I
slowly stood, suddenly feeling every eye on me.
Paul chose this moment to creep forward and pull the trashcan out of the
center.
“In Leopold’s old life, he was a
police officer.” Solomon spoke to the
group, but turned toward me. “Would you
like to tell us more about why you left that life to join us, Leopold?”
“I.
Uh. Sure.” I said feeling the blood race into my face. Had I told him about being a cop? “I joined the force a little bit after high
school. And everything seemed to be
going great, until a little bit ago.
Someone killed an ex-girlfriend of mine.
Really brutally. I mean, they
tortured and…” A couple people groaned,
and someone gasped. “Sorry. I forget that others aren’t used to that kind
of thing.” I took a breath and tried to
figure out where I was going with this.
“I don’t know. I really wanted to
catch that person. I wanted to set
things right. And I couldn’t.”
I felt my hands clench and my body
begin to sweat. I hadn’t really talked
about it, but I felt like I was about to let everything out. I was suddenly back at the crime scene. I could see her body wrenched apart. Her body torn and broken, left lifeless. The stomach that I had laid my head on as we
talked about the future, was bruised and burnt.
The neck I kissed and tickled was swollen and scraped. Her once-beautiful face was
unrecognizable. And the person who did
this was out there still.
“It made me feel so helpless that I
could not help her. That this woman I
loved died and I was not there. I mean,
we had our problems. I was not good for
her. We weren’t good for each
other. But that’s beside the point—“
“Leopold.” Solomon cut me off softly, and paused for a
second. “None of that matters. As you will learn, that was you last
life. As we’ve all seen with James, that
life is tough to give up. But the first
step is realizing, intellectually, that you are not your brother’s keeper. You have years of training and instinct
telling you otherwise, so this may be hard for you to accept. But the truth of the situation is that the
person who committed these regrettable acts, he is a symptom of the
problems. He is someone who has lost in
the system of competition, and he is someone that could be saved if everyone
would accept our teachings.”
He looked knowingly in my eyes, as
if he was waiting for my reaction. I
opened my mouth to speak, but could only stutter. “I-I.
Mindy.” Suddenly my throat
clenched as if it would not allow any sound to get out.
“You cared deeply for her. But look at you now. Look where your caring has brought you. Look where your quest to catch this man has
brought you. It has brought you to
misery. It made you run from the city
you called your home into a city with which you have no connection.” He paused.
“But luckily it brought you here.
Where you can be healed. Where
you can be accepted. Where you do not
have to continue to compete. Where you
can lay that burden down.”
Standing there with everyone looking
at me, I suddenly smiled.
Solomon returned my smile
graciously. “Freedom isn’t playing their
rigged game, it’s accepting that you cannot win and therefore should not
play. Freedom is accepting your bondage,
the role you can play here. By accepting
yourself as a member of this community, you are giving up all connections to
the outside world. You are a member of
this group and nothing more. You aren’t
responsible for anyone else. You don’t
have to continually strive for more and lose.
The feelings of helplessness will subside, because here you are not
trying to be anything other than a member of our community. You can just relax and be. Just be.”
I felt a flush in my cheeks. I felt heat in my face and then it radiated down
my spine and throughout my body. My throat
opened and I felt a sudden cooling sensation on my neck. I looked around and saw every face smiling up
at me.
“Can you accept that?” Solomon asked.
“I think I can,” I said quietly.
“Good,” he said with a smile.
That night, following a meal of an
oatmeal-type sludge mixed with prunes (apparently staying regular is very
important part of the group), we all went to bed silently. There had been some idle chit chat, but no
one spoke about what we saw at the offering.
It was hard for me to tell if this was a normal part of things or if
this was different from the normal pace of things.
As I crawled into bed, I laid my
head down still seeing James’s face as he watched his wife’s smiling face burn
in the trash can. I turned on my side
and closed my eyes. I took a deep breath
and let it out, feeling happy to be in a place where I could forget about
everything that had happened in Des Moines.
A new start, I thought as I drifted into the first deep sleep I could
remember having in a long time.
Sometimes I am extremely
stupid. I’ve learned to accept that
about myself, but I cannot say how it pops up will still surprise me.
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