in the throat by one of his mistresses. Except he’d really been
killed by a bunch of kids
thousands of miles away. Dr. Hendricks had waved his magic wand—which just happened to
be a cheap Fourth of July sparkler—and down Mr. Bokassa went. The phone on the mat was
bigger still, almost the size of a table lamp. The receiver was heavy in her hand when she picked
it up.
Another girl, and this time clear as a bell. As the phones got bigger, the voices got clearer, it
seemed.
“Zdravo, cujes li me?”
“Yes, I hear you fine, what is this place?”
The voice was gone, and another phone was ringing. It was in a bedroom with a chandelier,
and this phone was the size of a footstool. She had to pick up the receiver with both hands.
“Hallo, hoor je me?”
“Yes! Sure! Absolutely! Talk to me!”
He didn’t. No dial tone. Just gone.
The next phone was in a sunroom with a great glass roof, and it was as big as the table it sat
on. The ringing hurt her ears. It was like listening to a phone channeled through an amplifier at
a rock-and-roll gig. Kalisha ran at it, hands outstretched, palms tilted upward, and knocked the
receiver off the phone’s base, not because she expected enlightenment but to shut it up before it
burst her eardrums.
“Ciao!”
boomed a boy’s voice.
“Mi senti? MI SENTI?”
And that woke her up.
5
She was with her buds—Avery, Nicky, George, and Helen. The others were still sleeping, but
not easily. George and Helen were moaning. Nicky was muttering something and holding out
his hands, making her think of how she’d run at the big phone to make it stop.
Avery was
twisting around and gasping something that she had already heard:
Hoor je me? Hoor je me?
They were dreaming what she had been dreaming, and considering what they were now—
what the Institute had made them—the idea made perfect sense. They were generating some
kind
of group power, telepathy as well as telekinesis, so why wouldn’t
they share the same
dream? The only question was which one of them had started it.
She was guessing Avery,
because he was the strongest.
Hive of bees, she thought. That’s what we are now. Hive of psychic bees.
Kalisha got to her feet and looked around. Still
trapped in the access tunnel, that hadn’t
changed, but she thought the level of that group power had. Maybe it was why the Ward A kids
hadn’t gone to sleep, although it had to be fairly late; Kalisha’s time-sense had always been good,
and she thought it was at least nine-thirty, maybe a bit later.
The hum was louder than ever, and had picked up a kind of cycling beat:
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