Chapter 95 The Puppet’s Promise
When you look into a lens, you expect to see the world as it is, but sometimes the glass is just a window into the things we are too afraid to admit out loud.
The evening air was thick and heavy, smelling of ozone and the coming rain. On the porch of the lighthouse cottage, time seemed to have snarled into a knot. Elena stood with her hands pressed to her mouth, her eyes darting between her husband’s stiff, wooden hand and her daughter’s accusatory gaze.
"Arthur?" Elena’s voice was a fragile thread. "What is she saying? Tell her she’s wrong. Tell her the light is playing tricks."
The man who called himself Arthur Marlowe didn't move. He stood with a terrifying stillness, his gaze fixed on a point somewhere above the horizon. The wood of his arm was a dull, unfinished grey, the grain of the timber visible through the skin of his wrist. He looked like a masterpiece that the sculptor had abandoned halfway through.
"The light doesn't play tricks, Elena," the man said. His voice was steady, but it lacked the vibration of a living throat. It sounded like a recording played from the bottom of a well. "It only reveals the architecture. I am the Arthur who was promised. I am the version that fits the house."
"He’s a shell, Mom!" Cassia cried, the camera heavy in her hands. "He’s a 'Version 5.' He’s a collection of traits the Board thought you wanted. He’s not the man who left fifteen years ago!"
Sterling leaned against the garden gate, his black umbrella hooked over his arm. He looked like a man watching a play he had seen many times before. "Don't be so dramatic, Cassia. He’s a very high-quality draft. Most people would be grateful for such a seamless replacement. He doesn't age, he doesn't argue, and he’ll never leave you again."
"A life that is a lie is no life at all," Evan spat, his hand tightening on his flute. He stepped toward Sterling, his heart racing with a mixture of fear and fury. "You used my music. You used her eye. You’re trying to turn our lives into a show for the city."
"The city is where the real audience is, Evan," Sterling said, his eyes gleaming with a cold, professional hunger. "Down here, you’re just a boy playing to the gulls. In the capital, you’d be a god. And Cassia? Her photographs would change the way the world sees history. I’m not your enemy. I’m your promoter."
He gestured to the black carriage waiting in the lane. "The carriage is leaving. You can stay here in this crumbling village with a wooden father and a mother who is slowly losing her mind to a beautiful lie, or you can come with me. You can have the careers you’ve dreamed of."
"At what price?" Cassia asked, her voice trembling.
"Just your presence," Sterling smiled. "The Board doesn't need to control the village if they can control the people the village loves. If you go to the city, Arthur stays 'Real' for your mother. He’ll be the husband she needs. He’ll keep the light. He’ll be perfect."
Elena looked at the wooden-armed man. She reached out and touched the grey timber. A look of profound, agonizing conflict crossed her face. She was a woman who had been starved for love for fifteen years. Could she accept a puppet if it meant she never had to be lonely again?
"Elena, don't," Jonas said, stepping out from the shadows of the garden. Evan’s father looked older than he ever had, his eyes filled with a quiet, dignified sorrow. "A man isn't made of wood and ink. He’s made of the mistakes he makes and the way he says your name when he’s tired. This... this isn't Arthur."
"But it feels like him," Elena whispered, her fingers stroking the wooden wrist. "The way he stands. The way he smells like the sea. Jonas, I don't know if I can go back to the empty bed."
Down in the village, the gossips were having a field day with the arrival of the black carriage.
"It’s a hearse, I tell you!" Mrs. Higgins whispered to her neighbor over a fence made of red clay and stone. "My cousin said black carriages only bring two things: taxes or the end of a family name. And did you see the man in the suit? He looks like a lawyer for the devil."
"I heard they’re taking the Marlowe girl to the city," the baker added, wiping his hands on his apron. "To be a model for those fancy pictures. My wife says it’s a scandal. A lighthouse girl in the capital? She’ll be eaten alive by the velvet and the gin."
"And the boy!" a younger girl chimed in. "Evan’s going too! They say his music is going to be played in a hall made of glass. I wish I had a flute that could get me out of this red dirt."
Back at the cottage, the air was vibrating with a low, mechanical hum. The camera in Cassia’s hand was getting hot. She could feel the silver plate inside pulsing, trying to pull more information from the world around it.
"Cassia," Arthur, the version on the porch said, turning his head toward her. His eyes were no longer brown; they were silver mirrors, reflecting her own terrified face at her. "The carriage is for you. The city is the Archive. It’s where the best versions of us go to live forever. Don't fight the edit. It’s a mercy."
Cassia looked at Evan. She saw the longing in his eyes when Sterling mentioned the conservatory. She saw the dream he had carried in silence for years, the dream of being more than a gardener.
"Evan," she whispered. "If we go... we’re giving up the 'Real.' We’re becoming part of the Board’s collection."
"But if we stay," Evan said, his voice thick with emotion, "your mother lives with a doll, and your father... we don't even know where he is. Sterling knows, Cass. He’s the only one who knows the path to the cellar the Widow talked about."
Sterling stepped toward them, opening his umbrella. "The rain is starting, children. A decision must be made. The carriage or the truth? You can't have both."
Cassia looked at the wooden bird tucked in her apron, Version 4. She felt the map she had suspected was hidden in the grain. She realized that the Widow hadn't just given her a warning; she had given her a key.
"I'll go," Cassia said, her voice clear and hard.
"Cassia, no!" Elena cried.
"I’ll go to the city," Cassia repeated, looking Sterling in the eye. "But only if Evan comes with me. And only if the 'Version 5' on the porch leaves this house forever."
Sterling’s smile widened. "A trade. I love a good trade. Very well. The draft will be retracted. Elena will be alone again, but the daughter will be a star."
"No!" Evan shouted. "We aren't trading your mother’s happiness for a career!"
"We aren't trading anything, Evan," Cassia whispered so only he could hear. "We’re going to the city to find the man who carves the birds. We're going to find my father."
Sterling gestured to the carriage. "Inside, then. We have a long drive ahead, and the light in the capital is waiting for no one."
As Cassia and Evan stepped toward the gate, Jonas grabbed his son’s arm. "Evan. Take this." He handed him a small, heavy pouch. It wasn't money. It was a collection of seeds, the rarest seeds from the lighthouse garden. "Plant these where the soil is grey. Remind them that things still grow from the earth, not just from pens."
They climbed into the carriage. The interior was lined with black silk and smelled of chemicals and old paper. As the door shut, the windows turned opaque. They couldn't see out, and no one could see in.
The carriage began to move.
"Where are we really going, Sterling?" Cassia asked as the man sat across from them, his umbrella resting between his knees.
Sterling didn't answer. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small, silver-plated mirror. He handed it to Cassia.
"Look into it, Cassia. Tell me what you see."
Cassia looked. She didn't see herself. She saw the lighthouse, but it was burning. And standing in the middle of the flames was a man she had never seen before, a man with her eyes, holding a silver pen.
"That's not my father," Cassia whispered.
"No," Sterling said, his voice cold and satisfied. "That’s the man who created the Board. And he’s been waiting for you to come home for a very long time."
The carriage is racing toward a city that is more Archive than reality, but who is the man in the flames? If Arthur Marlowe didn't create the Board, who did? And what is the secret hidden in the seeds Jonas gave to Evan?