* OPEN * I Met a Traveler (Zarik)

46th of Ashan 719

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I Met a Traveler (Zarik)

46th of Ashan, 719


He was on a ship, heading across the ocean. This was a fact that the sleeping man knew to be real. He ate pickled herrings and moldy bread. He suffered from sea sickness, much to the amusement of the crew, for this was his first time crossing the sea. He sparred, as well as his land lubber legs would allow. He practiced the magic he had so recently learned, which was easier, since his physical balance was less of a factor when it came to a mental discipline. He did his chores and he scrubbed decks and spent lonely breaks in the crows nest. He looked out onto a vast and shimmering nothingness. When he went down below, he slept in a hammock that rocked him to sleep every night.

He was on a ship, heading home. This was a fact. This was reality.

But that was not this place.

This place was familiar to him in other ways. It was a cottage, outside of Westguard. It smelled of burning wood in the fire and herbs freshly cut. It echoed briefly with a child's laughter. A mother's calls. He could feel the wood of the chair under his hands, his back, his haunches. His senses drank these things in, and so he believed them. He did not question where he was, because his being knew it, and felt it.

That was not the entire truth. He wanted to be there. All of him, every part save that black and snarling tangle he'd beat into submission every trial throughout a long and bloody life, yearned for this place. So the sleeping man did not question. This was real, he thought, and smiled at his son.

"Reading that book again?"

"It's getting to a good part," the boy said without looking up. His mother's eyes, his father's terse expression. Reading by working his finger across the parchment. "The final battle at Hil... Hiladrith."

The man smiled. How many times had it been, now? Four? Five? Still he saw his son's face tighten when he got to that chapter. That part of the story. Where the armies of Etzos came to free Hiladrith from the Undead King. The Foul Necromancer. He was old and jaded enough to know the glory and the heroism wasn't like it was in real life. He'd never seen a battle, but seen plenty of death. The poets and bards never really captured the reality of it.

Something moved behind him. Old instincts stiffened his limbs, curled his hands to fists. Then he smelled perfume and onions. Martyn's mother. The stew was probably ready.

"Have to wait until after we eat, boy. Up you-"

"Kasoria?"

That wasn't her voice. Kasoria was up and out and turning and-

-he wasn't in the cottage. Wasn't in Westguard. Wasn't on a ship on the Orm'del Sea or on the cobbles of Etzos. He was... somewhere else. He blinked and looked around. There was sky above him, bright and blue and cloudless. Flat, bare land covered in scrub and grass. The Stormwastes. He remembered them, from Rharne. That lonely ride from the cave, with a mule bedecked with heads clopping behind him as he went to collect the bounty.

This happened. This was real. But it was a memory. It was the past.

Kasoria blinked and looked down at his hands. He felt the sun on them. The warmth.

"It was during Cylus," he muttered, brow furrowing. "There was no sun."

The ground crunched and crackled ahead of him. He looked up, and saw he wasn't alone. His hands lowered and rested on the pommels of his swords. They were never far away from him, and habit drew them there. He frowned even deeper at the man he saw there. A boy, really. Smooth face. Watchful eyes. He didn't know him, and hard as he tried, he couldn't dredge up the memory of him.

"You..."

He was a man on a ship, and in a cottage, and on the wastes. He was Kasoria of Etzos, and these things were all true. But this man was a stranger to him, and all the memories he had to muster.

"What are you doing... here?"
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Re: I Met a Traveler (Zarik)



Zarik couldn’t sleep. A new spark smoldered within his soul. When he shut his eyes, determined to rest, he remained awake regardless. Visions of his gruesome initiation into Becoming steeped at the forefront of his mind. His melted flesh. His twisted bones. And most terrifying to him, in retrospect, his own laughter. It had been madness, he knew, like that of his father’s. An insanity he’d accepted at the time to survive the initiation, but now he scrambled to push it away from himself. No matter how luxurious the satin sheets of his husband’s bed felt, nor the plush coziness of the lounge couches, sleep didn’t grant itself to Zarik’s burdened mind.

