to be hereditary. Let me see your hands.”
Decker closed his hands into fists. He didn’t want these people to touch him. He looked at the old man.
“You said you had a story for me.”
“I have a city of stories, if you’re willing to listen,” the old man said. “But first, we must see the root of your vision.”
Decker stared at him, then slowly, reluctantly, extended his right hand.

He had first seen her on the Champs Elysees, a vision in white. She looked like the old world blending with the new, her Gibson Girl hairdo, the wide-brimmed hat (with ribbons trailing it) that she carried in her left hand. Her dress was narrow, with a flip just near the knees, her stockings perfect, her shoes solid, old-fashioned, buttoned-up leather.
He had seen no Parisian woman dressed like that-mixing styles. Parisian women had their own style, a lot more fluid, a lot more suggestive, and all of them wore cloche hats (if they wore hats at all). She smiled when she saw him, a broad, wide American smile, the kind that held nothing back.
He tipped his hat to her. She laughed and continued onward as if she had known they would see each other again.
Of course they had. She had been looking at the sights, such a tourist, and he had been moving from park bench to park bench, staring at the monuments.
He had talked with her on Pont Neuf, more than once. She had laughed and flirted and never once told him her name. No one seemed to want to tell him names.
The thought disconcerted him for a moment, and the image of her laughing face wavered. He heard voices all around him, male voices mostly, and the air filled with tobacco smoke. An old man was peering at the palm of his hand as if it held the secrets of the universe.
And then she was back, looking at him sideways. She was holding his hand, palm up, as if she could see his future in it. She was young, enjoying Paris. He hadn’t enjoyed Paris until her. Not like this-climbing the Eiffel Tower and going to Versailles to see the gardens, wandering through the Louvre, and eating bread and cheese for lunch in the Tuileries.
And he wrote. How he wrote. The novel, abandoned, he didn’t care about Lincoln. He wrote instead about-
… the woman, discarded, like abandoned laundry at the base of the bridge. Her killer, dark, darker than anything Edgar Allan Poe could imagine in his darkest Rue Morgue dreams. The man carried her from the bridge itself, down the side, preparing to dump her in the Seine when someone called out…
He looked up, saw the younger man staring at him with something like horror, the old man with eyes full of compassion.
“Corpse Vision,” the young man said. “You have Corpse Vision.”

Decker wasn’t sure he wanted them to tell him what Corpse Vision was, although he had a hunch he knew.
The memories scrolled backwards-like the nightmares the old man had mentioned-the first homicide call on the