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Authors: Cate Tiernan

BOOK: Spellbound
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I feel no pain, I thought fiercely. I am fine. Everything in my life is perfect, whole, and complete. I am strength. I am power. I am magick.
Then I was standing tall, my back straight, my hands at my sides. I looked calmly at Selene and for one fraction of a second saw disbelief in her eyes. More than disbelief. I saw the barest hint of fear.
Whirling, she turned to face Hunter and threw out her hand. I saw no witch fire, but Hunter immediately raised his hands and drew sigils in the air. His chest heaved as he pulled in breath, and though I couldn’t actually see anything, I knew that Selene was trying to do to him what she had done to me and that he was resisting it. I had never seen so much of his power, not even when he was putting the
braigh
on David Redstone, and it was awesome.
But it wasn’t enough for us to resist Selene. We had to actually vanquish her. We had to render her powerless somehow. I searched Alyce’s data banks, concealed within my brain, and began to sift through the encyclopedias of knowledge she had acquired in her lifetime.
How do you fight darkness with light? I asked myself. In the same way that sunlight dispels a shadow, came the unhelpful answer. I almost screamed with frustration—I needed something practical, something concrete. Not mumbo jumbo.
The edge of my senses picked up a slight breathing sound—Mary K. She sat, as motionless as a doll, her open eyes unseeing, in the shadows of the corner. Without thinking, I quickly called up spells of distraction, of turn-away. If Selene looked at Mary K., I wanted her to shift focus slightly, to see nothing, to not remember my sister’s presence.
Hunter and Selene were facing each other, and suddenly Hunter surprised me by snatching up a crystal globe from a shelf and humming it at Selene. Her eyes widened and she stepped sideways, but the globe hit her shoulder with an audible thunk. In the next instant she flung out her hand and an athame flew across the room, straight at Hunter. It reminded me too much of that awful night weeks ago, and I flinched, but Hunter deflected the knife easily, and it glanced off a lamp and fell to the ground.
What could I do? I had no experience at things whizzing through the air—I had never practiced controlling physical things like that. In this battle I would need to use magick and magick alone. I would need to use my truth.
I saw Hunter pull out his
braigh
, the silver chain that was spelled to prevent its wearer from making magick. Coupled with some spells, it was enough to stop most witches.
But Selene merely glanced at Hunter with contempt, dismissing his threat and turning to me. Walking quickly across the room, she said, “Morgan, stop this foolishness. Call off your watchdog. You have it in you to be one of the greatest witches of all time: you are a true Woodbane, pure and ancient. Don’t deny your heritage any longer. Join us, my dear.”
“No, Selene,” I said. Inside me, I consciously opened the door to my magick and with a deep, indrawn breath allowed it to flow. The first strains of a power chant began to thread their way into my mind.
Her beautiful face hardened, and I once again realized what I was up against. Hunter had said that Selene had been wanted by the council for years—that she had been implicated in countless deaths. Clinging to calmness, I nevertheless wished every member of the council would suddenly burst through the open door, capes waving, wands brandished, spells spouting from their lips. Coming here alone had been desperate. It had been crazy. Worse, it had been stupid.
Hunter began moving on Selene. His lips were moving, his eyes intent, and I knew he was starting the binding spells he used as a Seeker. Seeming bored, Selene barely waved a hand at him, and he stopped still, blinking. Then he started forward again, and again she stopped him.
With my mind I reached out, closed my eyes, and tried to see what I felt was there. I saw that Selene was putting up blocks and that Hunter was working through the blocks—but not as quickly as she was able to put them up. I also saw the first thin ribbons of my power spell coming to me, floating toward me on the winds of my heritage. I reached out for them, but Selene interrupted me.
“Morgan, don’t you want to know the truth about how your mother died?”
17
Shift
Yule, 1982
 
The house is decorated with yew boughs and holly, wintergreen and mistletoe. Red candles burn and catch Cal’s eyes, now golden, like mine. This is his first Yule, and he loves it.
I found out that Daniel’s whore in England had a baby, a
boy, a month ago. It’s Daniel’s. She named him Gìomanach. Daniel must be shielding her, because I haven’t been able to find her, this Fiona, and get rid of her. Now I’m going to ask Amyranth to help me. It’s hard to describe the feelings I have.
