Author's note: I just wanted to say thank you to everyone who gave feedback and votes for my first story here on Literotica. All the encouragement gave me the inspiration to write another one. So please rate this one too, and send me a note if you have something to say, or just to say hi. /Icingsugar
Lori opened her eyes.
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She had called it the Ice Age. It was a name that she had chosen to reassure herself. Yes, it was cold. And yes, it was lonely. And yes yes yes it went on and on and on. But an ice age, however cold, barren, sterile and seemingly eternal, would one day be over. Ages ended, right?
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She opened her eyes. The ceiling was white, not grey.
What? Wait, woah, shit! Hold on, back up, rewind. What the hell just happened?
She had opened her eyes. Her EYES! No, nonono! This couldn't be for real, this could NOT be true!
Lori's mind spun as the impact of what had happened to her slowly became clear. For any normal person, opening your eyes after a night's sleep was not something that sent you into a state of confusion bordering on cataclysmic chock. But Lori was not a normal person. Not by a long shot.
Lori hadn't opened her eyes in a very long time. Last time it happened was so incredibly long ago that she could not remember what the movement of eyelids felt like. It had been over fifty years. Yes, fifty insanely long years. Not that she had counted. How could she?
There was a very simple explanation to all this. And there was also a very complicated one. The simple explanation was this: The last fifty years she couldn't open her eyes, because they were already open.
The complicated explanation would answer why.
But now she had woken up. She...had...just...woke...up. Oh my god!
Ok, don't panic! Calm down, calm down. Breathe Lori, breathe.
Breathe?
Yes. She breathed. She took real breaths, tasted real air. Her lungs sucked in the light, dry sensation, and her chest heaved, straining against the sheets above her. And her lids blinked. And her lips parted, her tongue moved against the back of her teeth, her eyes danced around in their sockets. Thousands of such little things happening to her, around her, inside of her, all at the same time.
And there was something else. She was no longer cold.
Warmth, comfort, softness, air, heartbeats, eyelids. And more? Carefully, as if trying to remember the right set of instructions, she moved her fingers.
Will. Motion. Freedom. Ohmygod. Dearsweetjesusholyshitfuck! It worked!
She shot up into a sitting position, held up her hand and marvelled at the sight of her wriggling fingers. It wasn't until after a few seconds that she realised that she had moved so much more than just her fingers in the process. It was too much for her. Just too much. She couldn't keep anything in now. Tears welled up in her eyes and butterflies danced in her heart. She giggled hysterically, cried like a child and her face was a three-way tug-of-war between confusion, terror and utter untainted joy.
She was back. She was free. She WAS. And it scared the shit out of her.
She stayed in bed, fearing to stand up, not knowing if there was anyone around her to help her if she fell. Instead she studied the sparse room. Four neutral white walls, her sturdy, comfortable bed and a pair of chairs by the foot. There was a window too, but it was covered by shades. Later she'd pull them open, look out, and see sky. Yes. She was sure of it. It would be the bluest of blue. Just like her eyes.
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The Ice Age had begun on the 19:th of April 1999, and from that day, she hadn't closed her eyes. It was perfectly normal, she had been told, when she was guided through the surreal room full of sterile looking pods of steel and glass. Many Sleepers had their eyes open, it meant nothing. Only that they had looked that way when they were put to sleep. Lori had silently decided that when she went, she'd keep her eyes opened. The ones with their lids shut looked dead. She'd have none of that.
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A rush of weariness washed over her and she felt her balance slip. Damn. She knew it. She was in a hospital, she assumed, and should be resting. She knew better than to sit up. With that thought still nagging in her head, her gaze went blank, her body limp and she slumped back into the welcoming pillows.
After flickering dreams of a big, clear blue sky and a cold, grey concrete ceiling, she woke up again. She realised that she loved waking up. It was the strangest thing. A paradigm shift of the consciousness from one universe to the other in a heartbeat. She immediately wished she could fall asleep again.
But then she noticed something different about the room. There was something new in it, just outside her frame of vision. Lori raised her head from the pillow, and the something new stirred and turned to her. It was a Person.
