A Mirror Mended (Fractured Fables #2)(27)



There’s a lot more to the speech, judging by the rising volume and level of aggression, but all I can think about is Eva’s small, sad smile right before she wrapped the bodice lace around Snow White’s neck. Like she knew the choice would damn her and didn’t care, because at least she was choosing her own damnation.

I interrupt Charm by throwing my arms around her. She stiffens, then hugs me back so hard it feels vindictive. “You’re such a little shit, you know that?”

I pull away. “Yeah. And I’m really, really sorry. I am. But I have to find a way back into Snow White right now. I have to save—”

Charm tosses both hands in the air. “Some stranger? What about us, Zin? What about me, you absolute turdbucket.”

“I know! I’m sorry, but people need me, okay?”

Charm chews the inside of her cheek before saying, in a voice that could only be accurately measured by the Kelvin scale, “That. Is what I’m trying to tell you. Bonehead.”

A small, extremely uncomfortable silence follows this statement, during which Charm watches me with red, tear-sheened eyes and I call myself every bad name I can think of. It strikes me that neither heroes nor dying girls are very good at sticking around, at the ordinary work of living: calling your friends back and remembering their birthdays, going to the doctor for regular checkups, taking care of the people you love.

Charm sits back, cross-legged, ripping disgustedly at the grass. “You’re so busy mucking around in other worlds you don’t even care about the freaky shit happening in your own.”

“Like what kind of freaky shit?” I ask, very mildly. But I think I know.

“Like fairy tale shit. I bought one of those frozen apple pies—shut up, they’re good—and when we cut into it we found a bunch of blackbirds. Prim’s shoes turned to glass one night while she was dancing. Your mom’s roses went nuts in December, blooming while there was still snow on the ground.”

I unglue my tongue from the roof of my mouth and say carefully, “That’s not so bad, is it?”

“Well, it’s not great.” Charm is tearing the grass up in great handfuls now, her nail beds stained neon. “The birds were all dead and putrefied. Prim’s shoes shattered under her—nine stitches, she missed weeks of class. And your mom’s roses died down to the roots. She tore them all up.”

“Oh.”

Charm fixes me with a blunt blue eye. “Is it your fault?”

“Maybe.”

“Will it get worse?”

“Uh, maybe. Yeah.” I look away from her. “If I don’t stop.”

“Then…” Charm presses the heels of her hands into her eyes. “Jesus, why don’t you?”

“I should. I will! But…” But somewhere along the line, Eva became one of the people I’m supposed to take care of, and she needs me, and the physical laws of the multiverse can go straight to hell. “But first I need to borrow your phone.”

Charm stands. She stares down at me with an expression somehow worse than anger, or even disappointment. It’s a sort of bitter, self-directed chagrin, as if she’s annoyed that she allowed herself to be disappointed by me again. She slams her phone down on the plastic card table as she leaves.

It takes me a minute to guess her passcode (8008, because Charm still has a seventh grader’s sense of humor), and another minute to find the faculty contact information on Ohio University’s site.

The phone slips against the clammy sweat of my face. “Hi, this is Zinnia Gray. Is Dr. Bastille available?”



* * *



“SO—AGAIN, HYPOTHETICALLY—HOW COULD the protagonist get back into that Snow White story without the magic mirror?”

Dr. Bastille sighs on the other end of the line. It seems to go on a very long time, as if she’s holding her phone in front of a box fan. “Well, hypothetically, if you were my student and you came into my office and told me … everything you just told me”—over the last six to eight minutes, I’ve given her the SparkNotes version of my life, framing it all somewhat unconvincingly as the plot of a very meta novella I’m working on—“I would be legally and morally obligated to refer you to campus counseling services.”

“Good thing I’m not your student anymore, huh.”

“Zinnia, that’s not better. You see how that’s not better, right? If a random person came into my office to talk about the fairy tale multiverse, I would probably swallow my personal convictions about law enforcement’s role in the violent maintenance of race and class hierarchies”—this is ivory tower speak for fuck the cops—“and call security.”

“Sure, I get that, but what if I was very convincing and desperate-seeming, and you were sort of compelled to advise me despite your better judgment?” I’m trying to bully her into a specific narrative role—the expert consultant/holder of arcane knowledge who offers wise counsel to the protagonist in their hour of need and saves their bacon—but I can feel Dr. Bastille resisting it. She’s never much liked playing prescribed roles.

I hear her pulling the phone away from her face, saying I’ll just be a minute, love to someone else. A woman’s voice says something about dinner reservations in a tone suggesting they have been made and broken before.

Alix E. Harrow's Books