He gathered a silken robe, tied it around his slim waist, and made the short journey to the estate’s study. Through a hidden entrance, he slid past a narrow corridor and into the secret attic. He closed the way behind him. With it, all light vanished. Pitch darkness enveloped the loft. Skitters of long-bodied insects dashed along the hard floor. Zarik blindly crawled forward. He felt the familiar caress of a spider that ambled across the top of his hand.

Once a few paces inward, he lowered to lay on his side. He brought his knees up to his chest, curled into a ball, then closed his eyes. Again, the visions presented themselves, but he maintained quiet and steady breath. Here, away from all others, he could feel anything, think anything, believe anything.

On the stone-cold floor, surrounded by insects and darkness, Zarik finally moved past the visions of recent memory and fell into a deep sleep.

The Dreamwalker opened his eyes to find himself in the same spot, though he could see. Shadows flickered in retreat from a warm illumination that snuck through the wooden floorboards. Wind whistled between rafters, icy cold, and Zarik lifted to his knees to look around.

This wasn’t the attic in Ashvane estate. This wasn’t Alistair’s loft. This wasn’t even in Quacia. This was a different attic, one from a time earlier in his years and a frequent place for his dreams.

He shuddered in recognition of both memory and past dreams. How cold that Cylus trial had been. The attic floor creaked from shoddy construction. Someone sobbed in the house underneath. Though he already knew what he would see, Zarik obligingly went through the motions of his mind - a path taken time and time again.

Zarik peeked through a gap in the floorboards. The hunched posture of his father crossed the swath of visible space below. The memory played with the affectations of emean vividness: skin colors pulsed between saturated contrast, shadow and light interchanged in unworldly dance, and his vision leaped in ways that weren’t possible in the waking world. He examined the tied-up family: the foolish farmer, and his plain wife, who’d graciously offered their home.

Any decent person would have offered, though. Outside, a frigid Cylus storm raged. His father had taken advantage of rural generosity to escape the deathly wilderness. The farmer should have turned him and Zarik away, but he hadn’t… because young Zarik had a terrible cough and violent shivers and the innocent eyes of a child in need of help.

Now, however, Zarik hid while his father dug a corkscrew through the farmer’s eye. His stomach turned over. He didn't want to watch, though in reality – when he’d lived through it as a boy – he couldn’t look away either: too fascinated, too horrified. Zarik knew how this ended. He didn’t need to witness it yet again. He pressed away.

The floor spun underneath him, centered around his feet. He drew his dagger and stabbed into a rafter. He tore apart the very fabric of the dream, and through sheer will, the mage reached up and climbed out of the attic.

On the rooftop, Emean wind rushed around him. Instead of the countryside, he saw nothing but stars glittering in an abyssal void that churned with unending motion. He sheathed his dagger, shut his eyes, took a breath and-

-when he opened his eyes, he stood on a higher vantage point. From a battlement pillar, he overlooked the decayed stone city of Quacia. He gathered himself, eyed the glimmer of a massive structure that didn’t truly exist in Idalos yet neighbored the dreamscape Fortress of Quacia. Zarik paced along the flat surface of the pillar. He turned around, then sprinted forward.

He lifted from the edge. His body flung through the air. Gossamer wings erupted from his shoulder blades. They flitted and supported him even higher. He reached to grab onto what was mere light in the sky. His fingers slid over something smooth. He felt it… but he could not grip it.

Zarik fell.

He tumbled through the air. His wings faded, then dissipated entirely as his ether vanished. He collided with a roof, stone tiles crumbling underneath, but he rolled and continued the quick descent to the ground. As he approached the cobblestones, he held out a hand. The stones split, a portal of shadow created instead, and he fell through.

Zarik landed in his own body as if he’d never fallen at all. He felt the warmth of pleasant sunlight and he heard someone muttering:

"It was during Cylus, there was no sun."

The blond biqaj glanced around. He’d never seen this land before, not in reality nor in his recollections of previous dreams. He accepted the undiscovered wilderness around him, eager for the change of scenery. Hooves clopping in approach brought his attention forward. With irises of warm amber pigment, he peered at the stranger and his mule, the mount decorated with many severed heads.

