Alike in Ignorance
Fandom: Sandman
Written for: holographis in the Yuletide 2003 Challenge
by Eleanor K.
Spoilers: The Doll's House, minor for Dream Country
Disclaimer: Sandman belongs to the fantabulous Neil
Gaiman. Also, the first two lines of dialogue between Dream and Hob are
taken from canon.
Warnings: Incest, sort of. Depending on how you view the
Endless.
Notes: Much thanks to Chrissy for betaing.
The waitress clicks up to my table in three-inch heels.
Who ever heard of a waitress wearing heels? But they all do here. Maybe
it's part of the dress code. God knows people have done more painful
things for money.
"Same again," I tell her.
She smells of hairspray and of liquor and generally as
if she'd go up in flames if you lit a match anywhere near her. She
picks up my empty glass and clicks away with it. I've been drinking
Perrier so far. If he doesn't show up soon, I'm switching to beer.
I scrape a match across one of the pub's lurid
matchbooks--shiny black with neon red lettering--and light up. It's
just before that first puff that I remember I don't smoke any more and
grind it out. The ashtray already holds three unsmoked cigarettes, bent
and torn across their middles, guts spilling out onto cut glass. Little
flecks of dried brown plant material should not be that tempting. The
way I feel right now, I could scoop it up and chew it.
Picked the wrong damn week to quit smoking. And it's not
as if I didn't know this was coming. Just couldn't handle the image of
myself sitting alone, smoking fag after fag, fingers drumming on the
table, that I've-got-a-date head twitch toward the door every twenty
seconds.
So I'm not smoking. And it's been a good five minutes
since I last looked at the door.
Desire stands in shadows. Smoke twists around it like
vines climbing to the sky in stop-motion photography, remembered
visions of jerky growth in ancient days, ancient rites. Maenads with
bloody lips and a bloody desire for their god. Standing beside Dream in
a darkness thick with the scent of blood and wine, watching as the
worshippers of Dionysus stumbled between their two realms.
Delirium danced with them, but Dream and Desire watched
together in silence as deep as the night. Desire, restless, sought to
join the dance. Its brother's hand, cool and calming on its bared
shoulder was reason enough to stay where it was.
Such things ended long ago, and Dream no longer speaks
to Desire. But he will speak to a mere mortal on this unremarkable
London night as if the two of them are friends, as if this will end any
better than it did with Nada.
Well. Maybe a little better. Desire smiles. It could
hardly end worse.
Smoke rings tremble in the air and drift toward Hob
Gadling. Desire watches him light and crush out another cigarette.
He won't show up this time. It was stupid of me to say
what I did. Blab your fool mouth off in haste, repent in leisure and
all that.
The waitress stops by to pick up the last Perrier with
taloned hands. Her nails are bubblegum pink.
"You look like you got stood up."
"Beer this time."
She shrugs, rolls her eyes, and leaves. Stood up. Hah.
She can forget her tip.
I find myself with another cigarette in my hand. I don't
even remember lighting this one. How long has it been? Ten minutes,
fifteen? I take another quick glance at the door.
It's opening just as I focus on it. A hint of damp air
crawls in from the street, and a tall man steps through wearing a dark
coat. A woman rises to greet him, and he takes off his hat to reveal
orange-red hair.
Too many people in this city wear dark coats.
He'll be wearing black or purple, or both. It's what he
always wears, always in the fashion of times, though the fashions sit
on him like Armani on a beggar, or rags on a king. More like that last,
really.
After that play, I figured him for the king of Faerie
for a while, old Oberon himself. But it didn't scan, as Kit Marlowe
would have said. Not that I've known so many of the fair folk
personally, but he struck me as too serious for that. And the gold he
used to pay the inn keeper stayed good and solid the next day, or I
would have heard about it.
I look back down and run my finger over an old cigarette
burn in the plastic surface of the table. He's not late, as such. We
never set a time for these things, and I did show up pretty bloody
early, I guess. Can't get up and take a piss, either, for fear of
missing him.
Yeah, I'm a sad piece of work tonight.
It's not that I think he wouldn't know exactly where I
was and that I'd be back. It's more that I don't want to give him the
chance to skip out on me.
Like he'd walk in and be relieved I was nowhere to be
seen and take off again. God, I'm an idiot. He'll come or he won't. His
kind don't make excuses. They don't need excuses.
He's not coming. I might as well pack it in and go home.
