Magic Unknown (The Elustria Chronicles: Magic Born Book 2)

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by Caethes Faron




  Magic Unknown

  The Elustria Chronicles: Magic Born - Book 2

  Caethes Faron

  Contents

  About Magic Unknown

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Also by Caethes Faron

  About the Author

  About Magic Unknown

  Kat and Alex are on the run when an unexpected visitor appears and takes Kat to face the Magesterial Council in Elustria. The Council reveals that Kat’s mother was a fugitive, and now Kat must uncover the truth of her mother’s crimes or stand trial as a co-conspirator. With only Alex and her best friend to help, Kat must race between worlds to discover who her mother was while dodging the mages who still hunt her. Time is running out, and failure means a lifetime sentence.

  Magic Unknown is the second book in the Magic Born series and is intended to be read after Magic Born.

  Get sneak peeks and stay up to date on new releases by signing up for the author’s newsletter at:

  http://CaethesFaron.com/Newsletter

  Chapter 1

  Context and age changes everything. As a kid, staying at a hotel amounted to a treat of epic proportions. Inoffensive artwork, bland breakfasts, a TV with all the channels I didn’t get at home, and the ubiquitous germ-covered bedspread all equaled adventure for a kid. As an adult fleeing for my life after killing an assassin? I could have done with less adventure. I’d take a bed I could sleep on two nights in a row—without the germ-covered bedspread—please.

  Luckily for me, my conversation with Alex was heated enough to distract me from the cold, tasteless scrambled eggs I ate in the hotel’s dining room.

  “I’m telling you, the Council sent Marcus. Why are you insistent we should still seek them out?” I pushed my chair back from the table and stood. Alex followed me to the lobby.

  “But you don’t know that. That’s just what Casper told you. He doesn’t have the best track record for being honest.” Frustration tinged Alex’s smooth voice. Everything about him screamed that he was a panther shifter, from his graceful stride to his silky black hair to his startling yellow eyes. I didn’t understand how the other guests in the hotel lobby didn’t see it.

  Oh yeah, no one on Earth knew shifters were real and traveled here through portals from Elustria.

  “You don’t understand what it was like to fight off Marcus. If there’s even a chance the Council sent him…” I shook my head as I pictured the assassin who had killed my mother and then set his sights on me to steal my amber talisman. Killing him had been the hardest thing I’d ever done. “I don’t think I’d make it out alive again. The only reason I survived this time was because he thought I was already dead or at least unconscious.”

  “The Magesterial Council doesn’t kill people,” Alex said. The elevator dinged as the doors opened, and we boarded. “Casper didn’t want you to go to the Council. That should be your first clue that it’s an organization that stands in opposition to him. There are only two sides of this: Casper and the Council. You have to put your trust in one of them, and it isn’t going to be Casper.”

  “I don’t trust anyone except you right now.” The last time I saw Casper, a murderous rage had lit his eyes. It was only a matter of time before he showed up to kill me and take my talisman. I fiddled with the amber stone that hung on the gold chain around my neck. The power inside it hummed, ready to shape itself to my will.

  “Then trust me on this too,” Alex said. “Whoever sent Marcus won’t stop. Without your cloaker, we’re vulnerable. We won’t be able to outrun whoever it is forever. We have to do something more than hide.” The elevator stopped on our floor. We had to make a decision soon. Checkout was in ten minutes.

  The housekeeping cart sat a few doors down from our room. I hated feeling rushed to check out, especially when I had no idea where I was going. I pulled the key card from the back pocket of my jeans.

  “Wait.” Alex pulled me back from the door to our room before I inserted the plastic card into the slot. “Someone’s in there. I can hear them.”

  My heart raced. Was this all the time we got? I couldn’t fight anymore. I was tired, dammit. I knew that whoever had sent Marcus would keep coming, but had it really been too selfish of me to hope for just one day to catch my breath?

  Alex took the key card from my hand. He had a notoriously difficult time getting hotel doors to unlock, so I had fallen into the habit of doing it myself. This time the little light turned green on his first try.

  Compared to the beating of my heart, him turning the handle appeared to move in slow motion. I held my breath, half dreading what we would see and half screaming at him in my head to hurry up already. When the door opened, my eyes widened in shock.

  “Oh, they told me there’d be a shifter here,” a short creature said from the far side of our room. “Hurry up and come in. I want to get back home. I don’t understand what you shifters find so appealing about this place. No magic at all.”

  The creature was between four and five feet tall, humanoid, and some cross between an imp and goblin from Wizards and Fae, my favorite online game. His hair, and I was assuming it was a him based solely on the timbre of his voice, resembled green Spanish moss. His leathery skin was a sickly, pale purple. He wore no shoes but kept himself covered in a green fabric that looked like moss ripped from the ground. And when I say covered, I mean that in the absolute barest sense of the word.

  Alex walked into the room, his body held stiff and on alert, and I followed. If this person were an immediate threat, Alex would have told me to run by now.

