"Reflections" - now updated and submitted! :D

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Yuka
Posts: 134
Joined: 21 Jan 2006 11:18 pm

"Reflections" - now updated and submitted! :D

Post by Yuka »

Edit: SCROLL DOWN TO 3RD POST FOR NEWER VERSION. :D

Just a quick warning before you dive in and have your brain leak out of your ears: I'm painfully out of practice. :P That's why I'm posting, really, to get opinions and advice so I can get back on track. Yeah.

Also... I feel bad about posting here, since it's pushing all the RP threads down, but there's nowhere else to put it. :? Maybe there should be separate sub-boards for writing and RP-games?
Reflections

Snow has fallen heavily this week. The normally green and yellow fields are hidden in a thick layer of cold, white dust - as are the thatched rooftops and the golden bricks of Castle Meridell. It’s a beautiful sight to behold, but for me it means only one thing - the return of winter.

Winter is a harsh season for us, and not just because of the cold. No crops grow in frozen fields, no fish swim beneath the surface of frozen ponds, and many of the poorer people starve before spring returns.

Somehow, I’ve made it through nine winters out here, and I fully intend to get through nine more, if I have to. But, somehow, I don’t think it will come to that. This year, I will face my fears and go back to where I belong. This year is a year of closure, for me and many others with the memory of what happened at the old house, all those years ago.

The very thing I’ve been trying to forget since the day it happened, but never will – because it’s burned into me. It’s irrevocable. And, as much as I hate to admit to it, the whole thing was entirely my fault.

***

It was very early on the morning of the first day of Hunting, 2005. It was also the day my life would change forever. My excitement had left me sleepless during the night, but I still felt full of life and happiness and energy because everything was just right with the world, and I assumed that that would always be so; it had to be.

I hurtled down the halls, still wearing my night-dress, almost knocking over the antique vase as I went. Normally I would have been loath to rush; it was discouraged in the upper class, to say the least. On the other hand, it was my birthday, and I was expecting a <i>very</i> special present.

I had seen the gift already, waiting in my parents room – though I dare not admit it to them. It was a magnificent, magical mirror – one with shining crystalline glass and minutely shaped filigree-gold edges that depicted a number of scenes in wonderful detail. Every inch of it had a story to tell. Naturally, I wondered where it had come from; but briefly - my mind was consumed with other matters.

It was no surprise when, as the old arched doorway swung open to reveal the familiar splendour of the central hall, the mirror was there waiting for me. Stood beside it were my two parents, wearing identical, royal grins; I couldn’t help joining them.

"Happy birthday, Mirage," my father laughed. I peered at the mirror with intent; it was obviously full of magic, even a pet with no knowledge of such things would have felt it. Energy seemed to cascade outwards from it, invisible and yet unmistakeably real.

"We gathered our funds together to buy you one big present this year. We know you've wanted a magical mirror for a long time now."

"Thank you," I said, realising how much it must have cost them. "It means so much to me."

I meant what I said. This strange looking-glass was my pride and joy. Mirrors, even of the common variety, are said to have magical powers – and standing in that room, with that particular mirror, one found it very easy to believe this.

“Breakfast is served!” came the cry from the kitchens, and an elderly red Krawk strolled into view, carrying a silver tray laden with food. She, too, was wearing a grin, although it was not quite royal.

“Thank you kindly, Evra,” I said, making an effort to be polite.

Breakfast was muffins with white chocolate syrup and asparagus – a true delicacy, although many say it’s an acquired taste. I ate three servings before deciding to leave room for the cake, which Evra was busy baking in the kitchen.

Right on cue, a sharp, echoing knock ran through the room. It would be our friends, of course, coming for the party. I stood up to answer the door, but mother was faster, and before long every seat at the table was filled. Many of the faces were unfamiliar to me, but I made a point of smiling and nodding at each guest as if they were my closest friends.

They all brought gifts of their own - only small ones, but nice things, like Draik eggs and rare paint brushes. I thanked them all with a polite smile, and carried the things up to my room to store with the treasure I had been given the previous year.

For the rest of the morning, I danced and ate chocolate and had a lot of fun, but I never forgot the mirror, which stood patiently in one corner of the hall. None of the guests seemed to have noticed the thing at all.

Finally, as morning gave way into afternoon, the elderly Krawk reappeared. Her face was almost completely hidden by the most enormous cake I had ever seen. It was covered in fresh, sliced strawberries; thick, sticky rivers of treacle and chocolate coated them and (as a final touch) a set of thirteen silver candles perched on the very top tier.

“Wow, Evra! I think this just may be the best cake you’ve ever served!”

“Wonderful job on the chocolate.”

“Are those strawberries grown here in Meridell? I simply--”

Silence fell as the cake was lowered to the table. After a moment, the candles lit themselves and everyone took a fresh, white plate from the tray. I was still thinking about the mirror.

“Is something wrong, dear?” I looked up to see who had posed the question. It was my mother, Ardelia; the queen of this small village on the outskirts of Meridell, and her face was twisted with fake concern. She knew I was fine, or would be when I had a plate of the cake; but she had to ask, anyway.

“No. I’m just thinking.” She looked at me strangely, as if I’d told her I wanted a battle duck for dinner rather than chocolate cake.

“Okay, dear. You can tell me if anything worries you,” she promised, as she always had, and (I felt sure) always would do, even when I was eighty and she a hundred.

The rest of the party seemed to pass without event. Slowly, the guests began to thin until eventually, only three remained. All three were Aishas, just as we were; two noblemen and one noblewoman. I didn’t trust them. Something about them triggered a kind of sixth sense in me – something about the way they exchanged glances, perhaps, or something in the way they laughed – it gave me the chills, anyway.

The evening grew long, and my parents had retired to the sitting room with a cup of frosted borovan apiece. I was sure the Aishas were gone by now, that I was alone in the house, and it felt safe to approach my new mirror again.

Nothing could have prepared me for what I would see in the next few seconds; but I was ignorant then, and (it pains me to think) I would have remained so for the rest of my life - if only the image that revealed itself to me, in the background of the world within the mirror, had been too blurred for me to see.

Taking small, careful steps, I drew closer and closer to the mirror. My reflection became clear in the surface, and it didn’t look like me at all. The Aisha in the mirror had a drawn, fearful face and wide, staring eyes; her fur was longer and darker, and her clothes were – for lack of a better word – filthy rags.

This was bad enough – I wondered if, perhaps, the mirror was showing me something that had happened in a past life. An involuntary shiver worked its way down my spine. Then I saw another thing that rendered the first irrelevant. Just behind one of the ornate chairs sat a… thing with jet black fur and bulging, fiery eyes. It crouched low and stock still, as if it meant to spring on the next person to make a sudden movement.

