Chris Jensen sat alone in the apartment
as late afternoon shadows slowly climbed
his brother's wall. A pile of unpaid
bills and personal papers lay spread out on
the desk before him, the paper trail of a
man's life, thirty-three years of
living neatly compacted into three manila
envelopes and two shoe
boxes.
Chris rubbed his aching eyes, stifling
a yawn before finally giving in to it. He
felt numb, disconnected from himself. Four
days without any real sleep will do that to
you. He pushed back from the desk,
stretching his back, wondering if there was
anything still edible in the fridge. Three
steps took him across the small room to the
kitchenette where he rummaged through food
Kevin would never eat. It seemed there
wasn't a single category of junk his
brother didn't stock; cupcakes, chips,
pretzels, ice cream, beer - it was all
there in quantity. What wasn't there
was a single trace of fruits, vegetables,
or meat, excluding some unwholesome looking
jerky that might have been meat
once.
"This stuff's gonna kill you,
Kev," he laughed before catching
himself.
Suddenly deflated, he drooped against
the counter. Dead. His little brother was
dead. It hadn't really struck him till
now. He'd been too distracted with all
the details, all the arrangements, to
really let it soak in. But now, standing in
this gloomy apartment staring into
Kevin's fridge, everything snapped into
sharp, painful focus. He was gone, really
gone, not on vacation in some exotic
locale, soon to return with a camera full
of pictures and a head full of wild stories
about the things he'd seen, the things
he'd done. Life is full of surprises,
Kevin used to say. You take what comes at
you and make the best of it. Heck of a
surprise this
was.
His appetite gone, Chris closed the
fridge and collapsed at the desk, trying to
focus on the task at hand. There were
insurance policies to look into, a few
remaining bills to be paid, friends to
notify, property to dispose
of.
Property. What a laugh. Kevin's
'property' consisted of a few
pieces of second hand furniture, a flat
screen TV, some dated clothing, and books,
lots and lots of books. The man devoured
books - they were his drugs, his Crack, his
Meth. He hungered for words and ideas with
fevered intensity. Reading was his one
great, insatiable addiction. The meager
money he earned as a freelancer never went
for the luxuries of life, sometimes not
even for the necessities. It all went for
books. If a man's happiness could be
gauged by the number of books he owned,
then Kevin Jensen had been a happy
man.
Chris wandered idly through the tiny
apartment with its overflowing bookshelves,
thumbing through dusty volumes on politics,
magic, religion, philosophy, ancient
history, art, you name it. Kevin always was
the intellectual, while Chris had a more
practical, businesslike approach to life.
Two brothers more different could never be
found, nor two brothers who loved each
other
more.
What was he supposed to do with all
this? He'd toss the food, he guessed,
and pay someone to haul the furniture to
Good Will, which was where it probably came
from anyway. He would keep some of the
books as mementos and the rest could go to
the library's annual
sale.
Thoroughly depressed at the thought of
liquidating his brother's life, he
flopped on the couch, sending dust motes
swirling through the darkening apartment.
He breathed in deep, feeling his brother in
this room, sensing his presence like a
persistent shadow. That made it easier
somehow, to imagine his brother here, now,
in his favorite of all places, at home with
his books and
ideas.
That's when he saw it; an envelope
taped to the bedroom door. He hadn't
gone in there yet; that's where the
landlord had found him, lying in bed for
who-knows-how-long. At least it had been
peaceful, painless. He just went to sleep
and never woke up. Not a bad way to go,
Chris
figured.
The envelope was plain white with
Chris's name across it in Kevin's
barely legible scrawl. Inside were five
pages of ruled paper covered with more
chicken
scratches.
"Chris," the letter began.
"I am taping this to my bedroom door
so you'll be the first to see it. If
anything happens to me I know you'll be
the first here. If you're reading this
then it's safe to assume something has
happened to
me."
Chris swore softly. Kevin had died over
a week ago when Chris was in San Francisco
on business. He'd rushed back to Denver
on the first flight he could get, but
he'd gone straight to the hospital and
Kevin was already in the morgue by the time
he got there. He hadn't felt up to
coming to the apartment till
today.
"What I'm going to tell you is
going to be a little hard to believe.
Actually, I hardly believe it myself,"
Chris read on. "But maybe a little
back story will clear things up. I had a
freelance assignment for the National
Skeptic - you know, that online mag,
I've done some stuff for them before.
The assignment was to debunk Astral
Projection, spirit travel, you know, so
called 'out of body experiences'.
