Author note:
Once again, my thanks go to my Dr Mark- whose editorial expertise makes sense of my nonsense.
Please don't forget to rate the story, and leaving a comment gets you extra brownie points.
PM
Caleb 35 - Maharishi Guptal-Pah
We arrived back at the house just after ten. We'd stopped off at a restaurant and had dinner, which had delayed us considerably. We'd been fortunate to have gotten a table.
Louise had insisted on taking the check since she had just come into quite a lot of money. It had been my idea to stop, so I argued the point for about ten seconds before relenting.
My phone chimed just before we got home. It was from Clarissa, Fiona's mother.
_I can see why you have four fiancΓ©es, Thank you.
I grinned.
"Who was that?" asked Amanda. I showed her the text.
"Fiona's mom just got her first reward," I said.
Despite getting some not-so-subtle hints from Louise, I decided to go to sleep. I was truly tired, but I was also ready to have some healthy apart time from the source of so much recent drama. Monday was going to be another long day for me.
My week started in the dojo. Kevin began to teach me Aikido. In addition to being a fourth dan in karate, he held black belts in Judo, Krav Maga, and Aikido. I got the feeling from his speech and his manner that he had been in the military, although he never spoke about it. I thought that one time, when I'd entered the changing room as he'd been getting changed, I'd caught a glimpse of a tattoo on his arm. It had looked very similar to the one that Dean had, and I wondered if Kevin had been a marine too.
I attended one class - not ethics, as I didn't have it that day - and after lunch went to look at the room that Hoss said he had ready for me. Mary had booked his friend in for the first of his sessions that afternoon, and I wanted to get a lay of the land before that. It was as good as it could be. There was no window, but despite that the room wasn't stuffy. It was clear of all junk, and had a table and three office-style chairs in it. The seats weren't as comfortable as they might have been, but I wasn't going to spring for better ones.
After I had my consultation with Hoss's friend, I went home and began dinner. I had my meeting with Jeevan at seven, so I needed to eat earlier than usual. The girls didn't complain about eating early, and at six thirty I left to go and find the address that Jeevan had texted me. When I arrived, I found it to be a church hall. I didn't see Jeevan; I saw the Maharishi Guptal Pah, in all his finery. He was standing at the front of the hall, directing people.
A large man at the door was about to deny me entry, but Jeevan spotted me, hurried over, and grabbed my arm.
"Gregory, this is Caleb," he said to the 'bouncer.' "Caleb, this is Gregory. He minds the door and provides security at my events."
We shook hands, and then Jeevan and I were away. He drew me to the front of the hall, and we sat on two of the seats in the front row.
"I run one of these events a few times every month," he said. "We move around some, but they are usually within an hour's drive of where I live."
"And you perform 'miracles?'" I asked.
He laughed. "I put on a show. All the people who I call up to the stage are plants. There are a rotating cast of about twenty - all volunteers. I will call four or five up this evening. They will have obvious afflictions, and I will heal them."
"I don't understand," I said.
"Almost always," he said, "there are people in the audience who do need healing. They come to see whether what they are hearing about is true. My fakery is so obvious that they leave disappointed - only what they don't realize is that those I can help leave healed. They never leave their seat in the audience, and they never interact with me. Sometimes there is nobody in the audience, and it has been a waste of time as far as healing is concerned, but it furthers the myth. People who are desperate will come to see at least, or get dragged along by one of their more gullible friends - someone who is fooled even by such a sham as I perform.
"There are some that come that do not even realize that they are unwell. They may be healed without ever knowing they were sick."
I chose not to ask about consent in that case. I hoped that would become apparent as we went.
"You charge entry?" I asked.
"A pittance," he said. "Just enough to cover the hire of the hall. Five dollars per head."
"So, what do you want me to do?" I asked.
"Tonight," he said, "observe. I want you to sit over there." He indicated a seat in the back row.
"I will 'perform,'" he continued, "and if anyone needs Healing, I will deal with it. You will watch, and I will show you how to detect illness, diagnose, and hopefully Heal."
At about seven thirty, the hall started to fill up, and it filled quickly. I realized that there must have been a queue outside, because people were streaming in. Jeevan had disappeared off 'stage' and was waiting in the wings.
At exactly eight o'clock the lights in the hall went out, the only illumination coming from the stage. There was silence, an air of expectation, and suddenly, with a crash of cymbals that made everyone jump, Jeevan appeared on the stage.
He began his routine, and I had to admit that he was good. In no time at all he had the crowd, including me, on the edge of our seats. He asked if anyone in the hall wanted to be healed, and several people yelled and raised their hands. Some, I could tell almost without my powers, were plants. I knew who would be called up. There were a few people whom I could tell were not plants, and were desperate. My heart went out to them. I hoped Jeevan would be able to help.
"So, you have noticed them already?"
sent Jeevan to me, all the while continuing his patter. His ability to multitask was impressive.
"Yes,"
I said.
"There are three who I believe are genuinely sick people, all begging to be noticed."
"One of them,"
he sent back, "t
he lady in the third row in the red coat, comes to all my meetings. She is convinced that I am a genuine healer, and that I can help her. Week after week she goes away disappointed, but next time, there she is again. She has pancreatic cancer; I do not have the power to help her, but you do. All I can do is ease her pain slightly, which I do at each meeting. The fact she goes away feeling slightly better is what makes her return each time. You are not yet ready to take on that healing, but I think that you soon will be - hopefully before it is too late for her. The first person I want to look at tonight doesn't even know he is unwell. He has what is called an aneurysm, which is a weakness in an artery. These can happen anywhere, but his is in his belly. If that artery bursts, then he will bleed to death in minutes without a drop of blood being seen."
"How do you gain consent," I asked, "if he doesn't even know he is sick?"
"Like this."
"Some of you here," he announced loudly, "require healing, and do not even realize it. Your bodies cry out to me for help, yet your minds are unaware. I ask you: do you want me to help you?"
There was a murmur from the audience. Some people said nothing; others said yes.
He then picked a few people out from the crowd. "You, madam," he said to one of his plants. "If I were to sense sickness in your body, would you want me to heal you?"
"Yes please, Maharishi!" she shouted loudly. He went to another plant. "And you sir, would you want me to heal you?"
"Yes, please Maharishi!" yelled the man.
The crowd was getting worked up. He went to several more people, some plants, others not. The response was becoming expected and rote. He eventually called on the man he had pointed out.
"You, sir," he said. "If your body cried out to me for help, would you want me to heed that call?"
Everyone in the hall looked at him. I watched his thoughts. He felt like he could hardly say 'no thanks;' all eyes were on him, and a rhythm had been established. He wasn't exactly signing anything. He went with the flow.
"Yes please, Maharishi" he said. Jeevan moved on, and the man sighed in relief.
"Hardly informed consent,"
I said with a hint of amusement in my tone.
"Good enough for my conscience,"
he replied.
"You will have to determine your own threshold. Now watch."
He called the first of the plants up onto the stage. He got them to describe their problems, their pain and how their lives were affected. All the time that was going on, I watched his mind; he assessing the weakness in the blood vessel wall and determining what to do about it.
He put his hands on the head of the plant on the stage and pretended to be concentrating.