Clearly. And I would set the objects on fire.
[get out, loki. this is why no one wants you.]
You say that like fire bothers me. Down, boy, down.
Clearly. And I would set the objects on fire.
[get out, loki. this is why no one wants you.]
You say that like fire bothers me. Down, boy, down.
why am i being hurt like this
why am i being hurt like this
It’s one of those gorgeous lucid dreams — the kind where a part of her is awake, struggling to hold on to what she sees. She’s dreaming of a wood: unfamiliar, old growth, wide spaces beneath the tall trees. And there is Loki, on the edge of the glade.
She doesn’t know which Loki; she knows so many, now. He changes, in that way that dreams do; now heartbreakingly young, now subtly marked with the weight of millennia. Always tall, so tall. Long hair, short hair; armoured, casual.
She cannot see his face. If she could see it, she might know — is she here for love, or hate? To die, or live?
In a dream, it could easily be both. Or neither.
She calls his name.