Burgeoning Bloodlust Today
In the twilight of the 22nd century, the citizens of the Arcadia Habitat had perfected the art of pacifism. For three generations, no one had raised a hand in anger. The neural dampeners implanted at birth filtered aggression into a gentle, humming background noise—like a distant waterfall that no one ever visited. Violence was a fossil, a curiosity studied in history cubes.
“You don’t tame a river by damming it. You build a channel. Let it sing.”
But meditation made it worse. In the silence, the bloodlust didn’t fade—it sharpened. People began staring at each other’s throats. Not with malice, but with a horrible, scientific curiosity. What sound does a trachea make when compressed? a baker wondered, kneading dough. What color is a lung when first exposed to air? a gardener mused, pruning roses. burgeoning bloodlust
And so Arcadia changed. They still valued peace—but now, peace was a choice, not a cage. Every citizen learned to fight before they learned to forgive. And on the first anniversary of the Reawakening, Kiran stood in the center of the fighting pit, bruised and grinning, and said:
The robotic bees stopped swarming. They returned to their gentle, solitary work. In the twilight of the 22nd century, the
The crowd roared—not with bloodlust, but with the oldest, wildest, most human joy of all: the joy of a second chance.
Then the dreams came. Citizens who had never dreamed of anything more violent than a spilled drink began waking gasping, hands clenched into fists. They dreamed of bone breaking under their knuckles. Of hot blood on cold stone. Of a nameless, rapturous crack . Violence was a fossil, a curiosity studied in history cubes
But nature, as they say, abhors a vacuum.