Spell Struck: Book 2 (The Teen Wytche Saga)
Page 18
"Bye."
Kali wagged her fingers at me and then sauntered out the door.
Salem knocked on the doorjamb. "You decent?"
"Totally. Come in."
Salem approached the bed. "Gray plaid is your color." She leaned close. "And you smell good, too."
"Soap and hot showers are way underrated."
"Tell Amy." Her expression crumbled. "Why didn't you tell me?"
I shook my head and fingered the blanket. "I couldn't. Shame. Fear." I stared her in the eye. "Besides, you had your own problems."
"True, but still…"
"I'm sorry I kept secrets from you."
Salem stared down at the blanket. "I kept a secret from you, too."
"You mean, besides not being a real goth?"
"Yes. Way worse than that. It may be my fault you came to town."
I leaned forward on the bed. "How do you figure?"
"Halloween night I performed a love spell and asked for a guy with all your qualities."
"You wished for a guy who was broke, homeless, kidnapped—?"
"Handsome, magical, artistic."
I inched my fingers across the blanket until they touched Salem's. "I wished for someone like you."
"You should have aimed higher. I come with a lot of baggage."
"Good thing I don't." I laughed.
She bolted up. "I almost forgot! Mr. Peters loved Blaming the Brew. I handed it in early so I could capitalize on the sympathy vote. I think we'll get an A."
"Way to go!" We slapped palms in a high five. The connection sent magic humming down my arm. I glanced at the black tote and festive bag clutched in her other hand. "Did you bring the grimoire?"
"Yes. It likes you. Maybe our visit will cheer it up." Then she mouthed, and more words will appear.
"Have you decided what to do with it?"
Salem's thin shoulders rose then fell as she released a long sigh. "I couldn't sell it to the Roma in its current condition even if I wanted to. So I think I'll keep low for now. Maybe loan it to Evie's grandmother, see if she has any ideas."
"What about the healing spell for Amy?"
"I'm going to try love and light instead. It worked well for Irina."
My heart jolted. "Irina?"
"Oh, I didn't tell you. At Evie's sleepover, a horrible energy tried to pull me away. A ghost girl stepped in and stopped it. Her name was Irina."
"Magdalena's daughter."
"Are you serious?"
I nodded. "Magdalena got her reunion, just not in the way she expected. And speaking of unexpected, I discovered something about Amy."
"What?"
"I think she is a Sensitive. There's a place in Berkeley that trains people with extrasensory perception and other paranormal abilities. Amy should be tested."
"Okay. I'll tell her you said so."
I nodded toward the festive bag. "On your way to a party?"
"Not exactly." She raised the bag and placed in on the bed beside me. "I brought you something."
"Seriously?" I parted the tissue paper and pulled out my trinket box.
"We weren't sure when or if you were coming back. Mr. Castellano said it was too beautiful for you to leave behind. Be careful when you open it," Salem instructed. "The present inside is breakable."
"Wow. It feels like Christmas." Other than Kali's watch, I couldn't remember the last time someone had given me a present. I raised the lid on the wooden box and lifted out a weighted object wrapped in glittering purple tissue paper. "I hope this is what I think it is."
"If you are sensing an art theme, then yes." Salem perched beside me.
Slowly, wanting the moment to stretch out as long as possible, I peeled away the paper. "You changed her. She's even more beautiful."
"She just fit. It's as if you made the box for her."
"I was making it for you. So you wouldn't forget me."
"As if." Salem studied the statue. "I wish you had been there to help me fashion the base for the stone. It was my first time working with wood, so don't judge."
"Are you kidding? You did a great job."
"Thanks. Now she's standing on top of the world instead of trying to hold it up."
"Much better." I leaned forward and traced Salem's jaw with my finger. "She's perfect, just like you." Her eyes gleamed, and dragonflies took flight inside me. Our faces inched closer. We kissed, and her lips were soft and sweet and tasted like strawberry lip gloss. "Good thing I'm not hooked up to a heart monitor."
"Why?"
I kissed her again until we both gasped for air. "Because it would have beeped like crazy."
A blush blossomed across Salem's pale cheeks. She cleared her throat. "I still can't believe Mr. Castellano figured things out. He searched for you on the Missing Children's website before he called the police."
"I never checked because Papo always said no one cared about me. He said no one would bother reporting a missing street rat."
"You were never a street rat to me," said a soft voice. "It broke my heart when your dad wouldn't relinquish you to me."
My heart boomeranged. I sat up straighter. "Bronwyn?"
Salem sidled away, and Bronwyn rushed to my bedside. Worry lines crinkled her face, but her hair was just as I remembered, long and streaked with bright autumn strands. She resembled Mom so much a cry rose in my throat.
