"If the hallway is empty," Belle says to the door, "let the tray out then close again."
She's wearing a dress the castle supplied - there's a dizzying array, everything fits her, things she doesn't like vanish when she's not looking so for a while she only tried things on over her original clothes in case the vanishing was haphazard but everything's been behaving so she's currently in a practical number of mid-calf blue cotton. It's not really practical for climbing, though. She's not practical for climbing.
She's stuck, but at least there's food that can tell whether the hallway has a creature in it or not and a self-operating ensuite bathroom.
She's running out of space in her notebook, is the only problem that staying in this room has which staying in the general castle environs as she has to anyway doesn't.
"If there's a blank notebook available, I'd like one, brought on the tray with lunch," she says aloud.
And she sits back on the bed.
And sings.
Lunch arrives, with a blank notebook on the tray. All the dishes are extra careful not to spill on it.
She can be okay here for a long time while she thinks of something.
For the rest of the day, there are no more strange noises from the rest of the castle.
She finishes the notebook she brought with her and starts on the second one. (She is getting sick of the songs she knows. She tries her hand at making up her own. She's not very good at it, but it passes the time when she's out of escape-related creative juice and needs to think about something else.)
On close inspection, they look like they were not cut but ripped from their bushes; there is even blood on a few of the thorns, and oddly enough, golden-brown hairs stuck here and there.
The bouquet is tied up clumsily with a wrinkled blue ribbon, and there is a folded bit of paper stuck between the ribbon and the flowers.
It says, in terrible handwriting, letters more cut and stabbed into the paper than merely written, ink blotches everywhere: sOrRY for tHE roARING
Okay.
There is some manner of person here. Something that, unlike the furniture, can use language on his or her own.
Belle sets the roses aside and nibbles distractedly on her breakfast, contemplating the note.
After she's done eating, she says, "Just a minute," to her tray, and tears a page from her notebook and writes:
Who are you? Why does this castle keep me from leaving?
And she folds this note neatly and puts it among her dishes and says, "Please bring that note to whoever wrote it."
An hour later, it comes back with a reply, written on her note: someone has drawn a straggling line down from Why does this castle keep me from leaving? to the words, DON'T KNow
Her other question is ignored.
Well, if he or she isn't going to explain who he or she is, that's frustrating, but at least she has someone to talk to. Was it you who was roaring? I thought it was some kind of animal. Is it safe to leave the room? she writes back, and sends the tray away with a pat.
Three separate lines, one from each sentence, down to the single word YES.
She wonders if it talks aloud. In case it doesn't, she brings her notebook and her pencils.
And she steps out of her room.
On the other side, there is a well-lit hallway.
The door belongs to a library.
Amid ranks of tall shelves holding several fortunes' worth of books, there is a table; lounging in an enormous chair at the table, there is a... beast.
Its clawed, furred hands have visible fingers and thumbs; its arms and shoulders are human in structure, though likewise furred. Its head resembles some kind of cat, with a long luxurious mane several shades darker than its golden brown fur. The fur is patterned haphazardly, spots here and stripes there, neither symmetrical nor obviously reminiscent of a particular species.
It does not wear clothes - but then, with that thick coat of fur, clothes would be both redundant and uncomfortable.
It watches her steadily when she comes into view.
"Hello, Belle." says the beast. The movement of speech reveals impressive fangs in its black-lipped mouth, but it makes no actual threatening move. And it speaks much more clearly, and with more obvious ease, than it writes.
"I have been here," it says, with amusement clear in its voice, "for a hundred years and more."
"Wow, I didn't know anyone could live that long," she says with immediate interest, "how do you do it - are there more of you around? What are you? What's your name?"
"I did not do any of this," it says, with a gesture to its furred body and the castle that surrounds them. "It was done to me. My name was among the things taken, and it is one I do not miss."
"Oh. Oh dear. So - what do I call you, then? And who did all this? What do they want?"