This was something new. Something he could adapt to. Zarik welcomed it.

He smiled when the grungy traveler noticed him. The blond calmly observed the hands resting on the sword pommels. He answered the stranger’s question with one of his own, “Why wouldn’t I be here?”

Zarik wore ivory white attire, unblemished by dirt or stains. The soft, tailored fabric covered his body from view as much as any of his black and gray clothing in the real world did. It was fashioned in Quacian style: a hooded cowl, fitted trousers with boots, and a long trenchcoat snugly belted around his slender waist. He casually gestured to the various heads that hung from the mule. “That’s a fine collection you’ve got, mister. What did you do with the bodies? Did you eat them?”

“If you left a mess, I could clean it for you,” politely offered Zarik with another genuine smile.

word count: 1124
Please — consider me a dream.
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Re: I Met a Traveler (Zarik)

It felt like a dream, but did not look like one. This thought stilled the dreamer's tongue as the traveler spoke to him.

In those fragments of recollection he had, it was always just his eyes. His visions. His memories, purely through what his eyes beheld. Tastes and smells and touches, all the other senses that made up reality, these things eluded him. Only the images remained. This was how Kasoria knew he was dreaming. et as he stood in that wind-swept field, with the sun backing the back of his neck, and hunger grumbling his belly, the assassin frowned.

This has to be a dream. But it doesn't feel like one. Apart from when it does.

"Bloody ridiculous..."

He muttered the words and pondered the ground at his feet. He didn't see the blonde boy move around to his donkey. Fates, it even looked like the same one. Same graying muzzle and flea-bitten tail. His priorities kicked in when the boy got closer, and a voice as gruff and growling as ever rumbled out of him.

"Oi? Stay away from those. I need 'em to..."

The words trailed of. No, he didn't. He'd done this before. This wasn't premonition, this was memory. It had to be. He hadn't gone through all this before in a dream, and now this was the reality. No, no, no. He shook his head and sat down on the wet ground. Wet. It felt wet. This was... not the usual. He sat on his haunches with his knees drawn up, massaging his temples under cropped black hair. Gone was the lank, matted mess of a mane he wore in Etzos. Now his hair was clipped short, on his skull and on his chin. His clothes were neat and practical, and save for his weapons he was just... Thagoras. A traveler from the west, headed back there.

But what are you here, though?

"I don't know ya," he said finally, with a cold certainty. Eyes like carved obsidian swiveled around and beheld Zarik. "But yer out here, in the Wastes, without escort or weapons on yeh, dressed like y'should be somewhere a shite sight warmer... and yer not worried. So I ain't buyin' this... wherever the fuck it is."

The older, smaller man sighed and patted himself down like he always did when he was about to pack his pipe. Same pocket, every time, but still he felt the need to search himself like it was forever migrating across his body. He pulled out the carved, cracked, worn smoker and did the same thing for his pouch of tobacco.

"What are yeh, anyway?" He said around the stem of it, eyeing the boy up and down. "Youse a man? Or a dream? Or a dreamin' man?" He found his pouch and looked around, sighing again. "Wouldn't happen t'have some tinder, would ya?"t
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Re: I Met a Traveler (Zarik)



Zarik observed the severed heads. He stepped back from the donkey immediately when the other man demanded he stay away. The tall biqaj leaned in a casual posture. He tapped his heel against the ground. Sickly moisture rose to the surface of the vast arid landscape. Zarik bit at the tip of his thumb. He fidgeted with the white leather of his glove, gnawing at the thick texture.

He knew he was dreaming. It didn’t matter. Even with awareness, Zarik’s mind felt differently in Emea than it did in Idalos. Here, things were different. Here, he could behave in all manners, act as all sorts of people, say whatever he wanted with next-to-no consequence. His lucid awareness meant that he’d be able to control the dreams with certain ease rather than being only thrown about by his subconscious.

