"Well, if the opportunity arises, we could take a train into the City, and then a cab everywhere else. Or -- just find a nice tailor in Sleepy Hollow, though I will cry foul if he's anything less than cosmopolitan."
It's just books, right? She walks along at a steady pace, one hand touching the shelves as she marks the sections, commiting them to memory.
"They seem to get older as they go along. And I found the part named 'The Restricted Section' but I'm not up to reading books that growl and move about under their own power."
"Sunlight, weakens the Horseman of Death? How strange."
There are pendant lights hanging from the ceiling at fairly regular intervals, and she glances up, mentally keeping track of how many they've passed.
"And I would be the last person to be surprised by that, actually. I spent three years convincing myself I wasn't dead. And I did a very good job of it, too. The mind is predisposed to seeing only the evidence which supports our own conclusions."
"Every day. Every time I fell asleep. Sometimes walking around in broad daylight. I could see the bullet spiralling towards my head in slow motion. I felt the impact, felt it push me over backwards. I could hear the medics that responded to the scene. I could hear the doctors working on me, trying to save my life."
"All the while, walking around, interacting with people I imagined were only constructs of my own mind."
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"Then we have a deal. And I must find an acceptable tailor in Sleepy Hollow."
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She raises an eyebrow in query.
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"If transport could be secured. The world doesn't seem to be very amenable to travelling on horseback, in these times."
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She remembers New York having a fairly accessible public transit system.
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"No. In a car, since I arrived in this time, and young Mr Todd has been teaching me about motorcycles. But not on a train."
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"I'll look into it", he promises. "And with no deliberate cheating."
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"I look forward to it. Until then, I'm curious. Have you, erm... Found the end of the Library yet?"
It's not an offer, it's a genuine question.
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"...no." He peers down the stacks. "I was starting to wonder if there was one."
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"I've been coming here for six months, and I haven't either. I always end up with too much to carry before I found the end."
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"Would you like to investigate?" Beat. "Although perhaps we should take a hint from Theseus and bring a ball of thread."
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"You haven't seen the garage."
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She takes a step forward, and glances back at him.
"Well? Are you coming?"
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"But of course."
He wouldn't let Alex face... the library... alone, and anyway, he wants to know.
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"They seem to get older as they go along. And I found the part named 'The Restricted Section' but I'm not up to reading books that growl and move about under their own power."
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Ichabod blinks.
"Living books? Yes, those sound as though they might... resist."
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"Magic." He should understand that sentiment.
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"Magic." He grins wryly. "Although I've never known it to be so blatant in my world."
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She throws him a look over her shoulder.
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"He only comes out at night - we believe sunlight weakens him - and you would be surprised what people can convince themselves they did not see."
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There are pendant lights hanging from the ceiling at fairly regular intervals, and she glances up, mentally keeping track of how many they've passed.
"And I would be the last person to be surprised by that, actually. I spent three years convincing myself I wasn't dead. And I did a very good job of it, too. The mind is predisposed to seeing only the evidence which supports our own conclusions."
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"Sunlight promotes life", he points out. "Perhaps it is anathema to him. Did you recall receiving the wound that killed you?"
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"Every day. Every time I fell asleep. Sometimes walking around in broad daylight. I could see the bullet spiralling towards my head in slow motion. I felt the impact, felt it push me over backwards. I could hear the medics that responded to the scene. I could hear the doctors working on me, trying to save my life."
"All the while, walking around, interacting with people I imagined were only constructs of my own mind."
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Ichabod winces.
"That sounds really quite extraordinarily difficult."
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