1st Stage
Wednesday dreamed she was back in her old home, deep within the walls of her family library. She glided thoughtlessly through the rows and rows of books, all the knowledge that she’d been eager to absorb ever since she was a young girl.
She was that young girl, in the dream, wearing a plain dress, her stubby little legs carrying her weightlessly through the hazy memory. Her body moved with no thought of her own, as if Wednesday were a passenger within her own head.
She eventually came to a stop, turning to one of the shelves, standing on her tippy toes to reach the book she’d apparently been searching for. She clutched the thick, heavy tome to her chest, and waddled over to the nearest desk, scooting into the seat and placing the book down upon the table.
The words were too blurry for her to read in the dreams, the pages indistinct. None of that was important, though. The girl who read the books hummed to herself, content, happy, Wednesday felt that well enough.
As she idly flicked through the pages though, something started to take shape within. There was a stain between the blurry words. A dark, ink-like blotch, so dark in her vision that it strained her eyes against the white page. She turned to the next page, and the stain was there again, only larger.
Wednesday felt the ache increase with every second she stared at it, yet she couldn’t turn to look away, couldn’t make her hands flip the page faster. The young girl who’s eyes she watched through continued to read the book at the same calm, relaxed pace, and the darkness bored into her mind with every second she was forced to see it.
The pages continued to turn, the dark growing larger, more distinct. Parts of it extended out into spiralling, elongated shapes, like grasping limbs reaching out from the centre. The warm, comforting library faded from her peripheral vision as the thing took up more and more of the pages, the pressure on her head increasing until her brain pounded.
Helplessly, she watched as the dark reached towards the edge of the page, right where he finger touched the page. With each flip it grew closer. Closer. Closer.
It touched.
And then she woke, body covered in sweat, breath ragged as her eye snapped open, staring at the ceiling.
She rose from the bed, groggy, rubbing her forehead. The details of the dream were already fading from her mind, making her frown in annoyance. Slowly, she slipped out from under the covers, reaching for her glasses as she moved to her desk. She was already up, might as well get some work done before she tried to sleep again.
She opened one of her notebooks and started writing, the pen gliding across the page, continuing on with her latest magical equations and theories. She yawned, struggling to keep her eye open as she scribbled, darkness slowly encroaching on her vision until her head started to slump…
She jolted back awake, yawning some more, blinking as she refocused her attention on the page. Then she went completely still.
She’d drawn the symbol from her dream on the page.
It didn’t hurt to look at this time, though the fact she’d drawn it without even meaning to unnerved her. She inspected it closer this time, taking in the arcane spirals and curves of the symbol.
Something clicked, in the back of her mind. She flicked back to some of her earlier notes, comparing the arcane symbols she’d been working on with what she’d drawn. It was, well, different from her own symbol magic, foreign. But with a little bit of adjustment...not only did it mesh properly but it could help her finish some spells she'd been working on.
Sleep could wait, she decided, turning to a clean page to start again with this new information.
The question of why she'd seen it in her dreams faded to the back of her mind.
Wednesday dreamed she was back in her old home, deep within the walls of her family library. She glided thoughtlessly through the rows and rows of books, all the knowledge that she’d been eager to absorb ever since she was a young girl.
She was that young girl, in the dream, wearing a plain dress, her stubby little legs carrying her weightlessly through the hazy memory. Her body moved with no thought of her own, as if Wednesday were a passenger within her own head.
She eventually came to a stop, turning to one of the shelves, standing on her tippy toes to reach the book she’d apparently been searching for. She clutched the thick, heavy tome to her chest, and waddled over to the nearest desk, scooting into the seat and placing the book down upon the table.
The words were too blurry for her to read in the dreams, the pages indistinct. None of that was important, though. The girl who read the books hummed to herself, content, happy, Wednesday felt that well enough.
As she idly flicked through the pages though, something started to take shape within. There was a stain between the blurry words. A dark, ink-like blotch, so dark in her vision that it strained her eyes against the white page. She turned to the next page, and the stain was there again, only larger.
Wednesday felt the ache increase with every second she stared at it, yet she couldn’t turn to look away, couldn’t make her hands flip the page faster. The young girl who’s eyes she watched through continued to read the book at the same calm, relaxed pace, and the darkness bored into her mind with every second she was forced to see it.
The pages continued to turn, the dark growing larger, more distinct. Parts of it extended out into spiralling, elongated shapes, like grasping limbs reaching out from the centre. The warm, comforting library faded from her peripheral vision as the thing took up more and more of the pages, the pressure on her head increasing until her brain pounded.
Helplessly, she watched as the dark reached towards the edge of the page, right where he finger touched the page. With each flip it grew closer. Closer. Closer.
It touched.
And then she woke, body covered in sweat, breath ragged as her eye snapped open, staring at the ceiling.
She rose from the bed, groggy, rubbing her forehead. The details of the dream were already fading from her mind, making her frown in annoyance. Slowly, she slipped out from under the covers, reaching for her glasses as she moved to her desk. She was already up, might as well get some work done before she tried to sleep again.
She opened one of her notebooks and started writing, the pen gliding across the page, continuing on with her latest magical equations and theories. She yawned, struggling to keep her eye open as she scribbled, darkness slowly encroaching on her vision until her head started to slump…
She jolted back awake, yawning some more, blinking as she refocused her attention on the page. Then she went completely still.
She’d drawn the symbol from her dream on the page.
It didn’t hurt to look at this time, though the fact she’d drawn it without even meaning to unnerved her. She inspected it closer this time, taking in the arcane spirals and curves of the symbol.
Something clicked, in the back of her mind. She flicked back to some of her earlier notes, comparing the arcane symbols she’d been working on with what she’d drawn. It was, well, different from her own symbol magic, foreign. But with a little bit of adjustment...not only did it mesh properly but it could help her finish some spells she'd been working on.
Sleep could wait, she decided, turning to a clean page to start again with this new information.
The question of why she'd seen it in her dreams faded to the back of her mind.