Memory's Door (A Well Spring Novel)
Page 2
And for one, death will come before the appointed time.
Doug didn’t get his wish because the words seemed hollow and fluttered to the damp grass before getting anywhere near Reece’s heart. He sat in silence, the darkness seeming to draw out the time longer than it probably was.
“Is Brandon still the Song, Reece?”
“Yes.”
“And Dana remains the Leader, Marcus the Teacher?”
“Yes.” Reece spoke the words to the ground.
“And are you still the Temple?”
Reece rubbed his eye sockets till the stars came. But it wasn’t seeing. Only chemical reactions from his fingers stimulating neurons that fired a message to his brain that there were lights in front of him. “What do you want me to say?”
“Whatever you want to.”
What could Reece tell his friend that he hadn’t already said fifty times? That he wouldn’t feel like the Temple again without his sight and waiting for the prophecy to come true was wearing him thin as tissue paper? That at night he dreamed of being on the Skykomish River at dawn, or in the mountains, or at the ocean taking shots no one else would capture in quite the same way?
It wasn’t only the death of being able to take photos. An image of his walls of books slipped across his mind. No more grabbing his worn copy of Pensées or his heavily highlighted hardback first edition of Mere Christianity. No more sitting in the light of his reading lamp studying philosophy or theology till the grandfather clock in his hallway struck one in the morning. And no more leafing through the worn-out Bible he’d lived with for more than forty years.
The healing had to come quickly.
“And for one, their vision will grow clear . . .”
Reece had said it with such confidence the day he came home from the hospital and Dana, Marcus, Brandon, and Doug had stood against Zennon and defeated the demon. But that confidence had been shrinking every day and the fire was close to going out.
“No, I don’t want to talk about it. We’ve talked about it enough. There’s nothing more to say.”
Doug didn’t respond and Reece pictured his friend with a sympathetic smile. But it would soon be followed up with a penetrating question.
Doug’s chair creaked as if announcing his inquiry. “When?”
“When what?” Reece grabbed a piece of wood, pictured the fire pit in his mind, and tossed it where the pit should be.
“Nice toss. Right in the center.”
“I can’t lead them like this.”
“Which is the same thing you said to me nearly a year ago. So I’ll repeat what I said then. You must. There is no other choice. It is time to tell the four about the Wolf, determine exactly what humans the Wolf will use against us, and strategize our plans of engagement.”
Reece shoved his sunglasses higher on his nose. “Not like this. Not until the healing comes. The classes and training we’ve been doing at Well Spring over the past ten months have been potent. The number of our allies has grown, and those allies are taking the message back to their communities all over the country. There have been significant breakthroughs. Think of the letters and e-mails we get, Doug. It’s happening. We’ll keep doing that until—”
“You’ve pushed it off as long as possible. The Wolf grows more powerful daily.”
“The Wolf has been growing more powerful daily for ages. We can wait. Give it a little more time, six weeks, a month at least. The Spirit will come through for me and I’ll be healed.”
“That may be, but we cannot wait. The time to act is now. What has the Spirit told you? I believe Jesus is on his white horse with fire in his eyes, a sword in his hand, his cloak dipped in blood, and he is telling us to ride.”
Reece shifted in his chair. “How does the fire look?”
“The fire is fine.” Doug sighed. “Reece, we need to—”
“Are we still planning on putting them through the test? To prepare them for the Wolf?”
“Yes.”
“Without warning them about what they’ll face.”
“Yes.”
“I don’t know if they’re ready for that.”
“I don’t know either. That’s the point of them going through it.” Doug rested his hand on Reece’s arm. “Fret not for the other Warriors. Before the test I believe we should take them into the Wall of Colors. That will give them strength. And I want you to come with me.”
“I won’t go there without being able to see. It would be worse than not going at all.”
“All right, friend. The choice is yours.” Doug’s chair squeaked and his voice came from above Reece. “Your time is coming. I don’t know how it will play out, but have faith, Reece. He will never forsake you.”
Reece waited till the sound of Doug’s footsteps had long faded before rising from the bench and making his way back to his home. Come on. His friend was right. He needed to snap out of it—had to snap out of it. Marcus, Brandon, Dana, Doug, and he would gather two days from now, and Reece needed to be strong for them and for himself. This was exactly the web the enemy would want him to become ensnared in. Pity. Self-focus. Only worried about when his sight would be restored. His mind knew the truth of it, but his feelings didn’t agree.
Reece breathed deep and sank inside himself. “Lord, speak. Please.”
You must ride. This is not about you.
The Spirit’s voice was as clear as he’d ever heard it.
“When will I be healed, Lord?”
This journey is not about you, and yours is not to know the future. Yours is to trust.
He took in another deep breath and held it as the truth reached his heart. I surrender, Lord.
Peace washed over him and he let the breath whoosh into the cool morning air. Doug was right. They needed to move forward and as impossible as it seemed, Reece would lead the charge.
As he stepped onto his back deck, his cell phone just inside his house spit out “Break On Through (To the Other Side)” by the Doors.
