The one that called himself Hunter knelt before her, as if his genuflection could mean anything to her. Or perhaps, she thought cynically, he was simply trying to deceive her. To play the gentle gatherer who buried wayward dead things and traveled through the darkened forests for his dear one. He could just as easily try to trick her, the way that she had sought to trick him.
I had not meant to trick him, specifically, the huntress supposed, eyeing the young man. When she tried to follow his gaze, she found it only reached to the height of her hands.
He called her Sade, as she had told him to, and it only felt marginally more correct to hear the name in his voice.
“Come down?” she repeated, and frowned. If she had ever done such a thing, why did Hunter not remember it himself? Why did she have to help him recall? Was he incapable of thinking on his own?
She did not know how to help someone else. She knew only how to make them help her, and did not wish to be this Hunter’s guide.
She did not wish to. And yet, slowly, against all sense, she reached out with her free hand to touch the young man’s upturned palms. If he must look at her hands, let him see them. They were smooth, her fingers long and deft. And, as her fingertips lightly touched his wrist, they slowly stained with crimson blood.
“I… have,” she realized, furrowing her brow. “When I was someone else. I have walked with you through the forest, and swam with you, where the sand melts into the sea. I have kept your wolf beneath my bed. I have held your words in my hands. I have shared my home with you.”
Lost between dreams and memory, the lines began to blur. To the yellow-eyed huntress, they were one and the same.
In the distance – growing louder, racing closer – a roar of thunder shook through the impossible trees, loud enough to topple them over in waves and unearth their ancient roots. All of this escaped the dreamer’s notice, whose fingers curled inwards, ready to withdraw.
“But you have never stayed. Why do you linger now?”
I had not meant to trick him, specifically, the huntress supposed, eyeing the young man. When she tried to follow his gaze, she found it only reached to the height of her hands.
He called her Sade, as she had told him to, and it only felt marginally more correct to hear the name in his voice.
“Come down?” she repeated, and frowned. If she had ever done such a thing, why did Hunter not remember it himself? Why did she have to help him recall? Was he incapable of thinking on his own?
She did not know how to help someone else. She knew only how to make them help her, and did not wish to be this Hunter’s guide.
She did not wish to. And yet, slowly, against all sense, she reached out with her free hand to touch the young man’s upturned palms. If he must look at her hands, let him see them. They were smooth, her fingers long and deft. And, as her fingertips lightly touched his wrist, they slowly stained with crimson blood.
“I… have,” she realized, furrowing her brow. “When I was someone else. I have walked with you through the forest, and swam with you, where the sand melts into the sea. I have kept your wolf beneath my bed. I have held your words in my hands. I have shared my home with you.”
Lost between dreams and memory, the lines began to blur. To the yellow-eyed huntress, they were one and the same.
In the distance – growing louder, racing closer – a roar of thunder shook through the impossible trees, loud enough to topple them over in waves and unearth their ancient roots. All of this escaped the dreamer’s notice, whose fingers curled inwards, ready to withdraw.
“But you have never stayed. Why do you linger now?”
Spoiler
The trees are falling! Yay! They are slowly collapsing inward in circles around the clearing. If Jinyel looks at where they used to be, he will not see fallen trees and roots, but darkness, as if the shadows are consuming more and more of the dreamscape.