Rush of fabric and darkness and the scent of jasmine
fading quickly into the air. I look up--and keep looking up. I always
forget how tall he is.
Why did I think he'd bother to use the door?
"I... I wasn't sure you'd be coming." And I've got
another damn cigarette in my hand, and I take a puff because what the
fuck, right? He's here. He came.
"Really?" His voice is dark and low and thick. "I have
always heard it was impolite to keep one's friends waiting. Would you
like a drink?"
Would I like a drink he says, as if I haven't got a beer
sitting in front of me. He actually hasn't noticed it, and that's
pretty funny.
Dark eyes with light deep within them shift away from
mine to take in the room. Awkward stance. He should always look
awkward, built like he is, all long and skinny with too many sharp
jutting bones too near the surface of his skin. He should, but he never
does. Never until now. So yeah, nervous.
Which is almost enough to make me want to laugh, but god
only knows how he'd take that.
"Have a seat. The waitress has been circling my table
like some kind of vulture for the past hour. She'll be back soon."
He sits, folding up his coat around him like there's a
lot more fabric to it than I can see. Now he glances at the beer bottle
and blinks. Only once, and then he looks back at me.
"You have been here some time, I think."
"It's no problem. I would've waited longer."
He nods, a solemn bow of his head that looks more like a
move in some ancient ritual than an acknowledgement. Pretty much
everything he does has that look about it. I'm used to it, more or
less.
Mostly less. But what the hell. He's here.
Desire steps smoothly between Sandra Talling and table
five. Table five holds Hob Gadling and Dream of the Endless. This is
not a normal night for Sandra, nor, if Desire has its way, a
particularly good one.
"Excuse me...sir," Sandra decides after looking Desire
up and down. "Can I help you?"
"You certainly can."
It just takes a touch, creamy pale skin on honey gold,
fingers across this jaded little girl's face. Brown eyes hidden by blue
contact lenses go wide, and painted lips part. Sandra says nothing.
What, after all, can she say?
"You'd love to do me a favor, wouldn't you, Sandra?"
The girl nods. Her hand reaches out tentatively and
settles on Desire's arm. Pink-nailed fingers stroke the skin,
scratching just a little.
"Of course you would." Desire leans forward to whisper
in her ear.
Sandra trembles at their proximity, but Desire has no
doubt she will remember every word.
It's not much. Just a little mischief. Just a little
entertainment. Just the beginnings of an idea planted in Hob Gadling's
mind.
Desire can be subtle when it cares to be, no matter what
Dream might say.
The waitress early-warning system, the crack of heels on
tile, grows louder. She leans over us. Her smile looks a little
drugged. Maybe she's been snorting something in the restroom. Wouldn't
surprise me.
"So he finally showed up, huh? Is this your first date?"
I stare at her. She could not just have said that. She
couldn't have. She didn't. I look across the table. He's watching me
with a curious expression, head slightly tilted.
"We're not, I don't. Ah." I take a deep breath. "Two
beers. Please."
"Is it like, a blind date? Cause, I mean, you two don't
seem that much alike." She laughs. "You're all yuppie, and he's like a
Metallica reject with that hair. Or maybe a flasher. Nice coat, mister.
Anyway, point is, hard to imagine where you two might've met."
She smiles like it's a joke, but he isn't smiling. He
never does, but right now he's not-smiling more than usual.
"Maybe we should just get the check." He inclines his
head slightly, and I tug on the waitress's sleeve. "Hey. The check,
please?"
"You shouldn't have made him wait so long," she says to
him. "He looked like he was about ready to get up and leave."
"Hey! The check? This century?"
"Don't get your panties in a twist. Here." She slaps it
down on the table. "Your boyfriend's not gonna be impressed with your
manners if you keep that up, you know."
She walks off.
I rub my eyes with one hand and go to pick up the check
with the other. He gets there first. His skin is cool and soft. Like
flower petals. I don't think I've ever touched him before. Not like
this.
I pull back quickly and end up with both hands wrapped
around my glass, just to have somewhere to put them.
"I will attend to this," he says.
"You didn't even get anything to drink. That's all
mine."
"Nevertheless." He reaches inside his coat and pauses.
"You may pay next time, if it is important."
"It's...something people do. So they won't burden each
other."
"Something people do." He places a few bills on the
table with care that suggests the action isn't exactly familiar. "Yes.
I suppose it is." He looks at me. "I'm afraid I wouldn't know."
