SML Ch 85
by berryChapter 85
âYou all felt stares? I donât sense anythingâŠâ
Volant, wandering the far end of the library, came back blinking in confusion. Each time he turned his head, the countless reflections followed in unisonâan effect dizzying to behold.
âI sensed it. At first thought it was just distraction keeping me from readingâŠâ
âI did too, Sir Reynald. I donât understand what force it is.â
Arun and Serna spoke almost at once, and Alex nodded gravely. Volantâs eyes went wide at their agreement.
âWhat? Iâm the only one who feels nothing? Why?â
âHard to say. But noticeâyouâre the only one not reading. Thatâs the only difference.â
Indeed, Volant had merely held a book idlyânever opened a page. Heideâs words earlier rang clear: while cleaning here, no unease aroseâuntil he began reading.
So the trigger was the books. When they read, something in the mirrors watched. Serna glanced about, half-thrilled, half-worried.
âThis library truly is no ordinary place, Sir Reynald. I let my guard down when the doll denied any secret passage.â
âYet even without passages⊠some hidden presence is watching us. No wonder the doll hesitated at the answer.â Reynald broke off suddenly, brow furrowed. âVolantâyou had the doll on your shoulder. Where is it now?â
ââŠWhat? Whyâoh!â
Only now did Volant realize. The clockwork doll was gone. Normally, if mentioned, it would drift into view at once. Here, with so many mirrors, even a reflection of it should be visibleâbut there was nothing.
âThe dollâs vanished! It was perched on me just minutes ago!â
âIt wouldnât hide from us deliberately. Thereâs no reason it would.â
Reynald eyed Volantâs shoulder, uneasy. The doll was forever erratic, yesâbut its absence here boded ill.
âWe must find it. Whatever happens, the doll is vital to grasping truth.â
âIt canât have left. We shut the door. No sound of opening.â
âThen within this room. And no secret doors, if the doll itself denied them.â
They rose. But Heide remained seated. He had been touching a mirrorâs surface, trance-like, and only startled when Reynald tapped his shoulder.
ââŠWhy so lost?â
âOhâI⊠worried for the doll, is all.â
Heide rose, pale, clutching his knee with a groan. âPerhaps we should divide and search carefully.â
âItâs not so wide a library. But⊠fair enoughâlet us cover everything.â
So they split. Heide, Arun, and Serna took the right side. Reynald, Alex, and Volant the left. Heide looked reluctant to part from Alex, but Reynald imposed the division. He had his own quiet suspicions.
They searched. Fitting places, cracks, shelvesâno sign of the doll. Volant called softly, âDoll, where did you go?â Alex searched too, but his eyes kept warily on the feel of watching.
Drawing near Reynald, Alex whispered: âIf caused by monster or magical creature⊠do you suspect who?â
Reynald nodded. âMirror-bound entities are distinct. Often constructs of magi. Their reflections manipulated, attacking intruders.â
âBut mirror imagesâhow attack the real outside?â
âThe reflection is but conduit. The actual force is spell pre-woven. Easier than commanding invisible phantoms.â
âSo then⊠might these gazes attack us soon? Intruders trespassing their books?â
Reynald shook his head. âRemember the rules painted: do not remove, do not cover, do not take books outside. None forbid reading.â
ââŠBut still.â
âAnd considerâthe castle lacked a ruler for decades, perhaps centuries. If written then, these books would serve villagers themselves. Who then would set traps to harm those same users?â
ââŠVillagers indeed.â
âExactly. People like Volant or Heide. Attacks seem unlikely without broken rules.â
He glanced at Volant, who still pawed shelves distractedly, book dangling. Undoubtedly he was listening. Reynald continued aloud:
ââŠThough possibility remains it is not construct at all, but fae.â
âFae? How differ from monsters?â
âThey dwell not in our worldâyet slip through gates. They live by whim, indifferent to man, sometimes toying with us when bored. No true malice, but no mercy either.â
Arunâs problem years ago had taught Reynald much of them. He knew their tricks.
âTheir traits reflect their gateways. From waterâwatery traits. From mirrorsâŠâ
ââŠmimicry? Or reversal?â Alex asked.
Reynald nodded. âOneâmimicking those reflected. The otherâreversing: left to right, weak to strong⊠the skills one lacks, suddenly gained.â
He looked deliberately at Volant as he said this. Volantâs eyes glittered, curious. At last, Alex too realized. He confronted:
ââŠVolant. Why do you hold that book? Youâve not once read it.â
ââŠI was going to. Later. First we find the doll, maybe check these shelvesââ
Alex pressed. âThen read it. Aloud. Just the first page.â
Volant blinkedâthen, after a beat, opened the volume.
ââŠA diary. Date, weather, summary of the day. Like the others.â He flipped pages easily, speaking while he read.
Alex exhaled hard, glancing toward Reynald. Reynald slowly nodded.
âCurious.â
âWhatâs curious?â Volant stammered. âWhy stare?â
âWhen did you learn to read?â
Volantâs face froze. Awkward, uncertain smile. No hostility, but as if caught in a mask unsure which expression fit.
ââŠHe⊠he canât read?â Serna stammered, wide-eyes.
Before another word, Reynald already moved. He shoved Alex aside and seized Volant by the collar, slamming him to the floorâ
âor rather, slamming down the mirror-fae that wore Volantâs shape.