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Rated: E · Short Story · Fantasy · #1067006
A dream story. . .from the dreams' point of view.
A Dream Deferred

“And what,” said Wraith, the Sandman of the Division, “is this supposed to mean? Do you mean to tell me that you skipped three people last night?”
“Sorry, Sandman,” Aislin replied wearily. They had had this conversation before. “Their futures were too awful. One’s going to die next year, of cancer, unless—I couldn’t help it. Couldn’t you send a falling dream instead?”
“How many times must we go over this! You are a precognitive dream, Aislin. If I send you somewhere, you go. I’m docking your pay this time. Maybe it’ll teach you a lesson.”
“Yes, Mr. Sandman, sir,” she answered. “Can I go to my desk now?”
Wraith, knowing he had not gotten his message across yet again, sighed heavily. “You might as well. It’s Competition tonight, so you’d better do as you’re told for once.”
“Yes, sir. I disembowel myself in shame.”
“None of that.”
Aislin took her seat, and Wraith walked up to the only desk with actual clouds—budget cutbacks had been murder. He looked out upon the shimmery, almost translucent beings and called for order. He began, authoritatively, “All right, all of you. It’s All Hallows Eve—competition night. I intend to beat those bastards at Reverie, Incorporated tonight. Who’s with me?”
There were a few halfhearted claps. Chimer, one of the most frequent nightmares, then voiced what those who had not clapped were thinking. “Um, sir. Reverie, Inc. has beaten us every year for the past decade. It’s a trend. Accept it and move on.”
Wraith looked at him. “You’re a nightmare, right? Number three-oh-six-oh-four. Tonight’s busy for you.” He cleared his throat. “Ask yourself why we’re all here today.”
Chimer shrugged. “It’s a job.”
“Exactly,” he answered. “We don’t need the humans, but they need us or they die, or go completely nuts. Why not get paid to something you’d already do anyway? And why not try to win this competition? It’ll help with the budget, that’s for sure.”
Almost involuntarily, the dreams in the look looked at the broken-down office. There were leaks in the ceiling where clouds should have been. “The budget can’t get much worse,” Aislin commented sardonically.
“Quiet, you,” Wraith pointed. “You’re already in trouble.”
“Yes, sir. But according to you, I’d be ‘doing this anyway’.”
“Quiet. Now, all man your stations. I want you ready when the Eastern Seaboarders drift off. Aislin, you’re in the Midwest. Easy. Little girl. She probably’ll forget whatever you tell her, so don’t get fancy. Chimer, you’re in Europe today. Morgana, you’re in Messina—some fisherman. . .”
Aislin sat down and buried her head in her hands. A little girl to start with was easy. It would get harder, she knew, eventually. It got progressively more difficult as the night went on.
Specter poker her at half-past eight. “You’re up in—call it ten minutes.”
“Thanks. Good luck tonight.”
“You too. Though we’ll never win.”
She made a face. “Of course not.” She made ready above the house she was to go in. When the kid went to sleep, she would be sucked downward to Earth—not a pleasant sensation—find the girl, give her the dream, then go on to whoever was next. Competition night was busy for everyone, even her.
Trance was counting down for her on his fingers now. She gave him the thumbs up, and was released, grunting hoarsely at being dragged downward several thousand feet in mere seconds, and landed softly on the lawn in front of the girl’s house. Now all that remained was to find the girl’s room.
Aislin sifted through the wall; it was very well insulated, she realized. She moved through the house, silently; it was the antithesis of a dream to wake people up. The girl’s room was at the end of the hall; she slipped under her door—
And immediately shielded her eyes. Dreams are used to working in relative darkness, and every light in this room was on. The girl slept fitfully, tossing and muttering strange sleep words. After her eyes adjusted, Aislin reached out an opaline hand and touched the girl’s forehead to quiet her down.
Her name was Danielle. She had a math test tomorrow, for which she had studied (she thought fruitlessly). But she would receive an A- on the test. Aislin remembered Wraith telling her, ‘don’t get fancy’; she could hardly think of a simpler dream than the girl receiving an A- on her test.
