𝘔𝘦𝘱𝘩𝘪𝘴𝘵𝘰𝘱𝘩𝘦𝘭𝘦𝘴 𝘪𝘴 𝘕𝘰𝘵 𝘠𝘰𝘶𝘳 𝘕𝘢𝘮𝘦
The street lamps flickered on as Cordelia woke up. She blinked the sleep out of her eyes.
“How long have I been asleep?” she groaned as she stretched out her cold, sore muscles. It didn’t feel entirely long enough.
She had been in that awful city for a couple of weeks. She wasn’t strong enough to make it out on her own, with no guaranteed shelter. Not that she was faring any better in the city. She was freezing, she had no real shelter, and she was weak from sickness and hunger both. Not only did her body feel broken, but her pride was stomped into nearly nothing as she had to resort to begging for food. Of all things, this was the worst to her. She came here hunting a dream, and instead she was surviving on people’s scraps.
“I should have never come here.” it wasn’t the first time she said this, and it probably wouldn’t be the last. She knew she would survive, she had to, but she hated doing it alone… again. She was so tired of everything, tired of being in this city, tired of running, tired of being on her own. She had lived most of her life on the road, without a companion, but that didn’t mean she wanted to keep doing it.
When she got better, she would have to do something differently, she couldn’t keep surviving like this. Not anymore. It’s what had made her so desperate to chase a new dream without being prepared, and without any kind of plan. She might have been hungry, starving in those streets, but she was hungry for something else too.
She was hungry for that change.
When she realized this, it was like a new fire lit in her eyes. She was still weak, but she almost felt like she had some kind of purpose that she didn’t before. The prospect made her giddy, but what she could hear in the distance made her even more so-- it made her run with her tail trail haphazardly behind her as she dashed around the now-familiar streets.
She ran, tripping over her own weak limbs as she raced onward, only slowing when her body refused to go further.
When she reached the rougher buildings, she began to see the lights.
There was something about the music-- carnival music-- that called to her. She didn’t know why, but something was important about it and she was sure to find out soon.
Eventually she found herself leaning against a building as she looked at the scene before her. There were lights in brilliant whites and sparkling golds. The tent erected in the center stood tall, and proud. Light’s surrounded it in a halo of warmth and invite. The material was made of crimsons and golds. It was lush, alluring, and almost familiar…
It reminded her so very much of the festival she had attended. It reminded her of the start of her quest.
She winced at the memory of the moment she decided to come to this city, but the bright lights-- the life and the noise-- knocked that from her mind and she was left with the warm, fuzzy memory of singing on that stage. Of excitement, and wonder. Just thinking about it made her shiver in delight, and not the cold.
“Come one, come all!” The voice of
a rather strange viscet called out from a stage oh so close to that (very possibly toasty) tent. He was clad in the strangest of garb, but what stuck out about him were the dots on his mouth that resembled stitches. Those weren’t paint, that was his pelt. It was quite unnerving.
Cordelia tried to focus on his words.
“Welcome to the greatest attraction you’ll ever be a part of. Dark's Pandemonium Shadow Show! There is true magic, and wonder, to be found in the
Illustrated Man’s Shadow Games! Come discover the hall of ancient mirrors, where you’ll be shown what you most desire, or maybe be shown something about your true self that you did not know! Let your fortunes be read by Madam La Roux as she gazes into her all-seeing spyglass.” he raised the volume of his voice “Enjoy the rides, the food, the atmosphere. Enter the tent, if you dare, and see the Illustrated Man work his wonders. Watch great acts of gravity and death defying acts. Trapeze, tightrope, knife-throwers, fire eaters, anything your heart desires and more!” he chuckled “Or do you like a challenge? Join in some games yourself. But remember, it’s only a game. Try not to take anything too terribly seriously, folks. The wonders you see are just that-- wonders. Meant to be taken in and enjoyed. It’s only a show, but if you take it too seriously then even a show can go wrong…”
He seemed to disappear in a puff of smoke, startling the gathering crowd-- including Cordelia herself. Still, the promise of a warm tent certainly tempted her, but she she approached it, she noticed people turning around. When she reached the tent, a man-- a viscet-- smiled to her. There was something quite off putting about that smile.
“Sorry Miss, the next show doesn’t start for another ten minutes? Come back then?”
“I don’t mind waiting for it…” Cordelia replied, and the man looked her over with an odd quirk of his brow.
