…only to find Lily.
The Midnight Dig
She was barefoot in the damp grass, wearing her oversized Cinderella nightgown. But the girl who cried when the hallway bulb burned out wasn’t cowering. Instead, she was holding our father’s heavy, rusted iron spade—a tool that was nearly as tall as she was.
With a chilling, mechanical rhythm, she lifted the heavy shovel and drove it into the soil. Thud. Squelch. Thud. She was digging a trench in a perfect, wide circle around the ancient oak tree. The moonlight caught the silver threads of her nightgown, contrasting sharply with the thick black mud caked beneath her fingernails and smeared across her cheeks.
“Lily?” I whispered, my voice trembling in the cold night air.
She didn’t startle. She didn’t drop the shovel. She simply paused, resting her small hands on the wooden handle, and turned her head slowly. Her eyes were wide, alert, and entirely devoid of the fear I expected to see.
The Glitter Trench
“Go back inside, Tommy,” she said, her voice dropping a terrifying octave below its usual high-pitched squeak. “It’s almost feeding time.”
I froze, my bare feet glued to the icy patio stones. “What are you doing? Why are you out here in the dark?”
Lily turned back to her work, driving the spade down one last time before dropping it. From the deep pockets of her nightgown, she pulled out a massive handful of her beloved pink crafting glitter.
“They don’t like the light,” Lily stated matter-of-factly, sprinkling a thick line of shimmering pink dust into the freshly dug trench. “And they hate the sparkle. It burns their skin when they try to crawl up from the roots.”
I walked closer, my heart hammering against my ribs. I looked past her shoulder, down into the shadows at the base of the old oak. The earth there was unnaturally loose, shifting slightly as if something beneath the surface was breathing.
Then, a low, guttural hiss echoed from the darkness of the roots.
Lily didn’t flinch. She reached into her other pocket, pulled out one of her prized stuffed unicorns—the one with the velvet horn—and unceremoniously dropped it into the center of the glittering circle.
“Bait,” she whispered, patting the dirt down over the glowing pink barrier.
The New Normal
The hiss turned into a frustrated screech, followed by the sound of something heavy burrowing frantically back down into the depths of the earth, away from the shimmering perimeter.
Lily wiped a streak of mud across her forehead, let out a tired sigh, and grabbed my hand. Her fingers were freezing.
“Come on,” she said, her voice returning to its normal, cheerful pitch. “I need to wash my hands before mom wakes up. Do you think she’ll buy me more glitter tomorrow? I’m running low.”
I let my seven-year-old sister lead me back inside. I realized then that she wasn’t terrified of the dark because she was a helpless little girl. She was terrified of the dark because she was the only one who knew exactly what was hiding in it—and the three nightlights in her bedroom weren’t for comfort. They were a tactical defense.
