Obsidian Mirror

Free Obsidian Mirror by Catherine Fisher

Book: Obsidian Mirror by Catherine Fisher Read Free Book Online
Authors: Catherine Fisher
quickly, “Turn it back.”
    Jake ignored her. He touched the glass, fingers to fingers. And then he gave a cry of terror, because the hand he had thought a reflection of his own caught hold of him and jerked him close.
    “Jake,”
his own face hissed.
“It’s me. Dad.”

7
    Long ago, they say, a baby was born in a cottage at the edge of the Wood. The boy was healthy, and his mother protected him with charms and prayers, and amulets of iron hanging from his cradle. But he cried and gurgled so loudly, the sound echoed under the trees.
    Soon, she began to see the faces of the Shee at the window, and hear, every night, their soft tapping at the door.
    She grew afraid in her heart.
    Chronicle of Wintercombe
    J AKE COULDN’T MOVE.
    The hand in the mirror was a gray fragility, but it gripped him tight.
    He stared into the glass, so close his breath misted it. “Dad?” he whispered.
    The face blurred beyond the mottled surface. It was his own, and yet its edges were worn, its eyes terrified, its skin ashen.
    “Jake,”
it said.
    “How can it be you?” He grabbed the mirror with the other hand, flattening himself against it. His legs went weak; only the frame held him up. His father’svoice was as fogged as the mirror between them.
    “Venn…need to…trapped…”
    He couldn’t understand. He pressed closer. “Are you dead? Are you a ghost?”
    Was he saying it, shouting it? There was movement in the mirror; a swirl of snow. The plane of glass was flat and smooth and yet it was deep; if he moved a millimeter he might fall into it and never stop falling.
    The hand dragged him close. In his ear the lips whispered, “
Venn…”
    “I can’t hear you.” His cheek was against the glass. It was ice on his skin. “I can’t hear you. Say it again. Tell me what I have to do!”
    “Venn…”
    “Did he do this?
Are you really dead?
” The words came out in a wild cry he barely recognized.
    Then Sarah had hold of him; she was pulling him away, but he clung on and his own reflection was yelling “Dad!” to himself, and the mirror toppled and wobbled and he let go and staggered back.
    It fell with a terrible crash. A black star of cracks fractured it. He felt the sting of flying glass, tasted blood.
    Sarah scrambled over and grabbed the mirror and turned it to the wall. Then she spun and stared at him.
    Jake knelt, huddled. He had a stunned, bruised look, as if someone had punched him. His face was fleckedwith tiny cuts. “Are you okay?” She squatted next to him.
    “It was him.” He looked at her. “You saw, didn’t you? He spoke to me. My father!”
    His own disbelief was raw. He couldn’t take his eyes off the scatter of broken glass. She moved in front, so he had to look at her. “Your father? He’s dead?”
    “Yes. He’s gone. Do you think that was his ghost?”
    “I don’t believe in ghosts.” She sat back, thinking of her own father, rotting in one of Janus’s prisons.
    “But you saw him.” He had hold of her arm. His need for reassurance was suddenly embarrassing to them both. Jake let go, quickly. She shrugged. “I thought…”
    A door closed softly somewhere close in the house. They both stared up the Long Gallery. As if the sound had broken the terror, Jake pulled himself to his feet. “My father is missing and Venn’s responsible. This proves it.”
    “A face in a mirror doesn’t prove anything.” She scrambled up and went and sat on a window seat.
    “It had hold of me!”
    “Don’t be stupid. You imagined that. You panicked.”
    He glared at her. “I don’t panic! You don’t even know me! Or anything about me.”
    “Then tell me,” she said.
    For a moment she thought he wouldn’t. But he paced up and down restlessly, obsessively, and the words came out as if the shock had triggered them.
    He told her the story of David Wilde’s disappearance. She saw the anger and bewilderment that burned in him, the terrible betrayal he squirmed away from. He turned quickly and pulled out a

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