The Tenth Insight
Available in:
- eBook
- Paperback
- Hardcover
- Book info
- Sample
- Media
- Author updates
- Lists
Synopsis
The adventure that began with The Celestine Prophecy continues as the action shifts to a wilderness in the American Southeast where the narrator's friend has disappeared.
Release date: November 29, 2009
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Print pages: 256
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
Reader buzz
Please log in to recommend or discuss...
Author updates
Close
The Tenth Insight
James Redfield
“In another spellbinding adventure tale, a worthy sequel to his Celestine masterpiece, James Redfield packs thrills, suspense, and spiritual wisdom into a book you cannot put down. You must read
THE TENTH INSIGHT!”
—Brian Weiss, M.D., author of Only Love Is Real and Many Lives, Many Masters
“Everybody’s reading THE TENTH INSIGHT, James Redfield’s sequel to The Celestine Prophecy. Run, don’t walk, to your nearest bookstore.”
—Los Angeles Features Syndicate
“THE TENTH INSIGHT captures not only the adventures of this life but the true spiritual essence of what we are trying to achieve.”
—Dannion Brinkley, author of Saved by the Light and At Peace in the Light
“Will move us further along toward spiritual enlightenment as we near the millennium.… With INSIGHT, Redfield has tried to
stress that everyone’s life, like his, is a ‘spiritual adventure.’”
—Detroit News
“James Redfield has achieved what the greatest storytellers across time and culture aspire to. He has woven a parable accessible
to all… an extraordinary map for the evolutionary journey begun in The Celestine Prophecy.”
—Michael Murphy, chairman, Esalen Institute,and author of Golf in the Kingdom,The Kingdom of Shivas Irons,and The Future of the Body
“In THE TENTH INSIGHT, Redfield continues the Celestine message of living a life that will help others.”
—Rocky Mountain News
“James Redfield has distilled the spiritual teachings of the ages into a thrilling, fast-paced adventure… to help humanity.”
—Joan Borysenko, Ph.D., author of Fire in the Soul
“Enlightening.… Profound teachings interwoven within a gripping story of good versus evil, of life and death, that both delights
the senses and stretches the mind.”
—Tulsa World
“Not to be missed.”
—New Age Journal
“Will take readers to unimagined plateaus of spirituality… may change forever the way we look at life, death, and our purpose
here on Earth.”
—Arizona Networking News
“Inspiring… unique and joyful… Redfield has again captured our deepest intuitions as he illuminates the worlds outside us
and within us… a must-read for everyone!”
—Commonwealth Journal
“A profoundly moving continuation of The Celestine Prophecy.… The plot has many clues and visions and moves with the speed of a first-class thriller.”
—Abilene Reporter-News
“The strength of this book comes from Redfield’s message that the future will be dramatically better than the present. The
story in this book goes well beyond its predecessor, especially in the range of ideas it covers.”
—Body Mind Spirit magazine
“As you read THE TENTH INSIGHT, you might see parts of yourself and others that you’ve never seen before. You might also see
the need for change.… The Tenth Insight must be experienced personally. In the first nine insights, for example, intuition
is experienced as gut feeling, but in The Tenth Insight you actually live it out.”
—Sunday Record (NJ)
“A colorful, imaginative pilgrimage.… Some of the visionary moments in the story remind me of the kind of imagination operating
in classic stories like the Hindu Ramayan or the Chinese Journey to the West. It is a way of thinking that gives palpability to obscure areas of psychological and spiritual experience, so that impulses
toward what is traditionally viewed as other-worldly are given a level of earthiness.”
—Bookscapes
I walked out to the edge of the granite overhang and looked northward at the scene below. Stretching across my view was a large
Appalachian valley of striking beauty, perhaps six or seven, miles long and five miles wide. Along the length of the valley
ran a winding stream that coursed through stretches of open meadowland and thick, colorful forests—old forests, with trees
standing hundreds of feet high.
I glanced down at the crude map in my hand. Everything in the valley coincided with the drawing exactly: the steep ridge on
which I was standing, the road leading down, the description of the landscape and the stream, the rolling foothills beyond.
This had to be the place Charlene had sketched on the note found in her office. Why had she done that? And why had she disappeared?
