"John Dalmas - The Second Coming" - читать интересную книгу автора (Dalmas John)

sensitive services, and in employee performance. Besides dealing with the usual
quality problems, their program undertook to identify and correct personality
difficulties, learning difficultiesтАФanything that might cause operation and delivery
problems.


Whistler concluded the meeting at 4:30. When the others had returned to their
separate offices, she told Lee she was to recommend any changes she felt necessary,
regardless of whom they affected. She was not to feel constrained in any way by the
status quo. "I'll want to review your progress each Friday," she added. "Meanwhile,
feel free to talk with me whenever necessary."


The woman paused, but Lee sensed she wasn't done yet. "It will help," Whistler said,
"if you become personally familiar with our services. Some of them, certainly. I
suggest the basic Abilities Release seriesтАФwhat we call Life Healing."


Aha! Lee knew a bit about Life Healing: it was the hook, the beginning of
Millennium brainwashing. She never blinked. "I don't know," she said. "I'll talk about
it with my husband this evening. But to be honest with you, I probably won't try it.
I'm uncomfortable with psychotherapies."


"I understand," Whistler replied.


Lee hoped the woman didn't. She also wondered, as she left Whistler's office, whether
this would cause difficulties. She'd discovered she really wanted to do this job. She
wanted the moneyтАФthey needed itтАФbut she also wanted to do the job. It looked
really interesting. Challenging and interesting.
***
As she walked home, it occurred to her that Ben was probably somewhere in the
admin building, working, and no one had been at home for the girls after school. She
should, she told herself, have instructed them about that. So she hurried, but found no
one there, and assumed they were playing with new friends. After using the bathroom,
she'd go to the Kleins and check. But Ben arrived before she left, and moments later
the girls came in.


"Where have you been?" she asked them.


"At school, Mom," Becca answered matter of factly. "Children whose parents both
work have to stay. You work on your homework first, and then, if there's time, you
can play on the playground or in the gym, or read if you want. Some of the other kids
stay too, because there are teachers to help if you need it."


Then both girls sat with their parents in the breakfast nook, describing their afternoon