The Secret Circle: The Complete Collection (97 page)

Read The Secret Circle: The Complete Collection Online

Authors: L. J. Smith

Tags: #Young Adult, #Fantasy, #Romance, #Vampires, #Juvenile Fiction, #Teenage Girls, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Love & Romance, #Witchcraft, #Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Social Issues, #Young Adult Fiction, #love, #Dating & Sex, #Massachusetts

BOOK: The Secret Circle: The Complete Collection
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“You mean rules,” Scarlett murmured coolly.
“Yes, rules,” Diana replied. “For you and for us to follow.”
“Don’t even bother trying to talk to her like a human being,” Faye said. “She’ll never be one of us. Let’s just get this over with. Everyone step inside the circle.”
Scarlett smiled ingenuously and Cassie led her to her place just outside a gap in the circle that had been drawn into the ground.
Diana stood in the center and formally began the ceremony. She raised the silver dagger to the sky—the same dagger used in Cassie’s initiation—and asked, “Who challenges her?”
“I do,” Cassie said, at the same time as Faye.
Everyone’s eyes bounced back and forth between the two of them. “Faye, I’ve got this,” Cassie whispered,
and then much louder, she repeated, “I do. I challenge Scarlett.”
Cassie went to the center of the circle and took the silver dagger from Diana. Then she stood before Scarlett with the blade in her outstretched hand. She held it up to Scarlett’s throat.
“If there is any fear in your heart,” Cassie said, “it would be better for you to throw yourself forward on this dagger than to continue.”
Cassie put a little more pressure on the blade, so it pressed lightly into the hollow of Scarlett’s neck. “Is there fear in your heart?”
Scarlett smiled. “None.”
Cassie stared hard at her, deep into the dark eyes that were just like their father’s. It occurred to Cassie that Scarlett’s life was completely in her hands. She could slice her open right there like a sheep in a slaughterhouse.
“Cassie.” Faye sounded faint and far away.
Cassie continued glaring at Scarlett, putting a little more pressure on the blade, just enough to prick the fine surface of Scarlett’s skin.
“Cassie!” Diana shouted. “Scarlett gave her answer. Now step away.”
Cassie swallowed hard and realized that Faye was at her side, guiding her back to her place on the circle’s perimeter. She wrenched the dagger from Cassie’s grip and passed it to Diana. Cassie suddenly felt weak.
“Scarlett, please step inside the circle,” Diana instructed.
Scarlett did as she was told, and Diana dragged the dagger through the ground to close the circle behind her.
“Now come to the center.” Diana raised her arms over Scarlett and asked the initiation questions. “Will you swear to be loyal to the Circle? Never to harm anyone who stands inside it? Will you protect and defend those who do, even if it costs you your life?”
Scarlett smirked before answering. “Yes.”
“Will you swear never to reveal the secrets you will learn, except to a proper person, within a properly prepared Circle like the one we stand in now? Will you swear to keep these secrets from all outsiders, friends, and enemies, even if it costs you your life?”
There was a disturbing triumph in Scarlett’s eyes. “Yes,” she said.
“By the ocean, by the moon, by your own blood, will you so swear?”
“I will so swear,” Scarlett said.
Diana looked over each member of the group. “Scarlett has sworn,” she said. “And now I call on the Powers to look at her.”

Just as she had when Cassie was initiated, Diana raised the dagger high above her head, with its blade pointed to the sky. She aimed it east, south, west, and north. And then, finally, she pointed it at Scarlett and said:

Earth and water, fire and air,

See your daughter standing there.

By dark of moon and light of sun,

As I will, let it be done.

By challenge, trial, and sacred vow,

Let her join the Circle now.

Flesh and sinew, blood and bone,

Scarlett now becomes our own.

