Dreamer (The Dream World Chronicles Book 1) Camille Peters (books to improve english txt) đ
- Author: Camille Peters
Book online «Dreamer (The Dream World Chronicles Book 1) Camille Peters (books to improve english txt) đ». Author Camille Peters
I shivered. âIâm fine.â
âNo, youâre not.â A smirk toyed with his mouth as he took a hesitant step towards me. âIs it because you lost? I did try to warn you.â
âApparently youâre not surprised.â
Dariusâs smirk softened. âYouâre wrong. It took nearly a full minute before my nightmare eclipsed your dream and appeared in my mirror. Your dream was stronger than I anticipated.â
Surely he was lying, but my cheeks warmed from his praise anyway. âIâm still mediocre, especially compared to you.â
âThatâs definitely true, but you arenât a complete disaster either. I wish I could have seen your dream. Iâm so curiousâŠâ He tilted his head and grinned in such an endearing, inviting way that I was caught off guard.
âWhy would I share it with you?â
âPlease?â His green eyes glistened pleadingly. Heat crawled up my neck as those eyes melted me. There was no harm in telling him about my dream, especially since the Weaving was over. So, despite Stardustâs frantic morphing motions to the contrary, I did, omitting all the rough patches that had riddled it. He listened intently until Iâd finished.
âThe main problem is your dream wasnât age appropriate,â he said. âEven though the story was nice, it didnât touch on Maciâs limited experiences, so she was unable to generate strong emotions towards it, which is why it lost. For your next dream you should create something simpler and more suitable for a newborn, especially dreams involving touchâthe warmth of arms cradling her body, kisses trailed on her cheeks, that sort of thing.â
I gaped at him. Was Darius actually giving me advice? Surely as my competitor, any advice he gave me couldnât be trusted.
âThanks,â I muttered reluctantly.
His cheeks darkened as he looked away. âIâm not being nice,â he said hastily. âWeaving is more fun when itâs a competition. This isnât some Mortal sewing circle; itâs a magic of the highest order, a responsibility more powerful than anything else magical beings do. You need to take it seriously.â
It wouldnât hurt to take advantage of his sharing mood. âWhich flowers did you use for your nightmare? You said there were only two?â
âColdness and pressure, plus some impressive stitchery, of course. Nightmares about discomfort are best for a newborn.â
How could something so simple have beaten my detailed dream? âI just thought it would beâŠmore elaborate.â Like the nightmare heâd given me had been. The memory of hundreds of spiders exploring my body scurried into my mind. I shivered.
âElaborate dreams are fun to weave, but theyâre not necessary to win,â he said. âNot to mention a Nightmare Weaverâs flowers are limited until a Mortal is older, so I do what I can with what I have to work with.â
And heâd succeeded. Even now, several minutes later, the coldness from his nightmare still seeped over me.
Darius bid me farewell until tomorrow before disappearing with a loud crack! As soon as he was gone, Stardust launched into her tirade.
âHow humiliating. He was actually condescending enough to give you advice. Thatâs beyond cocky; he acts as if heâd still beat you, even if you were the greatest Weaver. And I told you your dream was too complicated, but did you listen to me? No, and thatâs why we got lectured by that egotistical spiderweb creep.â
âI didnât lose because my dream was too complicated; I just need to better understand newborns.â I kept silent about the fact that I also needed more practice in constructing them.
Stardust gawked at me in disbelief. âSo it means nothing to you that Spiderweb beat your mammoth dream with only two flowers?â
âIâm not changing my strategy,â I said firmly. âEspecially considering Darius is the one who suggested it.â It was undoubtedly a trap. With the animosity between our two worlds, what motive could he possibly have to help me?
Stardust sighed. âYouâre making a huge mistake. Iâm ready to say âI told you soâ the moment you realize Iâm right.â
Then I would do all in my power to ensure that moment never came.
Chapter 15
Unfortunately, my determination proved futile. The next few months were torturous, as if Iâd stumbled into a never-ending nightmare I couldnât escape. When Iâd yearned to be a Weaver, I hadnât anticipated the drought of ideas, hours of planning and scouring the Cultivating Fields for difficult-to-find details, constant sore fingers from creating hundreds of complicated stitches, and night after night losing to my weaving partner.
Darius himself was quite the paradox. Whenever Stardust was around he seemed to take great delight in teasing me, smirking at my every mistake, and taking every opportunity to gloat. I struggled to ignore him, and he wasnât the only thingâeach night our woven dreams appeared above Maci. Sometimes I couldnât resist the temptation to peek inside, but that was risky because each time I did so made Darius increasingly suspicious.
âWhy do you keep doing that?â he repeatedly demanded. âIâve studied Mortals enough to know your behavior is abnormal even for them.â
I evaded his questions as best I could and did my best to focus on my weaving, but no matter how hard I tried, I couldnât escape the painful fact that I always lost, and lost bitterly. My only refuge after each painful failure was dream watching, which I did almost daily, especially on the nights after I accidentally stumbled into one of Dariusâs creepy nightmares.
However, whenever Stardust wasnât around, things were differentânot only was Darius kinder, but there were many times when Iâd glance over to find him watching me not with his usual glower, but with a softened look. It was during these moments that he seemed so sincere. But I couldnât ignore the hard look that filled his eyes whenever he mocked me and called me Nemesis, nor the moments when our gazes met and heâd hastily look away with another comment about how long I was taking and how he didnât have to wait for me, although he always did. Dariusâs one redeeming quality was that he always gave me a fighting chance.
âThatâs
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