by Cristy Rey
“It was so fun, B!” Sunday squealed as her cheek pressed against Bernadette’s. She pulled away and took a seat beside her patroness. Their fingers laced together, and Bernadette held their joined hands on her lap. “You should have come with us. Astor took me to this amazing record store. I got posters and CDs. The lady there told us about this thrift store down the street, and Astor and I went there afterward. Oh, my God, B! I got, like, four dresses and two new pairs of jeans.”
Bernadette pursed her lips and tilted her head.
“I’m glad you had fun, darling, but we’re going to need to get to work.”
She released Sunday’s hands, and raised her fingers to Sunday’s face. Magic flowed from her touch and coursed through Sunday’s veins. Sunday beamed. Her energy was uniquely invigorating. All over her body, Sunday could feel the buzzing electricity like a million little sparks. She was awed by the witch’s power, and she loved every second that she got to experience it.
“Tomorrow, we’ll be leaving town for business,” Bernadette explained. “It will be the first time you will get to use your gifts like this. It will be just as we practiced, but we must remember to be prepared for surprises.” Her smile fell, and she lowered her chin, looking Sunday directly in the eyes. Her voice dropped tenor when she continued.
“You must never trust a warlock,” she said gravely. “They work directly against our interests. They raise devils and demons, conjure killing curses, and consort with vampires liberally. Very quickly, they amass great quantities of power if permitted. We must always intervene with warlocks. Working against our interests is working for ill. What becomes of them will be an example to the others of their kind.”
Sunday pursed her lips, and she drew a hard breath through her nostrils. She had trained for this, precisely this. The world was filled with people who sought to do others harm. Unlike Bernadette and her coven, those witches and creatures were monsters. They didn’t care about the greater good; they cared only for themselves. They were profiteers. They were carpetbaggers of the mundane. Without question, they needed to be stopped.
The world needed the Incarnate to take action. Magic was no one’s plaything, and she wouldn’t let anyone take advantage of the less powerful or the mundane. If all witches were like Bernadette, then all would be well in the world. But they weren’t. No one was as good. No one was as kind.
… And no one had an Incarnate.
“Okay,” Sunday finally answered. Her course was set, and her pulse raced with the anticipation. She smiled broadly when she imagined herself standing at Bernadette’s side as she told them that they would never raise a demon on her watch. On their watch. “Let me get my stuff out of bags, and I’ll meet you in the study. Sound good?”
Alone in her room, Sunday thought of all the things she’d learned, all the things Bernadette taught her. Tomorrow, she’d be taking the first of many steps toward her Fate. And she was never so happy. Right at that moment, Sunday knew. Beyond the shadow of a doubt, she was and would always do the right thing. Let someone get in the way of Bernadette’s altruistic mission, and they’d have to face the preternatural and mundane worlds’ greatest weapon: her.
TAKING BACK SUNDAY, CHAPTER ONE
Present day…
Sunday’s tightly pressed lips barred her from unleashing a string of expletives and curses against Fate. For almost six years, she had managed to avoid the preternatural. No witches. No vampires. No magic. After just over a year of living in Columbia, South Carolina, it seemed her luck had run out. Fate reared its ugly head when her only two friends in the world outed themselves as witches. Almost two months later, Sunday sat with those very same friends, Kayla and Sammy, in Sammy’s kitchen. They’d been bugging her for months to join them to meet their coven. Usually, Sunday didn’t flinch when her friends talked shop. She let them go on to their hearts’ content, grinning, nodding, and staying mum while they talked. To Kayla and Sammy, Sunday’s nonchalance meant only one thing: she was a potential recruit for their coven. At first, the invitations to join them for esbat, or coven reunions, were gentle nudges. Months later, their requests had grown more blatant. In the last week, they’d become relentless.
Silently grinning and bearing it was Sunday’s usual go-to avoidance tactic, but that method had lost its effectiveness. At this point, she was well past tiptoeing around their invitations. Explaining to her friends why she couldn’t join some stupid, probably lame, and innocuous coven was the last thing Sunday wanted to do. As her friends’ involvement with their coven increased, rejecting them outright meant threatening their friendship.
