Entry tags:
Video; I Feel My Nightmares Watching Me
[It's a random day of the week and two o'clock in the morning. Therefore, it's time for, as someone once put it, Ushahin's philosopher's hour. The lights are dim and Ushahin is lying flat on his back on one of the beds in his house. The phone is propped up near him. He's got something in his hands, a pale looking stone carving that is mostly hidden by the fingers closed in upon it.
He's been thinking quite a bit since he was brought back from the dead. His double had caused him to reevaluate some of his previous behavior. Perhaps he's treated some of those around him rather poorly. Well, there's nothing but time here, and always a chance to make amends.]
This place is frightfully full of nightmares. I mean that quite literally. I've never met such a group of people where the night terrors come upon them without provocation. Every night, nothing but tossing and turning amongst you all. That used to be my job.
[He sits up, fingers uncovering the rhios stone he has cupped in his palms. There's three figures carved into it. The one on the left is a long-haired man, stern looking, and with lines around his mouth that suggest he's older than the twenty-eights years he is. This is Tanaros, the commander of Satoris' army. There's anger flashing in his eyes that the carver was able to perfectly capture. The middle figure is Ushahin, his broken features captured starkly, with an unfocused, dreamy look in his eyes as he stares out towards whoever is holding the figurine. The one on the right is an older man in his forties, fat and with a long beard, his close-set eyes looking shrewd as if he's ready to make a bargain. Vorax, the last of the three, and the one who kept supplies for Satoris.]
I'm sure you've all grown frightfully tired of them. So I will make you a deal, fellow denizens. Tell me one of your nightmares and I will exchange it for a better dream. That's fair enough, is it not?
He's been thinking quite a bit since he was brought back from the dead. His double had caused him to reevaluate some of his previous behavior. Perhaps he's treated some of those around him rather poorly. Well, there's nothing but time here, and always a chance to make amends.]
This place is frightfully full of nightmares. I mean that quite literally. I've never met such a group of people where the night terrors come upon them without provocation. Every night, nothing but tossing and turning amongst you all. That used to be my job.
[He sits up, fingers uncovering the rhios stone he has cupped in his palms. There's three figures carved into it. The one on the left is a long-haired man, stern looking, and with lines around his mouth that suggest he's older than the twenty-eights years he is. This is Tanaros, the commander of Satoris' army. There's anger flashing in his eyes that the carver was able to perfectly capture. The middle figure is Ushahin, his broken features captured starkly, with an unfocused, dreamy look in his eyes as he stares out towards whoever is holding the figurine. The one on the right is an older man in his forties, fat and with a long beard, his close-set eyes looking shrewd as if he's ready to make a bargain. Vorax, the last of the three, and the one who kept supplies for Satoris.]
I'm sure you've all grown frightfully tired of them. So I will make you a deal, fellow denizens. Tell me one of your nightmares and I will exchange it for a better dream. That's fair enough, is it not?

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No. It's never that simple or that easy. What do you gain from this?
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Knowledge. I wish to know what goes on inside the minds of those sleeping here. Now, it can be done this way, which I am told is much nicer than my usual way.
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You can't even tell that much? What's your usual way?
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I don't trust you, whatever you are. Why should I give you my secrets?
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[That makes Ushahin laugh. As if such a little speck could harm something like him. Now there's the attitude he remembers from their first meeting.]
Ah, promises, promises.
Trust me or not, it means very little to me. But in this case, trusting me does bring the reward for those tormented in their sleep. I'd say that's a fair enough trade.
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It could be arranged to become an ongoing process if one so desires.
[He looks at Cal with a shrewd look.]
I wonder what it is that leaves you awake in the middle of the night, hmmm?
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Then you're either a masochist, a fool, or both. There's no point in holding onto the terrors that come from our own minds. All it does is remind us of times and places that are better off thought less of.
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Ah, you believe suffering builds character? [He understands. Pain had made him what he was today.] Speaking from the personal experience of living through an age, suffering might help in the beginning, but in the end, all that is left to you is ashes and dust.
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Well spoken, young one. [He does so like getting into these discussions with people. Always, he learns something new about how their minds work.]
But does the one you love feel the same way? Would you take away their suffering if you could?
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So suffering has built your character but as not done the same for him?
[He tsks again, clearly picking up on that hypocritical streak.]
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I knew there was a reason I liked your mind.
[Which is never a good sign in itself. When Ushahin is interested in people, he tends to like to get inside their heads, and see what makes them tick.]
We are the same in that regards. Both in darkness and never to see the light again. All we can do is look out towards it and see what we might have been.
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[He's too old and cynical now to believe he can be something other than what he is.]
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[In darkness and in a relationship with one who is made up of light. Ushahin wonders if that helps or hurts.]
I know you won't exchange a nightmare for a sweet dream for yourself. What about Pell? Tell me a nightmare and I'll make sure his dream is a good one.
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[There's a significant pause while he stares.]
There's only one. The rest I've made peace with. Swear to me he will have peace.
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I swear on the memory of my god Satoris, he'll have peace.
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A nightmare, then. At first there's only blood. Nothing but. I can see it on the ground and on me and I can smell the stink. I don't know where it is. It could be anywhere. There's a body. There's always a body.
[He sighs.]
It's Pell's. And somewhere in my soul I know it's me that did it.
Are you happy now?
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