It’s so painful to admit to humiliation, despair, fury. If I were truly strong, I would strike Daniel dead. In my fantasies
I’ve done that a thousand times—I’ve put his head on a spike
in my front yard, cut out his heart, and mailed it to dear
Fiona. I would scry to see her opening the box, seeing his heart. I would laugh.
Except that this is Daniel. I don’t understand why I feel about him the way I do. Goddess help me, I can’t stop loving him. If my love for him could be cut out from me, I would take up an athame and do it. If my need for him could be burned out, I would sear myself with witch fire or candle fire or an athame heated red hot in flame.
The fact that I still love him, despite his betrayal, despite the fact that he had a bastard with another woman, is like a sickness. I asked him how it had happened; were they both such poor witches that they couldn’t even weave a contraceptive spell? He snapped at me and said no, the child was an accident, conceived of honest emotion. Unlike Calhoun, who had been my decision alone. He stormed out, into the wet San Francisco fog. He’ll be back. It’ll be against his will, but he always returns.
The joy in my life right now consists of one being, one perfection who delights me. Cal at six months is surpassing all my hopes and expectations. He has wisdom in his baby eyes, a hunger for knowledge I recognize. He’s a beautiful child and easy: calm-tempered yet determined, willful yet heartbreak ingly sweet. To see his face light up when I come in makes everything else worthwhile. So this Yule is a time of darkness and light, for me as well as the Goddess.
—SB
 
I blinked and snapped my head to look at Selene. She will use anything against you, I thought. Even your dead mother. This is why you needed to know yourself. And you do.
At once Selene seemed pathetic, like an ant, like an insect, and I felt all-powerful. In my mind the ancient ribbons of power, the crystalline tune that contained the true name of magick itself, intensified.
“I know exactly how my mother died,” I answered evenly, and saw her flicker of surprise. “She and Angus were burned to death by Ciaran, her
mùirn beatha dàn
.”
I felt rather than saw Selene sending out fast, dark tendrils of magick, and before they reached me, I put up a block around myself so I remained untouched inside it, free of her anger. I felt the urge to laugh at how easy it was.
But Selene was older than I, much more educated than I, and in the end she knew how to fight better than I did. “You’re seeing only what Hunter wants you to see,” she said with a frightening intensity. She moved closer to me still, her eyes glowing like a tiger’s, lit from within. “He has been controlling you these past weeks. Can’t you see that? Look at him.”
For some stupid reason I actually did flick a glance toward Hunter. “Don’t listen to her!” he gasped, walking toward me with halting movements.
Before my eyes, the Hunter I had come to know changed: the bones of his face grew heavier, his jaw sharper, his mouth more cruel. His eyes sank into shadow. His skin was mottled with odd white striations. His mouth twisted in a hungry leer, and even his teeth seemed sharper, more pointed, more animal-like. He looked like an evil caricature of himself.
In my split second of uncertainty, of dismay, Selene struck.
“An nahl nath rac!”
she cried, and shot a bolt of crackly blue lightning toward Hunter. It hit his throat and he gagged, his eyes wide, and sank to his knees.
“Hunter!” I yelled. He still looked different, evil, and I knew Selene was doing it, but I couldn’t help feeling repelled. I felt intense guilt and shame. I was supposed to trust myself, my own instincts, but the problem was, my instincts had been wrong before.
Now Selene was muttering dark spells as she advanced on me, and involuntarily I took a step back. All at once panic came crashing down on me: I had screwed up. I had made a good start but had lost it. Now Hunter was down, Mary K. was vulnerable, and I was going to die.
I felt the first prickles of Selene’s spells as they flitted around me like biting insects. Tiny stings bit my skin, making me writhe, and gray mist swirled at the edges of my vision. I realized she was going to wrap me in a cloud of pain and smother me. And I couldn’t stop her.
“Not my daughter.”
I heard the Irish-accented voice clearly in my head, its sweet inflection not hiding the steel underneath the words. I recognized it instantly as Maeve, my birth mother. “Not
my
daughter,” she said again in my mind.
