Clouded is the Eye
By: Delphinus Posted on: November 30, 2007
The sun clove brazen wedges over the pale-bearded Sangre Plains, nestled
as it was within the ides of Valnuary. Midsummer's keen intensity buzzed with
idle glee, content in its own simplicity, and there hung above the grasslands a
wavering heat that brought life buckling and lazing beneath its heavy mantle.
Cicadas droned; ruminants grazed; and somewhere, ensconced amid the towheaded
waves of grass, a young traveller of no more than twenty faltered upon his
feet.
Slumping to his knees, the man exhaled heavily as he fell supine below
the tall grasses; and the vultures above, for all their carrion-hewn fever,
knew better than to circle. Stray locks of chestnut fell ragged over his pate,
cloaking his vision. He fully expected to return to his recurrent reverie of
late, a private Limbo of frozen, sickly clouds ushered in upon a bated
atmosphere thick with fragrant smoke; where, beneath an archway of crushed
velvet, he would lay helpless and prone in expectancy of waking hours.
The man's chestnut-crowned head slumped and his muscles lolled, but he
neither slept nor lapsed in awareness. For a seeming eternity he lay upon the
crushed, springy straw and earth, grasshoppers and mayflies winging
nonchalantly over the pollen-thick grasses. Only his own heart, its measured,
steady tempo beating a subdued tom-tom, stood out against the formless white
noise of the summer prairie.
"Sir! Sir there!"
The traveller made the slightest vain attempt to shift toward the
distant sound, rucksack biting uncomfortably into his back and shoulders.
There, carried upon the wind was a voice - a girl's voice - muted by the reedy
susurrus of the enveloping grasslands. Would that the vultures were taunting
his misfortune, he mused, seizing upon his mind in what he assumed was noontide
heat.
"Are you all right there, sir?"
A soft-edged Petran drawl. Blunted. Gaining in intensity.
"Sir?"
A face.
The man's eyes strained to dissociate the form above him from the
marbled white and blue sky. There knelt over his face a fetching waif of a
woman, dressed in a simple, earthen-hued bodice and blouse, with dark auburn
curls that shone strawberry beneath the smiling sun. Her large hazel eyes gazed
down upon him, fraught with concern, and she pressed the mouth of an oaken vial
to his sweatless lips.
A new voice rung out from somewhere beyond his vision: a man's voice.
As a third joined the conversation, muted though it was, it dawned upon the
traveller that his consciousness was faltering once more. His vision began to
swim, clouds and sky halting within the celestial vault, and he felt rough
hands hoisting him above the grasses to ferry him through the acrid, smoky air.
~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-
The traveller thrust himself upright, emerging from his slumbering
stasis as a drowning man might burst from the surface of a lake. He was sitting
upon a bed within a rustic, simply furnished bedroom, with tall single-pane
windows, barren floorboards, and a polished kawhe table that held an open vial.
The bitter aftertaste of a frost elixir lingered upon his tongue. At his
bedside, a young woman inclined her auburn-cloaked head politely.
"You'd be my saviour, then?" the man spoke with an air of finality as
his nerves settled. "I am indebted to you, if so."
The girl nodded. "Treiya by name, sir. This is my pa's homestead, and
he carried you in with my brother. Mightn't I pry as to what your name is?"
"Gell... Gellan," came a sputter of a reply. The word sounded foreign
to him, and produced itself autonomously.
"Mister Gellan, then," the girl continued. "'Tis a small wonder you did
not succumb utterly to the heat." She heaved an admonishing sigh. "You weren't
sweating. That means heatstroke, you know.
Gellan looked about wearily, his expression addled and half-cognisant.
"Wasn't I?" His mind's eye was fixated upon the alarming unfamiliarity of what
he assumed to be his own name.
Treiya nodded, vexed by the man's apathy. "And what might've brought
you out into the Sangre, if I could be so bold?"
"I don't recollect." Gellan realised the underlying revelation in his
own words with mounting dread. Something had pillaged the chapel of his
memories, ransacked his most sacred of sanctuaries and left it to moulder in
empty condemnation.
His distress did not go unnoticed. The farm girl smiled warmly and
assured him, "You can stay here as long as you like, until you regain your
bearings. This is the guest room, as fortune would have it. You'll have to talk
to my pa - he'll likely ask only that you fill your own share of the chores as
they require mindin'."
