Zach was looking down at his hands. “But… I can’t even cast a basic shield.”
Annabelle patted Zach on the back. “Of course not. You’ve been learning from wizards.” She smiled, and somehow Christopher was afraid. “By the time the court is done with you, shields should come easier than breathing. It’ll be the other lessons you’ll need to worry about.” Grams turned her dark-eyed stare Christopher’s way. “Now what is this about a duel?” She crossed her arms. “And how is my granddaughter involved?”
The doorbell rang before he could answer. “I’ll get it!”
He ran for the front door, hearing the sounds of Zachary and Lana describing Cole’s latest threats to her grandmother. Without looking through the peephole, he pulled open the door.
He nearly sobbed. Today just kept getting better and better. Edward and Marjory Beckett stood on his step, his mother cool and icy in her pale blue jacket, his father’s salt and pepper hair rumpled as usual. “Hi, Mom. Dad.”
His father paused long enough to give him a hug, his golden eyes filled with anxiety. “Gareth?”
“My study.”
His father rushed passed him towards the study, barely acknowledging anyone else in his need to see his injured child.
“Christopher.” His mother glided past him, pulling her light wool jacket off and handing it to him. “Where are your other brothers?”
He happily threw his brothers to the wolf. “Zachary is practicing some spells in the great room, and Daniel is with Gareth in my study.”
She walked into the great room. “Zachary, you know better than to…” She stopped and slowly looked around. “Christopher, when did you redecorate?”
“Long story.” He walked over to Lana and pulled her to him, tucking her under his shoulder. “Mom, I’d like you to meet Alannah and her grandmother, Mrs. Evans. Lana, Annabelle, this is my mother, Marjory Beckett.”
His mother stiffened. “Annabelle Evans.”
Grammy smiled, her gaze never leaving his mother. “Nice to meet you, Mrs. Beckett.”
“Matriarch of the Evans coven?”
Annabelle’s smile was full of teeth. If Chris didn’t know any better he’d call her the predator. “The one and only.”
His mother took a deep breath. “And Alannah is also an Evans, I presume?”
Christopher winced. “Evans-Beckett.” Lana elbowed him in the side with a frown.
His mother turned, her frown equally dire. “Really?”
“Hello, Mrs. Beckett.” Lana held out her hand with a smile.
His mother eyed the shadow mark on the side of her neck and sighed. “A witch, Christopher?”
Lana’s hand dropped, her eyes narrowing dangerously.
Uh-oh. “Alannah is my mate, Mother.”
His mother waved her hand airily. “Don’t call me Mother in that tone of voice. I’ve wiped your poopy bottom; I deserve at least some respect. Besides, I have no problems per se with witches. It’s your father I’m worried about. You know how he gets.” She sniffed. “Are you the one who turned Christopher’s great room purple?”
“That was me, Mom.”
She turned to Zachary, both brows in her hairline. Not a good sign. “What spell were you attempting?”
Zachary took a step back, closer to Annabelle. “I was trying an illusion spell on the flowers.”
Mom blinked. “Illusion spell.”
He nodded. “Yes.”
“Zachary.” It was said in that tone of voice mothers everywhere had, weary and sad and somehow still filled with affection.
Lana fingered the mark on her neck, the exact same mark his mother wore on her neck. “Trust me, it could have been worse. We could have been instant spokeswomen for Welch’s grape juice.”
Christopher buried his face in her hair and tried not to laugh when his mother rolled her eyes. He slowly pulled her out of the room and left Zachary to explain to their mother what was going on. He wasn’t certain he wanted to be there for that. Besides, if anyone could handle his mother, it would be Annabelle Evans. The two were either going to hate each other or love one another and he wasn’t sure which prospect frightened him more.
“Chris?” His father was holding the door to the study open. “There’s something you need to see.”
He exchanged a worried look with Lana before moving into the study. “What?”
Daniel turned the Registry around and pointed to a single entry. “Cole.”
He read the entry and sucked in a breath. Why in hell was he so surprised? “That explains a lot.”
Lana was frowning. “I thought you told me he was a wizard.”
“He was a wizard once upon a time.” Christopher shook his head. “Enough hatred can send a man down a path no one could predict.”
She was shaking her head. “But that’s supposed to be impossible. No one can go from wizard to warlock like that.”
“Not unless they already had some warlock blood in them.” Daniel turned the book back around. “See here? The Godwins have an ancestor who married a warlock, two generations before our families intermarried.”
Chris felt like he’d been socked in the jaw. “Does that mean what I think it means?”
His father nodded. “There’s a direct line down from that ancestor to the one who married our ancestor.” He braced himself on the desk. “It means a warlock could also be born into the Becketts.”
“Fuck.” Gareth sat gingerly in the chair behind the desk. “So where’s the witch in the family? I mean, how did Zach wind up one?”
Lana shook her head. “Witches are spontaneous, remember? We tend to show up in the same families over and over again, but sometimes a witch is born into a wizard or warlock family and, unless someone picks up on it or checks the Registry, they never know who or what they really are. Sometimes we find them and try to train them, but how well they do depends on how much they’re willing to accept.”
