Copyright
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination and visions or used in a fictitious manner, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2017 by Margaret Duarte
All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review. For information address Omie Press, P.O. Box 581952, Elk Grove, CA 95758.
Book Cover design Yocla Designs by Clarissa
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Publisher's Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Duarte, Margaret.
Title: Between darkness and dawn / Margaret Duarte.
Description: Elk Grove, CA : Omie Press, 2017. | Series: Enter the between, bk. 2.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016917579 | ISBN 978-0-9860688-4-3 (pbk.) | ISBN 978-0-9860688-5-0 (Kindle ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Women--Fiction. | Self-actualization (Psychology)--Fiction. | Spiritual life--Fiction. | Quantum theory--Fiction. | Alzheimer's disease--Fiction. | Paranormal fiction. | BISAC: FICTION / Visionary & Metaphysical. | FICTION / Fantasy / Paranormal. | FICTION / Occult & Supernatural. | GSAFD: Occult fiction.
Classification: LCC PS3604.U241 B47 2017 (print) | LCC PS3604.U241 (ebook) | DDC 813/.6--dc23.
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Dedication
This book is dedicated to my sons, Todd and Jon, daughter-in-law, Martina, and granddaughters, Angelina, and Tessa. You are my life and my inspiration.
Table of Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Table of Contents
Summer
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Book one: “Enter the Between” Series
Book three: “Enter the Between” Series
Book four: “Enter the Between” Series
Summer
2001
The second path of initiation
begins in the South,
the place of forgiveness and release of the past.
I had always thought that my mind belonged to me alone, that I could isolate, even insulate, it from the world around me. I was prepared to share my possessions, my talents, my body, but my mind—never.
I was wrong.
Chapter One
AS THE BAY BREEZE WHISPERED across the barren hills of Bayfront Park, the first day of summer dawned on the horizon. The city of Menlo Park lay only two miles west, yet this land, surrounded by salt ponds, marshes, and sloughs, had the feel of another planet, on which we were all alone.
“Out-of-the-way places like this attract weirdoes,” my mother said. “Anyone could be hiding out here, and we’d be defenseless. Good Lord, whatever were you thinking?”
Although she lagged behind me a foot or two, I didn’t need to turn around to know that a frown marred her perfectly groomed face. I caught a whiff of her Shalimar perfume, so alien to our surroundings, yet so like my mother, the scent of orange, lemon, and vanilla, of tradition and order. It played games with my head, made me wonder if I was doing the right thing.
We’d walked half a mile into the 2.3-mile trail that ran the perimeter of the park, past a red pump house and salt and tidal ponds full of water birds with stilt legs. Ahead, a sign alerted us to the upcoming nesting areas for burrowing owls and advised us to remain on the designated path. I waited for my mother to catch up to me.
“I was hoping we could celebrate the summer solstice together and attune ourselves to the rhythms of the natural world,” I said, forestalling any comments she might make about the smell of natural gases and decaying algae that infiltrated the morning breeze.
“It’s half past seven, and we’re surrounded by” —she turned in a slow circle, eyeing the star thistles, wild mustard, and assorted grasses visible in the dawning light— “bugs, mice, and squirrels. Oh, Marjorie, what’s gotten into you?”
Now, there was a question far easier asked than answered. Part of the strength that had anchored my mother before and after my father’s death of cancer and had helped her follow her life’s path with such fierce determination, made her resistant to listening to my altered worldview. If she opened that door, even a crack, it would lead to far too many uncertainties. If she allowed herself to wonder, if she exposed herself to arcane possibilities, it would cause doubt and rattle her faith. Yet, if the universe existed as she had led me to believe, we wouldn’t be here today. There would be no way for the spirit world to contact ours. I wouldn’t be hearing voices.
Mother peered at me through narrowed eyes, waiting it seemed, for a creditable answer.
I resumed our walk, all too aware of the renewed pain my answer would evoke—for both of us. “When you told me last March that I was adopted, I was too upset to take into account how difficult telling me this must have been on you. I’m sorry.”
My mother increased her pace to keep up with me. “I should never have shared that information. You caught me by surprise.”
We’d both been caught by surprise. And we’d both experienced the pain and scarring resulting from a secret withheld for twenty-eight years and suddenly exposed like a gaping wound. My hope was to treat this wound before the infection of misunderstanding and mistrust settled in. If it wasn’t already too late. “You had no choice, Mom. Not after I ran into Veronica.”
“Hey twin stranger,” Veronica had said on our first meeting. “Who do you think was adopted? You or me? We’re identical. What are the chances we’re not related? I know you’re curious, because I sure am. If you don’t get an answer, I’ll clue you in on mine.”
