Read Spell Bound Online

Authors: Rachel Hawkins

Spell Bound (10 page)

“So that’s why we’re here,” I told him, “chilling with the Brannicks. And now my dad has shown up, and, uh, Cal, and now you. It’s been kind of a busy night.”

“How did Cal and your dad track you? I’ve been trying this magical GPS thing ever since I left Thorne, and it only locked on to you today.”

“Cal had told me to come to the Brannicks when I left Thorne, so they were just hoping I’d be here. It may be the first time I’ve had any luck since…oh, 2002 or so.”

Archer smiled and then began to flicker in and out. “Damn it,” he muttered, tapping on the stone around his neck. “Okay, it’s looking like I don’t have much longer, so I’ll make this quick. All The Eye knows is that the Casnoffs have disappeared. There haven’t been any more reported demon attacks, but something is definitely stirring. They just don’t know what.”

“That’s what Dad said, too.”

“We’re looking for the Casnoffs, but so far, no dice. It’s like we’re all in a holding pattern.”

“Here, too,” I told him. “So…what now, Cross? Are you going to stay with The Eye?”

Archer glanced over his shoulder at something. “I don’t know,” he said when he turned back, his voice much quieter. “But it’s not like I really have anywhere else to go.”

“You could come here.”

He smiled at that and reached out one ghostly hand. I pressed my fingertips to his, even though I couldn’t feel him. “I wish I could,” he said. “But they’re watching me pretty closely these days. For now, it’s probably safer for me to stay there. Toe the line a little bit.”

I stared at our hands. “Am I ever going to see you again?”

“You better believe it,” he said. “Didn’t I promise you we could make out in a castle?”

Chuckling, I drew my hand back. “You did. And to take me on dates. Real dates with no swords or ghouls or angst.”

“Well, there you go,” he said. “As soon as we’ve saved the world from a demon invasion, it’s you, me, and Applebee’s.”

I rolled my eyes, but I was grinning now. “Oh, the romance.”

His smile slowly faded. “I will see you again,” he said, serious this time. “I promise.” He moved closer to me so that his translucent legs disappeared into the bed. “Mercer, I—”

And then, just like that, he blinked out and was gone.

“Oh, come on,” I groaned to the empty room. Sighing, I flopped back against the pillows and shut my eyes. I’d been lying like that for a few minutes when I suddenly had the sense I wasn’t alone anymore.

Sure enough, when I opened my eyes, Elodie was perched on the end of the bed, watching me with an unreadable expression.

Finally, she mouthed, “Do you love him?”

I took a moment before replying, “Yeah. I think I do.”

She nodded, like that was the answer she’d expected. “I thought I did, too.”

It suddenly occurred to me that if I ever did see Archer again, Elodie’s new habit of popping into my body whenever she felt like it could be…awkward.

“He’s sorry, you know,” I told her. “For lying to you. And for the whole you-getting-killed thing.”

She shrugged. “Not his fault I got killed.” I was getting a lot better at reading her lips. She didn’t have to repeat anything now. “That was Alice. And since the Casnoffs had a hand in making her a demon, I guess it was their fault in the end.”

“We’re going to stop them,” I told her. “I don’t know how, but we will.”

Elodie gave me a look. “Will you? I heard what that magic mirror dude said, about seeing two futures for you.”

“I would never help the Casnoffs,” I said, automatically, but I couldn’t help the little shiver that went up my spine as I remembered Torin’s words.

I thought Elodie might have sighed. It was hard to tell since she didn’t technically breathe. “Well, even if you don’t go over to the dark side, you’re still pretty screwed. Your dad doesn’t have powers anymore. You might as well not have any, because I certainly can’t keep taking over every time you run into trouble. Those two little girls can’t even kill a werewolf, and Aislinn Brannick is just one woman. Your mom is better at books than she is at weapons, and Torin is both annoying and useless. Basically, the only thing you have going for you is Cal, who
might
be able to postpone the inevitable when the Casnoffs and their pet demons rip you to shreds. But, you know, good luck with that.”

And with that inspiring little speech, she vanished.