My angle was to expose its practitioners as
charlatans. But you know me, I like get my
hands dirty in the field, so rather than
just listening to stories from crazies and
weirdos, I wanted to find someone who could
prove they could do it. I came up with a
couple tests and I even got my editor to
put up five grand as prize money to the
first person to pass them. We both figured
his money was
safe.
"Well," the letter went on,
"I started by immersing myself in the
local psychic scene. Denver has a lot of
strange stuff lurking just under the
surface of acceptable society, so I
didn't have to dig too deep to find
plenty of people willing to talk about this
stuff. Not surprisingly, though, no one
would take me up on my challenge. Oh, they
all claimed they could do things, they just
didn't want to demean themselves or
their art by accepting filthy lucre for
passing a scientifically designed
test.
"Not one psychic would rise to the
challenge, and I was beginning to think my
story was doomed. But there was this one
guy everybody talked about. He was a true
master, they said, but was down on his
luck, living on the street, and might be
willing to compromise his principles for
some cold cash. So I hunted down this guy,
Henry James, which was no simple feat; all
I had was a name and the location of his
last known whereabouts, the Denver Rescue
Mission. Seems when the weather turns nasty
old Henry likes to hang around there for a
hot meal and the chance of a warm
bed.
"I haunted the shelter for days,
getting to know the staff and some of their
unfortunate clients. It's a whole
different world down there, brother, one
most of us like to pretend doesn't
exist.
"I let it be known to any and all
I was looking for one Henry James, that I
had some money for him from his dead
brother's estate. I know what
you're thinking, not exactly ethical,
but I was desperate to find this guy. I
even slipped a few twenties to some of the
regulars on the promise they'd let me
know when old Henry
showed.
"Anyway, after that first really
good cold snap we had I got a call from a
volunteer at the mission saying old Henry
was there and he'd agreed to see me. I
high-tailed it down there and was directed
to this shriveled up little guy sitting at
a table all by himself in the back of the
dining hall. As I approached he lit up like
I was a long lost war
buddy.
"'Mr James,' I said,
extending my hand. 'I'm Kevin
Jensen.' The old man's hand was
warm and tingly, almost electric. His smile
a was gap-toothed and full of
humor.
"'Hear you been looking for
me', he chuckled. 'About my dead
brother. Got no brother, but you know
that.'
"'Yes, sir', I apologized.
'But I do have some money for
you.'
"I explained my quest and my lack
of success so far and asked if he would be
willing to demonstrate his ability in
exchange for an ample
reward.
"'Demonstration,' he
scoffed. 'I don't demonstrate. You
want to know something's real the only
way's to do it yourself. You give me
the cash and I'll teach you to do it
for yourself. Then you'll know it's
real or
not.'
"That wasn't what I'd
expected but I decided to give the old boy
a try. What did I have to lose, except my
'by-line' if I didn't come up
with a story? We made a deal, a hundred per
session, the balance due when I
successfully projected my spirit from my
body.
"I rented a room in a dive out on
East Colfax where you can get rooms by the
hour. The guy behind the counter eyed me
curiously when he saw my companion but took
my cash without
questions.
"Our first session looked like it
was going to be a bust. Old Henry had me
stretch out on the bed, close my eyes and
try to 'cleanse my mind' and
'find the center of my being',
which sounded like a load of New Age horse
apples to me, which is probably why things
went so badly. Plus I have to admit it was
a little weird, me lying there on the bed
of a scummy motel with a strange little man
hovering over me. Not exactly conducive to
mental
relaxation.
"The old man sensed my
apprehension and assured me he was a
teacher, not a pervert. 'Besides,'
he said with a wink. 'I could do
better'n
you.'
"I laughed, gave him his payment
and asked him to meet him in the same room
the next day. I made arrangements with the
proprietor to have the room every day for
the next month. 'Whatever floats your
boat, pal,' he
sneered.
"My initial fears and apprehension
faded over the course of a week and by the
end of the second week I was convinced I
was on to something big. I still didn't
buy into the whole idea of spirit travel
but I had to admit I was feeling great. I
felt strong, energized, confident. And I
was actually beginning to feel a certain
sense of inner peace. My life has been a
mess, Chris. You of all people know that.
I've done some pretty stupid, crazy
stuff all in the search of some elusive
thing called Happiness which always seemed
just out of reach. But the mental
conditioning he put me through, the
exercises he had me do, they brought me a
sense of well being, a centered-ness
I'd never experienced before and pretty
soon I didn't even care if I ever wrote
my story. I was just happy being
me.
