The Gleaning, Spellspinners Series #2 (The Spellspinners of Melas County)

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The Gleaning, Spellspinners Series #2 (The Spellspinners of Melas County) Page 10

by Kling, Heidi R.


  I knew, from walking this road on clear days, that houses surrounded us on either side. Warm welcoming inviting houses, but mother said I was never to talk to strangers so I didn’t dare knock on one of their doors. In the window of one of the houses I saw the flickering of light. Candelabra.

  Though I couldn’t see well because of the blizzard, I could See it with my inner eye. It glowed in the window between thick, red curtains, and I thought how lucky the people must be who lived there. Just then, a little girl appeared in the window holding a porcelain doll fashioned in her likeness, with blue eyes and thick, plaited golden hair. The girl’s dress was rich velvet and lace. Even the doll’s velvet frock was finer than any dress I’d ever owned.

  As she stared out, I felt as if I could read her thoughts. She was wondering what it must feel like to be too poor for a warm coat. To be caught in a storm without a fur hat and mittens.

  Open the window. I whispered the words in my head.

  My eyes focused on the flame of the candles that burned in front of her. Help me.

  I stared, not believing my eyes, as the little girl paused, then leaned forward, and pulled the window up, letting the snowflakes flutter in from the outside. She leaned her head out the window and looked up into the air. Tongue sticking out, she let gentle snowflakes fall across her face, dance across her golden hair. I could feel her smile, her happiness. I could taste her freedom.

  It was then that I borrowed her fire.

  “So, Miss Rose, do you now believe in magic?” William looked down at me with a sly smile.

  “I always have,” I said, retreating back to the present.

  He cocked his head, and I observed again how very handsome he looked in his top hat. “I’m surprised.”

  “Are you? Why?”

  “I didn’t think many average humans believed,” he said with a rise of his brow.

  “What is there not to believe? I find it is only a fool who doubts what can not be proven untrue, don’t you agree?”

  “Of course.”

  “There is so much…unexplained in this world. I cannot imagine one saying, ‘I believe this to be true without an inkling of doubt but I have no proof!’ It goes round the same way with the opposite. With the not believing.”

  He leaned in. “And if something is proven true?”

  I shrugged. “I don’t necessarily need proof, sir. But this…is certainly delightful to see.” I opened my palms up to show off the floating roses, candelabras, dancing magic.

  “You surprise me, Rose.”

  “I do. How?”

  He paused as if carefully considering his words. “How are you able to self-deceive like that? I don’t mean to be rude, but human girls tend to not be as interesting as the girls who practice magic. And you Rose, are an interesting girl. May I confess something to you?” Before waiting for me to answer, he asked anyway. “I didn’t want to come out with you tonight.”

  “I understood that from the moment we met.”

  “You knew?” William’s face reddened and his brow knitted with what looked like guilt. “I apologize. It’s just that Father had sent me on so many of these dates lately. You see, he insists I marry a mortal girl. It’s entirely out of the question. Warlocks marry witches, it’s how it’s always been.” He lowered his voice. “I’m telling you this, Rose, because something about you makes me trust you. I can trust you, can’t I, Rose?”

  Why would his father, a powerful warlock, encourage his son to marry a magic-less woman? It made no sense. It was equally nonsensical for him to ask me. But for some reason I felt compelled to listen to this warlock’s confession, never mind flattered that he wanted to share something so personal with me, in that moment, a total stranger.

  “Yes,” I said. “You can trust me.”

  As if reading my thoughts, the warlock leaned forward. “It would be a shame to let all this wonder go to waste. May I have this dance?”

  I sucked in a breath, nodding as he leaned forward, close, so close to my chest that I could feel his warm breath on my throat as my chest rose and fell.

  “You may,” I said.

  He bowed to me, and I curtsied, with the full of my skirt, and in this room I felt confident and strong.

  The magic filled my heart, my stomach, and my blood with dancing faeries and though the night was cold, I felt the content flush of lying in freshly cut grass. The deeply relaxed feeling of melting deep into soft silky strands of brilliant green under an intense summer sun.

  The waltz began, and he breathed into my ear, “Do you know the steps?”

  “I do,” I said.

  “Ah, wonderful.”

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  The journal entry intrigued me, though I couldn’t quite interpret Rose’s message. She told the story of how, as a young girl, she’d received an invitation from an aristocratic young warlock, to be his companion at a ball masque. She’d never met him, and as a poor seamstress’s daughter, she felt unworthy to attend such an elegant event. She was not a member of the elite Spellspinner community, who were trained in ancient magical arts at secluded academies around the world.

  Rose’s own foray into magic was a carefully guarded secret—something she and her mother acknowledged only in glances and never discussed outright. So when her handsome, yet peculiar, escort, William, confessed that his father had chosen her to be his companion because she was an ordinary human, Rose grew even more perplexed about what was expected of her. Charming one minute, intimidating the next, William made her feel as though she was walking a tightrope.

  But as I read further, I realized William already knew she was far from ordinary. In her description of their first dance, it seemed clear to me that their attraction was fate.