I felt my heart catch in my throat as I turned to face the beast, but it was gone; all I saw was a series of deep claw-marks etched into the marble flooring where it had been crouched.

“Who are you?” I called, trying to keep the fear from my voice and not quite managing it. “Show yourself! I do not want to have to bring my parents into this, but—“

A deep, guttural shriek sounded from somewhere above me. Instinctively, I ducked under the stone table. I expected to hear a thud; when none came, I tentatively crept back into the dim candlelight. I smelt the breath of the thing in the air, but it was gone. It had to be.

“Is…is anyone there?” I squeaked. The only reply was my own voice. My instincts had proven right; it really was gone - gone to haunt some other, less fortunate family.

“Don’t be so sure about that.” Recoiling, I almost went back under the table, then decided against it. Some things have to be faced, rather than ignored; I sensed that this was one of them.

“Tell me where you are,” I hissed. “My parents will have a fit when they see what you did to the floor!” A deep, contemptuous laugh shook the ceiling of the room, sending down a shower of dust. Suddenly, the air was full of what sounded like wings beating.

“I can do a lot worse than that, princess. If I was really trying, there would be nothing left of this house or of you.”

“Stop toying with me and get out of our house!”

“You know nothing of what I am or what you’re getting yourself mixed up in. I came for the mirror specifically, but if you argue with me…”

I felt suddenly faint. This thing, I felt sure, dealt in magic of the worst kind possible – and somehow this realization moved me into a state of fear so intense that I felt like a spectator of some kind, floating far above and watching the scene unfold. I watched as my legs picked themselves up and began to run. Run, run, run. A heavy rain was falling outside, almost in slow motion; for once, I didn’t care that my fur would be ruined. The great door swung open with an almost ominous creak, and I was free.

The ground beneath me was soft with mud and water. Twice I slipped and fell into a puddle, but I never stopped, never looked back. I knew what I would see, and I didn’t want to; it was a reminder of my cowardice and foolishness.

A voice, alien and distant, broke into my consciousness. It was a rough, deep voice, sounded like a Lupe.

“Why, look who’s mixing with the commoners!”

There was a thick, braying laugh from the same direction. I staggered towards it.

“There’s trouble… at the palace…” I panted out.

“Down this end of town, there’s always trouble,” the voice replied. There was no trace of laughter there now. “It’s not like you ever cared about that. None of you did. Why should <i>I</i> bother about <i>your</i> business?”

“I’m sorry,” I started, then cut my thought off halfway through. It was no good.

“Fair’s fair,” the voice muttered. I just kept on walking. As I went, a crowd formed behind me – some concerned, some curious, some jeering and laughing. I must have walked for miles. Eventually, the rain slowed to a stop, and the clouds brightened to a fluffy white.

I turned and faced them; they fell quiet, as if they had only just realised I was there. The house I grew up in was a distant blur on the horizon. It looked dark and fuzzy, as if it were melting into the sky.

“What are you running from?”

This voice was small, trembling, and seemed to be coming from the ground. Looking down, I saw a red Cybunny clothed in a humble cloth dress. I decided it wouldn’t hurt to tell her.

“There’s been trouble up at the house,” I said again. “Something… I don’t know what it was… broke in and started wrecking things.” When I looked up, half the crowd was looking at me intently.

“I don’t know what it was because… well… I only saw it for a moment. In the mirror I got for my birthday. When I looked round it wasn’t there, but I heard the voice…” I trailed off, shuddering. No one was listening by that point. I was almost relieved; the way I told it sounded fake, a story made up on the spot, although (as you and I both know) it was nothing of the sort.

A scream cleaved the air and I resisted the urge to cover my ears.

“Fire! There’s a fire at the Palace!”

At the back of the crowd, someone (probably the owner of the voice that had screamed) was pointing frantically. Surely enough, when I dared to look up, I saw that the house had melted into the sky in a thick, dark plume of smoke.

Panic ensued. Several pets started toward the palace carrying buckets of water in both paws; I should have told them, there and then, that they stood no chance of getting there in time. I had an idea that they would carry on regardless, so I held my silence.

“What shall we do?” one mother asked, her children gathering around her like lost sheep. “That palace has stood since ancient times. It cannot be destroyed.”

“It can,” I said, startled at the quaver in my own voice. As if to prove my point, there was a dull, distant thud, and part of the building appeared to give way. I knew it was hopeless. My eyes grew wet with tears, but I could not cry in front of these people – I was a symbol of hope to them, as my ancestors had been before me.

So I started to retreat. I snuck under a wheelbarrow and curled up in the hay that had fallen beneath it. They would not find me here. That night I slept hardly a wink, and when I did sleep, I dreamed the smell of smoke and dark clouds on the horizon and the screaming and the rancid smell of fear—

Morning had broken. The first light of the sun crept over the land, casting fresh shadows in the valleys and behind the barns. It was time to crawl out and face reality again.

I pulled myself out of the hiding place. My fur was soaked with dew. Shivering, I shook most of it off and peered around the side of the building.

“There she is!”

I raced out to meet the villagers, but as I drew closer I began to see the fury. It was rising to the surface like a tiny bubble of air, growing and swelling and finally bursting.

“How could you, Mirage! How could you!”

“What happened?”

“It’s gone. Everything is gone. I hope you’re happy.” This time, I could not hold my tears.

“No, of course I’m not! How could you say such a thing?”

“You tell me! You did it!”

It all became clear. They thought I had started the fire, then run down to the village telling tales!

“I have told you all I know,” I said calmly. “There is no need to jump to conclusions.”

“You lied to us,” said one of them. “I can tell when someone is lying to me, and I don’t like it.” Surprisingly, the crowd raised a murmur of assent.

“If you don’t trust me, then there is no point in my staying here another moment. Just remember that you walk with demons, and one day they will surface, and then you’ll regret doubting me.”

“And don’t come back.” This last was the Cybunny child. There was something unsettling about her eyes, something I had not seen previously, and I unconsciously moved backwards.

“Don’t worry, I won’t.” I turned my back and walked off, tears still in my eyes and threatening to pour again, but I held it in. In the years since, I’ve become quite good at that. You just have to shut it out, shut everything out and pretend it’s not happening for a short while.

“You’re lucky we don’t report you!” They called after me. “You should have burned with your parents!”

That last one almost made me turn around and rush back at them, charge them with gleaming eyes, knock them to the ground. I didn’t. I just kept walking.

***

I know, I promised not to return. There are some promises you cannot keep. This is one of them. I worked under the cover of nightfall, ears tuned to the sound of approaching feet and faraway voices, and I finally made it.

