85th of Winter, 515 AV
Approaching Midnight
It had been a long season.
Longer than any season Aislyn had in memory.
The past five days alone had felt like an eternity. Like she couldn’t remember what life had been like before. When she had slept on the ground surrounded by the entirety of Alvadas, she couldn’t remember what it felt like to sleep in a bed. When she had joined the fray in the battle for all they had known, it hadn’t felt like bells, it had felt like days.
When Syna had risen on the second day, Aislyn hadn’t finished living and reliving the first. When war had come to Alvadas, none of them had been prepared.
When she had come face to face with death time and time again, she hadn’t been prepared.
None of them ever really were.
But, out of the experience, the woman had gained quite a few things.
For one, she had gained the knowledge that her paranoia served her well, and that being on edge every waking bell of the day was not always a hindrance to survival. She had also learned that insomnia was a lot less fun when it morphed from the ability to extend her days into the night without the thought of sleep into a constant state of just tired. All day and all night, tired.
When she did sleep, it was fitful and often interrupted by a nightmare of the amalgamate creatures the apocalypse had spawned. Not just of the undead, though, but of people- people she knew. Those she didn't particularly care for, and occasionally, the few people she did. There had a monstrous vision of Phobius, one of those nights.
That had been the most recent night, actually. The eighty... Fourth. Fifth...?
She hadn't begun a calendar in her new journal yet, which made timekeeping rather difficult. With the last one filled, she had switched to the newer, and relatively untouched book that the artist had used to track supplies in the Bastion. Within it, she had drawn what she had seen. Projected from her mind to the page, a sort of coping method she often used to help remember her dreams. And nightmares. On the parchment had emerged the grotesque deformity of the one person in Alvadas she would dare call a friend.
After that, she had taken a walk.
A walk to nowhere in particular, though she knew exactly where she was going. The vision- nightmare- whatever it had been- was what prompted her now, in the late hours of the night, to seek the boy out. Perhaps he would be asleep. If she were lucky, he would be plagued by the same sleeplessness. If she wasn't, well, that was unfortunate for him, as Aislyn planned on visiting anyways.
The artist had roamed the streets, not quite admiring the night with her usual appreciation, but still at peace with the silence. There was, of course, the occasional disturbance, especially the rare series of shouts and screams that reminded her that not all of the undead monsters from the end of the world had actually been eliminated yet.
That was one of many reasons sleep was not coming easy to Aislyn.
What was also a constant reminder of what had happened was the door. Every time, when something happened, it was a door. A bad omen, this time with a triangle of black. Said door had also appeared to have a very strange purpose, especially given the circumstances. The circular door in the center of Alvadas- the one that was impossible to step through but apparently open if one reached in by hand- had been gradually depositing yarn and string all over the city for about a day. It had spread fast, covering the plaza around it within the bell, then the buildings around that by high noon. Soon, woolen murals were quickly spreading, almost without input from those actually sewing if. Aislyn had heard that anything depicted was returned to the city, and it was not exactly an impossibly-hard-to-believe rumor. After all, she had been walking just that afternoon past a crudely sewn Cubacious Inn, only to find the real thing in its place the next time she passed.
With that logic in mind, Aislyn had tried something rather desperate. With her lack of sewing, embroidery, or really any related skill, she had attempted to draw just one thing onto a blank portion of the Weaving: her mother.
Unfortunately, that hadn't made the elder woman reappear out of nowhere. Nor did it make Aislyn’s house reappear, which was another factor in her aimless, insomnia-powered walk around the city during the nighttime hours. With nowhere to sleep, why sleep at all? And now she had a goal. A vague one, yes, but a goal.
Since she knew the Cubacious Inn to have reappeared, she would find it. And with it, Phobius.
If Aislyn were unable to enjoy the rising and setting of Syna’s light, perhaps another sort of light would provide some kind of comfort. Phobius, after all, was just about the brightest shade of sunlight ‘Miss Maya’ had ever known.
When the woman eventually came across the rather woolier-than-usual cube inn, she made the cross to the particular cube she knew Phobius to (probably) be lodged within. Each room, after all, was unique both inside and out. Even covered in wool, they were recognizable.
And spinning.
But that was a technicality.
Attempting to move with the problematic cube’s momentum, Aislyn managed to reach the window, and, clumsily, bring a fist to lightly rap the glass. All she had to back up this plan was the hope that the Inn didn't spin any faster, and a prayer to Ionu that she actually had the right room.
”Phobius? Phobius, are you awake?”
