Between Mirrors
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About this ebook
Context fills in the voids in our understanding, so we have no conscious perception of the things we don’t know, but the instinctive, deeper portion of our psyche can feel the gaps in reality, in ways it finds difficult to express, the gaps which reveal themselves to physical perception when dramatic, life changing events the kind we also can’t explain, fall on us apparently out of the blue.
These gaps in reality are like a sieve through which you can see the things beyond it. Not everything that’s forbidden is evil. Not everything that is hidden is wrong.
Without even knowing it, Claire had caught a glimpse through that sieve and saw a reality that wasn’t supposed to exist. Doubting what is right in front of you is learned human behavior, no self respecting animal would question whether the food in front of their nose is real just because they have no explanation of how it got there. Claire’s shadow, much like that animal, did not understand bias and allowed her to see what was actually there as opposed to what she was taught to believe she had to see.
Once you are made aware that you do not know the first thing about reality life becomes a lot harder, but also a lot brighter, more interesting and more surprising too. You suddenly start seeing the colors you couldn’t notice before, the details you used to toss aside because they didn’t make sense, you start seeing things just the way they are, without explanation or reason. Not everything has to make sense, not to our limited understanding, anyway; only our over inflated sense of self importance makes us willing to throw away half of reality just because our minds can’t make heads or tails of it.
Claire instinctively knew this other world would always be there for her from the moment she first caught a glimpse of its existence. It was there for her in the sunrise, in the rustling of the oak leaves, in her dreams, in the mirror reflections, in the clouds obscuring the sun, in the scent of the overheated dill, in every conversation, in every melody, in the pulse of her blood, in the wind brushing against her skin, in every breath she took, in her very life.
Like a child lost in the wilderness, Claire had to learn this other world for herself and trust it to reveal itself to her in ways that she could understand, and trust that it won’t hurt her. She was smitten and dazzled by its surprising ways, and if someone were to ask her to put into words how she knew what she knew she wouldn’t have been able to, because its patterns ran deeper, underneath concepts and words, in a much older recess of the mind where things simply made sense without rules or organizing principles - in the consciousness before thought.
From the moment this other reality had called out to her, Claire had been living in two worlds, equally important and equally real.
Francis Rosenfeld
Francis Rosenfeld has published thirteen books : Terra Two, Generations, Letters to Lelia, The Plant - A Steampunk Story, Door Number Eight, Fair, A Year and A Day, Möbius' Code, Between Mirrors, The Blue Rose Manuscript, Don't Look Down, The Library and My Dear Fiona. To learn more about her work, please visit her blog, francisrosenfeld.com.
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Between Mirrors - Francis Rosenfeld
BETWEEN MIRRORS
by Francis Rosenfeld
© 2018 Francis Rosenfeld
Smashwords Edition
Cover Design © JayF at SelfPubBookCovers
CONTENTS
PART ONE
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
PART TWO
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
About the Author
Other Books by Francis Rosenfeld
PART ONE
1
Get out of the doorway!
The words boomed like thunder in Claire’s ears, now almost thirty years later, with the same intensity and pronouncement they carried the first time she’d heard Grandmother utter them, the first time of many. She smiled vaguely to the memory.
It was vast, this mansion of her grandparents where she had grown up, but Claire didn’t know it at the time; she never questioned what she saw because she’d never known another way of life, she’d never ventured past the end of the formal alley flanked by huge oak trees, hundreds of years old, which led straight to its front doors. For her the mansion and its garden were the world.
The most interesting feature of this large house, and the one that had prompted Claire’s memory, was its entryway. The double doors carved out of solid walnut had stained glass panes set in intricate wood tracery and were so heavy little Claire always needed both hands to pry them open. The doors were flanked by large crystal mirrors, parallel to each other, which ran floor to ceiling and reflected everything and everybody that passed between them into infinity, contours diffracted into rainbows in places by the finely polished bevels around their edges.
She must have been five years old at the time, intensely curious about this exciting new world she’d been born into, wandering around the old mansion whose windows were frequently propped open to temper the sweltering heat of the Louisiana summers and whose broad surrounding porch offered welcoming shade during those afternoons when even the wind stood still. Nature afforded itself no movements and no sounds then, other than the eerie trilling of the tree frogs. This was her first memory of the mirrors: she was standing between them trying to understand why there were so many of her and why they seemed to get farther and farther away. She could still remember the way the white ribbons of the dress Grandmother had sewn by hand just in time for her birthday moved in the doors’ draft like they were alive. Little Claire had managed to smear cake frosting on the dress, a fact she was trying very hard to hide, and she remembered feeling somewhat relieved that all the Claires in the mirrors were also looking down with guilty expressions on their faces. A razor sharp ray of sun sliced through the stained glass suddenly, with the swiftness of a blade, and hardened the contours around everything, rendering the shadows deeper and softer than black velvet. For a second Claire could almost touch the substance of that shadow, feel its palpable nature. She got scared of it and ran out of the doorway, her frilly white ribbons trailing behind her, and promised herself to listen to Grandmother and steer clear of the doorway going further. Naturally, she forgot her promise the very next day.