CHAPTER 12
 

T
he next morning, I found myself at what had to be the weirdest breakfast ever. I looked around the room and tried to take in everyone who was there: Me, Mom, Dad, all three Brannicks, and Cal. Oh, and Torin, since “breakfast” involved all of us eating Pop-Tarts in the War Room. Elodie’s words from the night before circled my brain. Did we honestly think we stood a chance at defeating the Casnoffs?

“You have to know something,” Aislinn was saying to Torin now.

“I do,” he shot back. “I told you, those women are on their thrice-damned island.”

“Which. Is. Where?” Aislinn asked for what had to be the fourth time.

“In. The. Bloody. Sea,” Torin replied. He threw up his hands, his lace cuffs falling back as he did. “I don’t know why you can’t find it. It’s exactly where it always was.”

“As I’ve told you, Aislinn, it’s my belief that they’ve cloaked Graymalkin somehow,” Dad said. He was leaning heavily against one of the folding chairs. Cal stood on one side of him, Mom on the other. My eyes met Cal’s, and last night flashed in my mind. My fingers twining in his shirt, my mouth against his.

I suddenly gave my full attention to Torin. “So the Casnoffs are at Hex Hall,” I said. “Probably with however many demons they’ve managed to create. What are they doing there? Throwing a hellacious slumber party?” When no one said anything, I added, “Get it? Hellacious? Because they’re all…Forget it.”

“I got it,” Izzy said softly, and I threw her a grateful smile.

“I cannot tell what they’re planning,” Torin said. “Only that they’re there.” He frowned at all of us. “I don’t know everything, you know. Only that this girl”—he pointed at me—“is the key to stopping them from using an army of demons to wipe humans off the face of the earth.”

Or leading the charge
. The thought popped into my mind, making my stomach twist itself into knots. Torin winked at me, and I wondered if thought-reading was another of his powers. Or maybe it was just my expression.

Shoving aside the image of me at the front of a demon army, I said, “The Eye doesn’t know what they’re up to, either.”

Suddenly, every one in the room was staring at me as what I’d just said registered. “I, uh, saw Archer last night,” I said, like I’d just bumped into him at Starbucks. “He used this communicating stone thingie to…drop by, and, um, say hello.”

“And you just now decided to mention this?” Dad asked.

“When I got here, you guys were already yelling at Torin,” I fired back. “I didn’t exactly have a chance to get a word in. Besides, Archer didn’t know anything, really. Or at least nothing more than we do. I didn’t think it was a big deal. He was only here for like, five minutes.”

“In your room?” Mom asked, eyebrows up.

“He was non-corporeal!” I cried. “And all…ghostly. Everything was totally G-rated, swear.”

“One of L’Occhio di Dio is your
boyfriend
?” Finley asked incredulously.

Dad cleared his throat. “In any case,” he said, saving me from answering Finley, “that’s good information to have. It means that we’re all on the same page as far as the Casnoffs are concerned.”

“Right,” I said. “Which is that no one knows what to do next. I’m not really seeing that as a good thing, Dad.”

“So what
can
we do?” Finley asked. “Just sit here and wait for the Casnoffs to make their move?”

“We could go to Lough Bealach,” Aislinn answered.

“Is that a place, or are you choking?” I asked, earning me a glare in return.

Dad made a strangled sound that might have been a laugh. He covered it with a cough and said, “Lough Bealach is a lake in Ireland. It was once a very sacred place to the Brannick family, if I’m correct.”

“The most sacred place,” Aislinn answered. “It was once the Brannicks’ responsibility to guard it.”

“What’s there that needs guarding?”

“Supposedly, an opening to the underworld,” Mom answered.

“If we’re going to fight demons, it might be handy to have a lot of demonglass, seeing as how it’s the only thing that can kill a demon,” Aislinn said. “And the underworld is the only place we could get it.”

“Like
literally
going to hell?” I asked.

Everyone ignored me. “We couldn’t get in,” Finley said. “There’s not one of us here who could survive a trip into the underworld. You’d need dark, powerful magic to do that. If Sophie still had her powers, maybe it would be feasible, but without them…” She shook her head.

