She felt as though she had just closed her eyes, yet already they opened. The entire rest over before she had even begun to feel rested. Yet, what was it that had woken her? It was still early, or perhaps some would call it late, for the shadows of night writhed around her, obscuring her cottage with their grasp.
Not that it mattered, she didn't need to see to move around her own home, it was mostly bare, the floor plan open and easily maneuvered. She rolled out of her bed, combing through her hair with her fingers, unwilling to pull the comb from her chest at the moment.
She glanced about once more, there was something in the air, the oppressive weight of fear dragged against her, and once she became aware of it, more came to her as well. It was too dark, this was Zintila's city, alight with stars and calias plants and Leth should be growing in the night sky, returning from his escapades with the sun goddess.
Instead inky black picked at the foundations seeping into the air and covering the night sky. Chill wind bit at her, her thin night dress whipping around her legs, pulling her in the direction the wind blew. She shouldn't leave, her home was safe, but somehow she knew that if she left that would change.
It didn't matter, the wind grew stronger, howling in anger at her defiance, shoving her forward, out into the night. This wasn't the night of her city, nor her home in Mura, the dark was alive, textured with reaching, grasping hands that dragged her onward in the journey she had never meant to begin.
Skeletal fingers grasped at her pulling her hair, her dress, leaving chilled echoes of their touch in their wake. Her breathing rushed, picking up as terror raced down her spine. She could taste the velvety night, and it slid down her throat, smooth like silk but invasive in ways she couldn't explain. Her stomach rebelled, fighting back against the invasion, but to no avail, the coughing choking of the Konti woman producing nothing but tears in her eyes and pain in her chest.
There was a landscape, hidden in the dance of the shadows, or so she discovered as her fit found her draped across a stone, a damsel in distress out of the stories one read to children. She shoved herself up off the rock, anger warming the pit of her stomach, granting her temporary freedom, even as the fingers of darkness continued to pull at her, calling her name, beseeching her to come back, to lay back in their company. They were all velvet and silk now, sliding across her skin, tempting her with their wiles, fingers dancing the ebony walk across her skin.
It was wrong, all wrong. Where was the goddess, the god, who ruled the night? The gentle glow that was the promise of their domain? The temptress was dark, all encompassing, a smooth port, and still she refused.
The wind that had gone away returned, angry with her refusal, dragging, pulling, wrapping her dress about her feet. It was too late now, the first pinprick of light blooming in the sky, that was her goal, her promise. She battled the godforsaken blackness, the shelter of the goddess was near, she could see the star, the promise of the gossamer curtain of light that made up the night sky.
The dark abated, forced back by the light, twinkling, flickering, dancing unabashed in the tangible night. She could see more clearly, now even her own skin becoming visible against the touch of the light. Figures, not the skeletal hands of darkness, but people, real people stood in the glow of the star, the glow of the goddess.
It was not to be, and when she realized her mistake she groaned, the sound of pain erupting in a word that was the first real sound she had heard, the others conjured by the sentient creature that blackened the entire sky, the entire world. All but this spot, the candle flare that had tricked her with it's glow.
"No." It wrenched from her lips, the velvet blanket of the night twisting the sound, but not enough to stop it, the curtain pushed back by the light, by the presence of other warm bodies. "No..." The agonized sound repeated, choking her, drowning her as she fought her way into the temporary shelter. She fell to her knees, safe in the halo of light that reflected against her pale skin. Safe, but betrayed, misled, her will weakened by the darkness and the false hope that shattered with each flicker and twist of the candles flame.