Authors: Tina Connolly
And then I had it.
Two and a half tablespoons chopped pear, two tablespoons water, three tablespoons maple syrup, and one pinch each pepper and paprika. The only necessary gesture was to make sure you chopped the pears with both hands. It even sounded tasty.
The witch had said it was a beginner’s spell, and I’d never believed her.
Now that I’d figured it out, I almost wanted to try it. But the bus was already coming down the street. I stuffed the self-defense spell and the witch’s books in my backpack, and ran through the rain to the bus stop.
“Almost didn’t make it,” said Oliver as I climbed aboard.
“Then you wouldn’t have this,” I said, and handed him a tiny mister for his windshield.
“Whatta girl,” said Oliver as he accelerated. “I’ll put it on soon as I make up the time I lost. That stuff’s magic.”
“Yup,” I said. I wiped rain from my frizzing hair, looking over his shoulder for Devon. After last night, I was dying to see him in person. To see what his face would reveal when he saw me. But yet again, no Devon on the bus. I hoped the demon wasn’t making him walk the four miles to school in the pouring rain.
“I already saw your friend this morning,” Oliver said. “He got on when I swung through here an hour ago.”
I looked quizzically at him.
“You know, your friend that poured water on my nice dry bus,” he said. “I saw him.”
“How’d he look?”
“Dry,” said Oliver. “I particularly noticed that. Everyone else looked like they’d been through a car wash, but not him. I almost didn’t recognize him. You know I recognize people by the tops of their heads as they come up the stairs, and now his hair’s changed color…”
“Thanks, Oliver,” I said. “You ever stop driving buses, you can take up a career in espionage.”
“Espionage,” he said, trying out the sound of it. “Double-O-Oliver.”
No Devon on the bus, no Devon by the dripping-wet T-Bird, and certainly no Devon by my locker in the tenth-grade wing. Demons made it hard to have a smooth social life.
But a group of girls was clustered around a dim blonde and a black-haired girl in sparkly black, and when they saw me, the snickers erupted. I ignored that, because obviously when someone looks at you and snickers, it is on purpose to be super-annoying. I concentrated on toweling my hair with my hoodie as I went past.
I got along well enough with those girls when they weren’t under Sparkle’s influence—as in, we weren’t BFFs, but we were friendly enough. I knew one from biology, a couple from grade school, and I’d shared a laugh or two with all of them at one point.
So whatever their deal was today, I refused to play those Sparkle-driven games. I tied my damp hoodie around my waist and opened my locker.
“Was it second base?” said Reese.
Go back four places and lose one turn. “What did you say?”
“Don’t play dumb, Camellia,” said Reese. I should have been alerted by the open hostility in her tone. “We all know you were on the rooftop making out with Devon after school.”
And then, the double whammy.
“How’s it feel to be left for someone more popular?”
Shock waves ran through me at the implications of that last sentence, and then, backing up, for the flat-out horrid feeling of being accused. Ten girls surrounding you and laughing about
something you did
will have that effect on you, no matter what the something or how true it was.
Fumbling, I said: “I was not.” My policy of ignoring Sparkle’s girls when they were obnoxious was suddenly in shreds. Everything was in shreds. I was splayed open in a crowded green-painted hallway while a group of miniskirted tigers circled, watching to see what I’d do.
“You don’t know what you’re talking about,” I said, dumping textbooks in my locker.
Reese’s eyes narrowed. “Got it from the source.”
The source? The only other person who’d been there was—“You!” I rounded on Sparkle.
Sparkle laughed in my face, black hair tumbling. “I didn’t say one word,” she said.
“Liar,” I said. “You know perfectly well what I’ve got here.” I tugged my phone from my damp jeans pocket.
“Not a clue,” said Sparkle. I saw her glance behind me but I was too late. Three girls slammed into me. My phone squeezed from my fingers, banged to the floor. Another girl grabbed it and tossed it to Sparkle.
I felt my wrist where someone’s shoulder had crunched it. I was going to be a mass of bruises by Halloween. “Wow, way to ambush me with lies,” I said. “Bravo.”
