Above the head of each of them Wicca performed the ritual moves with her dagger.
“Now open the eyes of your souls.”
Brida opened the eyes of her soul. She was in a desert, and the place looked very familiar.
She remembered that she had been there before. With the Magus.
She looked around but couldn’t see him. Yet she wasn’t afraid; she felt calm and happy. She knew who she was and where she lived; she knew that in some other place in time a party was going on. But none of this mattered, because the landscape before her was so much prettier: the sand, the mountains in the distance, and a huge stone.
“Welcome,” said a voice.
Beside her stood a gentleman wearing clothes like those worn by her grandfather.
b r i d a
201
“I am Wicca’s Teacher. When you become a Teacher, your students will find Wicca here, and so on and so forth until the Soul of the World finally makes itself manifest.”
“I’m at a ritual for witches,” Brida said, “a Sabbath.”
The Teacher laughed.
“You have found your path. Few people have the courage to do so. They prefer to follow a path that is not their own.
Everyone has a Gift, but they choose not to see it. You accepted yours, and your encounter with your Gift is your encounter with the world.”
“But why?”
“So that you can plant God’s garden.”
“I have a life ahead of me,” said Brida. “I want to live that life just like anyone else. I want to be able to make mistakes, to be selfish, to have faults.”
The Teacher smiled. In his right hand a blue cloak suddenly appeared.
“You can only be close to people if you are one of them.”
The scene around her changed. She was no longer in a desert but immersed in a kind of liquid, in which various strange creatures were swimming.
“Life is about making mistakes,” said the Teacher. “Cells went on reproducing themselves in exactly the same way for millions of years until one of them made a mistake, and introduced change into that endless cycle of repetition.”
Brida was gazing in amazement at the sea. She didn’t ask how it was possible for them to breathe in there; all she could hear was
202
P a u l o C o e l h o
the Teacher’s voice, all she could think of was a very similar journey she had made and which had begun in a field of wheat.
“It was a mistake that set the world in motion,” said the Teacher. “Never be afraid of making a mistake.”
“But Adam and Eve were driven out of Paradise.”
“And they will return one day, knowing the miracle of the heavens and of all the world. God knew what He was doing when He drew their attention to the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. If He hadn’t wanted them to eat it, He would never have mentioned it.”
“So why did He, then?”
“In order to set the Universe in motion.”
The scene changed back to the desert and the stone. It was morning, and the horizon was becoming suffused with pink light.
The Teacher came toward her with the cloak.
“I consecrate you now, in this moment. Your Gift is God’s instrument. May you prove to be a useful tool.”
Wicca picked up the dress belonging to the youngest of the three women and held it up in her two hands. She made a symbolic offering to the Celtic priests who, in astral form, were watching everything from above the trees. Then she turned to the young woman.
“Stand up,” she said.
Brida stood up. The shadows from the fire flickered over her naked body. Once, another body had been consumed by those same flames, but that time was over.
“Raise your arms.”
b r i d a
203
Brida raised her arms. Wicca put the dress on her.