Dark of Night (Thorne Hill 2) - Page 51

“It’s just pouring out now. Slowly, but it’s just constant.” I shuffle to the side, not wanting to step on the Ley line but not really knowing where it is. Binx helps me look, and we find a darkened circle of dirt.

“Brimstone,” I whisper, picking up a handful of gray stones. “This is it,” I tell Lucas.

“What’s the plan?”

I look down at the ground, shaking my head. The blue-eyed man took me back in my dreams. He was showing me where the problem was and leaving it for me to figure out, which is annoying on a whole different level.

“I’m good, right?” I ask Lucas, not looking away from the ground.

“Uh, yeah.”

“I mean like morally good.”

“Is this really the time to question your character?” he asks.

“Should I take your avoiding the question as a no?”

“You are a good person, Callie. The best I’ve met.”

“But I’m no saint.”

“You’re not, and I’m glad for that. You’re real. You try to do the right thing, but you don’t take shit. You are perfect. I still don’t see what this is about.”

I turn and meet his gaze. “You don’t think I could be part demon?”

His brows furrow. “No. Demons couldn’t summon light like that.”

“Summon light…” I gasp. “Lucas, you’re a genius.”

He flashes a cocky grin. “I know. But…what’d I do now?”

Conjuring a ball of blue energy, I look back at the ground. Little bits of magic fall from the energy ball in my hands, illuminating the crack in the earth. “This is either going to work or blow up. Like, literally blow up.”

I inhale, giving more power to the energy ball, watching it grow bigger and brighter before I let it go. And I close my eyes and turn my head.

“Wait!” Lucas calls, but it’s too late. I’ve already let go.

Chapter 31

The energy ball hits the ground, shattering into a million little balls of bright blue light. They sink down into the earth, filling the crack. The white light pushes the negative energy away, sending it back down to the pit of Hell.

I stand transfixed, too scared to breathe. If this doesn’t work, then I don’t know what will. And if it doesn’t work…then maybe I really am evil.

“No!” the demon shouts, using Evander’s voice. I jerk my head around, holding my hands steady over the crack, needing to power the energy. The demon lunges for me, but Lucas is faster. He wrestles him to the ground.

“Don’t hurt him!” I yell, suddenly feeling drained. Another string of magic sizzles around my fingers, and I push it down into the ground. The air starts to vibrate, but it’s not suffocating this time.

The little stream of energy that was trickling off the Ley line retracts, breaking contact with the crack. Right away, the feel of the forest is back to normal…but it doesn’t solve the demon problem. Giving it all I have, I reach deep inside and fuel a final energy ball, this one glowing bright white. I throw it down, and when it hits the earth, it lights up the ground around it.

I sink to the ground, too weak to stand, and press my fingers into the dirt. The magic sizzles out, and the night is still. Panting, I start to fall forward. Binx shadows over and helps me up. I expect dizziness to crash down on me, but when I get up, I feel better.

Stronger.

More like myself than I’ve ever been, and I know that makes no sense.

Lucas has Evander’s arms behind his back. The demon is thrashing, trying to break free, but without the energy coming off the Ley line, it doesn’t stand a chance to fight against Lucas.

Inhaling, I push my shoulders back and walk over to him, holding out my hand. Evander’s eyes go wide as the demon looks at me in fear. Or awe. Maybe both.

“We will be great together!” He tries to break out of Lucas’s hold. “Together, we can rule the underworld, and you shall be my queen.”

“Somnum.” Evander’s body slumps forward, and Lucas lays him on the ground. “Sleeping spell,” I explain.

“Should we take him to your house?”

I nod. “Yeah. The Ley line isn’t being poisoned anymore, but there are still demons out here, not to mention the one possessing him.” I let out a breath and run my hand over my face. “The wendigo?”

“Dead. I stashed the heart in a tree so you can bury it later.”

I make a face. “Thanks.”

Right as Lucas picks up Evander, the door to the coven lights up. “Go,” I tell Lucas. “Take him back to my house.”

