Then the Factor came.
The mill’s shadow was colder than the air around it. Anya stepped over the threshold, and the silence swallowed the sound of cicadas. In the centre of the grinding floor, a shallow basin sat beneath the dormant millstone. She poured the dill seeds in. dill mill
Nothing happened.
“It worked,” she gasped.
Anya knelt. She scooped the seeds into her palm. They were warm. She planted them along the new course of the creek, and over the years, wild dill grew in a thick, feathery hedge. No one ever rebuilt the mill. But on the driest summer nights, the old folk say, you can still hear a single, gentle turn of the wheel—and if you listen close, the whisper of a girl telling the stone to sleep. Then the Factor came