“Well, go on in then I suppose.”
What she didn’t see was the grimace on his face after the flap of the tent had closed once more.
Inside it was dark, and quiet, as if the thin material of the tent was somehow enough to keep out the sounds and the lights from the carnival outside. It was magic in itself, wonderful, and… perhaps a little eerie. Still, Cordelia didn’t let that get to her as she simply found her a seat in the empty tent. It was odd, she mused to herself, that there wasn’t anyone already in here setting up for the show that was to come. She shuffled her thoughts aside, and after a few moment she began to sing to herself. It was one of the tunes she had sung at the festival.
♪ “To them she was a dancer-- child of the road
Gypsy of the world and a broken home-- ♪“You have a beautiful voice.” someone from behind her spoke. Cordelia practically jumped out of her skin before looking around frantically. From the shadows to her left stepped forward a man.
He was a viscet, large in stature. He was dressed in a fine, black suit with a vest of reds and golds and stitching on the jacket to match. He looked dashing-- handsome in a way that most men just didn’t seem to be. His golden markings didn’t sparkle, but they were certainly striking. The only thing more striking, perhaps, were his tattoos. They didn’t just cover the exposed parts of his pelt, no, they moved like living creatures. The sleeves of his suit jacket were rolled up, exposing so much of the tattooing in his forelegs. The result was mesmerizing.
“Are you… are you the Illustrated Man? Mr. Dark?” Cordelia found herself asking.
“I am indeed. I think you might have me for a loss here? And you are…?”
“Cordelia.” she answered without thinking.
“Cordelia…?” he asked, expecting some kind of surname.
“Just Cordelia.”
He frowned for only a moment before nodding.
“A beautiful name, to match that beautiful voice. Might I… Might I hear it again?”
Cordelia blushed fiercely, but she complied after a few moments of silence passed between the two of them. She sang the rest of the verse from the same song, trying her hardest not to focus on the living tattoos that graced the Illustrated Man’s body. She didn’t have the strength to continue singing beyond.
“Just beautiful. Simply captivating.” he paused “Say, what are you doing in here all alone anyway? The show’s not started yet.”
Cordelia looked down “I was cold, it was warmer in here.” her cheeks lit up like a fire with embarrassment “I… I just wanted to be warm for a few moments.”
Mr. Dark looked to her with concern.
“And hungry, yes?”
Her stomach chose then to growl, she had no choice but to nod after that.
“My act is already done for the night, I think, young lady. Follow me, I’ll offer you at least a warm drink.”
Cordelia couldn’t really refuse, or didn’t feel as if she could. He could kick her back on the streets if she didn't comply, and he just seemed so nice, and a warm drink sounded so very good. Maybe it could make this chill go away, at least for a while. Anything would be better than how she felt now.
They passed a carousel on the way, with a sign that read “out-of-order” and they passed the hall of mirrors as well as a small tent that promised oddities from around the globe. Cordelia looked all of this over with wonder, but she didn’t dare stop for fear of losing her kindly host.
They reached a wagon in the back of the carnival. It was gray, dusty, and nondescript.
“Is this…?”
“Yes.” Mr. Dark answered as he stepped up onto the wagon steps and opened the door “This is where I stay when the show runs. You were lucky, this is our last performance of the year.”
“Too cold?” Cordelia asked as he helped her climb onto the steps by offering a paw that she took gratefully.
“Yes, something like that. This is the last official day of fall, it would be foolish to carry the carnival into the winter. Can’t let the patrons freeze solid.” he chortled a moment as she stepped into the door.
Even this was magical.
Whereas the outside had been dull, maybe even in sore need of maintenance, the inside was lavish. So many different machines seemed to move, and everything was shiny and mystical. Even the fabrics on his bed were of beautiful, dyed silks. The tapestries and artifacts that draped from the ceiling were antique, some probably centuries upon centuries old.
Cordelia let out a gasp as Mr. Dark motioned her to a seat.
“Sit” he said “I’ll make some tea.” and he did, in no time at all they were sitting in a comfortable silence, sipping on tea until neither of them had a thing left in their cups.
“Better?”
“Better!” Cordelia responded, her voice far less hoarse than it had been “Oh, wow, your tea works wonders. But everything here does. I swear, even your wagon seems so much larger on the inside than the out, even stuffed full of such exotic and beautiful treasures!”