"But on our last day together old
Henry tells me I'm ready, that it's
time. He said I was the best student
he'd ever had, a real quick learner,
and that he'd taught me all there was
to know. One last secret and I'd be
able to leave my body. He explained to me
in precise detail what I was to do and how
I was to do
it.
"'You'll have to be
naked,' he said. And I'm thinking:
great, so this guy's a perv after
all.
"But once again he seemed to read
my thoughts. 'Don't worry, pal,
I'm leaving. Got no interest in your
family jewels or lack
thereof.'
"So I gave him his money and
locked the door behind him. I'm sorry
to admit it, but I slipped a chair under
the handle just to be safe. I felt more
than a little creeped out lying there in
the buff on that filthy bed, but after a
few cleansing exercises my mind was clear
and I focused on the new technique he'd
just taught me. I'm not going to commit
the process to paper, Chris. Maybe some day
I'll teach you, but for now accept my
word when I tell you it worked. I left my
body! One minute I was lying naked on the
bed and the next I was hovering around the
ceiling looking down on some pasty-skinned
naked guy. What a shock when I realized it
was me! I was looking down at myself from
about six feet up! Well, I was so freaked
out it broke my concentration and my
'spirit', if you'll allow me to
use that term, snapped back into my body
with such sickening force I could barely
breathe. The pain was absolutely the worse
thing I could ever have
imagined!
"When I finally stumbled from the
room old Henry was waiting for me. When I
told him what happened he just laughed.
'Beginner's mistake,' he said.
'Everybody does it first time. But just
the same, everybody has to experience it.
This is no game, boy. This is real, and
real can
hurt.'
"He assured me it would never
happen again because now I was ready for
it. I thanked the old man and paid him the
rest of the five-thousand. He'd earned
it!
"'Be careful, though,' he
said in parting. 'You're a kid with
a new BB gun: Make sure you don't shoot
your eye
out.'
"That was the last time I saw him.
Word on the street is he's moved on,
and I haven't been able to find a trace
of
him.
"I have to admit I didn't
think too much about his warning. After
all, what could go wrong? Plenty, as it
turns out, but not at first. At first it
was wonderful, exhilarating. I did it as
often as I could, even turning down
assignments so I could stay home and
project myself to the corners of the earth.
Paris! Madrid! London, Moscow, Baghdad,
Hong Kong! I've seen them all, Chris,
without ever leaving the safety of my own
bed.
"I know what you're thinking,
but I'm not crazy! Here's a little
proof for you. November eleventh, three
weeks ago. You came home from work at
exactly five thirty-two according to your
kitchen clock. You had macaroni and cheese,
a beer and half a bag of Doritos. You read
for awhile but seemed to have trouble
concentrating so you turned on the tube,
watched 'Dirty Jobs' on the
Discovery Chanel till ten. You watched the
news until after the weather. You still
fancy the weather lady, don't you, you
little weather groupie, you. After that you
went to the bathroom (don't worry, I
didn't watch), then you crawled into
bed. Your alarm clock read exactly ten
thirty-seven when the lights went
out.
"So how do I know all this? I was
there, that's how. I watched you all
evening, and I must say, bro, Mr.
Excitement you're
not.
"So now I've proven I'm of
sound mind and body. Well, mind, anyway.
See, that's the problem. The last few
times I've projected it's been
harder to find my way back to my body. I
don't know if it's the sheer
distances involved or if there's
something I'm doing wrong. I'd ask
old Henry, but he's vanished. The last
time I did it, right before I sat down to
write this letter, I almost didn't make
it back. I went really far out that time. I
left the planet. I left Earth, Chris! Do
you understand the implications? Imagine,
manned space exploration without a ship or
a suit, without massive machinery and
massive budgets. NASA will go
broke!
"But that time, as exhilarating as
it was, was almost my undoing. It took all
I had to return to my body and I almost
didn't make it. But I think I know
where I went wrong and I'm certain it
won't happen
again.
"That's where you come in, big
brother. I want you to make sure that if
something does go wrong you'll protect
my body until I find my way back. And
believe me, Chris, I will come back. So if
they call you and tell you they found me
dead or comatose or something DON'T
BELIEVE IT! Don't let them take me,
Chris. I promise you I will return if
you'll just buy me the time I need.
Please, big brother, look over me and keep
me safe till I
return."
The letter slipped from Chris's
hand, the pages floating to the floor. A
single tear traced a salty trail down his
cheek as he gently touched the shiny new
urn sitting on the end table next to him,
the urn he'd just picked up that
morning from the mortuary, the urn
containing the last earthly remains of the
late Kevin
Jensen.