Rachel Gillig

One Dark Window

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  • b7767341455has quoted11 hours ago
    A boy pushed past me, his eyes lingering a bit too long on my face. I gave him a false smile and turned away, running my hand over the taut muscles of my brow until I felt my expression go blank. It was a trick I had spent years perfecting in the looking glass—molding my face like clay until it bore the vague, demure look of someone who had nothing to hide.

    I felt him watching Ione through my eyes. When he spoke, his voice was slick with oil. Yellow girl, soft and clean. Yellow girl, plain—unseen. Yellow girl, overlooked. Yellow girl, won’t be Queen.

    Hush, I said, turning my back to my cousin.

    Ione did not know what the infection had done to me. At least, not the extent of it. No one did.
  • b7767341455has quoted12 hours ago
    It wasn’t until I sat up that I felt the pain in my hands. I looked down. My palms were scratched and tattered, blood soaking my fingers where my nails, now embedded with soil, had broken. Around me, the earth was upturned, the grass disturbed. Something, or someone, had flattened it.

    Something, or someone, had helped me crawl to safety through the mist.

    He never told me how he’d moved my body, how he’d managed to save me that day. It remains one of his many secrets, unspoken, resting listlessly in the darkness we shepherd.

    Still, it was the first time I stopped fearing the Nightmare—the voice in my head, the creature with strange yellow eyes and an eerie, smooth voice. Eleven years later, and I don’t fear him at all.

    Even if I should.
  • b7767341455has quoted12 hours ago
    I know now what happened next was not a dream. It couldn’t have been. People don’t dream when they faint. I didn’t dream at all. But I don’t know what else to call it.

    In the dream, the mist seeped into me, thick and dark. I was in my aunt’s garden, just as I had been a moment ago. I could see and hear—smell the air, feel the dirt beneath my head—but I was frozen, unable to move.

    Help, I cried, my voice tiny. Help me.

    Footsteps sounded in my mind, heavy and urgent. Tears slid down my cheeks. I winced but could not see, my vision blurry, like trying to see beneath seawater.

    A sharp, angry pain ripped through my arms, my veins suddenly black as ink.

    I screamed. I screamed until the world around me disappeared—my vision tunneling until everything had gone dark.

    I woke under an alder tree, shielded by the mist and deep greenery of the wood. The pain in my veins was gone. Somehow, my head split open, I’d managed to make it to the tree line. I’d escaped the Physicians.

    I was going to live.
  • b7767341455has quoted12 hours ago
    I did not fall onto warm summer grass. My head struck stone and I blinked, dizzy nausea casting dark shapes across my vision, my head haloed in red, sticky warmth.

    I heard them in the house, their steps heavy with sinister intent.

    Get up, called the voice in my head. Get up, Elspeth.

    I pulled myself to a rickety stance, desperate for the tree line just beyond the garden. Mist enveloped me, and even though I did not have my charm in my pocket, I ran toward the trees.

    But the pain in my head was too great.

    I fell again, blood seeping down my neck. They’re going to catch me, I cried, my mind lost to fear. They’re going to kill me.

    No one’s going to hurt you, child, he snarled. Now get up!
  • b7767341455has quoted12 hours ago
    The infection comes as a fever in the night. If you take ill, watch the veins—the tributary of blood traveling down the arms. If they remain as they ever did, you have nothing to fear. If the blood darkens to an inky black, the infection has taken hold.
  • b7767341455has quoted12 hours ago
    To the quiet girls with stories in their heads.
    To their dreams—and their nightmares.
  • Mihajlo Petrovićhas quoted9 days ago
    There once was a girl,” he murmured, “clever and good, who tarried in shadow in the depths of the wood. There also was a King—a shepherd by his crook, who reigned over magic and wrote the old book. The two were together, so the two were the same:

    “The girl, the King… and the monster they became.
  • Alison Reynosohas quoted2 months ago
    “What does the Shepherd King want?” he asked the girl-spirit. “What is he after?”

    “Balance,” she answered, head tilting like a bird of prey. “To right terrible wrongs. To free Blunder from the Rowans.” Her yellow eyes narrowed, wicked and absolute. “To collect his due.”
  • Alison Reynosohas quoted2 months ago
    Only I can find the Twin Alders…

    “For it was I who left it there.”
  • Alison Reynosohas quoted2 months ago
    Only I can find the Twin Alders…

    “For it was I who left it there.”
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