Something nicer, something gentler - an exercise, if you will, in shaking images loose so that I can focus on other things.
It's been a while since I've been able to put words to "paper", it's funny the way this thing called life tests us.
I floated on the still surface of the vast ocean that silently slept in the timeless, endless, forgotten caverns of Xar.
Darkness surrounded me; darkness drifted through me.
My thoughts were slower than ice, slower than the birth and death of galaxies, slower than time...
Had it always been like this?
I couldn't answer my question, but it seemed a strange way to be; to be this being - this strange creature, floating breathless and motionless on this endless, sunless sea.
Aeons came and went yet I remained, changeless as the unchanging waters around me.
I stared upwards, remembering the dimly-recalled dream of moon and... stars.
A soft, brief whisper at the very edge of hearing.
I remembered clouds, trees... a party...
Silence reclaimed me; silence stretched unbroken around me, comforting and endless.
I drifted, a silent space in the greater silent space that embraced me.
But then - a change.
A droplet of water, falling from the invisible roof above, the first I could ever remember...
A gentle
plink
- soft as silk in the darkness.
And the infinitesimal ripples spread over me and around me, changing the world.
At first, the change was slight - a sense of presence elsewhere, a knowing that this present reality was somehow unreal.
Then - scorching, jagged colours seemed to hint at some alternate existence, concealed just beyond my field of view.
I became aware of a distant wailing siren, repetitive and invasive.
I was drawn towards it; compelled to seek for it. I did not know why.
Slow waves of inky water built around me in a swiftly-swelling gale, unsettling my body, shifting the limbs that I did not remember ever needing to move before now.
I took my first breath in this eternity of stasis.
And then I took another.
Cold seeped into me. My pulse - another thing I'd forgotten - began to thump harshly in my ears. I felt the coarse pressure of fabric enveloping me, the unaccustomed weight of bones, of muscles, of skin and flesh and blood...
Existence lurched, light pierced me...
And I began, softly, to cry.
"There you are," said a girl's voice. "There you are, we got you back. It's okay, it's okay, we got you back."
The world was swaying and creaking around me; strange things beeped and wailed beneath the siren's persistent, banshee wail.
A hand gripped mine; the skin as soft and warm as the fields of Heaven, the fingers strong where they curled around my own feeble claws.
"Abby?" said the voice. "Abby, my name is Nell. You're in an ambulance, we're taking you to A and E, okay pet? Don't stress, my mate Dave's driving fast as he can, we're just a few minutes... shit. Abby? Abby, sweetheart, I really need you to focus on my voice... Dave, she's crashing again, we need to get there now, give it some fucking welly!"
"Three minutes out, mate!"
But she had faded, and the world had faded with her, and I felt the waves of the vast sunless sea lapping around me once more.
This time, though - this time I fought with everything I had.
I clung to the idea of her, to the distant afterglow of her touch. I clung to the vaguely-sensed pressure of the restraining strap around my chest, I clung to the sense of hovering pain.
And I swam.
I swam on and on in the endless night, never breathing, never slacking, driven by a single-mindedness that would have terrified my waking self... until my clawing hands struck sand beneath me.
I heard doors opening and slamming; I felt the jostling of movement, and I dimly heard the garbled words that I guessed somehow related to me.
Distant noise, bright light - and her voice, soft as a whisper across the dying centuries...
"Abby, Abby... stay with me, angel..."
Everything faded - but now I was calm. I knew that I'd made it; I knew that, somehow, I would be okay.
I slept.
.:.
Something cold, hard and painful was in my arm. My chest hurt, my back hurt, everything hurt. I could not believe how much everything hurt. I couldn't speak at first, couldn't move much. My tongue felt too large for my mouth; my legs belonged to some other girl entirely. Something uncomfortable was... in me
down there
, something else cool and smooth pressed gently against my vaguely-sensed thigh. I tried to move my hand, whimpering, to discover what it was...
Another hand caught mine and gently restrained it.
"Leave that, my lovely," said a voice. "It's a catheter. Abigail, I'm Tammy, I'm a nurse. You're in the ICU; we've had you here for a few hours already. There's all sorts of stuff plugged into you, so be careful moving, okay?"
"Okay..." I whispered. "What..."
"You had a severe allergic reaction to something you ate. You passed out and hit your head, and you've been in and out for the past while. Do you remember anything at all?"
"Not... really. Think... was at... Kim's birthday party. Cake..."
"Well, you're here and we're on top of it, so you can relax, okay? Just rest a bit, alright?"
"Okay..."
I managed to open an eye and tried to focus on her, but my vision was blurrier than usual. I gave up and closed my eye again.
"Time... is it?" I whispered.
"It's three in the morning. I just came in to check on your vitals and I'm done with that now, so I'll dim the lights for you and you try to get a bit more rest, okay? Doctor will be around in the morning; don't worry, you're in good hands and you're going to be fine. If you need me, there's a pad by your right hand with a call button on it. Here," she added, nudging my hand so I could feel where to press. "There you go, see?"
"...kay."
There was nothing I could do; I was far too weak to even think of wanting to move, and everything hurt at some strange distance.
So I let go and faded back into my dreams.
I slept.