The Other Matilda
There was a large, gold-framed mirror in Matilda’s room, reaching from the floor to several feet above the young girl’s head. It reflected Matilda’s room with crisp exactness; the lush four-poster bed with the gauzy canopy she had begged for at Christmas, and the pictures of ballerinas that her mother had put up after painting the frames a delicate pink. The desk and lamp stood just the same in the mirror as they did in Matilda’s room, exactly the same colors and with the same little cracks and imperfections. The only thing that the mirror did not reflect loyally was Matilda herself. Sitting on her bed, stroking the bedcovers absent-mindedly, Matilda watched her reflection twirl around her mirror-room. The Other Matilda had her long, dark hair, and the same blue ribbon as the one Matilda’s nanny had tied in her own hair that day. “I wish we could dance together,” the Other Matilda said longingly as she did a shaky arabesque. “Or go outside. It’s lone...