Binding the Shadows

Sharda Mishra posted under DreamScape Short Stories on 2024-04-27



My Awakening I had always been sensitive to the veils between worlds, perhaps more than anyone I knew. As a child, I’d seen shadows moving in the corners of my vision, heard whispers in the wind that no one else seemed to notice. These experiences were often dismissed by those around me, leaving me feeling isolated but undeniably drawn to the mysteries of life and death. My fascination with the metaphysical grew as I did, leading me to a solitary career as an archivist in a city's historical society, where I was surrounded by echoes of the past—letters never sent, diaries brimming with secret hopes and sorrows. Late one night, while cataloging old family records, I stumbled upon multiple letters that hinted at the existence of the Threshold. The letters talked about a place said to be the meeting point of the living and the dead. The walls were not just physical barriers, but curtains to the other side.  That night, as the moon cast a silver glow through the archive’s skylight, I dreamt of the mansion for the first time, its corridors whispering secrets meant only for me. It was my dreamscape, floating unfettered yet curiously. In my dreams, my eyes fluttered open, greeted by the somber dance of dust motes in a beam of moonlight. The room was vast, with walls draped in dark, heavy velvet and a ceiling lost to shadows. Rising from an ornate canopy bed, a swell of confusion and awe washed over me. I sat up, my head swirling as if emerging from deep water. The air was cool, carrying a decayed scent of old wood and forgotten stories. “Where am I?” My voice, barely a whisper, echoed in the cavernous space, amplifying my solitude. As I slipped out of the bed, my feet touched the cold, black marble floor. I shivered, wrapping my arms around myself. I couldn’t recognize my attire—a long, flowing nightgown of silken lace. It added to the surreal feeling. “Hello?” My call was tentative, half-hoping for no response. The silence that answered me seemed alive, expectant. I moved towards the only source of light, a large window framed by thick curtains. Drawing them aside, I peered out into a garden bathed in moonlight, its flora overgrown yet eerily beautiful. Statues of angels and gargoyles peered back at me, eyes glinting in the ghostly light. The sound of a distant clock chiming drew my attention back inside. Turning around, I caught my breath. Portraits lined the walls, their subjects’ eyes following my every move. The air grew colder, and as I stepped closer to examine a painting, the floorboards creaked ominously underfoot. “Who are you?” I murmured, touching the face of a woman in the portrait who bore an uncanny resemblance to me. “You have awakened at last, Ketki,” a soft, melodious voice floated through the room. Startled, I spun around. A figure stood in the doorway—a woman dressed in bright red silk saree, her expression somber. “Who are you? And where is this place?” I asked. “I am Bhawani Bahu, one of the keepers of this mansion. You are in the Threshold, a realm between life and death, dream and reality. You were brought here for a purpose, which will reveal itself in due time.” My heart raced. “Am I dead?” “Not quite,” Bhawani Bahu replied, her lips curling into a mysterious smile. “Follow me, and you might find the answers you seek.” Reluctantly, I followed as Bhawani Bahu led me through winding corridors filled with whispering echoes and flickering candlelight. Each room we passed was locked in a different time, each holding a breath of centuries past. Finally, we stopped before a large, oak door. Bhawani Bahu paused, her hand on the embellished doorknob. “Beyond this door lies the mansion’s library. Are you prepared to learn its secrets?” I nodded, though uncertainty knotted my stomach. The door creaked open, revealing a library with expanded shelves filled with ancient tomes, the center dominated by a large, round table covered in various artifacts. “Your journey begins here, Ketki. The past residents of this mansion are bound by something powerful, and you are key to their release. But be warned, not all spirits seek salvation.” As Bhawani Bahu vanished into thin air, I was left alone, my heart pounding in the silence. The clock chimed again, louder this time, and I knew that the hour of my ordeal had begun. The Whispering Walls As I wandered about the library, the weight of my task bore down on me. I couldn’t help but feel that the mansion was familiar in a way that went beyond my dreams. I wondered if my life, spent straddling the line between history and the present, had somehow prepared me for this moment.  