LOGINEPISODE 2 — THALIA ARRIVES
Three knocks at the door. Slow, measured, spaced exactly three seconds apart — the rhythm of a clock ticking down to something irreversible. The sound echoes in the silence like a countdown, like footsteps approaching in a long dark corridor. “Lady Isadora?” The voice is low, flat, carries no warmth or question — just a statement of fact, as inevitable as dawn. “May I enter?” She doesn’t answer, her throat too tight to form words, her tongue feeling thick and foreign in her mouth. The door opens anyway, swinging in on hinges that make no sound at all, as if it was always meant to be open, as if it had been waiting for this moment since the manor was built. Thalia stands in the doorway, her uniform of dark wool pressed so flat it looks painted on, every crease ironed out of existence. Her apron is white as fresh snow, starched so stiff it stands away from her body like armor. She is taller than the character Mira wrote — broader in the shoulders, with hands that look strong enough to break wood, with calluses on her palms and fingers that speak of work done with her hands. The scar through her left eyebrow is thin and white, exactly as described in Chapter 11, but when she moves her face, the skin pulls in a way that suggests it was made by something sharp and intentional — a blade, maybe, or a ring worn by a man who knew how to use his hands as weapons. She carries a tray with both hands, her movements precise, no shaking, no hesitation. The tray itself is polished wood with brass edges, worn smooth at the corners from use. On it rests a porcelain teapot decorated with blue cornflowers, a cup so thin she can see light through its walls, and a plate of small almond cakes dusted with sugar that glitters like crushed glass in the candlelight. “Good morning, my lady,” she says, setting the tray on the nightstand without being told, her movements so deliberate they feel like a ritual. Her eyes move over the woman on the bed, slow and deliberate, taking in bare feet, rumpled nightgown, fingers gripping the edge of the wardrobe door like it’s the only thing keeping her anchored to the world. “The Duke asked that I bring you tea. He said you’d need it — that the journey would leave you unsettled.” The Duke. Caelen. The name sits in the air between them like a stone dropped in still water, sending ripples through every corner of the room. The woman on the bed nods, not trusting herself to speak, and sits on the edge of the mattress. The silk sheets slide against her skin, cool and slick — nothing like the cotton she’d known, nothing like home. Thalia pours the tea, steam curling up in thin white ribbons that vanish before they can touch the air. The smell is chamomile and something else — bitter, like dandelion root, like medicine she took as a child when she couldn’t keep food down. She hands the cup to the woman and their fingers brush briefly, Thalia’s skin cool and dry, carrying no warmth at all. In the coffee shop, human touch had been rare but grounding — a hand on her shoulder from a coworker, a brush of fingers with the barista when he handed her change. Here, touch feels like ice against glass. The woman takes a small sip. The tea is hot enough to burn, should have blistered her tongue and throat, but she feels no pain — just a warmth that spreads from her throat to her chest to her stomach, settling like a stone in her gut. It tastes like metal and honey, like blood mixed with sugar. She never wrote what the tea would taste like — never thought such a small detail could matter so much. “Your carriage arrived yesterday evening,” Thalia says, standing perfectly still, her hands folded at her waist in a gesture that looks both respectful and defensive. “The Duke was informed of your coming four days prior. He’s been expecting you — had your chambers prepared, had the kitchens make your favorite cakes. He said you’d be hungry after the journey.” The woman sets the cup down, the porcelain making no sound against the wood. “My carriage… was there trouble on the road?” Her voice comes out hoarse, rough — not the smooth tone of Isadora Vess, but something closer to Mira’s own, worn thin by too many late nights and too much coffee. Thalia’s eyes don’t move from her face, steady and unblinking like a bird of prey watching its prey. “No trouble, my lady. The roads were clear — the Duke saw to that personally, had patrols sent out to ensure safe passage. Your driver said you slept the whole way, didn’t speak a word, didn’t even wake when we crossed the mountain pass where the wind howls loud enough to drown out thought.” The woman’s head begins to ache, a sharp pressure behind her eyes that feels like something is trying to force its way out. She didn’t write a driver. Didn’t write Isadora traveling by carriage. In Version 3.1, she came by ship, crossing the Crescent Bay in a vessel with sails the color of dried blood. In Version 4.5, she rode a horse named Shadow, black as night and trained to kill on command. In the last draft she worked on — the one she was writing when she died — Isadora never arrived at all. Her throat was cut by an assassin in the employ of the Emperor, her body left in a ditch beside the road, her blood seeping into the earth to feed the thorns that grew there. Which version is this? she thinks, pressing her palm to her forehead, feeling the heat build under her skin. Which one became real? Which one decided to keep me alive? “I don’t remember the journey,” she says, and the lie feels thick and heavy in her mouth, sticking to her teeth like syrup. Thalia nods slowly, as if she expected nothing less, as if she’d been told this exact thing before. “The journey can be tiring, my lady — especially when one travels between worlds. The Duke understands. He’ll see you in the solar when you’re ready. He says… he says you’ll know what to say when you see him. That you’ve always known.” She turns to leave, her movements as quiet and deliberate as her arrival, then pauses at the door, looking back over her shoulder. The scar through her eyebrow catches the candlelight, and for a moment she looks less like a servant and more like something older, something that has been watching this house for longer than anyone remembers. “The thorns on the wardrobe,” she says, her voice softer now, almost gentle — the first hint of warmth in anything she’s said. “They’re not just for decoration. Remember