Aislin prepared to jump into her brain to set up the dream, and stopped. She was confused; then she looked again. A glimmering radiance rested over the girl’s frame. That wasn’t normal. She tried to poke at the filmy substance; it stretched under her ghostly fingers but would not break.
Only then did she realize that she was wasting time, and Wraith would get angry; perhaps dock her pay again. She decided to give up on this; report it maybe, since it definitely wasn’t normal. Surprisingly, the rest of the night passed without further incident; the people she gave dreams to all seemed to have bright futures. Needless to say, when she arrived the next night, Dream Company had not beaten Reverie, Incorporated in their annual showdown.
They were short one dream.
Wraith was not happy. He was actually more like apoplectic with fury than unhappy. “Aislin, why do you do these things to me? You skipped another person last night? Competition night? Are you mad? And it was just a kid, not like she’s got such a terrible immediate future, now, does she? And it would have tied us.”
“Can I explain?”
“I don’t know. Can you?”
“I think so. She had this sort of—iridescent—glowy thing. I couldn’t get through. She’s blocking me from getting in, somehow. Like some kids proof their rooms against the boogeyman. And every light in her room was on, I swear. It was like she was terrified, or something.”
“All right. Suppose I believe you. What should we do about it?”
“I think we should pull Vagary out. He’s better at reading minds than me.”
“But he’s so expensive, Aislin. Can’t we just cross her off our dream list?”
“Hey!” it was her turn to shout. “Who was the one spouting all that self-righteousness about how the humans need us or they go mad—or die? It wasn’t me, that’s for sure.”
Wraith said, “Fine. This is beyond me; I’ve never heard anything like it before. We’ll pull out Vagary from retirement, but remember how temperamental he can get. He’s two steps away from being a poltergeist, I swear. And his pay comes for yours, since you’re so keen to do this. Fair?”
She looked a little rankled—pay docked again?—but she composed herself quickly. “Yes, sir.”
Chimer brought over a plate of something that looked like gloss or nail polish. He poked at it. “Hmm. I wonder what this is.”
“I don’t know. How much was it?”
“Five bucks.”
“Laundry detergent?”
“Ha, ha. We all know you were the one who stopped us from tieing.”
“Not my fault, for once. The kid had some kind of force field.”
“Vagary?”
“Yep.”
“Good luck.”
“Sorry.”
“Don’t mention it. This does smell like laundry detergent. . .” he walked away.
That night, Aislin met Vagary at the house. “Zees is ze dump?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Vell. Show me ze child.”
When he saw the glowing substance, he muttered. “I’ve seen zees before, once. It’s—“
“She’s—“
“Vhatever. She’s scared of something—her mother told her, ‘There’s no such zings as monsters,’ and of course zere are. She’s so tightened up—in mind and body—zat nothing can get through it. You’ll need to convince it—“
“Her—“
“Vhatever! Zat it iz safe.”
“How do I do that?”
“Zimple.” He pulled out his amplifier; Aislin never used one because remembering the future was often frowned upon; thus the weaker the dream the better. Vagary rested it just an inch above the glowing substance. “Zon—two—three—“
It exploded in colors. “Quickly, stupid! Get in zere!”
“What?”
“Get in zere!” But it was too late. They reported their failure to Wraith, who was not pleased.
“You get one more try, Aislin. After that, off with you.”
But there was one thing that Wraith had neglected. The child hadn’t dreamt in three days. She was growing sick and feverish; her mother was very concerned. That night, Aislin went alone with an Amplifier.
She touched Danielle’s head. “No need to be afraid,” and she set the Amplifier switch to on. She gave the girl a good dream: one of healing and peace. When she was done, she grabbed the Amplifier, but accidentally slipped—
She made a noise, and Danielle sat bolt upright in bed. Ah, well. I’m for sure fired now, Aislin thought.
“Danielle? Did I hear something?” Her mother appeared, framed by light in the doorway.
“Nothing,” the girl said, rubbing her eyes to remove the night’s grit. She was smiling prettily, and the feverish gleam had left her eyes. “It was just a dream.”
© Copyright 2006 Turiyayuro (turiyayuro at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
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