A Spell for the Revolution (47 page)

Deborah frowned, an expression he didn’t want to see on her face today, and he immediately regretted the question. He could tell from Deborah’s expression that there was no news about her either.

“There was no reply from your mother,” Deborah said, changing the subject.

“I am dead to her,” Proctor said. She would never forgive him for pursuing his talent. But that was all right. “I accept that’s how it is.”

“Are you sure you want to do this?” she asked.

He saw the worn-out pair of shoes where she had set them. He reached down and picked up his own old pair, sitting by the chair. The heels were cracked and the soles were peeling off. The leather had been rubbed through in places.

“Entirely certain,” he said, making his voice as cheerful as it could be. “These carried me all the way to Alex’s farm and back, and then from here to Gravesend and back again.”

“Then why are we waiting?” she said.

Together they lifted their shoes up to a hole in the plaster and dropped them into the wall. Bowing their heads, they each said a silent prayer in the Quaker fashion. Proctor held an image in his head, of anyone coming to do Deborah harm being kicked away by shoes. In truth, they had already done all their other preparations and had just been waiting for today to finish the spell.

After a moment’s silence, Proctor said, “Once we patch that up, The Farm should have stronger protections than ever.”

“Only as long as we live here to protect it,” Deborah said. She swallowed hard and looked away. “When I asked if you were sure you wanted to do this, I didn’t mean the spell.”

“I know,” he said. “And when I said I was certain, I didn’t mean the spell either.”

Abby poked her head in the door. “Deborah—there you are! Don’t you know it’s bad luck to see the groom before your wedding?”

“Not for Quakers,” Deborah said.

Abby rolled her eyes at Proctor, as if to say,
See what you’re in for
. He laughed.

They walked outside together, hands carefully at their sides. A bower had been built beside the orchard, where the apple trees were covered with blossoms. A long table had been set up between the trees. It was covered with almost equal amounts of flowers and food. Abby ran to join Alex, who stood with Sukey and Esther. Magdalena waited next to the bower along with Ezra, as stand-ins for Deborah’s parents. Zoe held a big bouquet in her hand. She started bouncing up and down when she saw Deborah.

Deborah turned and wrapped her arms around Proctor, taking him by surprise.

“Aren’t you worried what people will think?” he said.

“Not anymore. Not ever again.”

It’s not necessary for a writer to invent new details to make the struggles of 1776 seem more heroic, even when it is a lot of fun. For those interested in historical sources, I depended on David Hackett Fischer’s
Washington’s Crossing. Washington’s Spies: The Story of America’s First Spy Ring
, by Alexander Rose, also provided essential background, as did
Patriot Battles: How the War of Independence Was Fought
, by Michael Stephenson. In the early stages of planning this book, I had a wide-ranging conversation with historian Mark V. Kwasny, author of
Washington’s Partisan War, 1775-1783
. Mark, I know the New Jersey militia deserve more than two men in a boat, but I swear that’s all there was room for.

Dr. Thom and Deborah Mak won the right to name a character in this novel at a charity auction for St. Joseph Montessori School. I want to thank them for their generous contribution to SJMS and for giving me Zoe, who, in turn, contributed more than I originally expected.

The American Revolution was born, in part, in the coffee shops of Boston; in turn, much of this book emerged at my local coffee shop. Thanks to everyone at Luck Bros this past year, especially Justina, Mary, Chester, Sarah, Tim, Tony, and the Allisons, meek and tall. Good luck in the Peace Corps, Allison.

I could not have finished this book without the help of the 2008 Blue Heaven writers, especially Daryl Gregory and Paul Melko, who struggled through a draft as rushed
and rough as the retreat from Fort Lee, helping me regroup it into a more coherent and polished story. Chris Schluep once again made great suggestions. Thanks to my sons, Coleman and Finlay, for keeping their sense of humor and adjusting to my long hours. The no-pun zone is for you. Rae Carson Finlay reads every word of every draft I throw at her, always holding me to a higher standard and insisting that I write better, for which I am deeply grateful.