And that was it. Just like that, Scarlett was one of them. The Powers had welcomed her and the group had welcomed her, but it was nothing like when Cassie had become a member. There was no hugging, no real sense of welcoming.
Diana and the other members of the Circle did what
they had to do in the best way they knew how, but they didn’t have to celebrate it.
“Are we done here?” Scarlett asked disdainfully.
“Yes.” Diana sheathed her dagger. “We’re done.”
Laurel blew out all the candles and collected them, one by one. Cassie was ready to get away from this sham of an initiation as quickly as possible, but Faye pulled her aside.
“Can we talk about what happened back there?” Faye asked.
“Back where?” Cassie asked. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“I think you do.” Faye leaned in close to Cassie’s ear and brought her voice to a whisper. “The others may be willing to play along and pretend like you didn’t almost just make mincemeat of your half sister, but I won’t.”
“You mean with the dagger?” Cassie said. “I was just testing her. I wanted to scare her.”
“Cassie, I saw you. I saw your eyes. We all know what’s been happening to you, but everyone’s too afraid to talk about it.”
“And you expect me to believe that you want to talk about it, why, Faye? Because you’re so concerned about my welfare? Or Scarlett’s safety?”
“Heck, no. I think you should have stabbed her. It would have made things easier for all of us.”
Cassie looked at Faye, stunned, and then Faye cracked a smile. “Okay, maybe that would have been going a little too far.”
Cassie let herself laugh for the first time in a while, and Faye looked at her with a strange expression—something like understanding.
“But I’m serious that I think it’s a mistake to keep trying to handle all this black magic stuff yourself,” Faye said. “It’s obviously not working.”
Cassie examined Faye’s face for a clue as to what she was after. What strategy was she playing? After a moment, Cassie said, “You want me to show you the book.”
“Of course I want you to show me the book.”
Cassie shook her head. “Nice try.” She laughed again.
Suddenly there was a rustling in the woods. Faye turned quickly to locate the source of the sound. They all did.
“We’ve got a problem.” Adam focused on one of the trees in the distance.
Chapter 25

F
rom behind a stand of bulky trees came Max, his dad, and the two hunters who’d escaped from the rooftop—Jedediah and Louvera Felton. Each of them held a stone carved into the shape of the hunter symbol—the same relics they’d used to kill Suzan. Scarlett bolted at first sight of the hunters, disappearing into the woods. Why wasn’t Cassie surprised? With all her big talk, of course at heart Scarlett was just a coward.

A quick look passed between Diana and Max. He frowned at her with shame and sadness in his eyes, like he might have been there against his will.
“Now!” Mr. Boylan screamed, raising his symbol into the air.
Adam shot his hands toward the principal, calling out a defense spell. Nick tried throwing his energy at him with a fire blast. But Mr. Boylan and all the hunters appeared to be resistant to their magic. They clung to their relics and chanted their own curse, unhindered by anything cast their way.
“We have to get those stones out of their hands,” Melanie said.
Together Chris and Doug charged for Louvera’s relic, but the moment they came within striking distance, they both dropped to the ground, holding their heads.
Melanie dove for Jedediah’s relic, but she was also quick to fall, holding her head as if the relic had struck her.
Cassie, Diana, and Faye were still wearing the Master Tools. They joined hands and moved toward the hunters, chanting, “Earth my body, water my blood, air my breath, and fire my spirit.”

Mr. Boylan showed no fear of the Tools. He stepped forward, holding his symbol out to them, muttering the same words Cassie remembered hearing on the rooftop:

