Page 152 of The Quiet Light


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He mutters something I don’t quite catch, stands up, and marches himself out of the room.

I can’t help it. I start laughing again.

But I nevertheless yank my pants back up and start moving.

He’s going to respect my needs.

I think I may need to do better at respecting them, too.

And for that, I need to move.

Chapter 22

I’mthinkingaboutwalls.

Outside, in front of the cottage I share with Zan, I move through the forms of a kata.

I want Zan inside my walls—literally and metaphorically.

I felt uncomfortable at first with the idea of a lock, and I think I need to examine that.

Five hundred years ago, the Order walled me into a room with no exit. I was trapped.

But I was also, in a way, safe from them, for the first time in my life.

The problem wasn’t so much the wall, as that I didn’t have the key.

Well, I suppose Idid, but I couldn’t use it without hurting myself.

The ability—thefreedom—to open the door is the difference.

That I could have a space for myselfby choiceis the difference.

And—that I could choose to let someone in.

That I couldnotbe alone.

That isn’t something that ever occurred to me as apossibilityback then.

Sages are always alone.

But maybe they don’t have to be.

Maybe, there’s a space between lettingeveryonein and lettingno onein.

Walls, yes—and also keys.

Zan is the key, for me.

How do I make him know that? I’m not Teren; comfort is not my gift to give.

Can he feel at home with me with all my wrath?

A hitch in my kata; there’s something there.

I chase that thought.

Can he feel at home with mebecauseof my wrath?