2nd of Spring, 515 AV
4th bell
4th bell
There was the fog, and there was nothing. And it was nice.
Quiet, as there was no sound in the fog, nothing to pierce the solitude. Peaceful, as there were no memories here, no past, and no worries, no future. There was no true present either. Just fog. White mist, swirling. Always and everywhere. And it was easy to drift in this place, and it was easy to just be nothing. And being nothing, for her, was good.
Isolde floated. She didn't do anything else; the fog excluded it all. No thoughts or movement, no motivations, no emotions. The fog was absolute; the fog was a comfort.
She stayed in that sweet and distant place inside herself for a long time, long enough that when reality came and permeated through into the mist, she didn't know what was happening. All she knew was that her unchanging world had changed. The white fog was weeping into rain around her. Melting into puddles far down and away. Leaving her. Revealing her.
It made her sad to see it leave.
---
When she woke up, it actually was as if she was waking, and that was strange because she remembered, suddenly, as if the knowledge had never gone, that she could not sleep. Not truly. Nuit didn't sleep.
Still, she felt as if she had been sleeping, for bells and bells and more than that, too. Her eyes fluttered open, brow creased slightly. Her eyelashes were wet, another anomaly: just as she could not sleep, neither could she cry real tears. It took her a while to realize what was going on. The sleep-feeling was making her mind lethargic. It was difficult to make sense of things.
The fog was around her once more, but this time it was different. For a few long chimes she thought that perhaps she hadn't woken at all, perhaps this, somehow, was a dream, as impossible as that was. Or perhaps, more likely, it was some sort of imagining. But that couldn't be right. She had woken; she had felt that. No, this was no dream.
It wasn't a dream because she could feel it, could hear it, and inside the mind-fog there was no feeling and hearing, no sensing at all. Here and now in this fog she felt the chill damp against her cold face, making her skin clammy. She felt the dew that had collected on her eyelashes; felt the small drop of water that flashed down her cheek when she blinked her eyes. Felt the patina of liquid that had condensed onto her hair.
And she heard... noises. Familiar sounds. There was a swaying, a creaking that went in time with it, a never-ending harmony of splashes and licks and burbles. The swaying stirred a soft breeze, the fog eddying around her, against her face, and she could taste a light, undisguised saltiness, and could smell fish and open air and wet, swollen wood.
At last, she realized where she was. The Docks. Syliras. Somehow that frightened and saddened her, maybe in more ways than one, but she still wasn't herself enough to understand why. She blinked, inhaling once, deeply. The world continued to sharpen into focus.
Though her eyes were already open, it was only now that she saw. There was more than just the fog, though she was truly surrounded on all sides by a soft, wet haze, but it was more than that. She could see indistinct shapes among it, even in the dark-- for it was dark, almost certainly night or early, early morning, before Syna had risen. The shapes she recognized as towering wooden ships, sails hanging still and flaccid; the creaking she had heard earlier, that had been them. The swaying had been the sound of the gentle waves washing against the Docks. The splashing had been more of the same, just on a smaller scale, as bits of water slapped against wood.
But the ships were all to the sides of her, nothing in front. Maybe far, far away, if she strained her eyes, she could see the barest profile of something; a silvery-gold outline, starting at the horizon. Either the sun was going up or the moon going down, she couldn't tell which. She was facing out towards the Suvan, and if nothing was in front of her...
Slowly, as if still in a trance --and maybe she was-- Isolde looked down. Her body seemed different somehow, though she could yet recall why, or pinpoint exactly what was different about it. Her clothes, maybe. Her clothes were different? It was hard to tell in the low light, with the fog bleaching everything to shades of gray. She supposed it didn't really matter, right now. Because right now what mattered most was where her feet were, what mattered most was where she was standing.
She was perched on the very edge of one of the docks. The toes of her boots stuck out over open air; below lay a black expanse of water. Take one step more, no, even half a step --or even just tip slightly forward, enough to unbalance her-- and she would fall in. The waves would grab her, pull her under. If she inhaled any of the liquid, it would be over: drowning wouldn't kill her outright, as dead lungs didn't need to breathe, but she knew she was not nearly strong nor coordinated enough to swim well, and especially not when her body was heavy with swallowed water. If she went under, she would not get out; from there it would be a slow and perhaps painful death, stuck beneath the waves.
Somehow the concept didn't frighten her as much as it might once have, though if she had had a pulse it would have quickened. Still, she didn't move. She just stared down, at the Sea.
She wondered idly if being underwater was anything like being in the fog. Dark instead of white, but the same in many other ways. Perhaps death itself was like the fog. She felt the dock rock gently beneath her feet.
And then, abruptly, she noticed something else. Another feeling, one she had been overlooking --or perhaps simply ignoring-- before.
Something was picking at her ankle.
It wasn't a very pronounced sensation, which was why she likely hadn't noticed it before. Just a light tapping. Now that she was paying attention to it, she could also hear a soft scuffling, in time with the light pressure against her boot. She twisted without moving her feet --this was somewhat difficult, but she managed-- and looked down.
A seagull. It was a seagull, white-bodied with pale bluish wings tipped in black. It was pecking at the back of her boot. As she looked down at it, it seemed to notice her attention, and looked up at her, cocking its head to the side. When she didn't do anything more, it went back to pecking at her boot.
Isolde watched it for a moment longer, and then something seemed to come to in her head. She turned her shoulders to face forward, wavering for a second with her arms twitching up for balance, then took a drunken stumbling step backwards. Then another. And again. When she was far enough from the end of the dock to be certain not to fall in, she stopped and knelt slowly to the sea-smoothed wooden boards beneath her. Once she was kneeling, she sunk to the ground on her side, rolled over, stared up at the dark and murky sky. Her arms folded across her stomach, holding tight to each other at the elbows. She didn't breathe or blink or move. She just held still, and watched the fog waft around her.
The seagull continued to peck at her boot, now with increasing aggravation, but eventually it gave up on whatever it wanted. Instead it waddled to her side and settled down itself, tucking its wings tight to its body and drawing its neck in. Something about the bird was familiar to the Nuit, as if she knew it, but it was difficult for her to think at all, let alone remember. "Shyke," she muttered aloud, and somehow the word seemed relevant. The seagull gave a soft call and closed its eyes.
OOCIf anyone reads this, mainly I'm writing this post just to reintroduce my character to myself, since I've been away for a while. Anyone can join if they want, but really this post was just introductory, to test the writing.