However, while he watched the other man change in slight ways – in appearance – he wondered where he was and who he was with. He’d never seen the land they were in. The closer he observed, the less appealing it seemed. It wasn’t like the wilderness near Quacia or even Desnid. The land hadn’t been destroyed by the creep, but by something else… He’d never seen anything like it before.

He’d, also, never seen a man like this in his dreams: a man who struggled rather than going through routine motions. The brunet didn’t act like a puppet in a production as most of the people in his dreams did. Even his father proved impossible to truly talk with while in Emea, being only a ghost of the actual man – a figment created by Zarik’s mind – just like the Alistairs he found from time to time. All figments, not the real person. In Emea, he knew himself to be alone…

So how did the little man who sat on the ground, rubbing at his temple as if he had a headache, figure into it all. Why did he pause in his sentences, and seem to be… thinking? His answers didn’t sound scripted, nor did his behavior seem automatic.

Zarik stopped nibbling at his thumb. He shoved his hands in the pockets of his ivory trenchcoat. He listened to the stranger’s cold voice and easily made eye contact. He stared into those dark obsidian eyes. The biqaj’s own eyes brightened with intense amber shades that consumed his irises.

“The Wastes…” he said, unperturbed by the other man’s accent or confusion. Zarik's own accent seemed outside of location, unable to place as it derived from a blend rather than a singular influence. He walked around the donkey and surveyed the arid land. “So, that’s where we are.”

When he noticed movement, he returned his gaze, but the stranger only patted in the obvious fidget to retrieve something to smoke or chew. Zarik crouched in front of the smaller, older man. His inhuman skin glistened with the silver of his blood. He smiled slightly at the questions then shrugged.

Zarik brought his hand out of his pocket, fingers held tight in a fist, near the other dreamer. His fingers unfurled and in the palm was a rusty tinder box. The corroded dark metal had flecks of crimson blood on the sharp corner. He glanced at it, then swiftly closed his hand into a fist before the box could be accepted.

“Oh, sorry,” he apologized. He unfurled his fingers again. Another tinder box appeared, this time one that looked brand-new and bright silver without a hint of blood or rust on it. “Here you are.”

“As for what I am,” he said in a musing voice. He considered the question. Within a dream, he could answer however he wanted. Zarik didn’t have to answer with the truth of the waking world. The man, whether he was an entity or yet another figment of Zarik’s imagination, wouldn’t care otherwise. He didn’t believe he should inform the other man of their Emean circumstances though, even if he were truly another dreamer. His instincts told him not to. “I’m simply me. What does it matter? Don’t concern yourself with such things. I’m not going to... or anything. Promise, I’m harmless.”

“You can call me by a name, if that helps?” offered Zarik. He glanced at the pipe, curious about the tobacco. He looked at the sky. The sun had started to dim. Gray rain clouds swiftly rolled over the blue. “Let’s see… how about Kleine? That’s a fine name, isn’t it?”

“What about you, hm? What’s your name?” he questioned. He stood and brushed off his trenchcoat, though nothing had gotten on it. Zarik fiddled with the lapels. A droplet of rain fell. He watched the drop roll over his shoulder. It left a thin streak of inky black over the white of his coat.

word count: 826
Please — consider me a dream.
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Re: I Met a Traveler (Zarik)

[bbvideo]MUSIC LINK HERE[/bbvideo]
What was old and befouled with some past violence was gone and replaced before Kasoria could grasp it, save with his eyes. He knew blood when he saw it, and the sight of it around a sharp corner told him there was a grisly story there. But then the stranger's hand closed around it again, making it vanish, and what he saw a moment later was... the same, but far before that story. It shone with newness, like it had been purchased just bits ago. Kasoria looked up into a face he only just realized was not quite human. The skin shimmered and shone a little too eerily for that. He knew there were other races - cousins of humanity if not quite brothers - that had odd differences to them, but...

"Hardly a fucking anthropologist, are you?"

Kasoria blinked. He blinked again. Ah. Yes. This was not a place where thought and speech were too separate from each other. He waved away his own words and took the tinder instead. Any questions the young "man" may have had were ignored as he busied himself with the box, using it to stoke the pipe into crackling life. He inhaled... and a facsimile of fine Rharne tobacco filled his lungs. Close to it, but in the fashion a memory was to an experience. Diluted and distant, not crackling through the throat and scorching the lips on the exhale. But the cloud rose all the same and he grunted.

