The spirit of Sister Agnes met a bearded, white-robed figure with a benevolent smile standing just outside the pearly gates. "Saint Peter?" she asked. She was wearing the same kind of white robe which, frankly, was a bit thin and translucent for her taste.
"Call me Pete. We don't stand on ceremony here," he answered. "I am as you wish me to be. At your service, Sister Agnes. May I call you Agnes?"
'Yes, of course...uh...Pete. I don't quite know what to say. This looks exactly as I thought it would look. Even to the cherubs sitting on clouds. And the harp music. Everything is so white and clean.
"Your imagination makes it what it is," answered Peter. "Welcome to heaven! Your reward for a life well lived."
Agnes looked around. Through the pearly gates was a yellow brick road that passed from cloud to cloud and in the distance was a castle of white and aqua blue, its turrets shining in the light of a warm yellow sun. "That looks like Disney World," she thought.
She turned away from the pearly gates and looked in the opposite direction. A ragged line of people dressed in sackcloth, their faces contorted in sadness, trudged down a muddy road of tumbled cobblestones lined by thorny bushes.
"Goodness," said she. "The man with the orange skin looks familiar."
Saint Peter sighed. "Yes, it is sometimes difficult to decide which path a client may take -- but in his case it was an easy decision. You, dear Agnes, have better options. May I explain our little home away from home, so to speak?"
He continued. "First, of all, you died in one universe. You are now in another universe and you have an infinite number of choices how you will spend eternity. Virtual life after death, you will find, will be quite pleasant. You have accumulated a formidable number of points for good works and faith. Many more than some unfortunate souls. How would you like to begin eternity? Living in a temporal world -- or trying something more exotic: a digital consciousness in the over soul or perhaps a tour of black holes?"
She thought a moment. "I have always dreamed of a perfect earth. Perhaps I would like a medieval village and a small house and a property of my own. I have never owned anything. I could have a vegetable garden. And fruit trees." Her enthusiasm mounted as she spoke. "And chickens. My mother had a garden and chickens when I was a child. A dog. I want a dog. A Labrador." She paused. "But I am eighty years old. I can't take care of chickens and a dog and a garden."
"No worries," said Peter. "Here, you may be the age you wish to be."
"Any age I want? I was attractive as a youth. Is it all right to say that? Or is that vanity?"
"You were more than attractive! You were exquisite!" said Peter with enthusiasm.
Her first thought was, "Is that an appropriate compliment by a saint?" She dismissed the doubt. How could Saint Peter be inappropriate? "Thank you," she answered sincerely. "I always fought the sin of vanity. But it's nice to hear that from you. Some of those priests. Ugh." Oops, she thought, that wasn't a nice thing to say.
Peter reassured her. "Those bad priests follow the same path as the orange man. What age is good for you?"
"I don't want to be too young," she mused. "Nor too old. Thirty-five. Is that possible? Although I want to keep my eighty year old mind. I'm smarter now than then."
"Absolutely. Thirty-five you shall be with an eighty year old mind." He waved a hand, conjured up a floor-length mirror and said, "Look at yourself."
She stared at the mirror. "Oh, my God!" She twirled round and round and pulled her white robe to herself to see the outlines of her body. "I wasn't bad looking, was I? Are you sure that vanity is okay?"
"You are permitted vanity. And other sins too, if you wish."
"I wouldn't want to be sinful. Well, maybe just a little to experience something of life outside the Church. Not that I wasn't happy as a nun."
"How about a husband? Or a wife? Children?"
"Oh, no. But I would like to have lots of caring, sharing friends. Male and female friends. I've not had any male friends. Ever," she mused.
"Your wish is my command, Agnes. Now, let's look at the options you have for a place to live -- or perhaps better said, reside in a spirit that is indistinguishable from life. You want heaven to be rural, medieval, and agricultural. Like the Ireland of your childhood, perhaps?"
"Hmmm, No. Less rain and more sunshine, but with mountains and valleys and rainbows."
"Let me see what we have available." He stepped to a golden table and sat down in a golden chair in front of a platinum-plated desktop computer with a large monitor. He talked as his hands played over the keyboard. "We're not immune to change in heaven. Just recently, I arranged a temporary transfer from down below for Steve Jobs. He did a great job organizing our computerized list of environments."
He leaned back from the keyboard. "Here is a place which may meet your needs. What would you say to a 50 year lease? Earth years, of course, And renewable." He touched a key and a video appeared. It showed a small stone cottage nestled along a river. A waterfall shimmered white in the background. The video panned out to show a narrow valley ringed by sheer cliffs of red rocks The valley floor was covered by green fields interrupted with copses of trees. The small rushing river of clear blue water bisected the valley
The video rotated to show a narrow dirt road, shaded by enormous, ancient trees to a tiny village of gray, stone houses and narrow pathways not unlike the ancient villages she had seen in the Cotswolds.
"It's perfect," she said. "My vision exactly. But I'll need a lot of books to read."
"We've anticipated that need. The technology is medieval. There's no running water or electricity -- except that you'll have a heavenly Kindle preloaded with every book that's ever been published. That includes titles lost to your times such as How to Cook a Horse by Attila the Hun and 57 Ways to Kill your Wife by Henry VIII. Plus, you will have a heavenly time machine to view any historical event as it happened. Live, no censorship, no editing. You can answer the eternal question: Did Jesus get it on with Mary Magdalene?"
"I don't think I want to know that. It might be embarrassing, But I would like to see some things. I've always been curious about Joan of Arc, for example. She was the hero who inspired me to become a nun."