Suddenly I realise I don’t know why I came. Have I forgotten? Twisted, charred blocks of stone still stand at the foundation of the building, lonely sentinels that have weathered millennia and are now, finally, defeated. I want to take my eyes off it and run, but they seem to be glued there.

Am I looking for something? I wonder. Something almost forgotten in everything else that has happened. Old pieces of wood turn to ash as I walk through them and drift away on the breeze. Everything is gone, I know that, I knew. Why did I come here? Was it hope? How foolish of me.

Then I see it. Lying there, unobtrusively, in all the destruction – one tiny piece of life. Specifically, a tiny shard of magical mirror. I reach out for it, carefully, and hold it out before me.

In the remains of the mirror, I see myself. I am dressed finely, wearing my best silk dress, with the magestic scenery of the old hall behind me. I am crying, but I look happy, and wave to myself from the other side of the world in the mirror.

“If only it had happened that way,” I thought aloud. “But then, things never do, do they?” My laugh, now a harsh, humourless bark, has a certain resonance in the desolation of the ruin. In fact, as I placed the piece of mirror in one pocket and turned to leave, I could have sworn I heard it echo back to me, as if from the ceiling of the hall that no longer exists.

“Good-bye.”

Last edited by Yuka on 28 May 2006 12:30 am, edited 1 time in total.
Settingshadow
Posts: 292
Joined: 08 Jan 2006 12:54 am

Re: "Reflections" - hoping to get it in the NT. Ad

Post by Settingshadow »

Overall, I like it. You have a very distinct style...but I've worked as a professional editor, so my fingers are twitching.
Reflections

Snow has fallen heavily this week. The normally green and yellow fields are hidden in a thick layer of cold, white dust - as are the thatched rooftops and the golden bricks of Castle Meridell. It’s a beautiful sight to behold, but for me it means only one thing - the return of winter.

Winter is a harsh season for us, and not just because of the cold. No crops grow in frozen fields, no fish swim beneath the surface of frozen ponds, and many of the poorer people starve before spring returns.
I'm not a huge fan of first persons, but I think this is nicely done; the description is clear and this shows (rather than tells) about the main character's situation.
Somehow, I’ve made it through nine winters out here, and I fully intend to get through nine more, if I have to. But, somehow, I don’t think it will come to that.
One of our strengths as a writer is the repetition of key phrases for emphasis; however, when you reuse words that aren't key, it detracts from this motif. Thus, I'd recommend removing one of the somehows. In general, these sentences come off as having a more informal voice than the rest of the story, whereas I think you're going for more of a resigned voice.
This year, I will face my fears and go back to where I belong. This year is a year of closure, for me and many others with the memory of what happened at the old house, all those years ago.
Here -- the repeating of "this year" was what I was saying I liked. On the other hand "those years ago" detracts from the emphasis on "this year" -- I'd use "all that time ago," instead, although this diction may be a deliberate choice on your part.
The very thing I’ve been trying to forget since the day it happened, but never will – because it’s burned into me. It’s irrevocable. And, as much as I hate to admit to it, the whole thing was entirely my fault.
What "thing"? I would try to tie this in to the last paragraph better -- end the last paragraph with "the memory of that thing that happened..."
It was very early on the morning of the first day of Hunting, 2005. It was also the day my life would change forever. My excitement had left me sleepless during the night, but I still felt full of life and happiness and energy because everything was just right with the world, and I assumed that that would always be so; it had to be.
I don't like the description of "sleepless," I got very hung up on it while I was reading this -- is it night time; day time? Is the narrator tired and ignoring it? Is the excitement ambivalent or exaggerated? This paragraph feels very over-done. Is she actively aware of making these assumptions?
I would either colour this more clearly with the voice of the narrator reflecting or remove many of the editorial phrases.
I hurtled down the halls, still wearing my night-dress, almost knocking over the antique vase as I went. Normally I would have been loath to rush; it was discouraged in the upper class, to say the least. On the other hand, it was my birthday, and I was expecting a <i>very</i> special present.
Again, watch the voice. This is the voice of the young narrator, not the old one -- it can be either, but be consistent. I like the way this paragraph starts -- participal phrases are great for action! But show -- don't tell! Something like "I abandoned my typical demure attitude," even is better than "it was discouraged in the upper class"; best would be a parent actively discouraging the running.
I had seen the gift already, waiting in my parents room – though I dare not admit it to them. It was a magnificent, magical mirror – one with shining crystalline glass and minutely shaped filigree-gold edges that depicted a number of scenes in wonderful detail. Every inch of it had a story to tell. Naturally, I wondered where it had come from; but briefly - my mind was consumed with other matters.
Watch the tense -- dared or had not dared, not dare. I had wondered, not I wondered. And again, show -- your reader wants to know what other matters can consume the narrators mind and if they're more important to the narrator than the mirror, why aren't we hearing about them?
It was no surprise when, as the old arched doorway swung open to reveal the familiar splendour of the central hall, the mirror was there waiting for me. Stood beside it were my two parents, wearing identical, royal grins; I couldn’t help joining them.
nice, but what does a "royal grin" look like?
"Happy birthday, Mirage," my father laughed. I peered at the mirror with intent; it was obviously full of magic, even a pet with no knowledge of such things would have felt it. Energy seemed to cascade outwards from it, invisible and yet unmistakeably real.
Again, nitpicking, but "a pet" seems taken from nowhere -- why is she comparing herself to a pet? A novice or a child seems a more natural comparison
"We gathered our funds together to buy you one big present this year. We know you've wanted a magical mirror for a long time now."

"Thank you," I said, realising how much it must have cost them. "It means so much to me."
dialogue is the soul of fiction; this is nice.
I meant what I said. This strange looking-glass was my pride and joy. Mirrors, even of the common variety, are said to have magical powers – and standing in that room, with that particular mirror, one found it very easy to believe this.
There's no need to resort to "one" in first person fiction, particularly as it distracts from the reader's identification with the narrator -- use "I." And again, find a way to show that even common mirrors have magical powers.
“Breakfast is served!” came the cry from the kitchens, and an elderly red Krawk strolled into view, carrying a silver tray laden with food. She, too, was wearing a grin, although it was not quite royal.

“Thank you kindly, Evra,” I said, making an effort to be polite.

