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Authors: Cate Tiernan

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BOOK: Spellbound
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Robbie turned around to look at me and Hunter. “Chip?” he offered, holding out the bag.
It was only ten-thirty in the morning, but I took a handful of barbecue-flavor potato chips and crunched them. With a particularly English look, Hunter declined. I hid a smile.
“Can I have a chip?” Bree asked.
Robbie fed one to her, watching her with an endearing combination of adoration and lust.
I ate another handful of chips and popped open a Diet Coke. Hunter gazed at me steadily, and I tried very hard not to think about making out with him on the floor of my room. “Nature’s perfect beverage,” I said, holding up the can. He grimaced and looked away.
“What an amazing day,” Bree said, stretching in her seat.
“Thanks to me and my weather charm,” I said lightly.
Robbie and Hunter both looked at me in alarm. “You didn’t,” said Robbie.
“You didn’t,” said Hunter.
I was enjoying this. “Maybe I did, maybe I didn’t.”
Hunter looked upset. “You can’t be serious!”
Cahn’t, I thought. Cahn too.
“Have you learned nothing these past weeks?” he asked. “Weather-working is not something to be taken lightly. You have no idea of the consequences this could have. How could you possibly have toyed with improper magick in this way?”
I met Bree’s eyes in the rearview mirror. Instantly a smile broke across her face; she alone could tell I was teasing. It felt so wonderful to be driving somewhere again with her. The last three months had been desolate without her. We had a long way to go toward rebuilding our relationship, but we were making progress, and it felt great.
“You don’t understand what the council—” Hunter went on, really getting wound up.
“Relax, Hunter,” I said, taking pity on him. “I was just kidding. I don’t even know how to work weather magick.”
“Wha—what?” he sputtered.
“I don’t even know how to work weather magick,” I repeated. “And I certainly have learned my lesson about the improper use of magick. Yes, sir. You won’t catch me doing
that
again.” I took a deep, satisfying swig of my Diet Coke.
Hunter drummed his fingers on his door handle and looked out the window. After a moment a reluctant grin crept across his face, and I felt a burst of delight.
“By the way,” he said a few minutes later, “I went into Selene’s house and checked it out, looking for the source of that candle you saw. I didn’t find any trace of anything, neither a person nor any magick.”
“What candle at Cal’s?” Robbie asked.
“I thought I saw someone holding a flickering candle in the window of Cal’s old house,” I explained.
Robbie looked startled and alarmed. “Yikes.”
“So you didn’t see footprints or anything?” I asked Hunter.
“No. It’s already dusty inside, and the dust was undisturbed,” Hunter said. “I wanted to have another go at getting into Selene’s hidden library, but once again I couldn’t find the door.” He shook his head in frustration. “She has incredibly strong magick, I’ll say that for her.”
“Hmmm,” I said, thinking. I had been in that library only once, by accident, when I had found Maeve’s Book of Shadows. I wondered if I could get into it again. The International Council of Witches would surely want to see what, if anything, was left in that room. But I just couldn’t face it. I never wanted to go in that house again. I wanted to help Hunter but just couldn’t bring myself to offer to do this.
“Hey, Bree, you’ll be getting off at the next exit,” said Robbie, who was navigating.
“Okay,” said Bree.
We didn’t talk much about magick after that. I started thinking about the circle I’d had with Sky and Alyce yesterday. I knew I needed to learn more about my heritage, my birth parents, but I was at a loss as to where to begin. They’d died more than fifteen years before, and they’d known no one, had no close friends that I knew of, in America.
When I’d first found out that I was adopted, I’d read every newspaper article I’d found about the fire that killed my birth parents. I’d also found Maeve’s Book of Shadows hidden in Selene’s library (which probably should have tipped me off that Selene wasn’t as open and giving as she seemed), and in the last few weeks I’d read it cover to cover. I’d even found secret passages detailing Maeve’s passionate and tragic love affair with a man other than Angus, my birth father. I had Maeve’s magickal tools, which she’d helped me to find through a vision.
But all that knowledge wasn’t enough. It didn’t fill in the gaping holes in my understanding of Maeve and Angus as
people
—and as Woodbane witches.