He zooms away, and I stand there, watching the blue light of the door glowing as it forms. Kristy steps out and the biggest sense of relief washes over me.

“Callie!” she exclaims.

“You just missed the action. Again. And what the hell? I thought something terrible happened to you since you didn’t answer your phone.”

“Sorry. I went to the library to look through some books to try and see if I could find anything on our Ley line issue.”

“I solved it.”

“How?”

The door crackles and someone else steps out. It’s Tabatha, followed by two witches on our coven’s council.

“Callie, darling.” Tabatha’s robes swirl around as she walks over the forest floor.

“Hey. What are you guys doing?”

“Evander warned us of a disturbance in the Ley line.”

I nod. “There was one, but I handled it. I haven’t handled the banshee yet, though.”

“Banshee?” one of the council members questions, and I only have a second to decide how to run with this. I can lie and hope everything smooths over. Or I can tell the truth and hope the whole truth isn’t revealed.

Everything is such a mess right now.

“It was drawn to the Ley line. Something happened, and it was releasing energy into the air. I think it’s better now.” I should have gone with a lie, because that truth sounded like one. “I have what I need to make a vanquishing potion, so you can just go back to the Covenstead and let me take care of this.”

“The Grand Coven must be alerted at once!” The council members look at Tabatha, waiting for her to give the order. Her eyes meet mine, and I know she can sense something else is up.

“Where is my son?”

“At my house.” I lower my gaze, unable to look her in the eye. “You should alert the Grand Coven. There were about a dozen scrapper demons in the woods too.”

“And you handled them all?” Mildred, the older of the two witches on the council questions, tone bordering on mocking. “By yourself?”

I flick my eyes to Tabatha. She knows about Lucas and knows he wouldn’t dare let me out here alone. “My familiars were with me.”

Tabatha turns to the council witches. “Go back to the Covenstead and alert the Grand Coven at once. I will accompany these young witches back to Callie’s house. A banshee isn’t anything to take lightly.”

Th

e moment the witches are through the door and it’s sealed back up, Tabatha rounds on me. “Is Evander all right?”

“He’s kind of possessed by a demon right now.”

Tabatha’s mouth opens in horror. “How did that happen?”

“When the demon opened the gates of Hell, it created some sort of rift or something, and over time, it fed into the Ley line.”

“Oh my God,” Kristy says, hand flying to cover her mouth. “But you…”

“I threw a ball of white light at it, and it made the Hell energy or whatever back off enough to break the connection.”

“And the Ley line went back into its regular flow,” Tabatha finishes.

“Yes. At least I think so. It’s been supercharging demons and allowed a few to get out of Hell. Lucas just killed a wendigo.”

“There haven’t been any reports of those in over two hundred years.” Kristy’s face pales.

“I know.” I look out at the forest. “We need to go. Freya and Pandora are playing cat and mouse with the banshee, but they won’t be able to keep her away forever. I’ll make a vanquishing potion as soon as I get—”

“Here.” Kristy reaches into her purse and pulls out three vials. “I got nervous after you gave me the one for the scrappers and whipped up a batch of the generic kind. If we all throw it at her at the same time, it might work.”

“It will work,” Tabatha presses. “Now let’s go.”

We pick our way through the woods, and once we get to my backyard, I mentally call for Freya and Pandora. They’re a few miles away, chasing the banshee around like it’s a fun game of tag.

“Hold strong, ladies,” Tabatha says as we move close together. The banshee’s scream rattles the walls of my house, and Kristy takes my hand. The banshee looks like a beautiful woman in a flowing white dress from far away. They prefer to stay away, holding up their ruse.

My familiars flush her out, and she runs at us, mouth wide open as she screams. Her skin is translucent, stretched paper thin over her bones. The flowing white dress is nothing but rags, and her long hair is thin and wispy.

Tags: Emily Goodwin Thorne Hill Fantasy
Source: readsnovelonline.net
readsnovelonline.net Copyright 2016 - 2024