act IV. ~ Fritillaria
The snow falls on her red hair. Tiny spots of white sprinkling on a sea of flame. She stares at the wide lake as they walk by, the only darkness in a field of white.
“Why doesn’t snow pile up on the lake?” Daisy asks, watching her breath form very visible clouds.
Sister hums thoughtfully before she answers. “Because they melt when they touch the water, I think.” She looks back at her. “Careful of where you’re walking.”
“What if the lake freezes?” Daisy poses another question, before she realizes she doesn’t recognize the voice coming out of her. No, there shouldn’t be a voice. Who--what?
“Then the snow should pile up,” Sister grins her direction, but not at Daisy.
“I see,” her mouth replies. Her feet move to step on a particularly white sheet of ice. “This part of the lake is frozen,” a lifeless mutter. Sister looks panicked then, and makes a sound, as if to resonate with the crack beneath her feet.
And then, she’s falling. Looking up at the surface of the water, where Sister helps the girl out of the cold water. Daisy watches, as she slowly sinks deep down into the lake.
She can’t call out. She can’t make a sound. She can’t move.
It’s dark.
But through that crack in the ice, the moon shines. The moon sees. The moon finds.
---------------------------
Daisy wakes with a start, to the stern voice of a new Dot wearing a new character. She only shifts in her bed with a mind to ignore the annoyance, but she forces herself up eventually.
Once Dot finishes announcing her business and leaves them all to theirs, Daisy shrinks away as if to hide from the sky. It’s a fake, she's sure, but she takes special care not to look directly at the bright full moon glowering down at her. So Daisy pulls her hood up and hides her face, and she quickly slinks away to any ideal place to be alone.
In the dark of the movie theater, a movie’s playing. Daisy is seated there, quietly and completely inattentive to the movie.
She doesn’t know what kind of movie’s playing, but she’s quite focused on playing with the red string in her fingers.
Little paper Vepar is seated next to Daisy, the puppet’s head facing the screen. Apparently, she’s paying close attention to the movie. There’s even a small bucket of popcorn next to her.
Vepar leans onto the bucket of popcorn. ...... Perhaps she’s sleeping. But Vepar lifts herself up and turns their head towards the newcomer in the theater who had just spotted the two.
Daisy’s fingers don’t stop working in her game of cat’s cradle, but her head soon follows.
She tilts her head at them, and gives a small smile in greeting.












