"You're dead, you
know," Zhou said to Daniel White.
"I am?" Daniel nearly
jumped out of his reverie, and his shadow cast by the yak lamp glow jumped with
him.
"This yurt, this night,
these thoughts you've been having, are all memories." Zhou, as usual, kept
his eyes mostly straight ahead while talking.
Daniel had never known Zhou to
joke about anything, so he considered this comment thoughtfully. It dawned on
him that Zhou was speaking English. Zhou didn't know English. It must be true,
then, or else they were both in some new altered state in which they could
communicate telepathically.
"You will want to retrace your steps now,
to see about Ivy," Zhou said kindly. "It will all come back to you,
and then you'll be free to move on."
Like hunters following tracks,
pausing at each recognizable sign along the way, the two friends from different
worlds went together back through time to Daniel's last prayer on his rug.
While Daniel
had relived ninety-three years, only sixty-four days had passed in Ivy’s
turbulent life. Reporters were camped outside the gates of Heron Cove.
She reluctantly closed enrollment to her yoga classes to block the press from
entering and disrupting her work. Tabloids were running old photos of the
Whites leading tantra classes, with lurid headlines.
Recent photos showed Ivy pitched forward, making her way through reporters
outside her classroom at Asclepion Springs. Nervous
residents of Heron Cove clustered around the mailboxes, muttering and shaking
their heads.
Daniel found Ivy at home, meditating
on the rug her beloved teacher gave her.
“Ivy,” he said as he lowered himself to the
floor and sat facing her.
Her eyes flew open. She looked
him up and down, noted that he was sitting comfortably on the floor with his
legs crossed.
“Where the hell have you been?”
she demanded. Then she laughed.
“Hey, love, this bardo business is no joke,” he began. “It’s all very
confusing. I was back then, back there. I didn’t remember anything until I went
through it all again. Zhou, I don’t suppose you can see him? No, well, he’s
here with me. He led me back to you. Otherwise, I might never have found you
again.”
“I thought you were gone
forever,” she said, her voice cracking. “I thought it was all a mistake.”
He wrapped his arms around her
and held her while she cried a long time. Then she sat upright again and glared
at him.
“You lied to me.”
“I know. I’m sorry. You were so strong, I couldn’t believe you would forgive my weakness.
You never felt it, the craving, the way I did.”
“All I asked of you, from the beginning,
was veracity, Daniel.”
He hung his head. They sat in
silence.
“But,” she said, “I guess I
needed the lesson. Not to trust so blithely. You know, I never ever doubted
you, once you’d given me your promise. But I never saw your chakras
so clearly again after that first time we were together.”
“I wondered why you didn’t know,
the way you could see all the old connections at first.”
“Because when my chakras linked into yours, it obscured the vision. The
beauty and the terror of love, it turns out, is that you go blindly or not at
all.” She no longer looked fierce.
“How did you find out?” he asked.
“Remember the girl in the garden,
Philadelphia, the honeysuckle, a
kiss?”
He shook his head.
“The young
woman at Sarah Lawrence, the student of Joseph Campbell?”
He began to nod slowly, closed
his eyes. “Professor Turow’s
daughter. Deirdre? No, Dulcie.
Dulcie.
Dulcie?
The busybody?”
Ivy nodded. “The seeds of desire
bear fruit.”
“She’s so old.”
“Yeah, well, you’re dead, you’re a fine one to talk. And you died old, mister.”
“You’re not going to like this,
Ivy, love. Zhou says you need to go to church to hear that woman’s talk. I
don’t know why, but Zhou’s a lot clearer about things, past and future.”