All the furniture had been pushed to the edges of the room and neatly stacked out of the way. Deborah walked—no, waddled—around the open space, with Abigail supporting her on one side and Magdalena on the other. Magdalena, small and frail, supported herself with her cane, and looked as if she might topple under the weight. Proctor went to take her place, but Lydia put down the blanket and basket and got there first.

“Oh, you don’t need to do that—” Deborah protested, but the last word was interrupted by a wince as she felt another contraction.

“Just keep breathing through it,” Abigail said.

Deborah nodded and continued her small circuit of the room. Magdalena shuffled over to a chair and collapsed into it.

“What can I do to help?” Proctor asked.

All four women looked at him as if he had just asked them how to fly. “Maybe you could go check outside,” Magdalena said.

“Check for what?” he asked. “We’ve set spells protecting our borders against any physical intruders, man or animal, living or dead, accidental or intentional.” They’d learned their lesson after Bootzamon’s probing of their hideaway some years before. “It’s been over a year since we heard or saw any indication of the Covenant.”

Magdalena raised the knob end of her cane at him.

He threw up his hands in surrender. “I’ll go check the borders,” he said.

“Thank you,” Deborah said. She paused and smiled at him, but the effect was weakened by the sweat beading on her forehead.

Proctor grabbed a bucket and climbed the hill to the orchard to gather the fallen apples. Clouds rolled in, deepening the gloam before he’d gathered them all, and the wind whipped through the branches, threatening to break more limbs. He plucked a ripe apple and tucked it in his pocket for Singer, their mare, then took the rest and dumped them into the pig trough with their other kitchen scraps. Inside the barn, he rubbed Singer’s nose while she ate out of his hand and then checked the cows in their stalls. When he was done, he took a lantern from the wall and went outside.

He meant to light it with magic. He had almost mastered the talent, but he wasn’t going to make the attempt in the barn with all the straw around. Shielding the lantern with his body, he tried the spell that Deborah had taught him.

A prickling unease shivered through his skin the moment he spoke.

Before he could stop the spell, flame exploded from his hand, a ball of fire that hung suspended in the air. Wind swirled, drawing straw and grass up in a spiral to feed the flame. The new-fed fire, leashed to the ground, wavered toward the barn, then veered abruptly at the house.

Coming to his senses, Proctor kicked and stamped, scattering the dried grasses. Deprived of fuel, the flames quickly sputtered and died.

Hair prickled on the back of his neck, but he told himself he was imagining things. Worries about Deborah had him on edge. Still, he decided that he knew the land well enough to walk it in the dark. He put the lantern down and set out to check the fences.

The Farm was hidden by an illusion that blurred its presence to passing eyes. To anyone on the other side of the fence, Proctor would seem no more than a stray shadow or a bobbing will-o’-the-wisp. There were also physical barriers, thorny hedges just beyond the fence. Spells had also been set to discourage visitors from going any farther. If someone did press through the thorns and spells, their presence would set off warning bells. A variety of other protections would delay or trap them while the witches in the house responded to the warning.

In short, no man or creature not explicitly blessed or excepted by Deborah could approach them unawares. No wonder the Covenant had given up.

He finished his inspection at the gate, the weakest spot in their defenses, but he saw and sensed nothing unusual there, either. Satisfied, he passed through the gardens and returned to the house in the dark. The wind was as fitful as his mood, gusting and twisting along the ground in his wake.

Proctor entered the new wing so he wouldn’t disturb the women. He couldn’t wait until Deborah made up her mind to move into this part of the house. The main room was dominated by a huge fireplace built out of fieldstone and protected by an ancient spell that he and Deborah had performed on the day of their wedding.

He put logs on the grate and started a fire—using flint and steel this time. Wind whistled across the chimney top, but the shaft did not seem to be drawing smoke very well. He let the sparks burn down instead of feeding them.

He went through the back door into the old house. He saw Deborah in the bedroom, or at least he saw her knees poking up in the air. Abigail sat on the bed beside her, holding her hand.

Magdalena stepped in front of him to block the view. “Done already?”

“I checked all our boundaries. We’re shut up tight for the night.”

“Then go make sure we have fresh water, and kindling for the fire.”

“But—” He looked at the pitchers of water already full and ready, and the stack of firewood by the hearth, and then he realized it was just more make-work to keep him out of their way. He decided not to be irritated by it. “How’s Deborah?”

