Hello, everyone. I've been away for so long - it's wonderful  to come back. I 
missed this while gone.  
The fine print is, as always, Ms. Rice's. This work, however,  is mine.  
Spoilers: TVL, I suppose. Or QotD. I suppose it might be  worth mentioning 
that I have never read, nor intend to, anything  beyond TotBT so you don't need 
to expect anything related to MtD,  Pandora or TVA.  
 
Meditations in No Particular Order
by Ilah  Sef
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (http://www.tc.umn.edu/~pres0049/[EMAIL PROTECTED])   


There is a first time for everything.  
Ice. The winter storm I have remained one step ahead of my entire  travels 
has at last caught up; the snow must have begun to fall in  earnest in the 
early 
afternoon if the accumulation of it across the  ground as I woke was any 
indication. I snarl my irritation to the  black wind that stirs the flakes at 
my 
feet into a shifting stream,  curse and catch myself as my feet slip across 
frost slicked stones  hidden beneath drifts of white. Flurries of it swirl 
around 
me,  obscuring sight and stinging cold against exposed cheeks. I glance  up 
but can see no farther than the span of my outstretched arms -  only 
familiarity and the steady throb of their presence leads me on  to the sanctum. 
 
I unclasp chilled fingers and reach upward, finding the next hold  by touch 
alone. The ascent to the sanctum carved deep into the heart  of the cliff is 
steep and deliberately difficult to follow - the  final stretch to the entrance 
itself is more than enough to turn  away mortal explorers. In the summer 
months, when small mosses and  tiny flowers dot the stones, it is the matter of 
a 
few brief moments  to scale the stony cliff and secure the entrance. Now, half 
blinded  by flakes and chilled through, I swear roundly at the elements in  
this chilled northern clime and my own thrice damned cleverness as I  shift my 
weight and pull myself up to where the last small ledge  should be.  
I feel the stone twist beneath my foot in the moment as my weight  is 
balanced neither hither or yon. An instant of reaction as my  heart pounds loud 
within my chest - hands grasping desperately, not  quite in firm place, and 
feeling 
the lip of the stone edge break  beneath my fingertips as I subject it to a 
weight and strength it  was never meant to take. The gasp dies a-borning in my 
throat as  balance and earth drop away... I know it in my mind's eye, the  
descent. A long drop, and naught but stone beneath. Fatal? No, not  for I. But 
painful and injurious; I brace myself for it, for the  plummet and impact 
below, 
cursing in a hundred tongues, wishing with  futile strength for the 
impossible - stop, stop, STOP.  
One heartbeat, impossibly loud in my ears, my veins. Another.  
I slowly open my eyes, not daring to draw breath or move muscle.  Balanced, 
palms splayed against the rock face before me, feet...  foot... braced slipshod 
upon the remaining ledge as the snow swirls  thick below the foot resting 
upon nothing but air. Off balanced.  Pitched at an angle, my weight upon 
neither 
hands nor feet, with no  way to support myself. Impossibly, incredibly, 
suspended.  
Hysteria bubbles up, fueled on startled fear. I force my lungs to  open, to 
take one breath and then another. I can not wrench my eyes  from the open drop 
beneath my foot, a drop half of my body hangs  over without any means to stay 
so balanced. Thoughts, disjointed and  chaotic, tumble through my head and 
scramble to find some plausible  answer. "gignetai d' ek tês mnêmês empeiria 
tois 
 anthrôpois _1_ 
(http://www.tc.umn.edu/~pres0049/Perchancetodream.htm#footnote) "  a long dead 
teacher's voice recites but it avails me not at all for  if 
memory provides experience then what memory in all my hundreds of  years may 
explain the unexplainable? Only wish remains constant, the  breathless prayer 
that whatever miracle has occurred it will  continue to occur and I shall not 
find myself plummeting downward.  
But the gods are smiling and the only moving thing in the world  is the 
whistling wind and the falling snow.  
I wonder, idly, if I dream. If perhaps I missed the impact itself  and now 
lie, senseless, at the foot of the climb. If so, I reason to  myself, then what 
harm? You are already hurt, the pain shall not  strike until you wake, and why 
not explore the dream while the  opportunity is there? Let go. Yet the flesh 
is unwilling and still I  cling, though there is nothing for my hands to cling 
to but smooth  stone that even my fingers may not find purchase upon. It 
seems the  final idiocy of a mind gone scattered to the cutting winds, to  
release 
that last grasp upon reality. I start and stop a dozen  times, never daring 
to move more than the muscles in fingertips  rapidly going numb.  
Finally, taking a deep breath, I let my hands drop.  
It is another instant, frozen in the belabored stutter between  panicked 
heartbeats, before nature plucks with insistent hand and I  feel the world rush 
past me with the sickening sensation of falling.  There is no time for 
recrimination, no time for thoughts or curses  or action, no time for anything 
but to 
close my eyes, brace my  unwilling body and scream denial, heart and mind, NO!  
Falling and falling and falling - I count two frantic heartbeats,  then 
another, and know that no such span of time should have been  allowed between 
the 
point of my departure and the base of the climb.  I open my eyes, torn between 
not wishing to see the final moment  before impact and wanting to witness the 
possible new miracle.  
I open my eyes to a world gone mad.  
Falling, yes, but falling up - the world spiraling below  me, smaller by the 
moment, receding at a ghastly rate into swirls of  masking white until up and 
down have no meaning beneath the shroud  of snow. Panic, I find, is such a 
weak word - paltry and  insignificant, to describe the sheer scalding terror 
burning through  me, stealing away thought and breath and ability. I can not 
remember  the last time I gave voice to scream and I have no breath for it  
now. 
The wind roars in my ears, painful, pressing hard until I  wonder if my 
gibbering mind shall simply burst. Flailing, trying to  find purchase where 
there is 
none, the world buffeted around me as I  struggle against nothing at all.  
The helpless tears freeze upon my lashes, rimming my world in red  tinged 
fury. The air is chiller than any I have ever tasted, burning  tongue and 
lungs, 
pouring like liquid ice down my throat. The  pressure against my ears muffles 
sound, even as it drives the  frantic pulse of my heartbeat deep into my head. 
Impossible, I chant  to myself. Oh surely impossible. Dream, wish, nightmare, 
fantasy but  surely impossible. The prayers fall from my lips like the 
countless  snow flakes from the clouds.  
Who has not dreamed of reaching up to touch the clouds? What  child has not 
looked up into the sun drenched sky and tracked the  path of billows of white? 
It is said that the gods strode there,  that their home was there, high above 
the land where mortals toiled.  But who, truly, could imagine it? To live 
there, where the brilliant  rolling forms of clouds might replace the curve of 
green hills. What  would one see from there? What would the clouds feel like, 
what  would it be to touch one, to walk its surface?  
The answer, I find, is nothing but the realm of nightmare without  equal. 
Darkness, wet and cloying and freezing cold. I gasp, choking,  stung by slivers 
of ice that pierce clothes and rake across skin.  There are those who preach a 
hot punishment, an afterlife filled  with flames. No. This... this cold hell 
is a thousand times worse.  
And then it is gone.  
The air is still cold, still an assault to the body that breaths  it, but it 
is free of ice. It no longer presses against me like an  echo of the chill 
sea. Shivering, I dare to dash the frozen layers  from my eyes, to open them 
and 
find what new world I have entered.  
My tears are forgotten, my fear startled silent. Starlight, and  never, never 
have I seen so many so clearly. It stretches around me,  the dome of heaven, 
a limitless black cloth strewn with brilliant  points of light. I am moving 
still and the lights spin dizzyingly  around me. Stop, I wish. Stop, for if 
that 
was hell then this is  surely Olympus. This splendor, this sea of heaven and 
sky with the  surface of the clouds glinting below - this is wonder.  
And my wishes still have power, for though it is none too steady  and my eyes 
hurt with the motion, my body halts at last to hover,  spinning slowly there 
above the world.  
This is what it is to be a god.  
Above, the stars move in their eternal dance, and for one moment  I wonder if 
I might not join them - if I might not reach out and  touch them as I have 
touched the clouds. So distant, and yet  infinitely nearer than before. Below, 
the light of the moon makes  silver of the vast hills and valleys of clouds, 
shadows cast in  silken blackness, highlights picked out in brilliant 
sharpness. 
 Solid to the eye, as though one might walk upon their surface. No  sign, 
here, of the storm that rages below. Here, all is calm, still  and silent. Only 
the wind speaks. This is the home of birds alone  and in the darkness of the 
night even they are absent. I witness the  miracle in solitude and before it I 
am humbled, brought to my knees  by the majesty of that which no man has ever 
touched.  
Awe conquers fear and at length my heart slows somewhat. My ears,  I 
discover, have ceased to ache, the pressure gone. The chill  pierces to the 
bone but 
it is a slight discomfort in the face of  this wonder. Experiment is embarked 
on with trepidation, but no  physical motion makes any difference to my state. 
The air, then, is  not an ocean through which birds swim as fish do the sea. 
It has no  touch, no substance. Thought alone directs my body through its  
emptiness, held aloft on the wings of wishes. It is graceless and  fumbling but 
it 
matters not at all. It is enough and more than man's  mind has ever imagined. 
 