I slowly turned around, my eyes scanning the shadowy corners of the vast library. The air was heavy with the scent of aged paper and wood polish. As I approached the center table, my fingers traced the spines of leather-bound books, each embossed with titles gilded in fading gold. The whispering seemed to grow louder, a chorus of voices pleading and warning, merging into an unintelligible hum. “Reveal your secrets,” I murmured, picking up a dusty volume. As I opened it, the pages fluttered rapidly as if caught in a breeze, stopping on a marked page with a handwritten note: “Beware the thirteenth chime.” Confused, I placed the book back on the table. My gaze caught a flicker of movement in the periphery. Turning sharply, I saw nothing but the endless rows of books. The library felt alive, breathing in sync with my rising panic. “Who's there?” My voice was firmer this time, my senses heightened. “You are not alone,” a soft voice echoed from the walls. I spun around to find a small, oval portrait of a young man, his eyes sad but kind. “I am Daksh. I was once master of this house,” the portrait spoke, its lips moving slightly. “How is this possible?” I approached the portrait, my curiosity overcoming my fear. “The mansion keeps us,” Daksh said. “It houses people from several generations. It feeds on our stories, our unresolved fates. Help us find peace, and you may find your own way back.” “Tell me about this mansion,” I asked. “This mansion was called Threshold manor, and was built by Maharaja Renketu in the 18th century as a sanctuary for those caught between worlds,” Daksh replied. “Maharaja Renketu was a scholar of the arcane and believed that the location of the mansion was a convergence point of spiritual energies. This made it a magnet for souls who died with unresolved earthly ties. Unfortunately, his intentions veered from sanctuary to prison as his obsession with the afterlife grew. He developed a ritual that inadvertently bound the spirits to the mansion, trapping them within its walls. This ritual was meant to offer peace and guidance to the restless spirits, but due to a flaw—a miscalculation of the cosmic alignments—it instead tethered them permanently to the earthly realm.” “How sad! What must I do?” I asked, my resolve hardening. “Listen to our stories. Help us resolve what was left undone. But remember, each story has its shadows.” The walls began to murmur again, and other portraits around the room came to life, each voice overlapping with another. I listened, my heart aching with the sorrow of their tales. One by one, I spoke with the spirits. A woman named Kusum mourned her lost love, a soldier who never returned from war. A young boy, Tinku, searched endlessly for his missing mother. Each story wove a thread of grief and longing, painting a fabric of the mansion’s tragic history. As the clock neared midnight, I felt the air thicken. A sense of urgency enveloped me. I remembered the warning from the book—the thirteenth chime. “Tell me about the thirteenth chime,” I said to Daksh's portrait. “It is when the mansion resets the clock of fate. Whatever you have resolved by then either saves a soul or condemns it further. You must work quickly.” Determined, I focused on helping Kusum first. I scoured the library for letters or tokens from Kusum’s soldier, anything that might bring her peace. After hours of searching, I found a hidden compartment in a wall, revealing a bundle of old letters tied with a ribbon, yellowed with age. Returning to Kusum’s portrait, I handed over the letters. The spirit of Kusum wept as she read them, each word a balm to her restless soul. As she finished, her face softened, and with a grateful smile, she faded away, her part of the mansion grew brighter. Energized by my success, I turned to help Tinku. Remembering a mention of a secret garden in one of the books, I ventured out of the library in search of it, hoping to find a clue to his mother's whereabouts. The Clock Strikes Thirteen Leaving the whispering walls of the library behind, I wandered through dark, twisting hallways. My only light came from a flickering candle I had found on a cobwebbed stand. The deeper I ventured into the mansion, the more I felt the oppressive weight of time—each tick of the unseen clock a heavy step toward the mysterious thirteenth chime. I found the garden door hidden behind a heavy tapestry depicting the mansion in its days of glory. Pushing the door open, I stepped out into the night air. The garden was wild, overgrown with thorns and vines, but bathed in the silver glow of the moon, it held an eerie beauty. Amidst the tangled greenery, I discovered a statue of a woman, half-covered in moss and ivy. The face, worn by the elements, still bore a striking resemblance to the boy Tinku from the portraits. Kneeling beside the statue, I cleared the overgrowth, revealing an inscription: “To my dearest son, forever in my heart.” Convinced this was Tinku’s mother, I rushed back to the mansion to tell the boy what I had discovered. As I entered, the clock began to strike, resounding deeper and more ominously than before. I counted each chime, my pace quickening. “Tinku, I found her!” I called out as I reached his portrait. The boy’s eyes lit up with hope. “Where? Where is she?” “In the garden. She’s been there all along, watching over you.” “Can we go to her?” His voice was eager, filled with years of longing. “Yes, but we must hurry!” I grabbed his hand, feeling an inexplicable warmth from the painted figure, as if his spirit was momentarily alive and vibrant. We raced through the mansion. The chimes echoed in our ears. Eleven... twelve... Reaching the garden just as the thirteenth chime rang out, Tinku ran to the statue. He touched the stone, and a gentle light enveloped both the boy and the statue. “Thank you,” his voice echoed around me as he faded away, his spirit released. Breathing heavily, I looked around. The garden seemed brighter now, the air lighter. I had saved two souls tonight. But the mansion was vast, its halls filled with many more, and the clock would reset, its chimes ready to start over at one. Navigating the mansion’s