“She’s fine,” Magdalena said. “Why do you think she’s not fine?”

“I didn’t think she wasn’t fine.”

Deborah’s voice came from the other room, high-pitched, breathless, and short. “I’m fine.”

“Is she supposed to sound like that?” he asked Magdalena.

“Sound like what?” the old Dutch woman snapped angrily.

“I’ll go get water and firewood,” Proctor said.

“That would help a great deal, yes.”

The pitchers were all full, so he carried the kettle outside and filled that at the well. Then, since there was plenty of firewood inside already, he started moving one of the piles over to the porch where they could get at it easier.

He’d seen plenty of births—his mother had a sure hand with the lambs and calves, especially during difficult deliveries. But as an only child, he had never attended a baby’s birth before. Deborah’s pregnancy had been hard enough, but this—the hours of pain, sweat, and blood, the uncertain outcome …

Actually, it reminded him a lot of being in battle.

Best not to mention that.

He tossed the split logs onto the new pile and went back for two more. All that mattered was keeping Deborah safe, keeping their baby safe. He wondered if they were going to
have a boy or a girl. If it was a boy, he wanted to name him after his father. Lemuel. Now, that was a good strong name. Lemuel Brown.

Lydia stepped outside. “She’s asking for you.”

He dropped the wood. It clattered on the ground, banging off his shins, but he hardly noticed because his heart was pounding so hard. “Is everything—”

“Everything’s fine,” she said.

Proctor ran inside and stopped at the door to Deborah’s bedroom. Magdalena sat between Deborah’s feet, and Abigail frowned at him, rising immediately to block his view. “Deborah?” he said.

“Proctor, is that you?” she answered, panting between words.

“Yes, Lydia said you wanted me.”

“Yes, I did,” she said, gritting her teeth through a painful contraction. “Now go away.”

Abigail reached out and squeezed his arm, not as a gesture of reassurance, but as a means of turning him around and pushing him out the doorway and across the room. “She just wanted to know where you were. Now she knows. Don’t you have water to fetch or wood to split?”

The hearth had burned down to coals. “I could tend the fire,” he suggested. It would keep him near Deborah, and no one could argue that he wasn’t doing something.

“Good,” Abigail said, and she shoved him out of the way.

He moved a chair over in front of the hearth and added a log from the basket. He prodded it into flame, then added more logs on top. This chimney was drawing just fine.

Lydia pulled up another chair beside him and took out her knitting. “It’s not that cold outside,” she said.

“It felt chilly enough when I tried to see how my wife was doing,” he muttered.

The wind rattled the shutters, which banged against the
house like someone knocking to come in. The wood in the fire crackled and spit, shooting sparks out into the room. The draft from the chimney drew the flames into wild and unusual shapes. Proctor stared at them, the way he might stare into someone’s face, while Deborah shouted and panted her way through ever more frequent contractions.

Abigail popped her head out of the bedroom door. “I think it’s time,” she said eagerly.

Proctor jumped out of his seat.

“Not you,” she said. “Lydia—she’ll want to see the baby being born.”

Lydia sighed, then put her work aside and joined the women. With all of them crowded into the tiny room, they couldn’t close the door.

Deborah cried out.

Proctor plopped down in his chair and stabbed the iron into the fire. He flipped over a log, sending up a spray of sparks.

“This time, you push,” Magdalena said. “Just like you’re doing your business.”

Deborah cried out again.

Proctor stirred the coals. Sparks shot up again, but this time a ball of fire rose with the sparks. It was just like the strange flame that had formed when he tried to light the lantern. In a split second air spiraled around it, drawing fire from the logs, making the flame larger and stronger.

And more man-like.

The flame had limbs and a head. Proctor watched, frozen, as fiery fingers formed at the ends of its arms. Eyes as black as charcoal popped open in its head. The arms and legs, rooted in the burning logs, stretched and pulled like a creature escaping a trap.

It reminded him of the imp Dickon that had kept the evil Bootzamon’s pipe lit.

Only it was the size of a man, and it was crawling out of a hearth that had once been used as a black altar.

Proctor’s tongue came unfrozen. “Demon!”

Deborah cried out in reply from the other room.

