The Dream of Red Dirt
Helene Markham had not woken up in a sweat in fifteen years. Not because her life was easy, she was a real estate developer in Fairfield County, Connecticut, where the zoning boards were ruthless and the clients were worse. But because she had meditated every morning at 5:30 AM for two decades. She had built a fortress of calm around her nervous system. So when she bolted upright at 3:17 AM on a Tuesday in March, her heart slamming against her ribs, she knew something had shifted. The dream was already dissolving like sugar in rain, but one image remained: red dirt. Thick, tropical, blood-colored earth. And on it, a foundation being poured. Not the neat, gray rectangles of her Connecticut subdivisions. Something wilder. Something that curved with the land instead of fighting it. She sat on the edge of her king-sized bed, breath steadying, and listened. Her intuition, that quiet voice she had trained herself to hear through years of morning silence, did not speak in words. It spoke in p...