of three. They always entered a room walking forward in single file, but for some reason, they left by flying backward. Each one possessed spellbinding beauty, but the youngest was exceptional. Her name was Esme, though only another gossipwitch was allowed to call a gossipwitch by name. She wore a gleaming crystal teardrop on a chain around her neck.
Esme smiled seductively. “I hope we haven’t interrupted anything important.”
Solon watched the candlelight playing off the young witch’s necklace. He was taller than most of the gossipwitches, but Esme had several inches on him. “I gave you three damselflies yesterday. That buys me at least a day without your persecution.”
The witches glanced at one another, sculpted eyebrows raised. Their bees swarmed in busy circles.
“We are not here presently to collect,” the oldest of them said. The lines on her face were mesmerizing, pretty, like a sand dune shaped by a strong wind.
“We bring news,” Esme said. “The girl will arrive shortly.”
“But it isn’t even raining—”
“How would a hermetic fart-hammer like you know?” the middle witch spat.
A spray of seawater shot out of the waterfall’s pool, drenching the Poet but glancing off of Solon’s Seedbearer skin.
“How long will it take you to prepare her?” Esme asked.
“I’ve never met the girl.” Solon shrugged. “Even if she’s not as stupid as I suspect, these things take time.”
“Solon.” Esme fingered the charm on her necklace. “We want to go home.”
“That’s crystal clear,” Solon said. “But the journey to the Sleeping World is not possible at this juncture.” He paused. “Do you know how many tears were shed?”
“We know that Atlas and the Filling are near.” Esme’s forked tongue hissed.
What was the Filling? Filiz saw Solon shudder.
“When we glazed your home, you promised to make it worth our while,” the oldest witch reminded Solon. “All these years we have kept you out of view from your family.…”
“And I pay you for that protection! Three damselflies only yesterday.”
Filiz had heard Solon grumble about being indebted to these beasts. He hated obliging their incessant requests for winged creatures from his butterfly hall. But he didn’t have a choice. The witches’ glaze rendered the air around Solon’s cave imperceptible to the senses. Without it, the other Seedbearers would detect his location on the wind. They would hunt down the brother who betrayed them by falling in love with a Tearline girl.
What did the witches do with the fluttering dragonflies and damselflies, the regal monarchs and occasional blue morpho butterflies that Solon bestowed on them in small glass jars? Judging from the gossipwitches’ hungry eyes when they snatched the jars and slipped them in the long pockets of their caftans, Filiz imagined it was something terrible.
“Solon.” Esme had a way of speaking that made it sound like she was both a galaxy away and inside Filiz’s brain. “We won’t wait forever.”
“Do you think these visits speed the process? Leave me to my work.”
Instinctively, everyone looked at the pathetic spectacle the headless Ovid made, wires protruding from its neck.
“It won’t be long now, Solon,” Esme whispered, drawing something from the pocket of her caftan. She placed a small tin on the floor. “We brought you some honey, honey. Farewell.”
The witches smirked as they arched their arms behind their heads, lifted their feet off the ground, and flew backward, up the waterfall and out of the damp, dark cave.
“Do you believe them?” Filiz asked Solon as she and the Poet laid the robot’s head next to its body. “About the girl being on her way? You knew the last Tearline girl. We have only heard the stories, but you—”
“Never mention Byblis,” Solon said, and turned away.
“Solon,” Filiz pressed, “do you believe the witches?”
“I believe nothing.” Solon set about reattaching Ovid’s head.
Filiz