He was awoken by pain. His brains throbbed with such a furious, primal intensity that his hands shot to his temple immediately. Eyes wide and wild, his spine rigid and arched, he mouthed a silent scream. He lay motionless among the tall blades of grass, not daring to move but merely wrestling with the piercing agony in his skull.
When at last the fog of agony has dissipated and his mind was his once more he slowly sat up. Jamming his palms into his hollowed eye sockets to rub away the sleep, he realized he was nude. His naked, meager body tingled as the dark grass brushed against his bare skin, swaying like phantoms in the evening wind.
Gathering his wits, he stood and inspected his surroundings. A dark, barren landscape stretched in all directions perceivable and all was quiet. The ground was dry and compacted. Hard skeletal fissures snaked the ground, their patterns random yet almost scalelike. The dark patches of high grass rose from the ground sporadically, dancing in silent revelry at his confusion. In the distance, he could make out what appeared to be trees.
Behind the trees an outcropping of rocks rose from the dry earth, almost blackened against the horizon. The wind was hot in his face, and each time it blew a powerful gust it carried stinging bits of sand. But there was something else...a foul odor rode the wind like an angry rider of old.
He shivered and wrapped his arms around his fragile ribs. Taking a final cursory glance around, he started off towards the trees very much alone.
As he walked he looked to the sky for some sign of direction, but despite the absence of light pollution could see nothing. No moon, no stars, it were though even the heavens eschewed this place. The sky was instead a tumorous collection of dark collosal clouds. They pulsed and snaked like billowing titans, barely visible. In the impossible blackness however, there was an odd red hue that seemed to permiate the entire structure like a network of veins.
Each time he tried to focus on his capillary-like worms of light, they seemed to just barely escape his vision with such effectiveness that he was not sure that they existed at all.
He walked tenderely over the rocky terrain, his feet exposed and brittle. As he neared the trees, his eyes grew wide. They were not trees at all, at least not any he had ever seen. Rather, a series of large fleshy nodes erupted from the earth, leaning and lurching in the feverish winds as though they were seaweed growing on the ocean floor. They were cone-like in appearance, and a dark hideous purple. Tiny fibrous protrusions ran along the entirity of the things almost like fur.
A sound split the sky with such force and ferocity that the man instantly collapsed to the ground, arms wrapped around his head. An bestial cry so loud that no one creature could create it filled the landscape, originating seemingly from both nowhere and everywhere. It was impossibly deep and authoritatize, yet so alien and unnatural that tears filled the man's eyes.
Then at once it was gone.
He scrambled onto all fours, scurrying like a beaten dog past the strange swaying trees and onto towards the outcropping of rocks. Despite the pebbles and briars that embedded themselves into the flesh of his feet he ran on. He scrambled onto the rocks, pulling himself up, further and further towards the blackened sky.
When he stood atop the rocks he examined the landscape once more. All was silent and still, save for the gentle dance of the "trees" and grass. Only his wildly hammering heartbeat spoke. He studied the sky once more.
The clouds became illuminated with a wave of crimson that spilled across the sky like water. On the horizon the sky flared red in silence, like lightning striking too far away for one to hear. He shivered as the wind picked up once more, the hideous odor now more apparent. The stench of rotting flesh and disease overwhelmed his senses to the point that he could taste the repugnant odor.
The scarlet flashes in the distance continued and increased in intensity, each brighter and seemingly closer than the last. The man watched in wonder as the clouds became ever-more translucent like massive gellatenous bodies suspended against the firmament. Then he saw it.
Inside the clouds, massive and sprawling, a silhouette stretching from the horizon to the sky. A blackened figure impossibly large and dense. It was vaguely visible behind the clouds, like a form in a rainstorm, but it was getting closer. At the center of the mass, a great yellow orb gyrated like the eye of an infant, searching the landscape.
The mass lumbered forward, and now with each step he could hear the collosal crash as it impacted the earth. The sound filled the sky once more, that somewhat longful cry.
Instinctively, the man moved backwards only to lose his footing on the rocks. A moment of weightlessness and then he was falling, colliding with stone with remarkable brutality. He connected with earth once more and then there was only blackness.