I know he's not human. I know. But. It's not often he
reminds me of it.
"Let's get out of here, huh? Before she comes back."
He rises, and his grace is back. I'm the one who's
awkward as we walk out the door into the chill of the streets. Why did
she have to go and say that shit? I wasn't thinking about him like
that. I wasn't.
He pauses just outside the door, glancing back inside.
"Her words disturbed you."
"It doesn't matter. She didn't mean anything by it. Come
on. Where are we going?"
We start walking again.
"I do not know. Where do you wish to go?"
I speed up a little from our aimless wandering pace and
push the walk button at the corner.
"We'll go to my place, okay? I've got better beer than
what they serve there anyway."
Desire crosses its arms and leans back against the wall.
It saw that look on Dream's face. Apart from being screwed out of a tip
by Hob Gadling, Sandra's dreams tonight will likely not be pleasant.
Desire's brother is a vengeful creature, and this mortal seems dear to
him.
How can that be? Desire doesn't know, and so it skirts
the edges of Dream's consciousness, careful to stay hidden. No desire
should feel so alien. What Dream felt for Nada was understandable and,
with a little nudge, destructive. Beautiful.
Desire doesn't believe in the cool, clean purity that
Dream wants this friendship to fit into. Dream doesn't have friends. In
the end, all want is messy. And Dream does want this.
This is the first time in ten thousand years Dream has
let himself truly set foot within Desire's domain. This is a different
Dream than the one imprisoned for three quarters of a century. He is
changed in ways that Desire didn't believe were possible.
So Desire sends Sandra back to her work--maybe the girl
will dream of golden eyes and moonlight skin instead of the horrors
hidden in her own mind--and steps sideways through matter and distance.
We've always stayed in the pub. Walking with him is a
first. I thought more people would notice us--him, really--but no one
does. Maybe he doesn't want them to.
Then again, there aren't that many people on the street,
which is odd when I think about it. Friday night and all. Not that
late. But no, he's got nothing to do with that. I can't blame him for
everything.
I turn up my collar against a chill that's probably got
more to do with my thoughts than with the weather. The city's damp and
dreary tonight, but not cold enough to account for the prickles walking
up and down my spine.
I've never thought of him like that.
He glides along at my side, and we catch up to a pair of
guys with their hands in each other's back pockets. If I didn't know
better, I'd think someone was trying to give me ideas.
"So what have you been doing for the last hundred
years?"
Same question he always asks if I don't start talking
soon enough to suit him. I'm damned if I know why he cares.
"Trade for a while, like usual. But recently computers.
Got in on the ground floor, you might say."
He nods, and I ramble on. He only stops me once to ask
what a computer is.
It's not a long walk, but it's still enough for me to
tell him pretty much everything. Everything interesting, anyway. So by
the time I'm unlocking my front door, I'm ready to ask him the question
I've been sitting on since he showed up.
"Take a seat. I'll get the beer." I pause. "Beer okay?
I've got orange juice and red wine and--" And do I ever feel like an
idiot right now, 'cause I'm betting he could wave his hand and
champagne and naked serving girls would appear in the middle of my
living room, and here I am offering him orange juice.
He just nods. "Beer will be...fine."
And he sits on the couch, folding his coat around him.
"You want me to take that?"
"Take what?"
"Your coat. You want me to hang your coat up? It's a
little warm in here."
He blinks and looks down at himself. "No. That will not
be necessary."
"Okay."
So off I go to the kitchen to get the beer. When I come
back, the coat is nowhere in sight.
I set the beer down on two coasters on the coffee table
and sit beside him on the couch.
"Can I ask you a question?"
"You may."
"The sleepy sickness...all those people falling asleep
and not waking up... What was that about? I had some pretty damn weird
dreams during that." I almost stop and leave it at that. But. Well, I
never could leave well enough alone. "I ask because a lot of those
dreams were about you."
He sits back and clasps his hands across his stomach.
His spiked hair falls forward into his face. I can't see his eyes.
"What sort of dreams?"
"Nightmares. I was trapped somewhere, and I couldn't get
out. Then I'd realize I wasn't really me, I was you. And then usually
I'd wake up."
"Usually?"
"Sometimes there was this old guy, with a face like a
funhouse mirror. That's it. I mean, I've had worse nightmares. I just
wondered if..."
If. I don't really know, even now, what I wondered. He's
not going to help me out; that's pretty clear. The almost-question is
just going to hang there.
Fine.
