It was a day like any other day.
There was weather. Air. Time.
Nothing remarkable or notable. If Oliver had stopped to think about it (which he didn’t) he would have decided that he felt the same as he always did.
It was a school day so he put on his blue shirt. Hoisting his backpack up he walked down the stairs half listening to the voices outside. If all three of his friends were there it meant it was getting late, so he hurriedly pulled a breakfast smoothie out of the refrigerator and sped toward the back door. Lifting it to his mouth and yanking the door open at the same time proved a mistake. Bright strawberry pink smoothie geysered out all over his face and shirt. “Crapsticks!” he yelled peddling his toes backwards out of the drips. His mom was going to have a COW…
Dropping his backpack he ran up the stairs pulling the drenched and sticky shirt over his head. There was no other clean blue shirt so he grabbed a peculiar acid green one out of the clean clothes pile and pulled it on.
He was breathing hard when he finally made it out the door. His friend Ryan was the only one of the group left waiting and was just walking away, only stopping when he heard Oliver’s running feet behind him. Ryan looked at him strangely. “What happened to you, why are you wearing that? Never mind, we’re going to be late. C’mon I know a shortcut.” Oliver didn’t have time to think about his shirt anymore.
Later that morning Oliver was in his classroom searching his desk for his pencil. His teacher, Ms. Collins, looked momentarily confused as she passed him, but kept going, handing out graded test papers to everyone but him. Oliver’s hand went up but she didn’t seem to see it. “Ms. Collins?” he called uncertainly.
“Yes, ummm…yes?” she answered looking vaguely in his direction. But before he could say she hadn’t returned his work, she walked to the front of the class and started talking about geography. Oliver slumped down in his chair abashed and puzzled.
Lunchtime was the usual noisy jumble of students trying to eat their lunch, or dispose of it without being caught by the lunchroom monitors, and make a dash for the outside to take advantage of the last few days of nice weather.
Oliver looked all around the cafeteria but his friends weren’t at their usual table. He half-heartedly ate a few bites of ham sandwich (the usual) and a few bites of apple (the usual) and rolled the rest up in a napkin. Out in the schoolyard he saw Ryan, Caleb and few other kids he knew playing a tightly controlled game of catch. He joined in and waited for someone to throw it in his direction. The bell rang and Oliver was still waiting. No one had even looked at him. “Hey Ryan! Hey Caleb!” he yelled as they all walked towards the building. “What gives?” He felt uncomfortably close to tears and slowed down to get himself under control. That’s when he noticed the strange man in a dark suit standing near the edge of the building. He was alone. He was definitely out of place. And he was looking straight at Oliver.
When he realised that to get into school he had to walk right past the man (Mysterious Stranger! his brain yelled) Oliver went all hot and cold. He tried to project a casual, not noticing kind of air as he walked closer. He was taking that crucial last step over the threshold when the man spoke.
“Oliver.” That one word was all he said.
Oliver spun around, eyes wide and a mix of emotions warring together inside of him. The day had been so strange and lonely that he was partly grateful that someone, anyone, was speaking to him. On the other hand, this was a Stranger. And that was never good…
Oliver stopped and stared, mind and feet frozen in place.
“Oliver.” the man repeated. “Sorry to have startled you. There’s a problem with your story. I’ve been sent to help. I’m an Editor. Your Editor.
******
The hamburger smelled good and the fries were crispy just the way he liked them. But Oliver was too befuddled to have any appetite. The man (Editor? Mysterious Stranger his brain kept insisting.) sat quietly across from him with a large cup of coffee. His eyes and face were calm.
“You must be wondering about all this.” he said
Oliver opened his mouth but it was a while before any sound came out and it was difficult to make the words join up.
“Today.” he started. “At school. I mean, no one. I don’t understand. What’s an..? Why would I have an editor? Isn’t that for writers? I think I’m going nuts. I don’t understand anything.” Oliver finished miserably.
“I know. I’m here to help. It’s not the end of the world so don’t be frightened. We can fix this. I can fix this, that’s why I’m here.” The man spoke quietly but with assurance.
“Let me explain. Everyone has a story. Everyone. Everyone you know, everyone you don’t know. There have always been stories. And stories, like anything else, need to be managed. Yours has gone off track. Something was changed without approval, without any proper editing and now you have split off from it. Your story can’t find you. It’s my job to fix it, to get you back on track. To re-write you back in so that the storyline all makes sense. That’s what editors do.”
Oliver looked at the table thinking furiously. Comic book plots and adventure movies running through his head.
“You mean I’m not real?” he rasped
“You are as real as anything.” The man answered. “Having a story doesn’t mean you are made up. We just need to find out where you and your story parted ways, and why. Stories are like toddlers in a way. They like to run off sometimes but don’t really know what to do with themselves after that. There must be something that can point me in the direction of the fracture. Then I can patch it up, fill in the blanks and your life will go on, back to normal. You need to help me though. What went on today that was different, that made you feel…apart?”
Oliver thought hard.
“I was fine this morning.” He said slowly. “I was just going to school and then…oh! My shirt!”
The man closed his eyes, nodded in satisfaction and held up one finger for the check…
******
It was a day like any other day.
There was weather. Air. Time.
Nothing remarkable or notable. If Oliver had stopped to think about it (which he didn’t) he would have decided that he felt the same as he always did.
It was a school day so he put on his blue shirt. Hoisting his backpack up he walked down the stairs half listening to the voices outside. If all three of his friends were there it meant it was getting late, so he hurriedly pulled a breakfast smoothie out of the refrigerator ….and stopped. Frowning at the strange feeling coming over him, he put the smoothie back and grabbed a plain water instead.
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