The Illustrated Man quirked a brow “And perhaps it is bigger on the inside than out?”
Cordelia chuckled “Well that’s certainly a thought. I’d like to know how you’d pull that off.” she teased.
“Maybe I’ll show you sometime.” He replied “But first, I’d like to hear you sing again.”
“Not to be rude but… but why?” Cordelia questioned “My voice isn’t anything special.”
“Oh, but it is. There’s a yearning in it. There’s beauty in it. I think… I think that it would resonate well with a crowd, don’t you?”
The feeling of pride from before filled her chest. And, yes, yearning. He was right. When she sang, she was almost… crying out for help. Her eyes widened at the realization.
Was her singing a cry for help as much as anything else?
“You’re like a songbird, that is lost. You need a place, don’t you? To belong, but not be caged up in one place?” he put his cup down, and before her eye both cups filled themselves back up. “Go on, it’s safe to drink.” he took a sip of his own for emphasis.
Cordelia took a small sip of her refilled tea before setting the cup back on the saucer, listening to the quiet
“tink” as it settled into place.
“What exactly are you offering me?” she asked, her voice soft and tentative.
“I want to offer you a place… and a wish. Any wish you like. I can grant it.”
Cordelia could feel fear pooling in her belly. Something wasn’t right. But as he smiled to her, it began to fade away slowly.
“And what do I have to do?”
Mr. Dark’s lips quirked upward on one side. He stood up, slipping beside Cordelia in one smooth motion. He could, perhaps, reach her with song himself.
♪ “Hey, little songbird, give me a song
I’m a busy man and I can’t stay long…” ♪Cordelia stiffened as she sat, looking up to him. She remained silent, and he continue. His voice was a low, seductive rumble that reverberated even in the small room.
♪ “Hey, little songbird, cat got your tongue?
Always a pity for one so pretty and young” ♪He took a breath and shifted to her other side to continue.
♪ “When poverty comes to clip your wings” ♪Cordelia gulped.
♪ And knock the wind right out of your lungs
Hey, nobody sings on empty... ♪Cordelia could feel herself shaking, but somehow her mouth still opened in reply.
♪ “Strange is the call of this strange man
I want to fly down and feed at his hand
I want a nice soft place to land…” ♪She didn’t know where these words were coming from. Her throat clogged with emotion for a moment. Was this really her words? What she wanted?
♪ “I wanna lie down forever” ♪She stood up and Mr. Dark slipped around to her other side.
“That’s not true, is it dear? Laying down is what you have been doing, for a while now. You’re ready to fight for what you want, aren’t you?” Mr. Dark told more than asked-- he could see the fire in her eyes. She wasn’t defeated. There was something she wanted. Something she needed-- and she would ask for it.
Cordelia’s brow furrowed. That was what she wanted, wasn’t it? To fight? To give it her all?
♪ “Hey, little songbird, you got something fine
You’d shine like a diamond down in the mine” ♪Cordelia shivered again as she could feel his breath on her neck, gently caressing the feathers there, and lightly brushing her sensitive whiskers.
♪ “And the choice is yours if you’re willing to choose
Seeing as you’ve got nothing to lose” ♪Cordelia’s eyes drooped, just a little. She felt a little lulled by it all. It sounded right. She didn’t have anything to lose, did she?
♪ “...and I could use a canary.” ♪Mr. Dark’s concerned smile shifted, just for an instant, into a brilliant grin, as if he were sharing a joke that only he could understand, but it left as quickly as it had come.
Cordelia’s eyes snapped up to his after a moment.
“You need a singer?”
“Why, not just any singer.” Mr. Dark replied “I need you. You’re the only one we need.”
“But… why me?”
“Because you have that fire in you.” Mr. Dark responded, waving a paw in the air in an all-encompassing, dramatic fashion.
“You have a silver-tongue, Mr. Dark. Is this all flattery?”
“None at all, Miss Cordelia. You have untapped potential, and I could help you find it. We just need to strike a deal. You have to have a wish, the wish your heart desires most of all. You have that, don’t you? You know exactly what it is. I need to know it, I need to grant it. And then, only then, can you work with us. You could join us, sing on the move for crowds bigger than you could imagine.”
Cordelia looked deep in throught. She was so unsure. How could he grant a wish? What was it about this man? She flicked her tail as she considered him. Sure, everything seemed magical, but did real magic even exist?