Bronwyn touched the faded rags encircling my wrist. "Katherine's bracelet. It's really you." A sob escaped her lips as she wrapped me in her arms. I hugged her back as tightly as I could with one arm tethered to an IV. "When the police called me, I was afraid to get my hopes up." She pressed her forehead to mine. "You're taller."
I laughed, suspended between disbelief and elation. "I'm in bed. How can you tell?"
"I can tell." Her hands trembled as she tucked the thin blanket around my waist. "After you vanished, I moved to San Francisco to search for you. I have a small flat. There's room for you. I hope you'll come live with me."
Return to the city? Leave Salem? My misgivings warred with the second wave of thoughts. Bronwyn is family, my real family, and she's finally found me.
"Or I can rent a place here and commute on rapid transit if you want to finish the school year at Jefferson."
"For real?"
Bronwyn clasped my hands and nodded. "Whatever you want. I will make it happen."
I glanced at Salem, whose eyes gleamed with secret delight. She had the oddest expression on her delicate fairy face. "What?"
"Don't you hear it?" Salem asked.
Bronwyn angled her head. "Hear what?"
Salem held the black tote aloft. The sides bulged like a beating heart. The heat and swelling in my injured ear vanished. Something within the ear popped. The sirens outside, the beeping monitors inside, the nurses talking in the hall — the whole cacophony rushed in. Then I heard a distinctly non-hospital sound.
The grimoire chirped.
About the Author
After a childhood spent searching for a magical wardrobe that would transport her to Narnia, Ariella Moon grew up to become an author and shaman. Extreme math anxiety, and taller students who mistook her for a leaning post, marred Ariella’s teen years. Despite these horrors, she graduated summa cum laude from the University of California at Davis. While writing about magic, friendship, and love, Ariella lives a nearly normal life with her extraordinary daughter, shamelessly spoiled dog, and an enormous dragon.
Also from Ariella Moon,
Book 3 in the Teen Wytche Saga!
Chapter One
My parents never said it to my face, but I know they didn't expect me to survive middle school. I was fine until seventh grade, when my best friend disappeared. November twenty-sixth, the day after Thanksgiving, will forever be branded on my brain.
Sophia's foster parents weren't allowed to tell me anything. Their worried expressions said enough — she hadn't been moved to another foster home. Her social worker was another dead end. And I'm positive Sophia would have found a way to le
t me know if she were okay. She had even picked out an email address with a code name, Hope Huntleigh, so her biological parents couldn't trace her. When she didn't contact me and I couldn't find her, I knew something terrible had happened. The court must have allowed her parents to regain custody. Which meant Sophia's life was in danger — or worse.
When Sophia went from here to gone, in a way, so did I. Her disappearance detonated within me a deep depression, then crippling anxiety and paralyzing obsessive-compulsive disorder. I went from normal to the fetal position twenty-four/seven.
I'm better now. Not totally fine, not perfectly normal, but functional. I've pushed my memories of those times into a box and shoved it into the deep recesses of my mind. But I can see in my parents' eyes they haven't forgotten. Even though I survived — despite their dire expectations — and am now a high school sophomore, my every flash of anxiety or hint of OCD sets them against each other. Mom and Dad disagree on everything, from how late I stay up to how many after-school activities I should take part in. Their only shared belief is that my mental health issues would disappear if the other weren't such a lousy parent.
I'm afraid their marriage won't last past Christmas. Which is why I need to hide my mental illness. If they think I'm okay, then they'll stop fighting. They just need to hang in there for two more years. Afterwards, hopefully, I'll attend Columbia University and become an astrophysicist. With me away, there will be nothing left for them to fight about, and we'll get our happily ever after — all of us except Sophia.
First though, I, Ainslie Avalon-Bennett, have to survive high school.
The squawk of the walkie-talkie jolted me back to the present — the Athenian Academy Performing Arts building, and my job as stage manager. I stood in the hall outside the "loud" dressing room where the cast did their homework, gossiped, and fixed their hair and makeup. I held the walkie-talkie to my mouth. "What did you say?"
Rayne's baritone crackled. "Dancer down."
I rushed toward the auditorium door. "What do you mean?"
"One of the dancers fainted," Rayne said over the walkie-talkie. "We're running two hours behind. Everyone is starving."
"I know we're running over. I was just on Marisa's cell, convincing her mother she was still at school and not off partying."
"You actually put someone's germy cell phone to your ear?"
"No," I confessed. "Marisa held it near my face." No one at the academy knew about Sophia or my breakdown, but the entire school knew I was germ phobic. My parents had relegated me to a Stone Age phone after I had ruined my smartphone by disinfecting it vigorously and constantly. Like I was supposed to know you shouldn't scrub smartphones with ammonia or alcohol-based products. Dad had said I could have a new smartphone once I got over my OCD. Perhaps he was expecting a miracle.
