by Nayt on Wed Jan 21, 2009 1:29 am
"You wake up, that's what~" the woman chimed merrily.
It was far too simple of an answer to be true--but if this was exactly what she said, and was nothing more than a dream, would that be all? Baleron maintained all of those memories, all the events of the party and everything that lead up to his death, and while they weren't going to feel like something as minor as a dream to him--if he woke up, would he feel the same way?
"That's how dreams work, silly! Your dream's just ending right now, that's all~" she declared with a giggle. "Just when it gets to the best part! Oh well~! It just means you'll go on with your normal life, where you were--traveling, right? After freeing yourself from your curse, you started walking one road, deciding to see where it would lead you, now that you feel like a human being again! Right?"
Memories would flood back to him-- memories . . . his own . . . were they real, or was his mind just filling in the blanks with imagination? That was for him to decide, and as tempting as it might have been for him to believe that he really had died--if this was just a dream, then there was only one choice of what to believe . . .
There was form--he could see-- someone. Her. Slowly, the outline became more prominent as his eyes adjusted to the color (and, though he may not have noticed it, he'd begin to twitch indefinitely), and over the next couple of seconds, he'd finally be able to see the details of the woman he'd been talking to. She had a thin frame and was average height--for her age, at least, just five feet and four inches tall. To most men, she was the type to be considered attractive: thin, young, pretty . . . she had this pristine skin, almost completely devoid of blemishes, thin eyebrows, a bosom as perky as her attitude, and a quaint, pleasant smile--with ruby red lips, eyes pink like a jewel, and short, wild, yet well cleaned and groomed hair of the same color, the same shade of pink that could drive a man to frothing violence. Each article of clothing seemed to have no rhyme or reason: her pants were halved--one long pant leg (to her ankles), one short pant leg (to her knees), a tank top laden with unnecessary zippers, and jacket that she only wore over one arm, with the rest of it dangling down behind her, and to top it all off, between every article of clothing, she had every color of the rainbow, and every color beyond the rainbow, visible.
"And--hey! If you forget everything else, at least remember the name of your dream girl!" she declared with a giddy smile, before announcing her name--Baleron wouldn't hear what she was saying, as the pink began to fade into a less maddening color, and a world more real than the one in which he stood faded in, but as the figure faded with the color, he'd be able to read her lips, at the very least: "R-O-S-E-U-S."
In the end, Baleron would find himself resting at the camp [he had set up for himself?], after what may have been the strangest dream of his life.