Sometimes it drove the two souls of the Akontak crazy just how intertwined they were to each other - there was no separation of one from the other, a separation that one had tried to effect via complete and total domination while the other just tried to live with the soul who shared her body, who invaded her thoughts, and who had no respect whatsoever for privacy. They had come a long way since then. But they still wished they could dream separately. But having that as the only time through which they were parted might have been enough to tempt the Akontak into sleeping far more than she did. But as it was, Raiha and Kanikra made do with naps and a short night's sleep.
Ever since they had met their mother-goddess Akajia, their dreams had changed. Though they were easily a stark contrast between dreams and nightmares, neither twin could decide which they were. It was all in one's perspective, wasn't it? Raiha wasn't convinced that Kanikra ever had nightmares, where most of her own had involved being completely lost in nothingness. There was no more fear of the abyss, for each twin understood now just how there was no benefit for either of them if such an event occurred.
But now, that nothingness took shapes. The world of shadows was illuminating, and encouraged their fondness of all things dark. They could see in it, and if you could see in it, there was nothing to be afraid of. But this was strange enough - even as the sisters eyed one another, and began to walk, side by side. Always together. Here, they were apart. But at the same time, they were together, a closeness that nothing and no one could touch. Where Raiha had once considered herself the lightness to her sister's darkness, their balance, the equilibrium between the two had evolved and strengthened, and now both of them found comfort in the shadows... even if it was only for a short time. Darkness was merely the absence of light, and the fear of the darkness was merely fear of the unknown. "Up ahead," Kanikra remarked, ever alert, ever watchful as her identical twin, in the dreamscape, anyway, strolled along with her. "Do you see the light?"
"Aren't I supposed to ask you that?" Raiha shook her head, bemused. She reached for the moving darkness, gathering it about her like a wispy cloak, letting the shadows settle on her skin. They had felt this way before, using the Sulvanon. But where it had smothered them, suffocated them, through these, even as they settled over her mouth and nose, they could breathe. Beside her, Kanikra had done the same... to the point where only two pairs of gold eyes lit up their expressionless features, masked as they were by the shadows, which seemed to harden, almost like wood, around her face when the fingers she could no longer see. The masks. It was always the masks - the masks they wore as they went through their day. "Masks?"
"Yes," Kanikra's arm swept out to catch Raiha as they continued to approach the ball of fire. "Defining. Confining. Freeing. That is the power of the mask..." At the laughter, they looked at each other, gold eyes meeting gold eyes in the faceless masks. "That is new..." she mused. "But at least there's fire out here..." By now they were close enough to realize that something was perhaps burning, cocooned as Vala was in the fire. Their approach had been quiet, but now, in the light that defined the shadows, Raiha took comfort. "Rocks...?" Kanikra nudged one with a boot, the shadows undulating along her legs before settling in place once more. Solid. Curiouser and curiouser. At least it wasn't sand. Sand meant Mura, and that place of sunshine and butterflies and rainbows was more irritating than anything Kanikra knew.
"Goddess' greetings to you," she told the sleeping dreamer, having stopped out of her immediate melee range. Her voice was raised slightly, doubting from the fits of the other's sleep that she would hear her at her normal volume. The flames licked at the shadows that surrounded the two souls of the Akontak, which curled and clung, staying very much in place despite that fire, that anathema to their own nature. Kanikra watched, shaking her head at her sister. Tall, austere, cloaked in the darkness that Kanikra spent her life in, a world in which they both dwelled from time to time... They could have carried on, after seeing what it was, or, for that matter, who it was, or simply observing in the silence of the darkness, but this... this was typical Raiha.
Having abandoned the bed of her mews for the hammock to rest in for the night, Raiha snuggled in amongst the netting, serene and solemn as she was during the day, even as Zulrav's winds moved in and out of the open door, rocking her like the cradle of the sea. Around her, beneath her, the animals slept as well, listening, always listening, and always waiting for the opportune moment.