Breakfast was muffins with white chocolate syrup and asparagus – a true delicacy, although many say it’s an acquired taste. I ate three servings before deciding to leave room for the cake, which Evra was busy baking in the kitchen.
I think this really illustrates the personality of your narrator well and I like it. Again "royal grin"?
Right on cue, a sharp, echoing knock ran through the room. It would be our friends, of course, coming for the party. I stood up to answer the door, but mother was faster, and before long every seat at the table was filled. Many of the faces were unfamiliar to me, but I made a point of smiling and nodding at each guest as if they were my closest friends.
I like this scene -- but some diction issues. "Cue" -- there was no cue. Right as expected may be better. Again, you need to watch your tense "It would be" vs "it was"
They all brought gifts of their own - only small ones, but nice things, like Draik eggs and rare paint brushes. I thanked them all with a polite smile, and carried the things up to my room to store with the treasure I had been given the previous year.
I like this scene a lot -- good showing.
For the rest of the morning, I danced and ate chocolate and had a lot of fun, but I never forgot the mirror, which stood patiently in one corner of the hall. None of the guests seemed to have noticed the thing at all.
I don't like "had a lot of fun" -- it doesn't match the tone very nicely. Otherwise, this is good.
Finally, as morning gave way into afternoon, the elderly Krawk reappeared. Her face was almost completely hidden by the most enormous cake I had ever seen. It was covered in fresh, sliced strawberries; thick, sticky rivers of treacle and chocolate coated them and (as a final touch) a set of thirteen silver candles perched on the very top tier.

“Wow, Evra! I think this just may be the best cake you’ve ever served!”

“Wonderful job on the chocolate.”

“Are those strawberries grown here in Meridell? I simply--”

Silence fell as the cake was lowered to the table. After a moment, the candles lit themselves and everyone took a fresh, white plate from the tray. I was still thinking about the mirror.

“Is something wrong, dear?” I looked up to see who had posed the question. It was my mother, Ardelia; the queen of this small village on the outskirts of Meridell, and her face was twisted with fake concern. She knew I was fine, or would be when I had a plate of the cake; but she had to ask, anyway.

“No. I’m just thinking.” She looked at me strangely, as if I’d told her I wanted a battle duck for dinner rather than chocolate cake.

“Okay, dear. You can tell me if anything worries you,” she promised, as she always had, and (I felt sure) always would do, even when I was eighty and she a hundred.
The rest of the party seemed to pass without event. Slowly, the guests began to thin until eventually, only three remained. All three were Aishas, just as we were; two noblemen and one noblewoman. I didn’t trust them. Something about them triggered a kind of sixth sense in me – something about the way they exchanged glances, perhaps, or something in the way they laughed – it gave me the chills, anyway.
I'm starting to sound like a broken record, but here's another great place to show a scene to the reader, rather than describing it. One of the beauties of a first-person narrative is that you can give you readers a subjective -- skew the actions of the aishas to highlight how creepy it appears to the narrator.
The evening grew long, and my parents had retired to the sitting room with a cup of frosted borovan apiece. I was sure the Aishas were gone by now, that I was alone in the house, and it felt safe to approach my new mirror again.
This might be another place to us a participal: Feeling sure that the aishas were gone, I approached my new mirror. Either way, you have a run-on sentence between now and that.
Nothing could have prepared me for what I would see in the next few seconds; but I was ignorant then, and (it pains me to think) I would have remained so for the rest of my life - if only the image that revealed itself to me, in the background of the world within the mirror, had been too blurred for me to see.
The language here sounds clunky -- what does being ignorant have to do with not being prepared for what she's seeing? Is the image blurred but not too blurry? Is it clear? I don't know from reading this paragraph.
Taking small, careful steps, I drew closer and closer to the mirror. My reflection became clear in the surface, and it didn’t look like me at all. The Aisha in the mirror had a drawn, fearful face and wide, staring eyes; her fur was longer and darker, and her clothes were – for lack of a better word – filthy rags.
If I understand correctly at this point, the aisha in the mirror is the narrator -- the future "I." Then the "it didn't look like me at all" is confusing -- perhaps "I didn't even recognize the reflection" or something like that.
This was bad enough – I wondered if, perhaps, the mirror was showing me something that had happened in a past life. An involuntary shiver worked its way down my spine. Then I saw another thing that rendered the first irrelevant. Just behind one of the ornate chairs sat a… thing with jet black fur and bulging, fiery eyes. It crouched low and stock still, as if it meant to spring on the next person to make a sudden movement.
Use a second dash to link this was bad enough (I would use ...would have been bad enough -- text -- and then I...) Otherwise I like this paragraph.
I felt my heart catch in my throat as I turned to face the beast, but it was gone; all I saw was a series of deep claw-marks etched into the marble flooring where it had been crouched.
I like this a lot. "where it had been crouched" is a little awkward, but not bad. I might choose "where is had been crouching" or simply "where it had been" instead, but they all work.
“Who are you?” I called, trying to keep the fear from my voice and not quite managing it. “Show yourself! I do not want to have to bring my parents into this, but—“

A deep, guttural shriek sounded from somewhere above me. Instinctively, I ducked under the stone table. I expected to hear a thud; when none came, I tentatively crept back into the dim candlelight. I smelt the breath of the thing in the air, but it was gone. It had to be.
What does it smell like? How does she know that the scent belonged to the thing? I think more description here would be nice.
“Is…is anyone there?” I squeaked. The only reply was my own voice. My instincts had proven right; it really was gone - gone to haunt some other, less fortunate family.
“Don’t be so sure about that.” Recoiling, I almost went back under the table, then decided against it. Some things have to be faced, rather than ignored; I sensed that this was one of them.
It's responding to her thought, rather than her spoken question -- is that intentional?
There's too much happening in two sentences here -- she recoils; she thinks of going under the table; she decides some things in life have to be faced; she stands firm. Take the time to describe each of these actions.
“Tell me where you are,” I hissed. “My parents will have a fit when they see what you did to the floor!” A deep, contemptuous laugh shook the ceiling of the room, sending down a shower of dust. Suddenly, the air was full of what sounded like wings beating.

“I can do a lot worse than that, princess. If I was really trying, there would be nothing left of this house or of you.”

“Stop toying with me and get out of our house!”

“You know nothing of what I am or what you’re getting yourself mixed up in. I came for the mirror specifically, but if you argue with me…”
A nice exchange of words. I like this section a lot.
I felt suddenly faint. This thing, I felt sure, dealt in magic of the worst kind possible – and somehow this realization moved me into a state of fear so intense that I felt like a spectator of some kind, floating far above and watching the scene unfold. I watched as my legs picked themselves up and began to run. Run, run, run. A heavy rain was falling outside, almost in slow motion; for once, I didn’t care that my fur would be ruined. The great door swung open with an almost ominous creak, and I was free.
The "somehow" ruins the intesity of an otherwise breath-holding, nail-biting scene. Cut it and use a more action-packed word than moved -- "and this realization drove me into a state of fear so intense..."
The ground beneath me was soft with mud and water. Twice I slipped and fell into a puddle, but I never stopped, never looked back. I knew what I would see, and I didn’t want to; it was a reminder of my cowardice and foolishness.