  “Oh, there she is, the one I was sent to talk to.” The creature took a step toward us as he pointed at me.

  “Who are you?” Alex asked. I was glad he took the initiative, because all I could do was stare.

  “Millhook is my name. Oh, and the Council gave me this to prove to you who I am.” Millhook waved his hand in the air and a gold coin the size of my palm appeared. He tossed it onto the bed in front of Alex. “The Magesterial Council sent me as something of an impartial liaison. I’ve been told to inform you that there will be a portal waiting for you this afternoon. It’s, let me see”—Millhook snapped another finger and a piece of parchment appeared—“oh yes, here it is. A portal will be open for you at three o’clock. You’re to report to it, and I will give you safe passage to the Council. If you do not appear…well, I don’t really know what will happen, but I’m assuming nothing good.”

  Alex picked up the gold coin and examined it then passed it to me. I had no clue what I was supposed to be looking for. All I saw was a symbol made up of many circles inside one large circle. I assumed it must be the symbol of the Magesterial Council since Alex seemed satisfied. This coin was apparently what I sho
uld have looked for on Marcus’s body.

  “What guarantee do we have of her safe passage?” Alex asked.

  Millhook shrugged. “None but the word of the Council. But it goes both ways. The assurance that you have safe passage is the same as the assurance that if you don’t come, they’ll send someone else.”

  “So the Council did send Marcus to kill me?” I stepped out from behind Alex to get a better look at Millhook.

  “I don’t know anything about that. They said they sent someone, and it went badly. They want to make it right with you, so they sent me. That’s all I know. They figured I’d be a nice neutral liaison. Show, don’t show, it doesn’t really matter to me. I would like my medallion back though.” Millhook had a raspy, grumbly voice that made him sound irritated.

  I moved to hand it to him, but Alex intervened. He took the medallion from me and passed it to Millhook. Before he let go of the coin, he said, “Do you swear on the magic of your homeland that we have safe passage with you?”

  Millhook sighed and fixed an exasperated stare on Alex. “Yes, I swear on the magic of my homeland, the Flamewood Forest, that no harm will come to you while you’re with me.”

  Only when he finished did Alex release the medallion.

  “Geez, all this fuss, and for what?” Millhook tossed the coin into the air and it disappeared. “Until three.”

  “Wait, is that all you have to say? Why did the Council send Marcus to kill me? Why should I trust them now?” The magic in my talisman leapt, eager to help me wring answers from the little man.

  “Oh, yes, I forgot. I’m supposed to pass along the deepest apologies and regrets of the Council blah blah blah. They are deeply sorry for the pain and suffering that has been caused and wish to assure you that it was without their knowledge or approval or foresight blah blah blah.” Millhook flicked his hand in time with each “blah” to emphasize just how little he cared.

  “He killed my mother. It’s not nothing.”

  “It is to me.” Millhook shrugged. Then he nodded and disappeared.

  I ran to the spot where he had stood, but no sign of him remained. I spun to face Alex. “That’s who the Council sends to convince me to come to them?”

  “He’s a fae. The mages often use them as neutral representatives. They may seem uncaring, but they would never swear to anything on their magic without it being true. They can’t, or their magic is forfeit.”

  “So, what? You win now? We go to the Council because clearly only the most upstanding organizations use threats and intimidation to achieve their aims.” There were no good options before me, and I was taking it out on Alex. It wasn’t fair. I wanted to scream in frustration at the trap my life had become.

  “It’s not about me winning; it’s about keeping you safe. I believe him when he says we have safe passage. I also believe the Council will send someone else if we don’t come. The Council has summoned you. They will see you either by your choice or by force.”

  “Coercion means it’s not my choice.”

  “I understand your point, but I see no other choice for us.”

  As my heart rate slowed and the shock dissipated, I accepted that Alex was right. All I could do was make the best of a shitty situation. So instead of focusing on the negative, I turned my attention to the fact that I had just seen a real-life fae. That was undeniably cool. “So that was a fae?”

  “Yes. An imp to be exact, but that’s what most people mean in Elustria when they refer to the fae. They work closely with the mages.”

  “Yeah, I recognized the name of the forest he mentioned. That’s where the mages get the wood for their wands.”

  “Yes, which is more reason to trust the Council. A mage won’t break their word to a fae, not when that relationship is so important to them. If they cross the fae, they lose access to the forest and the material for their wands. They won’t do that over you.”

  “Whoops, I forgot this.” Millhook’s voice startled me as it filled the room, but he didn’t appear. Instead, the piece of parchment he had read from floated down from the ceiling and landed on the bed.

  “That was weird.” For the first time, I considered that I might be dreaming.

  “Typical fae.” Alex picked up the piece of parchment and glanced at it then gave it to me. It held the coordinates and the time for the portal. Seeing it written in front of my eyes stirred a fluttering of excitement in my stomach. If I did this, I’d be going to Elustria this afternoon. It would no longer be a nebulous idea of a place. It would be real.

