Boiled Memories

Sanria knew there was something wrong.  Something missing.  Something she should have been doing.  She'd turn to her boyfriend... no... husband... no.. Velentham and  ask him, but his answers were always  vague or complicated.  They were here  to get  away from it all - a vacation, but who wanted a vacation spent  entirely  in a tent?  Not only that, but she hadn't told... En... Enm... the silvery woman that she was going anywhere and she had business at... that place... the castle. But before she could truly launch into any reason that she needed to leave, he'd gently touch  her face, shine his silver eyes  into hers, and like magic, Sanria would utterly lose her train of thought.

Sleep, too, was frought with dreams and scattered tatters of truths. Faces would dance before her and she'd try to call out to them, but she just couldn't remember their names.  She  chased them through the fog in her mind, the one in brown robes, the  one in white robes, the  hulking muscular  one, the one with pointed  ears and armor, the one  with green eyes, the young ones, the children, the ones with  silver skin - the whole  while calling, "Wait!  Please, wait!" and  they'd call back:
"Remember."
"How can I if you keep running away?!"
"Remember."

Sanria  would wake  instantly, as  if she'd  just been pulled out of water after nearly drowning.  There'd be her husband... no... enemy... no... Velentham, looking  at her with expectant  adoration, as if he were waiting on her to do or say  something.  She'd tried, but she never knew how he was going to react.  When she  mentioned him getting so much time away from the temple, his smile left, his eyes  narrowed, and he venomously said, "I don't want to talk about that.  Don't bring  it up again! It's just you and me now!" A single name she'd remembered, Matinus,  and  she'd said it  and he'd put  his hand on her face, cupped her cheek  with a  stern glance, and she was suddenly dreaming again.

Her body  didn't feel  right, her mind was on  hiatus, and her emotions were all  over.  Each time  she shot awake, his face  was there.  The only trouble was, itwas getting harder and harder for Sanria to remember what to think about it. Each  time she looked on the narrow, gaunt being, she'd feel a tingle in her skull and  something in her mind would whisper in a phantom's voice, "Love me, please, love  me." Something else kept fighting back, but the fight was growing weaker and the  voice ever so pleadingly present, and the silver eyes kept on watching her with a  desperation hovering on madness.