"I just wondered if you were okay. That's all."
"No." He shifts forward to pick up his beer bottle and
roll it between his hands. "I was not...okay," he says, finally.
"But...you are now. Right?"
"Yes." Silence, for long enough that I'm thinking it's
time to change the subject, and then he speaks again. "I was held
captive for a time."
"I had those dreams for seventy-five years, off and on."
"Yes."
I drain my beer and don't ask any more questions. I'm
not sure I want to know.
Desire stands outside in the rain and sees through
walls. Plaster and brick and metal is all glass, so thin it could break
at a sharp breath. Everything about Desire is sharp.
It watches its brother with slitted eyes and leans
against a lamp post. Water oozes from heavy clouds and fails to fall
onto Desire's skin.
Nothing can come of this. There is no point to this
vigil. Everything hinges now on the dream vortex. Anything Desire does
tonight will be no more than mischief.
Desire smiles to itself. There is nothing wrong with
mischief. Nothing wrong with a little push. Dream would disagree, but
Dream is always so very serious.
"Want another one?" I wave the bottle in my hand at his
empty one.
"I do not. Thank you."
"No problem." I have to brace my hand against the wall
when I stand. The room's moving. It shouldn't be doing that, I'm pretty
sure. Am I drunk? I haven't had that much, have I? I don't feel drunk.
There's two bottles on the kitchen counter, plus the one
in my hand is three. That's not enough to get me drunk, not by half.
But the room is still moving and things are sort of blurred in a
familiar way.
I leave the beer I got up for in the fridge and go back
out to sit beside him.
"So are you going to tell me?" My voice is a bit blurry,
too.
"Tell you what?"
"You know. About what you said."
"You wish to know of my captivity."
"Yeah. I guess. I do, yeah."
He's quiet for a long time.
"No. I will not speak of that."
"Well, then what will you speak of? I've known you for
six hundred years, and I don't even know your name, man!"
"Is it that important?"
His head is tilted toward me, curiosity like a deep
light in his eyes.
"Yeah..." My voice has gone from blurry to slurred, and
I can't seem to do anything about it. "Names're important..."
You know, I think there really is a light in his eyes.
Like... Like looking into deep water. Black, dark, thick with depth and
age...with something shining at the bottom. And I want to know what it
is. I'm sure suddenly that's the clue I need to figure him out. If I
could just see that light in him...
So I lean closer. One hand I brace on the back of the
couch, and the other slips and finds purchase on something smooth and
warm. It takes me a few seconds to realize it's his knee. My hand is on
his knee.
I look up at him, and curiosity is still the only thing
showing on his face.
I'm not--
I can't--
I don't--
But I'm leaning toward him anyway, and it's not that I
don't want to because I can't remember ever wanting anything so much,
but--
His fingers are cool on my face. Maybe my face is hot.
It feels hot. Feels like I'm flushed. Or blushing. I can't say I want
this to stop, but there's something--wrong.
He's so close that I think our lips will meet any
second. His skin smells like jasmine, and his eyes are deep.
You hear about falling into people's eyes, but these eyes make me think
of dropping through the freefall of space and never, ever landing. The
light is from stars that died millenia ago, and... And I'm scared.
"I just wanted to know your name," I whisper.
He looks at me--into me--a second longer. He leans in
until his hair brushes my face. It's clingy and soft and sticks to my
cheek.
"Dream," he says.
The last thing I see is his dead-star eyes looking at me
with concern and something that might be anger. I hope he's not angry
with me.
"I stand in my gallery, sister-brother, and I hold your
sigil. Will you come?"
Dream's words reach Desire as a faint pull. It still
stands on a London street and watches the scarlet thread of want wind
through Hob Gadling's dreams.
This should be boring, but somehow it's not. Desire
didn't mean for the seed planted in Hob's mind to bloom in his dreams,
but it has. Maybe it was the way he was sent to sleep, or maybe
Desire's touch was stronger than it was meant to be, or maybe there was
already something there. It's impossible to say.
The mortal dreams, and Desire watches, but turns at its
brother's voice.
"Why don't you come to me, big brother? We can talk just
as well here."
"Do you fear to enter my realm, Desire?"
"Everyone fears the power you hold in the Dreaming. Am I
so arrogant that I should not?"
"You have always been arrogant, sister-brother. I will
come to you, then."
He is there, standing beside Desire. The rain falls on
him and wets his hair. He doesn't seem to notice and doesn't bother to
ward it off.
