Tim and Georgia both said something about Mirrors--capital-M Mirrors, people who lived on the opposite side of the glass, always watching.
(He'd tried to cover up his mirror the first night, but the sheet he draped over it kept falling.)
Hesitantly, Jay grabs a marker from the closet and approaches the glass. Now's as good a time to make contact as any.]
[He writes the first few letters forwards before realizing his mistake, wiping off the glass with his sleeve. Backwards, gradually, Jay manages to spell out a message.]
[The words disappear as though wiped away by an invisible erase. For a few moments, there's nothing but the empty glass, and Jay's own reflection staring back at him.
Aren't you a smart cookie today. Not smart enough to realize you don't need to write to me, but we have to measure Jay's progress in careful amounts. Can't get too ambitious, us.
Just when he thought the Mirror situation couldn't get any worse. The condescension is bad enough, but the thought that he's been able to hear everything? Not good. Not good at all.
Pulling back from the mirror, Jay mutters a response.]
Watching doesn't always mean listening. [Asshole.] Which one of...us are you? Got any more hints?
[He's already dissatisfied. That much is obvious. Put there's answers available here; a Mirror that's more talkative and receptive to pleas for information than the Real Tim ever could be. As long as Jay limits his definition of "information."]
We Mirrors are just special that way. If you've got a Mr. Wright already, does that make me Mr. Wrong?
[Jay perks up. An actual response, albeit a teasing one. Clearer than totheark any day.]
Makes sense.
[Jay sets the camera down on a tripod, focusing it on the mirror. If "Mr. Wrong" here has been around since Tim arrived, he might know something Tim hasn't chosen to mention. Scratch that, he definitely does.
I'm not allowed to be friendly? We're not all like our Reals, you know.
[It's an answer, and that brokers some tenuous form of trust in him as a fountain of information. Jay settles the camera on the tripod. Recording this for posterity, no doubt. Some things really do never change.]
Edited (sometimes pizza times it sometimes it sometimes it sometimes pizza times pizza) 2017-06-14 17:29 (UTC)
[Tim and Georgia made the mirrors sound...maybe not strictly evil, but something to be wary of. Tim might not be the greatest source for accurate information, but Georgia at least claimed she always told the truth. It's enough to put Jay on high alert.
But you can't get valuable information without taking a few risks.]
[That, too, isn't exactly a lie. He certainly knows how to smile, and derive genuine enjoyment from situations, a lot more compared to the Real Tim. That's a winning enough personality trait, isn't it?]
[Anhedonia, right? Jay looked it up the night he went through Tim's files. Inability to feel pleasure.
If he's honest with himself, Jay doesn't have much of a sense of humor either, not after everything. He's not sure if he even had one before.
Jay fidgets without the camera in his hand. He's never been any good at reading people, but having nothing but marks on a mirror and the knowledge that the other person can see every move you make--no edits, no chance to look over it again before posting--makes this even more difficult. He mentally rehearses his next question before he speaks.]
What can you tell me about this place? I mean, I'm guessing you've got a different perspective from the people on this side.
What do you want to know? Of the two of us, I guess you could say I'm native to this place.
[See? Look at him. He's helpful. More helpful than the Real Tim ever was. Difficult to read without body language to settle upon, sure, but why should that be a barrier, when they're engaged in this monumental occasion of communicating amiably across the glass?
A pity there's no way of knowing what Tim might have said about him, thus far. No reflective surfaces out in the woods.]
[And god, if that isn't the most beautiful sentence Jay's ever read.
Jay leans in, closer to the glass.]
Georgia told me you were, were built by somebody called the, uh--[Red Queen? Queen of...? Was there only one queen in Alice in Wonderland?]--Queen of Hearts? How does that work? If you're, you're based on us, then do you have a copy of our brain, or is it just like a blank slate?
Little hard to explain. Our memories aren't Real. Not the way yours are.
[Bit of a sore spot, memories. But they're important as far as how Wonderland runs, and if he's going to earn Jay's trust with some information, spoonfed as it is, uncomfortable truths will have to be dealt.
Hilarious. Right?]
For most of us, it's simple. Somewhere along the line, our roads diverged in a yellow wood. Something went ever so slightly different, yet still the same.
[Jay is tired of people speaking in riddles. He thinks he gets the gist, though.]
So you've got similar memories as us, but not exactly.
[What does Tim know what does he know
Jay resists the urge to just ask outright. If he understands correctly, the information this guy gives him might not translate to what Tim remembers. (Assuming he's even telling the truth.) For now, until he knows where their memories differ, he has to limit the questions about Tim's past.
