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Harriet's Dreams [REWRITTEN]

🇵🇹Lacien
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Synopsis
Harriet Allard, a twenty-one-year-old girl, recently realised a new reality, she is hopelessly in love with her childhood friend... Who happens to be her adoptive sister's first love. Theodore Miller, dropped everything going no contact for a month... Spontaneous vacation to Italy? Or something more sinister? Back home he tries to make things right with Harriet and the rest of their turbulent friend group. After a mysterious call from Grandma, Harriet sets out to the dreadful country house. Whether it be for better or worse, to uncover the mystery behind her parent's disappearance and the strange dreams that appear more vivid with each passing day. The budding romance between Harriet and Theodore is shaken, by her sister's sudden love confessions and the appearance of a long-lost friend. Can she unravel the mystery of her dreams before they consume her reality? Or will the weight of her hidden fears and forbidden love tear her world apart?
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Chapter 1 - These Dreams of Mine

Beneath the boundless expanse of the sky, I stood amidst the undulating sea of wheat, its pale stalks swaying gently in the breeze. Soil clung to my bare feet, grounding me in the moment as I grinned with unbridled joy.

Each step I took caused the earth to yield beneath me, damp and tickling, a comforting embrace. The breeze teased the fine hairs on my arms like the touch of sweet syrup on warm pancakes.

As my feet moved towards the edges of a paddy, I paused only to pluck an unruly flower. This rapid and looping moment, the best of moments. Heavy with questions amidst the serenity.

Why?

Why am I here?

Why now? 

"You are not supposed to be here." A voice whispered in urgency.

Memories, tacky and rapid-fire, a voice my own that I'd rather go away. Threatening to overwhelm. They should swivel and go with the wind, remain without detail, a remain of a beautiful and impeccable picture drawn from memory.

Then, in an instant, the idyllic scene fractured. Light gave way to darkness, warmth to coldness, as though a switch had been flipped. It was not the poetic demise of movies, but a visceral assault on my senses.

The perception of stench, a decay heavy in the air, a grotesque reminder of that day.

Years removed from the wheat field, I lay in a cramped apartment. Sounds of the city invading my restless sleep, a place I grew up, a real tangible place, still carries memories so vivid and unyielding.

Lost in the passage of time, I am adrift, unable to anchor myself in the present. As I close my eyes, I hear strident screams.