"He is not yours to meddle with, Desire."
"All the world is mine to meddle with. You know that."
"They are not your playthings. He is not your
plaything."
"So protective. How unlike you, brother." Desire sees
the warning on its brother's face and ignores it. "More like you to
leave your lovers in Hell at the mercy of any demon--"
"Silence!"
Desire smiles with calculated sympathy. "Is the truth so
very painful? How will this lover end up, I wonder?"
For a moment, Desire thinks there is pain in its near
future, but Dream's raised hand falls, and he turns away.
"He is not my lover."
Desire laughs. The sound spreads out, thick and soft.
People shiver, blocks away, and turn to each other with new purpose in
their eyes.
"No? You've seen his dream. You sent him there."
"They choose their own dreams. Or their dreams choose
them."
"So he chose to dream of you." Desire steps closer and
slides a hand in the air over its brother's chest. "Is that so very
shocking to you, brother?"
"I see your influence like a stain in his mind. Remove
it."
"What will you give me if I do?"
"I do not play your games."
"You have played before, and you will play again. What
will you give me?"
"You will do this, and I will give you nothing."
"Show me his dreams, brother." Desire steps closer,
looking up at Dream's face. "That's all I ask."
"You know well enough where he wanders tonight."
"And with whom, yes. But I want to be there. I want to
see. It's not so much to ask, is it? For my word that I will never
touch him again?"
Dream looks at Desire, and Desire looks steadily back.
Steady, steady, balanced on the knife's edge, singing with the surety
of its brother's capitulation and freely unaware of what the night
still holds.
Dream nods, one deep inclination of his head. "Very
well."
His lips are cool on mine. I don't know how we got here.
I don't know where here is. I don't care.
What's important is the way our mouths meet, the way he
tastes like wine, the way his cloak settles over me, soft like black
feathers. He was wearing a coat, wasn't he? But then it disappeared.
And now we're someplace else, so maybe he doesn't need his coat, but if
he doesn't need a coat, what does he need the cloak for?
Oh.
Because he's not wearing anything under it.
"Has anyone ever dreamed of you before, brother?"
Dream's eyes when he turns them on Desire are empty and
far away. "Nada dreamed of me."
And even Desire can't come up with a reply that won't
fall into those depths and be lost. Shifting, it watches as its brother
in dream form bends Hob Gadling back and back and settles over him.
The real Dream, if reality has any meaning here, stands
beside it and watches without reaction. He looks so distant that Desire
dares to touch his arm. When that liberty gets no reprimand, it lets
the hand move up over Dream's shoulder and down his chest.
"Take your hands from me." But Dream doesn't move, nor
look away from the scene being acted out in front of them.
Desire only has the one hand on him, so it corrects
that. One hand on Dream's chest, the other on his hip, stepping in
front of him, stepping closer. Even that doesn't draw Dream's attention
away from his pet mortal, but that's all right. It leaves Desire more
time to play.
Its hands find their way under Dream's tight black shirt
and press against soft skin, remembering nights of long ago, before
Calliope, before...almost anything. Before anything important. Memories
fade for Desire sooner, perhaps, than for others, but it remembers
this.
Nights of blood and wine and flowers, green things
crushed under their bodies, thrown together by mortals who walked in
divine madness that spanned their realms. Few worlds ever saw the like
of the Bacchante.
"Have you seen what you came to see? Are we done here?"
"I'll leave him alone." Desire leans against its
brother, shocked to stillness when it is not pushed away.
"What do you want from me, Desire? I am weary this
night."
And Dream does sound weary. Deeply tired beyond the
ordinary melancholy of his tone. Desire shifts against him, closer,
pushing. Angry. Dream has his mortal, has his family, has--as he always
does--everything he could want. And yet he wants nothing, only mopes
about as if he's something special, as if anyone cares.
"What do I want, Dream? You don't ask me what I want. I
tell you what you want."
"It would not be wise to play with me tonight."
Wouldn't it? But Dream still hasn't moved to push Desire
away, still hasn't taken his eyes from his mortal, though he is
watching with such a far away look that he might be seeing something
else entirely.
His cloak falls away. It settles between us and tickles
my skin. It really is made of feathers. He drags it across my chest,
bends closer, closer, and kisses my eyelids. First one. Then the other.
Soft touch on thin, creased skin.
His hands mold my body against his. My heart's beating
so fast. I want--
His touch.
