Between The Doors. Wes Peters

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Between The Doors - Wes Peters

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western cinema really bring peace in the modern age? Could gunslingers even exist in the 21st century? Andrew had his doubts.

      Andrew remembered something his mother had said when he had started reading The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. “All good stories,” she said, as he sat back on the porch and she kneeled down in the garden, “start when a character takes on a new part.”

      Andrew, nine years old, didn’t get it. “When they step into somebody else’s shoes, and leave their own behind,” she explained. Her pale face was beautiful in the spring light, as her crisp brown hair blew in the wind. It hurt Andrew to think about now. Her words echoed in his head. Suddenly Andrew wanted to leave his beat-up Nike’s behind in this grove and don a pair of cowboy boots. He straightened and addressed Nick.

      “Rise!” He cried in his deepest voice. Nick looked up in surprise. “Rise, Nickolas, son of Smith. I accept your service and thank you for your blessing.” Andrew felt ten feet tall. Nickolas climbed to his feet, his eyes locked on the gunslinger. The twilight beaming into the grove from the canopy illuminated Andrew’s face as he beamed.

      Andrew looked around. “Uh…” he shifted somewhat uncomfortably. “So… what is this place? Did anyone come through here?” He turned to survey the grove, expecting the cloaked stranger to pop out of the trees. He didn’t.

      Trees surrounded the grove, in a neat circle. No leaves littered the ground- the grass remained untouched and green. On the far side of the grove, not ten feet from where the boys stood facing one another, stood a door. The oak monolith was attached to the largest tree in the grove, though the door’s frame exceeded the tree’s girth. Andrew thought it had a funny look to it, as if someone had propped a door upright against the tree.

      Sensing Andrew’s eyes on the door, Nickolas shrugged. “Beats me,” he said. “Not sure what this place is all about, sir. I’ve been alone here all day.” Andrew had to conceal a smile as Nick called him sir. “To be honest, I just woke up ‘ere. I’m beginning to think this isn’t my world at ohl.” Andrew furrowed his brow at the odd pronunciation of such a familiar word.

      “What do you mean?” Andrew asked.

      “Well, for starters, there’s no guns in my world,” Nick said. “Or gunfighters, none of ‘em neither. We only tell stories of guns. They’re just legends, not the real thing.” Andrew eyed the boy curiously.

      “How did you get here?”

      At this question, Nick cast his eyes downward at his feet. Andrew stepped forward and put his hand on the boy’s shoulder.

      “What happened?” Andrew asked, his eyes burning with curiosity.

      After a short moment of silence, Nickolas looked up, but not at Andrew. He peered into the deep darkness of the forest.

      “I died. . .I think.”

      VII

      He had been sitting there for some time before the gunfighter entered the grove. Nick had begun to grow hungry, and that was strange—he didn’t think ghosts could eat. He had tried chewing on some grass, but it was bitter on his tongue and he spit it out. Grass tasted bad whether you were dead or not dead.

      Nick, who had always been told he was slow by his parents (though they weren’t so smart neither, Nick thought—not book smart at least), couldn’t quite grasp what had happened, and what was going on in this grove. If he was dead, then why was he here? He pondered this for quite some time when he woke up in the grove that morning, and when he spotted the door his questions multiplied.

      The door was locked, as Nick had discovered when he tried opening it earlier. What lies beyond it? The boy wondered as he sat in front of the door, feeling the grass under his hands and the hot still spring around him. Perhaps it was a door back to the living world, he figured. That would explain why it’s locked, he thought.

      If that was true, then should he get up and leave the grove? Would that make this new world he had woken up in the afterlife? That scared Nick, and he quit thinking about it.

      One thing, however, terrified the boy even worse than the concept that this new world was some kind of afterlife. As he paced around the grove that day, waiting to come up with an answer or for someone else to find out an answer for him, he was suddenly struck by a horrifying thought: what if the door led to the afterlife?

      Can’t be, thought the boy. Nobody ever said you enter the next life through a door, that’s just silliness.

      “But then again,” the boy reasoned out loud, “nobody knows what going to the next life is like cause once you go, you don’t come back.”

      So it was a definite possibility. After all, he was dead. Or was he? He was sort of confused about that too. Sure, he had fallen, fallen a hundred feet or more, higher than the boy had ever climbed in his life. As the wind had whipped at his face on his death fall from the Clock Tower, he had not screamed nor wet his pants. He had simply awaited the end. The crack would sound as his neck snapped on the cobblestone street below and the numb feeling would rush through his body as his spine shattered. He would’ve screamed, would’ve wet his pants, but the view of the rising world around him was too incredible for young Nick to do anything but stare in amazement as he fell and the ground rose up to meet him. He didn’t think of the people he’d miss, or the fact that he’d never lain with a woman (he’d heard stories from the older boys, but could hardly believe that a man and a woman would do… that). All he could do was watch and wait for that final crack that would let him know that it was all over.

      The crack never came, he reminded himself as he sat in the grove. Instead of hearing that crack, he’d woken up in this strange place. Though Nickolas had never been to school a day in his life, he knew that some things in life demanded proof. Especially, he decided, something as important as one’s death. If he wasn’t dead, that meant all bets were off. In that case, it wouldn’t make sense that this grove was the entrance to the afterlife, and the locked door the exit of his world; it also wouldn’t make sense that this grove was the exit of his world and this door the entrance to the next life. If he wasn’t dead, though, how’d he end up in this grove? None of it made much sense to Nickolas. So he took a seat in the grass, and waited patiently for someone to figure it out for him.

      VIII

      Andrew stood before Nick, listening to his story and trying to sort it all out. Andrew knew that Nick wasn’t telling it all. He could see, however, that Nick was traumatized from whatever had happened; whenever the boy began talking about ‘falling’ he would stutter and look away.

      “Well Nick,” Andrew said when the boy finished talking, “you’re not dead. If you were a ghost, I couldn’t touch you right?” He put a hand on Nick’s shoulder, who tensed up at first, then relaxed. “See? You’re not dead. You probably just dreamed the fall.” Nick, however, shook his head.

      “Alright, well maybe not. But one thing is for sure, Nick,” Andrew continued, and gestured at the stairs behind him. “This world is mine. Above this grove, we’re in the gracious state of New Jersey. Are you from New Jersey?”

      Nick shook his head. “Never heard of it.”

      Andrew reconsidered. “Delaware? Maine? Maryland?” Nick shook his head comically at each of these. Andrew tried a shot in the dark. “Texas?” No luck. Andrew gave up. “Where are you from?”

      “Ever hear of Sunsetville, sir?” asked Nick. Now it was Andrew’s turn to shake his head. “I live outside,

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