Strangely enough, after I did spend the allotted few hours with Howard the impasse seemed less dense. After greeting me warmly he handed me an elegantly wrapped package and exclaimed, "Marcia, I know my destiny is either with you or through you." Opening the box I saw that he had presented me with a most beautiful and unusual pendant. "Wear it always," he said. "I think it has healing powers." I asked him to fasten the chain around my neck, and since then have seldom taken it off.
Howard himself later described the circumstances surrounding that gift as follows: "During the group regression session at Carol's workshop I visualized a talisman consisting of an opal and a diamond. Also, I saw Uranus as the highest planet in your chart. At that time I was unaware that this is exactly how Uranus was placed in your horoscope. Afterward, looking at your book I saw that the opal and diamond represented your sign and planet, Gemini and Saturn. It seemed to me that this was remarkably symbolic of your natal chart.
That is, those stones captured something about the essence of you.
"The very next day I was downtown and thinking about you. I knew that we would meet only briefly before you left the area and would not be together again for some time. The thought occured to me to buy you a token piece of jewelry to remember me by. I wandered into a jewelry store and saw the talisman exactly as I had visualized it during the regression session. It was a case of pure precognition."
The remainder of that fleeting interlude was an eternally memorable fantasia of champagne and flowers, music and laughter, and somehow underneath, the rising hope that this magic might be for real. The last thing I did before regretfully turning south once more was to keep my promise that we would have a hypersensing session together.
It was no great surprise to discover that Howard was an excellent subject, since strong-minded people are often best able to override the barriers of memory that compartmentalize the time-conditioned sequences of our many lives. However, I was numbstruck when the first life he recapitulated turned out to be one in which he was an orphan boy named Enid living in the Sherwood Forest area of England. After the loss of his parents Enid had joined a band of outlaws during the time of the legendary Robin Hood and henceforth lived as a fugitive.
What Howard had no way of knowing, since we hadn't discussed it at all, was that my Ojai friends Barbara Devlin, Robert Byron, Harmony Shaw and I had just been conducting extensive research into that very time and place. The four of us had become convinced that our soul group, which had periodically coalesced since pre-Atlantean days, had also been together then. Evidently we had all been outlaws who had rebelled against the abuses of power perpetrated by the tyrannous overlords of the not-so-merry old England.
Byron had been a reluctant renegade who would rather compose poetry than contend with the king's men. Barbie and Harmony (Ellen and Polly) were female camp followers. I was a childlike herb woman known as "Old Mary" who did her best to look after the motley crew of forest dwellers by making soups and concocting medicinal salves and potions, A chapter on this phase of our reincarnational saga is contained in Barbara Devlin's epochal book, /
Now, as Howard recounted his version, I was witnessing the same scenes through another pair of eyes. Tears coursed down his cheeks as he (Enid) described the deaths of his oppressed parents and his own escape from the tyrants who were sucking the life blood of the hapless peasant farmers. After Enid cast in his lot with the outlaws he supported himself by fashioning knives and swords. Although he became a skilled craftsman he was excessively shy and had little to do with the women in the group, though he admired plump Polly from afar.
"What do you do when you get sick?" I asked.
"I go to the herb lady for a remedy."
"Do you know her name?"
"No, but I can see her. She looks exactly like
Further questioning brought out the fact that he used to visit this herb woman on Saturdays. They didn't talk a great deal, but he seemed greatly touched by her kindness in making him pies.
Like most of his fellow outcasts Enid met ah early death. His downfall came shortly after Old Mary, who undeniably had been a troublemaker, was hauled off to a dungeon where, with great relief, her soul discarded that most inadequate body. Hearing the doleful news Enid lost his will to survive and began taking foolish risks, venturing into town disguised only by a hood which he drew over his head to shadow his face. On one of these excursions he was identified as a member of the robber band by his woodsman's shoes, hauled off to the town square, and executed with an arrow through the heart. Most of the others in the group were killed in subsequent skirmishes.