The door had been bolted and barred longer than anyone could
remember. It seemed better to go in through the side anyway. Long-ago one
insistent person had begun the slow process of removing the plaster and stones,
chipping away at the mortar with a spoon as if he was a prisoner breaking out.
And yet he was free, he was outside. It made no sense to the passers-by, what
he was doing, but he wasn’t in their way so they let him be, free to scratch
and scrape as he pleased.
The ownership of the building had passed into public domain
by this point so not even the police or the insurance company felt the need to
get involved. So he scraped away day by day, but only when the shadows
protected him. His skin was too fair to risk being out in the Guadal sun for
very long.
He thought he’d be through in a week, tops. But the builders
had done their job well so it took nearly 2 months to make a hole big enough
for him to crawl through. And what treasure did he find on the other side! You
would have thought he was Howard Carter in his excitement. He could barely keep
his joy to himself. The neighboring shopkeepers hurried over for the whoops and
chortles. They’d long gotten used to this strange visitor but this was
something else. They stooped down and peered in – and saw nothing, nothing save
the unusual prospector with his spoon, sitting in the middle of the empty room,
talking up a storm to the air.
And that was that. Nothing to see here. Move along. The town,
collectively but silently, agreed to let him stay there.
Who cared if he was a little weird? Who minded if he saw
things that weren’t there? They left him to himself the same as they left
people who didn’t see what was there.
Maybe he was more advanced than they were. Maybe it wasn’t time for them to see
the treasures yet. Who could say? So they left him be, but they contracted to
have a window built in the gap he made. It wouldn’t do to have people coming in
to bother him. Only those who were persistent (and particular) enough to go in
via the window were worthy of an audience with the Prince of the Invisible
anyway.
Because that is who he had become. Or maybe he’d
always been? Maybe this was who he truly was, underneath the mask of normalcy
he’d always put on when he was around everyone else. Maybe he’d always seen the
spirits the same as solid people. Or maybe the potential had only been unlocked
on that day when he’d finally crossed the threshold, especially on such an
unusual way. Perhaps the spirits took note of his persistence.
Perhaps it was none of that and it was just finally time for
the talent to be revealed to the town, like he was at a debutante ball. Now he
was fully himself, out in the open, at large. Now he was multidimensional and
could openly use all of his senses.
He held court with the spirits in that room for days at a
time, seemingly unaware that time was passing. He didn’t grow tired or hungry
while he was with them either. It is as if he took on some of their
characteristics while he was with them. When he would leave the room, he would
return to the world of the physical and require all the usual things and be
subject to all the usual limitations. No wonder he seemed to prefer his time
inside, where the spirits acknowledged and even respected him. It was much
better among them than with regular people.
For the spirits were people too, no doubt about it. They were
just as real, just as present as the visible ones. Many were quite powerful and
opinionated, just as they had been in life. Some were the spirits of those who
had lived before. Some had yet to incarnate. Some had been around the wheel of
reincarnation so many times it was difficult to say whether they were coming or
going.
All that mattered now was that they’d found each other, this
unusual sort of kinship, a family cobbled together out of people who were
unexpectedly able to interact with each other. And wasn’t that better anyway,
better than the usual family where the usual people could barely stand to be in
the same city with each other, much less in the same home.