Something about Wonderland, then. Something someone who is always watching would know.
An idea strikes him. Jay lowers his voice, eyes twitching to the door--still locked.]
The Mirror smiles into the glass, briefly. If he were face to face with him now, he'd have to work a little harder at making himself impenetrable, impossible to read. But the glass always did serve his purposes well.]
As each word appears, the trembling in Jay's hands becomes a little more pronounced. He leans against the wall to the right of the mirror, to keep his balance, to keep his knees from buckling underneath him.
He should know, shouldn't he? This kind of thing doesn't just end. Not when you drop the investigation and your headaches start to clear up, not when your apartment's burned down and you're miles from home, not when you're gut-shot by an old friend. It may leave you alone for a second, just enough to catch your breath and wonder if it might have forgotten about you, but it always comes back.
The next question is unbidden, irrational, but it's out of his mouth before the filter can set in.]
[He falls apart, pretty much immediately. Good. He should. There's no escaping what It's capable of. It will find and claim every one of them, in the end. He escaped It, for now, by ducking away here, but he's only staving off what's already staked Its claim.
The words disappear slowly, wiped clean.]
You escaped It before. No more. Our sins will always come home to roost. They will be baptized in water.
[Wash them away, cleanse the stench from your skin. Cough like the victim you are, lungs filling with invisible water, thick and bubbling and inescapable.
[Jay doubles over, wheezing. What he's writing doesn't make sense, it doesn't, but something in it rings true, like it's bypassing his conscious mind and plugging directly into something else.
Just breathe. There's nothing in your lungs, just--
Jay fights to stay upright. When he speaks, it burns, like there's a hand around his throat.]
[Or is too hard to stomach? He's never shied away from difficult illuminations before. The world is dark place shot through with blank white, and Jay knows that. If he didn't before, he sure as hell needs to now.]
[His memories are different from Tim's. He made a different choice, and something changed, and now he knows something the Real Tim doesn't.]
[Gripping the frame of the mirror, he lets out a hoarse, painful cough.] What did you do? What's different? How do I...[His voice drops softer, to a raspy whisper.] I want to know what you know.
[Success. Now he's got him all but begging for it, desperate for the answers the Mirror has set himself up all for knowing. He's pathetic. It's perfect.]
mirror writing
LAST CHANCE
Tim and Georgia both said something about Mirrors--capital-M Mirrors, people who lived on the opposite side of the glass, always watching.
(He'd tried to cover up his mirror the first night, but the sheet he draped over it kept falling.)
Hesitantly, Jay grabs a marker from the closet and approaches the glass. Now's as good a time to make contact as any.]
[He writes the first few letters forwards before realizing his mistake, wiping off the glass with his sleeve. Backwards, gradually, Jay manages to spell out a message.]
I plan to. Who are you?
mirror writing, 1/2
Surely you can guess.
But just in case you can't, I'll give you a little hint.
mirror writing
Finally, it appears.
A familiar symbol.]
mirror writing
Tim? No, wait, Tim said everyone here had a double, so that left another option. One Jay really, really didn't want to contemplate.]
Narrowed it down to two.
mirror writing
Not smart enough to realize you don't need to write to me, but we have to measure Jay's progress in careful amounts.
Can't get too ambitious, us.
We're always watching you, silly. :)
action
Just when he thought the Mirror situation couldn't get any worse. The condescension is bad enough, but the thought that he's been able to hear everything? Not good. Not good at all.
Pulling back from the mirror, Jay mutters a response.]
Watching doesn't always mean listening. [Asshole.] Which one of...us are you? Got any more hints?
no subject
We Mirrors are just special that way.
If you've got a Mr. Wright already, does that make me Mr. Wrong?
no subject
Makes sense.
[Jay sets the camera down on a tripod, focusing it on the mirror. If "Mr. Wrong" here has been around since Tim arrived, he might know something Tim hasn't chosen to mention. Scratch that, he definitely does.
But first...]
Why've you suddenly...made contact now?
no subject
We're not all like our Reals, you know.
[It's an answer, and that brokers some tenuous form of trust in him as a fountain of information. Jay settles the camera on the tripod. Recording this for posterity, no doubt. Some things really do never change.]
no subject
Yeah, you're allowed.
[Tim and Georgia made the mirrors sound...maybe not strictly evil, but something to be wary of. Tim might not be the greatest source for accurate information, but Georgia at least claimed she always told the truth. It's enough to put Jay on high alert.
But you can't get valuable information without taking a few risks.]