“So what you’re saying is you can grant any wish? What if you can’t grant mine, do I just leave? Just like that?”
“I can grant any wish, dear girl. Anything your heart desires.”
“I… I can’t…”
Mr. Dark held his paw out to her “Just tell me what it is. Please. I want to help.”
“I don’t think… no it’s not…”
“Please.” he pleaded, his eyes shining in anticipation.
Cordelia put her paw into his. She needed something to hold onto, to ground her. Her head was fuzzy from her illness, lack of sleep, and the magic of this place.
“I don’t want to be alone anymore.” Cordelia whimpered out “I don’t want people to leave me, anymore.” she grimaced “But wishing for something… doesn’t make it happen. I’ve wished for this ever since my mother disappeared…”
Mr. Dark grinned, shaking the paw that he held softly before drawing her close to him. He pressed her head gently against his chest as she began to cry. She didn’t even notice the difference as her strings of fate attached themselves to the tattooed man.
“Shhhh, it’ll be alright now.” he told her quietly “You’ll not be alone. You have a place here, with us. And no one you want to stay will ever be able to leave you again.”
Cordelia could barely hear him over her sobs. They wracked her frame as he held her just a little tighter, rubbing soothing circles on her back “My canary, you are among family now. Don’t you feel better?”
And she did feel better. She didn’t feel sick or tired anymore. She was still hungry, but not debilitatingly so. She felt like herself again, as she had before the city. Before the soldiers and the fire and the darkness she had endured.
“How?” her voice was muffled against his chest, but Mr. Dark could still make them out.
“Because you have to be alive for your wish to be granted.”
“But I don’t understand…?”
“Shhh, you will, just rest for now.”
Cordelia started to feel drowsy, she could feel his warm presence lulling her to sleep. She didn’t fight it as her eyes shut and her tears finally stopped.
“Rest, my songbird. When you awaken, you’ll feel more alive than you ever have. You’ll be a part of something greater…” he left her there, laid her gently on his bed to keep her comfortable, before slipping off. He had a show to perform, after all.
“Where am I?”
There was so little light, this couldn’t be the city at night with all it’s artificial lighting.
And Cordelia was warm. Warmer than she had been in a long time, than she could even remember. Had she even ever been this warm? She couldn’t remember, with her thoughts so unclear.
She moved her limbs slowly, only to find a blanket draped across her.
“What could possibly be going on?” She wondered. The last thing she remembered was the carnival…
And then Mr. Dark. The Illustrated Man. He had offered her a job at his carnival, hadn’t he? She couldn’t remember if she said yes or not, but maybe she was still in his wagon.
Except… why would it be so dark then?
She shivered, and it had nothing to do with the cold.
She felt for the edge of the bedding and sat up on the side before standing. As she stood, she brushed a curtain and her balance faltered.
She paused, pondering.
Had there been a curtain in that wagon? She wasn’t sure. Her memories were starting to come back slowly.
“I made a deal with him.” she whispered to no one. “And I fell asleep, didn’t I? But what was the deal?”
She pushed back the curtain and light flooded her senses for a moment. She squinted her eyes as she let them adjust to the surprisingly dim light. It was as if she hadn’t looked to the light in months. She groaned as she sat back on the bedding to let herself reorient and examine the room. Her mind was swimming after the exposure to the light.
The room, she realized, was surprisingly opulent. It most certainly wasn’t the same room she remembered from before, in the wagon that Mr. Dark had lead her to. She studied the grain of the wood on the walls for a moment. It was of a stained, curly maple. It was beautiful, but even its beauty could have easily been overshadowed by the room as a whole. There was a beautiful armoire crafted from a similar wood, with a matching full-body mirror. There were brilliant red and gold tapestries and rugs adorning the walls and floor. There were many antiques-- all unique and beautiful works of art of varying materials including silver and gold. Mysterious, mobile trinkets were scattered about and cast in brass. Even the small jewelry box resting atop the wardrobe was a lavish work of art.
“Where
am I?” Cordelia questioned out loud once more. She had never been in a room as beautiful, even Mr. Dark’s paled in comparison.
She stood up slowly, trying to regain her balance. The world shifted in her vision for a moment before once again righting itself. She took a shaky step toward the door set into the wall of the room, taking deep breaths to calm her nerves.
There had to be an explanation for this, didn’t there? Had Mr. Dark put her in a hotel somewhere? But what hotel could be like this? Was this another wagon? If so, why was it so large? And full of such beautiful wonders?
