“You’re not the same man I slept with last night,” she tells him as she gets the girls ready.
The whole family surprised by how affectionate he is during the day, which is not like him. That evening, Berg takes them out to eat at a fancy restaurant for dinner, and after returning home, they send the kids to bed and snuggle on the sofa. She lies there curled in his arm, enjoying the moment. It has been a long time since they just sat and enjoyed each other’s company. Finally, she asks him about the change in his demeanor. He starts to tell her about the dream but finds that all he could remember are fragments that don’t make any sense, even after he gets his notes from the morning. She looks at him with her soft brown eyes and tells him that it doesn’t matter because it must have been a good dream. It brought back the man she married, and she likes that.
Mai opens her eyes to the four bland walls of her dorm room as she sits up, quickly making the room spin. She looks at her purple nightgown, and sadness slowly begins to creep over her as she faintly remembers the dream. Before taking a shower, she looks at her cell phone and realizes that her test is in an hour. All those months and I didn’t miss the test, damn, she thinks. The warm shower feels good, but she isn’t any dirtier than normal this morning, but she remembers the shock of an icy shower before the end of the dream. After the test, she goes to the library looking up dreams and their meanings. She is disappointed that there were no books even close to the dream.
She looks up the only name she could remember, Mashaun, and finds several on the Net. She tries to remember more but can’t. The more she thinks about the dream, the more she remembers and the happier she becomes, but she feels it fading as the day wears on. She feverishly writes down everything that she can remember. Sometimes what she writes doesn’t make any sense. She finds that sometimes when writing, something sparks more of the dream.
Reading her notes, she has a feeling that it is more than a dream, but there is something missing. Somehow, she and the others ended up in another world where they lived for a while but wondered how is that possible. She remembers Mashaun and her feelings for him but wonders if he would remember her or think she’s just a crazy woman or worse. The next few days, she spends her free time learning about clairvoyance, astral travel, and parallel worlds. She shares her thoughts with her friend, and they tell her it’s just a dream, but still, they could not deny that she has changed.
She is no longer a pure pacifist and actually tells them that there is a time and place for killing. She is also more vocal about her ideas and a much better student. Some of her friends don’t like the new Mai and they drift apart. She reads her notes each night, hoping that it would send her back to that dream world with Mashaun, but she would awake frustrated without any new memories, only the fading idea of her dream man.
As the days turn into weeks and weeks into months, they all slowly forget the dream itself while some of the ideas and attitudes that they brought away from it become part of their new lives.
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Robert Rumble
Thesila Prophecy - The Journey Home Page 27