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The twinsone boy and one girlsat beneath the thick wooden table, listening. Rain pattered against the windows, and the fire crackled in front of their father as he carved a new ward to sit on Governor Gales roof beam. The thin curls of wood flipped themselves neatly into the hearth as he worked. Their mother stood next to him in the firelight as they spoke in clipped whispers.
They say he walked right out of his house last night, the girl heard her mother say.
Their father said nothing, but his mouth tightened and another curl of wood whipped itself into the fire.
He was a good mana good neighbor.
Their mother wiped her eyes on her sleeves. He never went into the wood. He kept his wards strong.
The girl swallowed. She hadnt known Mr. Chaten well, but he had once brought a stew to share with them when her father was gone to Traders Hollow.
What was it? their father asked, and the girls heart quailed at the anger in his low voice.
Governor Gale thinks the malediction took the shape of a fork. Just just a plain fork.
Their father sighed and let the carving fall to his lap. He turned to their mother and took her hands. Such a simple thing. Did he bring it inside? Did he use it?
Her mother nodded, and the girl could feel the tickle of her brothers breath near her ear, listening with her.
Uprooted it in his own field, their mother choked. It could have been us, Rob. He thought it was his own. He laughed with Talon about it last night at the innhow hed grown careless in his old age.
And
Andthis morning he was gone. Walked into the Grimwood on his own two feet in the night.
Their father turned back to his carving. Another flick of his knife. Another curl of wood hissing in the fire. He wont be back.
No. He wont be back.
Any pickers?
Not that anyone saw. Only footprints.
The girls brother shifted next to her. I bet the pickers come tonight, the boy said in her ear, making the hair on her neck rise. His dark curls, a perfect match to hers, caught the light. I bet you picked up a malediction and didnt even know it, just like Mr. Chatensome little thing by the riverand tonight the pickers will walk through the Hollows with their stick bodies and their tiny heads, and their scrabbling legs. Theyll tap at your window and call you out to follow them into the Grimwood.
They will not! The girl scowled as she sat up and crossed her arms. The two looked alike in every waydark curls, dark eyes, and skin the color of gingerbreadthe same shade as the pale brown earth under their fingernails. She was, perhaps, a bit smaller, a little thinner in the facebut perhaps not.
Anyway, the pickers would never take me, she hissed at him. Mother says Im too ornery to feed to the thorn trees. But I bet the faeries will take you in the night. A gleam came into her eyes. Their queen will come knocking. Mother wont even mind. Shell let them through the wards, and theyll take you away in chains.
The boys face fell. Tears filled his eyes. A flash of remorse flew across the girls face. Her brother was full of clever thoughts and bright plans, but the sharp edge of his imagination cut two ways. He was too quick to believe. She took his hand. They wont really, Peter, she whispered, unable to meet his eyes.
They watched their mothers feet, silent in green wool house shoes, as she moved across the worn floor to open the front door of the cottage. The pensive blues of nightfall spilled into the room like the finest faery silk. See, the girl insisted. Mothers setting the wards now.
They peeked together out from under the table as their mother placed their protective ward gently on its post outside the door. The gruesome witch, with her twiggy carved hair and sharp teeth would keep away real witchesand other horrors they couldnt name. Then their mother sprinkled salt and iron shavings at their doorstep and held up the small bell, ringing it to set the wards. Many are the roots, she sang. Many are the eyes. Pass us by. Pass us by. Pass us by. Her words rang like the bell, over the top of their neighbors voices as they did the same, their many voices and bells folding into a singsong. Pass us by. Pass us by.
The boy shivered, and grabbed his sisters other hand. Say the rhyme with me, Mags.
Her smile could have warmed a stone. She turned to face him, both cross-legged, and met his eyes. Their voices pitched just over a whisper as the scent of warm bread filled the room.
Stay away from the Grimwood, child. Stay away from the fog. Stay away from the thorn trees, child. Stay away from the bog. Keep the promise. Rue the day. The Grimwood is no place to play. Close the shutters. Lock the doors. They come for you on twos and fours. They come for you on twos and fours.
There were terrible things in the Grimwood. Things that could, and would, try to kill her. This was why Poppys parents didnt want her in the Grimwood at all. She understood that, and yet here she was, standing at the forests edge.
Her heart raced, but not from fear. It wasnt likely shed bump into a monsternot at high noon, so close to the town of Strange Hollow.
She peered into the woods dappled shadows where the trees stretched away behind the cockeyed arches and towers of her house. Poppy could only manage one hundred paces into the wood before the ward her parents put on her became unbearable. They hoped it would curb her thirst to learn everything there was to know about the Grimwood, but it didnt. Trying to make her stay out only made the longing worse. Especially when her parents were always leaving on long, mysterious trips into the wood themselves.
She was nine when her parents stopped sharing stories of their work. They must have realized that the light in Poppys eyes was more than just a passing fancy. Instead they huddled together in the kitchen reviewing their plans when they thought she was asleep. Poppy, in turn, perfected the art of eavesdropping. She learned a lot that way, not just about the woods, but about the dangers her parents faced hunting maledictions. They risked their lives to bring the objects home and put them in stasismaking them powerless to lure the people of Strange Hollow into the wood.
Poppy tugged her long black hair into a ponytail and wiped her palms against her black jeans. She carried her small day pack, filled to bursting with her mothers old net gun, an extra knife (her favorite was holstered in her right boot), two apples, bug spray, and a water bottle. She slung the length of rope over her shoulder. Before she left the house, shed swapped her own black T-shirt for one of her mothers from the laundrydecorated with a sea dragon and the words They Might Be Giants, whatever that was supposed to mean. She lifted the neckline of the shirt and closed her eyes to take a deep breath. The bunched muscles of her shoulders eased as the warm green scent of her mothers vetiver oil washed over her.