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Stolen Magic (Dragon's Gift: The Huntress Book 3)

Page 4

by Linsey Hall


  “That won’t be a problem. Origin Enterprises did an update on the Museum security a few years ago. I should be able to get us in.”

  “Good. Much easier than anything I’d have come up with.” I grinned. “Is that why the security guards were so freaked out by you? And why Madam Astrix knew you?”

  “No. Madam Astrix knows me because I’m a donor to their annual fundraiser.”

  As I’d thought. Richer than twelve dragons.

  “And the security guards acted like cowards because I’m a scary bastard,” he said.

  Fair enough. I was no longer afraid of him, but I had been when I’d first met him. And whenever he turned into a griffin, his Shifter shape of choice, though I was getting over that.

  “Great. I’m going to go check on Connor, see how he’s coming with that invisibility potion.”

  I rose and wound my way through the small tables toward the counter at the back. Bridget was still mixing drinks—whiskey cocktails instead of coffee now that it was evening—and the breakfast treats tray in the glass case had been replaced with an assortment of savory pasties since they were more of a dinner item.

  “I’m headed back to see Connor,” I said to Bridget.

  “All right.” Her gaze stayed on the small bottle of bitters she was dashing into a glass of amber liquid.

  I skirted around the counter and headed back through the swinging wooden door. The galley kitchen was small and cramped, but ruthlessly organized. I hurried to the door on the left and knocked. It was not smart to barge in on Connor when he was playing with his potions. Explosions, and all that.

  Connor pulled the door open, wiping a hand on his band t-shirt. Quartz, this time. I’d never heard of them, but I assumed they were good, if Connor liked them. His dark hair flopped over his forehead.

  “Hey. Almost got it done.” He stepped back to let me in.

  Though the coffee shop specialized in enchanted coffees, Connor liked to keep the potions themselves separate from the food. His workshop was slightly bigger than the kitchen, but far more cramped and cluttered. Rainbow vials of liquid crowded every shelf. Mortars and pestles and test tubes were scattered across the counter. It was a mad scientist’s lair, all right.

  Kitchen Connor was a dictator, potion Conner was an artist. He walked over to a small, smoking cauldron and gave it a stir.

  “Won’t taste good, but should do the job,” he said.

  “How long will it last?”

  “An hour. Maybe a bit more.”

  I could work with that.

  “But you’ll have to keep control of your magical signature,” he said. “It can’t mask that.”

  My heart dropped. “Keep control? You mean, you’ve noticed it?”

  “Only since you told me you’re a FireSoul.” He turned to meet me, his brown eyes kind. He was a couple years younger than my own twenty-five, but the kindness in his gaze was older. “I’ve been sensitive to it. Looking for it. But you’re good at masking it. Only powerful supernaturals would notice it.”

  Like the investigators from the Order of the Magica. I swallowed hard, a chill prickling my skin.

  “And only some of the time,” he added. “Like I said, you’re good at hiding it. It’s not likely anyone will notice you, especially if they can’t see you.”

  My shoulders relaxed a bit. He was right. They wouldn’t be able to see me. And I’d thrown myself into practicing my magic—which made me a stronger Mage and better at hiding my signature overall—so I’d probably be okay.

  Connor turned back to the cauldron and lifted it, pouring it into two small vials. After he corked them, he handed the vials over.

  “These should do you. You’ll be able to see each other because you drank the same potion, but no one else will.”

  “Thanks. What do I owe you?”

  “Don’t be dumb. Nothing. I like Dr. Garriso too.” He made a shooing motion. “Now go get him back.”

  “Thanks.” I gave him a quick hug and hurried out of the kitchen. I shoved the vials into the pocket of my leather jacket as I walked over to Aidan and my deirfiúr.

  “Got it,” I said. “Want to head over?”

  “Sure.”

  “Need any help?” Del asked.

  “Maybe, but not now. This is just recon, and we’ve only got enough potion for the two of us.”

  “Just let me know. I don’t have another job for a couple of days. I’ll just be scouring the archives for magic for you to hunt.”

