Read Believe: The Complete Channie Series Online

Authors: Charlotte Abel

Tags: #Romance, #Paranormal, #Teen & Young Adult, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Witches & Wizards, #Paranormal & Urban

Believe: The Complete Channie Series (133 page)

“Me?” Josh pressed a palm against his chest. “I didn’t do anything.”

The nurse propped the door open with her foot and glared at everyone, including Kassie. “Your mother may stay. But no more visitors.”

Eric slid along the wall, keeping as much distance between himself and Hunter as possible then darted outside.

Kassie grabbed Hunter’s wrist. “I’m getting out of here later tonight. Come stay with me? I missed you.”

Hunter’s eyebrows shot up and disappeared under his hair. “What about your momma?”

Kassie rolled her eyes. “I just had a baby. She knows we aren’t going to do anything.”

“Kassie’s told me all about you.” Aunt Mary hooked a hand through Hunter’s elbow and led him towards the door. “If you’re willing to take on the 2am feeding and change a few diapers you can stay in our guest room until you find a place to rent.”

Hunter’s shoulders sagged. “I’m only here for a week.”

Kassie’s eyes filled with tears. “Why?”

“I have a new job that keeps me on the road. I was lucky to get any time off at all.”

Josh gritted his teeth. Kassie knew that Hunter was helping him with ‘magic stuff.’ But she didn’t know why. “Why don’t you call your employer? Maybe he’ll give you a few more days if you ask real nice.”

Hunter’s eyes lit up. “Yeah. I’ll do that.”

The nurse cleared her throat and nodded towards the open door.

Hunter dodged Aunt Mary and the nurse and ran back to Kassie’s bed. He leaned over the rail and kissed her forehead. “I’ll be waiting’ for ya.”

True to his word, Hunter insisted that Josh drop him off at Kassie’s house so he could wait for her on her front porch. “Go on home to Channie.”

“Are you sure? It could be hours before Kassie gets here.”

“You heard the girl.” Hunter sat on the porch swing and laced his fingers behind his head. He stretched his legs out and crossed his ankles. “She missed me.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SACRIFICE

 

 

P
RUDENCE
PACED
BACK
AND
FORTH
in the narrow space between the beds of yet another sleazy hotel room, waiting for her turn in the shower. She’d already dumped the contents of her suitcase into the bottom drawer and slammed it shut. Hopefully Wisdom would be too tired after driving all day to inspect it. ‘Neatness, routine and personal hygiene’ was a part of her ‘therapy.’ Prudence tried to follow Wisdom’s orders to earn more ‘privileges.’ But there was a limit to the amount of nonsense she could handle. They’d be on the road again tomorrow morning, so what was the point?

Wisdom refused to stay in one place for more than twenty-four hours, claiming it was to keep Channie’s stupid halfie husband from finding them.
Let him come.
She’d take care of him just like she had Abby’s empty husband.
Abby…no don’t think about Abby. It wasn’t my fault!
She betrayed me.
They all betrayed me, everyone from my own husband to my grandsons.

Prudence shook with rage. Everyone she’d ever loved had turned against her, but Wisdom’s betrayal was the worst.

I would have shared everything with you. All the power. All the fame. All the wealth. We were supposed to unite all the clans. But you betrayed me.

Prudence never would have shared the Book of the Dead’s message with Wisdom if she’d known she was just as weak willed and timid as all the others. When she’d recited the prophecy, Wisdom had pretended she was excited about their destiny. But it was all a lie. A trick. She’d insisted Prudence let her see the Book of the Dead for herself. But as soon as Wisdom had her hands on it, she’d knocked Prudence out with a be-calm spell and stolen her book.

You cowardly traitor. You backstabber. You treacherous fiend.
“You’ll pay for this!”

“Prudence? Is everything all right in there?”

Stop. Breathe. Be calm. Be patient.
“I’m fine.”

Prudence hadn’t meant to speak out loud. She had to keep her thoughts and plans to herself. Wisdom had to believe she’d broken Prudence’s spirit or she’d never be free. She’d never get her revenge and she’d never get to Channie in time to perform the sacrifice.

She slipped her fingers under her wig and dug at her scalp. The itching was driving her crazy. The wig was another of Wisdom’s bright ideas. She claimed Prudence’s nearly bald head drew too much unwanted attention. But that’s not why Prudence wore it even in the privacy of their hotel room. She’d discovered that Wisdom treated her differently when she wore the wig. She still knocked her out with empty drugs and be-calm spells every night, but she no longer handcuffed her to the bed.

Wisdom stepped out of the bathroom with a thin, ragged towel wrapped around her body and smiled. “Your turn.”

Prudence sighed. She didn’t want to take a shower, but it was all part of the game.

“Remember, neatness, routine and personal hygiene will help you get better faster.”

If you repeat that ridiculous line one more time, I swear I’ll slit your throat from ear to ear and shower in your blood.
Prudence smiled and nodded. She had to convince Wisdom that she was ‘getting better’ every day. She had to pretend that she was weak, docile and pathetic. She had to hide her strength, keep it buried inside. She had to pretend that the drugs Wisdom was giving her weren’t losing their effectiveness. Soon, she’d be able to access her magic again.

They were all afraid of her power and wanted to take it from her. How many times had they stolen her book? And how many times had she recovered it? She’d found it before. She’d find it again. And then they’d pay. Every last one of them. But first, she had to escape.

As
summer solstice approached, Josh refused to leave Channie’s side. He cancelled all trips to Freedom Ridge and ordered Hunter, Vince, Tim and Zen to report to him in Colorado as an extra precaution. A little before midnight on June twentieth, Josh knocked Channie out with a calming spell. He didn’t want her death pledge activated if Prudence managed to breech the combined protection spells of every mage present.

