“I know,” Cal whispered, kissing my temple. “I got your message. But I got back too late to call you. Was it important? I figured if you really needed me, you’d send a witch message.”
I wrapped my arms tightly around his waist. “It was just . . . a bunch of weird stuff I wanted to talk to you about.”
“Like what?”
For an instant I hesitated. We were leaning against his car, across the street from school, and it felt almost private. Not private enough, though. I glanced around to make sure we were alone. “Well, first I overheard Raven and Bree talking in the girls’ bathroom. They were talking about trying to get Matt and Robbie to join their coven. I think they want to split us up. Sky is their leader. They meet at her place, wherever that is. Then Bree said something about how she found some of my hair to give to Sky. I was kind of . . . freaked out,” I confessed. “I mean, what does Sky want with my hair?”
Cal’s golden eyes narrowed. “I don’t know—but I plan to find out.” He took a deep breath. “Don’t worry. No one is going to interfere with you, Morgan. Not while I’m around.”
I was amazed at how comforting I found his words. I felt like a weight had been lifted from my shoulders.
“There’s more,” I told him. “Later, Robbie and I were in the park, and we saw Raven and Matt actually making out.”
Cal’s eyebrows rose. “Oh,” he said.
“Yeah. It was totally by accident. Robbie and I were walking around, gathering pinecones and stuff, and we saw Raven practically roping and tying Matt, trying to get him to break up with Jenna and join their coven.”
“Man,” Cal said, frowning. “So you were right—Matt is acting squirrelly, and now we know why.”
“Yep.”
A thoughtful expression crossed Cal’s face. “And Sky’s definitely the leader of their coven? That makes sense since you saw her meeting with Bree and Raven.”
I nodded. But I couldn’t help wondering . . . if Sky was their leader, then what had she been doing at Cal’s house with Selene, participating in one of Selene’s circles the night I’d found Maeve’s Book of Shadows? Was she some kind of Wiccan spy? Did Selene know Sky had her own coven? Did it even matter? My head was spinning. There was so much I didn’t understand, so much I had to find out.
At that moment we heard the distant ringing of the homeroom bell, and we both groaned. Going to classes was not my number-one priority today.
With our arms around each other, we started slogging across the dead brown grass toward school. “Let me think about this,” said Cal. “I need to talk to Sky, obviously. But I also need to figure out if I should talk to Raven, or Matt, or both.”
I nodded. Part of me felt like a tattler. But mostly I was just relieved that Cal knew. I was thinking about talking to Matt myself, but I felt certain that Cal would take care of anything bigger, like with Sky. As we climbed the stone steps of the back entrance, I squeezed his hand good-bye. Yes, I would have to talk to Matt. He was a friend and still a part of our circle. I owed it to him.
“Matt?” I called down the hall. “Do you have a minute?”
It was after lunch and almost time to head to class. My lack of sleep was starting to catch up with me. My feet were definitely starting to drag. I would have given anything just to go curl up somewhere and take a nap. But this was the first chance I’d had to talk to Matt, and I wasn’t going to let it slip.
“What’s up, Morgan?” Matt asked. He stood in front of me, his face shuttered and remote, his hands in his pockets.
I took a deep breath, then decided just to get right into it. “I saw you and Raven yesterday,” I stated baldly. “In Butler’s Ferry park.”
Matt’s black eyes went wide, and he stared at me. “Uh . . . what are you talking about?”
“Come on,” I said patiently. I pulled him over to one side of the hallway so we could talk without being overheard by the occasional wandering student. I lowered my voice. “I mean, I
saw
you yesterday, with Raven, in the park. I know she’s trying to get you to join her coven. I know you’re fooling around with her.”
“I’m not fooling around with her!” Matt insisted.
I didn’t even answer. I just raised my eyebrows.
His gaze fell to the floor. “I mean, it hasn’t gotten that far,” he mumbled, finally giving in. “Jesus, I don’t know what to do.”