And then Dad said, “Sophie does have her powers.”

“Well, yeah,” I agreed. “I didn’t go through the Removal. But they’re stuck in here.” I tapped my chest. “Whatever that word the Council said at my sentencing, it sealed my magic away.”

Dad reached out and took my hand. “Do you remember when we studied the grimoire at Thorne Abbey? There was a spell in that book that I made you put your hand on.”

I did remember. I hadn’t been able to tell what kind of spell it was, but when I’d touched it, I’d felt a sold thump right in the middle of my sternum.

Which, I now realized, was the place where I always felt my powers swirling around.

“It was a protection spell,” Dad said. “Ensuring that your powers could never be fully taken away from you. No matter what kind of binding spell is put on you, all you have to do is touch that particular spell, and your magic will be restored.”

I squeezed his hand so tightly it must’ve hurt him. “Oh my God,” I breathed. My magic back. No more feeling helpless. No more needing Elodie’s ghost to do magic. A chance at actually stopping the Casnoffs. Hope and excitement surged through me.

And then, as if a cold bucket of water had been thrown in my face, I remembered what Torin had said last night. Me, leading the Casnoffs’ demon army. I’d have to have my powers to do that, wouldn’t I? But no. No, he was lying about that. There was no way I’d ever,
ever
team up with the Casnoffs for something so awful.

I remembered something else. “I have to touch that spell. That spell that’s in the grimoire. And the grimoire is where, exactly?”

Abashed, Dad looked down and admitted, “Undoubtedly with the Casnoffs.”

I deflated. “Who are on an island that we can’t find. I swear to God, this whole thing is like the world’s most twisted riddle.”

“Maybe there’s another way,” Finley suggested. “Don’t you guys know any witches or warlocks who could restore Sophie’s powers?”

“Perhaps,” Dad said, but I’d known him long enough to know that when Dad said, “perhaps,” it usually meant, “no freaking way.”

“Couldn’t someone just say the spell?” I asked. I knew I was grasping at straws, but if there was any chance for me to use my powers again, I was going to take it.

Dad shook his head. “No. That particular spell was woven to the paper with blood magic. It has to be touched. The words themselves don’t have the same power.”

“I may not have dark magic, but my powers are pretty strong,” Cal offered. “If we
did
go to Ireland, is there any chance I could get in?”

Considering that, Dad ran a hand over the back of his neck. “It’s possible, I suppose. But the potential risk—”

“We need to do something,” Cal said quietly. “I’d rather take our chances at Lough Bealach than wait around here.”

“The boy is right,” Torin said, even though he and Cal were probably close to the same age (well, plus or minus five hundred years, I guess). “And the sooner, the better. We’re in stasis now, but something is coming. I sense a—”

“Great disturbance in the Force?” I interrupted before I could stop myself.

Torin frowned. “I suspect you’re mocking me, but I don’t understand the reference. In any case, dark powers are stirring. The more prepared you are, the better.”

“Then, let’s go,” I said.

“Perhaps we should explore some other options before swanning off to Ireland,” Dad said, pushing his glasses up. “After all, Sophie, you’ve been through quite the ordeal.”

“I’ll nap on the plane. Look, we are dealing with the possibility of
an army of demons
. I don’t know about you guys, but those words are right up there with ‘root canal’ and ‘school on Saturdays’ in terms of things that terrify me. We’re already three weeks behind. We don’t have time to just sit here and explore options or read more books or listen to more half-assed prophecies from this jerk,” I said, pointing at Torin. He made a gesture that I think was the old-timey version of flipping me off.

“So, yeah,” I continued. “Maybe this is a totally stupid idea. But if there’s even a chance one of us can get into the underworld, then we have to take it.”

“Okay, I do like you,” Finley said, flashing me a grin. She looked at my dad. “She’s right. If we can’t figure out a way to stop these Casnoff chicks, then we at least need to defend ourselves against them. And the only way to do that is to go to Lough Bealach and get a whole bunch of demonglass.”

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