As I thought, the miles flew by, and then suddenly we were in Greenport, and Robbie was saying he was ready for lunch.
 
It was a happy, carefree day. We walked around, shopped, ate, laughed. I found a beautiful necklace of glass beads and twisted wire in a craft shop, and bought it to give Bree for Christmas, deciding on the spot to take the initiative. Someone had to be bold if we were going to put our friendship back together.
We all went home in the afternoon, and my aunt Eileen and her girlfriend Paula came over for dinner. Aunt Eileen, my mom’s younger sister, is my favorite aunt, and I was glad to see them. I was even gladder to hear that they were settling into their new home. They’d recently moved to a house in the nearby town of Taunton, and at first they’d been harassed by a bunch of gay-bashing teenagers. Happily, those kids had been arrested, and the rest of the neighbors seemed to be going out of their way to make Aunt Eileen and Paula feel welcome.
At about eight-thirty I said my good nights to everyone and headed out to my car. Our coven was having its weekly circle a day early this week, because a couple of people had holiday obligations with their families on Saturday night. The circle would be at Hunter and Sky’s house.
The beautiful day had flowed into an equally beautiful winter evening. I felt I hadn’t seen the stars for ages, and I relished looking at them through Das Boot’s windshield.
“Morgan.”
In one second my heart stopped cold. I slammed on the brakes, and my car swerved to the right. When I recovered, I wheeled around and scanned the backseat frantically, then looked at the seat next to me, which was of course empty. That voice. Quickly I reached over and pushed down all the door locks and peered out into the darkness.
It had been Cal, Cal’s voice, calling me, as he had done many times before. A witch message.
Where was he?
He was searching for me. Was he nearby? My heart pounded, and adrenaline flooded my body so that my hands were shaky on the steering wheel. Cal! Oh Goddess. Where was he? What did he want?
My next thought was that I had to get to Hunter. Hunter would know what to do.
I sat for a moment, willing my body to stop trembling. Then I put my car back in gear and pulled out again onto the road. I cast my senses out as strongly as I could. I drove carefully, trying to interpret the feelings and impressions I got, but there was no Cal anywhere in them: no voice, no image, no heartbeat.
Cal. The instantaneous tug of my heart horrified and angered me. For one moment, when I’d heard his voice, my heart had leaped in eager anticipation. How stupid
are
you? I asked myself furiously. How big an idiot?
With my senses still at their most alert, I turned down Hunter’s street and parked along his dark, weedy curb. Still no inkling of Cal’s presence. But could I be sure my senses were correct? I cast a fearful look around me, then ducked through the opening in the hedge and headed up the narrow path to Hunter and Sky’s ramshackle house.
A few feet from the front stairs the sound of voices and laughter from around back stopped me, and I picked my way impatiently through the dead grass and clumps of old snow, down the sloping lawn to their back porch. Hunter, I thought. I need you. I had made a mistake in not telling Hunter about the candle in Cal’s house. This I knew I had to tell him right away.
“Yo! Morganita,” Robbie called, and I looked up to see him hanging over the side of the deck. The house had been built into the side of a steep hill, so in front there were only four steps to the porch, but in back the porch was on the second story, supported by long wood pilings. Dropping off sharply behind the house, the hill turned into a steep, rocky ravine that was wild and beautiful during the day, dark and ominous at night.
“Hey,” I called. “Where’s Hunter?” I heard Bree’s voice, and Jenna’s laugh, and smelled the spicy, comforting scent of clove and cinnamon and apples.
“Right here,” Hunter called.
I looked up at him, sending him a message. I need to talk to you. I’m scared.
Frowning, he started down to meet me. I hurried up the stairs, comforted by the reality of his presence. How far could someone send a witch message? I wondered. Was it possible Cal had called me from, say, France? I wanted to believe it was.
The porch staircase was long and rickety, with two turns before the top. Hunter was halfway down, and when I was almost to him, our glances met: we were both feeling the first prickle of alarm, our senses processing the unnatural feelings of shakiness and sway in the staircase. Then Hunter was reaching out his hand to me in slow motion, and I reached back even as I heard the first, thundering crack of wood splitting and felt the steps fall away beneath my feet, leaving me to drop endlessly into darkness, away from the light and my friends.
