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Authors: F. Paul Wilson

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BOOK: The Fifth Harmonic
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“Sent?”

“Perhaps ‘sent’ is too strong.
Guided.

“By whom?”

“Just . . . guided. But if you ‘don't believe in any of this,’ and being here makes you so uncomfortable, why did you come?”

“Because I'm sick.”

Her smile faded. “I know.”

Did she? Did she really? Or was that simply a logical conclusion about a man in a place with “HEALER” on the front window?

No way she could know
how
sick.

“Tell me about it,” she said.

“I'd rather you tell
me
. About it, that is.”

“You have already seen your regular doctor, I assume?”

“Yes. A number of them.”

“And?”

“They tell me I'm sick.”

Will spoke the words softly, struggling to keep his tone neutral. He didn't want to sound belligerent, but he wanted to give away as
little as possible. He'd read about psychics and palm readers and such, and how they were adept at wheedling information out of unsuspecting marks. She wasn't getting any freebies from him.

“And now you come to me. To . . . what? Test me?”

Was that amusement or annoyance in her eyes? He couldn't be sure. Either way, it unsettled him.

“No . . . I don't know. I spoke to Savanna Walters.”

A smile again, warm this time. “Ah, Savanna. A sweet woman.”

Yes, Savanna was that—in spades. An independent, delightfully witty spinster who had been one of Will's first patients when he'd hung out his
Internal Medicine
shingle nearly two decades ago. He'd guided her through a number of minor illnesses and one serious, stubborn case of pneumonia. But when he'd investigated some abnormalities in her blood count last year, and a bone marrow aspiration confirmed the diagnosis of acute lymphocytic leukemia, he knew he was out of his depth. He'd sent her to an oncologisthematologist, and figured he'd never see Savanna again: the prognosis for ALL in her age group was extremely grim.

Then last week, on his next-to-last day in the office, she'd shocked him by showing up looking fit and healthy. She said she'd heard he was sick and closing his practice. Actually he'd sold the practice to the local hospital; they'd made a preemptive offer of half a million to cut out the Manhattan medical centers that had been gobbling up private practices all over Westchester County. The hospital had two young doctors lined up to take over—
two
men to handle what he'd been doing solo.

Leaving the practice was the hardest thing he'd ever done in his life. The breakup of his marriage couldn't hold a candle to the pain he'd felt when he closed the door behind him that last day.

“Savanna,” he said. “You're . . .”

“Alive?” she said, eyes twinkling. “Yes. I'm cured.”

“That's wonderful! But Dr. Singh told me you'd stopped treatment.”

“Only with him. After one chemotherapy session, I knew it wasn't for me. So I found somebody else.”

“He must be a miracle worker.”

“Yes.
She
is.” Savanna reached into her purse and pulled out a slip of paper. She pressed it into his hand. “This is her address. See her. Please. She helped cure me. She can do the same for you.”

“Cured your leukemia?” Will said, baffled. “How?”

“She worked with me and together we killed it.”

What a strange way to put it.
We killed it
—not cured it . . . killed it.

“She can help you kill yours. She has ways,” Savanna said, as if that explained it all.

“Oh, well,” he said, not knowing quite how to respond. He supposed word had got out about his malignancy, but it seemed so bizarre to have a patient refer him for treatment. “I don't think . . .”

“She cured me, Dr. Burleigh. Maybe she can cure you.” Her bright blue eyes begged him. “Please go see her. Please.”

After Savanna left, Will called her oncologist who was flabbergasted that Savanna was still alive. Singh confirmed that she'd had her first dose of chemotherapy and never returned for the rest, never returned his staff's repeated calls to her home.

The oncologist guessed that Savanna had had a spontaneous remission—extremely rare in ALL, but it happened. Will agreed. A spontaneous remission. What else could it be?

But over the next few days Savanna's words haunted him:
She cured me, Dr. Burleigh. Maybe she can cure you. Please go see her. Please.

And now, against all reason, against all common sense, here he was.

“How is Savanna?” she said.

“Fine, as far as I can tell. She told me you cured her leukemia.”

“I am glad she's doing well.”

That wasn't what he was looking for. “Did you?” he said. “Cure her?”

“No.”

Her answer startled him. Here was a perfect opportunity to take credit for Savanna's spontaneous remission—he'd handed it to her on the proverbial silver platter—and she was denying it.

“But she says you did.”

“That is very generous of Savanna, but I merely helped her toward a cure.”

This wasn't going the way Will had expected. Why was she dodging credit? Why so evasive? Does she think I'm with the Department of Health or Consumer Affairs?

Or is she mimicking me?

Either way, he wanted to bring this to a head.

“All right then: Can you help me the same way?”

“I can try.”

Frustration nibbled at him. She wasn't following his imagined script: No promises of a cure, and she hadn't even mentioned money. She was acting very professional. And that bothered him.

“And the cost?”

He had expected nothing from this encounter beyond satisfying his curiosity, and was willing to pay for that—up to a point. But he didn't want to be ripped off for some ungodly sum.

“Let us first see if I can help you. Come this way.”

No money down. All right, so maybe she wasn't a bunco artist. Maybe she was just another delusional character who thought she had a direct line to the secrets of the universe. Her kind, despite their sincerity, were still almost as dangerous as the larcenous phony if they kept sick people away from proven therapy.

