Adrienne felt an elbow nudging her side; Sarah nodded toward the door, the hallway, a question in her eyes. They stepped out as quietly as possible, pulling the door closed.
“I know you’re here as a prisoner of circumstances,” Sarah said, “but can you at least entertain a slightly open mind?”
“I don’t know. I’m… I
“But you believe it exists.”
“Yes.”
“And you believe it can emerge in dreams, right?”
Again she agreed, recalling what had, above all, convinced her. A case documented by Jung in
A year after committing them to paper, she had died. In her dreams, so unlike those of a child, it was as if some hidden cleft of her mind had known what was imminent.
“Yes,” said Adrienne. “I believe it does.”
“Then it’s there. For you, it’s there.” Sarah clasped both of Adrienne’s hands between her own, rubbing. “And if it emerges in dreams, it’s because it has a need to. And if that need is there, well… who’s to say it might not flow toward another outlet if it’s made available?”
“Maybe you’re right. I want you to be right.” She stepped forward, into the safer harbor of Sarah’s waiting arms.
Perhaps she was not nearly so opposed to Kendra Madigan and her techniques as she was to the idea of turning Clay over to someone who could offer him something she could not. It could have been anyone and she would have found a reason. We healers, what a territorial breed we are. Like the missionaries of different faiths who vie for the privilege of being first to convert the savages.
“Let’s go back in,” Sarah said, then gave Adrienne’s hands a kiss and, holding firm, led the way.
The regression continued, Kendra Madigan taking Clay back to a loose and liquid awareness of prenatal existence, for which he seemed to have few words, although body language spoke with its own eloquence. He folded into a fetal position while scooting deeper into the curve of the chair, gently rocking himself back and forth, as if cresting the buoyant waves of a warm ocean.
“Now I want you to go back even farther, Clay,” Kendra said, “back before there ever was a Clay. You’ll remember if you let yourself. But you can’t go straight back, because there’s only so far you can go in that direction… only so much Clay can remember on his own because there wasn’t always a Clay. But you’re part of something much older. So you have to find a new thread to follow. You still have to keep going back… but sideways this time. Do you understand what I mean by that?”
His head raised a fraction. “Yes…”
“That’s glorious, Clay, that’s wonderful. Now… I’m going to leave you for a while, but I’ll be back. I’m going to leave you to find your own way. I want you to follow the paths that open up, and listen to the drums. Go where the drums lead. Deeper, and deeper… and deeper…”
Kendra pulled away and reached for a remote control. With a few pecks of her finger there came from hidden speakers a low and steady rhythm, hypnotic in its own right. It thumped like echoes off a canopy of green, woven with the brown of ancient boughs. Adrienne found herself drifting with it, a timeless resonance taking root in heart, in bones, in soul.
She watched as Clay slowly uncoiled from his fetal position, lowering both feet to the floor again, and his hands to his sides, rolling his head limply back until he appeared to stare into the ceiling, beyond the ceiling. His jaw drooped, slack, then he came forward again, slumping while his head nodded toward his chest. It took several moments before she realized the rise and fall of his breathing was synchronizing itself to the drums.
Nearly ninety minutes had passed since Clay had first gone under. Kendra murmured parting reassurance to him, then shooed them from the room.
“He’s responding,” Adrienne said in the rec room, “he’s responding to something in there, in that state. And even I could feel… something.”
“Oh yes.” Kendra settled luxuriantly into a nearby lounger, raised her feet. “Powerful stimuli, aren’t they?” Suppressing a warm laugh at the expense of, Adrienne surmised, the intrigued skeptic.
“How long will you leave him alone?”
“I’ll check on him from time to time, but I won’t resume any real contact for two to three hours.”
Sarah had found her way to the inversion bar, hanging upside down by bent knees. The tips of her long braids whisked at the mat beneath. “It’s not really new, Adrienne, what she’s doing in there, you know? It’s pretty damn ancient.”
Kendra nodded. “Simple shamanic techniques, mostly. And those go back thirty, forty thousand years, it’s believed. The drumming, the use of natural hallucinogens? You’ll find them in nearly every primitive society the world over. They all came up with the same methods, independently, and the reason they’ve been around so long is because they
They ate, they talked, they spoke of how some of the most effective techniques for healing the body and plumbing the mind came from ancient traditions. Only recently had modern medicine begun to turn its head around to the past, taking fresh looks at methodology long since dismissed as superstition and folklore, and recognizing their legitimacy.
Throughout, Kendra was never far from another trip into her office to check on Clay. He maintained a stable condition: sitting comfortably, with deep, even breathing. Later in the afternoon she decided it should be time to proceed, and again they gathered before him.
As it went on, Adrienne felt her hands grow cold even though the house was warm; felt herself prickle every time she considered that it was not really Clay’s voice she was hearing. It was something else, speaking through his throat. Something that filled each of them and surrounded them every day of their lives, that predated them, and would survive them and everyone they would ever know and never meet.
He spoke with the voice of millennia.
Adrienne listened, clutching Sarah’s hand and thinking, no, it just couldn’t go this far, Clay could not be regressed to a level of cellular and genetic and evolutionary awareness, yet he was,
And what a coward she was — she would never have had courage enough to look this in the face and ask the question that demanded an answer that would have to be lived with forever:
“What is it inside you, Clay, and the others like you, that makes you different from everyone else?”
He was Clay, and he was Not.
In oceans of salt and aeons, where the coils of serpents gave birth to worlds, he floated — cell and zygote, embryo and fetus, past and future. He was in the plankton that fed the fish that fed the bird that fed the wolf that