Book Five, Chapter 54: Tea Party
byFrom the outside, the House of Dolls looked picture-perfect, like an American Girl store or the type of place that only existed in the minds of young girls playing tea parties with their dolls.
Because there were dolls. Tons and tons of them.
It was a Queen Anne-style home, except for two of the walls—the ones facing the street—were mostly windows. Through those windows, you could see tables set up for patrons who might want to have a tea party themselves, as the Dollhouse was apparently a restaurant as well as a shop.
Who would go eat in a place filled with those soulless creatures? I didn’t know.
There were lots of fabrics around the house with a checkered pattern, similar to the one usually found on a picnic blanket. The entire place was dusted and perfect, situated on the corner of a street in a well-to-do neighborhood with old houses and large trees.
Out on the porch, four dolls had been set up in rocking chairs to greet the neighborhood. Only one of them appeared to be cursed, as its eyes just wouldn’t stay still.
For Carousel, this place was underwhelming so far. I had expected the walls to be made out of melted Barbie dolls or something. And yet, it was perfectly delightful—from a distance.
Because no matter how good it looked as we walked down the street, the closer we got, the more omens we saw peeking out through those windows in the front.
We stopped at the corner across the street from the house, and Antoine whipped out the Atlas, which he carried with him.
Ideally, we would keep the Atlas at the Loft so that it didn’t get carried into a Storyline and then lost to us forever. But we figured that if Kimberly got trapped in a Storyline, the Loft would also be lost to us, and if the Atlas was there, it would be gone too so there really was no safe place for it.
Finding a way to copy the Atlas without spoiling ourselves was on the To-Do List.
“So, what have we got?” Michael said. “Is it safe to walk in? Or are we just gonna sit out here and stare?”
“I cannot impress on you enough how difficult it is to search through this book,” Andrew said. “It was designed for someone with Eureka.”
I chuckled because I had come to the same realization myself when trying to search through the Atlas. We would have our Scholar back one day, and when we did, it would be his job to look through that damn book.
“I doubt the Psychic would have sent us here if it was a death trap,” I said. “We paid her forty whole dollars.”
As much as that was a joke, I also felt like it might be true—that we could trust a lead from a Paragon, at least within the terms of the normal game, if not under all circumstances. Perhaps if there had been some ominous warning along with it…
“Here it is,” Andrew said. “Unfortunately, this section is not nearly as complete as some of the others.”
“That’s because nobody wanted to go into the Dollhouse,” Isaac said.
He was probably right.
As Andrew read through the scant information about the House of Dolls, I noticed that Ramona was staring at the house. I followed her gaze up to the second floor, and sure enough, there was an open window. While the room was dark, it did appear that something was sitting in front of the window—not in a chair, but almost as if a bed was situated in front of the window.
I could only see the silhouette.
“Spooky,” I said. “You think we’re being watched?”
Ramona shrugged. I could tell from the look on her face that something was off.
“What’s up?” I asked.
“I don’t know,” she said. “I just feel like someone’s looking at me.”
I looked back up at the dark figure in the window. There could have been someone there, or I could have been looking at a pillow—I couldn’t tell. I also felt something, but then, out in the open, my Hysteric trope was making me all kinds of anxious.
Andrew closed the book and handed it back to Antoine.
“I have to conclude that if the Dollhouse were dangerous, then someone who had written about it would have mentioned it,” he said. “More than that, it is a restaurant of some sort—or at least I think I see a menu by the door. And restaurants are often safe enough to eat at, with some notable exceptions.”
I could understand the rest of them having their concerns. I couldn’t imagine what it would be like to go through Carousel without being able to see omens easily, let alone see how they triggered.
“All right,” I said. “I’ll go in and help scope the place out. We don’t know this area very well, so we need scouts to stay out and keep a lookout. Isaac that means you, as much as you probably wanted to go in the Dollhouse.”
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“Aw, nuts,” Isaac said.
“Lila,” I said, “if you would stay out for a while and just keep an eye out while I scope things out in there, we’ll send for you if we find something.”
Technically, the lead that we were given was given to Andrew, Lila, and Michael, so it would make sense for her to go into the Dollhouse. But at the same time, I was far too curious—and a little too much of a micromanager—to stay outside now that we were on the trail of something big.
Your friends have all fallen, some here, some there;
‘Til they have risen, you’ve no friends to spare.
I fully expected to find a clue about the fortune, and I wanted to be there to see it for myself. The more I looked at those two little lines, the more certain I became that the straightforward warning was just a misdirect and that the true meaning was something else entirely. I was still working it over in my mind.
“I’ll stay out here with the Atlas,” Antoine said.
I guess that means me, Andrew, Michael, maybe Cassie, maybe Kimberly. “Dina,” I said, looking at her, “do you want to look at some dolls?”
“The first time one of those things says my name, I’m going to punt it across the room,” she said.
“Who else? Ramona, do you want to come?” I asked, noting that she was still looking at the upstairs window.
She nodded.
Kimberly wasn’t that excited to go and Cassie was acting hesitant for some reason, so Andrew, Michael, Dina, Ramona, and I set off across the road. As we got closer, I kept my eyes moving to try to get a layout and understand the omens.
My worst fear was that they might be moving, as dolls tended to do in horror movies. But for the most part, the House of Dolls appeared to be an ordinary shop—lots of omens for sale, as well as a few trope items, including a baby doll that everyone in a horror movie would pretend was a real baby.
Kimberly could use it with her pregnancy trope. I’d have to tell her about it.
As we approached the porch, I was able to read the menu for the tea and treats available at the shop.
The Teacup Cottage: House of Dolls
Enchanted Teas and SweetsTeas
Moonlit Gumdrop Elixir
Fairy Fog and Petalbrew
Whimsical Wishing Tea
Starlit Dream Draught
Midsummer Marshmallow Mist
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