Claire’s fascination with this mirror world which she perceived as three dimensional due to its endless patterns of reflection had subsequently earned her many scoldings, but she simply couldn’t resist the attraction it exerted on her; she kept getting drawn to it like a compass needle to the north. Even now the fascination that weird alcove exerted on her made her feel guilty, an absurd emotion for a woman in her mid thirties, even one who was still trying to find herself.
She decided to work on her assertiveness and stand wherever she pleased, since she was a grown up, gosh darn it, but her ears instinctively tuned in to hear if her grandparents were approaching, so she could get out of there before they saw her. She was grateful for her grandparents’ company and felt relieved to be back home, but she was also kind of embarrassed to move back in with them at her age. She shrugged her shoulders. Life had unexpected ways to steer one’s journey and it had certainly taught her it was easier sometimes to accept them at face value.
The world outside these familiar walls hadn’t turned out the way she hoped, nothing like the overheated imagination of her youth had painted it to be. The real world didn’t end up being her enchanted playground, quite the contrary, it stubbornly and consistently refused to cooperate. She was too weird for it, Claire learned. She didn’t exactly know how or why, but she didn’t seem to fit in it or understand its ways, the subtle cues and unspoken agreements that function so flawlessly in society and form the basis of common understanding.
It’s not that her life had been worse than anybody else’s, it’s just that everybody else accepted it the way it was, without unnecessary commentary, while Claire, for whatever cursed reason, could not. She had questions in school which made her teachers uncomfortable, she had questions at work which made coworkers find her difficult, but worse of all, she had questions regarding social expectations that doomed any potential friendships before they even started. She often felt like a car stuck going the wrong way on a one way street with no places to turn.
She couldn’t even remember what prompted her to pack up and come back to Louisiana on this self-imposed sabbatical she took because she didn’t have an alternative to it.
Get out of the doorway!
the real voice of her grandmother startled her from behind, and Claire let out a resigned sigh: she had fallen for the spell of the mirrors again and had lost track of herself. She obeyed, out of habit, and stepped out of the little alcove, somewhat disappointed that her endless reflections were now confined to just one body.
You never listen, bebelle,
Grandmother shook her head in distress. Thirty years old and still you never listen!
What’s wrong with it, maman?
Claire forgot to subdue the inquisitive streak that never failed to get her in trouble. Why do you get so upset when I hang around the front doors?
It’s bad luck, child! Do you need me to draw you a picture? Why would you want to invite trouble? God knows it is easy enough for it to find you anyway.
Please, maman,
Claire besought her in her loveliest cajoling voice, one she hoped the elder would find too endearing to deny, just tell me!
Grandmother dismissed her with an irate hand gesture, turned her back to the granddaughter and went to the kitchen.
Claire was still standing in front of the doors, whose intricate stained glass and wood motifs, depicting angels and flowers, were close enough to get caught in the mirrors. They multiplied in ways that confused the eye and made the entire scene absolutely hypnotic.
Aren’t you hungry, dear?
the soft voice of her grandfather startled her from her second reverie. She felt his hand on her shoulder guiding her gently towards the kitchen. She was hungry, she realized, and weary, and grateful to be cared for again, if only for a while.
***
When she was about six Claire started wondering what had happened to her parents. She tried to ask her grandparents about them, but they got so upset with her that she cried for days and decided never to bring up the subject again. Children tend to believe that everything that’s not right with the world must be their fault and adults will be mad at them for it and stop loving them, and Claire was no exception. Of course she never ceased questioning the issue, silently, and over the years constructed fantastic scenarios about what might have happened to them, stories which were heroic and extraordinary and made her hope that maybe some of their exceptional quality rubbed off on her too.
One wouldn’t call Claire’s life exceptional. One wouldn’t call it miserable either. She had worked so hard at fitting in that the results, which turned out to be the exact opposite of that, were almost hilariously bad. Unfortunately Claire couldn’t appreciate the fine irony because she had lost her sense of humor somewhere along the way and replaced it with a pleasant attitude meant to accommodate any opinion she might encounter on her journey.
That afternoon, when she asked what had happened to her parents and got scolded, Claire ran out into the garden and hid in the natural hollow created by the thick and gnarly roots of an oak tree where they broke the ground, and that spot became her secret hideaway from the world from that day on, the place where she could go to dream and find comfort in good times and in bad. That oak tree remained her best friend throughout her childhood: it didn’t judge, it had no expectations and it listened to whatever Claire’s wild imagination came up with. A weird friend for a child, but, as I said, Claire herself was weird.