For Sunday, witchcraft wasn’t something that quiet, happy mundanes engaged in while someone else baked scones. Witchcraft was something real and potentially extremely dangerous. Sunday was the Incarnate, a purported god-kind and preternatural conduit of magical and mystical forces. It was the bane of her existence, and for years, since breaking from the servitude of the most powerful witch in the United States, Sunday had run free and clear of all Fate’s designs for her. She’d been running non-stop for six years when she landed in Columbia. There, she found the only thing she’d ever wanted for herself: the chance to live a normal life, a life of being something other than the Incarnate.
Of course, her normal life with her normal friends was turning out to be anything but. As Kayla and Sammy flipped their twin golden ponytails and sipped from their mid-morning coffees, they stared at her with expectant eyes and eager smiles.
“You really need to come with, Sunday,” Kayla said. “It’s not what you think. It’s less ‘Satan’ and more ‘knitting circle’, except with no knitting and more chanting.”
Kayla and Sammy shared knowing smiles, pleased with the former’s description of their coven. Placing her coffee mug on the table, Kayla leaned onto her elbows and twirled a long strand of hair around her finger. Brows pinched and eyes narrowed, Kayla searched Sunday’s expression as she considered ways to make her offer more enticing. Sunday was sure that if she stared into Kayla’s eyes, she would see the wheels spinning.
“It’s like…” Kayla’s voice stalled as she came up empty-handed. She quickly looked to Sammy with a silent plea for help.
“It’s like magic,” Sammy continued. When she said magic, Sammy raised her hands and wiggled her fingers, miming butterflies fluttering away. As trite as the gesture was, Sammy’s lips fixed into a tight line and her jaw set tight.
Magic. Sunday forced a grin as she gulped hard. Could she have expected any different? No matter how far she ran or how hard she tried to escape it, Fate nipped at her heels. If Kayla and Sammy weren’t her only friends, perhaps Sunday would have packed up her things and left Columbia the minute they confided in her for the first time. “You’ll probably think we’re flakes, but we’re Wiccan.”
“I just don’t think there’s any point to my going along. It’s really not my thing,” Sunday mumbled. She dug her fingers in her hair and looked up at her friends with pleading in her eyes.
“You don’t know if it’s your thing—” Kayla started with a smile.
“Yet.” Sammy beamed, her eyes wide and sparkling, and a broad, bright smile painted across her face.
“It’s white magic, not black magic,” Kayla explained for the umpteenth time in the last year. She tried to place her hand on Sunday’s for encouragement, but Sunday quickly pulled away and dropped her hands to her lap.
Since Sunday was sorely out of practice at blocking other people’s emotions, she had made it known that she didn’t like to be touched. If only she could manage physical contact with people, then Sunday could minimize the pains it took to control her ability.
“No bloody orgies, or demon worshipping,” Sammy said. “I mean, can you picture us at a satanic ritual? I think not.”
Sunday hesitated, half-stammering as she offered yet another roadblock.
“I really don’t see why it’s such a big deal that I don’t want to go.”
Sammy narrowed her gaze and sat upright in he
r chair. Kayla crossed her arms and furrowed her brow. They were putting on a united front against Sunday. For her part, Sunday could do little more than slouch her shoulders and nervously chew on her lip.
“You never talk about family or any other friends. You may not think that you need it, but you do. You’re lonely, Sunny, and as your best friends, we’re not okay with it.”
Sammy looked to Kayla for acknowledgement, and Kayla provided a sharp nod in return.
“This is how we can help you. The coven is a sisterhood. They can be your friends and your family. It’s like when I tell the kids that the Cub Scouts is an extension of their support system. That’s what we’re telling you about the sisters. You don’t have anyone else, and that’s just not right. Everyone needs a support system.”
