Saturday, August 1, 2015

Mystic Mirror

 Summary:

The world of Callesmere Empire is a dangerous and magical place where ancient demons roam the land and human dukes war with each other. When average high schooler May Lawson is suddenly thrust into this world, she will have to learn quickly to survive if she ever wants to get back home. This task will not be an easy one though; kidnapped by a fearsome demon she will go through extraordinary journey while trying to battle her feelings at the same time. Will May ever be able to go home again? Will she want to?

 Laugh hard, blush and perhaps even cry, while reading The Mystic Mirror Series.

Gosia W.


Status of the book: Complete, with sequel under way



Warning
All stories published on my blog are my intelectual property. Do not copywrite, use the characters etc. without my permission, because you could receive a lawsuit from me.

Please enjoy reading. I hope, that I'll manage to entertain you with my stories. Please send me comments - I'd love to read them.

Prologue



Zhawn closed his eyes, savoring the delicate caress of sea breeze and the scent of salty water. The ship was rocking to the rhythm of the waves, gently carrying him toward his homeland. Zhawn’s golden eyes fluttered open as another scent joined that of the sea.
         “Kal Laismarr,” Zhawn said the name of his home when he saw the distant cliffs of Karhadon emerge from the thick fog. The sailors rolled the sail and grabbed the paddles, carefully leading the swift corvette between the treacherous rocks. The land was getting closer, yet the mist made it look like a mere illusion.
         “How does it feel to see your home?” Zhawn’s companion, a woman named Nesrin, combed her white hair with her long, pale fingers, looking at him expectantly. The breeze was playing with her unpigmented locks, making them dance around her slender frame. The strange color of her hair contrasted with her youthful, ageless face. It was impossible to tell if Zhawn’s companion was a young girl or a mature woman.
         “How many years passed since I left?” he ignored Nesrin’s question.
         The woman huffed, showing she was displeased by such treatment and set her bright, blue eyes on him, serious expression on her face.
         “Seventy years,” she replied; a playful smile appeared on her pale lips. “Much has happened during this time. I was here before; I know all the answers for the questions you wished to ask me during the entire voyage.”
         Zhawn set his gaze on the waves beating against the corvette’s prow. He wanted to know; he needed to find out what happened while he was… away. And yet, he hesitated; he was battling with his thoughts for weeks now, afraid that the answer might prove itself devastating.
         He clutched the railing tighter and glared at Nesrin; the intense look in his golden eyes made her smile to falter.
         “Tell me, Nesrin, where is Kaellach?” he asked, hatred filling his voice as he said the name of the man who was his sworn enemy and who used to be his closest friend.
         “Much has happened since seventy years ago,” Nesrin sighed. “Kaellach is dead.”
         Zhawn looked at the white-haired woman sharply.
         “Dead? How?” he asked, careful to keep his voice emotionless.
         Nesrin smiled widely as though his reaction amused her greatly.
         “Seventy years ago, right after the battle,” she answered. “King Kaellach was the strongest of his clan, but it seems his unwavering trust in his allies was his demise – the humans that fought alongside him betrayed him and ended his life.”
         “Pathetic,” Zhawn commented, observing the waves crash against the ship furiously as though they were trying to protect the shores of Kal Laismarr from Zhawn’s corvette. “And his family?”
         Nesrin sighed heavily, casually resting her bare elbows on the railing.
         “Kaellach’s family?" The white-haired woman made a dramatic pause, enjoying every second of Zhawn’s anticipation. “Most of the clan was wiped out not long after his death. Perhaps his son is still alive.”
         Nesrin peeked at her superior, curiously searching for any kind of reaction. However, Zhawn’s face was hidden by a hood, and even if it wasn’t, she was sure he would never betray his thoughts.
         “Nesrin, once we reach the shores of Karhadon, find him,” Zhawn commanded. The white-haired woman nodded and backed away from the railing, about to return to the cabin below the deck.
         “You asked how I feel about returning home.” Zhawn’s words made Nesrin still. The golden-eyed man smiled bitterly. “Like a man who is about to drown the whole Kal Laismarr in blood.”