A voice, alien and distant, broke into my consciousness. It was a rough, deep voice, sounded like a Lupe.

“Why, look who’s mixing with the commoners!”

There was a thick, braying laugh from the same direction. I staggered towards it.

“There’s trouble… at the palace…” I panted out.

“Down this end of town, there’s always trouble,” the voice replied. There was no trace of laughter there now. “It’s not like you ever cared about that. None of you did. Why should <i>I</i> bother about <i>your</i> business?”

“I’m sorry,” I started, then cut my thought off halfway through. It was no good.

“Fair’s fair,” the voice muttered. I just kept on walking. As I went, a crowd formed behind me – some concerned, some curious, some jeering and laughing. I must have walked for miles. Eventually, the rain slowed to a stop, and the clouds brightened to a fluffy white.
This is a really rich section -- a lot of characterization and description.
I turned and faced them; they fell quiet, as if they had only just realised I was there. The house I grew up in was a distant blur on the horizon. It looked dark and fuzzy, as if it were melting into the sky.
Your antecedent is unclear -- who's "they" -- the clouds? The first sentence really doesn't give the reader a good idea of what's going on. If it's the commoners falling silent, they obviously realised she was there before -- they were taunting her! Otherwise, I love the description of the castle melting into the sky.
“What are you running from?”

This voice was small, trembling, and seemed to be coming from the ground. Looking down, I saw a red Cybunny clothed in a humble cloth dress. I decided it wouldn’t hurt to tell her.

“There’s been trouble up at the house,” I said again. “Something… I don’t know what it was… broke in and started wrecking things.” When I looked up, half the crowd was looking at me intently.

“I don’t know what it was because… well… I only saw it for a moment. In the mirror I got for my birthday. When I looked round it wasn’t there, but I heard the voice…” I trailed off, shuddering. No one was listening by that point. I was almost relieved; the way I told it sounded fake, a story made up on the spot, although (as you and I both know) it was nothing of the sort.
I really like this except for the last phrase -- starting from although. I don't like asides to the reader, because I find it distracting (am I, the reader, in the story -- is this supposed to be a conversation? Am I reading a diary entry? It's too meta.) And if you've done a good job getting your reader to empathise with the narrator, which you have, there's no reason to reiterate that it wasn't made up.
A scream cleaved the air and I resisted the urge to cover my ears.

“Fire! There’s a fire at the Palace!”

At the back of the crowd, someone (probably the owner of the voice that had screamed) was pointing frantically. Surely enough, when I dared to look up, I saw that the house had melted into the sky in a thick, dark plume of smoke.
Nice, but you've already used the phrase "house had melted into the sky" to describe a different occurence.
Panic ensued. Several pets started toward the palace carrying buckets of water in both paws; I should have told them, there and then, that they stood no chance of getting there in time. I had an idea that they would carry on regardless, so I held my silence.

“What shall we do?” one mother asked, her children gathering around her like lost sheep. “That palace has stood since ancient times. It cannot be destroyed.”
I'm so confused -- no one cared that there was trouble at the castle at first, and she was so far away she could barely see it. Now everyone's very worried and they're close enough to tell that it's on fire and carry water up there? Make this clearer.
“It can,” I said, startled at the quaver in my own voice. As if to prove my point, there was a dull, distant thud, and part of the building appeared to give way. I knew it was hopeless. My eyes grew wet with tears, but I could not cry in front of these people – I was a symbol of hope to them, as my ancestors had been before me.
Very nice, but again, don't sell your writing short -- don't use qualifiers in intense scenes -- part of the building gave way, it didn't appear to give way.
So I started to retreat. I snuck under a wheelbarrow and curled up in the hay that had fallen beneath it. They would not find me here. That night I slept hardly a wink, and when I did sleep, I dreamed the smell of smoke and dark clouds on the horizon and the screaming and the rancid smell of fear—
Same issue here -- she didn't start to retreat, she retreated. Otherwise, nice.
Morning had broken. The first light of the sun crept over the land, casting fresh shadows in the valleys and behind the barns. It was time to crawl out and face reality again.
Another issue with tense -- Morning had broken is past perfect and thus needs to come before something else you're describing, which it doesn't here.
I pulled myself out of the hiding place. My fur was soaked with dew. Shivering, I shook most of it off and peered around the side of the building.

“There she is!”

I raced out to meet the villagers, but as I drew closer I began to see the fury. It was rising to the surface like a tiny bubble of air, growing and swelling and finally bursting.

“How could you, Mirage! How could you!”

“What happened?”

“It’s gone. Everything is gone. I hope you’re happy.” This time, I could not hold my tears.

“No, of course I’m not! How could you say such a thing?”

“You tell me! You did it!”

It all became clear. They thought I had started the fire, then run down to the village telling tales!
This is good.
“I have told you all I know,” I said calmly. “There is no need to jump to conclusions.”
I'm dubious that she would be calm after all this...maybe indignant!
“You lied to us,” said one of them. “I can tell when someone is lying to me, and I don’t like it.” Surprisingly, the crowd raised a murmur of assent.
Why is the assent surprising?
“If you don’t trust me, then there is no point in my staying here another moment. Just remember that you walk with demons, and one day they will surface, and then you’ll regret doubting me.”

“And don’t come back.” This last was the Cybunny child. There was something unsettling about her eyes, something I had not seen previously, and I unconsciously moved backwards.
I like these; nice ending paragraphs.
“Don’t worry, I won’t.” I turned my back and walked off, tears still in my eyes and threatening to pour again, but I held it in. In the years since, I’ve become quite good at that. You just have to shut it out, shut everything out and pretend it’s not happening for a short while.
Tears are plural -- I held them in.
I find "in the years since..." jarring -- so close to the scene break I thought you were actually switching. I might use something like "I would become quite good at holding back tears in the years to follow" instead.
“You’re lucky we don’t report you!” They called after me. “You should have burned with your parents!”

That last one almost made me turn around and rush back at them, charge them with gleaming eyes, knock them to the ground. I didn’t. I just kept walking.
I like these; good use of past participals to keep action going. Nice short sentences to show determination and resignation.

