I pause for a moment, watching Salem sleeping, then when she doesn't stir, I quietly move into the room and put my backpack down. I change into an oversized t-shirt that comes halfway down my thighs then tiptoe over to the window with its sliver of moonlight. I sink down to sit on the floor in the light with the mason jar I brought from home in my hands. I unscrew the lid and reach into the water inside, gently scooping one of the two dark ribbons there into my hand.
"Hello, friend," I whisper to the squirming black leech in my palm. I sit cross-legged and place the creature on the inside of my thigh next to a dozen little three-pronged scars from feedings past. When he bites, I don't feel anything but a slight tingling from the anesthesia in his saliva. I lean my head back against the wall, eyes turned up to the night sky. It'll be a good forty minutes before he finishes feeding, the orange speckles on his back stretched and full, but not of blood. He'll be full of darkness, of Whispers, of voices and the giggles that haunt me, and for a little while, the edge of the Whispers' knives will be dulled. They'll be quiet enough that I can crawl into bed with Salem and peacefully, finally, sleep.