01-07-2022, 03:44 PM
The chalky scent of blood remained. The iron smell sticking to her nostrils like honey, the odor invading the deepest crevices of Lana’s mind. A flicker of a tail was all the movement that followed out in the real world, one where her body was not confined to the hollowness of her own thoughts. Lana could remember nothing, and yet, the images flashed before her mind as though she could recite each and every little one. The words did not come, her voice did not come, and the tiny narration that lived inside her own mind could neither retell the events that led her to…wherever she was. The pictures that flashed across her mind were like figments of a dream—blurry and hazy—but if she reached out just far enough, she may just be able to touch one. To grasp it. To really see it.
Were they memories? Or were they dreams? Her eyes followed the cascading images before her, watching as they tipped and slipped against a waterfall of recollections. Her imagination transformed this dark space into an area where the echos of her past flashed like lightning bugs around her. Her eyes glanced against a specific shard of memory, its surface muddy against plumes of smoke that filtered across her vision. She could see herself, lying against the cold winter ground. Blood seeped out from beneath her body, it’s long, red hands painting the earth beneath her. Beside her, she could see Oskar and his familiar tones of autumn. Though, they too were stained red and the boy’s body was limp and cold. Their silhouettes were softened against a waning daylight, the image slowly starting to dull as Lana attempted to look in closer…
A sound had pierced the empty recess of Lana’s mind, drawing her head to the side and forcing her eyes to narrow against its shrill shriek. Was that…her? The sound had been disgruntled, seemingly squeezed against an impending doom that was not tangible nor present, and yet filled with the metallic taste of fear. She attempted to follow it, pushing her legs further against the darkness of her mind until she could barely catch a glimmer of an image.
Another cry.
This time a roar that brought Lana’s head swiveling to the other side. An animal, no doubt. One that was deep, throaty, and angry. Curiosity had easily gotten the better of the young Crane as her paws were seemingly moving on their own, towards the sound and away from her distinct cry.
Her paws, however, had not made it very far. As the darkened walls around her began to crumble and fade, the earth—if one could call it that—cracked and split until she was no longer standing, but instead falling.
A yelp echoed from her lungs as the world and her mind went black.
Lana woke to the sound of whistling wind. Traces of exhaustion and pain echoed along the muscles of her body as she shifted. Her paws grappled at the earth beneath her, lifting her body up, as her head danced with a dizzy tune. A green gaze fastened itself around its surroundings, observing, as the world before her sharpened. Where was she?
Without the safety of the walls that she had built around her mind, Lana could recall little of what had just occurred. The memories, the images, they faded into a dream she could faintly remember. The cries, their sound, stayed with her longer—but what had happened between point A and B were ultimately lost on the young Crane.
Structures that she had never seen before stood out to her, their jarring walls of stone unfamiliar as her eyes focused along their jagged edges. The air tasted like moss against her tongue, and the scents that flooded her nose were nothing she could recognize. Large roots tangled themselves against their structures, twisting atop themselves and rising higher into the sky. She traced them with her eyes, watching as the tree limbs soared into spaces and crevices that she could not imagine them fitting into, and yet they had.
She shifted once more, her body jerking against the sound of something cawing and clucking above her. Lana could not make out where the sound was coming from, but its haunting notes caused a shiver to run easily down her spine.
Her mind did its best to justify her existence, to fill in the holes where her memory ran blank. Oskar and her had traveled, they had left in search for something more. Had they found it? Was this it? She could not remember, and yet, the importance for said details began to fade as easily as they had come.
She was slow to fully rise to her feet. The weight of her body feeling unnatural, as though she had been bogged down by water, to the point where weariness creaked along her bones. But Lana did not falter in her step as she turned to peek around her. She had woken up in the middle of this structure, between two roots that cupped her body in a warm embrace. But where was Oskar? The realization had hit her like a ton of bricks. The stark awareness of his absence causing her breath to hitch in her throat as she swiveled around, her paws tapping against the soft dirt as she whipped her gaze back and forth.
“Oskar?” She called out, a sense of urgency coating her tone like honey, despite the rasp of fatigue that glazed over her voice. She searched for him against the flickering daylight and through the coins of light that glittered between the stalks of roots and swaying leaves.
“Oskar!” This time her urgency grew, her tone faltering to a place of desperation as her eyes swept over the decaying structure. Her paws cautiously stepped over roots, pieces of stone and moss that littered the ground as her nose twitched against a flurry of scents around her.
