Before long, the distinct, four-note humming stopped.
“Red magic,” breathed Alice, exhaling with a grand relief. “You’ve ended just where you should.”
Kneeling in sudden surrender to the shifting room, she curved herself into a loop of her own question—neck pressed to the wall, nose relearning how to sniff.
A soft groaning filled the air, rather like a biscuit attempting to recall a crisp tune.
The mirrors—bent awkwardly like warm toffee, still brimming with dizzling bottles—shimmered faintly, actively composing the next line of the story together.
Their light flickered—brightening, dimming, brightening again—as if modelling with one hand and bargaining with someone on the far side of Wonderland, eager to have a well-reflected story.
Even the bottles quivered within them, their glass caught between cracking and vanishing, as though the words DRINK ME were desperately trying to erase themselves from the code.
Alice, her neck still stiff, cast a sidelong glance at them.
“Hopefully,” she murmured, “the system won’t hang before the next bit loads”—a phrase she’d only learned earlier that morning, and still half believed was a charm.
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