Chapter 1: The Mirror



Baltimore, Maryland

         May Lawson bumped into the doorframe as she steered toward the kitchen, book in her hand. Not averting her gaze from the text, she managed to locate the chair and sit down. She shoved the box of her sister’s favorite cereal aside, making space for the book. Still reading, May reached for the bowl.
         “Hey! That’s mine!” Hailey, her younger sister protested, glaring at May.
         May mumbled something inaudible, not affected by the commotion in the kitchen at all when she was finishing reading. When she read the last paragraph, she took her eyes off the book and put it away, thinking that it was a nice way to start her first day of the summer break. She lifted her head and saw that apparently a little apocalypse came today.
         “Richard, did you pack your toothbrush?” Nancy Lawson, May’s mom, asked in her usual demanding tone.
         “Of course, dear,” May’s dad answered meekly, opening his suitcase and checking if he packed that toothbrush indeed – after all no one wanted to cross his wife. May’s mom was looming above him like an executioner, her blue eyes cold and unforgiving.
         “Better check if you have everything, I don’t want to have to buy you socks in London,” May’s mom nagged, her voice threatening.
         May sighed, observing her parents. Her poor dad was nearly cowering in fear before his wife while the mom kept giving him orders, another normal day in the life of the Lawson family. The contrast between the pair was impossible not to notice – May’s dad was a chubby, plain-looking man with glasses whereas her mother was a killer beauty with her perfect silhouette, blonde hair and exceptionally pretty face.
         May’s parents were about to head to London for a week and the summer morning had been turned into a hectic hell. Richard Lawson was about to lead some important conference and May’s mom was accompanying him as to support him and to control his expenses.  May’s dad, an accomplished history professor, was an absent-minded person, focused on his work and passion for collecting antiques – something his more level-headed wife wasn’t very fond of and was just about to remind him of it.
         “I swear, if you buy any more trash, Richard, you’ll regret it,” Nancy hissed when the doorbell rang.
         May’s dad flashed a shy smile which conveyed the message “I apologize for living” and rushed to collect the package. Nancy Lawson huffed, annoyed, and proceeded with ordering her family members around.
         “Hailey, please eat proper breakfasts and don’t eat too many snacks. Mrs. Hatchets will pop in order to check on you, so be nice to her,” May’s mom offered her younger daughter a smile which vanished instantly when she looked at her husband, who was dawdling in the corridor. Her red high heels clicked as she went to inspect the newest delivery.
         “Richard!” May winced, hearing her mother’s furious scream. “What’s the meaning of this? Why did you buy so many antiques? What are you doing? Leave it, don’t unpack it! We don’t have time for this now,”
         Flushed, May’s mom marched back to the kitchen and filled Hailey’s glass with juice.
         “Hailey, stay at home in the evenings, don’t invite your boyfriend while we’re gone and rest a bit, you deserve it,” May’s mom smiled warmly to her younger daughter, combing Hailey’s blonde locks with her fingers.
         May’s mom scanned the kitchens for the survivors who didn’t get scolded yet. Her gaze slid over her husband and Hailey who was looking like an angel right now to stop on the one person who escaped her attention this morning – her older daughter May who seemed to possess a mystical gift of invisibility and was surprisingly easy to overlook. Nancy Lawson approached her daughter like a hawk who had just spotted its prey.
         “May, I think you should use this summer break to study hard. If you are to get the scholarship and go to Harvard you’ll have to try harder during your senior year. Take your sister’s example; she’s so young and smart already,” May’s mom said harshly.
         “Yes, mom,” May replied in a monotone voice as a vision of grim future flashed in her mind – the prospect of studying instead of relaxing and simply having fun wasn’t what she had hoped for this summer. However, she was already used to the pressure to be the best and being compared with Hailey all the time.
         May could never compete with her younger sister, no matter how hard she tried. Not that May was lacking in intelligence - quite the opposite. She always scored the best marks in the class and worked harder than anybody else at the expense of her social life; however, Hailey was better. She was three years younger, but she had skipped a grade, took part in national competitions, was even a member of Mensa. She never failed to accomplish effortlessly whatever caught her fancy, while the same things cost May hard work. Hailey was the pride and joy of their family, and May was the other one, always second best.
         Hailey was the perfect daughter, the little prodigy who had the looks, outgoing personality, wonderful friends and even a boyfriend. Everyone seemed to adore her. May tried to be proud of her sister’s accomplishments, but she couldn’t help but to be jealous.
         “Hailey, dear, guess what?” May’s mom asked the younger of girls. “We’ll buy you a new violin in London.”
         “Oh, mommy, you’re the best!” Hailey exclaimed, her sapphire blue eyes sparkling with joy.
         May sighed, frustrated, seeing Hailey and mom fuss over the new violin.
         “Nancy, I believe we have to leave already,” May’s dad called from the corridor and stepped into the kitchen to say good-byes. Nancy Lawson planted kisses on Hailey’s both cheeks and ruffled May’s short, brown hair hastily before grabbing her suitcases. May’s Dad hugged his younger daughter awkwardly and waved to May.
         “May,” he addressed his older daughter. May lifted her head, gazing at her father with hope he would wish her good luck or say he was proud of her achievements. “Unpack the boxes from the corridor. Be careful – some of those contain very valuable antiques. You know how I want them to be catalogued, right?”
         The girl nodded; her face turned into a poker mask and her hand frozen in midair. Soon enough the door slammed shut and as soon as the parent’s car left the driveway, Hailey made a beeline for the table. Just when May opened her book again, ignoring her sister making a mess with her breakfast. She arched her eyebrow, seeing Hailey skip toward the mirror and critically examining her appearance, frowning with dissatisfaction at her still small breasts.
         May straightened her back, looking at her sister who was just flipping her long, blonde hair, as though she was in a shampoo commercial. May and Hailey were siblings, but they were polar opposites – May’s younger sister resembled their mother so much that May began suspecting that she could be a clone; tall and slim, stunningly beautiful,  blue-eyed  Hailey was entrancing everyone with her exceptionally good looks.
         May could be considered quite pretty, but compared to her mother and sister, she seemed to be terribly plain. Her face rarely caught passerby’s attention, and she wasn’t skinny and tall like a model. Having inherited her dad’s perfectly ordinary looks, May never stood out in the crowd of other seventeen-year-old  high school girls.
         The sole things she really liked about her appearance were her green eyes. Her brown hair always seemed to have a mind of its own, refusing to look presentable, so it was shoulder length. Her height was sometimes bothersome too – being shorter than most of her peers, May often got teased when she was younger.
         May observed Hailey march into the living room to seize the TV and decided to move from behind the table to get done with unpacking the delivery.
         The sooner the better.