"Thank yeh," he said, tossing back the box and jerking to his feet in one fluid movement. "Might as well smoke while I... wait, I guess."

He got up and looked around as the boy spoke and fidgeted. He remembered this place, in as much he remembered his entire journey across the Wastes. They all looked the same, to his city eyes. Oh, there were differences here and there, but one blasted stretch of heather and dirt was much the same as the next. The road carved into it was the only thing that mattered. He stood in the middle of it, pipe between his teeth, and looked first one way... and then the other... and then up at the sun.

Can't even tell which way the castle is. Wait, am I speaking? No. Don't think so.

Kasoria hummed a little when he caught the "I'm harmless" part of the phantom's spiel. Whether because he didn't believe it or didn't believe he could harm him, he wouldn't elaborate on. Probably the latter, given his profession. He inhabited a world where men didn't make vows or promises, and the ones that lasted longest survived through a paradoxical mixture of brutal honesty and savage, timely betrayal. The little man walked over to the donkey and patted its snout.

He doesn't smell. He smelled terrible. But not here.

"Name yehself what yeh please," the older man said as he relieved himself of his swords, placing the belt holding them across the donkey's back. His karambit stayed where it was, hidden at the small of his back, like the knife in his boot. Now he was clad only in his breeches, boots and shirt... though the brace of throwing knives under his armpits were clear to the eyes of this "Kleine". He looked the boy up and down, feeling a little under-dressed. "Ain't gonna matter much, out here... or in here."

Kasoria chuckled and studied the horizon. A steady stream of acrid smoke oozed out of his mouth. This was all in his head, he was sure of it. He was sleeping in a hammock in the middle of the sea, dreaming of places past. This figure... he had to be a figment. Some vestige of that past his waking mind had simply forgotten. He turned back to Kleine and smiled with half his mouth. More faces swam up to his eyes. More names. More histories encapsulated in those faces and voices and names and all of them gone now. Dead or forgotten. Much the same as each other.

"I'm Karim," he lied, extending his hand and waiting for the boy to shake it. "Now tell me, how'd y'do that wiv' that box, there? Make it vanish an' clean an' the like? Got some magic to yeh?"

His voice was light now, lighter than one would expect, if they knew him. His eyes were open, even amused, and there was no tension in his shoulders or arms. Kasoria carried himself as if he'd be ready to pull a blade or break a nose at any moment, but not now. Not safe in his own, slumbering mind. The lie he spoke was simply... habit. True names. True power. Something he'd heard when he was a boy and it never really went away. Even in this place, where it didn't matter what he said or did or called himself, he held to it.

"Never be too careful."

The old man sighed, closing his eyes for a trill as he did so.

"Ignore dat. So... how'd ya do it?"
word count: 862
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Re: I Met a Traveler (Zarik)



Away went the swords, the belt placed along the beast of burden’s back. Whether true vulnerability offered, or a play to create the illusion of such, Zarik felt increasingly at ease. Each statement made by the older man built upon a belief that he wasn’t a dreamscapian figment, but another sentient person. Zarik had never encountered this before, or if he had, he’d never been aware of it then.

The rain fell heavy, but only on the biqaj. The clouds centered above him and left the rest of the Wastes dry. In his hands, he held the tinder box that’d been returned to him. He fiddled with the sharp edges. His pale hair became slick against his brow. The white of his clothing turned black by the rain. When not a speck of ivory remained, replaced by an obsidian shade, the clouds broke apart and vanished into the blue sky.

He ignored himself, as this occurred, too focused on the man who… he had to be a person. Some wrinkle of emea his dreaming mind had simply discovered. The crooked smile offered by the other man – Karim – returned Zarik’s own smile to the biqaj’s youthful features, a bright and cheerful expression though not perfect in that his front teeth stuck a little too far out and his canines bent in slightly unparallel angles. It was as they did in the waking world. For as the rain had changed his clothes to black, and Zarik had come to realize that the other man wasn’t a puppet of his psyche, his appearance had started to conform more and more to how he truly looked in the realitiy of Idalos rather than cloaked by the fantasy of Emea.

