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My supervisor wasn’t very interested in supervising.

I rushed past the plants, curious but hesitant about their true nature. This was the greenhouse of an artificer, and I couldn’t imagine what lived there. Hopefully nothing interested in putting me on their menu. Mr. Hawthorne mentioned carnivorous plants. I survived the wolves and would feel like a total buffoon if I died to a plant. Imagine visiting a cemetery and reading “eaten by carnivorous plant” on a headstone.

I tiptoed by the potentially deadly arrangements, wondering if Mr. Thatcher purchased them or enchanted them. Artificers weren’t meant to enchant living things, or so I thought. They enchanted objects because the side effects to a living organism were too difficult to predict. Miss Francesca shared a story about a man who tried to regrow a lost finger. He succeeded, technically, except he grew a hundred more all across his body. Another artificer, who had been arrested in Cavehallow, performed illegal enchantments on the desperate, resulting in them rotting from within. For whatever reason, living organisms and magic did not go together.

I couldn’t imagine any of these plants existing without magic. Hopefully, I hadn’t walked into an illegal greenhouse. I had done enough running for my life in the last day.

Though the dome was constructed of glass, I couldn’t see outside. The humidity of the room left the panes coated in condensation, refracting the morning light in a dazzling array. A stone pathway swerved in multiple directions, cutting through the jungle. I stopped at each turn to inspect my surroundings until I found Mr. Thatcher at the far end of the greenhouse. He leaned over a desk cluttered with papers. Headjusted his glasses while muttering to himself and fed a grape to the plant with a drooping petal slick with saliva. Potentially. I did not plan to get close enough to test my theory.

“Mr. Thatcher?”

“My feathers!” Mr. Thatcher clutched a notebook to his heaving chest. “Miss Moore, my apologies. I didn’t hear you come in.”

“I should be the one apologizing. I didn’t mean to startle you.”

“I fear that is inevitable for one such as myself. I get lost in my work rather frequently.” He laughed, then set the notebook aside. “I hope Rooke isn’t pushing you too hard. You must have had quite the fright.”

I held the broom close to my chest in case any of the plants decided to take a swipe at me. “Not at all. I’m cleaning the mess I supposedly made. I don’t know where he went, but I hoped to ask something of you.”

“Of course. What is it?”

“Mr. Hawthorne said we will reach my home before nightfall. He also said my curse requires study to understand, but is there anything you can tell me? I must know what is happening to me and if I may be a danger to my family,” I asked, hating the desperation in my voice that so reminded me of Mom, her coughing fits as she begged the warehouse manager for extra shifts, then haggling the little coins we had for medicine that did not work.

Mr. Thatcher pressed his lips into a grim line. “Is it right for me to assume Rooke told you little to nothing?”

“Only that it would take time to discover what my curse is. I fear I do not have the coin to pay either of you, but any information you are willing to give, I would most appreciate it.”

“Please don’t worry yourself over payment. Well, technically, we are forbidden to work free of charge, but that can be dealt with.” Mr. Thatcher settled his palm against his temple as if to massage a headache. “That boy. I expected him to speak with you, but let me apologize once again. Rooke has such poor behavior at times. I will speak with him.”

A spark of hope clung to the edges of my mind. I wasn’t entirely sure of trusting it. “Do you believe you can convince him to help me?”

“Yes, I…” Mr. Thatcher grinned mischievously. “I have an idea that will work wonderfully.”

“Are you for certain? If not, I would be most appreciative if you were to point me toward the library, if Ivory House has one. I can conduct research on my own.”

“Nonsense. Demonic texts are a hassle for artificers such as myself to get through. You wouldn’t be able to decipher it, and I hope you take no offense to that. It is rough work,” he explained with a wave of his hand. “Leave this to me.”

People rarely followed through with their promises. Artificers didn’t make promises. They were like demons in that regard. They wanted a deal, except instead of a soul, they wanted coins.

Relying on another, on practically a stranger, put me out of my element. If I could fix this curse myself, I would. I wanted to because the only person I could rely on was myself, but this was no time to grow arrogant. My family was at stake.

“Thank you,” I said, even while lacking faith in Mr. Thatcher’s plan and Mr. Hawthorne’s abilities. “I should get back to work, then.”

Mr. Thatcher returned to his plants, and I returned to my cleaning.

Ivory House led me through the halls in the same manner as before, save one stop to prevent a collision. Slate fluttered by with Miss Beamy shrieking after it, “I will sink my teeth into your feathered throat, you vile creature!”

When the crow wandered off, I couldn’t tell. Slate rounded a corner, and Miss Beamy wheezed after him. That got a laugh out of me before I returned to the room I woke in, which suffered the most damage.

Mr. Hawthorne didn’t state all he wanted done, but I was not one to leave work half-finished. Even if irritated.

I sat Dolly in the hall, rolled up my sleeves, and took to removing the wallpaper. The parchment couldn’t be salvaged, nor the carpet—thankfully, he needed an interior decorator—so that was ripped up. The floor required a good scrub next. After a little more than a minute, my head buzzed. Whatever product Mr. Hawthorne usedmust be top quality. I had never felt so ill from a scent, but I pushed through by thinking of home.

The worst accidents in the woodlands had been a snake bite, where the poor girl was rushed to Cavehallow for the antivenom. Thankfully, she recovered. Twice since I had lived there, priests of Arestat came to Westshire in their burgundy robes. The first preached of destruction, retribution, and fiery wrath for a month before authorities captured him. I never learned what became of him. The second was smart enough to leave after a week, though the authorities visited to ask about his whereabouts. Neither of the priests were violent, but they were never short on cruel words, especially toward women.

In terms of violence, there were the occasional ruffians believing themselves frightful enough to steal a coin or two from lone riders. Once Cavehallow was alerted, they sent authorities to monitor the roads, as the city used the woodlands to secure goods to and from the outlying villages. Without the trade route, people would have to go around, which took a minimum of three days.

If soldiers were sent to fend off Carline, would they be capable of it? She couldn’t stay in the woodlands. I had to uncover why a demon went there in the first place. Where had Carline been before, and why did she move? Demons lived where trouble struck. That’s how they got what they wanted. My town suffered poverty and hardship, but I never saw it as a place a demon would thrive.