 
I was unconscious barely a moment: when I opened my eyes, wood fragments were still settling around me, and dust tickled my nose. I hurt all over.
“Morgan! Morgan! Hunter!” It was hard to tell who was calling, but I sensed Hunter near me, trying to struggle into a sitting position beneath one of the porch’s support beams.
“Here!” Hunter called back, sounding shaken. “Morgan?”
“Here,” I said weakly, feeling like my chest had been crushed, like I would never have enough breath in my lungs again. I tried to turn my head to look at the porch, but I must have rolled far down into the ravine, because I couldn’t see the top.
“Hang on—I’ll come get you,” said Hunter, and I saw that he was about eight feet above me. Then Robbie, Matt, and Sky were leaning over the edge of the ravine with flashlights and a long rope. Holding the rope, Hunter edged his way toward me, and I grabbed his hand. Together we climbed up the rocky slope, and by the time I reached the top and sat down on the edge, I was trembling all over. I saw that the porch was still attached to the house, but the corner where the stairs had been sagged frighteningly, and the stairs themselves were in pieces. Our coven members stood on the lawn in a frightened group. It looked as if only Hunter and I had fallen when the stairs collapsed.
“Are you guys all right?” Bree asked. I saw fear and concern in her eyes.
I nodded. “Nothing feels broken. I must have landed on something soft,” I said.
“That was me, I think. But I’m all right, more or less,” Hunter added. He put a hand to his side and winced. “Just a few scrapes and bruises.”
Sky put her arm around my waist and helped me around to the front of the house and inside.
“What happened?” Matt asked, following us. “Was the wood rotten?”
The coven members gathered around, going over what had just happened. As soon as they’d seen the stairs collapsing, they had crowded back through the kitchen door. I was so glad no one else had been hurt.
Sky left the kitchen, and Bree led me to a chair. “That was terrifying,” she said. “Seeing you and Hunter go down.” She shook her head.
“Here. I found some kava kava tea,” said Jenna, pressing a warm mug into my hand.
I nodded and took it from her. “Thanks.” I sipped the herb tea, hoping it would take effect soon. What a night it had been already, between hearing Cal’s voice and then having this accident.
A few minutes later Sky came back in. “Hunter’s looking at the porch,” she reported. “Now let’s get you cleaned up.” She fetched a small basket of supplies from the bathroom and started washing my cuts and bruises. “Arnica,” she said, holding out a small vial. “Good for trauma.”
I was letting the pills dissolve under my tongue when Hunter limped in, his face grim. He had scrapes on his cheek, and his sweater was ripped and bloody on one side. For myself, I knew I’d have bruises on my back and legs, but that was pretty much it.
“The posts were sawed,” Hunter announced, throwing down the coil of rope.
“What?” Robbie exclaimed. He, Bree, and Jenna were hovering by my chair. Matt, Raven, Sharon, and Ethan were standing at the back door, looking out at what was left of the porch. Thalia, Alisa, and Simon hadn’t arrived yet.
I stared at Hunter in alarm, and Cal’s voice echoed in my head again. “Sawed with a saw, or spelled to break?” I asked.
“Looked like a saw,” Hunter said as Jenna gave him a mug of the same tea I was drinking. “I didn’t sense any magick. I’ll have a closer look tomorrow, in the daylight.”
He looked at me: we needed to talk. This was the second time we had almost been killed when we were together. It couldn’t be coincidence.
“Maybe we should call the police,” said Jenna.
Hunter shook his head. “They’d think we’re subversive Wiccan weirdos who are being persecuted by the neighbors,” he said dryly. “I’d rather not bring them into this.”
“Okay, everybody, I’m going to lead the circle tonight,” Sky announced, getting everyone’s attention. “We’ll start in a few minutes. Why don’t the rest of you come to the circle room and start getting settled in while Morgan and Hunter finish their tea?”
They all trooped out. Robbie cast a worried glance over his shoulder at me as he left.
Alone, Hunter and I sat in silence for a moment.
“Neither of these accidents looked like magick,” Hunter said at last. He breathed in the steam from his mug. “But as I said, I just can’t think of any enemies I might have who aren’t witches.”
BOOK: Spellbound
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