Apart from the Boy, this was the first human being she'd seen since the beginning of the Ice Age.
"Hello there." said the Person.
The Person was an old woman. Well, maybe not ancient, but Lori wasn't used to look at people.
Only the Boy. Now what did he say his name was? How could she not remember?!
The woman went to pick up a chair in the corner and brought it to the side of the bed. She sat down, and looked at Lori with warm eyes and a friendly smile. She looked like someone's grandmother. She probably was, Lori concluded.
"Hi." said Lori. It was hard to speak. It surprised her that she still remembered how to form words like that at all.
"How are you feeling, dear?"
She thought about it for a while. What did you reply to something like that? Real? Euphoric? Like a kid in a candy store?
"Wonderful." she concluded. "Alive. I can wriggle my toes."
"So... Lorelei, are you aware of what has happened to you?"
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She had woken up, and everything had been wrong. She was staring out into the inside of a sleeping pod. Stainless steel and glass and wires and a grey concrete ceiling outside the glass window over her. Pain shot up at her from every nerve end on her body. It was cold. So incredibly cold. She panicked, shut her eyes and tensed her body to shield off the onslaught. No. She tried, but she didn't. She couldn't move, she couldn't breathe, she couldn't close her eyes.
She looked out at the world with tranquil, frozen eyes. She looked so peaceful, so content in her cryogenic state. But inside, her mind was screaming.
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Was she aware? Lori nodded. She knew. At least she thought she knew. The years were gnawing on her childhood. Life before the Ice Age was mostly a blur.
"I was sick. Some really bad cancer."
"You were diagnosed with a very malign case of bone cancer. You weren't going to last more than a couple of months. So your father contacted us, and you entered our cryo-stasis program. We put you in what is called suspended animation, where you were to wait out the advances in medicine until you could be properly cured." The old woman smiled warmly at her. "Well, that would be now. I can inform you that you have already begun your medical treatment, and that you're regenerating as we speak. But my, where are my manners?"
The lady extended a hand, Lori took it.
"My name is Dr Cathryn Albright. I'm a psychiatrist, your counsellor. You can call me Cate."
"Cate." Lori tasted the word, the first name she'd heard in an eternity.
Except the Boy's name. The name, the name...damn it!
Dr Albright looked into the girl's eyes and said "Lorelei, dear, there is no easy way of saying this, but it has to be said: You were suspended - frozen - for fifty two years and tree months."
Lori knew it had been long. But not how long. For all she knew, she had walked into the Ice Age just a short while before the Boy came along. Time before him had seen eternal, or like nothing. A week. Or a million years.
"Fif..fifty years? Wow...that's long."
"Yes," Dr Albright said "yes it is. So I have to warn you, coming to terms with your new life can be quite a dramatic experience."
"So, your job is to make sure that I don't freak?" Lori asked with a tired little smile.
Dr Albright raised a curious eyebrow.
"Now, that's a novel way of putting it. But yes, to stop you from freaking will be my full time job the next day or two. You have all the right to be confused, and to grief." she said softly. "Many of those you left behind are probably not with us anymore, you know."
She'd thought of that. But it was not something that she enjoyed dwelling on. It might as well hit her, Lori thought, and looked up into the doctor's eyes.
"Who? Who are gone?" Lori whispered. "Please don't sugar coat it. Just tell me."
"Ok." Dr Albright said. "Dear, your mother and father are dead. And your grandparents, naturally. And your brother Richard passed away in an accident two years ago."
Lori just nodded, feeling a little lump in her chest grow colder with each person counted. No family. A few friends maybe? They'd all be due for retirement by now. But the real pain never arrived. It had already passed.
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She had grieved, ages ago. She had screamed silently into the cold, dry air, wept tears she didn't have and drowned herself in the loss of everything she knew. For a long time she had grieved, gone under, gone insane. For a very long, cold time. But also a very long time ago.
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"Yes," she said. "but it happened way back then, it's hard to even remember.
She wanted to ask the counselor about the Boy with the dark hair. But she didn't know where to start.