Heart of Fire
28 Sunday Apr 2013
Posted The Butterfly Experiment
in28 Sunday Apr 2013
Posted The Butterfly Experiment
in27 Saturday Apr 2013
Posted The Butterfly Experiment
in24 Wednesday Apr 2013
Posted The Butterfly Experiment
inIf you click through to the full size, it’s awesome for wallpaper. If I don’t say so myself.
27 Wednesday Feb 2013
Posted The Butterfly Experiment
inAnna first found her tree on her eighth birthday. By the end, she had forgotten who was there, which friend delivered which object of ephemeral value, or who ate what, but she never forgot finding the tree.
Hours after the party had ended, after the paper was torn and the secrets revealed, when her friends had eaten their fill and exhausted themselves with their games, her parents tucked her into bed and turned out the lights.
She often wondered, later, what would have happened had they drawn the blinds before wishing her goodnight. Perhaps it would have made no difference; the stars were old, older than the very bones of the Earth which supported and nourished her tree. They were so old that many of them had died long before that night, and yet they were still strong enough to reach across the void and touch her mind.
Like the will-o-wisps of old, these ghost-lights in the sky reach out to her. What their purpose was, none could say, for ghosts keep their own counsel. They reached their light into her room and into her mind, as unimpeded by the thin membranes of her eyelids as they were by the glass of her window or the trackless space between. They reached deep into her, caressing her thoughts with their twinkling music, and she dreamed of a forest.
It was a forest in the same way that a mountain is a stone… its trees ancient, gnarled, and heavy with moss. The clawing branches could have been sinister and terrifying in the darkness, but she felt no fear. Instead, she was drawn to them, as if their gently swaying was beckoning to her.
So deeply was she dreaming that she was unaware of her physical body rising from her bed, slowly crossing the room, opening the window. As she picked her way through the bracken at the verge of the forest, she also climbed out the window. She worked her way deeper and deeper into the forest, a path always present before her but always quickly curving out of sight. She had no idea how long she walked before she came into the clearing.
The tree was there.
It spread out above her, filling the sky. Its ancient, clawing branches divided again and again, until trying to find where one ended and another began made her mind reel. Dizzy, she forced her eyes away from the heavenward tangle, looking to the ground for stability.
There was none to be found. Reeling with vertigo, she realized that she could see through the earth at her feet as if it were the clearest crystal. The roots of the tree multiplied and spread below her, as infinitely dense and complicated as its branches. The longer she looked, the more the spreading tendrils began to fill her vision until, blinded and disoriented, she slowly toppled against the tree. She could feel the rough, weathered bark catch her, biting into her exposed skin as it eased her to the ground. Through the bark, through the earth, through the very air around her, she could feel the warm pulse of life rising in waves from the finest root-tendril to the smallest new shoot in the spreading canopy.
With each pulse, she could feel herself being lifted out of the fog of panic which had threatened to engulf her. She could feel her thoughts slow and calm as the ancient tree’s essence reached out and engulfed her own, a small, bright flame nurtured and shielded with a parent’s tenderness. As her mind’s eye slowly closed and the depths of sleep claimed her, she saw clearly for an instant into the tangle of roots and branches and she knew that at the tip of each and every tendril lay a star, and that every star had a place amongst the chaos.
And then she knew nothing more until the morning, when she would awake far from home.
And the tree would still be there.
It would always be there.
It always had been.
24 Thursday Jan 2013
Posted The Butterfly Experiment
inI’ve been hard at work on a few new projects, which are still related to the previous few.
Here’s a teaser to keep you interested:
25 Thursday Oct 2012
Posted The Butterfly Experiment
inSoft wings brush
A sleeping mind, a soft target
A soothing caress, the lightness of hope.
Ice melts into a warm summer pool, and she floats.
Solace for a tired mind, protecting all, unknown to herself.
Ice grips her body. Cruel talons replace the soft wings, or always were.
Here, at last, an obstacle. She lets go of the false summer and fights.
It’s good to know you have an enemy. It fills her with purpose. Fire surges.
As she purges the horrors she forgets. Her dreams are incinerated.
Fire burns everything, not just the bad. It saps her will.
Morning will not let her die. Sun seeps in,
Erasing memories but leaving her
Rage, and pain, and fear.
14 Sunday Oct 2012
Posted The Butterfly Experiment
inAnna sleeps uneasily.
Dreams trouble her with chaos.
Pain and fire, engulfing all she knows.
Darkness and ice, draining life from her world.
She dreams this every night, but she cannot remember.
Cassandra’s fate was kinder, to see your everything burning
And to be powerless to stop it, unheeded and ignored, no one to fight.
Anna sees her loves and hates and her beginnings and endings
Swept away, unfeelingly replaced and cruelly supplanted.
And then morning’s light strips the memories
But leaves the terror and the pain.
Something is coming.
The end?