THE DREAM
The dream was always the same.
She would be lying on the grass in Hollenbeck Park, staring up with eyes wide at the clear blue sky. It would be a beautiful day, which was a rarity in her life. There was no one around to bother her, nothing that left a shadow over her. She would, for the first time in her life, experience an emotion that she couldn’t understand. Couldn’t describe with any real flavor. It was new, and it enveloped her. She embraced it, but the words couldn’t come to her as to what it was.
The city of Los Angeles would be surprisingly quiet in that dream. It would be less hectic, less alien to her. She may have lived in the City of Angels for the longest time, but she never really felt a part of it. To live and die in L.A. was an experience she was dumbfounded by. This new emotion, this day, was not dumbfounding. Not in the slightest.
The water at Hollenbeck, not far from where she would be lying, would be slick and serene, a giant puddle that seemed to live in symmetry with the wind of that perfect day. The water would rise up and slide down the edge of the grass as the wind whooshed and faded intermittently.
Of all the dreams that she had had, one had never been this detailed or profound, and certainly not as lasting.
All of a sudden, against the blue sky, there would be a butterfly beating its wings. It was a new addition to the combination of the water and the wind, but it seemed to be hitting the right notes. It was synchronized as well.
The most interesting part of the dream was the fact that the butterfly came down to her. It would land in her open left palm, and stay there. She would exchange a gaze with the butterfly. It would be a moment of clarity, of sheer wonder. The nameless feeling she was experiencing had reached a critical point.
Before she could fully realize what it was, the butterfly would take off from her palm, and flutter in the direction of the water.
Another emotion begins to seep into her. Time, once running smoothly, begins to wind down.
She gets up from the grass, and runs after the butterfly, in slow-motion.
The weather begins to change. The sun disappeared, and the sky became charcoal.
As soon as the tears begin to roll down her face, the rain comes.
She dives into the water, and goes down after the butterfly.
And down.
And down.
And down.
Eva Elliot had this nightmare for the past three months.
She would be lying on the grass in Hollenbeck Park, staring up with eyes wide at the clear blue sky. It would be a beautiful day, which was a rarity in her life. There was no one around to bother her, nothing that left a shadow over her. She would, for the first time in her life, experience an emotion that she couldn’t understand. Couldn’t describe with any real flavor. It was new, and it enveloped her. She embraced it, but the words couldn’t come to her as to what it was.
The city of Los Angeles would be surprisingly quiet in that dream. It would be less hectic, less alien to her. She may have lived in the City of Angels for the longest time, but she never really felt a part of it. To live and die in L.A. was an experience she was dumbfounded by. This new emotion, this day, was not dumbfounding. Not in the slightest.
The water at Hollenbeck, not far from where she would be lying, would be slick and serene, a giant puddle that seemed to live in symmetry with the wind of that perfect day. The water would rise up and slide down the edge of the grass as the wind whooshed and faded intermittently.
Of all the dreams that she had had, one had never been this detailed or profound, and certainly not as lasting.
All of a sudden, against the blue sky, there would be a butterfly beating its wings. It was a new addition to the combination of the water and the wind, but it seemed to be hitting the right notes. It was synchronized as well.
The most interesting part of the dream was the fact that the butterfly came down to her. It would land in her open left palm, and stay there. She would exchange a gaze with the butterfly. It would be a moment of clarity, of sheer wonder. The nameless feeling she was experiencing had reached a critical point.
Before she could fully realize what it was, the butterfly would take off from her palm, and flutter in the direction of the water.
Another emotion begins to seep into her. Time, once running smoothly, begins to wind down.
She gets up from the grass, and runs after the butterfly, in slow-motion.
The weather begins to change. The sun disappeared, and the sky became charcoal.
As soon as the tears begin to roll down her face, the rain comes.
She dives into the water, and goes down after the butterfly.
And down.
And down.
And down.
Eva Elliot had this nightmare for the past three months.