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The Dreamers Who Touched Tomorrow

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Blurb

Elara Voss does not believe in fate. She believes in alarm clocks, coffee strong enough to feel like a personality, and the kind of love that exists only in the books she proofreads for a living. She is practical. She is grounded. She is also three years into waking up from dreams so vivid they leave bruises on her memory.

The dreams began the night she turned twenty-three. Not nightmares, exactly. More like transmissions. She stands in places she has never visited. She speaks in conversations she has not had. She watches her own hands make choices she does not remember making. And in every single dream, without exception, he is there.

She does not know his name. She does not know his face clearly, the way you never quite see a face in a dream even when you swear you can. But she knows the shape of him. The particular way he tilts his head when he is listening. The quality of silence he creates around himself, the kind that makes a room feel smaller and safer and more dangerous all at once. She knows him the way you know a song you have never heard before but somehow already understand every word.

She starts keeping a journal. Date, time, what she saw, what she felt, what happened next in the waking world. Because that is the part that cannot be explained away with stress or grief or too much caffeine. The dreams predict things. Not grand disasters. Not lottery numbers. Small, specific, undeniable things. A particular conversation her editor will have in the hallway. The exact words a stranger will say on the train. The moment her neighbor's cat goes missing and precisely where she will eventually be found.

She has filled four journals in three years. She has not told a single person.

And then on a Tuesday morning in October that looks exactly like every other Tuesday morning in October, Elara walks into a coffee shop she has never entered before because the line at her usual place is too long, and the man behind the counter looks up, and time does something it should not be capable of doing.

It stutters.

She knows him. She has known him for three years without ever meeting him. And from the expression that crosses his face in the half-second before he schools it back into professional neutrality, she understands with cold, vertiginous certainty that he recognizes her too.

His name is Cael Doran. He is thirty-one. He has lived in this city for four months. He has a degree in astrophysics he no longer uses, a scar above his left eyebrow he has never explained to anyone, and he has been dreaming about her for three years.

This is where a love story should begin. This is where two people who were clearly built to find each other could take a breath and fall, slowly and beautifully, into the life they were always supposed to share.

But Elara's dreams do not show her one future.

They show her two.

In the first future, she and Cael fall in love the way storms fall on coastlines: inevitable, overwhelming, and transformative. In this future something is saved. Something enormous. Something she cannot yet name but feels pressing against her ribs from the inside, demanding to exist. In this future they choose each other and the choosing matters in ways that ripple far beyond the two of them, far beyond anything that should be the business of two ordinary people in a mid-sized city who met over coffee neither of them will remember ordering.

In the second future, she and Cael fall in love the same way. The same conversations. The same silences. The same slow inevitable erosion of every reason she gave herself to stay away from him. And then something breaks. Not something. Someone. Someone she loves more than she has ever loved anyone. Someone whose loss would not just devastate her but hollow her out so completely that the woman who survives it would not recognize herself in the mirror for years.

The dreams cannot tell her which future is coming. They only show her that both are real. Both are possible. They only show her that the difference between Future One and Future Two might come down to a single decision, a single moment, a single variable she cannot yet identify because she does not yet understand what she is looking for.

She starts avoiding him. It is not dramatic. She does not tell him why. She simply creates friction where there was ease, distance where there was proximity, until the warmth that ignited between them on that Tuesday morning is something she can almost pretend was never real.

It does not work the way she plans.

Cael knows she is pulling away before she has done anything visible to create the distance. He has spent three years learning to read a woman he had never met, and he is not going to misread her now that she is standing in the same room. He sees the strategy. He sees the fear underneath it. What he does not see, what she has not told him, is that the version of the future she is running from is also the version where she loves him most completely. That the tragedy is not a punishment