Then why the hell am I here?

Because you're a coward, he heard a voice say in his head. Because you can't face the proven therapy for what you've got.

She stepped through the beaded curtain and held it aside for him. He followed her through the doorway and down a narrow, curved set of stairs to another candlelit room in the basement. No windows here, however, and hence no rainbows dancing around the room. A pair of oak chairs and a small oak table, similar in provenance
to the ones upstairs, were the only furniture. On the table, four oddly shaped metal objects, each a different color, were arranged on a white cloth. But the feature that grabbed Will's attention was the large rectangular opening cut into the concrete slab of the basement floor. It looked to be about four by eight feet, and was filled with sand.

Westchester County seemed light years away.

“Remove your shoes and lie down, please,” she said, pointing to the opening.

“In there?”

“Yes. On the sand.”

“Why?”

“Because I wish you to be in contact with the earth.”

Curiouser and curiouser, he thought as he sat on one of the chairs and pulled off his loafers and socks. I must be more desperate than I imagined.

He padded across the cool concrete of the floor to the makeshift sandbox, but paused on the edge like a hesitant swimmer contemplating a cold pool. Did she really mean for him to . . . ?

“You did say to lie down.”

“Yes, I did.”

She didn't look at him; she was intent on her metal things, handling them one at a time. Each ran about eight inches long, slim and cylindrical at one end, flaring and flattening to a rough, wavy triangular shape at the other.

“Flat on your back, please. Don't worry. It's dry. You won't catch a cold.”

A cold is the least of my worries, he thought.

Feeling slightly ridiculous, he stepped onto the cool granular bed and stretched out. As the back of his head came to rest on the sand, he realized he'd reap an extra benefit from the turtleneck shirt: no sand down his collar.

“How does it feel?” she said, stepping closer and looking down at him.

“Sandy.”

A flicker of a smile, and he realized he was pleased he could make her smile. He wanted to dislike her, distrust her—bunco or
bonkers, either way she could cause harm to the wrong person—but found himself responding to, and envying, her aura of serenity.

Aura . . . listen to me. Been here ten minutes and already I'm starting to sound new-agey myself.

“Press your heels and your palms into the sand. That's your Mother you're feeling.”

“My mother died five years ago.”

“No, I mean the Mother of us all. The earth.”

Oh, boy, he thought. Here it comes.

“It is one of the tragedies of modern living that we never touch her. Industrial society has cut off its inhabitants from the living world. You live and work in structures made of dead material, travel enclosed in rubber and steel, and even when you stroll through the pockets of living things you call ‘parks,’ it is with your feet encased in rubber sneakers treading macadam paths. Think: when was the last time your body was in contact with the earth—when was the last time even the soles of your
shoes
touched her soil? Why do you see people lined up in their cars like steel lemmings heading for the beaches? It is the only time all year they actually touch their Mother. They come away feeling renewed after merely brushing her hem.”

“Ooookay,” Will said, wriggling his hands and feet into the sand. This woman might be beautiful but he feared her antenna was picking up the wrong channels. “There. I'm dug in.”

“Good. How does it feel?”

“Really good,” he said. He was tempted to add,
Just like sand in a hole in the floor of somebody's basement
, but didn't want to trigger another lecture.

“See? That is your Mother.”

He thought, I know who my mother is—was—and it's not a handful of sand.

Holding one of her metal things by its cylindrical end, she stepped onto the sand and squatted next to him.

“What's that?”

“This?” She held it up, twisting it back and forth, letting ruddy light reflect from the flared end. She plucked the tip and it gave off a faint musical note. “This is one of the four tines.”

“What's it for?”

“I am going to survey your
chakras
.”

“My what?”

“Your chakras—the energy centers of your body. Chakra is the Sanskrit word for wheel. Each of us has seven energy centers in our body.”

Only seven? he wanted to say. We have zillions. They're called
cells
. But he kept mum.

“I will check the first now.”

She held the tine over his groin, about two inches above the fly of his tan Dockers, and began moving it in clockwise circles.

“What's this telling you?” he said, a little uncomfortable with the area of her attention.

“Other than the fact that there is no woman in your life right now,” she said, utterly deadpan, “all is well here.”

Damn. She was right. Pretty risky for her to say that with nothing to go on. True, he wasn't wearing his wedding ring—he'd stopped after the divorce—but she could have found herself way out on a limb with that little declaration. In fact . . .

“What if I told you that I have been deeply involved with a woman for the past two years?”

“I would not believe you.”

“You can be that sure?”

“Not completely, but I can tell you that if such a woman exists, you are not having sexual relations with her. Your first chakra is very congested.”

Embarrassed, Will opened his mouth to make some sort of excuse but she cut him off.

“Please. Let me complete my survey and we can talk afterwards. I do not wish to be distracted.”

She now began rotating the tine over his lower abdomen. Once she seemed satisfied there, she switched to another tine, this with golden highlights, plucked it, and rotated it over his solar plexus. After a short stay there, she glided it up to his heart. A moment or two later, she gave a faint nod. No problem there, apparently.

Will held his breath as she plucked the tine that gave off greenish hues and brought it toward his throat. This is it, lady. This is where you blow it.

BOOK: The Fifth Harmonic
11.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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