Over a month had now passed since Charlene had last contacted her associates at the research firm where she worked, and
by the time Frank Sims, her officemate, had thought to call me, he had become clearly alarmed.
“She often goes off on her own tangents,” he had said. “But she’s never disappeared for this long before, and never when she
had meetings already set with long-term clients. Something’s not right.”
“How did you know to call me?” I asked.
He responded by describing part of a letter, found in Charlene’s office, that I had written to her months earlier chronicling
my experiences in Peru. With it, he told me, was a scribbled note that contained my name and telephone number.
“I’m calling everyone I know who is associated with her,” he added. “So far, no one seems to know a thing. Judging from the
letter, you’re a friend of Charlene’s. I was hoping you had heard from her.”
“Sorry,” I told him. “I haven’t talked to her in four months.”
Even as I had said the words, I couldn’t believe it had been that long. Soon after receiving my letter, Charlene had telephoned
and left a long message on my answering machine, voicing her excitement about the Insights and commenting on the speed with
which knowledge of them seemed to be spreading. I remembered listening, to Charlene’s message several times, but I had put
off calling her back—telling myself that I would call later, maybe tomorrow or the day after, when I felt ready to talk. I
knew at the time that speaking with her would put me in the position of having to recall and explain the details of the Manuscript,
and I told myself I needed more time to think, to digest what had occurred.
The truth, of course, was that parts of the prophecy still eluded me. Certainly I had retained the ability to connect with
a spiritual energy within, a great comfort to me considering that
everything had fallen through with Marjorie, and I was now spending large amounts of time alone. And I was more aware than
ever of intuitive thoughts and dreams and the luminosity of a room or landscape. Yet, at the same time, the sporadic nature
of the coincidences had become a problem.
I would fill up with energy, for instance, discerning the question foremost in my life, and would, usually perceive a clear
hunch about what to do or where to go to pursue the answer— yet, after acting accordingly, too often nothing of importance
would occur. I would find no message, no coincidence.
This was especially true when the intuition was to seek out someone I already knew to some extent, an old acquaintance perhaps,
or someone with whom I worked routinely. Occasionally this person and I would find some new point of interest, but just as
frequently, my initiative, in spite of my best efforts to send energy, would be completely rebuked, or worse, would begin
with excitement only to warp out of control and finally die in a flurry of unexpected irritations and emotions.
Such failure had not soured me on the process, but I had realized something was missing when it came to living the Insights
long-term. In Peru, I had been proceeding on momentum, often acting spontaneously with a kind of faith born out of desperation.
When I arrived back home, though, dealing again with my normal environment, often surrounded by outright skeptics, I seemed
to lose the keen expectation, or firm belief, that my hunches were really going to lead somewhere. Apparently there was some
vital part of the knowledge I had forgotten… or perhaps not yet discovered.
“I’m just not sure what to do next,” Charlene’s associate had pressed. “She has a sister, I think, somewhere in New York.
You
don’t know how to contact her, do you? Or anyone else who might know where she is?”
“I’m sorry,” I said, “I don’t. Charlene and I are actually rekindling an old friendship. I don’t remember any relatives and
I don’t know who her friends are now.”
“Well, I think I’m going to file a police report, unless you have a better idea.”
“No, I think that would be wise. Are there any other leads?”
“Only a drawing of some kind; could be the description of a place. It’s hard to tell.”
Later he had faxed me the entire note he had found in Charlene’s office, including the crude sketch of intersecting lines
and numbers with vague marks in the margins. And as I had sat in my study, comparing the drawing to the road numbers in an
Atlas of the South, I had found what I suspected to be the actual location. Afterward I had experienced a vivid image of Charlene in my mind,
the same image I had perceived in Peru when told of the existence of a Tenth Insight. Was her disappearance somehow connected
to the Manuscript?
A wisp of wind touched my face and I again studied the view below. Far to the left, at the western edge of the valley, I could
make out a row of rooftops. That had to be the town Charlene had indicated on the map. Stuffing the paper into my vest pocket, I made my way back to the road
and climbed into the Pathfinder.