Longer than any season Aislyn had in memory.
The past five days alone had felt like an eternity. Like she couldn’t remember what life had been like before. When she had slept on the ground surrounded by the entirety of Alvadas, she couldn’t remember what it felt like to sleep in a bed. When she had joined the fray in the battle for all they had known, it hadn’t felt like bells, it had felt like days.
When Syna had risen on the second day, Aislyn hadn’t finished living and reliving the first. When war had come to Alvadas, none of them had been prepared.
When she had come face to face with death time and time again, she hadn’t been prepared.
None of them ever really were.
But, out of the experience, the woman had gained quite a few things.
For one, she had gained the knowledge that her paranoia served her well, and that being on edge every waking bell of the day was not always a hindrance to survival. She had also learned that insomnia was a lot less fun when it morphed from the ability to extend her days into the night without the thought of sleep into a constant state of just tired. All day and all night, tired.
When she did sleep, it was fitful and often interrupted by a nightmare of the amalgamate creatures the apocalypse had spawned. Not just of the undead, though, but of people- people she knew. Those she didn't particularly care for, and occasionally, the few people she did. There had a monstrous vision of Phobius, one of those nights.
That had been the most recent night, actually. The eighty... Fourth. Fifth...?
She hadn't begun a calendar in her new journal yet, which made timekeeping rather difficult. With the last one filled, she had switched to the newer, and relatively untouched book that the artist had used to track supplies in the Bastion. Within it, she had drawn what she had seen. Projected from her mind to the page, a sort of coping method she often used to help remember her dreams. And nightmares. On the parchment had emerged the grotesque deformity of the one person in Alvadas she would dare call a friend.
After that, she had taken a walk.
A walk to nowhere in particular, though she knew exactly where she was going. The vision- nightmare- whatever it had been- was what prompted her now, in the late hours of the night, to seek the boy out. Perhaps he would be asleep. If she were lucky, he would be plagued by the same sleeplessness. If she wasn't, well, that was unfortunate for him, as Aislyn planned on visiting anyways.
The artist had roamed the streets, not quite admiring the night with her usual appreciation, but still at peace with the silence. There was, of course, the occasional disturbance, especially the rare series of shouts and screams that reminded her that not all of the undead monsters from the end of the world had actually been eliminated yet.
That was one of many reasons sleep was not coming easy to Aislyn.
What was also a constant reminder of what had happened was the door. Every time, when something happened, it was a door. A bad omen, this time with a triangle of black. Said door had also appeared to have a very strange purpose, especially given the circumstances. The circular door in the center of Alvadas- the one that was impossible to step through but apparently open if one reached in by hand- had been gradually depositing yarn and string all over the city for about a day. It had spread fast, covering the plaza around it within the bell, then the buildings around that by high noon. Soon, woolen murals were quickly spreading, almost without input from those actually sewing if. Aislyn had heard that anything depicted was returned to the city, and it was not exactly an impossibly-hard-to-believe rumor. After all, she had been walking just that afternoon past a crudely sewn Cubacious Inn, only to find the real thing in its place the next time she passed.
With that logic in mind, Aislyn had tried something rather desperate. With her lack of sewing, embroidery, or really any related skill, she had attempted to draw just one thing onto a blank portion of the Weaving: her mother.
Unfortunately, that hadn't made the elder woman reappear out of nowhere. Nor did it make Aislyn’s house reappear, which was another factor in her aimless, insomnia-powered walk around the city during the nighttime hours. With nowhere to sleep, why sleep at all? And now she had a goal. A vague one, yes, but a goal.
Since she knew the Cubacious Inn to have reappeared, she would find it. And with it, Phobius.
If Aislyn were unable to enjoy the rising and setting of Syna’s light, perhaps another sort of light would provide some kind of comfort. Phobius, after all, was just about the brightest shade of sunlight ‘Miss Maya’ had ever known.
When the woman eventually came across the rather woolier-than-usual cube inn, she made the cross to the particular cube she knew Phobius to (probably) be lodged within. Each room, after all, was unique both inside and out. Even covered in wool, they were recognizable.
And spinning.
But that was a technicality.
Attempting to move with the problematic cube’s momentum, Aislyn managed to reach the window, and, clumsily, bring a fist to lightly rap the glass. All she had to back up this plan was the hope that the Inn didn't spin any faster, and a prayer to Ionu that she actually had the right room.
”Phobius? Phobius, are you awake?”
~
The line between ILLUSION and REALITY
is one I am willing to cross