***
I know, I promised not to return. There are some promises you cannot keep. This is one of them. I worked under the cover of nightfall, ears tuned to the sound of approaching feet and faraway voices, and I finally made it.
The first sentence is a comma splice. Use a colon instead.
Suddenly I realise I don’t know why I came. Have I forgotten? Twisted, charred blocks of stone still stand at the foundation of the building, lonely sentinels that have weathered millennia and are now, finally, defeated. I want to take my eyes off it and run, but they seem to be glued there.
Tense change -- I worked in the last paragraph and then I realise. Use past tense consistently or present tense, but don't intermix them in the same scene. I'd recommend past as it is more commonly used in formal writing, but if you have a reason to use present, go with it.
Am I looking for something? I wonder. Something almost forgotten in everything else that has happened. Old pieces of wood turn to ash as I walk through them and drift away on the breeze. Everything is gone, I know that, I knew. Why did I come here? Was it hope? How foolish of me.
I like this a lot -- the old pieces of wood is a great visual!
Then I see it. Lying there, unobtrusively, in all the destruction – one tiny piece of life. Specifically, a tiny shard of magical mirror. I reach out for it, carefully, and hold it out before me.

In the remains of the mirror, I see myself. I am dressed finely, wearing my best silk dress, with the magestic scenery of the old hall behind me. I am crying, but I look happy, and wave to myself from the other side of the world in the mirror.
This scene is excellent.
“If only it had happened that way,” I thought aloud. “But then, things never do, do they?” My laugh, now a harsh, humourless bark, has a certain resonance in the desolation of the ruin. In fact, as I placed the piece of mirror in one pocket and turned to leave, I could have sworn I heard it echo back to me, as if from the ceiling of the hall that no longer exists.
And we're back to the past tense. "I thought" and then the present "my laugh...has"
Otherwise, I love the description of the laugh and this ending is great.

I think overall your writing style is nice. Your more developed paragraphs are excellent -- you have a good grasp of sentence construction and particularly imagery that makes your writing easy to read. This story needs some more editing and not just grammatical -- as I've pointed out there are some chunks that aren't semantically clear either.

Prose aside, I really enjoyed the storyline. I really got a feel for the character and how she developed. Your writing is very evocative of her emotions, which got me engrossed in her story. I love the mirror and the thing, particularly how you described it. In general, I'm a fan of the Night Voyage Arc, where a spoiled and juvenile character undergoes a dark event and is forced to mature, and this was a very nice example.
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Yuka
Posts: 134
Joined: 21 Jan 2006 11:18 pm

Post by Yuka »

Whoa! :D Thanks for going through it for me. Now I know exactly what to fix. I'll post an updated version later tonight or tomorrow. Thanks again! :)

EDIT: A little bit late, but here it is. Hopefully it's better than the last version. I'm going to send this one in to the 'times soon - wish me luck! :)

EDIT AGAIN:
Dear YukaranaYatomi,

Your Neopian Times submission (Reflections) was rejected because we had too many good entries in this category this week and there was not enough room for them all. Please try again next week.

Yours Sincerely,
The Neopets Team
http://www.neopets.com
Crud. Maybe I should give up. :(
Reflections

Snow has fallen heavily this week. The normally green and yellow fields are hidden in a thick layer of cold, white dust - as are the thatched rooftops and the golden bricks of Castle Meridell. It’s a beautiful sight to behold, but for me it means only one thing - the return of winter.

Winter is a harsh season for us, and not just because of the cold. No crops grow in frozen fields, no fish swim beneath the surface of frozen ponds, and many of the poorer people starve before spring returns.

I’ve made it through nine winters out here, and I fully intend to get through nine more, if I have to. But, somehow, I don’t think it will come to that. This year, I will face my fears and go back to where I belong. This year is a year of closure, for me and many others with the memory of what happened at the old house, such a long time ago.

The very event I’ve been trying to forget since the day it happened, but never will – because it’s burned into me. It’s irrevocable. And, as much as I hate to admit to it, the whole thing was entirely my fault.

***

It was very early on the morning of the first day of Hunting, 2005. It was also the day my life would change forever. For an instant, I wondered why my heart was racing with excitement; something special was happening today. My brain, still clinging to the last threads of sleep, refused the unexpected wave of emotion.

Then it dawned on me, crashing like a wave on the banks of my mind. All thoughts of tiredness were forgotten; there was no time for sleep.

I hurtled down the halls, still wearing my night-dress. My paw brushed an invaluable antique vase; it fell harmlessly to the plush carpet. I did not slow until the pale, pretty face of my mother poked out from behind the door.

“Mirage, what do you think you are doing?” I paused, trapped in mid-step, heart sinking. I could tell she was angry. “I know you’re excited. This is a special day for you, after all, but do try to control yourself,” she hissed. Then, as if nothing had transpired, a grin spread across her face. “Happy birthday, love! Breakfast is almost ready.” With that, she vanished as suddenly as she had appeared and I breathed a sigh of relief. I had escaped punishment.


More cautiously, I continued down the hall. My mind was on the one gift I knew I was going to get, the one I had seen beforehand, waiting in my parents room. It was a magnificent, magical mirror – one with shining crystalline glass and minutely shaped filigree-gold edges that depicted a number of scenes in wonderful detail. Every inch of it had a story to tell.

It was no surprise when, as the old arched doorway swung open to reveal the familiar splendour of the central hall, the mirror was there waiting for me. Stood beside it were my two parents, wearing identical, pearly white grins; I couldn’t help joining them.

"Happy birthday, Mirage," my father laughed. I peered at the mirror with intent; it was obviously full of magic, even a child with no knowledge of such things would have felt it. Energy seemed to cascade outwards from it, invisible and yet unmistakeably real.

"We gathered our funds together to buy you one big present this year. We know you've wanted a magical mirror for a long time now."

"Thank you," I said, realising how much it must have cost them. "It means so much to me."

I meant what I said. This strange looking-glass was my pride and joy. Mirrors, even of the common variety, are said to have magical powers – there are even rumours that they represent openings between this world and others. Standing in that room, with that particular mirror, I found it very easy to believe this.

“Breakfast is served!” came the cry from the kitchens, and an elderly red Krawk strolled into view, carrying a silver tray laden with food. She, too, was wearing a grin, although her teeth were yellow with age and lack of care.

“Thank you kindly, Evra,” I said, making an effort to be polite.

Breakfast was muffins with white chocolate syrup and asparagus – a true delicacy, although many say it’s an acquired taste. I ate three servings before deciding to leave room for the cake, which Evra was busy baking in the kitchen.

A sharp, echoing knock ran through the room as I finished the final plate. It was our friends, of course, coming for the party. I stood up to answer the door, but mother was faster, and before long every seat at the table was filled. Many of the faces were unfamiliar to me, but I made a point of smiling and nodding at each guest as if they were my closest friends.

They all brought gifts of their own - only small ones, but nice things, like Draik eggs and rare paint brushes. I thanked them all with a polite smile, and carried the things up to my room to store with the treasure I had been given the previous year.