Zarik held up the box when Karim inquired about it. He glanced at it then said, “Magic? Yes, perhaps.”

He considered how to explain it. Even if Karim was another dreamer, he still felt an instinct to not directly mention such a thing. Better to come up with an answer that wouldn’t rattle or harm. While he considered, he heard the quiet interjection and then the request to ignore it.

“It’s not that difficult,” he said. Zarik walked over, to show the tinder box closely for his explanation. He paused a couple steps distanced, however, as he inhaled some of the smoke from the man’s pipe. The biqaj took a deeper breath. The irises of his amber-lit eyes spun in a sudden display of all colors before settling back to amber. In his now-black gloved hand, he held the silver box up in display.

“I bet you could do it,” he suggested. “What you do, you see, is you think of something you used to have… but you have to really think of it. Of every part of it. Each edge, and the feel of it, the material that combined to create it, the structure it holds and… the feelings you had for it, the ones you still have too. You think of it, in your mind, hold it there. Hold it close, but not too tight because otherwise it explodes. You want to remember, but not scare the memory.”

Zarik closed his eyes, as if illustrating something that could be explained by such an outward display. “Then when you remember the shape and the substance and how you felt toward it, you ask for it to be with you now, here.”

He opened his eyes and looked directly at Karim. His expression was one of teaching, of seeking to identify whether the other man understood. “Whatever it is, it doesn’t have to. This box here, it could have said to me: No, I rather like how I am, so I will stay this way.”

“It didn’t though,” he held it up. “It wanted to be clean too. It was my fault, anyway, how it was before. I’d forgotten that I had to remember the feelings of before instead of the feelings of after, if I wanted it how it used to be. How you see it now, that is.”

Musing, perhaps even voicing a thought that would’ve otherwise been kept silent, Zarik added, “I prefer clean. Cleanliness is what separates man from animal.”

“But it’s easy,” he reiterated his natural inclination toward such a process. The Transmuter closed his eyes, again as if to show Karim how to do it, and then he reached into the gathered collar of his turtleneck beneath the trenchcoat. From it, he lifted a soft fabric mask that hadn’t been there a trill ago. He placed the mask over the lower half of his face - his smile no longer visible - and settled the top over the bridge of his nose.

“See? Simple.”
word count: 801
Please — consider me a dream.
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Re: I Met a Traveler (Zarik)

Image
Kasoria listened and watched as the man spoke and spoke and it rained and white turned into black and why wasn't that odd to him? Why didn't he frown? Why not interrupt and ask just what in the hells was going on, as he watched a man's blazing pure attire turn darker than the night that was around them.

He blinked and noticed that, too. The sun was gone. The night was back. Cold and dark as the Cylus had truly been, only he didn't feel it hissing like melting snow against his skin. He held up his arms and saw no hairs tingling on them. Felt no impulse to bundle himself up tighter against the chill. He just knew that it was cold, like he could see that it was dark.

"This is..." He started, like Zrik hadn't been speaking at all. His eyes scanned the horizon, what little of it he could make out. The donkey snuffled next to them. "... I dunno. But it ain't real, is it?"

The younger man didn't answer, but it wasn't really a question. He turned back to the boy and cocked an eyebrow as the mask now covering half his face. One of those breeds that could have been a scarf moments before, until it was pulled up and over the nose. Kasoria snorted softly and sucked at his pipe, thinking. He didn't have anywhere else to go. He wouldn't be waking up anytime soon, and this figment seemed like a fine way to spend his dream. He hummed to himself for a few bars, as if deciding on something. Then he tipped out the flaming embers and tapped the pipe against his hand, dislodging the rest.

"Well," he said eventually, pocketing the pipe. "Might need a hat fer when that sun comes back... or if that rain decides t'spread, y'know... further than youse."

Rain clouds over just one person that turn white to black. Definitely a dream.

