By night the lamplights bloom in blue, and Squinty Bat comes lurking through. A flicker, a whisper, a crooked spin, she twirls in the hush where dreams begin.
She nibbles moths that orbit the glow, grim as the gossip graveyards know. Around the lamp she loops and slides, a velvet ribbon on moonlit tides.
At morning sun - dreadful, bright! - Miss Clara Parrot claims the light. She squawks and scolds, so green, so loud, a herald of day to the mortal crowd.
She tattles from trees with her feathered choir, spilling the secrets that night conspired. Their laughter clatters like shattered glass, naming each sin the shadows let pass.
Neighbors groan and pull their sheets as Clara reigns over waking streets. While Squinty swings in her secret nook, dangling like crime in a dusty book.
By day, it’s Clara, gossip and glare, by night, it’s Squinty, a ghost in the air. And before you ask: Which one is blessed? the sun and the moon will refuse that test.