Pulling her hand through her short hair and dropping her head, Sunday considered her options. Neither Kayla nor Sammy was an innately gifted witch. For that, Sunday was supremely grateful. What they lacked in sensitivity to the preternatural was indeed a lucky strike. They couldn’t possibly know what was truly out there. If they did, they wouldn’t have invited Sunday into their lives, certainly not into their homes. Sunday wanted her friends to believe that she was a mundane person, wholly unaware of, untrained in, and naïve about magic. If they could gauge her predicament, they would be curious, and in this case, curiosity was dangerous.
For as long as she could remember, friends were a pipe dream for Sunday. Being the Incarnate meant superficiality and secrecy were necessities. Relationships didn’t bode well given those limitations. For nearly a decade, Sunday ran from everything that she truly needed: stability, security, and sanctity. Most of all, Sunday craved companionship. Having finally found that with Kayla and Sammy, the last thing she wanted was to disappoint them. Not participating in the coven was doing just that.
Coincidence or Fate, there was no hiding from the tendrils of the preternatural world for Sunday. It would always find her. Were it a book club, Sunday would’ve been there with bells on after their first invitation. It had taken twenty million invitations, she guessed, but she finally would accept. Resignation was less a choice than it was Sunday’s last remaining option. Not wanting to lose them, Sunday sighed in defeat.
“Okay,” Sunday finally answered. “Give me details.” She chewed on the inside of her cheek and forced down the inevitable well of tears rising to the surface. Giving up left a bitter taste. Looking away from her friends was the only way she could keep from crying.
Kayla and Sammy sprang from their seats and pulled Sunday into their arms. The elation radiated from their bodies and poured into Sunday’s own. She struggled to stifle the effects of it to ensure that she contained it rather than dispersed it. Because she was out of practice, she had to work doubly hard to keep her shields up.
Through the cascade of Kayla’s bleach blonde hair, Sunday focused on a spot on the kitchen wall, and as if bracing her hands against it, pushed back into herself. Arms squeezed her waist and chest, hands brushed over the back of her head, and their tremendous excitement drenched her. That spot on the wall. Sunday pushed back. Push harder. Contain it. It was all about containment. Lightning in a bottle.
As the women attempted to pull away, Sunday strengthened her grip, and willed them to calm down before she could let them go. It took considerable effort, and for that reason, Sunday rarely found herself in a situation like this. They couldn’t have known how Sunday strained to handle their contact, and they would never know, because Sunday would never tell them.
When Sammy’s husband, Carl, walked into the kitchen, Kayla and Sammy startled and jumped back before Sunday could put their emotions to rest. As panic filled her, she lost her grip on the emotions she’d absorbed from them. On the counter below where she’d focused her efforts, the toaster jumped, pulled its cord from the socket, and slammed into the wall, sending a spray of sparks before landing on its side. Sammy and Kayla yelped as Carl rushed to grab a spatula and bang it to death. Sunday finally managed to gather her wits about her and forced herself to relax with slow, steady breathing. As her heart rate settled, the toaster stilled. Carl smacked it two more times before he was certain the danger had died down. Exasperated, he looked at the women huddled by the table.
“Is everyone okay?” he asked, gasping for breath. Fear drenched and confused, Carl appeared well out of his depth.
The women beside Sunday were reeling from their shock. Kayla’s hand trembled slightly. Suddenly, Kayla and Sammy broke out in nervous laughter.
“Thanks for saving us from a toaster, big guy!” Sammy teased. “Husband and total dragon slayer. How did I get so lucky?”
The tension washed out of the room as they took in the ridiculousness of the situation. Everyone laughed, including Sunday, but Sunday’s laughter wasn’t like the rest. The more she forced it, the closer she came to heaving. It was a complex dance. If she didn’t maintain an even-keel, a wild toaster was the least of the damage that she could do. Very rarely, Sunday reminded herself, does an explosion of energy result in the raining of rose petals on a crisp autumn afternoon.
“What were you three doing that you set a toaster on fire?” Carl asked, smiling. He walked to the refrigerator and pulled out a can of juice.