For the rest of the morning, I danced and ate chocolate and shared meaningless secrets with the guests that I knew, but I never forgot the mirror, which stood patiently in one corner of the hall. None of the guests seemed to have noticed the thing at all.

Finally, morning gave way into afternoon and the elderly Krawk reappeared. This time, her face was almost completely hidden by a titanic chocolate cake. It was covered in fresh, sliced strawberries; thick, sticky rivers of golden treacle and white chocolate coated them and (as a final touch) a set of thirteen silver candles perched on the very top tier.

Silence fell as the cake was lowered to the table. After a moment, the candles flickered into life, as though lit by tongues of invisible flame. Everyone took a fresh, white plate from the tray; I was the last to do so. I was still thinking about the mirror.

When first slices of the cake had disappeared from their respective plates, the hissing sound of whispered conversation picked up again.

“Wow, Evra! I think this just may be the best cake you’ve ever served!”

“Wonderful job on the chocolate.”

“Are those strawberries grown here in Meridell? I simply--”

The cake, though it looked delicious and should have been, had no flavour and I hardly spoke throughout the meal. My mind kept drifting across the room, wondering if there really was a world on the other side of that sheet of glass.

“Is something wrong, dear?” I looked up to see who had posed the question. It was my mother, Ardelia; the queen of this small village on the outskirts of Meridell, and her face was twisted with fake concern. She knew I was fine, I could see it in her eyes; but she had to ask, anyway. It was proper to ask.

“No. I’m just thinking.” She looked at me strangely, as if I’d told her I wanted a battle duck for dinner rather than chocolate cake.

“Okay, dear. You can tell me if anything worries you,” she promised, as she always had, and (I felt sure) always would do, even when I was eighty and she a hundred.

Once the cake had gone, the party was over. The crowd of guests thinned, little by little, and the echoes died into the night. By the time dusk had fallen, only three of them remained. All three were Aishas, just as we were; but their faces were sharp and cold, their eyes glinting savagely with something that might have been avarice or anticipation.

I was still sat at the table. My legs felt stiff; I had been seated in the same position for hours and was suddenly eager to move. I think a part of me wanted to get closer to the dark door, where my parents stood talking to the three sinister Aishas, and perhaps make an excuse to have them removed. There was no real reason for my fear; it was merely a strong compulsion that these three, whoever and whatever they were, should be avoided at all costs.

My feet slid slightly on the floor as I stood up and started towards them. I knew they would hear my footsteps echo in the ceiling, and would then retreat into the dark doorway and leave me alone in the hall. By that point I was desperately afraid, and though I knew it was unreasonable, I continued towards them.

I drew within three feet without being seen. Then the female Aisha turned her head a fraction of an inch and caught my eye. It seemed empty, soulless – for a moment I didn’t realise why. I looked again and saw it – the eye, unlike that of every other mortal pet I had seen in my lifetime, was a vivid, piercing red.

I stopped in my tracks, paralyzed; now there was no mistaking it – my instincts had proven true. There was something decidedly strange about them, if not downright evil. In the same instant, as if to confirm my fears, one of the other strangers let out a short, sharp laugh.

“Ah, but this is no place to discuss such matters. Perhaps we ought to retire to the sitting room?”

The moments drew themselves out into faceless expanses of time – one by one, as I had known they would, they stepped into the darkness of the room beyond the ancient wooden doorframe. I watched my father disappear, too, the last of the five, and the door began to swing shut. I wanted to put a paw out and stop it, but in the end my nerve failed me.

“I’m sorry,” I whispered to the lifeless air, not knowing the meaning of what I was saying, no longer sure that I was sane. The one thing in the whole place that felt completely right and safe was the mirror. If I could make it to the end of the room in time, everything would be alright.

My feet still felt heavy and reluctant to move. I forced them forward as quickly as I could – in long, hurried strides, half-walking and half-running. Everything was out-of-focus; only my goal was in clear view.

Taking small, careful steps, I drew closer and closer to the mirror. My reflection became clear in the surface, and it was unrecognizable. The Aisha in the mirror had a drawn, fearful face and wide, staring eyes; her fur was longer and darker, and her clothes were – for lack of a better word – filthy rags. A moment later, I realised that I was looking into my own face.

This was bad enough – I wondered if, perhaps, the mirror was showing me something that had happened in a past life. An involuntary shiver worked its way down my spine. Then I saw another thing that rendered the first irrelevant. Just behind one of the ornate chairs sat a… thing with jet black fur and bulging, fiery eyes. It crouched low and stock still, as if it meant to spring on the next person to make a sudden movement.

I felt my heart catch in my throat as I turned to face the beast, but it was gone; all I saw was a series of deep claw-marks etched into the marble flooring where it had been.

“Who are you?” I called, trying to keep the fear from my voice and not quite managing it. “Show yourself! I do not want to have to bring my parents into this, but—“

A deep, guttural shriek sounded from somewhere above me. Instinctively, I ducked under the stone table. I expected to hear a thud; when none came, I tentatively crept back into the dim candlelight. Suddenly the thick, rancid odour of rotten meat filled my nostrils and I almost gagged. It was close, and getting closer.

“Is…is anyone there?” I squeaked. The only reply was my own voice. My instincts had proven wrong, this time; the beast was gone - gone to haunt some other, less fortunate family.

“Don’t be so sure about that.”

My dread returned in full force, almost flooring me. My feet were itching in their delicate shoes, itching to run – but where to? It felt like the thing was attached to me, and would follow me like a malevolent shadow no matter how far I ran, or where I tried to hide.

That’s when I realised what was trying to do. It wanted to intimidate me. It wanted me to run. Instantly I realised what had to be done. Some things have to be faced, rather than ignored; I sensed that this was one of them. With any luck the beast would tire of the game and look elsewhere.

Recoiling, I almost went back under the table, then decided against it. Some things have to be faced, rather than ignored; I sensed that this was one of them.

“Tell me where you are,” I hissed. “My parents will have a fit when they see what you did to the floor!” A deep, contemptuous laugh shook the ceiling of the room, sending down a shower of dust. Suddenly, the air was full of what sounded like wings beating.

“I can do a lot worse than that, princess. If I was really trying, there would be nothing left of this house or of you.”

“Stop toying with me and get out of our house!”

“You know nothing of what I am or what you’re getting yourself mixed up in. I came for the mirror specifically, but if you argue with me…”

I felt suddenly faint. This thing, I felt sure, dealt in magic of the worst kind possible – and this realization moved me into a state of fear so intense that I felt like a spectator of some kind, floating far above and watching the scene unfold. I watched as my legs picked themselves up and began to run. Run, run, run. A heavy rain was falling outside, almost in slow motion; for once, I didn’t care that my fur would be ruined. The great door swung open with an almost ominous creak, and I was free.

