Girl In Dreamland - The City Of Eyes And The
In the hollow of a forgotten mountain, where the wind whispered secrets in a language older than stone, lay the City of Eyes. It was not a city of people, but of vigilance . Every surface—cobblestones, windowpanes, even the drifting fog—bore a watching eye. Some were small and quick as lizards, others were vast, unblinking orbs embedded in clock towers. They saw everything: the birth of raindrops, the decay of a fallen leaf, the slow turn of a liar’s tongue. And they remembered .
And Lyra, in turn, learned to be seen. Not as a performance, but as a presence. She stopped hiding in the corners of her waking life. She let her classmates see her drawings. She told her mother about the City of Eyes. Her voice grew steadier.
The city shuddered. A thousand eyelids snapped open. The walls wept tears of surprise. “A girl!” cried the streetlamps. “A dream in the dreamless place!” The Lash Ladder coiled into a spiral of joy. The eyes had watched everything except each other. They had never seen connection.
She came not through a door, but through the final breath of a dream. Lyra was a dreamlander—a rare soul who could walk the sleeping paths between worlds. Her own world was gray and quiet, a place of muffled sounds and half-drawn curtains. She preferred the City of Eyes. There, she was invisible. The city of eyes and the girl in dreamland
“Why can you see me?” she asked.
And somewhere in the hollow mountain, a city of a thousand eyes learned to close them, just once, in a long, slow, peaceful blink.
“What do you see?” Lyra whispered one night, her voice a ghost’s echo. In the hollow of a forgotten mountain, where
But every night, a girl named Lyra slipped into the City of Eyes.
Lyra sat in the circle of that ancient attention and began to describe her gray, quiet world. The city’s eyes drank in her words—the smell of rain on concrete, the sound of a kettle’s whistle, the feeling of a mother’s hand on a fevered forehead. These were not facts. They were impressions . The eyes had never known impressions. They learned to soften.
The Silent Eye pulsed, and the city’s collective whisper became a single voice: Because you asked what I saw. Not what was true—what I saw. No one ever asked. Some were small and quick as lizards, others
No one lived there. No one could. To be seen so completely was to be unmade.
The Silent Eye trembled. No one had ever asked. The other eyes reported facts: three clouds, one thief, a broken promise . But the Silent Eye remembered a time before the city, when eyes were just eyes, and seeing was not a duty but a wonder.
And for the first time—it chose to see her.
Lyra returned to her gray city at dawn. She wore the silver eye beneath her shirt. In the mirror, she caught her own reflection—and for the first time, she didn’t look away.
She would walk the Spiral Street, where floor-tiles blinked in slow, sleepy rhythms. She’d climb the Lash Ladder, a staircase made of living lashes that fluttered like moth wings. And at the city’s heart, she would sit before the Silent Eye—a great, dark sphere that never blinked, never wept, never judged. It was the oldest thing there. It saw only what it chose.