He tipped over the kettle on the fire. Steam rolled out of the hearth, but the demon twisted and dodged, avoiding most of the water. It was a creature of spirit—it needed the flames to manifest. If Proctor drowned the fire, he could kill it.

Proctor grabbed the nearest pitcher and doused the flames again. The creature roared and spit, but it yanked one leg free of the burning logs. If it escaped and became a free creature of fire—

“Demon—we’re under attack from a demon,” Proctor yelled.

He looked for more water, wishing that he’d brought in more water—why hadn’t he brought in more water? He ran for the washbowl, but it was empty. He grabbed the half-empty pitcher from the stand and turned back to the fire. The demon was almost free.

“There, you’re almost there, one more push,” Magdalena said.

Proctor flung the pitcher. The ceramic shattered into a thousand shards, and the water washed over the rest of the logs.

Which set free the demon’s other leg.

Deborah cried out, louder than before.

The demon floated above the hearth, staring at Proctor eye-to-eye. Horns rose from its head and its mouth gaped in a snarl of white flame and orange tongue. Red fire rippled from its shoulder to its waist like a coat, and it moved on legs of smoke. It glanced away from Proctor, at the bedroom, and licked its lips.

Proctor drew all the power into himself that he could summon. Sweat poured from his body. He would smother the demon with every stone in the house. He would call
rain out of the sky. The demon took a step toward the bedroom and Proctor blocked its way.

“No. You will not have my wife or my child.”

The demon hesitated and fell back.

Abigail’s voice sound behind him. “Proctor, it’s wonderful, come see your baby—”

Her sentence ended with a scream.

The baby—his baby—cried out in the other room, its first sound, so small and vulnerable. Proctor’s heart jumped, and he turned his head. Magdalena had emerged from the room, smiling, oblivious. She held a knife out handle-first for Proctor, inviting him to cut the baby’s cord.

The demon lunged past him.

Proctor clutched for it, his right hand sliding down the flames until they closed on the creature’s ankle. Heat knifed up his arm, and the scar of his missing finger felt like a hot coal had been hammered into it. The demon twisted and lashed at him like a frightened snake. Proctor tried to drag it toward the front door, but the pain was blinding. His knees buckled beneath him and his vision blackened like the night. Everything in the room went dark except for the flames.

Abigail screamed and screamed. Deborah shouted his name. His baby cried out, tiny and helpless.

The demon’s ankle slipped through Proctor’s hand. He was holding on to no more than a heel. He tried to grab at it with his other hand, but he needed it to hold on to the floor lest he spin away into the dark and the shadow. The demon twisted around and slashed at his face with red talons. Proctor rolled away from the blow, but he couldn’t hold on much longer.

A cool white light, smooth and round as a pearl, emerged from the darkness.

The light came from the knob of Magdalena’s cane. She blocked the way to the child. She spoke out in German,
words Proctor couldn’t understand, though the tone was clear enough:
Clear out
.

The demon shrank back and roared, a sound like the wind building up to a tempest. The demon pulled free of Proctor’s hand, and Proctor collapsed to the ground.

Magdalena threatened the creature with her cane. The light brightened, a full moon, filling the room. The demon bounced from corner to corner, like an anxious cat, desperate to escape and equally ready to strike.

“Grab it,” Magdalena shouted, and Proctor realized she was shouting at him. “I told you to grab it und hold it!”

He lunged for it, and the demon dodged away. The baby hiccuped in the other room, and the demon seemed to cry in anguish, a whistling sound like the wind scraped over a roof’s edge. Proctor grabbed at it again with his left hand but it was hot to the touch and he flinched. It slipped through his fingers.

The demon, swollen with flame, charged at Magdalena.

Proctor yelled out “No!”

“You will not have this child!” she cried.

Other books

The Alpine Recluse by Mary Daheim
Confessions of a Teenage Psychic by Pamela Woods-Jackson
Alibi by Sydney Bauer
Kasey Michaels - [Redgraves 02] by What a Lady Needs
Not Quite Dating by Catherine Bybee
Hotel de Dream by Emma Tennant
A Girl Named Mister by Nikki Grimes
Fantasy Maker by Sabrina Kyle


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024