TW: Violence and Disturbing Imagery.
The main corridor of the manor was never-ending, even as the exit remained tantalizingly fixed in place.
It dizzied Elisabeth, the way each hallway's door appeared the same, each window reflected the same view, and the same servants continued in a bland, faceless procession past her.
"Lady," they echoed into the nothingness, and something in the formality of that title mocked her.
The exit remained as distant as ever, no matter how long, or how far, she walked. It maddened her.
Where was she going, exactly? She couldn't remember. She'd known it a moment ago, some place with open windows and doors and a garden that she...
"He's waiting for you," another servant whispered while passing by.
"Don't keep him long."Like a switch, this warning triggered a violent alarm in her, and without understanding why, she
ran. All at once, the hallway blurred around her, the colours all melting into one another like a kaleidoscope as she threw herself towards the door in the distance over and over and over and over again.
Why did nothing bring her closer to escape?
An unexpected sound interrupted the disquiet of her thoughts, like that of rattling pipes, arresting her in place. The world veered on its axis as she adjusted to the shift in her momentum, a puddle of water forming beneath one of the many uniform doors.
Tentatively, Elisabeth reached for the knob and, after only a moment's hesitation, opened it.
But
he wasn't there.
Someone else familiar stared back at her.
There was a woman sobbing, a Misdreavus hovering overhead and licking her tears. Somehow, impossibly, the droplets had amassed into a teeming flood, her crying filling the entirety of the parlor with water.
When the young blonde noblewoman looked at Elisabeth, her red-rimmed eyes widened.
"Please," the fragile woman begged, rising to her feet.
"Please, you have to help me. You don't understand. He'll kill me if you don't."There was something wild, something
desperate to the way this phantom stared at her, as if looking through Elisabeth and seeing all that she was and had ever been.
Elisabeth's lips moved, but no sound came out. She backed away, unmoored, her thoughts nothing but a hum of static and confusion.
"I'm sorry. I don't know how to escape," she whispered, and at that point, the sobbing woman let out a bloodcurdling howl.
"You LIE," the crying Kalosian snarled, and all at once, her tear-dampened hair snaked forward with a life of its own, the curls wrapping around Elisabeth with the tenacity of vines. Again the lights overhead flickered, and when sight returned to her, the wild-eyed woman was sneering at her, barely an inch away from her face.
"You think I'm weak. You want me dead. You've always wanted me dead."Did she? Had she? Disgust curdled in the pit of Elisabeth's stomach, the pitiful look of this creature's gaze inciting some long-dormant spark in her. Some
hatred that she couldn't name.
"Let go of me," Elisabeth hissed, and her hands found themselves on her doppelganger's pale neck. As her hands tightened, the fragile doll-like girl twitched and spasmed, her hair going limp at her sides as she clutched at her throat, too late, scratching valiantly for release.
"Please," her younger self sobbed out, before even that became impossible.
When the pathetic woman crumpled lifelessly on the floor, Elisabeth looked up and saw faced another figure's silent judgment.
"Elisabeth," her mother whispered, kneeling to the ground to tend to the fallen girl.
"Oh, Elisabeth. What have they done to you?"The way that Georgiana Fiorelli looked up at the killer of her only child spoke of a fathomless, unending hate, glittering with tears.
"You don't understand," Elisabeth protested, her breath hitching in her throat as she backed away.
"I had no choice. I had no choice..."Wasn't it true? Didn't it have to be true? If it wasn't...
If it wasn't...The lights flickered again, and this time, Georgiana's face was someone else's entirely. Some other woman that Elisabeth couldn't bear to disappoint.
Georgette Bluebottle looked at her, wounded and hurt beyond all imagining, as she cradled the fallen woman and whispered,
"You monster. Who even are you?"It was only then that Elisabeth caught a glance of herself in the mirror, and froze in place. A withered, elderly woman bedecked in pearls and rings grinned back at her, a sleeping Salazzle wrapped around her shoulders. The stench of Casablanca lilies, suffocating beyond all imagining, invaded her lungs.
"I'm not her, Gigi," Elisabeth whispered.
"This place is lying to you. I'm not that woman. I will never be her."But no matter her protests, the image of the Dowager Countess in the mirror didn't change.
The sound of her mother-in-law's laughter followed her as she fled, returning once more to a corridor that knew no ending.