There! A waning scent trail tickled her senses and before she knew it, her body was turning. A full one eighty as her paws leapt over the larger roots of the tree beside her. Her legs pushed her towards the fragmented steps of the structure, where a flash of a brown silhouette lied against a backsplash of grey. With the frantic beating of her heart, Lana pursued it with caution.
Were they memories? Or were they dreams? Her eyes followed the cascading images before her, watching as they tipped and slipped against a waterfall of recollections. Her imagination transformed this dark space into an area where the echos of her past flashed like lightning bugs around her. Her eyes glanced against a specific shard of memory, its surface muddy against plumes of smoke that filtered across her vision. She could see herself, lying against the cold winter ground. Blood seeped out from beneath her body, it’s long, red hands painting the earth beneath her. Beside her, she could see Oskar and his familiar tones of autumn. Though, they too were stained red and the boy’s body was limp and cold. Their silhouettes were softened against a waning daylight, the image slowly starting to dull as Lana attempted to look in closer…
A sound had pierced the empty recess of Lana’s mind, drawing her head to the side and forcing her eyes to narrow against its shrill shriek. Was that…her? The sound had been disgruntled, seemingly squeezed against an impending doom that was not tangible nor present, and yet filled with the metallic taste of fear. She attempted to follow it, pushing her legs further against the darkness of her mind until she could barely catch a glimmer of an image.
Another cry.
This time a roar that brought Lana’s head swiveling to the other side. An animal, no doubt. One that was deep, throaty, and angry. Curiosity had easily gotten the better of the young Crane as her paws were seemingly moving on their own, towards the sound and away from her distinct cry.
Her paws, however, had not made it very far. As the darkened walls around her began to crumble and fade, the earth—if one could call it that—cracked and split until she was no longer standing, but instead falling.
A yelp echoed from her lungs as the world and her mind went black.
Lana woke to the sound of whistling wind. Traces of exhaustion and pain echoed along the muscles of her body as she shifted. Her paws grappled at the earth beneath her, lifting her body up, as her head danced with a dizzy tune. A green gaze fastened itself around its surroundings, observing, as the world before her sharpened. Where was she?
Without the safety of the walls that she had built around her mind, Lana could recall little of what had just occurred. The memories, the images, they faded into a dream she could faintly remember. The cries, their sound, stayed with her longer—but what had happened between point A and B were ultimately lost on the young Crane.
Structures that she had never seen before stood out to her, their jarring walls of stone unfamiliar as her eyes focused along their jagged edges. The air tasted like moss against her tongue, and the scents that flooded her nose were nothing she could recognize. Large roots tangled themselves against their structures, twisting atop themselves and rising higher into the sky. She traced them with her eyes, watching as the tree limbs soared into spaces and crevices that she could not imagine them fitting into, and yet they had.
She shifted once more, her body jerking against the sound of something cawing and clucking above her. Lana could not make out where the sound was coming from, but its haunting notes caused a shiver to run easily down her spine.
Her mind did its best to justify her existence, to fill in the holes where her memory ran blank. Oskar and her had traveled, they had left in search for something more. Had they found it? Was this it? She could not remember, and yet, the importance for said details began to fade as easily as they had come.
She was slow to fully rise to her feet. The weight of her body feeling unnatural, as though she had been bogged down by water, to the point where weariness creaked along her bones. But Lana did not falter in her step as she turned to peek around her. She had woken up in the middle of this structure, between two roots that cupped her body in a warm embrace. But where was Oskar? The realization had hit her like a ton of bricks. The stark awareness of his absence causing her breath to hitch in her throat as she swiveled around, her paws tapping against the soft dirt as she whipped her gaze back and forth.
“Oskar?” She called out, a sense of urgency coating her tone like honey, despite the rasp of fatigue that glazed over her voice. She searched for him against the flickering daylight and through the coins of light that glittered between the stalks of roots and swaying leaves.
“Oskar!” This time her urgency grew, her tone faltering to a place of desperation as her eyes swept over the decaying structure. Her paws cautiously stepped over roots, pieces of stone and moss that littered the ground as her nose twitched against a flurry of scents around her.
There! A waning scent trail tickled her senses and before she knew it, her body was turning. A full one eighty as her paws leapt over the larger roots of the tree beside her. Her legs pushed her towards the fragmented steps of the structure, where a flash of a brown silhouette lied against a backsplash of grey. With the frantic beating of her heart, Lana pursued it with caution.
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