How're you different from the Tim I know?
no subject
[That, too, isn't exactly a lie. He certainly knows how to smile, and derive genuine enjoyment from situations, a lot more compared to the Real Tim. That's a winning enough personality trait, isn't it?]
no subject
[Anhedonia, right? Jay looked it up the night he went through Tim's files. Inability to feel pleasure.
If he's honest with himself, Jay doesn't have much of a sense of humor either, not after everything. He's not sure if he even had one before.
Jay fidgets without the camera in his hand. He's never been any good at reading people, but having nothing but marks on a mirror and the knowledge that the other person can see every move you make--no edits, no chance to look over it again before posting--makes this even more difficult. He mentally rehearses his next question before he speaks.]
What can you tell me about this place? I mean, I'm guessing you've got a different perspective from the people on this side.
no subject
Of the two of us, I guess you could say I'm native to this place.
[See? Look at him. He's helpful. More helpful than the Real Tim ever was. Difficult to read without body language to settle upon, sure, but why should that be a barrier, when they're engaged in this monumental occasion of communicating amiably across the glass?
A pity there's no way of knowing what Tim might have said about him, thus far. No reflective surfaces out in the woods.]
no subject
Jay leans in, closer to the glass.]
Georgia told me you were, were built by somebody called the, uh--[Red Queen? Queen of...? Was there only one queen in Alice in Wonderland?]--Queen of Hearts? How does that work? If you're, you're based on us, then do you have a copy of our brain, or is it just like a blank slate?
no subject
Our memories aren't Real. Not the way yours are.
[Bit of a sore spot, memories. But they're important as far as how Wonderland runs, and if he's going to earn Jay's trust with some information, spoonfed as it is, uncomfortable truths will have to be dealt.
Hilarious. Right?]
For most of us, it's simple.
Somewhere along the line, our roads diverged in a yellow wood.
Something went ever so slightly different, yet still the same.
no subject
So you've got similar memories as us, but not exactly.
[What does Tim know what does he know
Jay resists the urge to just ask outright. If he understands correctly, the information this guy gives him might not translate to what Tim remembers. (Assuming he's even telling the truth.) For now, until he knows where their memories differ, he has to limit the questions about Tim's past.
Something about Wonderland, then. Something someone who is always watching would know.
An idea strikes him. Jay lowers his voice, eyes twitching to the door--still locked.]
Has it been here?
no subject
Record time, too.
The Mirror smiles into the glass, briefly. If he were face to face with him now, he'd have to work a little harder at making himself impenetrable, impossible to read. But the glass always did serve his purposes well.]
It always has.
It always will be.
You of all people should know.
no subject
As each word appears, the trembling in Jay's hands becomes a little more pronounced. He leans against the wall to the right of the mirror, to keep his balance, to keep his knees from buckling underneath him.
He should know, shouldn't he? This kind of thing doesn't just end. Not when you drop the investigation and your headaches start to clear up, not when your apartment's burned down and you're miles from home, not when you're gut-shot by an old friend. It may leave you alone for a second, just enough to catch your breath and wonder if it might have forgotten about you, but it always comes back.
The next question is unbidden, irrational, but it's out of his mouth before the filter can set in.]
What does it want?
no subject
The words disappear slowly, wiped clean.]
You escaped It before.
No more.
Our sins will always come home to roost.
They will be baptized in water.
[Wash them away, cleanse the stench from your skin. Cough like the victim you are, lungs filling with invisible water, thick and bubbling and inescapable.
Are you drowning, Jay?]
no subject
Just breathe. There's nothing in your lungs, just--
Jay fights to stay upright. When he speaks, it burns, like there's a hand around his throat.]
What the hell are you doing?
no subject
Too bad.]
I thought you wanted the truth, Jay.
[Or is too hard to stomach? He's never shied away from difficult illuminations before. The world is dark place shot through with blank white, and Jay knows that. If he didn't before, he sure as hell needs to now.]
no subject
He can't suppress it this time, and the cough tears across his throat. (Psychosomatic? Or much, much worse?)
When he speaks again, his voice is low, strained.]
How do you know--[He pauses, gulping in air.]--Why do you think you know anything about what that thing wants?
no subject
[What did he think the answer would be? If his Tim fought It for every step of the way, this one stopped fighting a long, long time ago.]
no subject
[Gripping the frame of the mirror, he lets out a hoarse, painful cough.] What did you do? What's different? How do I...[His voice drops softer, to a raspy whisper.] I want to know what you know.
no subject
Hey, Jay.
You aren't looking so good there.
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