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THE SHAPE OF HIM
The dream always begins the same way. Not with darkness dissolving into light the way sleep is supposed to work. Not with the slow surfacing of consciousness that reminds you who you are before you have to be anyone. It begins mid-sentence, mid-breath, mid-step, as if she has simply been dropped into a life that has been running without her and the universe expects her to catch up. Tonight she is standing at the edge of a road she does not recognize. The asphalt is wet. The sky above it is that specific shade of deep grey that exists only in the Pacific Northwest in October, the color of something that has been dark for so long it has forgotten it was ever anything else. There are trees on both sides, tall and close, and the fog between them is so thick it looks less like weather and more like the world simply ending at a certain point and declining to explain itself. She is cold. She is always cold in the dreams, which she has noted in her journal forty-seven times without arriving at a conclusion about what it means. And he is there. He is standing a few feet ahead of her on the road, facing away. She can see the line of his shoulders, the particular set of them, the way he holds stillness like a person who has made peace with waiting. She knows that posture the way she knows her own handwriting. She has been studying it for three years in this place that is not quite real and not quite not. She opens her mouth to say something. The road cracks. Not the way pavement cracks from age or pressure. It splits, clean and deliberate, a dark seam opening between her feet and his, widening with the quiet certainty of something that has been decided already. She looks down at it. She looks up at him. He has not moved. He does not turn around. She reaches forward anyway. And then she wakes up. The ceiling of her apartment is white with a water stain in the upper left corner shaped approximately like the country of Chile. She has been staring at it for three years, which means she knows its exact dimensions, the precise shade where the water damage is deepest, the way it looks different at 3 a.m. than it does at 6 a.m. She knows it better than she knows most people. 4:51 a.m. The alarm is not set until 6:30 but the dreams have never cared about her schedule. She lies still for exactly ninety seconds. This is a rule she made for herself after the first year, when she learned that sitting up too fast after a dream meant carrying its emotional residue into the morning without any buffer. The ninety seconds is for letting the feeling settle. For reminding herself that she is in her apartment, she is awake, the road and the fog and the crack in the pavement are not real. The cold takes longer to leave than the images do. It always does. At ninety seconds she sits up, reaches for the blue pen on her nightstand, and opens the journal to the next blank page. The journal is her fifth. She filled the fourth one in August and bought this one the same day, the same brand, the same size, because consistency in the recording system feels important even though she cannot fully explain why. The covers are plain. She has never written her name in them. If someone found one they would not know immediately whose it was, which is a precaution she takes without examining whether the precaution is reasonable. She writes: Road. Fog. October light. He was there. Facing away. The crack again. She pauses. Adds: Reached for him. Woke before contact. Cold for eleven minutes after. She underlines the word crack and draws a small arrow to a note in the margin that says third time this configuration. Then she closes the journal, sets it back on the nightstand, and sits in the quiet of her apartment at 4:53 a.m. while the city outside makes its soft pre-dawn noises and the water stain shaped like Chile watches her from the ceiling without comment. She has a system for the mornings after dreams. Coffee first, before anything that requires language or interaction. Then the window, ten minutes of watching the street below because the ordinary movement of ordinary people doing ordinary things is the fastest way she has found to reground herself in a reality that operates by normal rules. Then the journal review, which means rereading the previous two weeks of entries to look for patterns, because the dreams are not random and she learned early that the patterns only become visible in retrospect. This morning the window shows her a man walking a dog that is too large for the leash he is using. A woman in a yellow coat arguing quietly with her phone. Two delivery trucks trying to negotiate the same narrow street with the patient aggression of entities that have been through this before. Normal. Completely, reliably, beautifully normal. She exhales. The review shows her three things she has been tracking: the crack in the road, which has now appeared in seven dreams across four months and which she has not yet decoded. The fog, which correlates in her records with dreams that carry the strongest emotional residue, the ones that leave her cold longest. And the way he stands. The specific quality of his stillness. She has seventeen descriptions of it across five journals and they are all, despite her attempts at precision, inadequate. She cannot capture it in language because the thing she is trying to describe is not visual. It is felt. It is the experience of standing near someone and understanding without data that this particular person is safe. She has spent three years dreaming about a man she has never met and the most consistent thing she knows about him is that he makes her feel safe in ways she cannot justify. She finds this either meaningful or humiliating and has not decided which. The line at her usual coffee shop is eleven people deep at 7:45 a.m., which means someone is either training or broken, and she does not have the patience this morning for either possibility. She turns left instead of right. There is a place half a block down she has walked past a hundred times without entering. The Still Point, the sign says, in plain letters that suggest confidence rather than effort. The door is heavy and opens onto warmth and the smell of something being roasted and the low ambient sound of a space that has been designed to make people want to stay. She joins the short line. Three people ahead of her. She looks at her phone. She does not look up when the person at the front of the line moves away. She does not look up when the next person steps forward either. She looks up when the person behind the counter says her name. Except he does not say her name. He says nothing at all. He simply looks at her, and the looking is so specific, so particular, so entirely devoid of the blankness of a stranger encountering a stranger, that her body understands what is happening approximately four full seconds before her mind is willing to catch up. She knows his face. She has never seen it before in her life. Both of these things are true simultaneously and neither of them gives way to the other. He is very still. He is standing behind a counter in a coffee shop on a Tuesday morning in October and he is the stillest thing she has ever seen outside of her own dreams. His expression does its best to stay neutral. It does not entirely succeed. She is aware that she has not spoken. She is aware that several seconds have passed. She is aware that the person behind her in line is beginning to shift their weight with the specific energy of someone calculating how long they are willing to wait before saying something. She says: "Medium coffee. Black." Her voice comes out steady. She is proud of this in a distant, dissociated way. He nods. He turns to make it. His hands move with the same unhurried competence as the rest of him and she watches them because looking at his face directly feels like something she is not ready for yet. When he sets the cup on the counter he does not let go of it immediately. Just a half-second. Just long enough for her to register that his hands are slightly unsteady. She picks up the cup. She turns to leave. Behind her, very quietly, he says: "You forgot your change." She turns back. He is holding out two dollars and some coins. His eyes are the specific grey of the sky in the dreams, which she notices and immediately wishes she had not. She takes the change. Their fingers do not touch. She leaves. She makes it exactly half a block before she stops walking, stands on the pavement in the October morning, and opens her journal to a new page. She writes one word. Found.

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