Contents
Acknowledgments
Part One: The Emporium of Remarkable Goods
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Part Two: The Mistress of Real Things
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Part Three: The Killing Gift
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
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-One
Chapter Forty-Two
Part Four: The Travelers from Avalon
Chapter Forty-Three
Chapter Forty-Four
Chapter Forty-Five
Chapter Forty-Six
Chapter Forty-Seven
Chapter Forty-Eight
Chapter Forty-Nine
Chapter Fifty
Chapter Fifty-One
Chapter Fifty-Two
Chapter Fifty-Three
About Molly Cochran
For Warren Murphy, who taught me everything I know about anything
Acknowledgments
Many thanks to my talented and hardworking editor, Alexandra Penfold; my brilliant and amazingly organized agent, Lucienne Diver; to my initial readers, Pam Williamson and Lynne Carrera, who make sure my course steers true; to BFF Michele Horon, without whom I could plot nothing; to all the bloggers who took the time to read and review my first YA novel, Legacy; and finally, to my new readers whose support has given me a new future.
PART ONE
THE EMPORIUM OF REMARKABLE GOODS
CHAPTER
•
ONE
I probably went to the only school in the country with a rule against practicing witchcraft.
That wasn’t really as crazy as it sounded. The Massachusetts town where I lived was sort of known for its rumored history of magical residents. Some said it was even more haunted by witches than Salem, our famous neighbor. The story went that while the Pilgrims in Salem were burning innocent women at the stake, the real witches went to Whitfield and vanished into a fog.
Of course, that wasn’t entirely true. Nobody had actually been burned at the stake in Salem. Oh, there had been plenty of murders, jailings, and torture of women who hadn’t done much more than piss off their neighbors. Lots of widows had their property stolen, and one guy got crushed to death. But the burnings were pretty much left to the Europeans. The part of the story that was true was the part about the real witches going to Whitfield.
I knew because I was the descendant of one of those witches.
A lot of us were, although we kept quiet about it. That was because even there, in the town where at least half the population were witches, we had to live among cowen, aka non-magical people. Actually, we thought of ourselves as talented—we could all do different things—rather than magical. But that wouldn’t have mattered to cowen. They had a nice tradition of destroying anything they couldn’t understand. Look at Salem.
At school there were two kinds of students, the Muffies and the witches. Muffies were the kinds of girls you’d find at every boarding school in the Northeast: fashionable, promiscuous, and clueless. Okay, that wasn’t fair. There were plenty of cowen kids at Ainsworth School who weren’t Muffies. Half of them weren’t even girls. But those non-Muffies generally left us alone. It was the Muffies who were always making life difficult.
They sneered at us. They called us names. (Yeah, these were the same people who were legally named Bitsy, Binky, and Buffy.) “Geek” was probably the most popular name for us, since it was pretty much true, at least from their point of view. We generally didn’t have problems with drugs, alcoholism, reckless driving, kleptomania, credit card debt, or STDs. To be fair, we did sometimes have issues with ghosts, apparitions, disappearing, transmogrification, rainmaking, telepathy, demon rampages, telekinesis, and raising the dead. And maybe a few other things.
Hence the injunction against performing witchcraft at Ainsworth. This rule had been in place ever since my ancestor Serenity Ainsworth had founded the school. (I liked to think that one of her pupils had given some Puritan Muffy a pig nose in a catfight.)
The Muffies didn’t know about this rule. They didn’t know that Whitfield was the biggest and oldest community of witches in the United States, or that the geeks at Ainsworth School could summon enough power to make a hydrogen bomb seem like a fart in a bathtub if we wanted to. They thought that Whitfield was an ordinary place and that Ainsworth was an ordinary school.
Or did they?
I’d often wondered if they knew. . . . I mean, how could they not know? On every major witch holiday the Meadow—that was a big field in the middle of Old Town—filled up with fog so dense that you couldn’t see through it. It was the same fog that saved the witches from being grabbed by the Puritans back in the day. When the fog appeared, the witches all tumbled into it like lemmings, but cowen couldn’t—physically couldn’t—enter. And that was only one of the weird shenanigans that went on there. Even the dumbest Muffies must have had an inkling once in a while that Whitfield, Massachusetts, was a little different from wherever they called home.
At least that was my theory about how the whole mess started. With a jealous Muffy.
And an idiot who should have known better than to forget the no-witchcraft rule, since it was her relative who’d made it in the first place.
CHAPTER
•
TWO
Right. It was me. But in all fairness I had a good reason. I was protecting my friend Verity from Summer Hayworth, the most evil of the evil Muffies at Ainsworth. More accurately, I was protecting her boyfriend, Cheswick, from expulsion, and possibly arrest, for what he was about to do to Summer in Verity’s defense.
