REM cycles rarely grant me the privilege of dreams. Usually I lay in bed and feel myself drifting into oblivion, and next think I know, it's morning (be it three, or seven-thirty). I may dream, but nothing rises past consciousness. Creativity doesn't always come to me during the sunlit hours, but my sleeping brain can sure whip up a doozy or two when conditions are right.
Sometime this morning I was back at my parents' house, down in the living room, looking out the bay windows at a tumultuous grey sky. A storm was brewing, and there was news of a tornado warning in the air. My father and I watched a funnel form and snake down from the sky, reaching for land. Next thing we knew, the vortex was sucking at the house. Somehow the timber and plaster kept their hold on the foundation while the dream fell silent. Actually, this is where the silence made itself known. I can't remember a single sound before the ceiling began to rearrange itself. That's the only way I can explain how I watched the tornado move over our home. Its almost like the ceiling refused to be devoured by the sky. The plaster knew it had to hold, or else the entire structure would sail up into oblivion, falling a few hundred yards, or a few miles away, impaling steel and skin. Mist poured in through the fluxing hole, coating the ceiling. The tornado tried to slip in through the temporary cracks and yank the top of the house up like an arm. We worried about my mother asleep upstairs. Was the struggle with the ceiling a sign that it had succeeded in decapitating out home?
It was one of those minutes that lasted for hours. The house (at least the first floor's ceiling) beat back the vortex, and it subsided. The mist dissipated. We went to check on my mother. My dreams never have an ending.
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Second Dream was longer, more involved, and thus I am left with more holes. If the first was a vignette or a sketch, this was an hour long episode. Only an hour on a network though. It would probably need some ads to bring it up to length. It was a good short story.
I remember coming down metal stairs, situated in the middle of a stone platform, from somewhere, maybe nowhere. It seems now like something from a video game. I cleared the last couple of flights in a daring fashion, and a kid asked if I should really be doing that. There were people all around. Something important was happening. Maybe the president was going to be there, wherever it was. I walked to the edge, leaned on the railing, and was immediately greeted by a drooling dog lunging and barking at me. I jumped away. People stared. I waited to be taken in for questioning. Co-operating was better than yelling about my innocence.
In a barracks, a commander questioned me. I'm sure he could see I was no threat to whatever was happening. I think I took off my blazer to show him I was hiding nothing. I think I told him the story of the tornado. He took pity on me and let me go.
Flashback (I think) to the only incident was was worried about the commander discovering. I was walking down a wide, tree-line dirt lane, the one where Forrest Gump broke his leg braces and learned to run (RUN!), with some friends. We scored some pot. We made our way to town on the side of the road. We were just carrying our little baggies around like jackasses when a plainclothes cop (in rural Alabama?) came and busted us. He managed to grab my friends, but I booked it. Not nearly as fast or noble as my retarded predecessor (and by now it wasn't even his town anymore just any old ruralburb would do), but enough to elude my captor and toss my bag for someone else to find and smoke. I kept running, then walking, until the road turned into a grass lane lined with small houses. I had no idea where I was headed, and I felt like everyone in those homes was watching my walk of shame. Eventually I could see the dead looking end, and a girl came and struck up some banal conversation. She showed me the highway, a beautiful black lined with soft green about twenty yards away from the end of the lane. She offered me a ride.
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