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Castaneda, Carlos – The Second Ring of Power

I wanted to tell her that I was a fiasco as a healer. Her eyes

seemed to catch my mood and they held it until it froze.

Rosa wanted to sleep. She was either dead tired or ill. I did

not want to find out which. I picked her up in my arms; she

was lighter than I would have imagined. I took her to don

Juan’s bed and gently placed her on it. Lidia covered her.

The room was very dark. I looked out of the window and saw

a cloudless sky filled with stars. Up to that moment I had been

oblivious to the fact that we were at a very high altitude.

As I looked at the sky, I felt a surge of optimism. Somehow

the stars looked festive to me. The southeast was indeed a

lovely direction to face.

I had a sudden urge that I felt obliged to satisfy. I wanted

to see how different the view of the sky was from dona Sole-

dad’s window, which faced the north. I took Lidia by the

hand with the intention of leading her there, but a ticklish

sensation on top of my head stopped me. It went like a ripple

down my back to my waist, and from there it went to the pit

of my stomach. I sat down on the mat. I made an effort to

think about my feelings. It seemed that at the very moment I

had felt the tickling on my head my thoughts had diminished

in strength and number. I tried, but I could not involve my-

self in the usual mental process that I call thinking.

My mental deliberations made me oblivious to Lidia. She

had knelt on the floor, facing me. I became aware that her

enormous eyes were scrutinizing me from a few inches away.

I automatically took her hand again and walked to dona Sole-

dad’s room. As we reached the door I felt her whole body

stiffening. I had to pull her. I was about to cross the threshold

when I caught sight of the bulky, dark mass of a human body

huddled against the wall opposite the door. The sight was so

unexpected that I gasped and let go of Lidia’s hand. It was

dona Soledad. She was resting her head against the wall. I

turned to Lidia. She had recoiled a couple of steps. I wanted

to whisper that dona Soledad had returned, but there were

no sounds to my words although I was sure I had vocalized

them. I would have tried to talk again had it not been that

I had an urge to act. It was as if words took too much time

and I had very little of it. I stepped into the room and walked

over to dona Soledad. She appeared to be in great pain. I

squatted by her side, and rather than asking her anything, I

lifted her face to look at her. I saw something on her forehead;

it looked like the plaster of leaves that she had made for her-

self. It was dark, viscous to the touch. I felt the imperative

need to peel it off her forehead. In a very bold fashion I

grabbed her head, tilled it back and yanked the plaster off.

It was like peeling off rubber. She did not move or complain

about pain. Underneath the plaster there was a yellowish-

green blotch. It moved, as if it were alive or imbued with

energy. I looked at it for a moment, unable to do anything.

I poked it with my finger and it stuck to it like glue. I did not

panic as I ordinarily would have; I rather liked the stuff. I

stirred it with the tips of my fingers and all of it came off her

forehead. I stood up. The gooey substance felt warm. It was

like a sticky paste for an instant and then it dried up between

my fingers and on the palm of my hand. I then felt another

jolt of apprehension and ran to don Juan’s room. I grabbed

Rosa’s arm and wiped the same fluorescent, yellowish-green

stuff from her hand that I had wiped from dona Soledad’s

forehead.

My heart was pounding so hard that I could hardly stand

on my feet. I wanted to lie down, but something in me pushed

me to the window and made me jog on the spot.

I cannot recall how long I jogged there. Suddenly I felt

that someone was wiping my neck and shoulders. I became

aware then that I was practically nude, perspiring profusely.

Lidia had a cloth around my shoulders and was wiping the

sweat off my face. My normal thought processes came back

to me all at once. I looked around the room. Rosa was sound

asleep. I ran to dona Soledad’s room. I expected to find her

also asleep, but there was no one there. Lidia had trailed be-

hind me. I told her what had happened. She rushed to Rosa

and woke her up while I put on my clothes. Rosa did not want

to wake up. Lidia grabbed her injured hand and squeezed it.

In one single, springing movement Rosa stood up and was

fully awake.

They began to rush around the house turning off the lan-

terns. They seemed to be getting ready to run away. I wanted

to ask them why they were in such a hurry, when I realized

that I had dressed in a great hurry myself. We were rushing

together; not only that, but they seemed to be waiting for

direct commands from me.

We ran out of the house carrying all the packages I had

brought. Lidia had advised me not to leave any of them be-

hind; I had not yet assigned them and they still belonged to

me. I threw them in the back seat of the car while the two

girls crammed into the front. I started the car and backed up

slowly, finding my way in the darkness.

Once we were on the road I was brought face to face with

the most pressing issue. Both of them said in unison that I was

the leader; their actions were dependent on my decisions. I

was the Nagual. We could not just run out of the house and

drive away aimlessly. I had to guide them. But the truth was

that I had no idea where to go or what to do. I turned casually

to look at them. The headlights cast a glare inside the car and

their eyes were like mirrors that reflected it. I remembered

that don Juan’s eyes did the same; they seemed to reflect more

light than the eyes of an average person.

I knew that the two girls were aware of my impasse. Rather

than making a joke about it in order to cover up my inca-

pacity, I bluntly put the responsibility of a solution in their

laps. I said that I lacked practice as the Nagual and would

appreciate it if they would oblige me with a suggestion or a

hint as to where we should go. They seemed disgusted with

me. They clicked their tongues and shook their heads. I men-

tally shuffled through various courses of action, none of which

was feasible, such as driving them to town, or taking them to

Nestor’s house, or even taking them to Mexico City.

I stopped the car. I was driving toward town. I wanted

more than anything else in the world to have a heart-to-heart

talk with the girls. I opened my mouth to begin, but they

turned away from me, faced each other and put their arms

around each other’s shoulders. That appeared to be an indica-

tion that they had locked themselves in and were not listening

tome.

My frustration was enormous. What I craved for at that

moment was don Juan’s mastery over any situation at hand,

his intellectual companionship, his humor. Instead I was in the

company of two nincompoops.

I caught a gesture of dejection in Lidia’s face and that

stopped my avalanche of self-pity. I became overtly aware,

for the first time, that there was no end to our mutual disap-

pointment. Obviously they too were accustomed, although in

a different manner, to the mastery of don Juan. For them the

shift from the Nagual himself to me must have been disastrous.

I sat for a long while with the motor running. Then all at

once I again had a bodily shiver that started on the top of my

head as a ticklish sensation and I knew then what had hap-

pened when I had entered dona Soledad’s room awhile before.

I had not seen her in an ordinary sense. What I had thought

was dona Soledad huddled against the wall was in fact the

memory of her leaving her body the instant after I had hit

her. I also knew that when I touched that gooey, phosphores-

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