His breath over my lips. He bends toward me again, and I
lean up for the kiss.
Desire's arms circle Dream's waist now. It cranes its
head to look back at the mortal, just in time to see dreamer and
dream-lover disappear.
"You have seen. You will leave now."
"Where did you send him?"
"Away."
"Awake?"
"It is none of your concern."
"But I'm curious, brother. What did you do to this one?"
Dream takes Desire's shoulders in his pale hands with
all the pressure of a storm before the first lightning strike. Mist
rises from nothing and swirls around them. Desire tries to pull away
and fails.
"It was a dream. Without your tampering, he will forget
soon enough."
Their eyes meet and hold, and the light in Dream's
flares and fades to nothing.
And then Dream is gone.
Desire is alone.
The mist is thicker now. Distant cries echo through it.
Desire cannot tell from which direction they come. It takes a step
forward and encounters tall grass, wet and lashing at its chest. Each
breath brings in the scent of marshes, bogs, sloughs. Still water and
decay.
It should take less than a thought to be home in the
Threshold, but that thought won't come.
"Brother! Dream!"
No answer.
"Get back here, you treacherous, moon-faced-- Come
back!" Again, there is no reply. Desire's next words are much quieter.
"How dare you?" The whisper is stripped from its lips by a peevish
wind. Silence. The creak and flow of water seeping through earth.
"Come back, brother. Come back..."
The only reply is the low-pitched sigh and moan of air
passing across broken reeds. Dream is not coming back. Desire steps
forward and feels the give of soft ground under its feet.
Every pace sinks Desire deeper into this unreality. The
silence takes on an organic, listening quality that makes it want to
retrace its steps, call out again...or keep quiet and hope to be
overlooked. It can see nothing ahead and nothing behind.
Step after step gets Desire nowhere. It is cold and wet
in a way that it would never permit in any other situation. Dream
should not be doing this. It is contrary to every unspoken agreement
the family has ever made.
Even a form shift is impossible. Dream is not called
Lord Shaper for nothing. He shapes reality here, even the reality of
others. Even of his family. Not fair. Not fair! The words want to ring
out, but Desire does not speak. It stands still, goose bumps puckering
its flesh for the first time in its memory.
A light appears in front of it, a soft ball of glowing
whiteness in the gloom. Will-o'-the-wisp. It floats away, bobbing and
tumbling through the dark air. Desire follows.
The thing is going in circles, Desire is sure. It
wanders through mist and over sodden ground for...far too long. Time
seems stretched here.
But eventually, the earth isn't wet any more, and then
it isn't earth at all, but sand. The mist dissipates, and the stars are
bright enough to see by.
There are more of them than ought to be possible. They
crowd the sky from horizon to horizon. Their light picks out bright
motes here and there in the dunes that wink at the sky.
This is no longer the Dreaming. It has the more solid
flavor of the waking world. It would be easy now to return to the
Threshold. But Desire walks onward, curious.
Sand shifts under its feet. Bare feet, it notices. Loose
silk pants. No shirt. Desire stops on the crest of a dune, unsure
whether it wrought these changes itself, or whether Dream had some hand
in them. That thought is intriguing enough that it lets the changes
stand.
Desire slides and skids down the dune. At the bottom is
a pavilion that wasn't there a moment ago. Desire enters.
The walls are hung with scarlet and vermillion and gold.
The floor is piled with silken rugs in eye-twisting patterns. Desire
looks up. The top is transparent...or painted so skillfully with stars
as to make it indistinguishable from the sky. Painted and set with
diamonds, perhaps.
Turning at a hiss of sound, Desire sees Dream standing
just inside. Sand drifts up around his feet.
"What are you doing here?" Dream asks.
"Just what I was about to ask you, brother. What am
I doing here? You strand me in your realm and lead me here, strip me
down--" Desire gestures at its lack of clothing, choosing to blame this
for the moment on Dream. "And ask me to explain my presence? You're the
one who should be offering explanations."
"I sent a guide to lead you from the dream. After your
words tonight, I will not apologize for leaving you. You are free now.
I ask again, what are you doing here? And that," Dream waves at the
silk pants dipping low around Desire's hips, "is none of my doing."
"Well." Desire smiles and steps closer. "It must be
mine, then. And yes, I could leave. So could you, o brother. What are
you doing here?"
"The soft places require watching. They bleed into my
realm. Anyone could wander in."
"Or out."
"As you say."