Why were there no windows?
She thought back, remembering that Mr. Dark’s own wagon had seemed so much larger on the inside than the out. Was there some kind of trick, perhaps? Was it the same with this one as well?
And what had that deal been, why couldn’t she remember?
Her paws brushed the doorknob, and she wiggled it to make sure it was unlocked. She wasn’t sure she was ready to leave yet, however. She stood there, staring at the ornately carved door for several minutes as she continued to think.
“I don’t want to be alone anymore.” Cordelia’s own voice seemed to echo in her mind, finally. She remembered this, the deal she had struck. It was coming back in spurts now.
“I don’t want people to leave me anymore.” It was the wish that Mr. Dark had asked her to speak. Her impossible wish. The wish festering deep in her soul, and she had broken down and said it, knowing it couldn’t possibly be a harm.
“But wishing for something doesn’t make it happen.” She could feel a lump in her throat as she backed away from the door, she remembered telling the carnival master those words. She had remembered feeling the all-consuming truth in them. She really did want that wish, more than anything, but it was one thing she knew deep down really couldn’t be granted. It was a fact of life, people
would always leave her. Nothing stays the same, everything fades and changes over time.
Everyone fades and changes.
“Shhh, it’ll be alright now.” Mr. Dark had told her then, and she remembered feeling relaxed even as she cried against him.
“You’ll not be alone.” and then, in that moment, she thought she had really believed him. He had said it with such conviction. As if he knew she would never feel loss again as she had felt.
“No one you want to stay will ever be able to leave you again.” what could that have even meant?
And why had he kept calling her a canary?
Oh, that was right, she was to sing at the carnival.
That’s what this was all about, the granting of a wish in exchange for work.
Well, it wasn’t as if she had anywhere else to go. Wish or not, she might as well stay with the carnival. At least she would have a place for a time. That certainly couldn’t be so bad.
She looked to the door one more time.
“A canary…”
She breathed a sigh, and let out a lamenting note. She didn’t even know why she did so, it just seemed to… fit in the moment. She let the note drop and let silence overtake the room again before finally stepping back to the door and turning the knob.
She stepped out of the wagon-- as it had indeed been a wagon-- only to be met with the sights and smells of the carnival. It was light out, early afternoon perhaps. Warm, autumn air fluttered past her as the smell of crisp, decaying leaves and cotton candy found their way to her sensitive nose. Her long, dragon-like whiskers twitched as she took everything in. And her stomach dropped.
Something wasn’t right. She just didn’t know what it was.
“Aye, look, it’s our new little one!” a familiar voice called out. She turned to see a viscet in outlandish clothing. His eyes shone black and red as he grinned to her. His pelt was familiar too…
He was the announcer from before, when she had first come to the carnival. She remembered him disappearing in a puff of smoke before, like magic.
His markings didn’t seem nearly as unnerving, in the daylight, she mused.
“You didn’t put on your outfit! No worries, though! The show won’t be until tomorrow. This is just early setup. Pretty normal, for when we have a new one. Gives you a chance to orient yourself a little."
He smiled brightly as he held out a paw.
“The name’s
Bram.” he said “It’s nice to meet you, Cordelia is it?”
Cordelia nodded, not sure else what to say just yet. She took his paw though, giving it a firm shake before dropping it to her side once more.
“You slept through the first town, and the travel to this one. Now that’s not exactly normal, but you’re body still needed to adjust. You were picked up late, and you were given something quite special, I hear.”
What did any of that mean? Body needing adjusting? Being picked up late? Cordelia couldn’t make whiskers or tails of it. Perhaps she wasn’t fully awake yet.
“I can’t wait to hear that voice, G.M. says it’s really something to behold. Oh man, he’s got us all excited about it.” Bram seemed to visibly vibrate with said excitement.
“Oh, Bram, you’re overwhelming her.” a pink-maned female put a paw to his shoulder “She’s just woken up, you can’t over do it like that. Don’t you remember how you were when you woke up?”
Bram’s smile faded “Yeah
Juliette, of course I remember, I woke up with one heck of a migraine.” he responded gruffly at the memory. “Didn’t go away for a week, almost. At least I woke up before fall. This poor girl will have to perform tomorrow.”
Juliette smiled to Cordelia, trying to reassure her “Well, you don’t seem to have a headache at least. Are you ok? Do you hurt anywhere?”
