Chapter 50

The Eighth Day

I’m still not quite sure how I made it out. Sheer luck, I suppose. Guess I was entitled to one miracle. I managed to duck inside a crawlspace while the house collapsed around me. After that, well, after that is a bit of a blur, but I made it out with only cuts and bruises.

Savannah never realized I’d impersonated her mother. She assumed I’d been trapped in the house while searching for her. As Cortez said, we’ll never tell her. She deserves that fantasy, one I envied her, a few last minutes with the person who meant more to her than anyone in the world.

We still had to do Savannah’s ceremony in a few days but, with Leah and Nast dead, no one would impede that now. So it was all over. All over. I should feel relief at those words. Yet I couldn’t, because it truly was over. My life as I’d always known it was over.

I didn’t get my happy ending. Maybe I’ve seen too many Hollywood movies, but I honestly believed everything would turn out okay. If I survived, if I saved Savannah, then I would get my karmic reward. My tattered life would miraculously mend. The media would forget about me overnight. The town would forgive me, welcome me back. The Coven would overthrow Victoria and reinstate me as Coven Leader. I’d return to find my house hadn’t been burned to the ground, but barely scorched, all my belongings still intact.

But my house was a hollow shell. Anything that hadn’t burned had been scavenged by human vultures. When we returned to survey the damage, we were beset by reporters. The tabloids screamed “Mob Justice: Vigilantes Try to Burn Massachusetts Witch.” Some claimed I’d caused the fire accidentally while conducting a Satanic ritual, using body parts dug up from the cemetery the night before. Hordes of screaming strangers banged against the taxi windows, chasing us up the street. The front page of every Boston paper carried the story of the burning, augmented with news of “renewed efforts” by townspeople to cleanse East Falls of my presence. Within a day, the more enterprising reporters began drawing links between me and the “unholy” destruction of a farmhouse thirty miles away.

I called every Coven member, assuring them that Nast was out of our lives for good. I told them what Victoria had done. It didn’t matter. I’d tainted the Coven. Only a handful would even consider having me back.

We stayed in Massachusetts only long enough to file an insurance claim and get the paperwork done. Between the money from the claim, and money I still had from my mother’s estate, I had enough to move anywhere I wanted and start over. For most women my age, this would be a dream come true. It wasn’t my dream, but I’d make it mine. I swore I would.

When we pulled out of Boston three days later, I watched the city lights fade behind me, perhaps for the last time, and a wave of sadness washed over me, but no tears came. Surprisingly few tears had come in the last few days. Even as I’d surveyed the ruins of my life, I realized that I still had exactly what I’d fought for.

I had Savannah. I’d known that I might lose everything I had in my quest to protect her, and I’d told myself that didn’t matter. I guess that’s what happens when you make a deal with the Fates. They take you at your word. Still, they did leave me with two consolation prizes, which I valued more than I could have imagined.

First, I still had the grimoires. When the firefighters rescued Cortez from my burning house, he’d still been carrying the two bags, the one with the grimoires and the one with my tools and the material for Savannah’s ceremony.

My second bonus reward? Cortez was fine, and still with us. Through his network of contacts, he’d found a doctor in Boston willing to examine him, no questions asked. He had three cracked ribs, internal bruising, and a possible concussion. The doctor had advised a hospital stay, but Cortez settled for a chest binding and some painkillers, then we’d set out on the road.

I hadn’t told him of his brother’s plan to have me killed. What would be the use? He already knew his brothers hated him. If I told him, he might decide he was putting my life in danger and leave, and I wasn’t risking that.

We’d been driving for two days now. I still didn’t know where we were going. For now, it was a cross-country summer tour. Savannah thought that was pretty cool. She’d tire of it soon. Hopefully I’d find a place to settle before she did.

We’d stopped this morning. Some town in Virginia. At least, I think we were still in Virginia, though we may have crossed into Kentucky. Today was the big day. The eighth day.

Since dawn we’d been preparing for the ceremony. Now that it was dark, we’d driven to a state park, slipped past the locked gates, and headed into the forest. I’d found a site almost immediately, a good-sized clearing ringed with trees, as the ceremony prescribed. We were still early, though, so Savannah had grabbed a flashlight and taken off to see if she couldn’t find something better. My choice was fine, but I suspected she was simply too excited to sit still.

I’d found a fallen log and sat down to pore over my notes. I was reading them through for the third time when a hand pressed between my shoulder blades, fingers rubbing the knot of tension there.

“How are you doing?” Cortez said, taking a seat beside me.

I managed a shaky smile. “It feels like I’m about to do my SAT’s, driver’s test, and thesis presentation all rolled into one.”

He squeezed my hand. “You’ll do fine.”

I leaned against him and he put his arm around my shoulder.

“What would you think about heading out to the Coast?” he asked. “Washington or Oregon. You might like it there. Lots of open space, and the ocean. It’s not the East Coast, but …”

“I visited Portland once. I liked it.”

“We’ll go there, then.”

“So you’re going to—?” I hesitated. “I mean, we haven’t discussed …” I took a deep breath and plowed on. “Are you coming with us? For now, I mean?”

“For now … and for as long as I’m welcome.” He slid a quarter-smile my way. “The problem, as you undoubtedly have already discerned, will not be keeping me around, but getting rid of me.”

“I can live with that.”

I leaned over and kissed him. When we pulled apart, he adjusted his glasses, then looked at me.