that. Thorns don’t just keep things out.” She leaves, closing the door behind her with no sound at all. The woman sits on the bed, holding the cup of tea that’s still hot even though she hasn’t touched it in minutes, and stares at the wardrobe. The silver thorns catch the light, twisting and turning in patterns that seem to shift when she isn’t looking directly at them. For a second she swears she sees them move, reaching out toward her like fingers wanting to touch.EPISODE 3 — MEMORY CORRUPTION The woman sets the cup down and stands, her legs steady now, her breathing under control. Recall, she tells herself, walking to the window, pressing her palm to the cold glass until it leaves a white mark on her skin. You are the author. You know this story. You know what happens next. She closes her eyes and reaches for the manuscript in her head, for the chapters she wrote at the kitchen table, in coffee shops, on trains during her commute to work. She reaches for the story she spent five years building, brick by brick, character by character, world by world. Chapter 18: Isadora meets Caelen in the solar, where he stands looking out over the mountains as if he can see into the future. They negotiate an alliance — he offers to protect her family’s lands from the Emperor’s advancing armies in exchange for her hand in marriage. She says yes, even though she knows he’s dangerous, even though she’s heard the stories of villages burned to the ground, of ri
EPISODE 2 — THALIA ARRIVESThree knocks at the door. Slow, measured, spaced exactly three seconds apart — the rhythm of a clock ticking down to something irreversible. The sound echoes in the silence like a countdown, like footsteps approaching in a long dark corridor.“Lady Isadora?” The voice is low, flat, carries no warmth or question — just a statement of fact, as inevitable as dawn. “May I enter?”She doesn’t answer, her throat too tight to form words, her tongue feeling thick and foreign in her mouth. The door opens anyway, swinging in on hinges that make no sound at all, as if it was always meant to be open, as if it had been waiting for this moment since the manor was built.Thalia stands in the doorway, her uniform of dark wool pressed so flat it looks painted on, every crease ironed out of existence. Her apron is white as fresh snow, starched so stiff it stands away from her body like armor. She is taller than the character Mira wrote — broader in the shoulders, with hands t
EPISODE 1 — THE BEDROOMThe marble floor of the guest chamber holds cold like a stone tomb left open to winter air, each slab cut so precisely the seams between them are nearly invisible. In the coffee shop where Mira’s life ended, the floor had been sticky linoleum stained with decades of spilled syrup and coffee; here, every surface is polished to a high sheen that shows not just reflections, but echoes of things that have yet to happen. A woman who is not quite Mira and not quite Isadora presses her palm flat against the stone and counts to ten, her fingers splaying wide, feeling the faint ridges of mineral deposits that run grey and white through the black rock. She learned this grounding trick in her twenty-third year, when panic would close her throat like a door slamming shut mid-sentence — back when she still believed she could control the shape of her days. Now the chill seeps up her arm and settles in her chest, a cold weight that feels more real than anything else in this p
EPISODE 3The Wrong BodyThe silk was the first thing she noticed, and it was wrong. Not soft like silk should be — slick and cool, like water over glass, sliding against her shoulders with a sound like snakeskin on stone when she moved. The movement itself was wrong too. Her arms were longer than they should be, her shoulders narrower, her center of gravity shifted forward as if she’d spent her whole life walking on tiptoe. When she touched her face, her fingers found cheekbones sharper than her own, a jawline softer than she’d ever had, lips full and pale and smooth. Her hair fell past her shoulders in heavy, dark waves, nothing like the short, brittle mess she’d been too tired to cut for months — when she ran her hand through it, it felt like holding liquid night.She opened her eyes slowly, as if moving too fast would shatter whatever this was. The room was exactly as she’d described it in Chapter Seventeen — every detail perfect, every line exactly as she’d written it. Grey silk
EPISODE 2.The Last SentenceThe screen was too bright, a white glare that made her eyes water even when she squeezed them shut. She squinted, trying to bring the words back into focus, but they swam in front of her like fish in murky water, then dissolved entirely. The laptop’s heat was unbearable now, searing into her skin, leaving blisters in the shape of letters she’d typed a hundred times before. C on her wrist, A on her elbow, E on the inside of her arm.Duke Caelen finally showed her his true face. It was nothing like she imagined.The words burned themselves into her vision, even when she looked away from the screen. She tried to lean back, to put space between herself and the laptop, but her body wouldn’t move — it was heavy, as if someone had laid a stone slab across her chest, pressing her down into the vinyl cushion. Her breath came in short, shallow gasps, each one a struggle, each one leaving a metallic taste in her mouth that she recognized as blood.She leaned forward
EPISODE 1The Coffee Shop.The espresso machine hissed like a radiator with a fever, steam curling up in thin white ribbons that vanished the second they hit the cold air. Three in the morning, or two, or four — the clock above the counter had stuck at 2:17 three days ago and nobody cared enough to fix it. The plastic numbers were faded from years of fluorescent light, the red glow more tired than bright. Mira’s jeans were cold where rainwater had seeped through the knee, a damp patch that had been there since she’d run through the downpour two hours earlier, clinging to her skin like a second layer. She’d been sitting in the same corner booth for eight hours straight, the vinyl cushion worn smooth as polished bone under her thigh, a faint groove where she’d shifted her weight thousands of times over months of coming here.Her laptop hummed against her forearms, warm enough to leave red indentations when she pulled away — little squares matching the keyboard keys, like a brand. The Re