Wonder and fear, combined, turn my thoughts away from miracles  and back to 
the earth below. My descent is only somewhat more  controlled then my initial 
rise. The clouds are still wet, still  viciously cold, their exterior beauty 
lost amidst the blackness of  their underside. The heavy pressure is there 
again, making me press  hand to ears, shake my head and hold my breath.  
I drop into the flurry of the storm, lost amidst the swirls of  white. How 
far from clouds to ground? The childish fear that there  is no ground, that the 
world itself has dropped away, grips me. I  shiver and can not stop, no matter 
how I try. Casting out, desperate  of a sudden for anything familiar, I touch 
their presence. There,  below me. Where I left them, safe within their 
sanctum. Safe within  the familiar grip of ground and earth, where up and down 
have  
meaning and the clouds are only to be looked at and not touched.  
The landing tumbles me head over feet, knocking the breath from  my body and 
jarring my very bones and teeth. I hear something crack,  feel the flash of 
pain streak along my leg. I curl around it,  gasping, letting the spinning of 
my 
head slow until I can look up  and around.  
The ground is beneath me, the sky above. My hands are buried in  drifts of 
snow and it falls still around me, a direction that is  singularly comforting. 
My body has the same weight, the same range  of motion, that it has always had. 
The dream is gone.  
But it was no dream alone, for my leg aches and I bite my lip as  I pull the 
bone back into place, breath hissing through my teeth as  I wait for the 
throbbing pain to cease. Dreams do not break bones.  Dreams do not leave a 
man's 
lungs seared, or rim his clothes in  frosted ice.  
Did you know of this, my Queen? Did you tread the clouds and walk  the paths 
of the gods, my King? I roll back, look up, blinking into  the falling 
snowflakes. Did you dance among the stars?  
They will not answer. Perhaps they did. Perhaps even now, as  their bodies 
sit, motionless, somewhere their spirits fly up there  above the storm, above 
the land and sea, where the stars shine  brighter than any flame.  
Perhaps I did dream it. And perchance, some night, I will dream  it again.  







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