“When I, uh, mentioned the Pacific Northwest, it wasn’t a random suggestion. Oregon is one of the few states without a Cabal satellite office. With Kristof dead, on a case in which I was involved, I may need to lie low for a while.”

“What will happen?”

“I don’t know. I can say, with certainty, that my presence won’t place you or Savannah in danger. I’d never do that. The matter of Kristof’s death will be handled through proper Cabal channels. If I’m in danger, I’ll hear of it long before anyone comes for me. My father should be able to handle it.” He shook his head. “It seems no matter how far and how fast I run, I always end up relying on my father to—” He stopped. “I’m sorry.”

“Tell me.”

He entwined his fingers with mine and smiled. “Later. I only wanted you to know that I’m not placing you in danger, but that it would be wise for me to keep out of sight for a while. My father may—will summon me home to Miami. I’d prefer to be as far away as possible when that happens.”

Savannah burst from the forest. “Is it time?”

I nodded. “Wait here. I’ll cast a perimeter spell around the site.”

“We’ll have everything set up when you return,” Cortez said, dropping the knapsack from his shoulder.

“No, I’ll do—” I bit my lip. “Sure. Thanks.”

I walked until I could no longer hear the murmur of their voices, then continued another ten feet before casting the perimeter spell. Fighting my way through the thick woods, I circled the site, casting as I went. Then I looped around again, just to be sure. When I returned to the clearing, Cortez and Savannah were kneeling on the ground, laying out the final objects.

Cortez shifted to a crouch. “Is this correct?”

I took the notes from him and walked around the tableau, scrutinizing it from every angle. Along both the north and south sides of the cloth they’d laid a quartet of tools—a small pot, an athame, a candle, and a chalice. The north candle was purple, for power. The south one blue, for wisdom and truth. Off the cloth they’d left the Baggies of dirt, the juniper, and a bottle of water.

Savannah handed me a necklace, a lodestone on a strip of rawhide, like the one now around her own neck. I put it on, surveyed the tableau once again, and bent to move the blue candle an inch to the left and rotate the northern athame about twenty degrees east. They’d probably been fine to begin with, but I felt better making the adjustments. Control isn’t a habit you can break overnight.

“Okay. We’re almost ready. Savannah, have you buried the cloth?”

She nodded.

“Good, then you need to kneel on the north side, in front of the purple candle.”

“Shall I move elsewhere?” Cortez said.

“Only if you want to.”

“I’ll sit back on the log and watch. If that bothers you, tell me and I’ll get out of sight.”

“Thanks.”

When he went to take his seat, I cast a protective circle around us. Then I turned to Savannah.

“Before we start, I want you to know that I really want this to work. It’s possible, though, that I might not have the power or the experience to do it properly. If it seems to fail, I’ll keep trying, but—”

“It’s okay,” she said. “I’ll know you tried. Thanks, Paige. For doing this, I mean. I know it’s not what you had in mind for me.”

“It’s what your mother wanted. That’s good enough for me.”

I laid my notes before me.

“Okay, first the elements. If anything sounds wrong, stop me. Even if you aren’t sure, don’t be afraid to speak up. Better to restart partway through than repeat the whole thing later.”

She nodded.

“Here we go then. Air.”

I slashed each athame through the air.

“Earth.”

I poured the grave dirt from the baggie into each shallow clay pot.

“Water.”

I uncapped the Evian bottle and filled both chalices.

“Fire.”

I struck a match and lit the candles.

I paused then, closing my eyes and clearing my mind. When I opened my eyes, I focused straight ahead, seeing nothing. With a brief Latin invocation, I called on the power of the elements to heed my will. Then I blinked, allowing myself to see again, and motioned for Savannah to watch carefully, since she’d need to repeat the next steps.

“Air to the north,” I said, taking my athame and placing it before me.

“Earth to the east.” I put my clay pot to my right.

“Water to the west.” I moved my chalice to my left.

“Fire to the south.” Taking the blue candle, I twisted, being careful not to fall, and laid it behind me.

I touched each in turn, the athame, the dirt, the water, and the flame. When it came to the last, panic darted through me and I hesitated, then gritted my teeth and forced my finger into the flame.

“Air, earth, water, fire. At their center, I sit in balance. All nature in harmony.”

I turned to Savannah and motioned for her to copy me. She did, intoning each phrase without faltering. When she’d finished, we repeated the last part together. Then Savannah shifted onto her knees, lighting the candles as I resumed my place. Fingers trembling, I held the juniper branch over my candle’s flame.

“With this offering, I beg protection,” I said in Latin. “Hecate, Selene, Artemis, goddesses three, hear my plea. We ask this in your name. Grant this, your child, all the powers you can bestow.”

I looked Savannah in the eyes, lifting my hands and voice.

“Grant her power without bounds. Give her the strength to wreak vengeance on her enemies.”

The ground beneath me rumbled, but I held Savannah’s gaze and kept going.

“Give her the power to overcome and the wisdom to do right by this gift. Give her all that you have to give.”

The earth quaked, toppling the candles and igniting the cloth beneath. I raised my hands to the sky and stood, closing my eyes and pouring everything into the last few words.

“Hecate, Selene, Artemis! Hear my plea!”

For a split second, all went still. Preternaturally still and silent. I could hear nothing, feel nothing. No, I did feel something. I felt peace. Complete peace.

“It worked!” Savannah said, launching herself across the space between and falling into my arms. “Can you feel that, Paige? It worked! You did it!”

“Yes,” I said, smiling. “We did it.”