The town itself was small—population two thousand, according to the sign beside the first and only stoplight. Most of the commercial
buildings lined just one street running along the edge of the stream. I drove through the light, spotted a motel near the
entrance to the National Forest, and pulled into a parking space facing an adjacent restaurant and pub. Several people were
entering the restaurant, including a tall man with a dark complexion and jet-black hair, carrying a large pack. He glanced
back at me and we momentarily made eye contact.
I got out and locked the car, then decided, on a hunch, to walk through the restaurant before checking into the motel. Inside,
the tables were near empty—just a few hikers at the bar and some of the people who had entered ahead of me. Most were oblivious
to my gaze, but as I continued to survey the room, I again met eyes with the tall man I had seen before; he was walking toward
the rear of the room. He smiled faintly, held the eye contact another second, then walked out a back exit.
I followed him through the exit. He was standing twenty feet away, bending over his pack. He was dressed in jeans, a western
shirt and boots, and appeared to be about fifty years old. Behind him, the late afternoon sun cast long shadows among the
tall trees and grass, and, fifty yards away, the stream flowed by, beginning its journey into the valley.
He smiled halfheartedly and looked up at me. “Another pilgrim?” he asked.
“I’m looking for a friend,” I said. “I had a hunch that you could help me.”
He nodded, studying, the outlines of my body very carefully. Walking closer, he introduced himself as David Lone Eagle, explaining,
as though it was something I might need to know, that he was a direct descendant of the Native Americans who originally inhabited
this valley. I noticed for the first time a thin scar on his face that ran from the edge of his left eyebrow all’ the way
to his chin, just missing his eye.
“You want some coffee?” he asked. “They’re good at Perrier
in the saloon there, but lousy at coffee.” He nodded toward an area near the stream where a small tent stood among three large
poplars. Dozens of people were walking in the area, some of them along a path that crossed a bridge and led into the National
Forest. Everything appeared safe.
“Sure,” I replied. “That would be good.”
At the campsite he lit a small butane camp stove, then filled a boiler with water and set it on the burner.
“What’s your friend’s name?” he finally asked.
“Charlene Billings.”
He paused and looked at me, and as we gazed at each other, I saw a clear image in my mind’s eye of him in another time. He
was younger and dressed in buckskins, sitting in front of a large fire. Streaks of war paint adorned his face. Around him
was a circle of people, mostly Native Americans, but including two whites, a woman and a very large man. The discussion was
heated. Some in the group wanted war; others desired reconciliation. He broke in, ridiculing the ones considering peace. How
could they be so naive, he told them, after so much treachery?
The white woman seemed to understand but pleaded with him to hear her out. War could be avoided, she maintained, and the valley
protected fairly, if the spiritual medicine was great enough. He rebuked her argument totally, then, chiding the group, he
mounted his horse and rode away. Most of the others followed.
“Your instincts are good,” David said, snapping me from my vision. He was spreading a homespun blanket between us, offering
me a seat. “I know of her.” He looked at me questioningly.
“I’m concerned,” I said. “No one has heard from her and I just want to make sure she’s okay. And we need to talk.”
“About the Tenth Insight?” he asked, smiling.
“How did you know that?”
“Just a guess. Many of the people coming to this valley aren’t just here because of the beauty of the National Forest. They’re
here to talk about the Insights. They think the Tenth is somewhere out there. A few even claim to know what it says.”
He turned away and put a tea ball filled with coffee into the steaming water. Something about his tone of voice made me think
he was testing me, trying to check out whether I was who I claimed.
“Where is Charlene?” I asked.
He pointed a finger toward the east. “In the Forest. I’ve never met your friend, but I overheard her being introduced in the
restaurant one night, and I’ve seen her a few times since. Several days ago I saw her again; she was hiking into the valley
alone, and judging from the way she was packed, I’d say she’s probably still out there.”
I looked in that direction. From this perspective, the valley looked enormous, stretching.forever into the distance.
“Where do you think she was going?” I asked.
He stared at me for a moment. “Probably toward the Sipsey Canyon. That’s where one of the openings is found.” He was studying my reaction.
“The openings?”
He smiled cryptically. “That’s right, the dimensional openings.”
I leaned over toward him, remembering my experience at the Celestine Ruins. “Who knows about all this?”
