09-04-2023, 05:38 AM
He slept, and he dreamed.
He dreamt of an unending shallow sea. In the distance, he saw a shore hovering over the horizon. He walked towards it, wading through dark, stagnant water that never rose past his chest. He felt nothing but mud under his paws; no rocks, no shells, nothing solid. He had been here many times before, though when and where he could not explain.
The shore faded in and out of sight—images flickering and overlaying one another, duplicating, merging, splitting. He needed to reach it. He did not know why—but he could feel the silt slipping under toes, feet, paws, claws—he could not be stranded here. He could not—
He awoke shivering and gasping for air.
Around him, stone columns stood stark and bare against the dense mass of vegetation behind. The air felt humid and damp. There was a trace of salt, too. His ears twitched: he could hear crashing waves echoed in the stone.
The wolf rose to his feet, unsteady but not injured. He was a wolf, he was sure—a wolf, and nothing more. A vague concept of hands drifted into his head as he looked down at his paws. He quickly shook his head, and the odd recollection flitted away from him like a fly. The sea, he thought. I have to get back.
A strange thought. Why would he need to go back? He remembered his lungs filling with fluid, his chest squeezing, and he swayed on the spot. He was sick on the stone floor.
When he recovered himself enough to move, he walked down the steps of the entranceway. No, it was an exit. Why was it an exit? He glanced behind himself at the blank, staring eyes of lupine statues before proceeding.
When he felt dry leaf litter crunch under his feet, the smells around him suddenly seemed so much sharper. Forest, rot, earth, rain, wolf.
“Who’s there?” he asked. He lowered his head instinctively.
the staff team luvs u
He dreamt of an unending shallow sea. In the distance, he saw a shore hovering over the horizon. He walked towards it, wading through dark, stagnant water that never rose past his chest. He felt nothing but mud under his paws; no rocks, no shells, nothing solid. He had been here many times before, though when and where he could not explain.
The shore faded in and out of sight—images flickering and overlaying one another, duplicating, merging, splitting. He needed to reach it. He did not know why—but he could feel the silt slipping under toes, feet, paws, claws—he could not be stranded here. He could not—
He awoke shivering and gasping for air.
Around him, stone columns stood stark and bare against the dense mass of vegetation behind. The air felt humid and damp. There was a trace of salt, too. His ears twitched: he could hear crashing waves echoed in the stone.
The wolf rose to his feet, unsteady but not injured. He was a wolf, he was sure—a wolf, and nothing more. A vague concept of hands drifted into his head as he looked down at his paws. He quickly shook his head, and the odd recollection flitted away from him like a fly. The sea, he thought. I have to get back.
A strange thought. Why would he need to go back? He remembered his lungs filling with fluid, his chest squeezing, and he swayed on the spot. He was sick on the stone floor.
When he recovered himself enough to move, he walked down the steps of the entranceway. No, it was an exit. Why was it an exit? He glanced behind himself at the blank, staring eyes of lupine statues before proceeding.
When he felt dry leaf litter crunch under his feet, the smells around him suddenly seemed so much sharper. Forest, rot, earth, rain, wolf.
“Who’s there?” he asked. He lowered his head instinctively.
the staff team luvs u