Haunted Dream
Author: Cheryl
Fandom: Lancer
Rating: U Gen
He was glad that there was enough hot water
left for him in the bathhouse. He worked himself past exhaustion in the vain
hope of pushing the unbidden memories from his awareness. Leaning his head back
he watched the tendrils of steam snaking toward the ceiling. He leaned his head
back and regarded the condensation forming on the surface above him. There were
cracks starting to traverse a tracery across the ceiling. He should mention
that to Jelly, it would need to be repaired soon. He reclined in the tub,
wreathed in a fog of steam and awash in hot water to soak away the tension in
his muscles; yet not the tension in his mind.
Scott really hadn't been having any more
dreams than usual about the war. He would dream about the war for the rest of
his life, he accepted that. No, the problem was that his wartime memories were
constantly invading his waking life. It was all he could do to keep them in
abeyance on the periphery of his day to day existence. There was some respite
to be found in working himself just short of the point of sheer collapse, then Scott felt things might be normal, or, at least, some
semblance of what might pass for normalcy.
He was overtired - but there was the strange
sense of agitation underlying everything. The way Scott might explain it would
be like the feeling in the air before a thunderstorm. Portentous.
Something yet to be happening, or is approaching, or what?
What did he expect? Why couldn't he put the war behind him the way had until. .
.
The business trip to
It had been a perfect October day, golden and
glorious. When Scott had lived in
Scott remembered a crisp fall day in
It became a graying sky. It was another
Scott, only slightly more than a boy, who mounted his horse sick with the
knowledge of what his orders required he do. An early morning
on a battlefield under a graying, lightening sky. It was still troubled
him less than the dawn he had seen this morning. The blood
red stain of the sun staining a roseate smudge into the cerulean dome of the
sky. It was beautiful and at another time Scott might well have found it
so. This morning he couldn't see the beauty. He took his place in formation
knowing his orders, knowing that as a junior officer his orders entailed, in
all likelihood, ordering men to their deaths. They were hardly more than boys,
most soldiers were boys. Scott felt he was a boy and he was terrified. He
gripped the reins tightly as his thighs pressed against his horse's sides. His
mount shifted nervously under him. Scott could view the enemy. The officers
were clad in gray, the men wore various pieces of gray
uniforms. None of those in lower ranks he could see had a complete uniform. The were rag-tag, but they were disciplined and determined.
Scott respected them, admired their bravery, and knew that he must kill as many
of them as he could.
He knew he had to get control over himself or
horse would sense his tension and become all but unmanageable. Scott was
afraid. He could feel the great cold mass of his fear running back and forth
through his guts like ice filled water. It threatened to crystallize into solid
ice freezing him into inactivity. Perhaps it might be better when the artillery
started and drowned out his thoughts. If God were willing he would be alive and
whole to see this evening. They turned and spun around and around in his head.
Why was he here? Because he was damn fool enough to volunteer. He didn't have
to be here at all. His grandfather was a wealthy man. Even if he had been
conscripted, his grandfather could have paid the three hundred dollars for his
replacement in the army. It began, Scott's horse surged forward with the line,
and all coherent thoughts and memories ceased.
He tried to steady his ragged breathing
cursing the past for not staying in the past. The war was over. It had been
over for years. Why did something inside him insist in returning to it over and
over again? What was wrong with him? He had survived. It was done. The dead
were buried and the living moved on - it was as simple as that. Why was it not
as simple for him?
He was exhausted. Scott closed his eyes, a
feeling of grit behind his eyelids. He wondered if they would wait dinner on
him as sleep overtook him. He wished he could melt into the hot water of the
bath. Melt into nothingness until he washed clean of all his pain and guilt.
Then be reborn as a fresh Scott Lancer. He started sliding down into the tub.
In his dream he walked through a stand of
trees, oaks perhaps, to a hidden pool formed by a forest stream. The shifting
sunlight glinted off the water and gently drifting golden leaves. The shadows
were like flitting ghosts across this idyllic place of dreams. Through the
wavering glare Scott discerned a pale figure floating on the pool's surface. It
was a strange, nymph-like girl whose dark hair spread in a delicate lacework
over the surface of the water. Scott remembered reading that people throwing
coins in fountains was just the remnant of ancient practices of giving
offerings to the deities, usually goddesses, of springs, lakes, and rivers. A
ridiculous thought struck him that this girl might well be the spirit, or
deity, of this pool. He'd never met a goddess, or make
that a nymph, before. He was impressed, insofar as his baser instincts were
concerned. She was a beautiful as a marble nymph. Yet Scott knew that although
her lightly sun blushed skin was as smooth and as flawless as the finest
marble, and that her body would be marvelously soft, as soft as something
infinitely ripened. She floated on the surface of his unconscious as lightly as
the leaves danced on the reflective surface of the water. Her exquisitely
rounded young limbs drifted by him, never touching the sides of the pool, only
sensuously skirting the edges. In the shifting light her face was wonderfully
sweet and impossibly lovely.
And Scott wanted her more than he could ever
remember wanting anything in his life.
He closed his eyes against the flickering
sunlight. The light shifted from rose-gold to dark red against his closed
eyelids; she was too beautiful for him. He feared the strange inhumanity of
her. Scott felt her looking at him, willing him to open his eyes. He had to
look at her. She had an almost childlike face but her eyes troubled him. They
were certainly beautiful enough. Wide sherry dark eyes, intoxicating,
like famous wine of
His head abruptly broke the surface of the
bath water. Sputtering and coughing up water, Scott braced himself halfway out
of the water, his arms on either side of the tub. Rivulets of water trailed
over the tensed muscles of his shoulders, down his chest and abdomen into the
water. Water dripped from his arms and hands onto the floor. Scott stepped from
the tub and began to vigorously rub is steam reddened skin with a towel. He
dressed quickly hoping that he wouldn't be late to dinner, or at most, not too
late.
That would be if he could find any appetite
at all.
Maybe he could just move the food around on
his plate loosing himself in the small talk and little things of family life.
He hoped to shake off the shadows which shrouded him by listening to Murdoch
drone on about business and the running of the ranch, in Teresa's young girl's
prattle, and by being thoroughly amazed by the amount of food Johnny could
shovel into his mouth. Johnny still ate like a growing boy.
Scott finished dressing, leaving the
bathhouse and walked toward the house.
-fin-