After hours, school hallways are lonely places - like cemeteries after dusk; subtle hints of decomposition lurk. I imagined Mrs. Johnson falling out of a locker. Freaked, I broke into a sprint, punching the lockers as I ran. I burst through the front doors of the Junior High.

Shannie sat Indian Style atop the concrete abutment in front of the piano factory. Her face - camouflaged by billowing hair - buried in a book. I slithered across Cemetery Street, across the sidewalk and up the short bench. I dove behind the hedge in front of the piano factory. I looked over the hedge, Shannie was floating towards the school.

"Hey Bug!" I cried.

"What the are you doing up there?" Shannie asked.

"I got lost," I answered.

Since that afternoon, I have tried to sneak up on Shannie on occasion. I never had any luck. "How do you know?" I asked. Beats me, she shrugged. That New Year's Eve the opportunity to test her ability presented itself.

Diane was a big shot with Laurel Hill Cemetery - a Victorian boneyard on the banks of the Schuylkill River in the East Falls section of Philadelphia. "The cemetery has a hundred thousand 'residents." Diane said. "It's the Main Line of the Dead."

New Year's Eve was the birthday Diane's favorite resident: Civil War General George Gordon Meade - Diane and rest of the Friend's of Laurel Hill used the opportunity to sip champagne and act genteel. After a brief ceremony commemorating the general, the wonks retired to the gate house - the only entrance to the city of the dead - leaving Shannie and I to frolic amongst Obelisks and Mausoleums that populated the terraced cemetery.

A light, persistent snow fell, shrouding the cemetery in gray silence. Our words seemed muffled - distant, otherworldly. Despite the snow, the sun made momentary appearances, casting a dull orange glow over the necropolis. On the horizon, an occasional sunbeam slipped between the clouds, as if claiming another soul for the heavens. Thirteen years later, I would experience the same eerie conditions.

"Imagine…" Shannie whispered. We stood shoulder to shoulder facing a sandstone cenotaph."…the thought that went into this, the symbolism, the choice of sandstone over granite. Exquisite." At eye level rested a decaying sandstone coffin, the top half of its lid ajar, exposing the sculptured likeness of the deceased. Lower in the coffin, an angel rose from the heart.

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"It's over the top," I whispered. Why are we whispering? I wondered.

"You can say that," Shannie said.