Sparkle smirked. “I’m not the idiot who was snuggling with a boy on a rooftop in broad daylight,” she said. “You know how rumor spreads. I didn’t have to say anything.” She pressed buttons on the phone, which apparently had turned off again. “How do you get this thing on?”
“You could’ve said it wasn’t true,” I muttered, even though that made me feel all mixed up inside because of course I wished it was. How is it that you could want two completely opposite things to happen? I didn’t want this scene to happen, where a gaggle of Sparkle’s minions accused me of kissing Devon … but of course I would’ve liked to have kissed Devon. And would’ve much rather had that happen than what
did
happen on the rooftop. Even if it meant the teasing would be true.
“What’s wrong with your stupid phone?” said Sparkle.
“You dropped it,” I said calmly. “Congratulations.”
Reese was standing off to the side, eyeing me. She looked half-sad, half like she would like to gouge my eyes out with her manicure.
“Devon and I didn’t do anything,” I offered. “This was just a setup by Sparkle to get my cell phone and you know it.”
But Reese in love was not-nice Reese. She stabbed a finger into my shoulder. “He’s
my
crush,” she said. “I’m paying for him. You’d better back off.”
“Or what. You’ll poke me to death?” Several of Sparkle’s girls giggled at that. They wouldn’t have sided with me against Sparkle, of course, but I was irrationally heartened to know they would against dim-bulb Reese.
“Oh, take your stupid brick,” said Sparkle, and she shoved the phone into my chest.
“Thanks, chum,” I said. “Catch ya later, girls. This was fun. Let’s do it again sometime.” I ignored the fuming blond chick an inch from me.
Several girls grabbed Reese and pulled. “C’mon. Crane’s coming.”
Reese sent one more parting shot: “At least he met me in public.”
Reese. He’d met
Reese
? I was dying to know what they were talking about, but damned if I’d ask. “Where was that? The petting zoo?”
Sparkle smiled nastily. “Wouldn’t you like to know what he does when he’s not with you?”
The other girls laughed again as they tugged Reese off. Sparkle slipped through and to the front of the pack, marching them off to class or further mischief or wherever. Her black hair swung against her relatively subdued black beaded dress.
“That was interesting,” said Jenah behind me.
“You saw?”
“Not live and in person, but Elly Sinclair got a blurry video, and then Barry sent me three texts about it.” She tested the air with a finger. “Of course, it’s obvious from the disturbances in the hallway that some girl-girl altercation went down. And way to play into stereotypes, girls! It was about a boy.”
I groaned and tugged on my damp hair. “Why didn’t I think on the spot? I should’ve laughed and said something like, ‘Of course we were making out on the roof. It was awesome.’ That would’ve stopped them. And what did Reese mean by meeting him in public? Tell me. Do you know?”
“You aren’t going to like it,” said Jenah. “Francie told me that Ellen saw Reese and Devon at Blue Moon Pizza together last night. They were holding hands over the cheese sticks.”
“Last night. Last night while I was worrying about him? While I was obsessing to you about how I could rescue him from Estahoth?
That
last night?”
“They didn’t kiss, if that’s any consolation. Francie said Reese kept trying to scoot in and tilt her lips into prime kissing position, but he blocked her. Checked her with his shoulder.”
“I didn’t get my English homework read because I was talking to him on the phone. He did not say one word.”
Jenah looked at me like, duh, of course he wouldn’t. “So
were
you making out on the roof?” she said. “Because we’re sharing everything now, you know.”
That made me laugh, despite the horrid shamed feeling. “No, we didn’t.” I pondered. “I guess he must’ve just flat out told Reese about the rooftop. How obnoxious. Because I could see some people in the park, but they were pretty far away, and they wouldn’t have known who we were, even
if
they saw us. Not that there was anything to see, because nothing happened.”
Jenah pursed her lips. “Okay.”
“Okay, what?”
“Okay, maybe I believe you.” She said that matter-of-factly, like she was keeping me up-to-date on the situation.
“Hells, Jenah. I never lied to you about anything but the witch, and I just couldn’t tell anyone about that. What?”
“You didn’t tell me any of this roof stuff.”
I didn’t? I scoured my memory. “Ack,” I said. “Only because I got derailed by Sparkle’s nose, and then you interrupted to say that—” I lowered my voice—“Moonfire was talking to you.” And maybe also because the memory of poor Devon forced to destroy those pixies was so horrible that deep down, I hadn’t wanted to talk about it.