Kasoria aped the young man and held out his hands. Palms up, as if what he wanted would fall from the sky. He thought about that battered old thing of leather and cloth, that perched on his head for arcs. How it had been worn and pliant even when he bought it, from a rag-and-bone cart in the Citizen's Market. But it didn't have holes, and it fit snugly over the tangled mass of hair he habitually had crowning his head. He thought of the wide brim that protected his face from the rain, leaving it dry and undisturbed when he spent long nights watching his prey. The way he could pull it over his eyes and sleep, or at least pretend to. He could almost see, almost feel the texture of it, the cracks of the material bumping along under his fingers-

-until he really could feel them, and he opened his eyes-

"... fuck me."

There it was. As lined and crumpled as he remembered. With the same notches in the brim and that old bird shit stain that would never quite fade. But as he turned it over in his hands, it felt... stronger. Harder. Firmer. What had Zarik said? The thing wanted, too, not just you. But surely that was insanity. Could a garment have thoughts? Could a hat have desires? The assassin shook his head, all ferocity vacant from his face as abject surprise took it over... until he set the thing on his head, and he chuckled.

"It... It really is the same."

He looked at Zarik. Inch by inch, his smile faded. This was not knowledge he'd had bound up and locked away in his head, waiting to be released. The Dreamwalkers, he'd heard of them, but never met one. Never researched or studied or read, because what would be the point? Up until a season or two ago, he had no interest in magic at all. He had dreams and he had nightmares; he enjoyed and weathered them in turn. But this face, this man, he was no memory. He could peer into those dark corners in this place, all those foggy, muddled places that his waking mind could not access. This boy was a fresh creati-

No. Not a creation.

A visitor.


"You... You're not from my head, are yeh?" He finally spoke and his body slid inexorably into a defensive posture. An intruder was an intruder was a trespasser, no matter what. "How the fuck did you get here, boy? An' wadaya want?"
word count: 767
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Llyr Llywelyn
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Re: I Met a Traveler (Zarik)



Immediate acceptance to try something new, and the other dreamer held out his hands with the palms up. Zarik observed them, briefly, then remained quiet to allow the man concentration on the summon of a hat. He smiled when one moment, Karim’s hands were empty… and in the next moment, there was a wide-brim hat that looked worn and thus, loved in a way. An almost sense of pride gathered in his chest when he heard the other man chuckle when putting the hat on.

Zarik’s eyelashes fluttered, his expression softening as the man looked at him. He folded his hands at his lower back. He nodded slowly, then said in a pleased tone of voice, “You did it, Karim. Perfectly so.”

But the other man slid into a defensive posture instead of returning the mild celebratory moment of something new being accomplished. He had realized that Zarik was outside of him, not of his mind, and not of his dreamscape at all. Zarik was a trespasser, an unintentional one, but one none-the-less.

“I wish I could tell you,” said the biqaj in a quiet, calm voice in response to the abrupt questions. “I simply sought to… go elsewhere… and I suppose I went farther than my own mind for once. If that is even possible, I don’t know. You do not seem to be of me, though, that or I’ve gotten better at fooling myself.”

Zarik held up a hand, the one that held onto the silver tinder box, and said, “I don’t want anything… well. Not now, anyhow. I don’t mean to be a bother, though, so I’ll leave you to your dreams, Karim.” He drew a dagger from the backside of his belt, swiftly outstretched his arm and stabbed the air beside him.

He tore the blade through surreality itself. Zarik glanced at the older man, then thinly smiled. He tossed over the tinder box while he slipped through the opening he’d forcefully created. He disappeared through and the wounded reality stitched itself back up. The thin shadow vanished as if it – and the biqaj – had never been there at all…

…but Karim would still remember the presence of the outsider by the hat on his head and the silver tinder box left behind.

word count: 388
Please — consider me a dream.
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Alistair
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Re: I Met a Traveler (Zarik)

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Zarik


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Dreamwalking: Dreamscape Location: The Wastes (Karim)
Dreamwalking: Trespassing.

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Kasoria


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N/A

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Points 15

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