WebNovels

Chapter 1 - PART 1 – The Door That Wasn’t There Yesterday

They say when you pass by something every day, your mind stops noticing it. Your brain sorts it into a folder called "background noise"—a grey blur behind the motion of real life. That's how it was with the alley.

I passed it on my way to school every day for four years. Just a dumpster, a broken streetlight, the smell of cat piss and cigarette ash. The buildings on either side always looked abandoned. One had graffiti of a rat with a crown. The other was completely boarded up.

But on the Tuesday after my seventeenth birthday, something changed.

There was a door.

A glass one, with a faded decal: "Panel & Ink – Comics Since 1901." The lettering looked hand-painted, cracked by time. I stopped. My headphones were still playing, but I didn't hear the music anymore. Just this low thrum in my ears, like the world had stopped breathing for a moment.

I looked around. No one else noticed it. People walked past without a glance.

I pulled one earbud out.

Silence.

The city had a hum—cars, voices, birds, wind. But here? In front of that door? Nothing. Like I'd stepped into the pause between heartbeats.

I don't know why I opened the door.

The handle was cold. Older than it looked.

It clicked.

And the world changed.

The first thing I noticed was the smell.

Old paper. Ink. Mold. And beneath it, something metallic. Like blood left too long in water.

The second thing I noticed: the dust. Not normal dust. This moved in slow spirals, like ash caught in candlelight. It clung to the air, making everything look sepia-toned and still.

I stepped inside.

The lights were dim. Hanging bulbs buzzed above crooked bookshelves. Most of them were half-empty or crammed with yellowed, water-damaged comics. Spider-Man. Hellboy. Fables. But they looked wrong, like bootlegs, or dreams pretending to be real.

And in the center of the store, on a velvet-covered pedestal, was one book.

Wrapped in brown paper. Sealed with red wax.

I approached it slowly, like it might vanish if I blinked.

There was a tag tied to the twine:

"For Evan. Yours alone."

My throat tightened. I hadn't told anyone my name since yesterday. And even then, it was just the substitute teacher in homeroom.

I looked around.

The store was empty.

No clerk. No back room. Just rows and rows of dying comics and this single, perfect package in the center of it all.

I reached out, hesitated. My fingers hovered over the twine.

It twitched.

Like it wanted me to open it.

So I did.

More Chapters