         “Oh no, not again,” May whined when she saw the corridor. The door was barely visible to behind the boxes of all sizes and shapes. It seemed that her dad went on an antique shopping spree. Actually, May understood why mom despised dad’s hobby so much – not only it consumed over half of family’s earnings, but there was barely enough space in the house for all the new acquirements.
         May began opening the boxes, having decided to unpack everything first and then carry the antiques to the basement. The girl looked at the multitude of packages and afterwards in the direction of the living room.
         “Hailey, come here and help me!” she called, but there was no response. “Hailey!”
         “What?” A rude response from the couch in the living room came. May rolled her eyes.
         “Lend me a hand with dad’s stuff, will you?” she called.
         Hailey turned the TV off and marched down the corridor. She rested her hands on her hips, glaring at May from above; even though she was three years younger, Hailey was already taller than her older sister.
         “I’m tired,” she said, shamelessly faking yawning. “Anyway, dad told that you should take care of his stuff, and I should rest. Now don’t bother me when I’m resting.”
         May looked at her sharply and grabbed Hailey’s shoulder when the younger girl was about.
         “Don’t even think about wriggling out of this,” she said, pointing at the boxes. “Help me or I won’t cook you anything for the entire week.”
         Hailey’s blue eyes widened when she heard the ultimatum. May’s face was serious – she had no intention of giving into  her sister’s whims this time, although usually she had to since dad and mom kept defending Hailey.
         “If you do that, mom will ground you for a month,” Hailey retorted, but the unsure look on her face betrayed that she wasn’t too confident.
         “Fine by me.” May shrugged her shoulders; after all, she’d be stuck at home studying anyway.
         Hailey bit her lower lip, weighing her options, the battle between a week without dinners versus an hour of effort raging in her mind.
         “Okay,” she grunted eventually and got to work, huffing angrily when she saw May’s triumphant smirk.
         The both girls were unpacking the various items from the boxes, wondering why their dad would need most of them. The oriental vase was truly beautiful, but the African sculpture was hideous. Richard Lawson had a weak spot for various items connected to occult and foreign religions. The antiques came from all over the world and May suspected that they were a substitute for traveling – her dad always wanted to visit the historical sites, but his wife consistently denied it.
         “If a vampire got into our house, the poor guy wouldn’t stand a chance,” May stated, discovering that one of the boxes contained over twenty different crosses.
         “What’s that?” Hailey asked, holding up an artwork which looked like it had been painted by Picasso on a bad day. May shrugged.
         “No idea, check this out,” she said, showing Hailey a long parcel which turned out to hide a genuine sword in its sheath. The weapon was orange from rust; the elaborate decorative pattern was barely visible now.
         “Is it sharp?” Hailey asked. May smiled – she wanted to find it out too. She pulled the handle, but the sword didn’t budge. No matter how hard she tried the blade refused to leave the sheath. Hailey sighed, disappointed. “It’s because of rust.”
         The younger of the girls took a piece of paper packed together with the sword and winced.
         “Gosh, what a waste,” she said after she read the price. She looked a look at the other information. “Country of origin: Ireland. History… let’s see… it says here that someone killed a dragon with this piece of rust.”
         May smiled.
         “A dragon, huh? I think it was rather someone’s mother-in-law,” she commented, putting the heavy sword aside and reached into yet another box. She opened it with the knife and took the document with price and description of the item while Hailey reached inside to remove the bubble wrap.
         “Country of origin: Norway. History… now that is interesting. Listen to this, Hailey,” she read, smiling. “According to the description it’s some mystical mirror. It is said to have the  power to switch souls of two people if they glance into the mirror at the same time. Even so, it will only work if the people have the similar souls. I don’t quite get it.”
         Hailey put a strand of her blonde hair behind her ear.
         “I think it’s like the Everett interpretation,” she said, leaving the rest of the bubble wrap in the box.
         “What?” May asked, not knowing what Hailey meant.
         “Everett's interpretation, you know, the many-world interpretation?” Hailey looked at May expectedly, but when the older of girls  was still staring blankly at her, she decided to give a more thorough explanation. “I guess that talking about quantum mechanics would be pointless, so I’ll explain it to you in a more science-fiction fashion. It’s about the parallel universes, different dimensions, that kind of stuff. For example, in another universe you could be born in Britain. So, if you from here and you from Britain looked into the mirror in the same time, you would switch souls.”
         “And you’d get a sister who would be talking with a funny accent,” May said, more or less understanding. Hailey nodded.
         “Right, I think that it should work that way. However, if it did, we could sell the mirror and buy an island,” she said, looking with distrust at the parcel which still waited to be unpacked. “Maybe I’ll go make a sandwich.”
         May smirked, seeing her younger sister move away from the supposedly mystical mirror.
         “Are you scared that your soul will be switched?” May teased. Hailey flushed as though she had just been caught red-handed.
         “Don’t be stupid, May!” she exclaimed, crossing her arms on her chest and pouting childishly. “I’m not superstitious. However, if it works, you won’t be missed, unlike me.”
         May clenched her teeth, glaring at her younger sister who, smirking mockingly, skipped to the kitchen to raid the fridge.
         “Brat,” May commented and reached for the mirror. She removed all the bubble wrap and looked at the antique looking glass curiously. She shook her head, amused by Hailey’s reaction. The mirror had a strange pentagonal shape, but other than that it was perfectly normal and non-magical.
         May flipped the mirror over and examined it. Its shape was odd; it was of a rather medium size, with a plain wooden frame and seemingly old. May took a breath and looked at her reflection. Of course, there wasn’t anything out of the ordinary. The mirror showed what she expected to see - her own plain face staring back. The same green eyes, the same slightly too wide nose, which wasn’t her favorite part of her face, the same childish cheeks and the same brown hair. The same… only longer. Shocked, May looked once more.
         There was no doubt! The May that was reflected in the mirror had long hair, much past her shoulders, though she could not say how long exactly. The girl felt something welling up in her stomach. The mirror reflected the sheer terror on her face. She tried to toss out the mirror, and scream for Hailey, but her voice wouldn’t come out; her body was frozen. She desperately tried to loosen her grip on the mirror’s frame, but she couldn’t move them. It was either the fear that had paralyzed her or some unknown force that didn’t want to allow her to avert her gaze from the mirror. She couldn’t do anything as her surroundings started to blur. It felt like the world was disappearing, or perhaps  she was.
         May had her gaze still fixed on the face in the mirror, staring in horror at the same face as her own, but somehow another’s. She observed as the reflection returned to normal, her reflection’s hair becoming shorter, like her own. The world around her was beginning to look more real and not so blurred anymore. May took a deep gasping breath, realizing that she must have been holding it, and finally managed to flex her fingers. The mirror fell on the floor. Her knees bent under, and she had to use her hands to prevent her face from meeting ground. She gasped in shock as her long hair fell like a curtain around her, and then she drifted into the unconsciousness, limply falling to the floor.