“Very few people. So far it’s all rumor, bits and pieces of information, intuition. Not a soul has seen a manuscript. Most
of the people who come here looking for the Tenth feel they’re being synchronistically led, and they’re genuinely trying to
live the
Nine Insights, even though they complain that the coincidences guide them along for a while and then just stop.” He chuckled lightly. “But that’s where we all are, right? The Tenth Insight is about understanding this whole awareness—the
perception of mysterious coincidences, the growing spiritual consciousness on Earth, the Ninth Insight disappearances—all
from the higher perspective of the other dimension, so that we can understand why this transformation is happening and participate
more fully.”
“How do you know that?” I asked.
He looked at me with piercing eyes, suddenly angry. “I know!”
For another moment his face remained serious, then his expression warmed again. He reached over and poured the coffee into
two cups and handed one to me.
“My ancestors have lived near this valley for thousands of years,” he continued. “They believed this forest was a sacred site
midway between the upper world and the middle world here on Earth. My people would fast and enter the valley on their vision
quests, looking for their specific gifts, their medicine, the path they should walk in this life.
“My grandfather told me about a shaman who came from a faraway tribe and taught our people to search for what he called a
state of purification. The shaman taught them to leave from this very spot, bearing only a knife, and to walk until the animals
provided a sign, and then to follow until they reached, what they called the sacred opening into the upper world. If they
were worthy, if they had cleared the lower emotions, he told them, they might even be allowed to enter the opening, and to
meet directly with the ancestors, where they could remember not just their own vision but the vision of the whole world.
“Of course, all that ended when the white man came. My
grandfather couldn’t remember how to do it, and neither can I. We’re having to figure it out, like everyone else.”
“You’re here looking for the Tenth, aren’t you?” I asked.
“Of course… of course! But all I seem to be doing is this penance of forgiveness.” His voice became sharp again, and he suddenly
seemed to be talking more to himself than to me. “Every time I try to move forward, a part of me can’t get past the resentment,
the rage, at what happened to my people. And it’s not getting any better. How could it happen that our land was stolen, our
way of life overrun, destroyed? Why would that be allowed?”
“I wish it hadn’t happened,” I said.
He looked at the ground and chuckled lowly again. “I believe that. But still, there is a rage that comes when I think of this
valley being misused.
“You see this scar,” he added, pointing to his face. “I could have avoided the fight where this happened. Texas cowboys with
too much to drink. I could have walked away but for this anger burning within me.”
“Isn’t most of this valley now protected in the National Forest?” I asked.
“Only about half of it, north of the stream, but the politicians always threaten to sell it or allow development.”
“What about the other half? Who owns that?”
“For a long time, this area was owned mostly by individuals, but now there’s a foreign-registered corporation trying to buy
it up. We don’t know who is behind it, but some of the owners have been offered huge amounts to sell.”
He looked away momentarily, then said, “My problem is that I want the past three centuries to have happened differently. I
resent the fact that Europeans began to settle on this continent
with no regard for the people who were already here. It was criminal. I want it to have happened differently, as though I
could somehow change the past. Our way of life was important. We were learning the value of remembering. This was the great message the Europeans could have received from my people if they had stopped to listen.”
As he talked, my mind drifted into another daydream. Two people—another Native American and the same white woman— were talking
on the banks of a small stream. Behind them was a thick forest. After a while, other Native Americans crowded around to hear
their conversation.
“We can heal this!” the woman was saying.
“I’m afraid we don’t know enough yet,” the Native American replied, his face expressing great regard for the woman. “Most
of the other chiefs have already left.”
“Why not? Think of the discussions we’ve had. You yourself said if there was enough faith, we could heal this.”
“Yes,” he replied. “But faith is a certainty that comes from knowing how things should be. The ancestors know, but not enough
of us here have reached that knowing.”
“But maybe we can reach this knowledge now,” the woman pleaded. “We have to try!”
My thoughts were interrupted by the sight of several young Forest Service officers, who were approaching an older man on the
bridge. He had neatly cut gray hair and wore dress slacks and a starched shirt. As he moved, he seemed to limp slightly.
“Do you see the man with the officers?” David asked.
“Yeah,” I replied. “What about him?”
