Part 24 (1/2)
”I am awake,” said Temple.
”We see that. You shouldn't be.”
”No?”
”No. There is one more dream.”
Temple dozed restfully but was soon aware of a commotion. Strangely, he did not care. He was too tired to open his eyes, anyway. Let whatever was going to happen, happen. He wanted his sleep.
But the voice persisted.
”This is highly irregular. You came in here once and--”
”I did you a favor, didn't I?” (That voice is familiar, Temple thought.)
”Well, yes. But what now?”
”Temple's record is now one and one. In the second sequence he was the victor. The Soviet entry had to extract certain information from him and turn it over to her people. She extracted the information well enough but somehow Temple made her change her mind. The information never went anyplace. How Temple managed to play counterspy I don't know, but he played it and won.”
”That's fine. But what do you want?”
”The final E.C.R. is critical.” (The voice was Arkalion's!) ”How critical, I can't tell you. Sufficient though, if you know that you lose no matter how Temple fares. If the Russian woman defeats Temple, you lose.”
”Naturally.”
”Let me finish. If Temple defeats the Russian woman, you also lose.
Either way, Earth is the loser. I haven't time to explain what you wouldn't understand anyway. Will you cooperate?”
”Umm-mm. You did save Temple's life. Umm-mm, yes. All right.”
”The third dream sequence is the wrong dream, the wrong contest with the wrong antagonist at the wrong time, when a far more important contest is brewing ... with the fate of Earth as a reward for the victor.”
”What do you propose?”
”I will arrange Temple's final dream. But if he disappears from this room, don't be alarmed. It's a dream of a different sort. Temple won't know it until the dream progresses, you won't know it until everything is concluded, but Temple will fight for a slave or a free Earth.”
”Can't you tell us more?”
”There is no time, except to say that along with the rest of the Galaxy, you've been duped. The Nowhere Journey is a grim, tragic farce.
”Awaken, Kit!”
Temple awoke into what he thought was the third and final dream.
Strange, because this time he knew where he was and why, knew also that he was dreaming, even remembered vividly the other two dreams.
”Stealth,” said Arkalion, and led Temple through long, white-walled corridors. They finally came to a partially open door and paused there. Peering within, Temple saw a room much like the one he had left, with two white-gowned figures standing anxiously over a table.
And p.r.o.ne on the table was Sophia, whom Temple had loved short moments before, in his second dream. Moments? Years. (Never, except in a dream.)