Miranda was descending again. They were using the water visualizations this time; Doctor Ballantine told her that it was the fastest way to get her to the edge of the black. Miranda allowed herself to sink into the icy water, picturing her arms windmilling as she swam deeper and deeper into her own mind.
It felt awful, but Doctor Ballatine had already explained all that. "The meditative techniques we're using," she said, back at the beginning, "are intended to be therapeutic. This means that we're going to be going into parts of your deep, unconscious mind that aren't always comfortable to you. Your mind will throw out defensive measures, images and concepts designed to get you to avoid exploring these regions of your subconscious. Your job is to ignore them and press onward. Remember, you're always perfectly safe when you're with me."
Miranda forced that memory into her mind, using it like a lantern as she swam down through waters that gradually turned a darker and darker blue as she went into the recesses of herself. The office was still there, Doctor Ballantine was still there, but she didn't see any of it. She wasn't staring into Doctor Ballantine's warm brown eyes, she was staring into the icy blue as it turned into shadowy black. Miranda could sense great predators circling around her, sharks and squids and things that swam in waters so deep that they could not be described, but she refused to let them near her. They were illusions, she told herself. Defense mechanisms of a mind that wanted to avoid confronting uncomfortable truths.
"What do you see?" Doctor Ballantine asked. The voice seemed to come from just over her shoulder. Miranda didn't look around. She knew she wouldn't see anything. Doctor Ballantine was never down here with her, not directly. She was alone in the darkness. Alone on the edge of the black. The thought panicked Miranda for a moment, and she felt like the suffocating depths of the water were choking the life out of her. She forced herself to take a breath. The water was just a metaphor. It was just a path she created in her mind that led her to her subconscious, no different than the winding spiral staircase or the caverns. They all led to the same place.
"I see the black," she said, her voice filled with the quiet calm that only comes from utter dread.
It had taken fifteen months to get to this point. It had actually taken Miranda a full month to acknowledge that the black even existed; she was originally just looking for guided meditation, something to help her achieve calm and spiritual focus in her everyday life. But Doctor Ballantine helped her realize that she couldn't achieve a higher peace if she couldn't bring herself to explore the lower self first. That was when they began to turn Doctor Ballantine's meditations inward, visualizing a path down into the inner recesses of Miranda's soul.
It wasn't until six months ago that Miranda even glimpsed the black. Every session, she locked gazes with Doctor Ballantine and went a little deeper, a little darker, as deep as she dared until the panic got to be too much for her and she snapped back to reality. Every time, she woke up with her dark hair plastered to her head with sweat and her hazel eyes bloodshot from forgetting to even blink for minutes at a time. But with each session, she built the path like an imaginary landscape in her mind, creating the details until she knew them as well as anything in the real world and using them as landmarks to go deeper into her subconscious.
And then one day she saw it. The black.
It was always smooth in her mind. Not smooth and rippled like polished obsidian, more like a solid wall of perfectly still black water. It loomed over her, every time. Even though Miranda always approached it from above, she always wound up seeing it tower above her head to a measureless height. She could never see the top of the black. It was always bigger than she could imagine. The first time Miranda saw it, Doctor Ballantine had to cradle her for nearly an hour until Miranda stopped sobbing. "What is it?" she remembered whispering, her voice raw with pain. "What's down there?"
"We won't know until you pass through it," Doctor Ballantine had explained, in firm but unshakable tones. "It's something you've repressed, pushed down so deeply that you weren't even able to admit it existed until you began studying with me. But now that you know it exists, you'll be able to keep returning until that construct of your imagination no longer holds any terror. And then you'll be able to enter it and find out what it represents."
That was six months ago. It turned out that it wasn't that easy.
The nightmares began only a few days after Miranda found the black. She would wake with the unbearable sensation that something was looking at her, that the still and featureless surface was on the verge of fixing her with an impossible gaze like a vast black pupil that stared up at her from the depths of her own mind. She called Doctor Ballantine nightly, sometimes three or four times nightly, until Doctor Ballantine suggested that Miranda begin staying over at her apartment until their explorations were completed.