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  Side by side, my arm crossed in front of his chest, holding on to his hand. We stepped together in perfect unison, like he’d always been my dancing partner. We bowed to the line of couples facing us and switched places. Eyes like magic stones: sapphires and emeralds and amethyst like William’s watched me with a mix of curiosity and contempt. This time there was no questioning their meaning.

  They looked at me like I was stealing something of theirs.

  “Don’t mind them,” he whispered to me. “They are envious of the strange girl on my arm.”

  “I’m not strange,” I lied.

  “In my world, strange is the highest compliment one can give.”

  “Oh?” I cocked my head and grinned as he twirled me under his arm.

  His voice broke me out of the sensation as he pulled me in closer for a more intimate part of the dance. “This is an interesting jewel, Rose. Where did you get it?”

  It must’ve slipped from under my cape when I spun. “My mother,” I said honestly. “She gave it to me tonight. It was a gift.”

  The warlock’s eyes lightened from amethyst, fading into a near lilac, like they had in the carriage. In the candle-lit ballroom they were effervescent; and in that moment, I never wanted to be far from his enchanting gaze.

  “Shaped like a heart, this rare jewel. How telli
ng. I wonder why she chose tonight,” he said thoughtfully, staring at me intensely, so intensely that I felt my blood might boil right out of my skin, “to give you such a precious gem.”

  “Mother said…” I worded it carefully, trying to read his eyes as they absorbed my words, “the necklace would keep me safe.”

  “From what, I wonder?”

  “Not a what, a who,” I said, fingering the heart-shaped charm.

  “Any ideas who this dangerous person could be?”

  “I suspect it could be you.”

  “Ah, that couldn’t be it, because I would never hurt you.”

  I sucked in a breath. He was so close, my hand in his; fitting so perfectly like it’d always been there. And the way he looked at me…so…knowingly. It both confused and delighted me. I wasn’t like Mother. I wasn’t afraid of him at all.

  “How is it that I’m not stepping all over your toes?” I grinned. “I’m two left feet in our parlor.”

  “Perhaps,” Will said, his eyes like stars, “it’s because we aren’t touching the floor?”

  Then maddeningly, the words disappeared. I wondered what happened next. If that was a hundred years ago, right around the time of the curse, if William’s father was insisting his son court humans, then that must’ve been the beginning of the end of the utopian society of Spellspinners.

  I knew Rose’s clue had something to do with the amulets. But I couldn’t figure out what.

  The Rabbit Hole

  Logan

  Though it was a cruel disappointment that he hadn’t been able to see Lily, Logan trusted Chance with his life and knew he’d delivered her safely from the dungeon. Now his mind was left to replay his dream about the frightened boy. He couldn’t shake the woman’s voice in his head. ‘Stay here…this will keep you safe’ He didn’t believe it was just a dream. It had to have been a memory of his mother.

  Before now, Logan’s early memories had been locked away from him. He knew nothing about his mother and father outside of Jacob’s likely false intel—that they’d abandoned him on the doorstep when he was a toddler.

  The age matched up; the kid in his dream was about three or four.

  Logan’s thoughts were interrupted by male voices outside his cell—and something else…

  Frenetic scratching, like claws on metal, followed by a painful squeak.

  “Not rats,” he muttered. If he had an Achilles Heel, it would be anything furry sporting a thick, wiggling tail.

  He peered out the aged keyhole. Squeak! He heard it again, the sound of rats trying to escape from a metal cage.

  Through the window in his cell, Logan peered down the corridor and saw an unfamiliar warlock carrying two small cages to a room across the hall. When the door opened, Logan saw Jacob barking orders to the other warlock, who seemed to be some kind of lab technician. Then Logan closed his eyes and Saw what Jacob saw.

  Rows and rows of cages stacked on top of each other like moving boxes. White rats with red eyes ran on spinning wheels or alternately huddled together in straw nests. In the corner of the room was a metal-topped examination table. An old man Logan didn’t recognize, frail like Jacob, but with no noticeable magic energy, was strapped to it. Oddly, his eyes looked more hungry than frightened, as he stared down at a rat strapped to a steel tray next to him.

  Jacob’s crony poured a liquid substance into an IV drip. The cord ran from the old man’s veins to the rat’s tail.

  Logan watched in horror as a beeping machine pumped, and the rat aged backwards, like a time lapse series of photographs. The creature grew younger and younger until it possessed the wrinkled, nearly translucent pink skin of a newborn. Then, just as quickly, the process reversed; the rat regenerated into a full-grown adult, fat and thick with fur, before deteriorating into a skeletal, desiccated thing. Like a rapidly deflating toy, it twisted unnaturally to its side, and then seized with a final jerky gasp before lying still.

  What…the…?

  Jacob cursed, chastising the lab tech. Clearly that wasn’t the result he was after. The lab tech apologized profusely as he pulled a white sheet over the old man’s body. Shriveled up toes stuck out from the sheet. Jacob’s experiment had killed him, too.

