She was trapped. The girl struggled for a moment against her sheets, seemingly blind to her actual surroundings. Impossible to breathe. Impossible to escape. It took her a second to realise that her thrashing only caused the sheets to become more and more tangled around her arms and legs, and that she was in her bed at home. Safe. Dash released a slow, shuddering breath. She was okay. She was safe. The girl realised that her cheeks were wet… apparently she’d woken up crying. Her fingers found her face, and she ran her fingertips against her skin with shaky hands, dragging lines of salty water across her cheeks in the dark until the water was gone. She relaxed and lay absolutely still for a moment, catching her breath slowly in short gasps. Sindri hadn’t woken up yet (how, she had no idea), and she didn’t want to disturb his sleep. He was working early the next morning, after all. Her dream was intensely clear in her mind, but she didn’t want to think about it because it made her chest ache.
Tonight’s vision wasn’t a new one. It was a repeat of a dream she’d had twice already; almost a record seeing as how they’d occurred over what felt like a very short time period. A few weeks. Maybe two months. It was unusual for her to have such an intense dream so many times, but this one was overwhelmingly personal and hard-hitting. Dash felt shaken to her core. Again. Tonight, and not for the first time, she’d dreamed that she and Sindri weren’t together. The girl felt a little sick and more than a little fragile. Mounting horror and shock were building up. She had to get out of here.
She slid out of bed, wincing at the roughness of the sheets. The girl had no idea why her skin was always so sensitive after her dreams, but that was just the way it was. The way it had always been. All of her senses felt especially sensitive and fragile, and she knew that her magic would be all over the place at the moment. Once, she’d tried to perform a simple summoning charm after waking up from a vision. The jug she’d been summoning had shattered and the lights fixed to the walls had all flickered on, then off again. It was scary, having no control like that, and the girl was sure she’d hurt someone if she tried to perform anything more complicated than a summoning spell.
Dash was a slim girl and she was light on her feet, so her footsteps didn’t make the wooden floorboards creak at all as she stepped lithely outside their bedroom door. Spider steps, she thought firmly. The brunette made her way through their house, crossing her arms against her chest and holding herself to stop her hands from shaking. A shiver spread over her body, and she felt as if she could the air sliding over her skin as she moved. It made her feel uneasy. Dash didn't want to think bout her dream, or what it meant. She didn't want to even consider the idea of the future and she didn't want to try to discern whether or not her dream of the two of them, without each other, would come true. Every fibre of her being rejected it.
She was shaken. And shaking. In fact, now that she was in their workshop room, filled with a strong smell of sawdust and clay, (and not with him) the girl started to cry again. She tried to keep it as silent as possible, but her tiny frame couldn't fight against the tremors or the rising panic. Her greatest character flaw, in her opinion, was that she thought about things too much. She wished that she could turn her head off, but it just wasn't happening. Trying to stifle her tears and little gasps for air, Dash started going through her usual routine for when she had intense dreams... her senses all felt... raw, but she knew that having something to do with her hands would distract her. It always did. The fact that this time the subject matter of the dream was so sensitive only made her cry more. She didn't want to think. If she didn't think about it then maybe it would go away...
The girl shakily took a large lump of clay from its place on one of the shelves they'd built together and moved to the table in the middle of the room. Her back was to the door. The room was filled with all kinds of little creations; pots, sculptures, paintings. They'd decided that they had to have a workshop room when they moved in. The thought of it sent an acute pang of pain through her body. Dash's actions were somewhat manic, but she was definitely on autopilot. She had to pause for a moment to try and wipe her face, but when she came back, the woman bumped against the the table hard. She watched with wide eyes as a large glazed pot at the end of the table toppled off the edge and felt her whole body tense as it smashed loudly on the ground. Dash scrambled forward, but the damage was done. She was helpless. Totally helpless.