The trail turned left to follow a series of unirrigated hills with brown grasses and drought-tolerant plants. “You also told me that you didn’t know the identity of my birth parents,” I said, “only that my mother was a descendent of the Ohlone/Costanoan Esselen Nation, and that she died soon after giving birth to me.”
“Why are you bringing up old news when you know it causes me pain?” my mother asked, matching me stride-for-stride.
“Because I found out who she is, Mom. Her name is—”
My mother swung around to face me. “Was, Marjorie. You found out who she was.”
“Not e
xactly...”
Her face took on the unyielding appearance of stone; an expression I knew was due to her deep sense of loss at the change the exposed secret of my adoption had brought into our lives.
We started walking again. At this rate, it would take hours to complete the park’s perimeter trail. A jogger sped by. Good. Hopefully, this would ease my mother’s concern about getting mugged by a weirdo. “Remember how I told you I was hearing a voice and thought I was losing my mind?”
Silence.
“The voice belongs to—”
“She is dead,” my mother said.
If only I could believe, as I once had, that dead meant dead and that the deceased went to heaven, hell, or some place in between and couldn’t—wouldn’t—come back to haunt us. “I know, but—”
“She...is...dead,” my mother repeated, each word a hammer to the nail of my spirit. “She gave birth to you and died. Case closed. I’m the one who loved you and sacrificed for you, day in and day out, for twenty-eight years, and, by God, I’m the reason you are who you are.”
I wanted to hug her and communicate, as words could not, that I would always love her for raising me the best way she knew how and for being here today, trying to support me, when it was obvious she’d rather be at morning Mass, even the confessional. But I could sense by the way she was clenching and unclenching her fists and stumbling along the perfectly level path that this was not a good time.
“You were two weeks old when I adopted you,” she said, her words nearly drowned out by the swooping, base-heavy sound of an overhead jet. “Doesn’t that count for anything?”
I halted. Met my mother’s flashing blue eyes. “Of course, it does, but—”
“Then why are you choosing her over me?”
Was it true? Was I choosing one mother over the other? I hadn’t asked for the untold story of Antonia’s life to infiltrate mine. I’d been content living a neat, orderly existence, scripted and directed by those I considered stronger and wiser than me. I’d believed myself to be the only child of Gerardo and Truus Veil, of Italian and Dutch ancestry, when in fact, I was a twin daughter of Irish descendant, Bob Mask, and Antonia Flores, a Native American. It’s a bit hard to carry on as before when you discover that the foundation on which you’ve built your life is fiction. My current worldview needed major stretching to assimilate Antonia’s messages from beyond the grave: Marjorie Marie Veil, there is something you must know. You must listen. Time is running out.
“My birth mother...Antonia...is speaking to me,” I said, “and I have to find out what she wants, so I can make her stop.”
Mother’s eyes bored into mine as if she could bend me to her will. I couldn’t blame her for trying. It had worked often enough during my upbringing. Only recently had I begun stepping away from my cultural and familial environment and attempting to follow my own path. “Hogwash. Dead people don’t talk.”
How I wished that were true.
A hawk screeched from above, and I remembered what my friend Ben Gentle Bear Mendoza had said about the call of a hawk; how it often signals changes to come.
“Why are you carrying on this way?” my mother asked.
For the same reason you would if our positions were reversed. “I don’t mean to dishonor or blame you, Mom, but if I don’t go to Big Sur, the land of Antonia’s people, and use the Earth’s medicine to find out what she wants, I’ll risk spending the rest of my life in regret.”
“Don’t talk to me of primitive medicine like some pagan squaw,” my mother said, her eyes glistening with an odd light, some kind of misguided triumph. “You were raised Catholic and, by God, you’ll remain a Catholic if I have anything to say about it.”
My vision blurred, and for a moment, my mind went blank, unable to comprehend my mother’s sudden cruelty. She had always tried to control me with the force of her will, but this was different. She had never resorted to name-calling before.
Over the last few months, I had tried to accept her reasoning—and excuses—for withholding knowledge of my adoption and of my twin. And I had hidden my hurt as best I could. But I wasn’t about to stand back while she discredited my birth mother’s heritage and spirituality. “By squaw, I assume you’re referring to my Native American ancestry. But the pagan part, no.”
“The occult, false idols, animal worship.”
My body throbbed with the thrust of a thousand needles as I stared at the woman who had turned into a stranger. I should’ve been prepared for her reaction. The angry look in her eyes should’ve warned me to back off. But I’d carried on, ignoring the signs, so desperate to explain, so desperate for her approval.