The man made an attempt to sit upright. He vacillated, and then slumped
backward once more.
Treiya laughed melodically. "Tomorrow. You'll start work tomorrow. For
now, rest."
~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-
Seasons came and seasons went: first as autumn stole away with the land's viridity, and then again, as winter's nimble grasp plucked the last withered shells from the trees. During the day Gellan worked the fields, made repairs, and tended to whatever else the farmstead was found in need of. In the night he slept fitfully, ever fitfully, waking and lashing out against restraints that held him fast within the confines of his own dreams. His paralysis and related stress were such that he came to dread the night, though always with a vain hope reserved within his heart: one night he would break free of that red velvet archway, and take for his own the insight that lay beyond.
As the days marched on, it became clear to both Gellan and Treiya that
a mutual fondness was burgeoning. Though propriety and uncertainty stayed their
hands to any undue degree, the two began to unconsciously synchronise their
long-term plans. Treiya had made arrangements with a chamberlain abroad, and
was setting off to work at the Deautrive estate in Cyrene the following autumn.
Gellan would accompany her, for he hoped to troll the Cyrenian records in
pursuit of legal documents that might trigger some memory etched within the
deeper archives of his mind.
Spring arrived at long last, and with it the lion's share of farmyard
chores. Gellan tilled and sowed crops upon the barren fields as was necessary,
relishing the same earthy, ascetic lifestyle as any other day, and he rested
his body and mind as any other night. His eyelids flicked shut as clouds began
to form within his mind's eye.
"Hey mister!" a shrill, whispering voice called from somewhere outside.
A sharp rapping, as of knuckles on glass, interrupted his banal descent into the
land of dreams.
Gellan rolled deftly out of bed and leapt to his feet, producing a
folded steel machete from beneath his goose down pillow. He crept cautiously to
the window, squinting as his eyes adjusted in the dizzying shadow.
The cherubic face of a tiny girl-child gazed at him from the moonlit
yard outside, blue cervine eyes framed in ringlets of shining gold. "Mister!"
she whispered with all the urgency expected of one so young. "We've been
lookin' for ya! You're missing something!"
The man lowered his weapon, utterly nonplussed. "Missing... Wait, what?
Who are you?"
Tugging at her ruffled white frock, the girl fidgeted impatiently.
"Gotta ask the guy for your stuff back!" She tapped the side of her temple with
a delicate finger, jarring loose the butterfly that had alighted upon her hand.
"This stuff. We've been looking for you since you ran off! I know you lost it,
and I know he's got it. You prolly ran off here to look for it, but you
shouldn't have run off at all!"
At that moment, what little hope the aimless dreamer had reserved came
welling upward in a surge of adrenaline. He slipped into his boots and overcoat
with haste, his heart clopping elated horse-trails within his ears. The machete
he lodged firmly between his belt and trousers, much to the little girl's
outward dismay, and he slipped innocuously through the tilted window pane into
the yard beyond.
A light, metallic jostling sound alerted Gellan to the presence of a
knight, clad in dulled fullplate, cowering and glancing about sharply behind
the rhododendrons. "Gads, mate, you're not s'posed to be here!" he whispered
shrilly. "N-none of us are. Not s'posed! This is horrible. We have to get
back."
Treiya crept out carefully from around the corner of the farmhouse,
looking disheveled. "Back to where?" she inquired. All heads turned toward her;
the knight nearly toppled over. "I heard whispering," she admitted sheepishly.
"The Mesmerium!" the shaking knight yelped. "We have to go back to the
sodding Mesmerium!"
The little girl nodded emphatically, partially unravelling the blue
ribbon set within her hair. "It's true, we do! That's where you left your
stuff! C'mon!" She tugged eagerly at Gellan's hand.
Gellan glanced confusedly at Treiya, whose expression reflected the
same. Wordlessly, they set off.
