Rain. Again.
I don’t know which god controls the weather, but if I ever et them, I’m going to slap them with this soggy shawl and ask what exactly their problem is.
I trudge up the hill alone, soaked head to toe, dragging penitence behind like a funeral snail. The Dragon refused to co. Flat-out refused.
“Not that lunatic again,” he said.
“He gave us a hallucinated grimoire last ti.”
“He thought you were a war cri wearing jewelry.”
“He summoned footnote maggots.”
Which, okay. Fair. But I’m desperate.
So here I am. Midnight. Rain. Miserable. Shivering. Wrapped in the sa black penitence shroud like a sexy cultist in mourning. I look like a depressed cult recruiter who lost her clipboard.
I knock.
Silence.
I knock again.
A shuffle. A crash. A muffled "Maude, I swear if it's another goat—"
Then the door creaks open.
He peers out. Eyebrows like burnt shrubbery. Beard with its own weather system. Robes askew. Eyes bloodshot and blinking unevenly.
He sees .
Sees the shawl.
Sees the rain behind .
Sees absolutely nothing else.
He gasps.
“Death…”
I blink. “What?”
“You’ve co for at last,” he whispers, clutching the doorfra. “I knew it. I felt it. In bunions.”
“No—”
“Maude warned ! Said the chickens were actin’ funny this morning! Said don’t drink the seventh bottle! Said don’t mix wine with frog balm! But I did! I always do!”
“I’m not Death!” I yell. “I’m Saya!”
He narrows one eye. Then two. Squints hard enough to rupture a blood vessel.
“…You sure?”
“Do I look like Death?”
“You look like Death’s side hustle.”
“I brought cookies.”
He stares. Blinks again. Looks behind like he’s expecting a scythe.
Finally, he opens the door all the way.
“Roit,” he mutters. “Get in. But if you’re here to reap soul, do it quick. I’ve got stew on.”
Inside, it’s even worse than last ti.
There are more jars. More blinking things in the jars. The sa goat from last ti is back, this ti wearing a bonnet. Sothing on the bookshelf is weeping softly.
The wizard shuffles over to a table, picks up a teacup, sniffs it, decides it’s too clean, and pours sothing from a flask labeled “ALMOST DEFINITELY NOT POISON (MAUDE DON’T TOUCH)” into it.
I stand dripping in the middle of his war cri of a living room.
“I need help.”
He groans. “Oh gods, it’s the scale thing again, innit?”
“No. Worse.”
He turns slowly. “You’re pregnant.”
“No.”
“Cursed with twin heads?”
“No.”
“You married the Dragon?”
“No.”
He shrugs. “Roit. That exhausts list of horrors.”
I step forward, serious now. “I was told… I ate a Migwai.”
He freezes.
“…A what now?”
“A Migwai.”
He turns pale. “You an Mogwai?”
“That’s what I said.”
“You said Migwai.”
“Sa thing.”
He sets the cup down slowly. “No. It ain’t.”
I cross my arms. “So what the hell is it?”
He scratches his head. “Mogwai’s a… sort of… taphysical furball, innit? Born of starlight and goat sin. Harmless unless invoked during lunar transitions or consud during monts of karmic vulnerability.”
I stare. “That’s not an explanation.”
“It is if you squint.”
“So what happens if I ate one?”
He goes rigid.
“Oh gods.”
“What?”
He turns, stumbles toward a book, throws it open. Pages fly. Dust poofs. Sothing inside it hisses and dies.
“You consud a Mogwai? Like... whole?”
“I don’t know! I didn’t an to! I might’ve! I eat a lot of strange things when I’m drunk or emotional.”
He slaps the book shut. Whirls on .
“THERE IS NO CURE!”
I jump. “What?”
He’s pacing now.
Wildly.
Arms flapping like he’s trying to take off or ward off invisible bees.
I throw my hands up. “I DON’T EVEN KNOW WHAT A MIGWAI IS, LET ALONE WHETHER I ATE ONE!”
He freezes. Slowly pivots toward . One eyebrow lifting like a seesaw of doom.
“Mogwai,” he whispers. “MOGwai. Stars above, woman, get the pronunciation right before the fluff hears you.”
“I can’t!” I wail. “I don’t even know what it is! How could I have eaten one?!”
“Are ye sure,” he says, leaning in close, “absolutely sure ye ate one?”
“I don’t KNOW!” I say. “The oracle with the gold llamas told I did! She said maybe it was in this life or maybe in a past one, but the fluff was devoured.”
He goes sheet-white.
Sweat beads.
One eye twitches.
Then—
“No, no, NO, no, nonono—”
He starts pacing again, faster, hands shaking. “THERE IS NO CURE for Mogwai-infested karma! No counter-spell! No ritual! No divine refund!”
“I don’t even REMBER my past incarnations!” I cry.
He stops just long enough to yell, “That’s because ye were a mushroom in five of them and an earthworm in two!”
I blink. “I’m sorry—WHAT?!”
He flings his arms skyward. “THAT’S WHY YE DON'T REMBER! Mushrooms don’t keep diaries! Earthworms don’t ruminate on existential fluff consumption!”
“But—HOW,” I sputter, “could I eat a Mogwai as a mushroom or an earthworm?!”
He grabs his head like he’s trying to squeeze clarity out of his skull.
“I DON’T KNOW! Maybe soone fed ye to one another! Maybe ye were spiritual compost! Maybe ye absorbed the fluff osmotically! Mogwai are taphysical! They don’t give a toss about digestive logistics!”
I gape at him.
He gapes at .
A jar on the shelf blinks.
The goat in the bonnet sneezes.
The wizard points at with trembling fingers.
“If the oracle said ye ate a Mogwai—past, present, or hypothetical future—then ye DID. An’ now yer karmic ledger is fluff-stained beyond redemption.”
“That can’t be right,” I whisper. “It’s… ridiculous.”
“Oh, aye,” he says, nodding rapidly, “ridiculous is exactly where Mogwai thrive. Chaos. Nonsense. Low moral fiber. They LOVE souls like yers.”
I don’t know whether to cry or hit him.
Maybe both.
He looks at with a haunted seriousness.
“Lass… Mogwai don’t just happen. They’re attracted to the spiritually… compromised.”
“I am NOT compromised!”
He stares.
I stare back.
The shawl slips off one shoulder dramatically.
He coughs. “Right. Anyway.”
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