My: Life As A Cult Leader

I still run the Schema. We bought the desert land. The center is half-built. Brenda passed away last spring—peacefully, in her sleep, surrounded by people who called her family. I held her hand. I whispered a Schema blessing I made up on the spot. She smiled.

“There is no Resonance Center,” Marcus said. “There’s just a dusty plot of land you looked at on Zillow.” My Life as a Cult Leader

We moved to a ramshackle farm in upstate New York. I grew a beard. I wore flowing linen that smelled faintly of mildew. I stopped calling them “followers” and started calling them “Echoes.” We had a chant: “The map is not the road; the road is the walking.” It meant nothing. It meant everything. I still run the Schema

He stared at me for a long time. Then he nodded slowly and walked away. He didn’t leave. He worked harder. Because I had given him a new, even more addictive drug: the secret knowledge that the leader was a fraud, and the mission was to protect him anyway. Brenda passed away last spring—peacefully, in her sleep,

The night of the big fundraising solstice, Marcus pulled me aside. His coder’s eyes were clear and cold. He showed me a spreadsheet. “The donations are coming in from pension funds,” he said. “From Brenda’s annuity. From a kid in Florida who sold his car.”

Scroll to Top