~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-
Moonlight spread diffusely over the open, rolling weald, pinpricks of
light blotted and dulled as though filtering the stars through a heavy woollen
blanket. Empyrean hammers had drawn felt-limned gashes through the mantle of
clouds above, and the celestial vault hung open through its nephological
wounds. Soon, the red-gambrel barns and whitewashed farmhouses of Petra dipped
below the horizon and out of sight. Gellan mulled silently over their motley
band - a pluckily optimistic child, a blanched and fearful knight, a Petran
farm girl, and an amnesiac whose nights were condemned to the more rote
extremities of the Dreamrealm - but in truth, the long and winding Prelatorian
had seen far stranger things in its day.
They wandered for hours, the steady scrape of armour grinding noisily
over the roadside cricket-song. Finally, Gellan spoke. "So this person... He'll
be able to help with my memories?"
The girl nodded emphatically, a cheery smile painted from dimple to
dimple.
"And you and the knight," he continued. "Where did you two come from?"
"Same place you did, silly! The good sir knight already told ya that."
She curtsied politely in the knight's direction, eliciting a sudden flinch from
the armoured man.
After a time, the great jagged blot of the Aureliana Forest loomed into
sight, black marble ruins squatting at its edge beside the Urubamba rapids. The
girl skipped alongside a cracked monolith and plopped herself upon it, giggling
as she watched a translucent butterfly alight upon her right palm.
The knight halted dead in his tracks. "Right, this is as far as I'll
venture. Not mingling with that angry lot again! No sir, no thank you," he
proclaimed with an air of incredulity. Blinking through the visor of his
helmet, he removed his gleaming longsword and handed it to Gellan. "Take this,
mate. I'm not gonna need it."
Gellan frowned, concern evident upon his features. "And just why would
I need it?" He replaced the machete in his belt with the knight's blade,
handing his former armament to Treiya.
Sticking out her lower lip in a pitiful pout, the girl shot her
knightly friend a withering look of disapproval. The knight yelped in surprise.
"You won't!" she exclaimed. "None of you'll need to fight at all!"
As the knight rolled his eyes and sat shivering upon a block of marble,
his back pressed firmly to the stony wall beside him, the three remaining
travellers descended the decrepit, musty stairwell leading into the abandoned
bowels of the Mesmerium. Dewy cobwebs glinted and winked idly along the twilit
passage, following the stairway as it terminated in darkness. At last, the
three came upon a great subterranean windmill of becalmed, whitewashed planks
and ornate floral trellises.
The child pointed a tiny hand at the windmill's luminescent arch. "He's
in there," she whispered.
Gellan crept silently toward the windmill with longsword gripped firmly
in hand, his eyes darting about in the darkness. There lumbered within the
mouldering structure a hulking abomination, pale, rubbery flesh drawn with
vitreous slickness over its noxious hide. It supported its long, tubular trunk
upon two muscular arms complemented by a myriad of sucker-encrusted tentacles.
The creature's deformed head bore three glowing eyes in a triangular formation,
and in the centre bulged an uncut sapphire.
"That's him!" the girl whispered emphatically. "That's the guy! See? He
has it on his forehead!"
Gellan shot an accusatory glance over his shoulder. "That's not a guy!
That's not even a person, it-"
A sinewy, mucus-slick tentacle shot forth from the tenebrous doorway,
wrapping itself around his waist. The man cried out in surprise as he found
himself plummeting backward into a well of darkness. "Please don't fight! The
path of war is the path of folly!" the little girl's cry echoed from the
caverns of the Mesmerium outside. Treiya gasped suddenly, pushing closer to the
structure in a desperate bid to help.
Gellan raised his gleaming longsword bellicosely, preparing to drop his
arm in a broad swath across the fell dream horror's head. The creature preempted
him, however, and a pair of rubbery tentacles snaked out with lightning speed to
snap the folded steel in two. A piercingly high note rang out through the
chamber, cutting sharply through the air, before the weapon's keening swan song
was muffled beneath an avalanche of blubbery flesh.
Treiya tossed her machete toward Gellan's grasp. The man reached wide
for the flailing weapon, prompting a mass of cilia to spring out and cling fast
to his wrist; the machete rebounded harmlessly off of the rubbery tentacles and
clattered to the floor. There he watched, helpless as a sinewy,
sucker-encrusted appendage lashed out and twined itself around his head. The
tentacle pulsed and throbbed against his skull with a lurching undulation as it
drained his life energy bit by precious bit.
