SML Ch 88
by berryChapter 88
Reynald had expected shelves and books, like a library or archive. Insteadâinside was a theater.
Not a grand, jeweled opera house of the capital, but something else entirely. Almost like a childrenâs playhouse. The chairs fit full-grown adults, yet their sky-blue and pink upholstery bore stars and moons, clearly styled to please childrenâs eyes.
Most chairs were emptyâbut one was occupied.
There sat Volant, holding a book in both hands, the clockwork doll perched on his shoulder. He had not even noticed their arrival until the doll thumped his head and pointed at the entry. Startled, Volant leapt upright.
âMy lord! Alex tooâŠ! How did you get here?â
âA fae guided us. You seem safeâIâm relieved.â
ââŠA fae?â
âThis is the fae world. Did the doll not explain? Ahâthatâs right. No mouth.â
âI was just⊠brought here by it. But⊠youâre right. So those faces staring earlierâthey were fae?â
Faces? Reynald frowned, looking where Volant pointed.
Beyond each window near the entrance, dozens of fae pressed in, staring inside.
So thatâs why the hall was dimâthey were crowding the glass.
Reynald scowled, skin crawling. They hadnât surrounded the hut when he approached. When had they gathered?
They bore expressions only of curiosity, not malice. But packed so tight, blotting out the light, they were unsettling. Like night-moths swarming to flame, bodies layered across a pane of glass. They were watching humans as spectacle.
ââŠAnd here? What sort of place is this? Iâve never seen so many chairs⊠Whatâs behind that red curtain?â Volant muttered.
He didnât even know what a theater was. Alex, at least, understood, though he kept his face calm. Reynald answered simply:
âA place for plays. Have you seen one?â
âLike puppet shows? Peddlers sometimes showed them.â
âSimilarâbut with people. The fae outside said: a century ago, people left their records here.â
âSo⊠a play, to explain history?â
Yesâso even illiterate folk could understand.
Reynald squinted at the curtain. Volant, though, was staring at Reynaldâs and Alexâs joined hands. Alex flushed red, sputtering when Volant teased him.
âWhy are you holding his hand, Alex?â
âItâsâitâs not weird! In case I got drawn in, Iâd close my eyesâso I had to hold on!â
âDrawn inâto what? His face?â
âShut it!â Alex snapped, almost kicking himâexcept the curtain stirred.
The drapes drew back, slowly. Reynald hushed Alex and sat him down. He tucked his book safely under his coat, and with his free hand seized Volantâs.
âMy lord?!â Volant squeaked.
âI already told Alex. If you feel drawn to stay, or your vision cloudsâdrop the book. Hold to me. Even if the fae kingâs illusions take you again, Iâll pull you free.â
Volant swallowed, nodded, grasped tight. Reynald now sat, both hands anchored by his two young companionsâa chain of grip against enchantment.
The curtain fell aside fully. Lights in their seats went dark, while the stage lamps flared.
The scene revealed on stage was no painted setâ
âbut the library they had searched the night before.
Only, seated inside were other figures.
âŠThose must be the chosen, from a century past.
Front row sat two young women, no older than twenty by looks, yet their eyes were weary as if eighty. Beside them leaned an older woman, perhaps mother to them. Eyes openâbut unfocused, sight gone.
Next sat a scholarly sort of youth. His right sleeve hung empty, arm gone. In his lone hand he held a pen with metal nib. PerhapsâReynald thoughtâhe had been the one copying all those records.
Last, a man with a staff tipped by seven gems. His face half-masked. His age and appearance hidden.
ââŠImpossible.â
âVolant?â
âThat manâthe maskâthatâs him. He killed my family.â
Reynald clenched Volantâs hand tighter. Surely this was only an echoâa show, a projection. The performers might be real onceâbut now? It was no truth, not here.
Fortunately, Volant steadied, resting against Reynaldâs shoulder. On stage, the figures began to speak.
[Soâweâre to leave our record, for descendants in a hundred years? But how? I canât readâor write, not with these eyes.]
The blind woman muttered. The armless youth replied:
[No worry. Merely speak. They will watch, just as we once did. The heart of it isârecall the feelings. Let them flow.]
[Feelings, not facts? Not which monsters we fought, or what horrors we faced?]
[By then, things will differ. Details become dangerous, even irrelevant. At most, footnotes.]
[Hmph.]
[What matters: that descendants not repeat mistakes. We grew accustomed. We accepted costs. But losing sight, losing an armâno joy in that.]
Mistakes? Was that how they lost their limbs?
And the masked man at last spoke. His voice, muffled yet heavy.
[Too much detail tempts curiosity. Then they too will be luredâby what lives below. Even to name, to write it, is peril. Better they not.]
ââŠHeâs right,â added the armless scribe. âThis doll we craftedâcould only answer âyesâ or âno.â That too was deliberate. So curiosity would not drive destruction. Descendantsâlisten. Misplaced hunger for knowledge will cost you everything.â
The doll nodded smugly, patting Volantâs knee. As though preening itselfâthough to Reynald, it felt like arrogance, as if excusing all its evasions.
Conversations wound down. The scribe pat a girlâs knee; she nodded at last. Perhaps their hearing fractured, or sense dulled.
But thenâthen all five slowly turned. Their blank faces lifted, and their eyes fixed straight on Reynald, Alex, Volant.
SuddenlyâReynald gasped. A flood of sensation pierced his mind.
This is why. This is why they left records with fae. This is why humans alone cannot keep them.
Records tainted. Not factsâbut feelings so strong they seared.
Two incompatible powers seized him at once.
A terror black enough to wretchâ
and a fascination bright enough to scorch that terror away.
He trembled under both. Wholly consumed.