He instructed Vince, Zen and Tim to guard the area inside the protection zone while four extra men from Blackthorne patrolled the perimeter of the property—then barricaded himself, Channie and Hunter inside the cabin.

And then they waited.

Nothing happened.

Josh called Dad to check if Wisdom had made her daily call. She had. He woke Channie on the second day and let her out onto the deck on the third. He waited an extra five days, just to be sure, then released everyone to go back to their regular duties on Saturday morning.

“Hey, babe, I wanna celebrate. Do you feel like take-out?” Nederland was a small mountain town, but it had a couple of great restaurants.

Channie’s eyes lit up as she licked her lips. “Can you get something from Wild Mountain Smokehouse?”

“Sure. But would you mind whipping up a batch of cornbread while I’m gone? Yours is so much better than theirs.”

She rolled her eyes, but Josh could tell she was pleased by the way her mouth quirked up at the corners. “You are so spoiled.”

“True. But it’s your fault. You never should have let me taste it.” He kissed her eyes, both cheeks and the tip of her nose. “When I get back, remind me to recharge the protection spells. I should have done it last night, but I got a little distracted.”

Golden light pulsed out of both their chests. Channie walked her fingers up Josh’s belly then pressed her palm over his glowing heart. “I wouldn’t mind being
distracted
again.”

“You’re making it hard for me to leave.”

“I like making it hard for you.”

Josh choked on his own spit.

Channie laughed as she thumped his back. “Sorry, but you walked right into that one. Besides, you deserved it for all the times you teased me.”

“I teased you about sex?”

“Constantly.”

“Huh.” Josh found that hard to believe.

“You were shy when we first met, but you knew a lot more about sex than I did.”

“Believe me, it was all theoretical knowledge. I had no field experience at all.”

Channie stretched up on her toes and tugged Josh’s head closer. Her breath tickled his ear. “I’m glad I’m the only one you’ve ever experienced.”

Two hours later, Josh placed an order of prime rib “to go” then swung by the Kwik Mart on Highway 119 to pick up a couple liters of pop; Dr. Pepper for Channie and Cherry Pepsi for himself.

Josh frowned when he turned the corner and noticed the gate swinging on its hinges. Where were the guards? He stopped the car but left it running and opened his door. The stench of burned hair and flesh assaulted his nose. All that remained of the guards were two piles of blackened, smoldering bones.

Josh screamed Channie’s name then ran back to his car. He pounded the steering wheel with his left hand and drove with his right. He prayed for her safety as he raced up the dirt road to the cabin.

Channie
hummed and sang as she stirred up a batch of cornbread, making the high altitude adjustments so it wouldn’t fall. She slid the pan into the oven then closed the door and set the timer for twenty minutes. The fact that she no longer needed Josh’s help with the fancy appliances made her smile every time she used them.

When the buzzer on the timer went off, she grabbed a couple of pot holders and pulled the cornbread out of the oven.

“Well, well, well. If you aren’t a regular little suzy homemaker.”

Channie spun around and dropped the pan to the floor. Hot shards of glass and clumps of cornbread skittered across the tile floor.

Momma!
Channie barely recognized her. Every inch of visible skin was burned. She was completely bald. Her face and scalp were bright red and blistered. Even her eyebrows and eyelashes were gone. Her hands and arms were spotted with charred black patches.

She must have forced her way past the protection spells. Something she wouldn’t have been able to do if Josh had recharged them on schedule. But Channie didn’t blame him. She was the one that had seduced him last night. They’d both thought the threat was over.

“Summer solstice was five days ago. Why are you here?”

“The Book of the Dead said, ‘
The blood of the daughter cannot repay
the debt of the mother ’til solstice day.

It didn’t say it wouldn’t work after solstice, just not before.”

Channie backed up, one step, two. “That’s a bit of a stretch.”

“Shut up!” Momma cast a paralyzing spell on Channie that froze her body. She remained fully alert—and consumed with terror—as she tipped sideways. Her brain fired instructions to her non-functioning muscles in an effort to regain her balance, but they didn’t respond. She picked up speed as the room tilted. Pain blossomed in her right hip, followed by her elbow and shoulder when they slammed into the floor.

Channie teetered for a moment, balanced on her hip bone and upper arm, then fell onto her back. Her skull smacked the tile with a sickening
crack.
Her vision tunneled as
her entire head exploded in agony.

If the side of her body hadn’t broken her fall, it would have killed her…or at least knocked her out. Channie wished it had. The pain was so intense, she was afraid she’d throw up. Never a good sign, but especially dangerous while she was flat on her back and paralyzed.

Why hadn’t Momma knocked her out with a be-calm spell instead of this turn-to-stone paralysis magic? Was it a display of her dark magic, a show of power, or did she hate her so much that she wanted her to suffer? Was she enjoying this?

Momma cleared a patch of the floor with her foot then knelt beside Channie. She plucked a shard of broken glass out of Channie’s arm then healed the cut.

Channie still had a hard time believing that Momma would really cut her heart out, but this simple act of kindness puzzled her.

Momma smiled and brushed the hair off Channie’s forehead. “I can’t offer a damaged sacrifice to the Book of the Dead. You stay put while I go get it.”

Tears leaked out of the corners of Channie’s eyes. They knew that the Book of the Dead worked like a homing beacon for Momma. That’s one of the reasons Josh kept it with him at all times. Momma needed to get the book first, before she could sacrifice Channie. It was a last line of defense sort of thing, but he’d left it in his backpack under the bed.

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