  “Great. Thanks.”

  “Be safe,” Nix said.

  “Always.” I turned and followed Aidan to the door, Nix’s scoffing laughter following me out onto the street.

  “What’s her problem?” I grumbled.

  “She sort of has a point,” Aidan said as we crossed to Cecilia. “You do run at danger.”

  “It’s part of my charm.”

  He grabbed my hand and squeezed. “It is, actually.”

  I smiled despite the rain that had picked up again, but thoughts of Dr. Garriso drove the grin from my face.

  CHAPTER THREE

  Aidan made the drive in record time. Now was not the moment to trust Cecilia to get the job done. We parked in the lot across from the museum, behind the old library that now served as a small local theatre.

  I dug the vials out of my pocket and handed one over. “Here. It’ll work for an hour. We’ll still be able to see each other.”

  Aidan held the small bottle up to the dim light from the street lamp and squinted at the blue contents. “Bet it tastes like hell.”

  “Yep.”

  “Let’s take it now. Won’t take us long to get in, and we shouldn’t risk being seen sneaking across the parking lot.”

  I held my vial up close to his. He clinked his against mine.

  “Cheers,” I said, then uncorked the bottle and poured it into my mouth.

  A bitter, muddy taste flowed over my tongue. Vile. Magic rarely came without a cost. I choked it down.

  Cold shivered along my limbs, followed quickly by a strange numbness. I flexed my fingers, staring at them. Would I be able to fight well like this? Numbness couldn’t be good for the reflexes.

  “Think it worked?” Aidan asked.

  I scowled. He hadn’t even grimaced. “I feel weird, so I guess so.”

  “Good enough. Let’s go.”

  We climbed out of the car. I zipped my leather jacket against the rain and we sprinted across the gleaming street, then cut across the wet grass. Aidan led the way up the expansive stairs toward a tall window at the front of the building. Normally, I entered through the back basement, straight into the office wing to see Dr. Garriso. Aidan wanted us to waltz into the biggest exhibit hall in the place.

  He stopped in front of the tall window and pulled a round metal charm out of his pocket.

  “What’s that?” I asked as he ran it around the edges of the window.

  “Spell Stripper.”

  I sucked in a breath. “Holy magic, those are rare.”

  “Indeed. This one was made specifically for me. Only I can use it.”

  “So you can sneak back into the places you provide security for? Isn’t that illegal?”

  “I’m not all good, Cass.”

  Startled, I glanced up, meeting his dark eyes. The heart of him was there—the good Aidan I’d grown to trust—but so was the darkness that’d made me fear him when I’d first met him.

  “But you’re mostly good, right?” I asked.

  He nodded. “Yeah, I think so. Where it counts.”

  I nodded. Considering that “where it counts” had been sticking by my side and saving me from nasty situations, I figured I could live with that. We all had a little darkness in us. Me, particularly, I was learning.

  “Good enough for me,” I said.

  “Excellent.” He returned the charm to his pocket and pushed open the window. “Shall we?”

  “Wouldn’t miss it.” I hopped up onto the windowsill and climbed down into the huge atrium of t
he main entry hall.

  No moonlight shined through the glass dome above, so the only light came from the dim recessed lights set into the walls. Shadows of statues and glass cases loomed in the darkness, places where anyone could hide.

  Aidan landed silently next to me and shut the window, then ran the Spell Stripper over the edges again, presumably reigniting the protection spells.

  “Let’s go,” he said.

  We crept through the main part of the atrium, keeping our footsteps silent. My skin prickled to be so out in the open. Damn, I hoped these invisibility charms worked. I felt like I was just strolling through and could be spotted any moment.

  I heard and saw no guards as we passed through a narrow room full of white marble statues. Ancient gods and goddesses draped in frozen fabric gazed impassively at us as we passed.

  Like many museums, this one was a maze of different-sized rooms. Magic swelled from the room ahead of us, differing signatures that indicated the artifacts within were enchanted like the ones in my shop. Glass cases reflected the dim light. As soon as we stepped over the threshold, a ghostly howl broke through the silence.

