There was a sudden chill in the air, and it only got colder. Her hair stood on end, breath came out clouded, all in the space of seconds. Kit wrapped her arms around herself, shivering now from the cold, trying to massage the warmth back into her arms.
Then the mirrors started changing.
Little pointless images; her sitting on the lip of a roof, her bare feet swinging, starring at a frozen sunrise; haggling with a fishmonger in the street; perched on a high place, eyes determined, staying balanced on a metal pole thinner than her feet.
Another; a sign she had never seen pointing downward, labeled ‘Ukalas.’
As she walked further in, they started to change, from suspended moments to brief bits of movement and action. The mirrors flickered, switched from image to image, like a flipbook. She leapt from roof to roof; she laughed, sat in her room and cried, stared out the window at a motionless street.
She was so fascinated she forgot to be afraid. It was like her whole life was laid out here for her. Kit lingered a while and watched the scenes. They did not change no matter how long she watched, so she moved on.
They began to center around her father. She saw him standing in the street, and her running from behind her uncle, jumping forward, the scene stopping just before she touched him. She watched his hands moving through his gestures, mouth moving in silent instruction as she mimicked him, and a green cloud came from her fingers. She stood by his bedside, one hand lost in his, and she remembered that though his voice was young even though his face was old and white and wrinkled.
Kit watched, transfixed, as his mouth moved. ‘My Kova,’ he said, and pulled her closer before Kit realized what was happening. And then his mouth opened wide, his teeth all serrated knives, and he bit into her throat and she screamed, and pushed her to the floor, tearing at her as she screamed silence.
That wasn’t what happened, she thought, as though from a great distance. She turned away, shaking, not comprehending.
And she saw herself, naked, with bloody palms and wild eyes, pinned by his uncle as her father stood by the door as she scratched and screeched and screamed. ‘Be strong,’ she remember him whispering as the Res went inside of her, before she knew what it meant. ‘Be strong.’ His hands danced in gestures, and Kit remembered the way her insides twisted, and knew that she was begging him to stop.
And that he had not.
She staggered backward, looked away and saw herself at her father’s bedside again, with a pillow in her hand against his face, and he struggled, too sick and weak to fight back. Her mirror’s smile too wide to be anything but a nightmare, but what scared her most was that, through the horror, through the disgust, she could feel one like it that tugging at her lips.
She started running. |
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