I could still see it—Summer, who had the taste level of a dung beetle, laughing when Verity opened her locker and found a stuffed witch doll hanging by its neck. The doll had been made to look like Verity, with striped stockings and red hair. Its eyes had been removed and replaced by Xs, and someone had sewn a red tongue hanging out the side of its mouth.
There was no doubt about who’d done it. Even though none of them had classes near Verity’s locker, Summer and her three main cohorts—A. J. Nakamura, Tiffany Rothstein, and Suzy Dusset—just happened to be hanging around the area. Aside from Verity, me, and our boyfriends, Cheswick and Peter, the evil Muffies were the only people within a hundred feet of the locker in question. As for the witch doll itself, well, it had “evil Muffy” stamped all over it. A.J. was an artist, and the tongue definitely looked like her work, but the idea had to have been Summer’s because nobody else in the school could possibly have been so crass.
If it had been my locker, I wouldn’t have thought much about it. The witch doll was actually kind of cute,
X-ed out eyes and all. But Verity was, well, sensitive. More to the point, she was a QMS—a quivering mass of sensitivity—of the highest order. She got emotional if someone swatted a fly or squashed a mosquito. She went into coughing fits if anyone in the room was wearing perfume. She was a vegan, of course, and only wore plastic shoes. Frankly, she wasn’t the most fun person to party with, but that wasn’t the point.
The point was, she was from a very old witch family, and being outed by Muffies in high school was, for Verity, pretty much on a par with being ravaged by wild dogs. She went all pale and started shaking so hard that Cheswick had to hold her up. Her eyes filled with tears. Her nose ran. Her fingertips turned blue.
“She needs something to drink,” Cheswick said. He was looking at me, but Summer answered:
“What would she like? Bat’s blood?”
“Shut up, Summer,” I said.
“You going to make me, or are you just going to turn me into a frog?”
“I’d turn you into a jerk, except someone must have beat me to it,” I said. Peter poked me in the arm. He thought I asked for trouble. Not true. I never had confrontations with horrible people if I could help it. Peter was just more of a “go with the flow” kind of person than I was.
Tiffany almost laughed at my little comeback, but she checked herself. Summer had no sense of humor, especially about herself. A.J. and Suzy just stared, as bored and clueless as ever.
“Let’s get out of here,” Peter said.
“Yeah,” Cheswick agreed, slamming Verity’s locker with a little more force than necessary.
“Oh, yeah. Go with your cool boyfriend,” Summer said. A.J. and Suzy smiled. Cheswick, who looked like a dandelion puff and was the all-school champion in Lord of the Rings trivia, was not considered cool, even by the geeks.
I think this, more than Summer’s offending Verity, was what set him off. Before any of us knew what was happening, Cheswick hurled Verity at Peter like he was passing a football, and threw five fingers at Summer.
The Muffies laughed at that, which showed how dumb they really were. When witches did that—flicked their fingers at someone—it was like aiming a wand at them. And when the witch was as pissed off as Cheswick was, the result usually wasn’t good.
“Cheswick!” I whispered, but it was too late to stop him. All I could do at that point was try to weaken his spell by throwing out one of my own to cross his.
“Stink!” I shouted. Don’t ask me why I chose that one. It was probably at the core of what I felt about Summer and the skank girls. Anyway, at that moment A. J. Nakamura, Japanese-American princess that she was, let loose with this tremendous salami-scented belch. Tiffany sniffed at her armpits, and then gagged. Suzy Dusset grabbed her belly and headed for the bathroom, sounding like a Formula One race car the whole way.
“What the hell do you think—” Summer began, then stopped to sniff the air she had just fouled with her breath. The rest of us shrank backward. Verity started to retch. Summer narrowed her eyes at me. “You’ll be sorry,” she said. Then she smiled at Peter and made the Call me gesture with her fingers. That was how crusty she was.
“Er . . . you wouldn’t happen to have some air freshener in your locker, would you?” I asked Verity.
Cheswick led her away. Figuring that Verity didn’t need a repeat of what had just gone on, I opened the locker and took out the doll.
“I don’t think you should be touching that,” Peter said.
“Hey, somebody has to get rid of it.”
He sighed. “Okay, but why does that person always have to be you?”
“It’s just better if we avoid complications,” I said. “Look, I’m not doing anything wrong, okay?”
“Exactly what are you doing, Katy?” a pleasant voice behind me asked. It was Miss P, the assistant principal.
“Oh, no,” Peter muttered.
“Move along, Peter,” Miss P said, her eyes never leaving mine. “Is that your locker?”
Quickly I stashed the doll behind my back. “Miss P, I can explain.”
“I don’t think so,” she said in a tone she might have used to discuss the weather. “I saw you using special ability on those girls.” “Special ability” was code for “witchcraft.”
“Then you know I didn’t—” I thrust out my arms, having forgotten about the doll, whose head bobbed in mute accusation.
“I’ll take that, please.”