“I’ve seen him around here for the past two weeks. His first name is Feyman, I think. I don’t know his last name.” David leaned
toward me, sounding for the first time as if he trusted me
completely. “Listen, something very strange is going on. For several weeks the Forest Service seems to have been counting
the hikers who go into the forest. They’ve never done that before, and yesterday someone told me they have completely closed
off the far eastern end of the wilderness. There are places in that. . .
THE TENTH INSIGHT!”
—Brian Weiss, M.D., author of Only Love Is Real and Many Lives, Many Masters
“Everybody’s reading THE TENTH INSIGHT, James Redfield’s sequel to The Celestine Prophecy. Run, don’t walk, to your nearest bookstore.”
—Los Angeles Features Syndicate
“THE TENTH INSIGHT captures not only the adventures of this life but the true spiritual essence of what we are trying to achieve.”
—Dannion Brinkley, author of Saved by the Light and At Peace in the Light
“Will move us further along toward spiritual enlightenment as we near the millennium.… With INSIGHT, Redfield has tried to
stress that everyone’s life, like his, is a ‘spiritual adventure.’”
—Detroit News
“James Redfield has achieved what the greatest storytellers across time and culture aspire to. He has woven a parable accessible
to all… an extraordinary map for the evolutionary journey begun in The Celestine Prophecy.”
—Michael Murphy, chairman, Esalen Institute,and author of Golf in the Kingdom,The Kingdom of Shivas Irons,and The Future of the Body
“In THE TENTH INSIGHT, Redfield continues the Celestine message of living a life that will help others.”
—Rocky Mountain News
“James Redfield has distilled the spiritual teachings of the ages into a thrilling, fast-paced adventure… to help humanity.”
—Joan Borysenko, Ph.D., author of Fire in the Soul
“Enlightening.… Profound teachings interwoven within a gripping story of good versus evil, of life and death, that both delights
the senses and stretches the mind.”
—Tulsa World
“Not to be missed.”
—New Age Journal
“Will take readers to unimagined plateaus of spirituality… may change forever the way we look at life, death, and our purpose
here on Earth.”
—Arizona Networking News
“Inspiring… unique and joyful… Redfield has again captured our deepest intuitions as he illuminates the worlds outside us
and within us… a must-read for everyone!”
—Commonwealth Journal
“A profoundly moving continuation of The Celestine Prophecy.… The plot has many clues and visions and moves with the speed of a first-class thriller.”
—Abilene Reporter-News
“The strength of this book comes from Redfield’s message that the future will be dramatically better than the present. The
story in this book goes well beyond its predecessor, especially in the range of ideas it covers.”
—Body Mind Spirit magazine
“As you read THE TENTH INSIGHT, you might see parts of yourself and others that you’ve never seen before. You might also see
the need for change.… The Tenth Insight must be experienced personally. In the first nine insights, for example, intuition
is experienced as gut feeling, but in The Tenth Insight you actually live it out.”
—Sunday Record (NJ)
“A colorful, imaginative pilgrimage.… Some of the visionary moments in the story remind me of the kind of imagination operating
in classic stories like the Hindu Ramayan or the Chinese Journey to the West. It is a way of thinking that gives palpability to obscure areas of psychological and spiritual experience, so that impulses
toward what is traditionally viewed as other-worldly are given a level of earthiness.”
—Bookscapes
I walked out to the edge of the granite overhang and looked northward at the scene below. Stretching across my view was a large
Appalachian valley of striking beauty, perhaps six or seven, miles long and five miles wide. Along the length of the valley
ran a winding stream that coursed through stretches of open meadowland and thick, colorful forests—old forests, with trees
standing hundreds of feet high.
I glanced down at the crude map in my hand. Everything in the valley coincided with the drawing exactly: the steep ridge on
which I was standing, the road leading down, the description of the landscape and the stream, the rolling foothills beyond.
This had to be the place Charlene had sketched on the note found in her office. Why had she done that? And why had she disappeared?
Over a month had now passed since Charlene had last contacted her associates at the research firm where she worked, and
by the time Frank Sims, her officemate, had thought to call me, he had become clearly alarmed.
“She often goes off on her own tangents,” he had said. “But she’s never disappeared for this long before, and never when she
had meetings already set with long-term clients. Something’s not right.”
“How did you know to call me?” I asked.
