He lay awake in the dark, his heart pounding in his chest and his pillow cold and damp with his sweat. Not just his pillow, his hair was sodden. Much of him was uncovered and cold. There was the faint green light from his old clock radio but it didn't really penetrate the darkness. It was at times like this he regretted moving out to the sticks. One of the great selling points when his wife had first suggested buying a house in the middle of the Yorkshire Moors was the lack of light pollution and spectacular night skies. He hadn't counted on the seemingly permanent cloud cover obliterating any starry nights.
Growing up and spending most of his life in a suburb of Manchester he was used to everything being bathed in an orange light if you were unlucky enough to find your sleep disturbed. Sodium lights, where are you when I need you?
He didn't how many times he had this dream, it didn't matter he knew it was a dream. It terrified him. For some reason it punched all his buttons. Nobody knows you like your subconscious, but quite why it had decided to turn on him now was as big a worry as the dreams themselves.
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It all starts with a sense of intense wellbeing. A Friday evening leaving work after a really good productive week and weekend plans he'd been looking forward to for months kind of feeling. He's walking down a set of stairs. They are tiled black and white alternate squares. The walls are less important. There is a well worn dark wooden rail along the inner edge of the oval stairwell. The previous euphoria is gradually erased and replaced with a sense of ill ease. Firstly it dawns on him he doesn't actually know where he is. Next he looks up and down the stairwell and only the floors immediately above and floor below seems to be illuminated. He's been walking for a while, downwards and has always been in light. He has no clue what floor he is on or which he is headed for. And lastly there is the echo. If it is an echo. Every step his leather soled brogues make on the tiled stairs there is another identical step above him, a fraction of a second behind. It is always there, it is always at the same time. And yet somehow it is getting louder, it is getting closer. It is the floor directly above now and he leans over to look up. Grinning back is a parody of himself. Blackened eyes and an evil sneer but definitely his face. It's at this point he wakes up, terrified and coated in a sheen of sweat.
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Greg and Daisy O'Dowd had met through work. At least that's what they told anyone that asked. She was in scientific research and development and he owned a coffee shop she and her colleagues often frequented. Both had been in relationships that weren't going well. Greg suspected his then girlfriend was cheating on him and Daisy had been with the same guy for 12 years and they were simply drifting apart. She just wasn't the same person she was had been at 22 but he seemed content to never change, never grow or move on.
It was one night after work she just wanted to postpone going home and decided on some quiet "me" time at the coffee shop.
Greg ran the early evening shift by himself, it was never busy and he spent most of his time restocking and preparing for the next day before closing up.
When Daisy entered there was one other customer staring at an eBook on a tablet and Greg smiling amiably at her. He was cute. Bright friendly brown eyes and a tussle of wavy russet hair. He was tall, which was a definite ticked box for her, but quite skinny which definitely wasn't.
He recognised her immediately. She was 'pot of earl grey for one'. She was small and pretty but always looked terribly serious. He had often wondered if she ever smiled. She would probably be quite beautiful if she smiled. He decided tonight he would find out. Tonight he would he would put all his wit and charm to good use. Tonight he would stand behind his counter tongue-tied and silent and try not to appear to be staring at the pretty brunette with the earl grey for one.
She barely touched her drink. She watched people out on the pavement making their way home or off to meet friends. She hated drinking alcohol on a work night and couldn't stand to be around drunks when she was sober. She hadn't noticed the other customer had left half an hour ago. Her tea was tepid at best and Greg had done as much as he needed to do. As much as he liked definitely not staring at her he just wanted her to leave now.
"Are we all done with these?"
He smiled that warm smile at her sitting form. Out of reflex she picked up her cup and took a sip. Uck! She grimaced and swallowed.
"Gone cold."
She spoke to her cup as much as to Greg, before she looked up into his face.
"Are you closing now?" She hadn't kept track of time but the autumn dusk was deepening and street lights were flickering to life. She didn't want to go home. She couldn't face another round of circular arguments going on for hours, draining her energy and killing what love she had left for Pete. How can you feel love for someone you dread to be around? Pity, fondness, even the physical attraction was still there, but not much love any more. They had so much shared history, so many very happy memories but was that enough? He would always have a place in her heart but...
Her usually serious face fell. From serious to sad. Greg was about to answer her question in the affirmative but saw such loneliness and sorrow in her lovely face he just didn't have the heart. He crouched so their heads were at the same level, "You know earl grey is meant to be drunk hot, otherwise you don't get the wonderful aroma of the bergamot. If anyone found out a customer of mine was drinking cold earl grey tea in my very own coffee shop...well..." He shook his head sadly, "My reputation would be in tatters. I'd be run out of town, and justifiably so. Can I get you a fresh pot?"
And there it was. Daisy's sad face morphed into the most beautiful heart rending smile he had ever seen. She placed a hand on his, "Thank you."
When he returned with her tray she smiled again. He was nice. His humour was gentle, self-effacing and she wondered why she hadn't noticed before.
Daisy looked around the empty shop, "I'm Daisy by the way, will you keep me company?"
And so it began.
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Greg squinted at the green glow. 03:44 as usual. Do dreams have internal chronometer? Same time each night. Not each and every night but the same time each night he dreamt. Becoming more frequent, third time in five days and getting closer every time. He felt himself starting to drift. Next thing he knew it was morning.
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Greg didn't know for sure she was cheating. All the signs were there, sudden increase in her interest in her appearance (Ursula had always looked good, really good. Small blonde, blue eyed. Small sharp nose and pronounced cheek bones, full lips) more revealing outfits, staying out later, and less interest in him. She had become quite dismissive of him and rarely seemed to be even listening to him. By God she was sexy though, and their physical relationship blew him away. She had been the one to latch on to him in the first place. A fairly unpromising Friday night out with a couple of friends had met up with more friends and a trip to the local night spot. Ursula had decided he was her target for the night and made her intentions clear from the off. Greg had never experienced a sexually aggressive woman before and loved every minute of it. She took him back to her flat and fucked his brains out, soon he was besotted and six weeks later she was moving in with him. Now it seemed she was bored and had reset her sights elsewhere. With a curt air kiss and a "Don't wait up," she was out of the door and gone nimbly ignoring his questions and giving no indication where she was going. Greg decided there and then, even if she wasn't seeing anyone else he couldn't stay in this relationship any longer.
For the she-didn't-know-how-many times Daisy asked Pete to please put down the Xbox controls and listen to her. Pete loved his video games and his football and his nights out and occasional weekends away with the lads. And Daisy. He always had. He still did. And that was the problem. He just wanted life to be the same as it was when he was in his twenties. His teens. He was still in the same job, exactly the same job, at the warehouse. She wanted more. She wanted to get on and he just didn't get it.
"Pete, I've grown, I need more. I can't stay in this same situation forever going nowhere."
"Why? What is wrong with our life? We have fun don't we? Loads of people would be happy with what we have."
"I know Pete, but I'm sorry, I'm not loads of people. I need to grow. I need to change."
They sat in silence for a minute or so. Neither could look at the other. Pete eventually picked up his games console controls and returned to his zombie slaying.
"I can't cope with this right now." And he turned to face the TV screen. Daisy went and lay on her bed and wept.
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Greg was walking down the black and white stairs again. The echoed steps are louder ever closer. His sense of wellbeing evaporated as he sensed someone directly behind him. He didn't turn, his body refused to move. A hand on his shoulder and unmistakably his own voice but deeper, darker somehow, "Hello Gregor."