I shrugged. “Break up with Jenna if you want to go out with Raven,” I said.
“But I don’t want to go out with Raven,” Matt said. “I don’t want to join her coven. The thing is . . . I’ve always thought she was kind of hot, you know?” He shook his head as if to clear it. “Why am I even telling you this?”
A couple of freshman girls passed us. Though they were only two years younger, they seemed a world apart from me. They
were
a world apart. They belonged to the world of school and homework and boys. Mary K.’s world. Not mine.
“Why does she want you to join their coven?” I asked.
“I guess they need more people,” Matt answered. He sounded miserable. “A bunch of people started coming, but they all dropped out or were kicked out. A lot of them didn’t take it seriously.”
“But why
you?
” I pressed.
He sniffed. “I don’t think it’s really me. I mean, I’m nobody. I’m just a warm body.”
“You’re also part of our coven,” I muttered. Part of me wanted to console him, but the other part wanted to wring his neck. “So what are you going to do?” I asked. I crossed my arms and tried not to look too judgmental.
“I don’t know.”
I sighed. “Maybe you should talk to Cal about this,” I suggested. “Maybe he could help you clarify your thoughts.”
Matt didn’t look so sure. “Maybe,” he said doubtfully. “I’ll think about it.” He glanced up at me. “Are you going to tell Jenna?”
“No.” I shook my head. “But she’s not stupid. She knows something’s wrong.”
He laughed distantly. “Yeah. We’ve been going out for four years. We know each other so well. But we’re not even eighteen yet.” With that, he pushed himself off the wall and headed off to his class—without so much as even a backward glance.
I watched him leave, thinking about what he’d said. Did he mean he had gotten tied up with Jenna too early and wanted to date other people? As I pondered it, a short rhyme popped into my mind. I repeated the words quietly.
“Help him see the way to go
Help him know the truth to show
He is not the hunter here
Nor yet should he be the deer.”
I shook my head and headed to my own class. What did it mean? I wondered. Who knew? These things didn’t come with instructions and commentary.
That afternoon when Mary K. and I got home from school, there was a gray car parked in front of our house. I didn’t think anything of it—people parked in front of our house all the time. It was probably one of my mother’s clients. So I just followed my sister up the walkway.
“Morgan!”
I wheeled at that voice. Hunter Niall was getting out of the car.
“Who’s the dish?” Mary K. asked, arching an eyebrow.
I glared at her. “Go inside,” I commanded, my heart kicking up a beat. “I’ll deal with it.”
Mary K. grinned at me. “Ooh. I can’t wait to hear all about
this.
” She pounded up the porch steps, stomped the ice off her Doc Martens, and went inside.
“Hello, Morgan,” Hunter said, approaching me. How did he manage to make a simple greeting sound menacing? I wondered. His cold seemed to have gotten worse, too. His nose was red, and his voice was very nasal.
“What do you want?” I asked, swallowing. I remembered my bad dream of last night, my overwhelming feelings of being smothered, the dark cloud that had been chasing me.
He coughed. “I want to talk to you.”
“About what?” I slung my backpack up onto the porch, not taking my eyes off him. I watched his hands, his mouth, his eyes, anything that he could use to do magick. My pulse was racing; my throat felt tight. I wished hard that Cal would suddenly drive up out of the blue. I considered sending him a message with my thoughts, a witch message—but then I realized I should just turn around and go in. I could handle myself. I didn’t even need to talk to Hunter.
But for some reason I just stood there as he strode toward me, cutting across our lawn, leaving black footprints in the half-melted ice. He was close enough now that I could see that his fair skin was completely unblemished and there were a few freckles across the bridge of his strong nose. His eyes were cold and green.
“Let’s talk about
you,
Morgan,” he said, and he pushed his leather cap farther back on his head. A few tufts of blond hair poked out beneath it. “You don’t know what you’re doing with Cal.” He made this announcement firmly but casually, as if he were simply telling me it was four o’clock and time for tea.
