An unfamiliar sound jolted me from sleep, pulling me from a dream about green cranes and ventriloquist puppets. My eyes flew open, searching the unfamiliar room as I lay still, trying to calm my speeding pulse. My ears strained, but the rest of the house was silent. Gradually, each of the shadows turned into something I recognised: my washing basket, a chest of drawers, a stack of unopened boxes.
No figure leaned over me. No hands clutched at my throat.
Beside me, his breath in the deep and even cadence of sleep, lay Brad. A sliver of moonlight that had eased through a crack in the curtains highlighted the gentle contours of his face. His hair was a scruffy, uneven pile on top of his head and one hand curved beneath his cheek—one of the same strong hands that had caused me such dread months before.
I smiled, the confused terror fading as I regarded him, glad he’d agreed to stay over. His lips formed a pout he’d never wear during the day. I wished I had a camera—my old phone didn’t have one.
I’d just about decided the sound that woke me had been my imagination when I heard it again. But, awake, I was able to identify it: the snick of a Stanley knife, followed by the long tearing sound of a blade slicing through packing tape.
I rolled over, ignoring muscles that screamed a protest, and stared blankly at my bedside table. No clock radio stared back; it was still in a box. Fumbling, I found my phone and pressed a button to activate the screen and check the time.
Just after four in the morning. Dammit.
Moving slowly so as not to wake Brad, I slid out from between the sheets and eased the wardrobe open, finding my dressing gown. My bunny slippers were in the tumble of shoes I’d emptied there the day before. I poked my toes into them and, hugging myself to stay warm in the chilly night air, walked up the hall to the kitchen.
The overhead light was on, filling the space with a warm yellow glow that made the benchtops seem greener, the pale tiles on the wall shinier. In the corner, Jen’s and my old fridge hummed, content in its new home. And in the middle of the space, moving like a melancholy ballerina, was my mother.
She stood amidst torn scraps of newspaper, a box on the bench before her. As I watched, she pulled a newspaper-wrapped bundle from the box and set it on the bench, stripping the paper from a mismatched crockery set with graceful efficiency.
“Couldn’t sleep?” I asked, moving fully into the room. The rest of the boxes we’d left in the corner before bed had been emptied.
She looked up at me, a small smile tightening the lines around her tired eyes. “A few hours. Then I woke and that was the end of it. I thought I’d finish the kitchen. Any news?”
I shook my head, and her fine-boned shoulders drooped. Feeling guilty, I took a plate from her and swiped at it with a tea towel before placing it in the cupboard. I shouldn’t feel bad. The lack of an update from the world of the Oneiroi, or dream spirits, wasn’t something I could control. But Ollie, my Oneiroi father and a former fugitive, was gone, probably to be tossed into an Oneiroi prison. Mum’s dreams were empty in a way they hadn’t been for two decades.
Mum had been cured of her hypersomnia by Dad’s departure, and her sleep had mostly returned to normal. Her doctor had proclaimed her cured without looking too hard at the reasons why; her nursing home probably hadn’t wanted to admit that one of their staff may have been drugging her. And, since Mum no longer needed the around-the-clock care the home had provided, she’d discharged herself. When she’d invited me and my best friend, Jen, to move into the house she’d bought with her trust fund payout, I hadn’t known what to say. I’d never lived with my mother, wasn’t sure I knew how to … but she was lonely. We’d find a way.
When the last of the crockery had been dusted off and put away, I helped Mum collect the scraps of paper. We tucked them into the top of an overstuffed box by the door and washed our hands, all in silence. “Did you want me to help you sleep?” I asked her finally, pressing the back of my hand to my mouth as though to prevent a yawn escaping.
Her hazel eyes narrowed. “If I say no, will you stay up with me?”
“Yes.”
“And if I tell you not to, will you listen to your mother?”
“No.”
She sighed. “Then yes. You can help me get back to sleep.”
I smiled and followed her up to the master bedroom. She’d suggested I take the biggest room, but I’d refused. It was her house, bought and paid for; she should have the ensuite. Besides, Jen and I were used to sharing a bathroom.
Once my mother was tucked back under her blanket, I leaned over and kissed her forehead. “Goodnight, Mum.”
“Goodnight, Melaina.” She blinked eyes gone misty with tears. “My darling girl.”
I breathed gently on her face and watched her slip back into slumber.
She had always looked younger when she was sleeping, and it was still true now: the tension drained from her shoulders, the curve of her neck. There were differences, though. Before my father had been arrested by my childhood friend and dragged away, she’d always seemed happiest when she was asleep. Not anymore.
Grimacing, I turned the lamp off and crept from the room.
Despite my faked yawn, I didn’t think I’d be able to sleep again. My heart was too heavy. The sun wouldn’t rise for more than an hour, and the air outside was frigid—it was only the first month of spring, and I wouldn’t be surprised if there was a touch of frost on the grass come dawn. It had been a hard winter, and the season seemed reluctant to loosen its grip just yet.
