The man on the Harley Davidson circled us slowly at first, the engine low and growling like an animal protecting its territory. The headlamp cut through the sea mist in pale slices. Behind him stretched an opening in the dunes, and beyond that, the ocean itself, black and endless.
Broken boats littered the shoreline and the water beyond it.
Not driftwood.
Not wreckage from storms.
Actual boats.
Fishing vessels split down the middle. Small sailboats overturned like dead insects. Rotting hulls half submerged, gently rocking in the tide as though something beneath the water breathed against them. Their masts leaned at impossible angles. Some looked burned. Others looked abandoned in panic.
The Harley rider turned slowly toward us.
“Follow me.”
His voice was calm, amused.
And naturally, against all instinct, we obeyed.
The mansion appeared suddenly through the fog like an hallucination. Huge. White. Colonial architecture. Balconies and towering windows facing the sea as though the house itself worshipped the darkness rolling in from the horizon.
Beautiful from a distance.
But madness often is.
Inside, there were people everywhere.
Older men with expensive watches hanging loosely around stick like wrists. Women with faded glamour, lipstick bleeding into the lines around their mouths. Crystal glasses. Cigarette smoke. Laughter too loud to be genuine.
Nobody acknowledged our arrival at first.
Not one face turned.
We stood awkwardly near the doorway feeling like intruders who had wandered accidentally into the afterlife itself.
Then eventually a woman noticed us.
She laughed.
Soon the others joined her.
Not cruel exactly.
But entertained. Like children observing stray dogs attempting to sit at a dinner table.
I sat finally upon a velvet chair near the fireplace and immediately felt the springs collapse beneath me. The upholstery was torn open. Yellow foam bulged through the seams like exposed flesh. Everywhere I looked the mansion carried this same contradiction.
Grandeur collapsing quietly.
Gilded frames blackened with mould.
Paintings warped by salt damp.
Silver trays tarnished green.
The illusion of wealth rotting in plain sight.
The Harley rider approached carrying two drinks. "I'm David. "
Up close he was tired looking, small in stature. Compact. Wiry. Curly silver-grey hair framing a face that had once undoubtedly been handsome. The type of man women forgive too much.
“You see,” he said, noticing me studying the furniture, “I do not replace any of this now.”
“Why not?”
He smiled.
“ There is no point. When I am gone, the children will only care about the structure. Nobody inherits sentiment.”
I told him he looked healthy. Strong. A man with years ahead of him still.
He laughed at that.
“I have already died. I am dead.”
The room seemed quieter suddenly.
Not silent.
Never silent.
The laughter continued elsewhere in pockets, glasses clinking softly, but around him there seemed to be a strange pressure in the air.
“I had five children. Maybe six, seven even.”
“You don’t know?”
“One loses count eventually.”
He stared toward the black ocean through the windows.
“My last wife was very young. Beautiful. Too beautiful perhaps. She gave me two babies. There was jealousy. Arguments. Suspicion. Possession. You know how humans are when they begin confusing love with ownership.”
His fingers tapped slowly against the dirty glass.
“I shot myself with a shotgun one night, when we had been fighting, we were drunk, we had enjoyed some class A's also.”
No one nearby reacted.
As though they had heard this story hundreds of times already.
“I died. Left the body. Moved into the next dimension. Problem solved.”
“And?”
“And then I killed myself again.”
That sentence. What? Of course it made no sense. “You cannot die twice.”
His pale eyes met mine.
“Oh yes,” he whispered. “You can die many times.”
Outside the tide crashed violently against the skeletal boats.
He explained slowly, almost gently, like a teacher speaking to a child unable to grasp mathematics.
“The first death removes the body. But the second death…” he leaned closer, “…the second death removes the lie.”
“What lie?”
“The person you believed yourself to be, when the body dies, consciousness remains exactly as it was. Arrogant men remain arrogant. Jealous men remain jealous. Violent men remain violent. Death does not cleanse anything. It merely strips away the disguise."
“You carry your sickness with you.”
The room is feeling colder.
The people seated around us no longer seemed drunk or joyful. Their laughter had become mechanical somehow. Delayed. Hollow. Some stared into space, others started to wail like injured animals, nobody noticed.
One woman near the piano had tears rolling down her cheeks while smiling broadly at absolutely nothing.
What the hell is this?
“What faith are you?” He asks.
“Kabbalah. Hinduism. Buddhism. Pieces of all of them.”
“Not Christianity?” He smirked faintly.
"Christianity should have been about conduct. Mercy. Protection. Kindness. Instead humans transformed it into theatre. Performance for frightened crowds. That is how I feel, how I think. Christianity is an action."
The chandeliers flickered overhead.
For one brief second the lights dimmed enough that every face in the mansion appeared corpse-like. Hollowed eyes, teeth too big for the face, all smiling, but not actually smiling, just showing teeth.
Then brightness returned, dimmer than before.
“What is the second death?” I asked quietly.
He stared directly at me now.
“The moment you realise you were never important. That you are but a grain of sand in a desert.”
That makes sense. To me.
“Your possessions gone. Your enemies continuing life without you. Your children eventually forgetting the sound of your voice. Your beautiful face collapsing into the soil. Your grudges becoming microscopic. No one cares. They will cry for 20 minutes then go eat the free buffet. ”
He smiled then.
Not kindly.
Wearily.
“I refused to accept this. Even after death I clung to my old identity. My house. My women. My anger. And so I destroyed myself again in the next world.”
“You committed suicide… spiritually?”
“In a sense.”
“And now?”
“Now I am returned here. To walk the Earth.”
“To haunt the house?”
“No,” he replied softly. “To understand it.”
The ocean outside roared like a starving Lion.
I suddenly noticed stains spreading across the mansion ceiling. Cracks travelling slowly through the walls. Salt erosion eating the foundations. The entire structure was decaying from within despite its magnificent exterior.
Like the people seated inside it. Slowly dying, but rapidly decaying. That sweet smell of decay (...)
Like all of us.
The Harley rider stood slowly.
Every face turned toward him.
And for the first time since arriving, none of them were smiling.
“You fear death too much,” he said. “You should fear becoming trapped between deaths. For we have to die many times. Only when you can live through the final cycle of life's lessons without getting blood on your hands, or committing acts of darkness against the light do you get to rest peacefully. ”
The lights went out completely then. David and the Harley had disappeared and we were back on the ferry crossing the Hudson.
And somewhere out there, in a place no one has ever seen, is the grand mansion, out amongst the wrecked boats drifting in the black water, with something enormous and unknown moving beneath the surface.
And somewhere out there is David, riding his motorcycle in circles for all eternity.