“It’s witchcraft,” she said, her right hand opening and closing as if she were about to slap me.
A soft breeze cooled my hot, prickly skin and lifted my hair. “What do you know about witchcraft, other than what you’ve seen on TV?”
“It deals with magic, sorcery—the devil,” she spat out. “It means you’re not a Christian.”
If honoring the traditions of my Native American ancestors meant I wasn’t a Christian, she had a point, but, really, was Jesus all that into the Euro-American idea of Christian, or was He about tolerance and kindness, fellowship and love? “I don’t think Christianity and Native spirituality should be at odds, that’s all.”
“You’re talking about the occult, Marjorie! About praying to eagles and worshiping rocks.”
She wasn’t about to give an inch. Understandable. I’d been there myself not all that long ago. I’d feared wide, open spaces and vast expansions, limiting my existence to what I could see, feel, and hear. “I’m not talking about the occult, Mom, at least not in the way you think. I’m talking about shamanism, the belief of my ancestors, not witchcraft or magic, though they may have some things in common.”
Her face turned a mottled red, not a good sign.
“I’m not joining a cult or losing my faith,” I continued, “only supplementing it with something that’ll bring me closer to God. There’s power in the universe that I hope to tap into, using the spirituality of my ancestors.”
“By worshiping a bunch of pagan gods and talking to spirits?”
I took a deep breath. My mother wanted to keep things as they were. Again, I couldn’t blame her. My determination to discover a new part of me was forcing both of us to question our values and our concepts of reality. It was like I had shed my skin and appeared as someone else, someone she didn’t recognize as her daughter. She didn’t deserve my desertion after all the years she had cared for and loved me. But Antonia had planted a seed of determination within me, to discover who I was, who I was meant to be—and to prove I wasn’t crazy.
How could my mother continue to be so unreasonable in the face of what I was going through? Unless, that is, she equated the voice I was hearing to mental illness, rather than as part of a wakeup call as Dr. Mendez had suggested.
“You revere Mary and believe in angels and saints,” I said, “and you talk to Saint Christopher when you travel.”
“That’s different.”
“The church has statues and a serpent that depicts the devil.”
Mother’s teased and sprayed hair lifted in the breeze. She opened her shoulder bag and pulled out a scarf. “They’re just symbols.”
“What do you think totems are?”
“We don’t worship the statues. They’re just reminders.”
“Same with totems.”
“You make it all sound so...so...reasonable,” my mother admitted grudgingly, as though trying to discern the flaws in my defense of a nature-worshipping spirituality, which she considered evil.
“That’s because it is...” Why was I putting her through this? What was the use? We were speaking different languages. “Guess I’m just trying to fill that big empty space inside of me.”
“Cliff could have done that for you.”
Oh, dear God, not again. “With sex?”
Mother raised
a hand to her chest. “Marjorie Marie Veil!”
She loved my ex-fiancé as if he were her own son, and she still hadn’t forgiven me for our break up. “Marry him, honey, before it’s too late. He’s handsome. He has money. He’ll take care of you.”
“No, Mom.” I would no longer play the role of pleaser and conformer, waiting for deliverance.
“Oh, I forgot,” she said, “you’re too busy pining over that Morgan fellow you met in Carmel Valley.”
I thought about the man I loved and would soon marry, his green eyes, his kind, understanding ways. Little did my mother know that Morgan was the reason I was back in Menlo Park attempting to make her understand. He had asked me why I was punishing her. “Is it because she loves you too much and wants to protect you, or because she can’t let you go?”
“Even Morgan will have to wait.”
“Men don’t wait, Marjorie. They find someone else. Grab the brass ring while you can. You may not get a second chance.”
“It’s only a brass ring.”
She shook her head and frowned at me. “You’ve changed since seeing that...that...Indian guru.”
“Transpersonal psychologist,” I corrected.
“And since taking off to Carmel Valley on that so-called retreat. All that talk about Earth Medicine and the Medicine Wheel and totems and gemstones. I’m surprised you’re not burning incense and staring at psychedelic designs on the wall.” She came to another halt. “You aren’t involved with drugs, are you?”
“Of course not!”
For a blessed moment, my mother remained silent, but then, “I feared the primitive would come out in you sooner or later, the Indian part of you.”
Apparently, her fight for my soul wasn’t over.
“Are you saying this primitive knowledge is passed on through the blood?” I asked. “If so, you must also believe in the sacredness of it, and that I need to discover that part of me.”
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