Dazed and reeling from the assault, Gellan struggled against his
captor's bindings once more. To his surprise, his arms passed through the
nightmare horror's tentacles as though water. He raised his palms to his gaze:
ethereal, and fading with each leeching slurp. Without thinking, he thrust a
hand into the centre of what he determined to be the creature's chest and
willed corporeality to his fingertips with the fullest of his mind's ability.
Fingers caught on slippery, rubbery innards and ichor, sloshing coldly around
his grasp. He withdrew his arm with a violent, singular motion, and the
creature howled an otherworldly scream of torment as its viscera were drawn
forcefully from its body. Soon, it was still.
Gellan shook free of his bindings with a shudder, paying no heed to
Treiya and the young girl as they crept into the windmill's rusted,
gear-studded interior. He wiped the foul ichor upon his trousers. "Girl... What
happened just there?" he asked. "I began to disappear for a moment."
The girl giggled and tilted her head. "Silly man! That's what happens
to all of us dream apparitions when the horrors get to them!"
Gellan blinked and looked about blankly, mulling over the revelation.
"I'm... a dream."
"Of course you are!" the little girl said with no small amount of
juvenile frustration. "We all are! We came outta the Dreamrealm, don't you
remember?"
"Of course I am," Gellan echoed. "That makes sense." He could make
little sense of any of what had transpired, in truth, and his mind rebelled
against the disjointed product of some passing flight of fancy. A nauseous knot
built in his stomach - whether from mounting apprehension or the dead
dream-creature's physical toll - and he doubled over, slumping to his knees.
Suddenly, he espied the sapphire embedded within the dead creature's forehead.
"Aren't you going to take it?" the girl asked innocently. "It's yours,
isn't it?"
Gellan and Treiya exchanged nervous glances. He knew little of what
would happen once he took that innocuous gem, but there a deep-seated need
beyond his conscious thought. The deepest wells of his psyche cried out in
longing for what had been purloined.
With a singular motion, his fingers dug deep into the horror's skull
and pried the glistening sapphire free of its rubbery prison. The sapphire
became a shimmering beacon of indigo, floating upward from his grasp before
disappearing into his own forehead. "It's flooding back," he said with a faint
smile. His form waxed incorporeal. "All of it. You're not going to bel-"
Treiya cried out in horror. Gellan flickered and was gone.
~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-
Treiya stepped neatly from the carriage with an air of propriety,
mustering up what little noble bearing she could. She tightened her shawl in an
attempt to stifle the Cyrenian autumn chill, making her way up the stony steps
to the Deautrive estate as primly as possible. The broad oaken door stood ajar,
and she stepped across the threshold nervously.
Grand oaken balustrades swept upward along the side-stairs, ushering
marble steps into the loftier reaches of the manor. Oak panelling bordered the
stately stone walls, and the manor's ceilings were painted in a faded fresco
depicting soft, fluffy clouds frozen in transit. She strode across the lobby
and into what appeared to be Lord Deautrive's study.
Mounted upon a table set against the far wall of the study was a large
glass display case not unlike a coffin, with a thick red cloth of crushed
velvet draped ceremoniously over its lid. The ceiling bore the same faded cloud
fresco that figured so prominently elsewhere in the manor, and the spicy
redolence of incense hung thickly in the air. There, seated at a desk against
the western wall, was the chestnut-haired form of a young noble.
Lord Deautrive turned his head in greeting to this, his expected
visitor, but blanched suddenly as his eyes and hers made contact. He felt her
presence jutting forth from the tenebrous shrouds of his psyche, bulging
awkwardly within his mind like the thrice-buried suggestions of a fell Serpent.
There was an aspect to this farm girl that becalmed his otherwise implacable
nerves, and the young noble found his own helplessness deeply unsettling.
"Pardon my reticence if you would," he said with a stammer as he came
to his feet. "The, ah... The majority of the house staff is on paid leave. As
thanks for my... extenuating upkeep. I've been unwell recently, you see."
Mustering the barest of awkward politesse, he attempted a bow. "Gellan
Deautrive," he introduced himself, "and I have been eagerly awaiting the new
chambermaid's assistant to rescue me from this mess. You'd be my saviour,
then?"
The girl gave a simple nod, answering his civility with a curtsy and a
smile. "Treiya by name, sir." She glanced out the window. The stars shone
quiescent and unimpeded in the clear night sky.