![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
It came to her in flashes, these dreams that lingered in her mind throughout the day. They weren't the nightmares that plagued her in her teens, leaving her gripped by terror and afraid to be alone at night. They weren't the dreams she used to have of the red room, of the old man in the suit, her lips brushing his ear.
I know who killed me...
These weren't dreams at all, she thought. They were memories, though she couldn't be sure that they were her own.
She remembered a room, leeched of color. Vaulted ceilings. A woman with a round face and glittering jewels in her hair. A tall man, his face gaunt and expressionless. She recalled the feeling of bright, blinding joy, and crushing, hollow ache of loss. She recalled the utter, chaotic destruction of an atom bomb, and the pain of rebirth after. Shades of grey and searing, beauteous gold.
The chaos of her living room, dirty and disordered in a way Sara Palmer never allowed it to be... and the constant, warbling scratch of a needle across vinyl.
She woke with a gasp, in the small hours of the morning, the taste of cigarette ash on her tongue. She sat, clutching at her throat, unsure whether the sound she made was an anguished sob or the clanging bell of hysterical laughter.
I know who killed me...
These weren't dreams at all, she thought. They were memories, though she couldn't be sure that they were her own.
She remembered a room, leeched of color. Vaulted ceilings. A woman with a round face and glittering jewels in her hair. A tall man, his face gaunt and expressionless. She recalled the feeling of bright, blinding joy, and crushing, hollow ache of loss. She recalled the utter, chaotic destruction of an atom bomb, and the pain of rebirth after. Shades of grey and searing, beauteous gold.
The chaos of her living room, dirty and disordered in a way Sara Palmer never allowed it to be... and the constant, warbling scratch of a needle across vinyl.
She woke with a gasp, in the small hours of the morning, the taste of cigarette ash on her tongue. She sat, clutching at her throat, unsure whether the sound she made was an anguished sob or the clanging bell of hysterical laughter.