Here’s a riddle from The chained Mirror.

The Chained Mirror
A mirror hung in iron shackles on a castle wall. Anyone who looked into it saw a pale figure behind them— even when alone. Who was the figure?
Answer:
Their own reflection doubled by a second hidden mirror behind them.
Explanation:
The Riddle
A mirror hung in iron shackles on a castle wall.
Anyone who looked into it saw a pale figure behind them—
even when alone.
Who was the figure?
Step 1: Setting the Mood — Misdirection
The riddle deliberately creates a haunted atmosphere:
- Castle wall → ancient, mysterious place
- Iron shackles → imprisonment, torture, or punishment
- Pale figure → ghost, spirit, apparition
- Even when alone → implies something impossible or supernatural
All of this primes the reader to think:
“This must be a ghost.”
That’s the trap.
Step 2: Understanding Mirrors and Perception
A normal mirror shows:
- Your face
- The space behind you as reflected from your position
So if someone sees a figure behind them when no one is there, something unusual must be happening with the mirror itself, not with reality.
Step 3: The Hidden Trick — A Second Mirror
The key is this line from the solution:
“Their own reflection doubled by a second hidden mirror behind them.”
Here’s what’s actually happening:
- There is another mirror, concealed behind or angled behind the viewer.
- Light bounces:
- From the viewer
- Into the hidden mirror
- Back into the main mirror
- And finally into the viewer’s eyes
This creates a secondary reflection—a faint, pale image of the viewer that appears behind them.
Because:
- It’s reflected twice, it looks lighter and less distinct
- It’s slightly delayed or offset, making it feel “separate”
- The brain interprets it as another presence
Step 4: Why It Looks Like “Someone Else”
The human brain is excellent at recognizing faces—but terrible at questioning reflections.
So when someone sees:
- A humanoid shape
- Roughly their size
- Standing behind them
Their instinctive reaction is fear, not logic.
Especially in:
- Dim castle lighting
- Candlelight or torchlight
- Old, imperfect mirrors (which distort images)
This makes the reflection:
- Pale
- Slightly warped
- Ghostlike
Yet it is still them.
Step 5: Why It Works “Even When Alone”
This is the cleverest part of the riddle.
The phrase “even when alone” reinforces the illusion, but also hides the truth:
You are never absent from a mirror.
If the mirror system reflects you twice, then:
- You are both the observer
- And the “figure behind”
The mirror is simply showing more of you than expected.
Final Answer Explained
Who was the figure?
The viewer themselves.
More precisely:
Their own reflection, duplicated by a second hidden mirror, creating the illusion of another presence behind them.
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