Kurt was sleeping when the psi-visitor arrived.
Sand had reached out with his mind, and exploratory tendrils of thought had penetrated Kurt’s thin defenses. He spoke gently, insinuating thoughts as if Kurt were dreaming, but deep within his subconscious Kurt knew that he was being visited.
“Let me tell you about the Circle of Ashaandi,” the voice said in his head, “and let me show you how changed life in The Human Hive will be if we are successful.”
Kurt dreamed.
He was back in The Leaders Horde, and it was different. Still a bustling seaport and naval repair facility, it had lost all the drabness that was a Hive trademark. Instead of underground warrens barely poking their superstructures above ground level, it was a glowing city of spires and minarets, solid above ground squat buildings and towering skyscrapers.
There was hustle and bustle with people rushing to and fro about their business, all with happy smiles on their faces. They were gaudily dressed, and engaged in animated conversation. The police were supervising traffic instead of keeping tabs on people, and there were thousands of lights burning brightly in the evening sky.
He was sitting on a couch in a small apartment with a view over the harbor mouth. His arm was around Shauna as they watched a vidshow on a giant screen on the wall, and at their feet two young childen played merrily.
He had a sense of contentment that he had never known before.
“This is how it could be,” said the voice in his head. “This is how it could be. Watch further.”
It was a worship day. Kurt and Shauna with children in tow were walking into the Leader’s Cathedral. A couple of thousand of worshippers were already there, and it was rapidly filling to its capacity of seven thousand. The choir was singing as they entered, setting the mood of the congregation for this thanksgiving service.
The joy was palpable, and Kurt felt real pain as he was wrenched back from the dream.
“I am showing this to Shauna as to you,” the voice said. “The Circle needs recruits to help it in its mission of overthrowing the godless dictator. Even now Ashaandi is plotting his demise. Won’t you join us, Kurt, and help this dream come true? “
Kurt woke up sweating. Had he dreamed this, or imagined this? In his heart he knew that Sand had indeed visited him in his sleep.
He rolled over to look at Shauna.
How peaceful she looked, lying in a light sleep with her hair strewn over the pillow, her eyelids fluttering and a soft smile playing around the corners of her mouth.
Instinctively he knew. Knew that she was reliving and savoring the dream. He knew she was hooked.
He didn’t dare try to probe her mind, but from her beatific expression he read her like a book.
The Believer religion reinstated at The Leaders Horde.
The population emerging from underground to build again the graceful spires reaching to the heavens, monuments to the God they believed in.
He didn’t want to be left out, even although he was maybe not a 100% convert.
He stretched his mind across the boat, seeking the below deck cabin that housed the Circle’s operative.
The mind was open, waiting.
“What do we have to de?” he asked. “If you are monitoring Shauna as I know you are, you know you have captivated her.”
“Come to my quarters after breakfast and I will initiate you both,” the reply came unbidden into his mind.
“Welcome to the Circle of Ashaandi.”
Kurt shuddered. It had such an air of finality.
He hoped and prayed that he was doing the right thing, for his sake and for Shauna's.
Sand had reached out with his mind, and exploratory tendrils of thought had penetrated Kurt’s thin defenses. He spoke gently, insinuating thoughts as if Kurt were dreaming, but deep within his subconscious Kurt knew that he was being visited.
“Let me tell you about the Circle of Ashaandi,” the voice said in his head, “and let me show you how changed life in The Human Hive will be if we are successful.”
Kurt dreamed.
He was back in The Leaders Horde, and it was different. Still a bustling seaport and naval repair facility, it had lost all the drabness that was a Hive trademark. Instead of underground warrens barely poking their superstructures above ground level, it was a glowing city of spires and minarets, solid above ground squat buildings and towering skyscrapers.
There was hustle and bustle with people rushing to and fro about their business, all with happy smiles on their faces. They were gaudily dressed, and engaged in animated conversation. The police were supervising traffic instead of keeping tabs on people, and there were thousands of lights burning brightly in the evening sky.
He was sitting on a couch in a small apartment with a view over the harbor mouth. His arm was around Shauna as they watched a vidshow on a giant screen on the wall, and at their feet two young childen played merrily.
He had a sense of contentment that he had never known before.
“This is how it could be,” said the voice in his head. “This is how it could be. Watch further.”
It was a worship day. Kurt and Shauna with children in tow were walking into the Leader’s Cathedral. A couple of thousand of worshippers were already there, and it was rapidly filling to its capacity of seven thousand. The choir was singing as they entered, setting the mood of the congregation for this thanksgiving service.
The joy was palpable, and Kurt felt real pain as he was wrenched back from the dream.
“I am showing this to Shauna as to you,” the voice said. “The Circle needs recruits to help it in its mission of overthrowing the godless dictator. Even now Ashaandi is plotting his demise. Won’t you join us, Kurt, and help this dream come true? “
Kurt woke up sweating. Had he dreamed this, or imagined this? In his heart he knew that Sand had indeed visited him in his sleep.
He rolled over to look at Shauna.
How peaceful she looked, lying in a light sleep with her hair strewn over the pillow, her eyelids fluttering and a soft smile playing around the corners of her mouth.
Instinctively he knew. Knew that she was reliving and savoring the dream. He knew she was hooked.
He didn’t dare try to probe her mind, but from her beatific expression he read her like a book.
The Believer religion reinstated at The Leaders Horde.
The population emerging from underground to build again the graceful spires reaching to the heavens, monuments to the God they believed in.
He didn’t want to be left out, even although he was maybe not a 100% convert.
He stretched his mind across the boat, seeking the below deck cabin that housed the Circle’s operative.
The mind was open, waiting.
“What do we have to de?” he asked. “If you are monitoring Shauna as I know you are, you know you have captivated her.”
“Come to my quarters after breakfast and I will initiate you both,” the reply came unbidden into his mind.
“Welcome to the Circle of Ashaandi.”
Kurt shuddered. It had such an air of finality.
He hoped and prayed that he was doing the right thing, for his sake and for Shauna's.
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