Cordelia shook her head “I’m a little dizzy though, and thirsty.” now that she had said it out loud, her thirst seemed to rear up with a vengeance. Her tongue felt like sandpaper. She grimaced.
“Oh dear, of course you are. Hungry too, right?”
Cordelia shook her head. She wasn’t really all that hungry.
Juliette stepped over to Cordelia and wrapped an arm around her “Follow me.” she said “We’ll get you taken care of. And then we’ll worry about your wardrobe. That sound good?”
Cordelia only nodded as she allowed the female to direct her to yet another wagon that when inside was certainly bigger on the inside than the outside.
“How is this even possible?” Cordelia questioned as Juliette began to boil tea “All the wagons, being so much bigger inside?”
“Magic.” Juliette replied with a small giggle “This carnival is magic, isn’t it? It seems so surreal at first, but most of us get so used to it after a while that the rest of the world begins to feel fake. It’s why some of us don’t leave, come winter, and busy ourselves with projects where we park at. I usually stay, myself.”
“So you just… travel around with Mr. Dark and everyone all the time? Even when it’s too cold?”
Juliette nodded.
“And you perform, what, through summer and fall? Or maybe part of spring too?”
“No” Juliette answered “Just through the fall, it’s the only time the magic really blossoms here.” she laughed lightly.
“Ah ha….” Cordelia responded “I think I get it.” she really didn’t, but she figured she would learn soon enough.
Could things really be magic? She wondered
Was it really possible? She shook her head of it and focused on the tea that Juliette set in front of her, followed by a bowl of soup she had heated when Cordelia wasn’t paying attention.
“No, it’s fine really, I’m not particularly hungry--”
Juliette smiled “Oh nonsense, I insist. It’s a long time before the meal. Maybe you’re one that doesn’t require food, but even those of us that don’t still feel better after eating.
Don’t require food? Who wouldn’t require food? It made no sense either, but Cordelia simply nodded and took a sip of the tea, thanking the sweet female for her trouble before settling into a silence while they both sipped their tea and Cordelia sipped on her soup as well. She had to admit that it did make her feel a little better, she wasn’t nearly as dizzy now.
“Now that you’re done.” Juliette said several minutes later “Let me help you back to your quarters. We’ll pick an outfit, for now, and if you aren’t fond of what you have we’ll talk to our seamstress. I’m sure she could get something together for you.”
Cordelia followed wordlessly, allowing Juliette even to pick out her outfit when they arrived with little input.
She felt empty as she dressed, and empty as she received Juliette’s praise for her beauty. She was missing something, it didn’t feel quite right, but as they met up with the others she pushed that aside and smiled, greeting everyone she met with gusto. They were all so full of life here. They were beautiful people with smiles and cheer exuding from them, excluding the couple of more… grumpy members that tended to steer clear of the rest. She let everyone else’s excitement fill her, and in truth she was growing more excited about this arrangement. Truth be told, they almost felt like a family. It was as if they all felt connected, even though they all seemed to come from different places and walks of life.
Eventually that empty feeling completely slipped away, filled with the joy she had for the company of her new companions.
As she graced the stage for the first time the following day, taking the microphone into her paws, she felt whole again. As she belted out each note, and the crowd grew quiet with rapt attention, she was filled with happiness and contentment. As the echo of her voice faded from the stage, carried by the wind, the crowd cheered and her heart swelled in response.
Just as they cheered for an encore, she was happy to oblige.
And the following night, she was happy to oblige again.
On the third night, she could even see Mr. Dark watching her, and she was almost happier than before to see him there, smiling with pride at her work.
She was adored-- loved-- by all who would visit the carnival. And when they made their way over to the next town it was much the same. She was thrown roses, offered work from esteemed theaters, offered money, and offered marriages to men of all walks of life-- both human and viscet. And all the while, she grew closer with her new family, rejecting every offer from the strangers as she was content to stay with the carnival.
All during her first fall, she only really questioned how she had fallen asleep during the cusp of winter only to awaken at the beginning of the following fall only once, after a fevered dream late in the night. Even then, she quickly forgot again as she was swept away back the magic of the carnival the following morning.
What was there to question, after all? She was happy, safe, and had the family she always wanted. And even though many of them she knew would leave during the winter, she also knew many would stay… and they would all be back come the next fall.
She was sure of that, though she wasn’t so sure of
why she knew that.