corridors, I felt an increasing synchronicity with the spirits around myself. My entire life had been a prelude to this encounter, a dance with the ephemeral that had now taken a startlingly tangible form. With each spirit I helped, I felt a piece of my own history fall into place, as if I too was being healed by my actions. The mansion was not just a place of confinement for lost souls; it was a crucible for my own transformation, challenging me to confront my fears and desires that mirrored those of the spirits I was helping. Returning to the library, I knew my work was far from done. As I prepared to delve into another tale, I felt a strange empowerment. This place, bound by sorrow and time, was mine to mend, one spirit at a time. The Shadow Feast I spent the next few hours of my dream navigating the labyrinthine corridors and chambers of the mansion, each room unveiling layers of history and whispers of those who once dwelled within. My encounters with the spirits had taught me that the mansion was not just a repository of the dead but a crucible of unfinished lives, each yearning for closure. As I prepared myself for more surprises, a peculiar invitation slid under my door. The paper was black as night, with a silver script that shimmered faintly: "You are cordially invited to the Feast of Shadows at midnight in the Grand Dining Hall." Intrigued and cautious, I dressed in a black saree that appeared in my wardrobe as if by magic—a deep, velvety black that seemed to absorb the light. Descending the grand staircase, I felt the air thrum with a strange energy, the walls themselves pulsating softly as if in anticipation. As I entered the Dining Hall, the doors swung open silently before me, revealing a vast room lit by candles that flickered with an unnatural glow. The table was set for a feast, with crystal goblets, fine china, and silver gleaming under the candlelight. Around the table, shadows gathered, their forms vague and shifting, murmuring in a discord of hushed tones. “Welcome, Ketki,” a voice resonated from the head of the table. A figure stepped forward, more solid than the others, dressed in an elegant suit of an indefinable shade. His eyes, dark and deep, seemed to hold centuries of secrets. “I am Maharaj Renketu, once master of this house, and now merely another prisoner of its whims. I was once a nobleman and a seeker of esoteric knowledge. I turned my family estate into a haven for lost souls, driven by the tragic death of my beloved wife.” “I’m so sorry. What happened to your wife?” I asked Maharaj Renketu. “It was that dreadful Measles, which took her away from me. She became a spirit I could never reach,” Maharaj Renketu replied with a sullen voice. “My deep obsession with reuniting with my wife led me to study the thresholds of life and death and I created this mansion’s binding spell.” “Did you reunite with your wife?” “No, we didn’t,” Maharaj Renketu’s head hung in sadness. “My own spirit became ensnared by the same forces I sought to command, dooming me to watch over the spirits as both their warden and fellow prisoner.” I took a seat hesitantly as the figures around the table began to solidify, revealing themselves as spirits of various eras, each bearing the mark of their time. “We gather here, once a cycle, to share our tales and our regrets,” Maharaj Renketu continued. “Tonight, we share this with you, hoping that you might help us find the peace that has eluded us. Something had turned my family estate into a haven for lost souls, driven by the tragic death of my beloved wife. She also became a spirit I could never reach.” One by one, the spirits present in the dining hall recounted their stories, each narrative weaving into the fabric of the mansion’s dark history. A lady in a red saree spoke of a forbidden love, a soldier from the Great War lamented the friend he betrayed, and a young maid wept for the child she lost to the mansion’s cruel whims. As each story unfolded, I felt the weight of their collective sorrow, but also a growing understanding of the power held within these walls, power that could perhaps be harnessed to set these souls free. When the clock struck midnight, the feast appeared, dishes materializing out of thin air—exotic fruits, curried meats with strange spices, and desserts dripping with honey and nuts. As I tasted each dish, I found that with every bite, I glimpsed moments of the lives of those at the table, as if the food itself was imbued with their memories. “Your turn,” Maharaj Renketu said, turning to me with an expectant look. With the eyes of the assembly upon me, I spoke of my own life, my trials and tribulations, and how I came to find myself at the mansion. As I spoke, I realized that my own story was now irrevocably entwined with those of the mansion’s inhabitants. “Your story is not yet complete,” Maharaj Renketu said, his voice echoing slightly. “But you have the power to complete ours.” As the feast concluded, the spirits faded back into shadows, leaving me alone with Maharaj Renketu. “Help us, and you may yet find the key to your own chains,” he whispered before disappearing, his words hanging in the air like a promise or a curse. Revelations in the Dust As the mansion slept under the starlit sky, I wandered deeper in my dreams and into the mysteries of the mansion, armed with the knowledge and resolve gleaned from the feast. Each room, each ghostly encounter