Summary:
Fib, an animated doll woman often fawns over the bookstore owner downstairs, Declan, but can't manage the courage to speak to him. Humans would be terrified of an animate doll. She sets out to make a concoction to change things for the better, only, a chance encounter with him sends her plans awry, with unexpected results.
_
"Do you? Do you know what you're doing? Hello? Fib?" a crow squawked.
"Hush, Berry," Fib replied. Her eyes spun around into a slanted annoyance. "I know exactly what I'm doing." Her wooden nose pushed forward. "I sort of know what I'm doing!" With a hand she jammed her nose back into place and looked into her all-too-large cauldron.
Berry hopped back and forth on the windowsill. "Ask Eloise! Ask Eloise!"
Fib scoffed, shaking her head. "She's not here right now, is she? And I doubt she'll be coming back any time soon."
Berry briefly stopped his hopping, crooking his head, before returning to his excited back and forth. Fib looked between the empty cauldron and the book laid out on a table next to it. Was she really going to do this? She nodded and focused on the book. Eloise, recluse that she was, wrote all her work in an elaborate code that Fib distantly remembered. Fortunately, Fib's anatomy gave her a bit of an advantage.
"Study time! Study time!" Berry said.
"Would you be quiet?" She snapped her mouth, creating an annoying clacking. Fib looked back to the tome. "Next would be a touch of the target's hair." Her nose remained still. "And then after that... The flower that they love?" It moved an inch. "No, the flower that shows love." Fib tilted her head. "What's a flower that shows love?"
"Rose! Rose of the heart!"
"Where am I supposed to get a stupid rose?"
"Declan!"
"I'm not asking him for a rose!" Fib slightly deflated. That's why she needed one in the first place. She brushed aside some blonde hair.
"Outside! Declan outside!"
Fib's eyes briefly rolled back in shock. Adjusting her witchy hat, she nearly stumbled off the chair she stood on and moved up to the window by way of a desk against the windowsill. There he was, walking confidently to work, a cheery smile plastered on his face. He was a ray of sunshine on the cloudy, rainy day. Only a few seconds passed before he was out of sight yet again, hidden away in the book store below.
"What do you think he's gonna read today?" she asked. "Do you think he likes romance books?"
Berry tilted his head. "No."
"Whaddya mean, 'no?' " She looked to Berry, eyes slanting angrily. "Look at him! He has to love romances!" The fire in her dimmed, eyes relaxing to a neutral. "Lots and lots of romance."
"Romances. Nope. Action, adventure!"
"Romance can be in those, too."
"Uninteresting!"
Fib rolled her eyes and descended to the floor. She stepped around a stack of books and approached a chalk square she had scribbled onto the floor. With one hand, she traced along the box, mouthing off the incantation she had said so many times before. Soon enough, the section of floor faded away, allowing her to peer into the book store below and its many aisles.
The book store was a cozy affair, with its soft lighting, carpeted floors, and quiet books. Not to mention the age of the building itself, giving it an almost tired yet happy air. Fib eased herself onto the floor, prone, legs kicking back and forth as she watched Declan. His morning routine was going through the aisles, arranging any stragglers, replacing stock, then returning to his spot behind the counter, easing into a chair with a book of his own.
Funny how with all the magical powers she held, the one thing she could not do was go down there and talk to him. Fib glanced back to the cauldron. Maybe the mixture didn't have to be finished. Maybe a simple hello would be possible with what she had.
Berry flapped down next to her, peering into the magical window.
"See? Action."
"Oh, hush, you don't even know that book."
"Ask him."
"You know I can't."
"Why? Do you think he would be scared of a puppet? Are humans like that? Eloise was not like that."
"I'm not a puppet!"
Berry leaned over and poked at her wooden head, producing loud thunks. She shooed him off with an arm.
"Doll," he said.
"I'm not a doll either!" Fib's nose grew. She immediately turned away, forcing it back in with a finger. "He would be scared of a weird girl-thing walking in. That doesn't happen every day."
"It could."
"You know what I mean!" Her eyes swiveled to anger. "Go back to your perch before I turn you into a pig."
Berry flapped his wings. "Better than a doll." He squawked, crudely mimicking laughter.
Fib huffed, turning her attention back to Declan. It would be nice if he was understanding. Of course, in her magical fairyland of an imagination, he would sweep her up into his arms and serenade her with all the things he learned in his many books. Then they'd return to his home to live out a happy little existence, far away from this damnable room.
Or maybe it'd be best if she could become real. Not that she didn't exist, but this little slice of the world was hardly living. Fib herself could become human, and aspire to be something more. That was the intent of her cauldron mixing, after all. Declan would prefer that, too, assumedly. Fib rubbed her wooden fingers together, feeling the varnished surfaces rub together. Hardly something any man would want to touch, unless he was some sort of carpenter. Declan was nothing of the sort.
"Talk with your mouth. You can do it," Berry said. "Say hello to him."
"And if he panics?"
"Panic from a doll?"
"People often make stories from the idea of a possessed doll. Would I look any different?" Really, was she any different, practically? She traced a finger along her jagged mouth. "What was Eloise thinking?" she said quietly.
"Eloise was thinking of study-study time. You're a study-study time doll."
And now that Eloise wasn't here, that meant Fib's one purpose would go unfulfilled. Essentially, she had no reason to exist. If she had no reason to exist, then there was hardly anything to worry about, right? Still... Fib watched Declan work his way through his latest book. He mattered, and messing her one possible chance with him was not something she would stand for.
Fib stood up, looking around the dusty, cramped workshop. It must have been at least a year since Eloise left to heavens knew where. What did it matter, anyways? She could take care of herself, so there was no chance she got into some serious trouble. Eloise likely just found some other, better place to practice magic and didn't bother to bring her tools or pets along.
Right, instead of having no purpose, Fib would have to make one of her own. Her eyes swiveled to downcast. She had told herself that so many times before, why would this be any different? She balled her hand into a fist. Because this time she would force herself into it.
"You go outside all the time, Berry. Tell me, how do humans talk to one another?" Fib asked.
"Meanly!" He hopped in place. "Get outta the way, moron! Watch where you're going! Easy, chump!"