He flicked open his watch and rubbed the face. Seven thirty-nine. Who was calling him this early? The song stopped as he opened the screen door. Doug must have picked up his cell.
“Hello?” The sound of Doug’s footsteps came toward him. “No, this is his friend Doug. Who is calling please?” The footsteps stopped a few feet in front of Reece.
“Please wait and I’ll see if he’s available.” Reece pictured Doug covering up the mouthpiece of his cell phone. “It’s Tamera. Do you want to take it?”
Reece held out his hand and a moment later felt his cell phone settle into his palm. “Hello, Tamera.”
“I need to come see you.” Her voice was clipped and too loud.
“What would we talk about?”
“What happened to me at Well Spring during my training with the other new students.”
“And what was that?” Reece eased through the back door and sat at his kitchen table. He didn’t need this. She’d been pinging him every few weeks since she ran into Marcus last summer at the Space Needle about getting deeper in with the ministry.
The first time they’d talked Reece suggested the best way to go deeper was to attend one of their training sessions in Colorado at Well Spring Ranch. She’d refused. He said the same thing the second time she called. The third time she said she’d go and she had. He hadn’t been there, but Brandon, Marcus, and Dana said things went well.
“I’ll explain when we meet. I just want to ask you a few questions.”
Reece rubbed his forehead. “Can you ask them now?”
“In person would be better.”
“This is a busy time for me, Tamera.”
“It’s been a busy time for you for the past six months. I went through the training as you suggested. You implied we could get together after I did.”
“I did not.”
“I think you did.”
Reece sighed. “All right, how does Sunday at three o’clock sound?”
“Fine, where would you like to meet?”
> “Can you come to my home?”
“Of course.”
Reece hung up and squeezed his cell phone.
“What did she want?” Doug’s voice came from his left.
“To make life more difficult.”
“The enemy is not going to rest just because you are.”
“I’m not resting.”
“You’re waiting. Holding back. You can’t—we can’t—afford for you to do so.” Doug squeezed Reece’s shoulder. “When the Warriors gather here on Sunday night, you need to be ready.”
“I came to that same conclusion at the fire pit.” Reece raised his face in the direction of Doug’s voice. “I’ll be ready for Sunday night.”
“Really?”
“I’m done with the self-pity.”
“Excellent.”
Reece heard the smile in Doug’s voice, but his tone grew somber a moment later.
“There is little doubt in my spirit that the enemy is going to step up his attack. If he knows we’re soon to go after the Wolf and his associates, he’ll be coming for all of us in greater measure.”
“I agree. I’ve felt it. With more subtlety this time.” The demon Zennon they’d faced ten months back wasn’t overt, but he wasn’t subtle either. He wouldn’t make the same mistake again. And neither would the Wolf.
Reece pulled his beat-up Stetson down on his forehead. “Have you sensed the attack will be focused on any of us in particular?”
“The one who comes to mind with the greatest frequency is the professor.”
FOUR
“DO OTHER REALITIES OR UNIVERSES TRULY EXIST?”
A roar of delight broke out on Friday mid-morning in Professor Marcus Amber’s class in the physics and astronomy building on the University of Washington campus. He grinned as he stood at the podium in front of forty or so students who whooped and applauded at the question like they were rabid Brandon Scott fans.
That was the question Marcus’s class had been waiting to hear. It was the main reason his Physics 401 class was always full, with at least another twenty-three students on the waiting list. It surprised him every quarter that there were people as drawn to the idea of alternate realities as he was. And this quarter it wasn’t theory. Not that he truly believed alternate realities existed. Yes, he’d written a book on it—quantum mechanics supported the idea—but he didn’t believe there were other universes where you could meet altered versions of yourself or your friends and family.
But he certainly now believed there were spiritual dimensions beyond what most Christians dreamed of, and that at least some of the most seemingly outlandish, mind-bending stories in the Bible were true. He was living them. And in a certain sense, they qualified as alternate realities.
Marcus held up his hand to quiet his students. “I’m going to ask you to boldly go where many classes have gone before. It’s your turn to follow in the footsteps of twenty-one classes before you. It has now fallen among you to prove or disprove the existence of other realities and universes.”
A shout came from a student in the back of the room. “Do you believe in them, Professor?”
Marcus chuckled. “I take it you haven’t read my book.”
The young man stood. “No, I have read your book and you don’t ever give a definitive answer.”
Marcus jabbed his pen in the direction of the student. “I see we have a sharp one among us this quarter. ’Tis true. I do not divulge my personal position on the subject within the covers of my book.”
“So are you going to tell us?”
“I understand a number of you already know where I stand with regard to my beliefs in the alternate realities, even though I have sworn all my previous students to secrecy. But even if you do know and they have explained to you why I believe what I believe, I will presume they didn’t explain to you the same way I would and with the complete explanation I can. So hopefully you will be enlightened even if you do already know.”
“In other words, you’re not going to tell us now.”
“Yes.” Marcus slipped off his glasses and set them on the podium. “I believe in dimensions other than the one in which we typically reside.”
The majority of the class cheered, but the student at the back wasn’t finished. “And that we can get to them.”