The ground beneath me was soft with mud and water. Twice I slipped and fell into a puddle, but I never stopped, never looked back. I knew what I would see, and I didn’t want to; it was a reminder of my cowardice and foolishness.

A voice, alien and distant, broke into my consciousness. It was a rough, deep voice, sounded like a Lupe.

“Why, look who’s mixing with the commoners!”

There was a thick, braying laugh from the same direction. I staggered towards it.

“There’s trouble… at the palace…” I panted out.

“Down this end of town, there’s always trouble,” the voice replied. There was no trace of laughter there now. “It’s not like you ever cared about that. None of you did. Why should <i>I</i> bother about <i>your</i> business?”

“I’m sorry,” I started, then cut my thought off halfway through. It was no good.

“Fair’s fair,” the voice muttered. I just kept on walking. As I went, a crowd formed behind me – some concerned, some curious, some jeering and laughing. I must have walked for miles. Eventually, the rain slowed to a stop, and the clouds brightened to a fluffy white.

I turned and faced the crowd; they fell quiet, as if they were suddenly ashamed of their behaviour. The house I grew up in was a distant blur on the horizon. It looked dark and fuzzy, as if it were melting into the sky.

“What are you running from?”

This voice was small, trembling, and seemed to be coming from the ground. Looking down, I saw a red Cybunny clothed in a humble cloth dress. I decided it wouldn’t hurt to tell her.

“There’s been trouble up at the house,” I said again. “Something… I don’t know what it was… broke in and started wrecking things.” When I looked up, half the crowd was looking at me intently.

“I don’t know what it was because… well… I only saw it for a moment. In the mirror I got for my birthday. When I looked round it wasn’t there, but I heard the voice…” I trailed off, shuddering. No one was listening by that point. I was almost relieved; the way I told it sounded fake, a story made up on the spot. It wouldn’t do, but it would have to – there was nothing else I could really say.

A scream cleaved the air and I resisted the urge to cover my ears.

“Fire! There’s a fire at the Palace!”

“What?” I cried out, not wanting to look and yet unable to resist. I saw what they meant at once. The house, though still a tiny speck on the horizon, was visibly consumed with a vivid plume of flame.

Panic ensued. Many of the pets were alive with wild fear brought on by the instinctual dread of fire and death and all associated with it. Only a handful of pets, mostly towards the edge of the raging mass, were able to remain calm.

“What shall we do?” one mother asked, her children gathering around her like lost sheep. “That palace has stood since ancient times. It cannot be destroyed.” One or two of the others glanced at her nervously.

“It can,” I said, startled at the quaver in my own voice. As if to prove my point, there was a dull, distant thud, and part of the building fell away. I knew it was hopeless. My eyes grew wet with tears, but I could not cry in front of these people – I was a symbol of hope to them, as my ancestors had been before me.

So I retreated. I snuck under a wheelbarrow and curled up in the hay that had fallen beneath it. They would not find me here. That night I slept hardly a wink, and when I did sleep, I dreamed the smell of smoke and dark clouds on the horizon and the screaming and the rancid smell of fear—

It was morning already. The first light of the sun crept over the land, casting fresh shadows in the valleys and behind the barns. It was time to crawl out and face reality again.

I pulled myself out of the hiding place. My fur was soaked with dew. Shivering, I shook most of it off and peered around the side of the building.

“There she is!”

I raced out to meet the villagers, but as I drew closer I began to see the fury. It was rising to the surface like a tiny bubble of air, growing and swelling and finally bursting.

“How could you, Mirage! How could you!”

“What happened?”

“It’s gone. Everything is gone. I hope you’re happy.” This time, I could not hold my tears.

“No, of course I’m not! How could you say such a thing?”

“You tell me! You did it!”

It all became clear. They thought I had started the fire, then run down to the village telling tales!

“I have told you all I know,” I said. My voice was surprisingly calm, although the fear and anger I felt at that moment must have radiated from me. “There is no need to jump to conclusions.”

“You lied to us,” said one of them. “I can tell when someone is lying to me, and I don’t like it.” The crowd raised a murmur of assent. I felt betrayed, and yet I knew that they had been against me all along. Secretly. I closed my eyes and gathered my composure before speaking again.

“If you don’t trust me, then there is no point in my staying here another moment. Just remember that you walk with demons, and one day they will surface, and then you’ll regret doubting me.”

“And don’t come back.” This last was the Cybunny child. There was something unsettling about her eyes, something I had not seen previously, and I unconsciously moved backwards.

“Don’t worry, I won’t.” I turned my back and walked off, tears still in my eyes and threatening to pour again, but I held them in. I would become very good at holding back tears in the years that followed. You just have to shut it out, shut everything out and pretend it’s not happening for a short while.

“You’re lucky we don’t report you!” They called after me. “You should have burned with your parents!”

That last one almost made me turn around and rush back at them, charge them with gleaming eyes, knock them to the ground. I didn’t. I just kept walking.

***

I know: I promised not to return. There are some promises you cannot keep. This is one of them. I have made my journey under the cover of nightfall, ears tuned to the sound of approaching feet and faraway voices. After so long travelling without a destination, I came to realise that what I needed was waiting in the place I left behind. So, here I am, standing at the foot of this hill and gazing upward at the ruins of my former home.

Suddenly I realise I don’t know why I came. Have I forgotten? Twisted, charred blocks of stone still stand at the foundation of the building, lonely sentinels that have weathered millennia and are now, finally, defeated. I want to take my eyes off it and run, but they seem to be glued there.

Am I looking for something? I wonder. Something almost forgotten in everything else that has happened. Old pieces of wood turn to ash as I walk through them and drift away on the breeze. Everything is gone, I know that, I knew. Why did I come here? Was it hope? How foolish of me.

Then I see it. Lying there, unobtrusively, in all the destruction – one tiny piece of life. Specifically, a tiny shard of magical mirror. I reach out for it, carefully, and hold it out before me.

In the remains of the mirror, I see myself. I am dressed finely, wearing my best silk dress, with the magestic scenery of the old hall behind me. I am crying, but I look happy, and wave to myself from the other side of the world in the mirror.

“If only it had happened that way,” I think aloud. “But then, things never do, do they?” My laugh, now a harsh, humourless bark, has a certain resonance in the desolation of the ruin. In fact, as I placed the piece of mirror in one pocket and turned to leave, I could have sworn I heard it echo back to me, as if from the ceiling of the hall that no longer exists.

“Good-bye.”

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