Elsewhere

         “Lady,” a maidservant called.
         “You may come in,” a quiet, demure voice said. The maidservant opened the door and came in, bowing deeply.
         Inside sat a young noblewoman, the Lady of the respectable Thoen family, Maewyn. She looked as if she was deep in thought. Her long brown hair, now undone, fell softly around her reaching to the floor as she sat on a cushion. Her green eyes had a slightly melancholic look in them. The Lady was adorned with a multi-layered dress made of the finest silk looking every inch of her status. She looked at the maidservant, who was still bowing in front of her. The Lady smiled gently and told the woman in her sweet voice to face her.
         “What brings you here, Astrid?” Meawyn asked.
         The young servant gasped as she heard her name being remembered by the Lady... The woman held out a package. Lady Meawyn glanced at it curiously.
         “What would that be?” she asked.
         “My Lady,”  the woman called Astrid answered. “It was sent by lord Abrran to Lady Maewyn as a gift to commemorate the engagement.”
         A blush begun to show on Lady Maewyn’s face as, she cautiously took the package that was handed over to her. Lord Abrran was the man she was going to marry in a matter of weeks; the man to whom she would pledge loyalty and love; the man who would become the father of her children. Her destiny, her everything. She couldn’t wait to be married to him. That was the purpose of her life – to become the wife of such a powerful man, and she would more than glad to accept it.
         Maewyn held the package closest to her heart, wondering what gift her beloved Lord had sent her. Her heart was beating faster as the maidservant took her leave. Once the servants were dismissed for the night, she stood up and sat on the edge of the large bed, anticipating to see the gift.
         The Lady began to unwrap the package. Inside was a plain-looking mirror. Maewyn was a bit disappointed but told herself that the gift was given from the bottom of the heart, so it shouldn’t be judged. She held the mirror in front of her face, glancing at her own reflection. Suddenly, the Lady stiffened. It was not her reflection. From the mirror, another person was looking at her. She had her face, but she was not here. The other one had noticeably shorter hair, like some village girl, not the knee-length Lady’s tresses, and she didn’t have the royal air about her, like Maewyn.
         “Lord Abrran,” the Lady whispered, horrified, “Why would you send me a demon sealed in a mirror? Why?”
         That was Maewyn’s last thought before she slipped into unconsciousness.