She was sitting in that natural chair now, eyes closed, listening to the bird song and the tree frogs and the wind blowing through the thick foliage. The clinking of plates and silverware accompanied them - the sounds of her grandparents setting the table for breakfast outside on the patio, as it had been customary for them to do for decades. In the ever changing nature of things having this ritual felt almost like a gift, one of the fixed points which held her life well anchored in reality and kept it from being scattered by the winds. It was always at the same time, too. She kept smiling, with her eyes closed, and waited for the grandfather clock to strike nine. One…two…three…bang…bang…bang…Claire counted the guttural chimes with the clock until she reached nine, then got up to join her grandparents at the table.
Did you sleep well, bebelle?
Grandmother asked, smiling.
Claire’s sleep had been troubled by strange dreams, most of which she couldn’t remember, but which left her uneasy and wrought. It was the heat, she thought, she’d become unaccustomed to the heat during all of these years she’d been gone, it didn’t use to bother her when she was a child. Glad as she was to be back home something felt off, odd, out of place, like reality had been bent or dented in the present moment somehow, but only very slightly, allowing everything to look almost normal. Almost.
Yes, thank you, maman,
she smiled politely and her hard acquired social skills kicked in instinctively, eager to smother any chance that candor or, God forbid, a real connection might sneak up on her.
Don’t lie to me, child. I’ve known you since you were in swaddling clothes,
Grandmother shook her head in a gesture so familiar to Claire it suddenly brightened her mood and made her feel safe. She smiled.
It doesn’t matter, really.
Have some coffee,
Grandmother enticed her.
Claire picked up the old china pot and poured the dark liquid carefully into her cup. Her grandparents had this rule, which Claire had never questioned as a child but never encountered in her grown-up life anywhere else, that each member of the family had to use their own plate and cup, not to be mixed up with anybody else’s. There was a matching china set, of course, complete with tureens and gravy boats and large enough for twenty four people, but it was only used when the family hosted dinner parties and at no other time. Claire’s cup and saucer were made of bone porcelain, hand painted with delicate blue and gold tracery and so thin they became translucent; it seemed almost a miracle they had survived Claire’s entire childhood.
She wasn’t used to seeing coffee in that cup, given her usual fare as a young girl which consisted of linden tea with lemon and honey or chocolate milk. It made her sad that there was a grown-up beverage in it now, especially since she hadn’t managed to figure out how to be a grown-up yet.
Milk?
Grandmother offered, as if she’d heard her granddaughter’s thoughts.
Claire poured milk in the already full cup and made the coffee spill into the saucer in the process.
For luck!
Grandmother dipped her forefinger in the saucer and smeared coffee on the young woman’s forehead, another one of the many customs Claire never questioned. One threw salt over one’s shoulder, ate beans on Wednesdays, wished on the first fruits of the year, wrapped up the outdoor activities at sundown. Life had different ways of marking the passing of time in their household - by the songs of the pigeons in the morning, by the height of the sun at noon, by the sounds of the old bell in the church nearby in the late afternoon. Seasons were announced by scents - the fragrance of the tree blossoms, the overheated aroma of the herbs, the sweet heavy scent of the harvest, the damp smell of the rain. The grandfather clock was the only exception in this world that marked its own time, as if it were brought there from outside just to make a point.
Claire’s grandfather went over the tasks for the day, as he always did at breakfast, taking slow sips of coffee between rare puffs of his morning cigarette, whose tip glowed amber in the rhythm of his puffs, and which stood eerily far from his hand at the end of a very long tortoise shell holder. It was Claire’s task, when she was a child, to prepare the cigarette and stuff so much cotton in the holder that almost no nicotine made it through.
Slow wisps of blue-gray smoke danced in the morning air, drawn towards the sky by the rising air currents. Grandfather finished drafting the daily schedule and turned towards Claire. He was in a good mood, a state of mind the presence of his beloved granddaughter only served to amplify.
I’m going into town, do you want to come?
He was referring to the daily bicycle trip to the baker from which he always returned wrapped in the irresistible aroma of warm bread. Claire immediately made a mental list of the items she hoped they still made and got up from the table without a word in order to follow him. It’d been decades since she had ridden a bicycle and she felt a little awkward trying to do it again.
You’re not going to change?
Grandfather turned around. She’d almost forgotten the first rule of going out: one never left the house wearing anything other than street attire. Clothes had to be perfectly pressed, shoes polished to a shine, always one last check in the mirrors before going out the door. Maybe that was