Crap.
I’d always thought of myself as honest. Why was my subconscious working against me? Why were some things so difficult to push past your lips?
“So I left Sparkle, and went into the auditorium—” I said.
“But first, you saw me,” said Jenah. She smoothed her filmy green skirt over her black leggings.
I endured the embarrassment. “Yes. I saw you. I’m sorry. And then I found Devon on the roof with the box you saw yesterday…” In a couple sentences I outlined the rest of that horror.
“Oh,” said Jenah. She swallowed. “Magic isn’t all fluffy butterflies, is it?”
“No. But please. I am telling you the truth. As quickly as I can. So bear with me.”
“I know,” Jenah said. She patted my shoulder a couple times. “Look, we’re going to be late to algebra. We better go.”
So that was like ice in my gut. Jenah did trust me and she didn’t, all at once. The frustrating thing was that her caution was, logically, the right thing. I could tell she wasn’t just trying to piss me off, trying to get back at me. She would try to take me at my word, but she wasn’t necessarily going to believe 100 percent of everything I said until she’d proven it for herself. Or maybe till great oceans of time passed and we were old and gray, or at least in college.
How the heck did I deal with that?
* * *
No Devon in algebra, and you’ll think I’m an idiot, but I slid the demon book into my binder and studied it instead of algebra. Okay, so I’m an idiot. But I had one day to put a spell together, and that meant I needed lunch today to gather any ingredients I might need.
I found the part about pentagrams straight off, and the good news there was that the spell didn’t need anything besides the pentagram itself, one breath from the witch, and the touch of her wand. It wasn’t even written in code, either. I guess because it was so straightforward—and so important. Besides demon-summoning, pentagrams could also contain witches, humans—even phoenix and dragons. The only catch for using a pentagram as a jail was that you had to get the entity inside first.
Some catch.
Still, it was the only plan I had. And the fact that a pentagram wasn’t much of a spell meant I really only had to figure out one spell, the big spell, the tremendous spell.
A spell to get the demon out of Devon.
If such a spell even existed.
I skimmed pages, looking. There were several pages of different summoning spells, and I thought I recognized the one the witch used, with the basil and salamander. Then several pages of how to lock demons into bodies. Was getting the demon up to Earth all that witches cared about? How could the book have pages and pages of how to get a demon here, but nothing about controlling your demon once you’ve got him? Nothing about damage control? I supposed because demons couldn’t get into
witches
unless they let them in, they didn’t give two hoots for the regular humans in danger. Typical.
On the very last page I found the spell I sought.
The title was:
Ye Olde Demon-Loosening Spell for Feebleminded Witches Who Have Changed Their Minds About Which Puny Human Should Hold Said Demon.
Then there were the caveats, a whole bunch of “We’ve heard this works, but the demon had already gotten himself embodied so that’s probably why it failed,” and, “We’ve heard this works, but the witch disappeared and so did the demon.”
Yeah.
We’ve heard this works but—help, help, I’m being eaten
, I thought sourly.
There was a list of ten ingredients and then the complex instructions, as usual. I didn’t have time to attempt to “solve” the recipe and see which ingredients were needed and which weren’t.
Hastily I scribbled them all on a sheet of torn-out notebook paper. Three of them were grocery items we didn’t have at home: eggplant, oysters, apples. One of the ingredients was goat’s blood. I sighed. Why didn’t the witch just keep a goshdarn goat, if it was going to be this important? I scanned the complex directions and saw immediately that the required amount of goat’s blood was one ounce and the number of apples was two. But I was going to have to decipher the rest of the spell to see how much of the other items I needed.
So I’d go to Celestial Foods and get the grocery items, plus the stuff off the list Sarmine had left out for me. After a moment’s thought I added pears and maple syrup to the list, for the self-defense spell. The bell rang and I scrambled up.
“Camellia? Up here a moment.”
Hells.
Well, I wasn’t going to break down for Rourke. If he was still mad from yesterday, he was still mad.
But Rourke, oddly enough, was smiling. I suppose he liked delivering bad news.