  “So you think going is the right choice?” I looked to Alex to make this decision. Ever since this entire ordeal had started, he’d been the only person I could trust. I needed to trust him now.

  Alex sat next to me on the bed. “Yes, I really do. It was always going to come to this one way or another. You can’t hide from the Council forever. If we go now, we at least have some assurances because of Millhook. If we let this window pass, then I’m not sure what will happen.”

  That was that then. I only had one more question, but I hated myself for asking it, not only for the doubt it would reveal, but because I didn’t want to be that girl. “And are you going to come with me?”

  Damn him, Alex actually laughed. “Of course I’m coming. Who would protect you?”

  “As I recall, you haven’t done an awful lot of protecting, more like standing by and getting yourself used as a pawn against me.”

  “Fair point. Then I guess I’m coming because I need you to protect me.” He winked as he stood and then rounded up the few belongings I had. Everything got stuffed into the shopping bag that we’d been using as a suitcase.

  In four hours, I’d step through a portal into the unknown with only the assurance of a grumpy imp that I’d be safe. Nothing could possibly go wrong.

  Chapter 2

  When we neared the point where the portal should be waiting, I pulled off the road and parked the car behind some trees growing near a creek bed. I wasn’t sure how many times I’d have to say goodbye to my car, but I thought this might be the last. I left the keys in the wheel well even though something inside me said this would be a one-way trip.

  “Do you want to walk there together, or do you want to ride on my back?” Alex asked.

  “Let’s walk.” As I expected, Alex held out his hand for me to take. Walking together in his human form meant that he could communicate with me more easily if there were trouble, but it also meant having his hand to hold for support. I wasn’t sure which rationale I gave more weight to.

  A bright blue light shone in the distance. This was it, the portal to my home world. Actually, I didn’t know whether I’d been born on Earth or on Elustria. If things went well with the Council, maybe I’d find out.

  As we drew closer, I saw Millhook standing next to the oval-shaped portal.

  “Ah, very wise, very wise. And punctual too,” he said.

  The view beyond the portal was blurred, as if I were looking through a window smudged with petroleum jelly. The edges of the portal dissipated into nothing, pulsing slightly as if to show that it was active. One step and I’d be in Elustria. I had hoped to see a grand view of this new world, but the other side of the portal appeared to be a plain stone hallway. Not very enticing.

  “What are you waiting for? I haven’t got all day. Just step through.” Millhook urged me along.

  Sweat coated my palms from nerves, and there was one more concern I had.

  “I think you should go first,” I said, looking to Alex. “I don’t want to risk the portal closing after me.”

  Alex nodded. “Good idea. You’ll follow right behind?”

  “Of course.”

  “There’s nothing to it. All you have to do is take a step.” Alex’s yellow eyes encouraged me.

  “What is this?” Millhook interjected. “Some human thing where you have to gab all day long instead of just taking a step? Get on with it. I have other things to do besides ferrying mages to Elustria. I’m not a taxi service.” />
  “I’ll be fine.” I smiled at Alex in what I hoped was a reassuring way. “Go ahead. I’m right behind you.”

  Alex turned, took a step, and was gone. Through the portal, a blurry blob I assumed was Alex waved at me. I took a deep breath in and slowly let it out as I stepped through. My eyes instinctually closed, but I didn’t feel a thing. I opened them to see what had gone wrong, but I stood in a stone corridor next to Alex. Traveling between worlds really was as easy as taking a step, even easier than teleporting.

  A second later, Millhook appeared beside us and then waved his hand and the portal disappeared.

  “All right, you two, this way. Got to present you to the Councilor so I can collect my payment.” Millhook led the way down the corridor, not even looking back to see if we followed. A red velvet carpet covered the floor, and artwork lined the walls. The paintings appeared so real that I wanted to reach out and touch the ocean waves and cliff faces and exotic fruits pictured. The same illuminator orbs that had been at Casper’s Armory floated in the air above us.

  Millhook seemed to know his way around well, never hesitating to decide which direction to turn or which staircase to take. The emptiness of the corridors and the rooms I peeked into gave the entire place an eerie feeling. The building appeared to be lived in, but it was as if everyone had disappeared.

  Millhook stopped in front of a door that was just like all the others we had seen: thick wood with a gold knocker. But instead of knocking, Millhook walked right in, and Alex and I followed.

  The second I stepped across the threshold, I froze. Sitting at a table in front of me was the woman I’d seen Marcus speaking with through the communication orb minutes before I killed him. I squeezed Alex’s hand to keep from betraying my recognition to the woman.

  At the intrusion, the woman stood, as did her tablemate: a middle-aged man with dark hair and red eyes. An angry scar ran down the left side of his face, even more noticeable because of his dark tan and sun-damaged skin. He was so scary looking that I almost feared him more than the woman who had sent Marcus to kill me and my mother.

 

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