Chapter 2: The Lady



May slowly opened her eyes and sat up. She felt like crap, her whole body aching all over. Rubbing her eyes she looked around. It took a while for her eyesight to adjust to the dimness of the room, though the oil lamps hanging on the wall shed enough light to see everything around her well.
         Gazing around her, she noticed she was in a large room decorated strangely, something like a combination between a traditional Japanese home and then as if some crazy interior decorator had come in and thrown Viking sculptures in the room. She felt  like she was in a museum in some castle, perhaps an exhibition room or something. The room had very little furniture in it, just a low table with cushions instead of chairs and a large bed on a pedestal, barely visible to under the pile of  what looked to be colorful pillows. The stone walls were beautifully painted with vivid birds and cherry blossoms, and the transparent curtains billowed in the wind, which invaded the chamber from outside. The bed, where May was lying, was of a very  impressive size, even though the girl had to share it with at least thirty pillows. What was this place? Why was she here?
         Suddenly, May paled as she remembered what happened earlier in her house.
         The mirror.
         May felt a shiver go down her spine, and her body stiffen in horror.
         This must be a dream. I was just so tired from all the work and must have fallen asleep. Just a dream, nothing to worry about… I’ll wake up in a minute or so.
         She repeated the mantra in her head. The girl  sat  on the bed motionlessly; her breathing quickened, and her heart began to pound faster with every passing second. Her  palms began shaking  and sweating as the disturbing image refused to go away no matter how many times she blinked her eyes. To make matters worse, the longer she stared at everything,  the more real it seemed. May could now clearly make out  every detail of the foreign chamber and felt the  too actual light drafts upon her face. Her clothes rustled, as the wind moved the fabric. Every sensation was so real… she never had a dream like this. May reached with a  trembling hand to her cheek and pinched it, praying  to wake up from the nightmare...
         “Ouch!” she hissed from the pain. Her heart was now pumping the blood at such a high speed that her ears felt like they were going to explode.  Panic began overpowering her brain, when a disturbing suspicion crept into her mind.
         What if I’m awake?
         Slowly, as if in a trance, the girl reached for her hair and discovered that it was very long, running far past her waist. She grabbed a handful of it, pulled forcefully and winced from the pain – there was no doubt – it wasn’t a wig. May’s eyes widened, as she came to the realization.
         “It’s not a dream,” May whispered in shock. What was going on?
         She felt a growing sensation of panic settle into her stomach, but she refused to lose her cool. She had to find that cursed mirror – whatever had happened, it began after she had looked into the mirror. She scanned the room with her eyes and found it. There it was! Resting on a desk. May got up to reach for it and nearly fell onto the floor. Angrily, she looked down and noticed that she wasn’t wearing her summer clothes anymore, instead she was dressed in some fancy gown – many layers of one, actually. It resembled the outfits she saw in movies about the Middle Ages in China though it had a definite European influence with the corset, which made it hard to breathe...
         This has got to be some joke; she thought and waddled over to the mirror. She grabbed it quickly and gave it her best threatening glare, willing it to fix the situation. She wanted this awfully real-looking dream, this illusion, whatever it was, to stop. Now. May narrowed her eyes at the surface of the mirror. Nothing happened. Well, nothing except that she was able to take in her slightly different face. Aside from the long hair, her skin looked better, as though she had been using some expensive cosmetics,  and she looked like some strange princess from confused Asian-European Middle Ages with a thin golden circlet on her head.
         When she spotted a large mirror in the corner of the chamber, she rushed to it, so that she could see more of her changed self. She did a slow spin before  it to take a good look at the dress she was wearing. The silk rustled as she moved around. May outstretched her arms, staring the wide sleeves made of the several layers of the thin pink fabric. The dark-purple corset of the gown was richly embroidered with golden thread and little pearls, that created an elaborate pattern. May carefully set the mirror aside and walked over to the door, hoping to see something familiar.
         She opened it slowly, and gasped. Before her very eye was the most beautiful garden, she had ever seen – covered in colorful blooming flowers of all shades, it was as if a magical scene was unfolding before her. Despite the dim light, the colors were incredibly vibrant, being a feast to her eyes. The plants had been carefully shaped so that every single flower was a part of the gardener’s masterpiece, perfectly fitting into its right place. The bright light of the moon and stars wonderfully illuminated the area.
         The garden itself was not very spacious, as it was surrounded by brick walls, as though the architect had intended to make it a private place where no one would bother its owner. Hesitantly, May took a few steps forward, admiring the way stars were reflected in a little pond. She was so enticed by the beauty of her surroundings, that she almost forgot about panicking. Looking up, she gazed at the sky. The night sky was much brighter than expected. In fact, she had never seen; the  moon and stars  shine so intensely. She was admiring the multitude of the bright tiny dots in the sky, when an alarming feeling began creeping into her mind.
         Something was wrong. However, not wrong, as if in waking up in a strange place with long hair and fancy dress, it was something else she couldn’t put her finger on. She blinked, thinking intensely about it. Then, her eyes widened and she let out a shocked gasp.
         The stars.
         There was a fairly normal moon in  the sky, but the stars… they were different. At the first glance, they hadn't looked  suspicious, but now glancing again the constellations were all wrong. May knew most of the most basic ones from books, like Great Bear and Orion, but she couldn’t find them at this night sky. They were simply gone, replaced by some other arrangement.
         May legs gave way and she limply fell to the ground. She sat motionlessly and stared in front of her, her brain having  difficulty comprehending what was going on.
         The reality of the illusion, the pain, when she pinched herself or pulled her hair… and the stars. There was no way her mind could have devised such a crazy situation on its own. The girl covered her mouth with her hand,  feeling nauseous. Some small voice in the back of her head told her, that perhaps that she wasn't in Maryland anymore. And it also meant that she was screwed. May snorted, suddenly  feeling amused – it had to be out of fear.
         “No kidding,” she muttered.
         The girl stood up and made a series of  calming breaths. She began pacing all over the garden, as the sky began lighting up in the east and the first of the sun rays began illuminating her surroundings.
         May shook her head in disbelief, considering her options. The situation was far too freaky to be some normal dream. Either she was mentally ill or was in some freaking Narnia. Alternatively, on another planet. At the moment, she wasn’t sure which option she preferred.
She was so busy thinking, that she didn’t hear someone come into the room.
         “Lady,” a quiet, shy voice called.
         May turned around with the maximal speed that her clothes allowed, the fear swiftly returning to her chest. What she saw startled her. A woman was  groveling on the floor before her. 
         “W-What?” that was the only answer May could manage, too startled to remember about being polite.
         Lady? Is she talking to me?
         “Your father has requested your presence during the breakfast with his advisors, my Lady,” the girl on the floor said respectfully. “If you will, this is the time for you to prepare.”
         “Alright…” May agreed hesitantly, eying the woman suspiciously.
         Father? Advisors? What the hell is going on here?
         Another option popped into her head. Possibly someone was playing a joke on her, like in a TV show. Maybe she should just go along with it for a while, and then a TV crew will suddenly appear, and they’ll give her flowers or a prize or something… May’s brain conveniently ignored the issue about the different night sky, or longer hair. She definitely  liked the idea of a joke better than being mentally ill or a in a freaky Narnia land.
         May wanted to think more about the current situation, but in that very moment four women burst into the room and grabbed her. Confused, she didn’t put up any resistance. They led her to the bathing room and started undressing her. Embarrassed, the girl covered herself with her hands as much as she could. Soon May was ushered out of the tub and dried. Later, the women dressed her in far too many layers of another heavy, silk gown like the one before and brushed her hair, putting half of it up in a crown around her head with a pearl barrette. Then one of them applied makeup, and a large mirror was brought before May. At first, the girl flinched, remembering the whole mess with mirrors, but then she looked at the reflection.
         She gave a little gasp, running her hand along her face. She looked like a totally different person, like some princess from a movie or a cover of a fantasy book.
         I guess you can never underestimate the wonders of a  good spa and make-up, she told herself.
         “My Lady, it is time,” the maidservant from before said, and she showed May the way out of the room.
         May followed, unsure. She decided for now, that the maids must be hired actors, who participated in the joke. As she walked down the hallway, she admired the decorations. They must have been really expensive. The girl shook her head. She hadn’t the slightest idea what was going on, but she decided to play along and find out.
