by Paulo Coelho
I hovered for a second between heaven and hell, between rebellion and submission, between cold reason and destructive emotion. In the end, summoning up all my strength, I managed to control myself. I pressed the button.
“Let’s continue.”
“As I was saying, I’ve been receiving death threats. I’ve been getting anonymous phone calls. They insult me and say I’m a menace, that I’m trying to restore the reign of Satan, and that they can’t allow this to happen.”
“Have you spoken to the police?”
I deliberately omitted any reference to her boyfriend, showing that I’d never believed that story anyway.
“Yes, I have. They’ve recorded the calls. They come from public pay phones, but the police told me not to worry, that they’re watching my house. They’ve arrested one person: he’s mentally ill and believes he’s the reincarnation of one of the apostles, and that ‘this time, he must fight so that Christ is not driven out again.’ He’s in a psychiatric hospital now. The police explained that he’s been in the hospital before for making similar threats to other people.”
“If they’re on the case, there’s no need to worry. Our police are the best in the world.”
“I’m not afraid of death. If I were to die today, I would carry with me moments that few people my age have had the chance to experience. What I’m afraid of, and this is why I’ve asked you to record our conversation today, is that I might kill someone.”
“Kill someone?”
“You know that there are legal proceedings under way to remove Viorel from me. I’ve asked friends, but no one can do anything. We just have to await the verdict. According to them—depending on the judge, of course—these fanatics will get what they want. That’s why I’ve bought a gun. I know what it means for a child to be removed from his mother, because I’ve experienced it myself. And so, when the first bailiff arrives, I’ll shoot, and I’ll keep shooting until the bullets run out. If they don’t shoot me first, I’ll use the knives in my house. If they take the knives, I’ll use my teeth and my nails. But no one is going to take Viorel from me, or only over my dead body. Are you recording this?”
“I am. But there are ways—”
“There aren’t. My father is following the case. He says that when it comes to family law, there’s little that can be done. Now turn off the tape recorder.”
“Was that your testament?”
She didn’t answer. When I did nothing, she took the initiative. She went over to the sound system and put on that music from the steppes, which I now knew almost by heart. She danced as she did during the rituals, completely out of rhythm, and I knew what she was trying to do. Her tape recorder was still on, a silent witness to everything that was happening there. The afternoon sunlight was pouring in through the windows, but Athena was off in search of another light, one that had been there since the creation of the world.
When she felt the spark from the Mother she stopped dancing, turned off the music, put her head in her hands, and didn’t move for some time. Then she raised her head and looked at me.
“You know who is here, don’t you?”
“Yes. Athena and her divine side, Hagia Sofia.”
“I’ve grown used to doing this. I don’t think it’s necessary, but it’s the method I’ve discovered for getting in touch with her, and now it’s become a tradition in my life. You know who you’re talking to, don’t you? To Athena. I am Hagia Sofia.”
“Yes, I know. The second time I danced at your house, I discovered that I had a spirit guide too: Philemon. But I don’t talk to him very much, I don’t listen to what he says. I only know that when he’s present, it’s as if our two souls have finally met.”
“That’s right. And today Philemon and Hagia Sofia are going to talk about love.”
“Should I dance first?”
“There’s no need. Philemon will understand me, because I can see that you were touched by my dance. The man before me suffers for something which he believes he has never received—my love. But the man beyond your self understands that all the pain, anxiety, and feelings of abandonment are unnecessary and childish. I love you. Not in the way that your human side wants, but in the way that the divine spark wants. We inhabit the same tent, which was placed on our path by her. There we understand that we are not the slaves of our feelings, but their masters. We serve and are served, we open the doors of our rooms and we embrace. Perhaps we kiss too, because everything that happens very intensely on earth will have its counterpart on the invisible plane. And you know that I’m not trying to provoke you, that I’m not toying with your feelings when I say that.”
“What is love, then?”
“The soul, blood, and body of the Great Mother. I love you as exiled souls love each other when they meet in the middle of the desert. There will never be anything physical between us, but no passion is in vain, no love is ever wasted. If the Mother awoke that love in your heart, she awoke it in mine too, although your heart perhaps accepts it more readily. The energy of love can never be lost—it is more powerful than anything and shows itself in many ways.”
“I’m not strong enough for this. Such abstractions only leave me feeling more depressed and alone than ever.”
“I’m not strong enough either. I need someone by my side too. But one day, our eyes will open, the different forms of Love will be made manifest, and then suffering will disappear from the face of the earth. It won’t be long now, I think. Many of us are returning from a long journey during which we were forced to search for things that were of no interest to us. Now we realize that they were false. But this return cannot be made without pain, because we have been away for a long time and feel that we are strangers in our own land. It will take some time to find the friends who also left, and the places where our roots and our treasures lie. But this will happen.”
For some reason, what she said touched me. And that drove me on.
“I want to continue talking about love,” I said.