I shook my head, feeling the anger rise. “You don’t even know—”
“It’s not your fault,” he interrupted. “This is all new to you.” The anger welled in the pit of my stomach, turning to rage. What right did he have to be so condescending to me?
Hunter fastened his eyes on mine. “You can’t be expected to know about Cal, and his mother, and who they are,” he said. “No one blames you,” he added.
“No one blames me for what?” I demanded. “What are you talking about? I don’t even
know
you. Where do you get off telling me anything about people I know, people I care about?”
He shrugged. His manner was as cold as the air around us. “You’re stumbling into something bigger and darker than you could possibly imagine.”
Rage turned to sarcasm. Hunter definitely brought out the worst in me. “Oh,” I said, trying to sound bored. “Stop, stop, you’re scaring me.”
His face tightened, and he stepped toward me. My stomach clenched, and adrenaline pumped through my veins. I resisted the urge to turn and bolt into the house.
“Cal’s lied to you,” Hunter snarled. “He isn’t what or who you think he is. Neither he nor his mother. I’m here to warn you. Don’t be stupid. Look at me!” He gestured at his puffy eyes and red nose. “Do you think this is normal? Because it isn’t. They’re working magick on me—”
“Oh, are you kidding me?” I interrupted. “Are you actually telling me they’re plotting against you? Give me a break!”
Who
was
this guy? Did he really think I would believe that Cal and Selene gave him a cold with dark magick? Or was he simply some paranoid nut? Maybe I should feel sorry for him—but I couldn’t. All I felt was fury. I wanted to shove him as hard as I could, knock him down, and kick him. I had never been so angry, not at my parents, or Bree, not even at Bakker. I spun to go inside.
Hunter darted forward and caught my arm in a painful grip. Feeling trapped, furious, I drew my fingers together and smacked his hand. A jolt of crackly blue light jumped from my hand and shocked him. He released me at once, looking startled.
“So that’s it,” he whispered, rubbing his hand. He nodded in astonishment. “That’s why he wants you.”
“Get the hell away from me!” I shouted. “Or do you want me to really hurt you?”
Hunter sneered. “Trying to show me just what a powerful Woodbane you are?”
Time seemed to freeze.
“That’s right,” he whispered. “I know your secret. I know you’re Woodbane.”
“You don’t know anything,” I managed. The words came out in a misty whisper.
“Maeve Riordan,” he said, shrugging. “Belwicket. They were all Woodbane. Don’t act like you don’t know.”
“You’re lying,” I spat, but I felt an awful sensation bubbling inside me, like a boiling cauldron. I wondered if I was going to throw up.
A flash of surprise crossed his face, instantly replaced with suspicion. “You can’t hide it,” he said. Now he sounded more irritated than arrogant. “You can’t pretend it away. You’re Woodbane, Cal is Woodbane, and the two of you are dancing with fire. But it’s going to stop. You have a choice, and he does, too. I’m here to make sure you make the right one.”
Move, I told my body, my feet. Get inside. Move, dammit! But I couldn’t.
“Who are you?” I asked. “Why are you doing this to me?”
“I’m Hunter,” he said with a sudden, wolfish grin that made me draw in my breath. He looked feral and dangerous.
“The youngest member of the International Council of Witches.”
My breath was now coming in shallow gasps, as if I were facing death itself.
“And I’m Cal’s brother,” he said.
12
The Future
I ran up the ice-crusted steps of our house and threw myself through the door. Somehow I knew Hunter wouldn’t follow me. The house was wonderfully warm and cozy, and I almost sobbed with relief as I pounded up the stairs and crashed into my bedroom. I had enough presence of mind to lock my door, and when Mary K. knocked a minute later, I called, “I’ll be down in a few minutes.”
“Okay,” she replied. A moment later her feet padded downstairs.