Heaven's Keep

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Authors: William Kent Krueger
Tags: Fiction, General, Suspense, Mystery & Detective
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“Sometimes a dream is just a dream, Stephen. It is a way for the spirit to examine pieces of this world.”
    “I think it’s more than a dream, Henry. I think it was a vision.”
    “Tell me what you think this vision means.”
    “The white door has got to be the snow, right?”
    The old man did not reply.
    “Right?”
    Instead of answering, the old man said, “You thought there was someone in the room with you. Who?”
    Stephen frowned, trying to remember. “I don’t know, but whoever it was, I was afraid of them.”
    “Afraid for yourself or for your mother?”
    “For her, I think.”
    “This room, you said it was big. What else do you remember?”
    “It was yellow. And full of white rocks,” Stephen said suddenly.
    “There were rocks in the room?”
    “Yes. They looked like ice. Like the door looked.”
    The old man nodded. “Do you remember anything else?”
    Stephen closed his eyes. “A light under the door.”
    “The door that hid your mother and closed itself to you?”
    “Yeah, that one.”
    “Anything else?”
    Stephen shook his head hopelessly. “It was a long time ago.”
    “Yet you remember much. I think you are right, Stephen. I think this is more than a dream.”
    “What does it mean?”
    “I do not know. But I will tell you this. If there is a door, it can be opened.”
    “How?”
    The old Mide shrugged. “Your vision. You will have to find the answer yourself.”
    “I don’t even know where to start.”
    “You already have,” Meloux replied. “A vision is never seen with your eyes, Stephen. Your heart is the only witness, and only your heart understands.”
    “So… what? I have to, like, talk to my heart?”
    “I think listening will do.”
    “Henry, I need an answer now. My mom’s in real trouble.”
    “All the more reason for everything inside you to be still, Stephen, the better to hear your heart.”
    “That’s all you can tell me?” Stephen said.
    “I am afraid so,” the old man replied.
    “Jesus.” Stephen threw the last of his cigarette into the fire, stood up, and left the ring. He disappeared through the rocks heading along the path back to Meloux’s cabin.
    “He’s scared, Henry,” Cork said.
    “He has reason to be. He holds a key, but does not know the lock that it fits.”
    They walked together to the cabin with Walleye following closely. Stephen wasn’t there. Cork saw him far across the meadow, stomping along the path that would lead him through the forest to where the Bronco was parked. Meloux bent, picked up the black corn bread brick, and broke it open. The center was yellow and unburned.
    “At the heart of most things that look bad is something that can be good and useful.” He crumbled the edible section of the corn bread and spread it on the ground for the animals. “I am sorry for your situation, Corcoran O’Connor, and I hope that you discover some good in it somewhere.”
    Cork walked back the way he’d come. He found Stephen sitting in the Bronco, staring through the windshield. He got in, kicked the engine over, turned the Bronco around, and headed back toward town.
    “Lot of good that did,” Stephen said. “Listen to your heart. What kind of bullshit is that?”
    “I’d never accuse Henry of offering bullshit.”
    “Okay, you tell me what it means. What door am I supposed to open?”
    “I don’t know.”
    “See? No help at all.” Stephen folded his arms across his chest and slumped in his seat.
    Cork had intended to use the trip to Meloux’s to break the news to Stephen that he was flying to Wyoming, alone. But he found himself backing off, hoping a better opportunity might present itself, though he didn’t have a clue how that might happen.
    Halfway to Aurora, his cell phone rang. He pulled to the side of the road and answered. He listened and said, “Thanks, Mal.” He put the phone away. “We need to get home,” he told his son. “They’ve found something in the mountains.”
    Stephen’s face brightened.

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