He responded by describing part of a letter, found in Charlene’s office, that I had written to her months earlier chronicling
my experiences in Peru. With it, he told me, was a scribbled note that contained my name and telephone number.
“I’m calling everyone I know who is associated with her,” he added. “So far, no one seems to know a thing. Judging from the
letter, you’re a friend of Charlene’s. I was hoping you had heard from her.”
“Sorry,” I told him. “I haven’t talked to her in four months.”
Even as I had said the words, I couldn’t believe it had been that long. Soon after receiving my letter, Charlene had telephoned
and left a long message on my answering machine, voicing her excitement about the Insights and commenting on the speed with
which knowledge of them seemed to be spreading. I remembered listening, to Charlene’s message several times, but I had put
off calling her back—telling myself that I would call later, maybe tomorrow or the day after, when I felt ready to talk. I
knew at the time that speaking with her would put me in the position of having to recall and explain the details of the Manuscript,
and I told myself I needed more time to think, to digest what had occurred.
The truth, of course, was that parts of the prophecy still eluded me. Certainly I had retained the ability to connect with
a spiritual energy within, a great comfort to me considering that
everything had fallen through with Marjorie, and I was now spending large amounts of time alone. And I was more aware than
ever of intuitive thoughts and dreams and the luminosity of a room or landscape. Yet, at the same time, the sporadic nature
of the coincidences had become a problem.
I would fill up with energy, for instance, discerning the question foremost in my life, and would, usually perceive a clear
hunch about what to do or where to go to pursue the answer— yet, after acting accordingly, too often nothing of importance
would occur. I would find no message, no coincidence.
This was especially true when the intuition was to seek out someone I already knew to some extent, an old acquaintance perhaps,
or someone with whom I worked routinely. Occasionally this person and I would find some new point of interest, but just as
frequently, my initiative, in spite of my best efforts to send energy, would be completely rebuked, or worse, would begin
with excitement only to warp out of control and finally die in a flurry of unexpected irritations and emotions.
Such failure had not soured me on the process, but I had realized something was missing when it came to living the Insights
long-term. In Peru, I had been proceeding on momentum, often acting spontaneously with a kind of faith born out of desperation.
When I arrived back home, though, dealing again with my normal environment, often surrounded by outright skeptics, I seemed
to lose the keen expectation, or firm belief, that my hunches were really going to lead somewhere. Apparently there was some
vital part of the knowledge I had forgotten… or perhaps not yet discovered.
“I’m just not sure what to do next,” Charlene’s associate had pressed. “She has a sister, I think, somewhere in New York.
You
don’t know how to contact her, do you? Or anyone else who might know where she is?”
“I’m sorry,” I said, “I don’t. Charlene and I are actually rekindling an old friendship. I don’t remember any relatives and
I don’t know who her friends are now.”
“Well, I think I’m going to file a police report, unless you have a better idea.”
“No, I think that would be wise. Are there any other leads?”
“Only a drawing of some kind; could be the description of a place. It’s hard to tell.”
Later he had faxed me the entire note he had found in Charlene’s office, including the crude sketch of intersecting lines
and numbers with vague marks in the margins. And as I had sat in my study, comparing the drawing to the road numbers in an
Atlas of the South, I had found what I suspected to be the actual location. Afterward I had experienced a vivid image of Charlene in my mind,
the same image I had perceived in Peru when told of the existence of a Tenth Insight. Was her disappearance somehow connected
to the Manuscript?
A wisp of wind touched my face and I again studied the view below. Far to the left, at the western edge of the valley, I could
make out a row of rooftops. That had to be the town Charlene had indicated on the map. Stuffing the paper into my vest pocket, I made my way back to the road
and climbed into the Pathfinder.
The town itself was small—population two thousand, according to the sign beside the first and only stoplight. Most of the commercial
buildings lined just one street running along the edge of the stream. I drove through the light, spotted a motel near the
entrance to the National Forest, and pulled into a parking space facing an adjacent restaurant and pub. Several people were
entering the restaurant, including a tall man with a dark complexion and jet-black hair, carrying a large pack. He glanced
back at me and we momentarily made eye contact.