         If they wanted her to be a Lady, then she would act like one, why not, it’s not like she got to be on a prank show every day. May wondered who was behind this sick joke, which had nearly given  her a heart attack. Maybe her parents did this to make up for the missed holiday in Europe?
         She was led into the huge room where a richly-clothed man was casually striding across a spacious chamber. He looked to be around his fifties, not so tall and had a rather intimidating thick brown beard, with  eyes like her own. She didn't fail to notice, that he resembled her dad a little. She thought, that the joke must have been very expensive with all the elaborate decorations and the actors.
         “Maewyn,” the man said in a deep voice.
         May quickly looked around but saw no one but herself so he assumed the man was addressing her. She didn’t have a clue what to say. Who was he? Presumably, he acted as a relative of some sort. She decided to smile and bow slightly. Apparently, it was the right decision. The man smiled and strode towards her.
         “Are you all right, my child? You look a little pale,” he said  with worry in a voice.
         May wanted to inform him, that she was most definitely not his child and demand him to tell her what the hell is going on, but the voice in the back of her head told her not to do it. Better to wait for the TV crew to pop out. The girl cleared her throat, wanting to say something, that could be expected of an actress in such a scene, but a sudden commotion outside the chamber interrupted her.
         Suddenly, the door flung open and a large group of men stormed inside. All of them except one were dressed in chain mail and tunics, with swords hanging from their hips. The clank of metal was resounding throughout the room with every hasty step they took. Their hair was  about shoulder length, just like the other male actor had. Most of them had beards as well, which  made them look like Vikings. The two men were dragging some poor guy dressed in shabby clothes behind them. The man was kicking and struggling, unsuccessfully attempting to set himself free from the firm grasp of his captors. His face was smeared with dirt, the hair untidy and a gleam of madness in his eyes.
         “She deserved it! That bitch slept with my cousin!” the man yelled, as the Vikings shoved him on his knees before the richly-clothed actor  who was her "father."
         “Duke Thoen, we caught the murderer, who killed his wife,” one of the soldiers informed. May stared in silence as the middle-aged man nodded and reached out with his hand. One of the Vikings unsheathed his sword and passed it to the fancy-clothed actor. He took it, a solemn look on his face.
         “I have promised the mother of this poor woman, that the murderer of her daughter will die by my hand as soon as I see you. Prepare to pay for your sin may the demons return your soul,” he said solemnly.
         The man in the shabby clothes began crying and yelling, as the soldiers immobilized him and brutally grabbed his hair, so that his neck would be exposed.
         May  stared at the scene with wide-opened eyes. She observed at the middle-aged actor lifted his sword and swiftly brought the blade down. The girl heard an unpleasant sound, when the sword slashed through the flesh and backbone, meeting little resistance. Then, there was a thud, as the convict’s head fell to the ground and rolled towards May, leaving a red smudge on the snowy white marble floor. The headless body limply fell to the floor.
         “Take this carcass out.” May heard someone saying, but she was still staring at the head at her feet.
         Holy hell, it was real.
         May stared at the head at her feet, as though she was in a trance – it didn’t seem entirely real, but there was no way it was a joke. The blood now pooling around the man’s head was most definitely not fake. The eyes of the convict were glassy and half-opened; the life abandoned them.
         May sharply took a breath, feeling her hands begin to sweat. This man had been killed before her eyes – a minute ago he was talking and screaming, and now his head laid here, separated from the rest of the body. May took a step back, shaking from panic. She didn’t know what scared her more – that she saw a man executed right before her eyes, or that she finally understood, what had happened to her. This was no freaking TV show.
         “Maewyn, I am terribly sorry, that you had to witness that  gruesome scene. Perhaps I should have delivered justice to this criminal outside.” The man, who just beheaded the convict approached her and ushered her into the neighboring chamber.
         May was too shocked to protest or struggle. The panic and the sudden realization of her situation almost petrified her.
         Her mind began processing things at great speed, basic survival instinct kicking in. The people around her were crazy and one thing was for sure – angry, insane people were violent, and she didn’t want to end up dead like the guy a moment ago. She couldn’t afford to make a mistake, not even a tiny one. If she did, she would surely lose her head.
         “You seem distracted, Maewyn. Did something happen?” the middle-aged man asked her casually, as though nothing wrong had happened.
         May lifted her head to look at him, frantically assessing her current situation. The people around here treated her like someone they knew. They thought, that she was their Lady. Considering that she looked a tiny bit differently than her old self, she probably looked now like her. How would they react if she told them, that she’s a stranger? Dungeon? Execution? She thought fast, when suddenly, she got an idea.
         “Actually, I tripped and hit myself in the head. I'm feeling very confused right now,” May blurted out, saying the first thing, which popped into her mind. Almost immediately she berated herself for coming up with the stupidest idea possible.
         The man paled slightly and reached out a hand to feel her forehead, turning around yelling to the one of the servants:
         “Bring the healer in here immediately and send for Hilda.”
         The servant ran out frantically, and May concentrated on surviving.
         So, I am his daughter. If I’m a Lady, he must be the Lord of the castle. One of the Vikings called him a duke, May thought.
         The Duke’s attention turned back to May.
         “Maewyn, rest, please. I wouldn’t want you to overexert yourself,” he said and ushered her onto the bench in the corner of the room. With an impatient gesture, the Duke ushered the servants out of the chamber.
         May sat down and stared at her knees. The situation was becoming more and more freaky with every minute, and she was scared.
         A woman and a man rushed through the door. The woman was in her fifties, dressed in fine silk. She was quite tall and slim; her face proud. She gave Maewyn a quick glance and turned her attention to the Duke. The man beside her looked somewhat like a rat – he was short and thin, with gray hair; his back bent with age.
         “Healer, examine the Lady,” the Duke ordered.
         The woman gasped, covering her mouth with a hem of her sleeve and looked at May with worry in her pale blue eyes.
         May flinched when the healer approached her; she definitely didn’t want the “rat-man” anywhere around her – she was afraid, that he’d try to “cure” her with leeches or slitting her wrists, like they  had done in the Middle Ages. May tried her best to smile.
         “Actually, I think that I feel better already,” she said quickly, wanting to avoid any phony treatment. The elder woman furrowed her eyebrows.
         “Maewyn, let the healer examine you. You don’t want to faint when you meet Lord Abrran, do you?” she said sternly.
         “Abrran who?” May asked.
         She soon realized that the question had been a big mistake. The Duke, Hilda and the healer were now all staring at her, as though she was crazy, well crazier  than she already felt. May shifted uncomfortably on the bench and tried to think of what to say. The healer was the first to break the awkward silence.
         “Lady, Lord Abrran is your fiancĂ©. You are to be married to him this summer. You don’t remember him?” the man asked.
         FiancĂ©? Oh crap, May thought.
         “No,” she said aloud.
         “Who is the man beside me?” the healer asked while pointing to the Duke.
         “My… father. The Duke…” May looked around searching for a hint. However, there were none. She closed her mouth, helplessly shrugging her shoulders.
         “And the lady on my right?” he asked. May didn’t know what to answer. She heard her fake-father call her Hilda, but aside that, she didn’t have any information on her. The girl decided to give up.
         “I don’t remember,” she answered.
         The Duke scowled. Hilda looked at May in shock. The healer shook his head sadly and turned to the Duke.
         “My Lord, I can heal the sickness of the body, but not that of the mind. If the Lady regains her lost memories, I cannot say. This happens sometimes with head injuries. The best cure would be time. It would be wise to take the Lady to familiar places; it could help the memories to come back to her, but I cannot promise anything. This is beyond my ability,” the healer said, looking at May with genuine compassion.
         There was silence once again. The Duke looked as if he was battling with his thoughts.
         “Is there nothing that can be done?” he asked sharply, knitting his thick eyebrows and gazing demandingly at the healer. The rat-like man tugged his ear, hanging his head in an apologizing gesture. He shook his head.
         “I can only pray for the Lady to get better,” he said quietly, bowing his head. The Duke furrowed his brows, as he began pacing, uneasiness reflecting on his face. Finally, he stilled and looked at Hilda and the healer sternly.
         “Maewyn’s sickness must be kept secret. If it was known that the Lady cannot remember neither her father nor the woman who has raised her, the dignity of the Thoen family would be put in jeopardy. I cannot take such risk. The only ones who know about my daughter’s… condition, are we three. I trust you to keep silent,” the Duke said in a threatening voice. The Healer nodded turning slightly pale at the intimidating tone the Duke used.
