Maintaining the professional front, Arthur tries to control the smile that keeps fighting its way to the surface, forcing the unrelated thoughts away until the time is appropriate.
He watches as she takes in their surroundings, glancing around himself and wearing an expression of satisfaction at how well the world has come together. "The last big job I worked was based in Paris," he admits sheepishly, "But I hear recycling is good for the health, and having someone to impress doesn't hurt, either."
Not sure if Bela will quite notice the bizarre changes at this stage enough to stop and question it, Arthur takes advantage by making a rose bush appear beside the bench and carefully picking the most elegant one, he offers it to her with a smile. And, acting as though nothing out of the ordinary has just occurred, he continues.
"If you're going to put the dream world to use, you need to be able to create the most basic of features. In the next dream you will be the dreamer and I the subject, so take a good look around, try to remember what you see here, and your mind will attempt to recreate it. It is possible to alter things once you're in the middle of a dream," he confirms, and to support the fact with evidence the square-shaped layout of the park begins to form curves, transforming itself into a circle, "but if it's not kept to a simple degree then the subject of that dream, the person that fills the dreamer's world with their subconscious and brings in their projections of people residing there - in our current case, that would be you - then those projections will start to attack the dreamer - that would be me - like white cells fighting off a disease."
no subject
He watches as she takes in their surroundings, glancing around himself and wearing an expression of satisfaction at how well the world has come together. "The last big job I worked was based in Paris," he admits sheepishly, "But I hear recycling is good for the health, and having someone to impress doesn't hurt, either."
Not sure if Bela will quite notice the bizarre changes at this stage enough to stop and question it, Arthur takes advantage by making a rose bush appear beside the bench and carefully picking the most elegant one, he offers it to her with a smile. And, acting as though nothing out of the ordinary has just occurred, he continues.
"If you're going to put the dream world to use, you need to be able to create the most basic of features. In the next dream you will be the dreamer and I the subject, so take a good look around, try to remember what you see here, and your mind will attempt to recreate it. It is possible to alter things once you're in the middle of a dream," he confirms, and to support the fact with evidence the square-shaped layout of the park begins to form curves, transforming itself into a circle, "but if it's not kept to a simple degree then the subject of that dream, the person that fills the dreamer's world with their subconscious and brings in their projections of people residing there - in our current case, that would be you - then those projections will start to attack the dreamer - that would be me - like white cells fighting off a disease."