*
The sky weeps blood, her soul does too, A fragile heart split clean in two. Her silent scream, a raw despair, Fills the void of empty air. Once her refuge, now her tomb, A love turned ash, a life in ruin. I watch her break, I feel her pain. Her fall, my joy, her loss, my gain.
*
---
The moment she screamed, I knew something inside her had shattered. Not just her heart. Oh no, it was far deeper than that. It was her very essence, her foundation, the delicate thread that tethered her to her humanity.
Her scream wasn’t a cry for help. It was a final, desperate release, the sound of something breaking so irrevocably that it could never be mended.
I felt it echo through me like a symphony. It filled every corner of this shared prison, this fractured existence we inhabited. And as the st note faded, I disappeared from her cell without hesitation, drawn back to the world she had once called her sanctuary.
The dream world.
But the moment I arrived, I felt it, the change. It was palpable, oppressive, like stepping into a suffocating void. This was no longer the idyllic refuge she had created, no longer the warm haven where she hid from reality.
It was darker. Colder. Hungrier.
The sky above bled crimson, streaked with veins of bck that pulsated like infected wounds. The soft blues and golden hues of her once-perfect horizon were gone, consumed by a roiling, churning expanse that seemed alive with malice.
The air reeked of sulfur, sharp and acrid, mingling with the faint, metallic tang of blood. Breathing here felt like inhaling smoke, thick and heavy, cwing its way into my lungs.
The ground beneath me was cracked and dry, a byrinth of jagged fissures that oozed molten fire. Each step I took sent tiny eruptions of ash and embers spiraling into the air. The once-tall grass that had swayed in gentle breezes was gone, repced by brittle, bckened stalks that crumbled into dust at the slightest touch.
And then there were the whispers.
They seeped from the shadows, from the cracks, from the very fabric of this world. Faint at first, barely audible over the distant roar of fmes, but growing louder with every step I took. They were fragmented, disjointed—half-formed words ced with pain and fear.
They called to her. Pleaded with her. Promised her things I knew she was too broken to refuse.
I smiled.
This pce was perfect.
The oak tree stood in the distance, a silhouette of despair against the blood-soaked sky. Its bark, once rich and vibrant, was now charred and cracked, oozing a viscous, tar-like substance that dripped to the scorched earth below. The branches, twisted and gnarled, stretched toward the heavens like skeletal fingers, cwing at a sky that would never answer.
And beneath it, there she was.
Sam.
She sat slumped at the base of the tree, her knees drawn to her chest, her silver hair falling around her face like a lifeless curtain. She didn’t move, didn’t stir, as though the weight of this world had crushed her into stillness.
My pulse quickened.
I took my time approaching her, savoring every step. The ground trembled beneath my feet, cracks widening in response to my presence. Shadows coiled around my legs, twisting and writhing like living things, their cold touch a comforting reminder of the power I held here.
“Look at you,” I murmured, my voice soft and reverent.
She didn’t respond.
I stopped a few paces away, letting my gaze linger on her fragile form. Her silver hair, once so striking against the vibrant colors of this pce, now seemed dulled, tarnished by the darkness creeping into every corner of her mind.
This was no longer her refuge. This was her prison.
And it was glorious.
The whispers grew louder, more insistent, swirling around us in a cacophony of despair. The air itself seemed to pulse with energy, charged with the weight of her anguish.
I stepped closer, my heels clicking against the scorched earth, and the shadows around me surged forward, eager to touch her, to cim her.
“This is your doing, little one,” I said, crouching down to her level. “This world… this hell… it’s all yours.”
She didn’t flinch, didn’t move. But I could feel it, the storm raging inside her. The walls she had built around herself were crumbling, her defenses falling piece by piece.
And I? I was here to witness every moment of her unraveling.
The tree groaned above us, its branches twisting further, dripping more of that thick, tar-like substance. The ground beneath us cracked and split, molten rivers carving new paths through the ndscape. The sky darkened, the crimson hue deepening to near-bck, and the whispers turned to wails.
I reached out, brushing a strand of hair from her face. Her skin was cold, her expression vacant, but her eyes… Oh, her eyes. They stared into the distance, unseeing, yet filled with the faintest glimmer of something raw and untamed.
“You feel it, don’t you?” I whispered, my voice a mix of mockery and delight. “The darkness creeping in. The weight of it all pressing down on you.”
Still, she said nothing.
I stood, spreading my wings wide, and the shadows around me erupted into motion, swirling and twisting like a storm. The dream world bent to my will, the ndscape shifting and contorting in response to my presence.
The rivers of fire roared louder, their light casting flickering, hellish shadows across the cracked earth. The sky churned above, streaked with fshes of red lightning that illuminated the grotesque forms of the shadows now crawling across the ground.
This was her creation. Her pain made manifest. And I was here to bask in it.
“This is only the beginning,” I said, my voice carrying over the wails and whispers. “The first step toward becoming what you were always meant to be.”
I turned back to her, my gaze lingering on her slumped form. She was silent, but I could feel the weight of her emotions, the storm raging beneath the surface.
“You’ll break soon enough,” I murmured, a smile curling my lips. “And when you do, I’ll be here. Waiting.”
The ground beneath me pulsed one final time, a shuddering, violent tremor that sent cracks spidering outward in every direction. The molten rivers surged, their light casting an eerie glow on the dying oak tree and the girl beneath it.
I took a step back, spreading my wings further, the shadows rising around me like a throne.
“I have all the time in the world,” I said softly, my voice a whisper carried on the suffocating breeze.
And as the dream world darkened further, the whispers rising to a deafening crescendo, I disappeared into the shadows, leaving her alone beneath the dying tree.
For now.
Queen