  It tore at my eardrums as the hair on my arms stood up. My gaze darted to Aidan’s. Surprise flickered in his eyes.

  Footsteps thundered toward us.

  “Run,” we said at the same time.

  We retreated, sprinting back through the statue room and veering left down a narrow corridor lined with ancient shields. I tried my damnedest to keep my footsteps silent. Aidan, of course, had no problem with that, despite his great size. The Shifter in him gave him an unnatural grace.

  Footsteps sounded behind us, but I didn’t dare turn to look. I pushed myself faster, seeking a place to hide. We were invisible, but no need to court trouble. And I really didn’t want to risk anyone sensing my magic.

  We dove into a large exhibit of Egyptian statues. Towering Pharaohs loomed in the darkness. We ducked behind a sitting Hatshepsut, her throne giving us enough space to lean against her, side by side.

  “What was that?” I panted, trying to keep my voice low. The ghostly howl was still screeching.

  “Extra enchantments. That room had the most valuable stuff in the place. They must have doubled up on protection charms.”

  “Yeah, I felt the magic.” I snapped my mouth shut when I heard footsteps.

  I tensed, trying to calm my heart and hopefully any magic that I was putting out. As long as I didn’t use it, I should be okay. Using magic was a bit like sweating. If you worked hard to access it, people would smell you. Or sense you, rather, depending on what kind of signature your magic gave off.

  Aidan squeezed my hand as a guard walked in ten feet in front of us, his brow scrunched, like he sensed something was off here but couldn’t figure it out. My heart pounded so hard I swore he could hear it. We could fight him if it came down to it, but then we’d lose any chance at eavesdropping on the investigators.

  Finally, when I was about to start actually sweating, the guard turned and left. We sat in silence, each tense as boards, until Aidan finally relaxed.

  “I heard them say it must have been a false trip,” Aidan said.

  “Thank god for Shifter senses.” I didn’t want to sit here too long, wasting our invisibility. “Come on, let’s go.”

  We climbed to our feet and crept between the Egyptian statues, back down the hall, and around the room that had lost its shit at us. We took an alternate route, this one through an exhibit of daggers. My fingers itched to pocket one, but that was an obvious no-no.

  I slowed my steps and my breathing as we neared the exhibit where Dr. Garriso had fallen through the portal. Aidan did the same. We nodded at each other, then slunk to either side of the entrance, each taking up a post and peering in.

  The four administrators stood along the side of the room, watching the three investigators with sharp eyes. Two men and one woman, their magic radiating immense strength. Some supernaturals weren’t afraid of showing off their power, though I could never understand why. There was an advantage in having people underestimate you.

  The woman’s power smelled like over-ripe apples. One man’s magic felt like too-hot water against my skin, and the other’s tasted like dirt. None of those were signatures I’d be showing off, despite their obvious power.

  “It’s strange,” said the woman investigator. “I’ve never seen a portal like it.”

  She and the other two stood near it, peering intently into the pulsing purple light.

  Had it gotten brighter? My skin prickled, a sickly wariness turning my stomach. Was that the portal? Was it giving off even more weird magic?

  I focused on the investigators, trying to ignore the nerves that crept along my spine and keep my magic under control. It didn’t take much, as long as I didn’t actively use it, but I needed to be extra wary.

  “And you say Dr. Garriso just fell through? And then it shut?” the taller male investigator asked.

  “Yes,” Madam Astrix said. “Though as it was described, he was sucked in.”

  “Hmmm. Portals don’t do that,” he said.

  The woman investigator raised her hands. Silvery light flowed from her fingertips, disappearing inside the portal. She said, “And this is clearly a portal.”

  “It’s residual at this point. Failed magic,” the tall man said.

  No. It didn’t feel failed. Something was off about it.

  “So you don’t think it is anything more than a portal created by stupid thieves intent on stealing from a place that cannot be stolen from?” Madam Astrix asked.

  “While that is possible, I doubt it,” the woman investigator said. “But we will retrieve Dr. Garriso. We’ll have to call in a Transporter to see if they can get through the barrier. In scenarios like this, their unique power helps them cross the closed portal.”

