The Blue-Edged Room in Grosvenor Square

Charlotte DeVere’s footsteps echoed down the marble hall like questions in an empty cathedral. It was 1889, or so the calendar proclaimed. She pressed a gloved palm to her ribs, steadying her breath as the machinery whirred unseen behind the wainscoting. The world had grown slippery since Albert’s passing—since his mind had been uploaded to the ether, leaving his body slack in their marriage bed, eyes open but unreachable.

Now she walked these corridors not as a wife but as an operator: one of few with the rarest currency—grief unspent and a willingness to trespass.

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They called it the Dream Vault: an architecture of shared consciousness built from etheric wires and whisper-thin glass filaments. The city above believed itself real; those below knew better. Here, thoughts could be burgled, recollections relived, futures previewed like plays at the Lyceum.

Charlotte’s target was Oswald Rooke, the reclusive industrialist who’d brokered half the city’s dream-heists and kept his own secrets locked tight. She’d been hired by desperate hands—his enemies, perhaps, or his future self. In dreamwork, motives blurred like watercolor in rain.

She entered through memory: the blue-edged drawing room in Rooke’s Grosvenor Square mansion. It shimmered with impossible clarity—floor polished bright as water, gaslight globes humming overhead. But something was amiss. Along one wall stood a sleek rectangle unlike any Victorian invention. Its surface glowed with color and motion: images flickered across it—lively cricket matches beside headlines from lands yet unnamed.

Charlotte blinked; her dream-partner Jonah grinned at her confusion. “He keeps it here,” he murmured. “Some kind of key.”

They approached together. The object seemed solid, yet not quite real—a 40-inch pane showing news from every corner of Rooke’s mind: laughter from some long-lost music hall; reports of wars fought on foreign sands; a parade of faces Charlotte did not know.

Jonah pressed his palm to its edge. Instantly, channels changed: now a broadcast from an imagined future where crowds cheered as dirigibles circled crystal towers.

"He can access anything," Jonah said softly. “Every memory, every story ever told or yet to come.”

Charlotte reached for the device’s small remote resting on an ottoman—strangely shaped, designed for fingers unfamiliar with quill or pen. On instinct she pressed a button marked with an icon of a house: instantly the display shifted to a field of icons, each promising entry into another fragment of dream or memory—live news from Paris in flame; family scenes by firelight; tales spun out in languages Charlotte had never studied but somehow understood.

It occurred to her this machine was more than entertainment—it was Rooke’s defense system, his collection of curated selves.

As they delved deeper, Charlotte glimpsed moments that might serve as leverage: secret meetings disguised as melodramas on this impossible screen; whispered promises encoded in the scrolling headlines.

But then they were caught—a ripple in the architecture signaled Rooke himself entering his own dreamspace. Charlotte froze as his avatar materialized in tweeds and wire spectacles, face stern but weary.

“You found my window,” he said quietly. “It updates itself—you see? I never lose touch with what matters.”

Jonah hesitated beside her; Charlotte felt sympathy prickling beneath her resolve.

Rooke gestured at the glowing device—now cycling through childhood memories: picnics under elms; mother’s voice reading stories; then darkness interrupted by bursts of light—a parade of all he’d ever loved or feared.

“Why take?” he asked simply.

Charlotte glanced at Jonah—then back at the host of lives on that vibrant pane. “To remember what’s lost,” she replied, feeling Albert’s absence like static behind her eyes.

Outside this vault—in waking London—she owned nothing but debts and faded portraits. But inside here…

She pressed another button: suddenly their surroundings shifted to Albert’s study, recreated in impossible detail—the same settee where he’d laughed over penny dreadfuls; the windows open to birdsong borrowed from some spring long gone.

“It lets you choose,” Charlotte whispered—to herself more than anyone else—as Albert appeared on the screen beside childhood Rooke and strangers from other times.

With trembling hands she rearranged their icons—bringing Albert forward until he filled half the pane. The system obliged without question; it learned desires before they could be spoken aloud.

Jonah watched her carefully. “What now?”

Charlotte smiled through tears not quite shed. “We take what we need,” she said—and left behind some part of her grief there among the swirling lights and endless stories, knowing she could return anytime for solace or strategy.

They exited through waking—a corridor lined with memories both real and conjured. The blue-edged room shimmered once more before dissolving entirely into morning fog and horse-drawn carriages rattling over cobblestone.

And somewhere far below London’s dreaming streets, Oswald Rooke adjusted his defenses—his future secure within that luminous window no one else understood yet everyone would someday crave.

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