“We are talking. That has always been the aim of everything I’ve looked for in my life—allowing Love to manifest itself in me without barriers, letting it fill up my blank spaces, making me dance, smile, justify my life, protect my son, get in touch with the heavens, with men and women, with all those who were placed on my path. I tried to control my feelings, saying such things as ‘he deserves my love’ or ‘he doesn’t.’ Until, that is, I understood my fate, when I saw that I might lose the most important thing in my life.”
“Your son.”
“Exactly. He is the most complete manifestation of Love. When the possibility arose that he might be taken away from me, then I found myself and realized that I could never have anything or lose anything. I understood this after crying for many hours. It was only after intense suffering that the part of me I call Hagia Sofia said: ‘What nonsense! Love always stays, even though, sooner or later, your son will leave.’”
I was beginning to understand.
“Love is not a habit, a commitment, or a debt. It isn’t what romantic songs tell us it is—love simply is. That is the testament of Athena or Sherine or Hagia Sofia—love is. No definitions. Love and don’t ask too many questions. Just love.”
“That’s difficult.”
“Are you recording?”
“You asked me to turn the machine off.”
“Well, turn it on again.”
I did as she asked. Athena went on.
“It’s difficult for me too. That’s why I’m not going back home. I’m going into hiding. The police might protect me from madmen, but not from human justice. I had a mission to fulfill and it took me so far that I even risked the custody of my son. Not that I regret it. I fulfilled my destiny.”
“What was your mission?”
“You know what it was. You were there from the start. Preparing the way for the Mother. Continuing a Tradition that has been suppressed for centuries, but which is now beginning to experience a resurgence.”
“Perhaps…”
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I stopped, but she didn’t say a word until I’d finished my sentence.
“…perhaps you came too early, and people aren’t yet ready.”
Athena laughed.
“Of course they’re not. That’s why there were all those confrontations, all that aggression and obscurantism. Because the forces of darkness are dying, and they are thrown back on such things as a last resort. They seem very strong, as animals do before they die, but afterward, they’re too exhausted to get to their feet. I sowed the seed in many hearts, and each one will reveal the Renaissance in its own way, but one of those hearts will follow the full Tradition—Andrea.”
Andrea.
Who hated her, who blamed her for the collapse of our relationship, who said to anyone who would listen that Athena had been taken over by egotism and vanity, and had destroyed something that had been very hard to create.
Athena got to her feet and picked up her bag—Hagia Sofia was still with her.
“I can see your aura. It’s being healed of some needless suffering.”
“You know, of course, that Andrea doesn’t like you.”
“Naturally. But we’ve been speaking for nearly half an hour about love. Liking has nothing to do with it. Andrea is perfectly capable of fulfilling her mission. She has more experience and more charisma than I do. She learned from my mistakes; she knows that she must be prudent because in an age in which the wild beast of obscurantism is dying, there’s bound to be conflict. Andrea may hate me as a person, and that may be why she’s developed her gifts so quickly—to prove that she was more able than me. When hatred makes a person grow, it’s transformed into one of the many ways of loving.”
She picked up her tape recorder, put it in her bag, and left.
At the end of that week, the court gave its verdict: various witnesses were heard, and Sherine Khalil, known as Athena, was given the right to keep custody of her child.
Moreover, the head teacher at the boy’s school was officially warned that any kind of discrimination against the boy would be punishable by law.
I knew there was no point in ringing the apartment where she used to live. She’d left the key with Andrea, taken her sound system, some clothes, and said that she would be gone for some time.
I waited for the telephone call to invite me to celebrate that victory together. With each day that passed, my love for Athena ceased being a source of suffering and became a lake of joy and serenity. I no longer felt so alone. At some point in space, our souls—and the souls of all those returning exiles—were joyfully celebrating their reunion.
The first week passed, and I assumed she was trying to recover from the recent tensions. A month later, I assumed she must have gone back to Dubai and taken up her old job; I telephoned and was told that they’d heard nothing more from her, but if I knew where she was, could I please give her a message: the door was always open, and she was greatly missed.
I decided to write a series of articles on the reawakening of the Mother, which provoked a number of offensive letters accusing me of “promoting paganism,” but which were otherwise a great success with our readership.
Two months later, when I was just about to have lunch, a colleague at work phoned me. The body of Sherine Khalil, the Witch of Portobello, had been found in Hampstead. She had been brutally murdered.
Now that I’ve finished transcribing all the taped interviews, I’m going to give her the transcript. She’s probably gone for a walk in the Snowdonia National Park as she does every afternoon. It’s her birthday—or, rather, the date that her parents chose for her birthday when they adopted her—and this is my present to her.
Viorel, who will be coming to the celebration with his grandparents, has also prepared a surprise for her. He’s recorded his first composition in a friend’s studio and he’s going to play it during supper.
She’ll ask me afterward: “Why did you do this?”
And I’ll say: “Because I needed to understand you.” During all the years we’ve been together, I’ve only heard what I thought were legends about her, but now I know that the legends are true.
