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The Valkyries

The Valkyries

Titel: The Valkyries Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Paulo Coelho
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wasn’t looking at the horizon. I know that it’s all around me, but I wasn’t looking at it.”
    “Open your eyes and look at it.”
    Chris looked out at the horizon. She saw mountains, rocks, stones, and sparse and spindly vegetation. A sun that shone brighter and brighter seemed to pierce her sunglasses and burn into her eyes.
    “You are here,” Gene said, now with a serious tone of voice. “Try to understand that you are here, and that the things that surround you change you—in the same way that you change them.”
    Chris stared at the desert.
    “In order to penetrate the invisible world and develop your powers, you have to live in the present, the
here and now.
In order to live in the present, you have to control your second mind. And look at the horizon.”
    Gene asked her to concentrate on the melody that she had been humming. It was “When I Fall in Love.” She didn’t know the words, and had been making them up, or just singing a ta-de-dum.
    Chris concentrated. In a few moments, the melody disappeared. She was now completely alert, listening only to Gene’s words.
    But Gene seemed to have nothing more to say.
    “I have to be alone now,” he said. “Come back in two days.”

Chapter 07
     
    P AULO AND C HRIS LOCKED THEMSELVES inside their air-conditioned hotel room, unwilling to confront the 110 degrees of the midday desert. No books to read, nothing to do. They tried taking a nap, but couldn’t sleep.
    “Let’s explore the desert,” Paulo said.
    “It’s too hot out there. Gene said it was even dangerous. Let’s do it tomorrow.”
    Paulo didn’t answer. He was certain he could turn the fact that he was locked into his hotel room into a learning experience. He tried to make sense of everything that happened in his life, and used conversation only as means for discharging tension.
    But it was impossible; trying to find a meaning in everything meant he had to remain alert and tense. Paulo never relaxed, and Chris had often asked herself when he would tire of his intensity.
    “Who is Gene?”
    “His father is a powerful magus, and he wants Gene to maintain the family tradition—like engineers who want their children to follow in their footsteps.”
    “He’s young, but he wants to act mature,” Chris commented. “And he’s giving up the best years of his life out here in the desert.”
    “Everything has its price. If Gene goes through all this—and doesn’t abandon the Tradition—he’ll be the first in a line of young masters to be integrated into a world that the older masters, although they understand it, no longer know how to explain.”
    Paulo lay down and started to read the only book available,
The Guide to Lodging in the Mojave Desert.
He didn’t want to tell his wife that, in addition to what he had already told her, there was another reason that Gene was here: He was powerful in the paranormal processes, and had been prepared by the Tradition to be ready to act when the gates to paradise opened.
    Chris wanted to talk. She felt anxious cooped up in the hotel room, and had decided not to “make sense of everything,” as her husband did. She was not there to seek a place within a community of the elite.
    “I didn’t really understand what Gene was trying to teach me,” she said. “The solitude and the desert can increase your contact with the invisible world. But I think it causes us to lose contact with other people.”
    “He probably has a girlfriend or two around here,” Paulo said, wanting to avoid conversation.
    If I have to spend another thirty-nine days locked up with Paulo, I’ll commit suicide,
she promised herself.

Chapter 08
     
    T HAT AFTERNOON, THEY WENT TO A COFFEE shop across the street from the hotel. Paulo chose a table by the window. They ordered ice cream. Chris had spent several hours studying her second mind, and had learned to control it much better than before, but her appetite was never subject to control.
    Paulo said, “I want you to pay close attention to the people who pass by.”
    She did as Paulo had asked. In the next half hour, only five people passed by.
    “What did you see?”
    She described the people in detail—their clothing, approximate age, what they were carrying. But apparently that wasn’t what he wanted to hear. He insisted on more, trying to get a better answer, but couldn’t do so.
    “Okay,” he said. “I’m going to tell you what it was that I wanted you to notice: All the people who passed by in the

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