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They’re both lovely tonight, but I miss their true forms: Wig’s sweet, chubby pink face with the layers of tightly packed green leaves circled around it; Poke’s broom-handle body with the puckered lips, the scrunched right eye so much smaller than the left, and his dozens of prickly fingers.

In this world, they appear as birds or mice or other smallish creatures, forms that allow them to get close enough to humans to perform their true work: Wig setting the thoughts of the sleepless running in circles, and Poke prickling tired bodies into restlessness.

Relatively harmless tasks, both. Vexing, but only when compared to a peaceful sleep.

If it were only Earworms and Skritches the people of this city had to fear, there would be no sigils, no empty streets, no curtains pulled tight.

“It’s freezing,” Poke grumbles, the copper feathers atop his head bristling. “I don’t care for the north.”

“Care for the north, care for the north, care for the—” Wig flaps his wings, rising into the air seconds before Poke’s beak jabs at his throat. “North,” he finishes as he lands.

An Earworm can’t leave a circle unfinished. Every song must be sung through from beginning to end—or at least from the start of the chorus to the finish. The chorus is the most addictive bit, the part that gets a human mind humming and pointlessly wakeful.

“Care for a change, care for a change,” Wig chirps, settling onto a perch under the eaves, sheltering in my shadow. His tiny heart beats a needy rhythm, and I seep from my hiding spot. I grow claws to clutch the battered sill and tuck him gently under my new raven’s wing.

“Tales from the south, tales from the sea,” he says. “Tales from the south, tales from the sea.”

“Shut your beak. Let me tell it.” Poke hops up beside me, nudging his way under my other wing with a gruff butt of his head.

It took time for me to realize that Poke enjoys a cuddle as much as Wig, but now I don’t hesitate to pull him in, even when his muscles go stiff and he shudders before he allows himself to relax. Prickly or not, I treasure these moments of closeness. Without Wig and Poke, I’m not sure I would have survived the loneliness of learning to be one instead of five.

“There’s talk of an island in the Tyrrhenian Sea. Off limits. Ringed with enchantments,” Poke says, pecking the empty air in front of him for emphasis. “A place where the mountains curve like a giant’s rib, and the sea grows teeth below the waves and never a nightmare set tooth nor claw.”

I lift my beak and sniff the air. The time is nearly right. The night is sticky with sleep. “We’ve heard that tale before.”

There’s always a story floating in the ether, a tale of a town even the Banshee, the Dream Thief, the Night Witch—the humans have many pet names for me—won’t be able to touch. But the stories are never true. I have touched each and every one and left a string of transformed men and boys in my wake.

Mother grew me straight and true, and I am no thief of dreams. I am a correction. A cure. I am the beauty that brands the minds of human men, the girl that gentles their hardened hearts. Once I’ve spun through their sleep, they awake transformed, never again to treat a woman cruelly, to raise a hand to their daughters, sisters, or wives, or to shatter a single sweet lady’s heart.

I perform an invaluable service to the women and girls of Earth.

Though you wouldn’t know it from the way they greet me—with blood and tears and doors locked tight and protections whispered over the sleeping heads of their men.

“New tune, new tune,” Wig warbles.

“It is new,” Poke agrees, making my feathers prickle. It’s unusual for Poke to agree with Wig, let alone to admit it aloud. “Word comes from the garden itself. From Skritches and Worms and Freezers and Fallers. They’ve all sought sleepers there and been turned away, forced to fly through the night to reach open minds and portals home before morning.”

The casual mention of other plantings jostles the splinters of my heart. We often catch sight of other nightmares plying their trade, but no creature of the garden—aside from Wig or Poke—will speak to me.

They’re too afraid. Even the night things are wary of Foxglove.

Well, not of me exactly…

They’re wary of Mother, and the way she feels about me now. Word is, she won’t tolerate mention of me in the garden. I am her blackest sheep, the only planting ever to close her heart to the Night Witch. I had no choice but to take up the mantle she passed to me that night—I was grown to serve at her pleasure, and my life will never be my own—but I don’t have to love her for it.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
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