"She's the third parent I've spoken to tonight." Most were already upset Tanaka had scheduled a rehearsal on the day after Thanksgiving and the beginning of Hanukkah.
Using the end of my scarf as a germ shield, I pulled open the heavy auditorium door. Rayne nodded to me from the far side of the stage. Tall, thin, and gender creative, she wore a shimmering silver wrap blouse over gray skinny jeans. Her boy-sized feet were encased in cowboy boots painted with ferns and fairies. Whenever I saw her, I thought Middle Earth must have been missing an elf.
Rayne stood behind a ring of students who crouched, I assumed, around the fallen dancer. Cupping her hand around the side of her mouth, Rayne whispered into the walkie-talkie. "You are the only kid parents believe over the teacher."
"Just this teacher," I whispered back. "The parents want him fired."
As I ascended the stage stairs — left foot, right, left — Jazmin snatched a drumstick from her percussionist boyfriend and cut me off. Her electric guitar was strapped to her back like a crossbow, and she pointed the drumstick at our director. "Make Tanaka feed us or release us."
"I will." My knees wobbled from stopping on the wrong foot. I rolled one shoulder, then the other, to bring myself into alignment.
Jazmin snapped her fingers. "Work it. Now." With her new hair extensions, she resembled a teenaged Nicki Minaj. Her murderous expression warned of falling blood sugar and the possible termination of our BFF status.
"She'll be fine." Mister Tanaka rose from his one-knee crouch and backed away from the circle of concerned students. Our gazes locked, and I detected a smattering of worry in his beady eyes.
One more step — right foot — and I was on the stage. My nervous system calmed. I pulled a protein bar from the pouch on my hip and pushed through the pack. The dancer was still flat on her back, hardly indicating she was fine. I unwrapped the chocolate and peanut butter bar and waved it like smelling salts beneath the girl's nose. "Any food allergies?"
The dancer shook her head.
"Good. Eat this."
She grabbed my wrist as if it were a lifeline and whispered, "Get us out of here."
I glanced at her hand and ground my teeth.
"Got any more of those?" a junior in a soldier costume asked.
I pulled six bars from my pouch and handed them to Jazmin and Rayne. "Break them in half. Spread them around."
"War rations!" Jazmin yelled.
"Contains gluten and peanuts!" I warned the crowd.
"Thanks, Ainslie!" several students called out.
"You're welcome." I approached Mister Tanaka and cleared my throat.
He glanced up from his phone and said, "I just texted the dean."
"Good." So I won't have to. "We need to wrap. Parents are complaining."
"Not going to happen." Mister Tanaka pushed his black rectangular glasses higher on his nose. "No one is focused." He jerked his head toward the stage. "Your Disaster Relief fundraiser wore out everyone."
Excuse me? "Only the show band and three of the singers performed at my event. They're not the problem. It's the actors and dancers. The choreography is super-complicated, and the one-act plays you chose—"
"Will come together by curtain."
I seriously doubt it. "Can you order pizzas, and let the day students phone their parents and the boarders text their dorm parents?"
"Fine." Mister Tanaka tapped the touchscreen on his phone and scrolled through the icons. "Tell them to take five and make their calls. Parents can pick them up in ninety minutes. Pizzas are on their way. I'm ordering them right now."
Ninety minutes! The later it got, the more furious Mom would be. She already regretted sending me to private school. "If you went to the public school," she had whined after the last late rehearsal, "we could be home in five minutes instead of forty-five."
A quick commute would be nice, especially now when I had tons of Advanced Placement homework, finals to study for, and the Christmas presents for the foster teens to organize. Even though I didn't want to add one more thing to the list of how I was destroying my parents' marriage, I couldn't leave Athenian Academy for public school. Jefferson High was too big. I felt safer and more in control of things here than I did anywhere else. Besides, the whole point of attending Athenian had been to escape the kids who had known me as a mental case in middle school.
I relayed Mister Tanaka's instructions to everyone on the stage and sequestered in the "quiet" dressing room backstage. Before heading to the loud room to tell the rest of the cast, I glanced up and spied the light and sound techies escaping the booth through the side door. Idiots! They left it ajar. My OCD jumped into overdrive.
My heart rate jackhammered as I strode up the side stairs — right, left, right, left, right — to Mission Control — my nickname for the tech booth. Biting cold air seeped through the open door. Breathing in quick shallow bursts, I gathered up the end of my scarf and steeled myself for closing the escape hatch.
The divas would have to wait.
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Table of Contents
Spell Struck
Also by Ariella Moon
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three<
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Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
About the Author
Also from Ariella Moon,