Coraline

It was not damp, like a normal fog or mist. It was not cold and it was not warm. It felt to Coraline like she was walking into nothing.

 

I’m an explorer, thought Coraline to herself. And I need all the ways out of here that I can get. So I shall keep walking.

 

The world she was walking through was a pale nothingness, like a blank sheet of paper or an enormous, empty white room. It had no temperature, no smell, no texture, and no taste.

 

It certainly isn’t mist, thought Coraline, although she did not know what it was. For a moment she wondered if she might not have gone blind. But no, she could see herself, plain as day. But there was no ground beneath her feet, just a misty, milky whiteness.

 

“And what do you think you’re doing?” said a shape to one side of her.

 

It took a few moments for her eyes to focus on it properly: she thought it might be some kind of lion, at first, some distance away from her; and then she thought it might be a mouse, close beside her. And then she knew what it was.

 

“I’m exploring,” Coraline told the cat.

 

Its fur stood straight out from its body and its eyes were wide, while its tail was down and between its legs. It did not look a happy cat.

 

“Bad place,” said the cat. “If you want to call it a place, which I don’t. What are you doing here?”

 

“I’m exploring.”

 

“Nothing to find here,” said the cat. “This is just the outside, the part of the place she hasn’t bothered to create.”

 

“She?”

 

“The one who says she’s your other mother,” said the cat.

 

“What is she?” asked Coraline.

 

The cat did not answer, just padded through the pale mist beside Coraline.

 

A shape began to appear in front of them, something high and towering and dark.

 

“You were wrong!” she told the cat. “There is something there!”

 

And then it took shape in the mist: a dark house, which loomed at them out of the formless whiteness.

 

“But that’s—” said Coraline.

 

“The house you just left,” agreed the cat. “Precisely.”

 

“Maybe I just got turned around in the mist,” said Coraline.

 

The cat curled the high tip of its tail into a question mark, and tipped its head to one side. “You might have done,” it said. “I certainly would not. Wrong, indeed.”

 

“But how can you walk away from something and still come back to it?”

 

“Easy,” said the cat. “Think of somebody walking around the world. You start out walking away from something and end up coming back to it.”

 

“Small world,” said Coraline.

 

“It’s big enough for her,” said the cat. “Spiders’ webs only have to be large enough to catch flies.”

 

Coraline shivered.

 

“He said that she’s fixing all the gates and the doors,” she told the cat, “to keep you out.”

 

“She may try,” said the cat, unimpressed. “Oh yes. She may try.” They were standing under a clump of trees now, beside the house. These trees looked much more likely. “There’s ways in and ways out of places like this that even she doesn’t know about.”

 

“Did she make this place, then?” asked Coraline.

 

“Made it, found it—what’s the difference?” asked the cat. “Either way, she’s had it a very long time. Hang on—” And it gave a shiver and a leap and before Coraline could blink the cat was sitting with its paw holding down a big black rat. “It’s not that I like rats at the best of times,” said the cat, conversationally, as if nothing had happened, “but the rats in this place are all spies for her. She uses them as her eyes and hands…” And with that the cat let the rat go.

 

It ran several feet and then the cat, with one bound, was upon it, batting it hard with one sharp-clawed paw, while with the other paw it held the rat down. “I love this bit,” said the cat, happily. “Want to see me do that again?”

 

“No,” said Coraline. “Why do you do it? You’re torturing it.”

 

“Mm,” said the cat. It let the rat go.

 

The rat stumbled, dazed, for a few steps, then it began to run. With a blow of its paw, the cat knocked the rat into the air, and caught it in its mouth.

 

“Stop it!” said Coraline.

 

The cat dropped the rat between its two front paws. “There are those,” it said with a sigh, in tones as smooth as oiled silk, “who have suggested that the tendency of a cat to play with its prey is a merciful one—after all, it permits the occasional funny little running snack to escape, from time to time. How often does your dinner get to escape?”

 

And then it picked the rat up in its mouth and carried it off into the woods, behind a tree.

 

Coraline walked back into the house.

 

All was quiet and empty and deserted. Even her footsteps on the carpeted floor seemed loud. Dust motes hung in a beam of sunlight.

 

At the far end of the hall was the mirror. She could see herself walking toward the mirror, looking, reflected, a little braver than she actually felt. There was nothing else there in the mirror. Just her, in the corridor.

 

Neil Gaiman's books