before you know it you have turned the page. The last figure, you realize, is straight ahead of you. He is the reason you are here at all. Yes, you begin to recall, you followed the man to this room, this place. Before you came here, you had been in a room with seven pictures on the wall, though one frame hung empty. The room belonged to the man before you; you had followed the man into the picture of... of a book, this book, you realize. Only shortly before that you had just met the man. He had been seated in a grand chair, a throne, it must have been. Thin and pale with eyes that never quite came out from the shadows of his raven black hair. No, no, you realize, that’s not right. His hair was as silky white as his skin. The black truly was from a raven, perched just over his shoulder. The man had stood, then, to cross to the picture-room and you had realized how tall and slender he was for the first time. You belonged to this man, you had somehow understood at that point; at this moment in time, in this place, you and everything around you belonged to him. The tall man had allowed you to follow. It had, you suppose, amused him to do so.

Before the throne room there had been another tall man, taller than this one. You strain to remember now, feeling the page fading into white. The other man, not pale like the others, but thin and willowy, had told you where to go. What had he said his name was? You can barely hold the image in your mind, and everything is fading quickly, now, to whiteness. He had said something, something about a library, something about the books that people didn’t write. Not this book, though, no one didn’t write this book, you’re quite sure.

Soon the whiteness of the page will overcome the words entirely and you will be forced to look up. You will not, however, look up from a thick, leather-bound book to see the six pale-faced strangers. You will not look up to see again the face of the man you followed. You will not have a chance to look into the eyes beneath the shadows of his brow.

Though you did follow him out of the room of pictures, you know you never left and that you are still in his home, still under his rule. The man turns, as you read quickly to catch any last glimpse of an answer. He is watching you now, as if waiting for you to look up, waiting to bid you goodbye. The words are about to disappear and you are about to look up, and then you will realize that you have allowed your mind to drift into sleep while reading some piece of abstract fiction, and that you have only just snapped out of it. The piece, you imagine, must have reminded you of a world you have seen many times before, in different ways. The matter, incidentally, is not worth thinking about too hard. You let it go, allow the page to fade, and look up from the paper.

Turn the page back ... Close the book

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