
Frame 412
An exclusive bonus chapter for You Look Perfect Like That
by Aurora North
The mirror shoot from Chapter 9 — told entirely from Clara’s POV. Subscriber exclusive: sign up below for new releases and bonus chapters too hot for Amazon, then keep scrolling.
Frame 412 — Clara
The mirrors were never about the series.
I should put that on the record somewhere, since this is apparently the chapter where I tell the truth. I commissioned the concept memo, I walked Vivian through “reflection as portrait” with a straight face, I stood in my own studio at eight in the morning adjusting three full-length mirrors by single degrees with a light meter — and underneath all of that professional architecture, the truth was four words long: I wanted her surrounded.
I wanted Tessa Vale to stand in the center of an arc of glass and be unable to look anywhere without finding herself. Because she had spent three sessions giving me frames the world would call once-in-a-career, and after every single one she looked at the monitor and said that’s not what I look like, and I am a documentarian by trade. I do not tolerate inaccurate captions on my work.
By noon it was a disaster, and I want it noted that I diagnosed it within ten frames. Three mirrors, and every one of them was a customs checkpoint. I watched her audit herself in triplicate — the nose, the shoulder, the whole inherited inventory — and I shot it anyway, dead frame after dead frame, because sometimes you have to let a setup fail completely before the subject will let you change it.
At twelve-thirty I sent the crew to lunch. At twelve-thirty-one I sent them to a long lunch.
Mara took her coat with the expression of a woman updating a ledger. I’ll be hearing about it at my next contract negotiation, and she’ll be right to raise it.
Then the elevator died at the bottom of its shaft, and the studio was just the two of us and the rain light, and Tessa stood inside the arc in ivory silk looking like a woman being held hostage by her own reflection, and I crossed the border I had drawn myself — it stays out of the studio, my treaty, my clause — and the treaty did not survive contact with her voice when she told me about the checkpoint. About the before picture. About auditing.
Here is what no one knows about frame 412, and what I will deny composing if asked at a gallery: the direction that made it was improvised in free fall.
Watch me looking at her.
I invented it standing behind her with my hands on her bare shoulders, because she could not look at herself without flinching and I could not stand one more second of watching her flinch. And the moment I said it, I understood — too late, the way I understand everything that matters — what I had actually volunteered for. She couldn’t audit herself if her eyes were on mine. Which meant my face had to do the disclosing. Twenty years of being the woman behind the camera, the eye, the crop, the safe side of the glass — and I had just ordered the most observant subject I’ve ever shot to watch my face while I narrated, out loud, in detail, exactly what wanting her looks like.
So I did it. I held her shoulders and I read her body to her like a contact sheet — the line of her neck when she stops guarding it, the collarbone, the wrists she thinks are too thin, the mouth I informed her was its own afternoon — and the entire time, in the glass, her eyes stayed locked on mine, and I felt the moment the heat in her changed registers. Felt it under my palms. Heard it in her breathing. Watched it arrive in the mirror in triplicate, surrounding us both.
And my face, per the assignment, hid nothing. Could not. The evidence registered on me one second before she could have doubted it, every single time, and there is no discipline on earth — I have checked; I built my career on the inventory — that can keep want off a face that has been ordered to display it.
“Now,” I said, when her breath had gone ragged and my own voice had lost the level entirely. “Look at her now.”
She looked. And I watched Tessa Vale meet a woman in the glass who had never once been to customs — flushed, lit, head tipping back toward me, wanted in every direction she could turn — and I watched the checkpoint close. Not ease. Close. Twenty-four years of inherited inspection, gone between one breath and the next, and I had the privilege of being the wall she leaned against while it happened.
“There she is,” I said. “That’s the picture.”
“Then go get your camera,” she whispered.
I did not go get the camera.
I turned her around — out of the glass, away from the reflections, to me, the original, no medium between us for once in my entire adult life — and what happened inside that arc of mirrors took the rest of the afternoon, and it was the least composed I have ever been in the building where I built my name. Ivory silk does not survive sincerity; the pins came out of my hair by her hands; and at some point, on the floor, in the rain light, surrounded on three sides by ourselves, she pressed her mouth to my ear and gave me my own direction back — eyes open, Clara, watch us — and I, who have spent twenty years declining to appear in the frame, watched.
Triplicate. Both of us. Nowhere to crop.
It is the only afternoon of my career for which no photograph exists, and it is the best work I have ever done.
Afterward she lay across me on the floor with her head on my chest — the arrangement that negotiated itself the first night and has never once been renegotiated — and the silk was a casualty and the rain was easing and she said, drowsy, into my collarbone: “You know the crew comes back at three.”
“Two forty-five,” I said. “Mara pads the estimate.”
“And you still owe the series a picture.”
“I owe the series nothing. The series owes me.” But she was right, and she knew she was right, and that is how, at two-fifteen, I shot frame 412 — Tessa in the glass with her hair ruined and the strap fallen and the checkpoint demolished, watching me watch her, both of us still humming — and every person who stands in front of that photograph for the rest of its long public life will feel exactly what is happening in it and not one of them will ever be able to prove it.
The secret a picture keeps while telling everything.
I logged the selects that night. I backed up the cards twice. And at the bottom of the take, in the private notes field that only I will ever read, I typed the caption that is the actual title of frame 412, the one the gallery will never get:
The afternoon the eye stopped being clean and started being honest. Keep that.
Want the whole story? Read Tessa and Clara from the very first frame.
More from Aurora North

You Look Perfect Like That
She said the pose was all wrong. The photographer said she was exactly right.

Her Best Review Yet
She never gives tens. Maya intends to earn one anyway.

Office Hours Only
She thought the door was closed for a reason. The woman inside kept asking her to come back.

Her Plus-One Problem
She hired a plus-one. She didn't plan to fall in love with the invoice.

Fake Wife, Real Heat
They said "for appearances." Then the appearances got very, very real.

Stormed In, Turned On
Two coworkers. One storm. Zero chance they keep their hands to themselves.

Her Best Student
She came for lessons. She stayed for the way her teacher looked at her when she finally got it right.

For Professional Reasons
They kept saying it was just work. The problem was how good it felt when it stopped being work.

The Landlord’s Daughter
Her grad program is hard. The landlord's daughter is harder.

Straight Until Sleepover
One girls' weekend. One bed. One very inconvenient realization.

Girls Who Kiss Girls Next Door
She moved in next door to start over. She didn't expect the woman across the hall to ruin her for anyone else.

Bridesmaid, Not Sorry
She's the bride's best friend. The bride is the problem. The woman at the altar is the answer.

Sugar & Spite
She invested out of spite. She stayed because she’s in love.

Locked In with the Librarian
She looked harmless. She'd been in control the entire time.

Private Sessions
One more rep. One more time.

One Night with the Bride
She's getting married in five days. She just kissed a stranger.

Fake Dating My Ex’s Sister
She needed a fake girlfriend. She didn't expect the sister to be real.

Her Rival Tastes Better
We compete for everything… including control.

The Sugar Wife
She can buy anything she wants. What she wants is you.

Shared Bed, No Rules
One room. One bed. One rule: there are none.
Never Miss a Release
Get new release alerts, exclusive bonus content, and reader-only giveaways.