“Other dimensions, yes. Alternate realities, no.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“There is a high probability that by the end of the quarter you’ll find out.”
Marcus slid his glasses back on, pulled up a slide on his computer, and pointed to the white screen on the back wall of the classroom. “In case you haven’t already heard, here’s how the class will work. Half of you will argue for the existence of alternate realities, the other half against. It doesn’t matter to me if you believe what you’re arguing or not. In fact, I suggest you choose to play for the side whose argument to which you don’t subscribe. To convince others of your way of thinking, you must understand completely what they believe, why they believe what they do, and be able to state it with clarity.”
Marcus shut his laptop and put it in his satchel. “The rest of the class today will be spent dividing into teams. My capable TA will handle the details. I’ll see you on Monday.”
As Marcus stood on a street corner just west of campus waiting for the light to change, a man a foot to his right shuffled closer. He didn’t stop till his left shoulder was within two inches of Marcus’s. A space invader. Great. Marcus wished he could zap the guy into oblivion just like he used to do with that ancient video game he played when he was a kid.
On an airplane? Yes, being jammed within centimeters of strangers was unavoidable due to the airline’s penchant for making a profit. But on the corner of the Ave and 45th, it wasn’t necessary for this man to snuggle up to him like Marcus and Kat did in front of their big screen on cold January nights.
Marcus grimaced and took a step to the left. So did the man. Marcus glanced to his left. The woman next to him stared at the proximity of his shoulder, then scowled at him. He sighed and willed the light to change.
The man to his right scooted another quarter inch closer, then crept forward till the middle of his shoes were on the edge of the curb. He balanced there, his feet rocking back and forth as if to keep his balance, the edge of his dark red shirt brushing Marcus’s as he swayed.
Marcus studied the man’s face. A thick black goatee splattered with gray took some of the attention away from his slightly oversized ears. His full head of hair was the same color as his goatee. His eyes were slate gray and the kind that always seemed to be laughing at some inside joke. Fifty? Fifty-five? Somewhere in that age range.
Marcus was about to step backward to get some breathing room when the man cocked his head, looked up, and spoke.
“Finally.” He winked.
His gaze roamed Marcus’s face as if he knew something secret and was proud of the fact.
Marcus frowned. “Excuse me?”
“We finally get to meet. You and me.” He laced and unlaced his fingers three times and stared at them like they might fly away. “I’ve been waiting, and I’m not always the most patient person in this reality or any other. Especially this one. Because this is the real one. I think. Almost positively sure.”
This reality? Oh boy. Either an ex-student or someone who had read his book and had come to believe crossing over into other realities was more than theory.
“I see.”
“No, you don’t, oh no, you don’t. But you will.” He smacked his lips and tapped his nose four times. “You will, Professor. I can spot ’em. People like you and me, you know? You’ve got it on you. He’s coming after you. Because you’re the key, you see.”
“How do you know I’m a professor?”
The man poked his head with his thumb. “Lots of brain cells working overtime.”
“And your name?” Marcus didn’t offer his hand.
“That will be revealed in due time, mon frère.”
 
; “I wouldn’t say we’re friends.”
“We will be.” The man rubbed his hands together. “I’m almost positive of that. We could call it a fact. Upon which we should act.”
A second later the light changed and Marcus pushed off into the street. Dr. Strange remained on the corner, still rocking on the edge of the curb.
“I’ll see you again soon,” he murmured as Marcus strode away.
“Is that so?” Marcus called over his shoulder.
“Yes. Absolutely. You need me, you do, you do. I promise it’s true.”
“Wonderful.” Marcus marched forward and waved his hand but didn’t turn. “I’m not sure I’ll survive the anticipation of seeing you again.”
“Nor I,” the man called, “so I must be spry, because your choice could pass by in the blink of an eye.”
Wow. The man had good hearing. When Marcus reached the other side of the street, he turned to see if the man still stood on the corner but he was gone. A moment later light flashed against the window of the Gingko Tea store and into Marcus’s eyes. He squeezed them shut, all sound vanished, and his legs went to jelly. He expected to faint but his strength returned a second later and he opened his eyes.
He almost wished he hadn’t. The street, the buildings, the cars, and everyone around him had all vanished.
FIVE
MARCUS FOUND HIMSELF STANDING ON THE EDGE OF A soccer field full of young girls, the air filled with shouts from the sparse crowd on either side. What was this? Where was this? He spun in a slow circle. He was in a park surrounded by northwest trees, and the place felt vaguely familiar but he didn’t recognize it. Was this a vision from the Spirit? Maybe. If so, it felt so much more real than last time. Could he be in someone’s soul? No, he knew that feeling well and this didn’t feel anything like that. Plus he’d never gone in involuntarily. And never alone. Where am I?
He turned back and studied the girls on the field. Should he know one of them? None of them looked . . . Wait! At the far end of the field it was Abbie, wasn’t it? If this was real maybe he’d been teleported here. But why? As he stared at Abbie his stomach churned. Something was off. She looked younger than she should. At least two years. Maybe more.