  “Excellent. When can we expect them?” Madam Astrix’s worried gaze darted to the portal. “Dr. Garriso is not used to such hardship. He is a scholar.”

  That was the truth. He had a brilliant mind and a cunning wit, and I’d no doubt he could handle himself in a fight, but only if it were an even fight. And you couldn’t count on even fights in this world.

  “It shouldn’t be more than twenty-four to thirty-six hours,” the tall man said. “We’ll call in a transporter, but we only have two and both are on jobs right now. But they will come right away.”

  I had to stifle a growl as my skin heated. A whole day? Maybe more?

  “Is there nothing else you can do?” Madam Astrix frowned.

  “Not at the present, though we can send our findings back to the Order and see what they have to say. We’ll also stay and monitor it for changes. It should close on its own as the magic fades. A week, maybe a bit longer. I’ve seen the like before.”

  This was such bull.

  The female investigator stiffened, her head jerking toward me. She sniffed, her nostrils flaring.

  “Who’s there?” she demanded.

  Shit.

  The heat on my skin wasn’t just anger. It was the invisibility charm fading. We were near the end of our hour. She’d be able to see us any second. I met Aidan’s gaze. He was thinking the same thing.

  “The lights,” I mouthed. I wanted the cover of darkness as we fled back into the museum.

  He nodded.

  My magic reached out for his, calling for his Elemental Mage powers and finding the chill of ice. I breathed deeply as I embraced it, cold air in my lungs, and tried to control my power so they wouldn’t sense me. I raised my hand and threw tiny bullets of ice at the lights in the ceiling, small enough I hoped they wouldn’t see them.

  They raced through the air, tiny pinpricks of ice, and shattered the bulbs.

  I grinned. Damn, I was getting good at this.

  Aidan did the same, blowing out the rest of the lights.

  Darkness crashed. The investigators and administrators shouted, but I didn’t stick around to hear. I spun and raced into the darkened museum, my back now prote
cted, Aidan at my side.

  My breath heaved and lungs ached as I pushed myself faster, praying they wouldn’t get to a light and see my hair. The red was pretty distinct. Not to mention, Aidan wasn’t a subtle guy.

  We streaked for cover along the wall, racing behind the looming statues toward the narrower hallway I knew lay at the other end. Footsteps pounded behind us as we darted into the dark hall.

  Aidan spun and flung out his hands, sending a streak of power at the hall entrance. A thick wall of ice formed, glittery and blue even in the dark.

  “That should take them a second,” he said. “But no time to waste.”

  “Agreed.”

  We turned and sprinted down the hall. Shouts sounded on the other side of the makeshift wall. As we neared the door at the end, I called upon my Mirror Mage power and accessed Aidan’s gift of the wind. It filled me, a cool breeze that brought joy in its wake. A torrent gusted from my fingertips and blew the door outward, breaking whatever lock had kept it closed.

  “Nice one,” Aidan said as we sprinted into the dark night. “I hardly sensed your magic at all.”

  “Thanks—” I panted, too exhausted to do anything but run. We raced across the grass and around the old library, then dove into Aidan’s car.

  “Take the back way.” I dragged the seatbelt on.

  “Not my first rodeo.”

  I laughed and wheezed at the same time, peering over my shoulder to see if anyone was coming.

  No one.

  I leaned back against the seat, gulping air. “I really need to work on my cardio.”

  Aidan laughed, his breathing short as well, and drove us away from the museum.

  “What bastards,” I said as we passed through the business district. It’d taken me two neighborhoods to catch my breath. “Waiting a whole day?”

  “Not everyone has a Transporter on hand.”

  “No.” I reached toward the communication charm that hung around my neck. “But I do.”

  I pressed on the silver pendant to turn it on. Comms charms were basically magical cellphones. Though I had a cellphone, I preferred this. No roaming charges.

  “Del?” I said.

  A moment later, her voice came through, along with what sounded like a fight. “Cass? What’s up?”

 

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