Abashed, I handed it to her as I watched Peter recede into the distance, shaking his head.
“Do you have a minute?” Miss P said cheerfully. That was code for “Bend over and kiss your butt good-bye.”
CHAPTER
•
THREE
Actually, it wasn’t so bad. Miss P was pretty decent most of the time. She rounded up everyone who had been near the locker and heard us all out. Of course, no one said anything. Peter said he hadn’t seen anything, Cheswick wouldn’t admit to throwing out five fingers, Summer didn’t confess to putting the doll in Verity’s locker, and naturally, the Muffy posse would die before they’d say they smelled bad.
In the end everyone was dismissed except for me.
“I needn’t remind you about your responsibilities as a member of this community,” Miss P said. That was all code. Translation: “Do that again, and you’ll not only get kicked out of school, but you won’t be welcome in Whitfield anymore either.”
Witches were strict. If you didn’t fit in—that is, if you weren’t magical enough, or if you broke one of the million unwritten rules that had been passed down through the centuries, most of which had to do with not drawing attention to yourself—then the whole town stopped talking to you, and you had to go live among cowen if you wanted any kind of life at all.
Fortunately, that didn’t happen often. Peter had been afraid it might happen to him last year because he wasn’t very proficient in witchcraft (sorry, guys, but it was one area in which females seemed to have a slight edge), but his friends helped him through that. Besides, it was better to have too little magic than too much. No one was kinder, smarter, or more loyal than Peter Shaw. Or better-looking, if truth be told. To be honest, if he got kicked out of Whitfield, I wouldn’t want to stay there either.
But Peter wasn’t the problem this time. I was.
“I understand,” I said. I tried to sound reasonably contrite, but I knew that causing four nasty girls to have BO wasn’t going to put me on the FBI’s Most Wanted list, especially since the Muffies hadn’t even complained about it.
“I’m aware that the infraction wasn’t severe,” Miss P said. “It’s that it happened at all. This is an open school.”
I nodded. Ainsworth needed the Muffies, because most of them came from rich families. Without them (and their sizable tuition checks) a lot of us would have to go to Liberty High, the area’s twelve-hundred-student public school, where we’d stick out like sore thumbs and probably end up being beaten into jelly.
“You really should try not to involve your friends in your misadventures,” she said crisply.
That hurt. “Involve . . . They involved me!” I protested.
Miss P sat back in her chair. “Really?” she asked quietly. “How did Peter Shaw involve you in this?”
I swallowed. “Well, not him, maybe,” I said, reddening. I didn’t want to drag Peter into anything. He had enough problems of his own.
“I understand you’re considering applying for early admission to Harvard next year.”
“Uh, yeah,” I answered warily.
“So is your friend Peter,” she said. “However, despite his excellent academic record, he lacks some of your advantages.”
Meaning, I suppose, my father, who had been lobbying to get me into Harvard since the day I was born. An academic himself, he planned to pull every string he could get his hands on to guarantee my early acceptance and a hefty scholarship.
Peter wasn’t so lucky. The poorest relation of the richest family in town, he’d been disowned by his relatives and regarde
d as an outcast by the Shaws after his parents had died.
Miss P leaned forward and looked earnestly into my eyes. “I want to help Peter get the education he deserves,” she said. “I’m sure you do too.”
“Of course,” I said. She knew that Peter Shaw meant more to me than anything else in the world.
“So you must know how important it is that Peter’s record not be marred by disciplinary issues.” Her eyes bored into mine.
“Oh.” She’d struck a nerve. If my stupidity caused anything bad to rebound onto Peter, I’d never forgive myself. “I get it,” I said quietly. “There won’t be any more . . . issues.”
“Good.” She smiled at me as she got up and held open her office door for me.
• • •
Peter was waiting by my locker when the final bell rang. “Hey,” he said softly, touching my hair.
“Hey,” I answered. I wrapped my arms around his waist and leaned my head against his chest. Just hearing his heart beat, as deep and steady as Peter himself, made me feel as if I’d gone into a safe place.
“Are you okay?”
I nodded silently, afraid that my voice would betray me.
“No, you’re not,” he said, and lifted my chin. He was smiling, his gray eyes twinkling beneath his thick honey-colored hair. “Listen, if you’re going to break all the rules, you’d better get used to being yelled at.”
“Thank you, Judge Shaw.”
“So what’d you get, detention?”
“Not even.” I got out my coat. “Miss P gave me a pass this time.”
“Well done,” Peter said with mock admiration. “Now if you can just avoid flying through the halls on your broom . . . ”
“Ha-ha,” I said humorlessly. I closed my locker and turned to leave—Peter and I were both due at work in half an hour—but I couldn’t get out of my mind what Miss P had said. “Peter, I’m so sorry,” I said, throwing my arms around his neck. “You know I’d do anything for you.”
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