  A lot of weird crap went down here, sure, but murder? Jacob experimented on rats? And who was that old guy anyway? A human? A prisoner? He hadn’t looked too keen on escape—wasn’t hollering for help or anything—so maybe he was agreeable to having his fluids intermixed with a rat’s? Unlikely.

  Sensing dark energy approaching, Logan jumped back from the keyhole.

  He slumped down on the cot as if he was resting. He had mostly recovered, but that didn’t mean he wanted Jacob to know. His father would be much easier on him if he thought he was already beaten down.

  Almost as quickly as that poor rat completed its lifecycle, Logan cleared his mind of Lily, his dream memories, and what he’d just seen.

  “You’re awake, I see.”

  Since playing dumb sometimes worked, Logan decided to go that route. “What happened?” He rubbed his eyes. “Where am I?”

  “Someplace safe. I need to protect you from the witch; prevent any further…incidents before the Gleaning.”

  “I don’t need protection from her.”

  Jacob sighed, and a cloud of black soot exhaled with his breath.

  “You are special, Logan, and thus more vulnerable than your brothers. You understand that, right?”

  Logan chose to remain silent, which caused Jacob to sigh again. Logan coughed through the volcanic ash.

  “The way you’re feeling now—that loyalty you feel for her? The urge to protect her? It is all a result of her enchantment. She cast a spell on you, son. This is why you feel the way you do.”

  When Logan still didn’t respond, Jacob pushed further. Logan could see he was digging deep to find restraint, to not unleash rage on Logan before the Gleaning. “You gave her an opening, boy. A chink in your armor. If you are chosen to fight this witch, will you show her mercy, like a lovesick fool? Or will you stand your ground and drain her dry?”

  “It’s against the Congression’s rules to drain our opponents.”

  He sneered. “Damn their rules. Do you like to see me this way? Old before my time? Suffering? This will be your fate, too, son, sooner than I’d like to admit. We have no choice. The Seven Sisters’ curse left us nothing but enough strength to glean our youth back in this fashion. It may seem barbaric to you, but we are only taking back what was stolen from us. And believe me, they will be doing the same to you. The witches are after one thing and one thing only: your powers. Protect yourself, boy, protect our future. Win this for us.” He paused in the doorway, holding it open for Logan. “Come on, now. You’ve done sufficient penance. You need to wash up before breakfast. You smell like a diseased garden.”

  Lily

  Before I could process what I’d read, I was distracted by the sounds of arguing coming from the kitchen.

  “I know what you did. You sent in a doppelganger! You drugged the coven with a potion and gave me an extra dose. I’m her mother! You know I’d never fall asleep while Lily was on such a dangerous mission! How dare you?”

  My ears were keen; I could hear everything even without Listening.

  “As she admitted to the entire coven, and to you, Lily refused to go in and complete her task. We had to find out if this boy was the one.” Camellia’s voice.

  “The doppelganger couldn’t see the mark! It had to be Lily. So foolish of you! Jacob followed Logan in. How could you put her in that position?”

  “She was in a trance, she doesn’t remember anything.”

  “You’re playing with dangerous magic here, Camellia. If it gets out of control, we could lose all we’ve worked for.”

  “It was a risk I was willing to take. Entering the Gleaning without definitive proof about the identity of the Rognaithe? How could that possibly work in our favor?”

  “How could risking our girls be in our favor? I should never have agree
d to send Lily in. We should’ve gone another route.”

  “It was the only way. You’re too close to this, Iris. It’s time for you to step back and let me do my job.”

  “Don’t you forget where you got your power, Camellia. What I gave you, I can also take back.”

  When I heard the front door slam, I jumped up and peered out into the hallway.

  “Mom?” I called. She appeared at the bottom of the staircase, looking red-faced and fiery eyed.

  “Hi, honey,” she said as she walked up to my room. “How are you feeling?”

  “I’m not great, honestly. This is bad, isn’t it?”

  “So you heard?”

  “You and Camellia weren’t terribly discreet.”

  She sighed and rested her hands on my shoulders. I knew from her reflection in the mirror that she wasn’t going to pretend things were okay.

  “I’m sorry I didn’t shut her up last night when she was making all those false accusations. I didn’t feel I could argue with her in front of the entire coven until I had more information. But essentially she thought this shifter could draw the mark.”

  “Because she looked like me? How was she able to cast a sleeping spell on you like that? You guys hold the same level of magic. How could she block your Hearing without you knowing?”

  Iris’s chest rose and fell in deep, meditative breaths. Her youthful skin and hair seemed to glow in the morning sunlight, but her eyes looked world-weary. I gripped the sides of my chair, bracing myself for whatever she was about to say. My instincts warned me it wouldn’t be good, but at least it’d be something.

  “Have you ever wondered why Camellia is the Mistress of Light and we’ve obtained the same level of magic?”

  “I assumed it was because you didn’t want to be Mistress.”

  Her look held me like I was glass—if I moved, I would slip from her grasp and shatter.

 

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