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Chapter 9 - Chapter 8: Reflections in the Abyss

The door clicked

shut behind Dan with the finality of a coffin lid. Maryanne stood frozen in the

threshold, her fingers still gripping the bone blade, its faint glow dimming as

the wards resealed themselves. The house exhaled a breath of relief. Maryanne

had convinced herself she wouldn't let the Crowned-Deep get to her.

"Mom?" Marietta's

voice cut through the haze, sharp with the edge of fear she rarely showed. She

and Anne Faith stood by the table, the diary's pages fluttering as if stirred

by an unseen breath. "What the hell was that? He just... walked in as if he owned

us."

Maryanne sheathed

the blade, forcing her hands to steady. Years of vigilance had forged her into

something unyielding, but Dan's words had cracked that armor, exposing the raw

nerves beneath. "He's not what he seems," she said, her voice low and measured,

masking the tremor in her chest. "Part of the Covenant, but... more. A bridge

between worlds. We don't engage him again unless we have to."

Anne Faith

clutched her pendant, the burn mark on her skin now a faint scar, pulsing like

a second heartbeat. "He mentioned a church. Sorrow Creek. It's one of the sites

from the quarry vision—the threads converge there. If we ignore it..."

"We can't,"

Marietta finished, her eyes hardening with the same resolute fire Maryanne had

seen in her own reflection during the darkest nights. The sisters exchanged a

glance, their bond humming with unspoken power, a current that made the room's

shadows twist unnaturally. "But we're not going in blind. Tell us about the

relic, Mom. The one you hid in the diary."

Maryanne's breath

caught. She'd buried that secret deep, in coded passages only she could

decipher—references to an artifact she'd encountered in the aftermath of her

own battles with the Crowned-Deep. But her daughters' gifts were sharpening,

their inheritance blooming like nightshade in fertile soil. She crossed to the

table, flipping the diary to a page marked with ink that seemed to writhe under

scrutiny.

"The Abyssal

Mirror," she whispered, tracing the illustration: a jagged shard of obsidian,

veined with silver that mimicked underwater currents, its surface eternally

fogged as if breathing. "It's not just a tool of the Covenant—it's a remnant of

the Crowned-Deep itself, forged in the abyss where light dies, and desires are

born twisted. Your father... he found it, and left it in our old apartment. It

reflects not your face, but your lineage—the curses, the potentials, the

horrors waiting to claim you."

Anne Faith leaned

in, her spiritual sight flaring; she could almost hear the mirror's whispers,

faint echoes of drowned pleas. "It draws things," she murmured. "Entities from

beyond. Like Mortifiers—guardians of suffering, explorers of flesh and soul. They

come when the mirror is activated, pulled by its signal, offering 'pleasures'

that are really torments. But why hide it from us?"

"Because it

hungers for our bloodline specifically, Maryanne admitted," her voice cracking

for the first time. The weight of her trauma pressed down, memories of Roman

and Minnie flashing like lightning over stormy waves: their deaths not from

age, as she had heard, but from the mirror's insatiable pull, twisting them

into vessels for something vaster. In the quiet moments, when she allowed

herself to remember, Maryanne could almost feel the cold tug of temptation

she'd buried deep within, a fragment of desire whispering promises of power in

her most vulnerable hours. "It amplifies gifts like yours, Marietta—turns

water-sense into a flood that drowns the mind. And yours, Anne Faith—it warps

spiritual vision into visions of endless agony. If the Covenant uses it in

their rituals, it won't just weaken barriers; it'll shatter them, inviting

those... things to feast on our world."

The room grew

colder, the fog outside pressing against the windows like curious fingers.

Marietta felt the familiar chill snake up her spine, but now it carried

visions: fractured images of herself and Anne Faith, mirrored infinitely, each

reflection more monstrous than the last—eyes hollowed by abyss-light, skin

peeling like old wallpaper to reveal writhing shadows beneath.

"We destroy it,"

Marietta said, clenching her fists. "Before midnight."

Maryanne shook

her head; the morally complex heart of their legacy lay bare. "It's not that

simple. The mirror is tied to us—destroying it requires a sacrifice from the

bloodline. One of you... would have to gaze into it fully, absorb its curse to

seal it away. I've carried that burden alone for years, but now..." Her eyes

met theirs, filled with a mother's fierce love laced with the survivor's

calculation. "Together, we might rewrite the rules."

Outside, the fog

thickened into shapes and vague outlines of figures with hooks and chains,

flickering at the edge of perception. The Mortifiers were already stirring,

drawn by the mirror's latent call, their dimension bleeding into this one like

ink in water.

The sisters

nodded, their bond igniting like a ward against the encroaching dark. For the

first time, Maryanne felt not just hope, but a thrilling dread: her daughters

were no longer inheritors to protect—they were weapons, forged in the same fire

that had nearly consumed her.

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