I gulped in a breath. I couldn’t let Selene win. Hunter was curled on the floor, motionless. I couldn’t even see Mary K.; the gray mist had closed in so that I could see only Selene, glowing in front of me as if she contained a fire within her. In my mind I stretched out my hand to seize power, to draw it to me. I tried to forget everything, to concentrate only on my own spells of protection and binding. I am made of magick, I told myself. All of magick is mine for the taking. Again and again I repeated these words until they seemed part of my song, my chant that calls power. Ancient words, recognizable but unknown, came to my lips, and I flung out my arms and twirled in a circle, barely feeling my hair flying out in waves behind me.
“Menach bis,”
I muttered, feeling the words coming to me in a voice that I didn’t recognize, a man’s voice. Could it be Angus?
“Allaigh nith rah. Feard, burn, torse, menach bis.”
I swirled faster in my circle of one, weaving this spell, this one perfect spell that would protect me, stop Selene, help Hunter, and keep Mary K. safe. To me it was like seeing a perfect geometric shape forming in space: the lines of the spell, its forms, its intersections and boundaries and limitations. It was a shape made of light, of energy, of music, and I saw it forming around me in the room, being woven by the words that spilled from my mouth.
And as the shape formed, I saw another shape come into focus in the background, behind Selene. Cal. He stepped through the door, into the library, and Selene’s head turned toward him.
“Mother.” His voice was clear, strong, but I couldn’t read his intentions from his tone. Had he come to help me? Or to help Selene kill me?
No time to stop and ask. I saw myself as if from outside, dressed in Maeve’s green silk robe, its hem rippling around my bare ankles like seawater as I turned. Magick crackled all around me, glowing like fireflies, floating in the air: a dandelion flower of magick that had burst and was seeding itself everywhere. Motes of power began to draw themselves around Selene. Inside me was a fierce pride, an exhilaration in my strength and the ecstasy of weaving this spell. With my ancient words I gathered the motes around Selene; I began to encase her in them, as if I were sealing her inside.
Dimly I realized what I was doing. Dimly I recognized the cage of ice and light as I wove it around Selene. It was the same as the cage that had imprisoned Maeve and Angus. But I had no time, no energy to spare for wondering what this meant, where this knowledge had come from. I was caught in the magick. It consumed me.
It was the most beautiful and the most terrifying thing I had ever seen. It was like the beauty of a star’s death when it goes nova: exhilarating and devastating. The awe inside me welled up and spilled out of my eyes as tears: purifying salt crystals in and of themselves.
“No!” Selene bellowed suddenly, a horrible, gut-wrenching howl of fury and darkness. “No!” The crystal cage around her shattered, and she loomed within it, dark and malevolent and cloaked with blackness.
I didn’t have the experience to duck or swerve or throw up a block. I saw the boiling cloud of dark vapor spinning away from Selene, churning toward me, and I knew that in a moment I would experience the soul being sucked from my body. All I could do was watch.
And then a dark form blocked my sight, and like a highspeed camera, my mind snapped image after image but gave me no time to process what happened. Cal surged forward, his eyes burning and hollow as he blocked Selene’s attack on me. I stepped back, eyes wide, mouth open in shock as Cal absorbed the dark vapor; it surrounded him, fell upon him, and then he was sinking to the ground, his eyes already unseeing as his soul left his body.
Now I knew. He had come to help me.
Selene was on him in an instant, screaming, falling onto his chest, beating him, trying to force life back into him as I watched stupidly and without comprehension.
“Sgàth!” she shrieked, barely sounding human. “Sgàth! Come back!” I had never heard a banshee, but that’s what she sounded like, an inhuman keening and wailing that seemed to have the agony of the world in it. Her son was dead, and she had killed him.
When Hunter staggered to me and grabbed my hand, I could only stare at him. He looked like himself again, pale and ill, but the Hunter I knew.
“Now,” he croaked, his voice sounding charred. “Now.”
It all came back to me again, my brain began to function, and Hunter and I took advantage of Selene’s grief and joined our powers to bind her.
Feeling cold, I gathered my magick and wove it tightly once more, a beautiful cage. Hunter stepped forward and snapped the silver
braigh
onto Selene’s wrists, catching her unguarded as she held Cal’s face and wept over him. She screamed again, the chain already burning her flesh. I shrank back at the horror of it: Cal’s dead body, Selene’s grief, her endless screaming as she thrashed, trying to get the
braigh
off.

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