Summary: In the heart of Chicago, a chance encounter between a weary nurse and a grief-stricken stranger stirs something neither can explain. Their worlds — one bound by the routines of mortal life, the other by ancient, unfathomable purpose — begin to intertwine through dreams, questions, and quiet moments of connection. In the space between waking and sleeping, they discover that some meetings are more than coincidence… and that even the most guarded hearts can be seen.
Chapter 1: Before the Scales
Chapter 2: Collision of Worlds
Chapter 3: Written in the Margins
Chapter 4: Echoes of a Forgotten Song
Chapter 5: Where Dreams Taste of Coffee
Chapter 6: The Touch That Stills
Chapter 7: What Sisters Know
Chapter 8: Liminal Moments
Chapter 9: Every Book Ever Dreamed
Chapter 10: Commute Between Realms
Chapter 11: Words Between Worlds
Chapter 12: Not Just a Dream
Chapter 13: Words Across the Divide
Chapter 14: The Dream Who Came Calling
Chapter 15: Boundaries Drawn
Chapter 16: This Friend, This Table
Chapter 17: The Invitation
Chapter 18: Sunlight on Canvas
Chapter 19:
You can also read (and subscribe for updates) over on AO3: Freely Given
Summary:
In the heart of Chicago, a chance encounter between a weary nurse and a grief-stricken stranger stirs something neither can explain. Their worlds — one bound by the routines of mortal life, the other by ancient, unfathomable purpose — begin to intertwine through dreams, questions, and quiet moments of connection. In the space between waking and sleeping, they discover that some meetings are more than coincidence… and that even the most guarded hearts can be seen.
Table of Contents
The Chicago sidewalk thrummed with the relentless pulse of summer in the city, a cacophony of hurried footsteps and honking horns cut through by the distant rumble of the L train. Summer had painted Streeterville in brilliant clarity, the kind of light that made glass towers gleam like beacons and cast sharp shadows between buildings. The wind came sharp and sudden off Lake Michigan, funneling through the urban canyons with enough force to catch unsuspecting pedestrians off guard.
The air carried the neighborhood's abundance: fresh bread from corner bakeries, garlic and basil from Italian restaurants with their doors thrown open to catch the lake breeze, and the sweet carnival scents of street vendors hawking shaved ice and cotton candy to tourists who moved in bright, chattering clusters through the city.
Among the rushing mortals, two figures moved largely unnoticed, their presence registering only as fleeting shadows in peripheral vision. Morpheus walked with the measured gait of one carrying unbearable weight, his dark coat seeming to absorb the summer light rather than reflect it. The grief that had consumed him since Orpheus's death hung around him like a shroud, turning his star-filled eyes into wells of ancient despair.
Every step felt like moving through quicksand. The mortals flowed around him like water around a stone, their laughter and hurried conversations a distant echo of a life he no longer remembered how to inhabit. When had he become so disconnected from the very beings whose dreams he shepherded? When had existence become this hollow echo of purpose?
Beside him, Death moved with the easy grace of inevitability made gentle, her expression patient but shadowed with concern that had been building for months.
"Orpheus chose his end," Morpheus said, his voice carrying the hollow ring of justification worn thin by endless repetition. "I merely honored his wish."
The words felt brittle in his mouth, stripped of conviction. His gaze drifted over the rushing mortals who barely registered his presence. "They move through their lives without truly seeing. As I move through mine without truly living."
Death stopped, her dark eyes softening with something deeper than worry. "I know you are in pain, brother. But this cannot continue. You are fading, even from yourself."
"Perhaps it is better this way." The admission came out quieter than he intended, carrying the weight of months of self-doubt. "To exist at the edges of perception, neither fully present nor entirely absent."
"That is not existence," Death said firmly. "That is surrender."
Before he could respond, the mortal world crashed back in.
A young woman hurried down the sidewalk, her auburn hair escaping from a messy bun that spoke of long hours and little sleep. Her scrubs were wrinkled, her backpack sliding off one shoulder as she juggled her phone with the weary determination of someone running on caffeine and stubborn will alone.
"Come on, Nell," she muttered to herself, squinting at her phone screen. "You gotta eat something before you can crash and burn. Again."
The collision happened in that strange space between heartbeats where fate pivots on impossibly small moments. Nell, glancing up just as she stepped around a slower pedestrian, walked directly into Morpheus. Where others might have felt only the slightest brush of presence, she met solid form. The impact jolted them both, mundane and startling.
Her half-zipped backpack betrayed her, spilling its contents as she stumbled. A battered paperback went skittering across the sidewalk, pages fluttering.
"Oh God, I'm so sorry!" Nell blurted, crouching quickly to retrieve it. "I should pay better attention. I just got off a double and my brain is basically mush at this point."
She looked up and froze.
Morpheus stared down at her, shock rippling through him like a stone dropped in still water. She could see him. Not the half-glimpse that mortals usually managed, not the vague sense of presence they quickly dismissed. She was looking directly at him, her hazel eyes focused on his face with startling clarity.