Instead, I made a coffee and drank it in the lounge room as I unpacked and arranged our DVDs and books on the meagre shelves. Jen and I had owned enough furnishings for our tiny two-bedroom flat; they didn’t come close to filling the space in this roomy, if somewhat tired, three-bedroom house. And Mum didn’t own anything beyond clothes and toiletries. The dining room was empty except for a teetering and uneven pile of flattened moving boxes.
I shucked the dressing gown and took advantage of the empty space to do some stretches, trying to loosen muscles knotted from all the lifting and carrying I’d done the day before. Then I ran through a yoga workout to try and lift my spirits and stretch out the last of the kinks.
Brad found me just as I was easing my way out of a reclining spinal twist onto my back. He eyed me, an appreciative curve to his lips, and I grinned back before flattening my shoulders against the carpet and lengthening my spine. I was conscious of the image I must present: thin cotton pyjama pants and comfortable T-shirt, unbrushed black hair with a shock of blue in the fringe, painted toenails pointing out towards each bare wall.
Still, Brad didn’t seem to mind. When I stood, he slid his arms around my waist and kissed me, slow and deep. His lips were soft, his faint stubble a rasping counterpoint. Heat flared in my belly and, for a moment, I considered dragging him back to my bed so we could try out the new bedroom. But the sound of movement down the other end of the house made me sigh. It was probably Jen, not my mother—but my bedroom shared a wall with Mum’s. How long would my spell of sleep last, anyway? Mum was a lucid dreamer, like me; I couldn’t assume she would stay under for as long as someone with no awareness of their dreams would.
I hadn’t thought through all the implications of moving in with her, I realised with a sinking feeling. Resting my forehead against Brad’s chest, I grimaced into his shirt.
“Want to come back to my place later?” he asked, his voice smoky as he ran his hand up and down the curve of my ribs through the fabric of my shirt.
“I really do,” I said. “But I should stay here and help get things squared away. Jen has an exam tomorrow. She needs to study.”
“Your mother could get everything sorted. She doesn’t have to work…” There was a question in his voice, and I shrugged, muscles relaxing as his hand found a persistent knot in my shoulder and massaged it.
“I know. Once we’re settled, I’m going to see if I can help her find a job somewhere. I feel bad, ditching her, but…” I looked up at him “…I suppose I could spare an hour. We could do a round trip.” I gestured to the boxes.
“Okay,” he said with a grin. Then he licked his lips, tipping his head to the side. “You’ve had a coffee already?”
I nodded. “It’s just instant. Want me to make you one?”
He wrinkled his nose and then nodded. “Now you have the bench space, I might buy you an espresso machine.”
“You can’t,” I said. “You’ve done so much for us—for me—already. Hiring the truck, helping us move…”
“That is true.” A twinkle in his eye, Brad tapped a long finger against his chin. “But this wouldn’t be for you. This is enlightened self-interest.”
I collected my empty coffee mug from the lounge and walked back to the kitchen, putting the jug on to boil. As it hissed to life, I bent to fetch a mug from the cupboard underneath, plonking it on the bench beside mine. Brad grimaced.
“What is it?” I asked.
He nodded at the second mug. “You have mugs from Wattle Tree Park?”
“One. The staff gave it to Mum as a parting gift when she left. Why?”
His gaze slid away to look out the window. “No reason.”
Like hell. I crossed to his side and touched his chin, that strong jaw I loved, turning his head to face mine. “What’s the matter?”
“Belinda is dragging me out there to visit my grandad later this afternoon,” he said. “I hate that place. I hate it twice as much now I know he’s got a … a thing inside him. Belinda always holds his hand, even though I’ve warned her about the breeder blight, and I’m terrified she’s going to catch a blight from him. It gives me the heebie jeebies.”
Guilt and anxiety tightened my gut. I didn’t think it was that easy to pick up a blight infestation from a person infected with a breeder blight, but I didn’t know for sure. Blights had to be the most common dream-world predators for a reason. “If she starts having nightmares, even the tiniest ones…”
“I’ll tell you. At least she’s careful to wash her hands properly after we visit. I just…” He looked away again, and I let my hand fall to my side.
“If there was anything I could do about the breeder on my own, I would. But Leander said we’d need a dozen Oneiroi to deal with it.” I turned to the fridge, shuddering as I remembered touching Brad’s grandfather’s dream. The breeder blight had nearly swallowed me whole. “I believe him.”
“And there’s been no sign of Leander?”
Not since the last time you asked. “I haven’t seen hide nor hair of him since the day he arrested my father. And I have no idea how to get in touch with him. Mum’s been asking too.” I bit my lip as I poured the steaming water. Leander was my only Oneiroi contact, and he was as flighty as, well, a moth. “I’m sorry.”
“Hey.” Brad’s warm hand squeezed my shoulder. “I’m not blaming you. I was just asking. I’m sure he’ll show up soon. In the meantime, I’ll let the nursing home staff think I’ve developed a handwashing obsession. They already reckon I’m a little bit nuts.”
“You aren’t?” I asked, raising my eyebrows at him.
With a wicked glint in his eye, he picked up the tea towel I’d used to wash off the plates and twisted it between his hands, turning it into a crude whip. I danced away, laughing.