4th Autumn 519 AV
"speech"
"speech"
Caw. Caw. C a w. A crow pecked her forehead. CAW. Ennisa stared into its shiny eyes as it stared straight back into her. The world was barely formed. Wherever the young woman turned her head, scenery seemed to tumble into place. Trees sprouted in convoluted, twisted patterns, their black barky twigs scratching at the sky. Animals and insects crept into their places. The sky sloshed to join in, as clouds were dragged across the sketchy darkness by the very act of Ennisa's roaming eyeballs.
The woman in question felt decidedly queasy. As was so often the case in a dream, she didn't really realise that she was dreaming. The world was simply as it was, even if it was completely ridiculous. The fact that a crow kept pecking her forehead like an acorn didn't move her. The creeping, shaking landscape didn't bother her unduly. The nagging feeling that she was forgetting something bothered her though.
Ennisa walked, the crow accompanying her as she went. Caw. What had she lost? Or, rather, what was she missing? She searched the landscape, traversing mountains and fields and plains with the ease of a breeze, but the thing she was searching for seemed to be hiding in plain sight. With growing frustration, she tried to shout, but found that her voice was nothing but a harsh whisper.
"Petch." Maybe the dream was less dream and more nightmare. She probably would not know until she woke up. That wouldn't happen for a while yet.
In the distance, behind a thicket of trembling, ashy bushes, a figure stood. Ennisa felt a certain rush of giddiness, and knew for absolute certain that this was what she needed to find. This person, stood in the distance. She began to run. All around her, sticky, gulping mudflats opened up, dragging her down. The mud reached all around, except they seemed to stretch out into a strip of quasi-land, which had at the end of it the clump of waist-height bushes and the figure that she still couldn't quite see properly. She strived forwards, her hands reaching forwards, forwards, hoping to reach this important stranger.
Grey mud clumped around her ankles, then her knees until the panicked desperation felt like some clawed creature mutilating her chest cavity. The mud was all-powerful, all-devouring, and it seemed like nothing could save her. Except the stranger.
"Help!", she cried. "Please!" Her voice floated in the air of that strange world. She could only hope that her words reached someone before it was too late. The mud gurgled and smacked; they were disgusting sounds that Ennisa fought to escape with all her strength. "Help."