I got out and locked the car, then decided, on a hunch, to walk through the restaurant before checking into the motel. Inside,
the tables were near empty—just a few hikers at the bar and some of the people who had entered ahead of me. Most were oblivious
to my gaze, but as I continued to survey the room, I again met eyes with the tall man I had seen before; he was walking toward
the rear of the room. He smiled faintly, held the eye contact another second, then walked out a back exit.
I followed him through the exit. He was standing twenty feet away, bending over his pack. He was dressed in jeans, a western
shirt and boots, and appeared to be about fifty years old. Behind him, the late afternoon sun cast long shadows among the
tall trees and grass, and, fifty yards away, the stream flowed by, beginning its journey into the valley.
He smiled halfheartedly and looked up at me. “Another pilgrim?” he asked.
“I’m looking for a friend,” I said. “I had a hunch that you could help me.”
He nodded, studying, the outlines of my body very carefully. Walking closer, he introduced himself as David Lone Eagle, explaining,
as though it was something I might need to know, that he was a direct descendant of the Native Americans who originally inhabited
this valley. I noticed for the first time a thin scar on his face that ran from the edge of his left eyebrow all’ the way
to his chin, just missing his eye.
“You want some coffee?” he asked. “They’re good at Perrier
in the saloon there, but lousy at coffee.” He nodded toward an area near the stream where a small tent stood among three large
poplars. Dozens of people were walking in the area, some of them along a path that crossed a bridge and led into the National
Forest. Everything appeared safe.
“Sure,” I replied. “That would be good.”
At the campsite he lit a small butane camp stove, then filled a boiler with water and set it on the burner.
“What’s your friend’s name?” he finally asked.
“Charlene Billings.”
He paused and looked at me, and as we gazed at each other, I saw a clear image in my mind’s eye of him in another time. He
was younger and dressed in buckskins, sitting in front of a large fire. Streaks of war paint adorned his face. Around him
was a circle of people, mostly Native Americans, but including two whites, a woman and a very large man. The discussion was
heated. Some in the group wanted war; others desired reconciliation. He broke in, ridiculing the ones considering peace. How
could they be so naive, he told them, after so much treachery?
The white woman seemed to understand but pleaded with him to hear her out. War could be avoided, she maintained, and the valley
protected fairly, if the spiritual medicine was great enough. He rebuked her argument totally, then, chiding the group, he
mounted his horse and rode away. Most of the others followed.
“Your instincts are good,” David said, snapping me from my vision. He was spreading a homespun blanket between us, offering
me a seat. “I know of her.” He looked at me questioningly.
“I’m concerned,” I said. “No one has heard from her and I just want to make sure she’s okay. And we need to talk.”
“About the Tenth Insight?” he asked, smiling.
“How did you know that?”
“Just a guess. Many of the people coming to this valley aren’t just here because of the beauty of the National Forest. They’re
here to talk about the Insights. They think the Tenth is somewhere out there. A few even claim to know what it says.”
He turned away and put a tea ball filled with coffee into the steaming water. Something about his tone of voice made me think
he was testing me, trying to check out whether I was who I claimed.
“Where is Charlene?” I asked.
He pointed a finger toward the east. “In the Forest. I’ve never met your friend, but I overheard her being introduced in the
restaurant one night, and I’ve seen her a few times since. Several days ago I saw her again; she was hiking into the valley
alone, and judging from the way she was packed, I’d say she’s probably still out there.”
I looked in that direction. From this perspective, the valley looked enormous, stretching.forever into the distance.
“Where do you think she was going?” I asked.
He stared at me for a moment. “Probably toward the Sipsey Canyon. That’s where one of the openings is found.” He was studying my reaction.
“The openings?”
He smiled cryptically. “That’s right, the dimensional openings.”
I leaned over toward him, remembering my experience at the Celestine Ruins. “Who knows about all this?”
“Very few people. So far it’s all rumor, bits and pieces of information, intuition. Not a soul has seen a manuscript. Most
of the people who come here looking for the Tenth feel they’re being synchronistically led, and they’re genuinely trying to
live the
Nine Insights, even though they complain that the coincidences guide them along for a while and then just stop.” He chuckled lightly. “But that’s where we all are, right? The Tenth Insight is about understanding this whole awareness—the
perception of mysterious coincidences, the growing spiritual consciousness on Earth, the Ninth Insight disappearances—all
from the higher perspective of the other dimension, so that we can understand why this transformation is happening and participate
more fully.”