brought me closer to understanding the mansion’s true nature—a nexus of lost souls, caught in a web spun from their own regrets and failures. I felt stressful with anticipation, each shadow and whisper hinting at revelations soon to unfold. The night felt surreal, as if I had stepped into a dreamscape where reality blurred with the ethereal. I was drawn irresistibly to the heart of the mansion, the ancient library — a sanctum of knowledge that seemed untouched by time. The mahogany door creaked as I pushed it open, releasing the faint, musty smell of old paper and leather, a scent that spoke of age and secrets. The library also contained the original deeds and documents of the house. Among these papers, I found a map depicting the mansion as it once was, with a single point marked as "The Heart." Compelled by an unseen force and guided by this map, I navigated through forgotten passageways and hidden doors until I reached a small, secluded Mandir, buried deep within the mansion’s bowels. In the center(Garbhagriha) of the Mandir, stood a neglected altar atop which lay a large, leather-bound book—the Book of Thresholds, the ledger of entrapped souls. As I opened the book, the pages fluttered to life, like captive birds desperate for release. Each page listed the names of those who had passed through the mansion, their spirits bound to the house as long as their stories remained unresolved. Understanding dawned on me; I realized that to free the spirits, I needed to rewrite their endings, to give them the closure they lacked. One by one, I worked through the night, my pen guided by a force I could scarcely understand. I rewrote histories, untangled the knotted threads of each spirit’s tale, and gave them the endings they deserved. As I did so, the air grew lighter, the oppressive weight of the mansion lifted with each name I freed. Its walls seemed to breathe a sigh of relief. It was then that I felt drawn to a part of the library I had previously overlooked. Hidden behind an ornate door were rows of dusty shelves filled with forgotten lore. The wood of the door was carved intricately, whispering secrets of ages past. The library was a labyrinth of towering bookshelves, each laden with books and forgotten manuscripts. Cobwebs stretched from shelf to shelf. The soft silver threads glinted in the moonlight that filtered through the stained-glass windows. The books were covered with fine dust stirring into the air. At the far end of the library, I found what I was unconsciously seeking—a secluded alcove with a heavy wooden desk cluttered with scattered papers and ancient texts. The papers crackled under my touch as I began to sift through them, each page a fragile remnant of history. Among these ancient texts, I found a series of letters exchanged between Renketu and a mysterious correspondent. They spoke of metaphysical theories and otherworldly bindings. As I delved deeper, the conversation between Renketu and his associate grew more intense, their words weaving a complex fabric of fate and power. Then, one letter stopped me cold—it mentioned a ‘child of destiny’, a direct descendant prophesied to have the power to unravel Renketu’s spiritual bindings and free the trapped spirits.  My breath caught in my throat. The implications of the words were overwhelming. As the pieces fell into place, I realized with a mix of awe and terror that this child was likely me. This lineage was not of blood but a spiritual legacy, passed through generations marked by supernatural encounters.  This revelation cast a new light on everything I had experienced since entering the mansion. My inexplicable draw to this place, my innate ability to interact with and release the spirits—it all pointed to a destiny I had never imagined. The weight of this knowledge was both terrifying and exhilarating. As dawn broke, the mansion trembled, a deep groan echoed through its halls as if it were both protesting and relenting at once. I rushed to the grand entrance, the doors now stood mysteriously open. It revealed the path that led away from the dark hold of the mansion. I barely noticed the passage of time until a faint light began to seep through the windows. Dawn was approaching, and with it, I felt rushed. I gathered the crucial documents and stepped across the threshold. The fresh cool morning air of the outside world filled my lungs, washing over me with the promise of a new beginning. I looked back one last time. Turning back, I saw the spirits I had helped, gathered in the morning light, their faces peaceful at last. They nodded to me, gratitude and relief in their eyes, before fading away. Their bonds finally broke. The mansion appeared like a normal house. The mansion’s dark allure was gone with the spirits that once haunted its halls. As I walked away, I knew my life was forever changed. The mansion receded into the distance as the sun climbed higher. Its rays painted the sky with promises of new beginnings.  I woke up with a jolt and realized that I had entered a place between dream and reality and had emerged not just a survivor, but a savior, a bearer of a legacy that would continue to shape my destiny.  My journey through the dreamscape had ended, but the story of the child of destiny was just beginning—quiet, yet resolute, steps echoing into the future. The road ahead was uncertain, but for the first time in what felt like forever, it was mine to shape.