         Oh, great, May thought, they’re not counting me.
         “Maewyn,” Duke Thoen turned to May. The girl flinched slightly as he said that name. “It is important that you do not let anyone know that there is something wrong with you. You may rely on me, Hilda or healer Kolbrunn. We will make sure no one will discover the truth about your sickness. Do you understand?”
         “Um… I think so,” May answered unsurely.
         She was still confused about what was going on, but she was glad that the Duke and the rest of the people in the room were helping her keep her identity a secret. It was a miracle that she managed somehow to make them think she had amnesia – surely she was lucky on this one. A stupid idea turned out to be not so silly at all… God, if they only knew the whole truth…
         “It is settled then,” Duke Thoen stated. “I shall meet my advisors now, as you're in no shape to sit in on the council, Maewyn, have Hilda take you back to your chambers.”
         With those words, he marched out of the room, followed by the rat like healer, leaving May  with the stern-looking woman. The girl stared back at her, not wanting to be the first to break the silence. The old woman cleared her throat.
         “I imagine that you must be tired, Maewyn. Would you like to rest in your quarters?” she asked.
         Quickly, May thought of ideas. Well, one thing was for sure; she wasn’t going to let them keep her locked up in her room. She had to look around and find out where exactly she was. Plus, There was one more thing she had to confirm.
         “Actually,” she started, gathering her courage to speak up. “I would feel better if I had a stroll outside.  The healer himself said that I could look around for the memories to come back.” She tried to sound as convincing as possible. The older woman sighed, obviously not happy about the perspective of the walk.
         “Very well, Maewyn. Let us go then.”
         For the next hour, May and the older woman walked around the castle, barely saying a word to each other. The place was huge and looked like no other medieval castle May had seen in the documentaries. The castle was not a single building, but a whole complex, which housed hundreds of people, maybe even more than a thousand. The part, where May was, was just a tip of the iceberg. It was the upper castle which was situated high above other buildings and was the residence of the Duke, his family and the closest advisors.
         Its interior was fully decorated with the most beautiful pieces of furniture and art which all looked disturbingly… new. Most castles looked old and destroyed while this one actually seemed like someone had remodeled it just a couple of years ago to make it appear like a castle would have looked in the Middle Ages. Though it would be hard to tell in which Middle Ages – the architectonic style was unrecognizable for the girl. The basic elements resembled the typical European gothic castles, but the decorations and sculptures looked rather oriental. The beautifully woven arrases hung next to the pieces of porcelain, which resembled Ming dynasty vases. May had no idea why, but the vases in the movies have been always from the Ming Dynasty. Moreover, the sculptured pillars looked a lot Viking-like, with the pattern of dragons winding around them. The mix of styles baffled the girl.
          The servants and nobles were dressed in variously designed clothes. From what May saw, the noble women wore the expensive silk Chinese-style robes with some elements of the European royalty attire, just like she did, while the rest was dressed in plain cotton clothing, which would be common in Europe  somewhere around 15th century. May pondered on the thought that the clothes on her back were probably worth a lot more than all she possessed back at home.
         “Hilda?” May suddenly spoke up. “Can we go outside the castle?”
         “My Lady!” the woman scolded May harshly. “You want to go to the village? That’s unthinkable!”
         “The doctor said that I should visit places, so the walk will be good for my health,” the girl insisted, set on getting out of the castle hoping to find more clues to what was going on. Hilda placed her palm on her chest, as though the woman was about to get a heart attack.
         “What an idea! However,…" Hilda paused, as though she was battling hard with her inner thoughts. “I think it is in order, if it is for your health. Very well, I will get the palanquin ready.”
         May’s eyes widened. A palanquin? She was supposed to ride in the thing?
         “No need, I’m fine with walking,” she protested as firmly as she could before Hilda took off. A strange voice escaped the old crone’s throat, as though she was choking, apparently shocked by her words.
         “Walk? On foot? You could get yourself dirty!”
         However, May ultimately managed to talk some sense into the old woman and convince her not to take palanquin, but four armed bodyguards followed the women.
         May and Hilda went outside the gates of the upper castle, heading down the ramp, which encircled the gothic-style palace hidden behind the massive stone walls. The girl expected to be already out of the castle, but that was only its smallest part. Beneath the palace were other fortifications – the buildings made of the large stone blocks were creating a circle around the upper palace, and the high towers were emerging here and there, their multitude making them look like a stone forest. May noticed a lot of armed Vikings-like warriors in chain mail and assumed, that the place must be mainly barracks, housing the entire army.
         Outside the gates of the middle level, there was another one, likewise, equipped in high outer wall and guardian towers. Here the colorful crowd of craftsmen and merchants was filling the streets. The castle was like a real city, gathering all the most useful people under the protection of the fortifications.
         As May and Hilda finally managed to step out of the outer gates, this time leaving the stone stronghold for good, the girl was turning her head in all the directions, greedily taking in the sight. The whole castle wasn’t surrounded with a moat, how she had expected, but the settlement of farmers was built right under the walls, the wooden huts practically linked to the gray stone of the fortifications. However, the moat seemed to be unnecessary, as the walls themselves were an obstacle impossible to overcome – erected to the height of over fifty feet and casting a mighty shadow over the village. Undoubtedly, it was the most gigantic stronghold May had ever seen. The construction of such a huge castle wasn't something she could even imagine.
         The armed guardsmen bowed to May, as she and her “nanny” left the stronghold. The older woman complained all the time – about the dirt on the ground, about noise on the streets or the peasants’ lack of manners. They were walking across the village situated next to the castle. The people there were staring at them and pointing at her with their fingers, whispering. May also noticed that they were all bowing and avoided looking her in the eye. Such strange behavior made her feel uncomfortable, but it wasn’t really surprising. She was dressed like a Lady, and her hair was so long that it reached her knees. The village itself looked like something out of one of  those Renaissance Fair’s or those trips schools would take you to see how real communities lived in the past. All the people here had similar peasant clothing and unusual hairdos.
         The girl noticed, that the majority of the villagers were either blonde or had brown or red hair. Black hair seemed to be rather rare around here. The young women had their hair either undone or had one or two braids falling on their backs. The older women, probably the married ones, had their hair done up in a bun. All the men had their hair rather long, reaching to their jaws, some to shoulders and even past it and had little braids on them. Beards seemed to be also quite popular, which again reminded May of Vikings.
         May paled, as the trip to the village confirmed her greatest fear – she was definitely not at home anymore. Not only was she not in Baltimore – judging by the night sky she was probably not even on Earth. Just… where was she?
         Hilda noticed May’s distress.
         “Maewyn? Child, you are so pale! Let us go back to the castle!” she said turning around and dragging her along.
         All these thoughts flooded through May’s brain as she was guided back to the castle.
         Why do all the bad things happen to me? Why was it me who was sent to the damn freaking Narnia by some freaky magic mirror, not, for example, Hailey?  
         May knew that she had to think of some type of plan, and she had to do it quickly if she didn’t want to end up decapitated. Objective number one: stay alive. Objective number two: go home. It sounded like an excellent plan to her. May had a pretty good  idea of what would happen if the Duke and the people here found out that she was not the real Lady: losing her head... literally. She had to act like a Lady would. That  shouldn’t be too hard, yeah right.... Thankfully, the Duke himself had solved some of that problem for her. To go home though, she had to figure out how to get that cursed mirror to work – it had to be the core of the problem.
         She was almost in her quarters when she heard a commotion from a sobbing woman.
         Hilda rushed into her room, and May followed her. They found a servant sitting on the floor and leaning over something, trying to pick it up. The woman looked up at her with teary eyes and guilt on her face.
         “My Lady, please, forgive me,” she pleaded. “The gift from Lord Abrran… I was cleaning and…”
         She tried to say something more, but it was no longer audible. May looked at what exactly the woman was trying to pick up, hoping to reassure her, it was no big deal. Her eyes widened when she what it was though. The fragments of the mirror! May leaned heavily against the wall, processing what she was staring at: the mirror shattered, her only way home! Her family… she wouldn’t see them ever again! What was she supposed to do now?


