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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 — The Dust of Forgotten Things

Aiden Chase had always lived between two worlds—though he never realized it until the day one of them reached back for him.

At twenty-four, Aiden was the kind of man people overlooked. Tall but slightly stooped from years of reading, dark-haired, with eyes that carried a constant trace of distant thought. He worked as a freelance book cover designer, spending most of his days behind a glowing screen, shaping imaginary realms into visual form for stories he secretly envied. Fantasy novels had been his refuge since childhood. While other children chased footballs, Aiden chased dragons, ancient gods, and lost kingdoms through pages worn thin by rereading.

Yet for all his love of fiction, he never believed in magic.

Magic belonged in ink and imagination—not in the quiet suburbs where his ancestral house stood.

The house itself was older than memory. Built nearly a century ago by his great-grandfather, it had passed down through generations of the Chase family. After his parents moved abroad, the house became his responsibility. It creaked at night. The wood sighed with temperature changes. The attic—especially the attic—felt like a sealed time capsule of forgotten lives.

Aiden avoided it for years.

Until the letter came.

It wasn't mystical. It wasn't dramatic. Just an official notice from a property inspector advising structural repairs before the rainy season worsened the roof damage. Practical. Annoying. Inevitable.

So on a quiet Saturday afternoon, armed with gloves, a flashlight, and reluctant determination, Aiden climbed the narrow wooden ladder to the attic.

The air was thick with dust and the scent of aged timber. Shafts of sunlight pierced through cracks in the roof, illuminating drifting particles like suspended stars. Old furniture lay beneath white sheets. Boxes filled with yellowed photographs and brittle letters were stacked carelessly against the far wall.

He worked methodically at first, sorting, discarding, organizing.

Then he noticed something odd.

At the far end of the attic, partially hidden behind a tall wardrobe draped in cloth, was a section of the wall that looked… different. Cleaner. Less decayed.

Curious, Aiden pulled the wardrobe aside with effort.

Behind it stood an object almost as tall as he was.

A mirror.

It was unlike any mirror he had seen. The frame was forged from dark silver metal, etched with intricate carvings that resembled intertwining vines and unfamiliar symbols. Despite the attic's neglect, the glass surface was immaculate—untouched by dust.

As if it refused to be forgotten.

Aiden frowned.

"This wasn't here before," he muttered, though he couldn't be certain.

He stepped closer. The air around it felt cooler, subtly heavier. When he brushed his fingers against the frame, a faint vibration pulsed beneath the metal—so slight he almost thought he imagined it.

He wiped his gloved hand across the surface.

The glass rippled.

Not shattered. Not cracked.

Rippled—like disturbed water.

Aiden jerked his hand back, heart pounding.

"That's not possible."

He leaned in cautiously.

His reflection stared back at him.

But it was wrong.

The attic behind his reflection was gone. In its place stretched a vast sky painted in deep violet hues. Three luminous moons hovered above jagged crystalline towers rising from a distant city. Shapes moved in the air—winged silhouettes drifting between spires.

Aiden blinked.

The attic returned.

He stepped back, breathing hard.

Hallucination. Fatigue. Dust inhalation.

He leaned forward again.

The attic vanished once more.

The purple sky returned—clearer this time. Wind seemed to move across unseen plains. Light shimmered across structures too elegant, too impossible to belong to Earth.

Aiden pressed his palm against the glass.

The surface was cold.

And solid.

But the world beyond continued moving.

He watched a robed figure walk across a distant bridge suspended in midair. Watched banners flutter in wind he could almost hear. This was no static image. No trick of light.

It was a place.

His mind raced through explanations—projection technology, hidden screens, elaborate pranks—but none fit. There were no wires. No power source. No logical framework.

And then he noticed something that made his blood run colder than the mirror itself.

In the distance, one of the winged silhouettes stopped mid-flight.

It turned.

Toward him.

Toward the mirror.

Aiden staggered backward as the glass shimmered violently.

The carvings along the frame began to glow faintly, tracing lines of pale silver light. Symbols rearranged themselves like shifting constellations. A soft hum filled the attic, resonating deep in his chest.

He wasn't imagining this.

The mirror wasn't reflecting a myth.

It was connected to one.

And somehow—

It had been waiting.

For him.

As the light intensified, Aiden felt something awaken inside him—a subtle pull, like a thread tightening between his heartbeat and the world beyond the glass.

For the first time in his life, the line between fiction and reality shattered.

And Aiden Chase understood one terrifying truth:

The stories he loved were not inventions.

They were memories of a world just beyond the mirror.

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