Greta lifted her arms, stretching the white smock over the lines of her body. "Darling!" she said.
"Greta!" he said, feeling a slight revulsion but repressing it. No doubt he would be able to adjust to her once having been dead the same way he had learned to accept the, to him, distasteful duty of kissing her ears the way she enjoyed.
Greta swirled across the room and folded her arms across his shoulders. She kissed his cheek. "It's so wonderful to be back. This calls for a celebration. We must see Nancy, Oscar, Johnny, all our old friends."
"Yes," he said, his heart lurching for her sad ignorance. "But tell me—how was it being away?"
The curves and angles of her flesh changed their positions against his Ivy dacron. Her attitude altered.
"I can't remember," she said. "I can't really remember anything. Not really. My memories are ghosts...."
"Now, now," Linton said, "we mustn't get excited. You've been through a trial."
She accepted the verdict. She pulled away and touched at her hair. It was the same hair, black as evil, contrasting with her inner purity. Of course it would be; it hadn't changed even in the grave. He remembered the snaky tendrils of it growing out of the water-logged casket.
"I must see all our old friends," Greta persisted. "Helen and Johnny...."
"My darling," he said gently, "about Johnny—"