“Oh, nothing. Except that Sunday is joining our book club,” Sammy chimed lightly. She threw an arm around Sunday’s waist and pulled her closer. Sunday bit back the urge to push her friend away. The punctuation of her words made Carl raise an incredulous eyebrow. Kayla clapped her hands and squealed with delight.
“Your book club.” He shot a humorous gaze between his wife and Sunday. “Sounds exciting.” Popping open the can, he took a sip and shrugged before walking out of the kitchen. From the other room, he called out back to them, “Watch out for the microwave when we all decide to go to Disney World.”
As soon as he stepped out, Kayla slapped Sunday’s arm. Had Sunday not been chiding herself for losing control of her ability, she might have reciprocated the playful gesture. Instead, the best she managed was a weak grin and a shrug. These were her friends. This was the life she’d chosen for herself—the one she’d wanted so desperately to work. That’s how the Incarnate’s arm was twisted into tagging along to some half-assed, wannabe esbat.
“Don’t be such a bitch about it, Sunny,” Sammy teased. “Eunice is going to be there, too. You like her, don’t you? I don’t think you know anyone else there.”
“You know, because you’re essentially antisocial,” Kayla cut in.
“Except for you two, right?” Sunday answered with a forced smirk.
“Exactly. But like I was saying, at least you’ll know Eunice, and you actually like her so there’s that.”
Eunice was a casual acquaintance of Sunday’s. At their initial meeting, Sunday instantly made Eunice for a witch. It wasn’t something she did or something she said. Eunice’s palpable caretaker aura was as clear to Sunday as the woman’s salt-and-pepper hair. What the coven lacked in Sammy and Kayla utter and complete mundane-ness, it made up for in spades with Eunice. The magic swam around her. Sunday read Eunice’s aura like a book. No doubt about it, Eunice was a witch, a powerful one at that, as caretakers often were.
Having identified Eunice, Sunday carefully investigated her. She even stalked Eunice to ensure that, with her guard down, the caretaker didn’t suddenly change dispositions. Manufacturing a caretaker spirit was tough, and even a skilled witch could only hold the façade for so long before the veil dropped. If Eunice was faking, she was the best imitation that Sunday had ever seen. In truth, it would have made Sunday admire her just a bit for being able to pull it off.
“That makes me feel better,” Sunday confessed. She might not tell them how, but it did. It was a comfort to know that Eunice would be among the coven.
“So, where are we meeting?” Her friends answered with broad smiles.
The more information she had, the better. If she was going to join them, then Sunday needed to take the proper precautions before attend
ing. For Sunday, worst-case scenarios were high on a scale of probability, particularly where witches were concerned. Though doubtful that Kayla and Sammy would ever be invited to join a coven even the slightest bit threatening, there was a chance that Sunday would be waltzing into a veritable lion’s den. As much as she tried to avoid it, Fate did have the tendency to put her right where she least wanted to be.
“We always meet at Vicky’s house,” Kayla answered. “She lives with her grandma, who is kind of our leader, I guess. She’s been practicing since she was a teenager, so, like, decades.”
“And decades,” Sammy joked.
“I’m going to need the address,” Sunday stated flatly. And that was that. Old habits died hard. Sunday was back at the task of sussing out threats within covens, acting the judge, jury, and executioner. Hopefully, it stopped short this time, though.
The ride to Vicky’s later that night was easy. Through mostly residential streets, the late night traffic proved to work in Sunday’s favor. She rode around the block one more time, keeping her eye out for any neighboring houses with the lights still on and potential late nighters and insomniacs. Any one of the neighbors might consider a woman riding around on a bicycle well after two a.m. on a weeknight, suspicious.
More often than not, Sunday planned escape routes from places that she frequented. Staying off the radar meant knowing the quickest routes out of town and securing drop boxes with essentials in case of a quick escape. She couldn’t be sure that she was being stalked, but it was a possibility. During her reign as the Incarnate, Sunday had done some terrible things. If recognized, someone might sound the alarm, and then vampires would crawl out of the woodwork and put her head on a stake in retribution. Given Kayla and Sammy’s overwhelming mundaneness, however, their coven was likely no more than a glorified suburban book club.