You wake up in a strange city, in a bed that doesn’t belong to you, and you feel a strange tickling in your pinkie. You glance down – a small pair of turquoise and brown feathers are fluttering on your nail bed. “What the…” you begin to murmur, but before you can complete the sentiment, a stranger slides back into the bed beside you.
“Oh,” he says with a big smile, “you’re awake.”
You writhe around, trying to find a way to keep the stranger from discovering what you just found out for yourself – that over night, you’ve developed a tiny pair of wings.
You try to smile back, but the stranger recognizes how uncomfortable you are. “Would you like to freshen up?” he offers.
How magnanimous, you think. Maybe he has some nail clippers in the bathroom and I can just snip the wings off. You nod and hide your hands behind your back as he gestures toward the bathroom. You nod and scurry to the bathroom, slamming the door behind you. “Sorry,” you call over your shoulder.
“No worries,” he replies. At least he seems like an easygoing enough guy. You find a hairbrush and untangle your snarled hair. You make do without a toothbrush. Then, the most important reason – you start hunting for a pair of nail clippers.
You find them and easily snip the wings off, but even in the yellow light of the bathroom, they are oddly beautiful – the turquoise is the color of the ocean and the brown is even lovely, the shade of a wren’s feathers.
Even weirder is the pain that sears through you when you cut them off. Like a scorching, sizzling sort of pain. You bite back a gasp.
Then, the unthinkable happens.
The two tiny feathers that had been beating against each other grow back.

“You okay in there?” the stranger calls.
You are speechless but finally swallow your fears and call back, “Yep. I’m fine.”
You think about it. This is a stranger. You probably slept together. You don’t really remember much. The night is a little hazy. You are naked. You did wake up in his bed. He was naked when he came back to bed.
“Did we have sex?” you ask because why the hell not? That’s safer than asking him if he knows anything about pinkie feathers.
“I was that memorable, huh?” he replies, his voice teasing. “We sure did. Next thing you know, you’ll tell me you don’t remember my name.”
Shit. It’s like someone wiped your memory clean.
What is his name?
“You’re going to hate me,” you respond, your voice decidedly not teasing.
“I’m Micah,” he tells you, “and you can come out of the bathroom now. I know all about the feathers on your finger.”
…to be continued.
Isabelle Palerma
This short story is entirely my own content – no A.I. used to create this.