Her thoughts were less disjointed, like when one awoke from a very deep sleep and only slowly managed to figure out what had been dreamed and what was real. Somehow knowing that she'd been at school with this young woman helped. It was someone from her past, but someone safe someone who wasn't going to weep over her death or mourn her. Her death. Thinking those words didn't feel quite so shocking as it had before. How strange that one could get used to the most appalling truths when there was no alternative. She raised her head and stared at the woman - no, she was barely more than a girl, probably even younger than Aylanmaa herself, and those fuzzy thoughts she'd had upon waking to her new life - she almost smiled at the thought - coalesced into the realisation that she didn't know her companion's name.
Or did she? Had she already asked? She couldn't remember... but there was the mirror, and as frightening as the prospect was, she wanted to see how she looked now. "Yes. Yes, I do. I...have to" she said quietly, but for the first time her voice, altered and thin though it was, sounded almost like herself, like the person she remembered being. Concentrating hard, she stood without floating in an unexpected direction, and then tried to remember how to move now. Last time she had simply had the intention to walk, and then she'd moved. She tried, tentatively at first, and barely shifted more than a few inches. Frustrated, she imagined running across the room to where the mirror was, moved her feet as she would have done when she'd been... before the accident, and then she was hurtling across the room and trying to figure out to stop before she flew straight through the mirror. A high, reedy squeal left her lips and she put her arms up as if to protect her face...and then she stopped, a couple of feet away from where the mirror stood.
Slowly, she lowered her arms, but her eyes were closed. To her relief, she couldn't see anything, so although people could apparently see through her, she wasn't actually able to see through herself. So she could deal with this slowly...she opened her eyes a crack, got used to what she saw, opened them a little further...
And she looked much the same as she had before the accident. Aylanmaa had heard tales of ghosts who appeared covered in blood or with body parts damaged or severed. She knew she'd been hit by a muggle vehicle, and she knew the sort of injuries that could be caused by that. But apparently whatever had happened to her had been so instant she hadn't had time to bleed...was her head at a slight angle, perhaps? She turned to the right and looked - yes, there was a certain tilt to her neck that hadn't been there before. A laugh bubbled up out of nowhere as she realised she was using her medical training to deduce what had happened to her. "Did I break my neck?" she asked in an almost conversational tone, continuing to study her reflection. Her skin looked almost perfect; the one spot she knew she'd had at the side of one cheek concealed by her hair, and she had been wearing one of her favourite outfits. And there were definitely no bloodstains.
She felt better now. Not right, not fine, not good, but better. Better enough that she could begin to think logically about what was to happen next, and she turned to face the other woman. "I'm so sorry, you probably told me already, but I can't remember your name" she said apologetically "though you already know I'm Aylan..." she broke off halfway through her own name with a gasp. You never spoke of the dead by their given names, it was terribly unlucky. She'd grown up with that belief, and now it came back to her with shocking suddenness, and she became silent again.