This was impossible. He existed in the spaces between conscious thought, visible only when he chose to be seen. Yet this exhausted young woman regarded him as though he were simply another person on the street.
The man she had collided with was impossibly beautiful, sharp and ethereal, like something painted on cathedral ceilings rather than walking Chicago streets. His skin was pale as moonlight, his hair black as midnight, and his eyes...
His eyes were not entirely human. Something deeper moved in their darkness, ancient and vast, and beneath that, a grief so profound it seemed to bend the air around him. Nell felt her breath catch, not from fear but from recognition of pain she understood too well.
"Wait," she said softly, rising to her feet with her rescued book clutched in one hand. Her eyes lingered on him, taking in the stillness, the hollow set of his mouth, the way his gaze seemed fixed on some far-off place. "Are you okay? You look like..." She hesitated, as if trying to find the right words. "Like you just lost everything."
The words hit him like a physical blow. How could she read him so clearly? How could a stranger see past millennia of careful control to the raw wound beneath?
"It is of no consequence," he said quietly, though his voice carried a rare uncertainty. Her gaze didn’t flicker or slide past him as mortal eyes often did. Instead, she looked at him as though every detail mattered. "You see me clearly." The words were not a question but a quiet wonder, barely contained.
She blinked, surprised by the intensity in his voice, then smiled warmly. "Well, yeah. Kind of hard to miss someone when you literally run into them." She gave him a small, genuine smile. "Though I promise I'm not usually this much of a walking disaster. Well... not usually."
The simple honesty of it, the way she spoke to him without awe or terror, pulled something from the depths of his despair. For the first time in months, he felt truly present in a moment. This mortal looked at him and saw not the Lord of Dreams, not a cosmic force to be feared or worshipped, but simply someone in pain who might need kindness.
When was the last time anyone had offered him such uncomplicated warmth?
"You are not a disaster," he said quietly, his formal cadence softening despite himself. "The fault was mine. I was... elsewhere."
"Yeah, I get that." She glanced at her phone, wincing at whatever she saw there, then looked back at him. "You just… you seem like you could use someone to talk to. Are you sure you’re okay?"
The offer hung in the air between them, simple and genuine. Morpheus felt something shift in his chest, a loosening of the grief that had held him rigid for months. When was the last time a mortal had offered him comfort without knowing who he was? Without wanting something in return?
Her concern was so purely human, so refreshingly uncomplicated. She saw suffering and instinctively reached toward it. It was then he understood the meaning of the loose green fabric, the faint scent of antiseptic still clinging to it. She was a healer. The realization explained much about the warmth that seemed to radiate from her despite her exhaustion.
He hesitated, searching for a reply that would close the moment without inviting more questions. "I will manage," he said at last, though something in his voice suggested he was not entirely convinced.
She studied his face for a moment longer, as if trying to memorize it. He found himself hoping she would. "Take care of yourself, okay?"
Turning away, she slipped back into the current of pedestrians. Over her shoulder, she called, "And watch out for distracted nurses. We’re apparently hazardous to your health."
Her auburn hair quickly disappeared into the shifting colors of the crowd. Morpheus stood still, staring at the space she had left behind, reluctant to let the moment fade.
Death observed quietly, amusement and something like relief flickering in her eyes. "Well," she said softly as the young woman vanished, "that was interesting."
"She saw me," Morpheus murmured, more to himself than to Death. The wonder in his voice was unmistakable. "Truly saw me. Spoke to me as though I were..."
He trailed off, unsure how to finish. The encounter had lasted less than five minutes, yet something fundamental had shifted. The crushing weight of his grief was still there, but for the first time since Orpheus, it no longer felt like the only thing he was capable of feeling.
"Human?" Death supplied gently.
The word should have stung. Instead, it felt like possibility.
For a moment, he found himself replaying the sound of her voice. Warm and unafraid, startlingly direct. It had cut through millennia of isolation like sunlight through fog, anchoring him to the present in a way he had almost forgotten was possible.
"She offered comfort to a stranger," he said slowly, testing the reality of it. "Without knowing what I am, what I have done. She looked at me and saw only someone who might need kindness."
The simple generosity of the gesture overwhelmed him. In all his eons of existence, how many mortals had approached him without agenda, without fear, without the weight of knowing exactly what power he wielded? She had bumped into him on a busy street and worried that he might be hurt.
"Maybe that's exactly why she could offer it," Death observed, her smile growing warmer. "Sometimes we need to be seen as we are, not as what we represent."
Morpheus looked back at the bustling street where the young woman had vanished into the flow of Chicago life. Something had shifted, subtle but undeniable. The sound of her voice lingered in his thoughts, warm against the cold edges of his grief. For the first time since Orpheus, he felt something other than the weight of loss.
"What was her name?" he asked quietly.
Death's smile widened with the satisfaction of someone whose plan was already beginning to work. "Why don't you find out?"
Chapter Three Teaser:
Still unsettled by an impossible encounter, Morpheus seeks answers from Destiny — and learns that some names are written in places even the Endless cannot fully read.
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You can also read (and subscribe for updates) over on AO3: Freely Given