Baltimore

         Hailey just finished spreading peanut butter on her sandwich and went to help her sister unpack dad’s useless antiques. She spotted donuts that somehow escaped dad’s appetite and snatched one, placing it on her plate.
         “May!” she called. “I’ve found the donuts. Want one?”
Nobody answered. Hailey got a sudden nervous. She dropped the plate, letting it shatter on the floor and rushed to the corridor. May was lying on the floor unconscious. Next to her was the mirror. Hailey quickly hurried over to check May’s pulse like they had taught her at school. All right. Her heart was beating and she was breathing. Hailey looked once more at the looking glass, a very bad feeling washing over her.
         May moaned and her eyes slowly opened.
         “May!” Hailey exclaimed. “Oh thank goodness! Are you all right?”
         May looked at Hailey’s panicked face, then down at her summer outfit and finally around the corridor, and let loose a loud scream. Hailey tried to calm her down, but that only made matters worse. Scared, May backed away from her sister.
         “Who are you?” she yelled. “Answer me this instant!”
         Hailey didn’t know what to think – her older sister was thrashing in her embrace, genuine bewilderment and fear showing on her face. Didn’t May recognize her?
         “I’m Hailey, your sister. May, don’t joke…”
         “May?” May looked confused and slightly angry. “How dare you to speak to me in that manner, simpleton? I am a Lady, the daughter of a powerful Duke! What do you want with me, demon?”
         “So… you are not May?” Hailey asked slowly, her mind quickly connecting the dots. She glanced at the mirror on the floor.
         Oh dear. May and her blasted luck.