So proud, so stubborn. Even having set this up, Dream
will never admit it. Desire doesn't care. It steps forward, chest to
chest with its brother, bare skin against dark cotton. Dream's robe is
simple and unbound, easy to part and push aside.
Bare skin against bare skin, and Dream wears nothing at
all under the robe that now lies pooled at his feet. He does nothing as
Desire runs hands and then nails over his back. He does nothing as
Desire presses the lightest of kisses to the base of his throat.
Desire pauses then, wary, not quite fearful, or at least
trying not to be. Dream is so predictable in almost every way that any
surprise from him is unsettling, and tonight is a surprise.
His hand at Desire's waist is enough of a shock to make
Desire take a step back--if Dream would allow that. He will not. His
arm circles Desire's waist and pulls it close again.
Their lips meet, and there is no suppressing the sound
of triumph that breaks from Desire's throat. Dream's only response is
the deepening of their kiss and the cool hand slipping along Desire's
spine.
Solid and immutable as stone, Dream lays them both down
on embroidered pillows, hovering over Desire's body, propped up on his
hands. Desire pulls him down. Their bodies fit together, the flat
expanse of Dream's chest now mirroring Desire's, now cushioned by a
softer shape.
Normally defined by its owner's whims or by the lusts of
others, Desire's body changes now by the second, swiftly moving water
over the streambed of its brother's form. Desire's course is changed,
Dream's edges tumbled smooth. Curves and planes, yielding and surging
forward, held steady against Dream's flesh.
It is different with family. Freer and more frightening.
Dream's long fingers stroke Desire's neck, throat, chest, and push in
through skin and muscle to caress its heart. Transient flesh passes
through flesh as Desire enters and is entered.
Their bodies come together, and their minds twist and
twine. Dream holds Desire in cool acceptance. Cool, but total. Every
fault is acknowledged, every flaw seen and held close. There is no
anger now, and distrust is set aside. Their minds slide against each
other, pushing into secret places, thrilling Desire with a creeping
pleasure.
Dream's physical body bucks up, jutting rock churning
water to foam, piercing Desire's body and mind with pleasure so pure it
is almost sickening. Bright, star-shattering and destructive, Desire is
borne far on it, lost and drifting until Dream pulls it back.
It lies boneless in its brother's arms, wondering how
long the truce will last.
"Until morning," Dream says, predicting the question or
reading it through the bond that is not yet entirely dissolved. "The
sun will wake us."
London looks almost clean at dawn, even with the grey
sky. The sun is a hazy redness, barely visible through the clouds. I
only woke up a few minutes ago.
I remember stuff I'm pretty sure didn't happen. I
remember him kissing me. I remember letting him. I remember how his
skin felt and how he smelled and how he tasted.
Was it a dream? It didn't feel like a dream. You'd think
I'd be able to tell.
I'll see him again. At least I know that much now. I
didn't blow our friendship with that stupid ultimatum. I doubt he'll
explain, but I'll see him again. A century isn't so long once you get
used to it. It's all in what you choose to dwell on, and I've gotten
good at not dwelling.
Maybe in another hundred years, I won't even remember
this. Or I'll remember it as one more mystery in a lifetime of them.
Maybe. Or maybe it won't be so easy to let go this time.
Dream's face is blood-washed by the red light of dawn.
His eyes are closed. Perhaps he is asleep, or in that state which
passes for sleep among the family. Desire watches and waits for the
moment when they will admit to waking and part.
Dream opens his eyes.
Desire does not know what to expect from this morning.
"Are you leaving?" Dream asks.
"Are you?"
Dream's eyes are dark as he lays a hand on Desire's
face. Desire almost flinches away from the touch.
"Calm yourself, sister-brother. I wish only to remind
you of your promise."
"I'll leave him alone. I said I would."
"Good."
"I don't understand what you want from him."
"I want nothing from him."
"That's not true. I can feel it, you know."
Dream is silent long enough that Desire suspects the
thing to do now is get up and leave. It ignores the feeling and settles
more solidly against Dream's side.
"His friendship, then," Dream says, at last.
"You don't have friends."
"Nor do you."
Silence again. The red of dawn fades. The moon floats in
an acid-blue sky, ever paler as the light grows.
Desire rolls away from Dream and stands. They look at
each other a moment longer.
Then, with a thought, Desire is gone, back in the
Threshold. However much he has changed, Dream will never explain
himself. There's no point in asking.
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