Whenever I suggested going with her, be it to the Monday evening celebrations at her apartment, to Romania, or to get-togethers with friends, she always asked me not to. She wanted to be free, and people, she said, find policemen intimidating. Faced by someone like me, even the innocent feel guilty.
However, I went to the Portobello warehouse twice without her knowledge. Again without her knowledge, I arranged for various colleagues to be around to protect her when she arrived and left, and at least one person, later identified as a militant member of some sect, was arrested for carrying a knife. He said he’d been told by spirits to acquire a little blood from the Witch of Portobello, who was a manifestation of the Great Mother. The blood, he said, was needed to consecrate certain offerings. He didn’t intend to kill her, he merely wanted a little blood on a handkerchief. The investigation showed that there really was no intention to murder, but nevertheless, he was charged and sentenced to six months in prison.
It wasn’t my idea to make it look as if she’d been murdered. Athena wanted to disappear and asked me if that would be possible. I explained that if the courts decided that the state should have custody of her child, I couldn’t go against the law, but when the judge found in her favor, we were free to carry out her plan.
Athena was fully aware that once the meetings at the warehouse became the focus of local gossip, her mission would be ruined for good. There was no point standing up in front of the crowd and denying that she was a queen, a witch, a divine manifestation, because people choose to follow the powerful and they give power to whomever they wish. And that would go against everything she preached—freedom to choose, to consecrate your own bread, to awaken your particular gifts, with no help from guides or shepherds.
Nor was there any point in disappearing. People would interpret such a gesture as a retreat into the wilderness, an ascent into the heavens, a secret pilgrimage to meet teachers in the Himalayas, and they would always be awaiting her return. Legends and possibly a cult could grow up around her. We started to notice this when she stopped going to Portobello. My informants said that, contrary to everyone’s expectations, her cult was growing with frightening speed: other similar groups were being created, and people were turning up claiming to be the “heirs” of Hagia Sofia. The newspaper photograph of her holding Viorel was being sold on the black market, depicting her as a victim, a martyr to intolerance. Occultists started talking about an “Order of Athena,” through which—upon payment—one could be put in touch with the founder.
All that remained was “death,” but the death had to take place in completely normal circumstances, like the death of any other person murdered in a big city. This obliged us to take certain precautions.
The crime could not in any way be associated with martyrdom for religious reasons, because, if it was, we would only aggravate the very situation we were trying to avoid;
The victim would have to be so badly disfigured as to be unrecognizable;
The murderer could not be arrested;
We would need a corpse.
In a city like London, dead, disfigured, burned bodies turn up every day, but normally we find the culprit. So we had to wait nearly two months until the Hampstead murder. We found a murderer too, who was also conveniently dead—he had fled to Portugal and committed suicide by blowing his brains out. Justice had been done, and all I needed was a little cooperation from my closest friends. One hand washes the other: they sometimes asked me to do things that were not entirely orthodox, and as long as no major law was broken, there was—shall we say—a certain degree of flexibility in interpreting the facts.
That is what happened. As soon as the body was found, I and a colleague of many years’ standing were given the case, and almost simultaneously, we got news that the Portuguese police had found the body of a suicide in Guimarães, along with a note confessing to a murder whose details fitted the
case we were dealing with, and giving instructions for all his money to be donated to charitable institutions. It had been a crime of passion—love often ends like that.
In the note he left behind, the dead man said that he’d brought the woman from one of the ex-Soviet republics and done everything he could to help her. He was prepared to marry her so that she would have the same rights as a British citizen, and then he’d found a letter she was about to send to some German man, who had invited her to spend a few days at his castle.
In the letter, she said she couldn’t wait to leave and asked the German to send her a plane ticket at once so that they could meet again as soon as possible. They had met in a London café and had only exchanged two letters.
We had the perfect scenario.
My friend hesitated—no one likes to have an unsolved crime on their files—but when I said that I’d take the blame for this, he agreed.
I went to the place where Athena was in hiding—a delightful house in Oxford. I used a syringe to take some of her blood. I cut off a lock of her hair and singed it slightly. Back at the scene of the crime, I scattered this “evidence” around. I knew that since no one knew the identity of her real mother and father, no DNA identification would be possible, and so all I needed was to cross my fingers and hope the murder didn’t get too much coverage in the press.
A few journalists turned up. I told them the story of the murderer’s suicide, mentioning only the country, not the town. I said that no motive had been found for the crime, but that we had completely discounted any idea that it was a revenge killing or that there had been some religious motive. As I understood it (after all, the police can make mistakes too), the victim had been raped. She had presumably recognized her attacker, who had then killed and mutilated her.
If the German ever wrote again, his letters would have been sent back marked “Return to sender.” Athena’s photograph had appeared only once in the newspapers, during the first demonstration in Portobello, and so the chances of her being recognized were minimal. Apart from me, only three people know this story—her parents and her son. They all attended the burial of “her” remains, and the gravestone bears her name.