“How do you know that?” I asked.
He looked at me with piercing eyes, suddenly angry. “I know!”
For another moment his face remained serious, then his expression warmed again. He reached over and poured the coffee into
two cups and handed one to me.
“My ancestors have lived near this valley for thousands of years,” he continued. “They believed this forest was a sacred site
midway between the upper world and the middle world here on Earth. My people would fast and enter the valley on their vision
quests, looking for their specific gifts, their medicine, the path they should walk in this life.
“My grandfather told me about a shaman who came from a faraway tribe and taught our people to search for what he called a
state of purification. The shaman taught them to leave from this very spot, bearing only a knife, and to walk until the animals
provided a sign, and then to follow until they reached, what they called the sacred opening into the upper world. If they
were worthy, if they had cleared the lower emotions, he told them, they might even be allowed to enter the opening, and to
meet directly with the ancestors, where they could remember not just their own vision but the vision of the whole world.
“Of course, all that ended when the white man came. My
grandfather couldn’t remember how to do it, and neither can I. We’re having to figure it out, like everyone else.”
“You’re here looking for the Tenth, aren’t you?” I asked.
“Of course… of course! But all I seem to be doing is this penance of forgiveness.” His voice became sharp again, and he suddenly
seemed to be talking more to himself than to me. “Every time I try to move forward, a part of me can’t get past the resentment,
the rage, at what happened to my people. And it’s not getting any better. How could it happen that our land was stolen, our
way of life overrun, destroyed? Why would that be allowed?”
“I wish it hadn’t happened,” I said.
He looked at the ground and chuckled lowly again. “I believe that. But still, there is a rage that comes when I think of this
valley being misused.
“You see this scar,” he added, pointing to his face. “I could have avoided the fight where this happened. Texas cowboys with
too much to drink. I could have walked away but for this anger burning within me.”
“Isn’t most of this valley now protected in the National Forest?” I asked.
“Only about half of it, north of the stream, but the politicians always threaten to sell it or allow development.”
“What about the other half? Who owns that?”
“For a long time, this area was owned mostly by individuals, but now there’s a foreign-registered corporation trying to buy
it up. We don’t know who is behind it, but some of the owners have been offered huge amounts to sell.”
He looked away momentarily, then said, “My problem is that I want the past three centuries to have happened differently. I
resent the fact that Europeans began to settle on this continent
with no regard for the people who were already here. It was criminal. I want it to have happened differently, as though I
could somehow change the past. Our way of life was important. We were learning the value of remembering. This was the great message the Europeans could have received from my people if they had stopped to listen.”
As he talked, my mind drifted into another daydream. Two people—another Native American and the same white woman— were talking
on the banks of a small stream. Behind them was a thick forest. After a while, other Native Americans crowded around to hear
their conversation.
“We can heal this!” the woman was saying.
“I’m afraid we don’t know enough yet,” the Native American replied, his face expressing great regard for the woman. “Most
of the other chiefs have already left.”
“Why not? Think of the discussions we’ve had. You yourself said if there was enough faith, we could heal this.”
“Yes,” he replied. “But faith is a certainty that comes from knowing how things should be. The ancestors know, but not enough
of us here have reached that knowing.”
“But maybe we can reach this knowledge now,” the woman pleaded. “We have to try!”
My thoughts were interrupted by the sight of several young Forest Service officers, who were approaching an older man on the
bridge. He had neatly cut gray hair and wore dress slacks and a starched shirt. As he moved, he seemed to limp slightly.
“Do you see the man with the officers?” David asked.
“Yeah,” I replied. “What about him?”
“I’ve seen him around here for the past two weeks. His first name is Feyman, I think. I don’t know his last name.” David leaned
toward me, sounding for the first time as if he trusted me
completely. “Listen, something very strange is going on. For several weeks the Forest Service seems to have been counting
the hikers who go into the forest. They’ve never done that before, and yesterday someone told me they have completely closed
off the far eastern end of the wilderness. There are places in that. . .
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...
Copyright © 2024 All Rights Reserved