I sum eius agens,

I occidere in eius nomen—

I sum eius agens,

I occidere in eius nomen—

Cassie could feel that the Tools weren’t working. She felt weak to the bone and powerless, and the bracelet remained cool and lifeless on her arm.
Mr. Boylan seemed to grow stronger every second he continued his chant. He was getting the best of them. Laurel, Deborah, and Sean had all fallen down onto the ground. Cassie could no longer see anyone else. Her own head began to throb, her vision blurred, and she knew it wouldn’t be long before she also lost all her remaining strength.
“Cassie,” Diana said. “I’m …” She folded to her knees.
Max turned to Diana and cried out. He ran to where she’d fallen, standing between her and his father. Mr. Boylan tried to wave him out of the way, but Max wouldn’t budge. He placed his stone relic on the ground and raised his arms. “We have to stop this,” he said. “Stop the curse.”
Tears of joy and relief filled Diana’s eyes. Max had come through for her.
Adam appeared at Cassie’s side, winded and confused. “What’s he doing?” he asked.
The hunters had been thrown off by Max’s turnaround. For a brief moment they had ceased chanting, looking to Mr. Boylan for direction, but now they resumed again with full force.
Max’s father picked up Max’s relic from the ground and held it out for him. “Take this,” he said. But Max refused to accept it. He stood tall with Diana behind him.
“Don’t make a terrible mistake,” his father said. “Obey your destiny.”
Max glanced back at Diana and then returned his eyes to his father. “I am obeying my destiny,” he said.
The Circle watched Max in awe. There were a few seconds of silence, long enough for Cassie to hear Diana inhale with a quick, shallow breath and stumble to her feet. And then with a swift swipe to the head, Mr. Boylan knocked Max out cold.
Diana dashed to Max’s aid, but Jedediah pummeled her with a few ominous words. She spilled onto the ground beside Max’s unconscious body.
Laurel crawled over to Cassie, horrified. “Do something,” she screamed. “Whatever you did on the roof, do it again.”
Faye leaned forward at Cassie’s side, breathless. “You have to,” she begged. “You’re our only hope.”
But before Cassie could say a word, Adam winced as if he’d been shot. Then he dropped facedown onto the ground. Faye also buckled and then collapsed, holding her head in her hands.
Cassie looked around. She was the only Circle member still standing. She locked eyes with Mr. Boylan and burned with a feverish heat. Book or no book, she had the power in her, and she knew it. All she had to do was let it take her over.
Cassie centered her mind and took a deep breath. She told herself that just this one time it was okay to give in, to let the darkness wash over her and surge through her veins. But suddenly her legs went out from under her. Her head felt like it had been cracked open, and a splitting pain assured her she’d acted too late. All her energy was being drained from her body. It was the sensation of dying, she was sure of it.
Through her hazy vision, she could see that Max had awakened and was trying to rise to his feet, but the other two hunters were restraining him. They held him back as they continued the curse, their relics still in hand.
The entire Circle had been overpowered. Each of them lay scattered around the muddy ground like insects left for dead. The hunters’ chant became louder. Mr. Boylan had closed his eyes and raised his arms to the sky, ecstatic and triumphant. Cassie could hardly believe that after such a long, hard fight it could end so pitifully for her Circle.
But then Mr. Boylan’s eyes shot open again and he
suddenly drew back. “Not again,” he said. “It can’t be possible.”
The other hunters anxiously scanned the surrounding area. They’d stopped mumbling their curse and tilted their heads toward the woods to listen.
Cassie faintly heard what they were hearing. Another language, both foreign and familiar. It was Scarlett. She was in the distance, walking toward them, chanting a dark spell.
Jedediah clutched his chest as he had on the roof. His face reddened as he gasped for air, and he screamed for their retreat. He and Louvera backed away from Max and fled in the opposite direction.
Max was dazed. He was squinting his eyes, searching the ground for Diana, clambering like a baby deer new to its hooves. And then he shrieked in pain, clutching his heart.
Chris, Doug, and Sean rose back up to a standing position. Deborah, Laurel, and Melanie did the same. The Circle was regaining its strength even as Max’s waned. Diana cried out to Scarlett. “You’re killing him!” But Scarlett was unstoppable.
Mr. Boylan hurried to Max and helped him to his feet. “It’s an ancient,” he said. “We have to run.” He steadied Max’s arm around his neck.
Max, writhing in agony, allowed his father to drag him away, and within minutes they were gone, swallowed up by the shadowy woods. Tragedy had been averted.

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