“We have another problem than Zach’s spontaneous witchdom.” Daniel stared at Chris, his expression grim.
Chris nodded. “We’ve been preparing for a wizard.”
“When we should have been preparing for a warlock.” Lana parked her butt on the edge of his work table, her fingers automatically going to the emerald ring. She toyed with it before slipping it absently onto her finger. Chris tried to focus on the problem at hand rather than what she’d just done. “We need to get Grammy and your mom in here.”
“I agree.” His brothers looked at him like he’d just offered to share office space with Jaws and the Terminator, but his father looked oddly pleased. “We also need to let the court know that Cole is no longer a wizard, and therefore no longer eligible for the role of king.”
“I’ll take care of that.” Daniel picked up the phone and began dialing.
“I’ll get mom, Annabelle and Zach.” Gareth pulled himself wearily to his feet. “These fucking pain pills are really dragging my ass down.”
“Rest after this.” When Gareth opened his mouth to object, Chris held up his hand, silencing him. “You can help me more when you’re at the top of your game. Take a nap, then come back down and help me prepare for my duel.”
Gareth nodded and dragged himself out of the room.
“Chris?”
He looked down into the worried eyes of his mate. “It will be all right, Lana.” He pressed a kiss to those soft, beautiful lips. “I promise.”
She glared up at him, but he saw the worry dragging at her eyes. “It better be.”
He smiled. Now that he knew what he’d be dealing with during the duel he was positive it would be.
Chapter Twelve
“So what’s the plan? Has he contacted you yet with a location? A date, a time?”
Lana watched the Beckett boys get serious in Chris’s workroom. Gareth was busy thumbing through Chris’s spell books, awkwardly leaving little sticky tabs to mark pages with his good hand. Daniel was polishing Chris’s Athame, a magical knife used by all three types of magic users. Spells cou
ld be channeled through that knife much like a wand. Edward, their father, was quietly consulting with someone on the phone about binding spells. Zachary was muttering to himself, closing his eyes and running words around in his head. She could hear the beginnings of rhymes, chants that might possibly help Chris protect himself. Every now and then he would stop and scribble something down, his full lip caught between his teeth. Sometimes his hand would reach out absently and snag something, running it around and around his fingers before either adding it to his pile or setting it aside. Whenever he reached for something, his brothers would watch him with various degrees of amusement and wonder. She didn’t have the heart to tell Zach that a witch’s spells wouldn’t work very well for a wizard.
Then again, considering everything else he’d accomplished, perhaps his would. It was something to think about, anyway.
She, on the other hand, had been relegated to kitchen help. She was bringing the men coffee and sandwiches while they worked, and while it rankled she sort of understood. Just watching the precise way they worked, the way Christopher would lay out different things, study them, put most of them away and set one aside, showed her she wouldn’t have much to contribute. It was like he was building a beautiful mosaic, once piece at a time, and she wouldn’t be able to see his vision until after he’d finished.
It was so god-damn sexy. It was the same focus he had when they made love, the fierce concentration making her think wicked thoughts.
Made love. Lana smiled. She didn’t know what it was about the arrogant wolf and his family, but she felt like she’d come home.
She handed him his sandwich and coffee, returning the absent smile he gave her. He pushed his glasses back up his nose and bent to study the talisman currently sitting on his desk, runes etched on its surface that had absolutely no meaning for her. “What is that?”
“Protection amulet,” he responded absently. “Need it for a shielding spell.”
She stroked it, feeling the dormant magic within it. “Groovy.”
His lips twitched. He looked up at her over the top of his glasses. “Groovy?”
She shrugged. “Isn’t that what Shaggy always says?”
He shook his head, pinching the bridge of his nose under his glasses, but she could see the way his mouth trembled from trying to hold back the laugh.
Next thing she knew Chris tumbled her into his lap. She squeaked, grabbing hold of his shoulders. He nipped her chin. “Who gets to be Thelma?”
“Not me!” Zach held up his hand, grinning, still writing scribbles on pieces of paper.
Lana tapped her lips with her fingernail, getting into the game. She could sense some of the tension leaving their shoulders. “You’re more Danger-Prone Daphne, I think.”
Zach sputtered indignantly while his brothers laughed.
Chris leaned down and kissed the tip of her nose. “That would make Daniel Thelma, wouldn’t it?”
“And Gareth Fred?”
Chris grinned. “He has pulled Zachary’s ass out of the fire more than once.”
Lana nodded, her own lips turning up. “And Zach does have a real fondness for the color purple.”
Gareth was leaning against a bookcase, face buried in his arm, his shoulders shaking. Daniel was openly grinning at his brother Zach.
“Oh fuck you all.” Zach stood up and stretched. “I’m going to get some chips.” He strode out, but not before flipping his brothers off.
“I knew you were trouble.” Chris gave her a soft kiss. “Thank you for the sandwiches.”
“You’re welcome.” She climbed off his lap. “I’ll let you boring types get back to work.” She sauntered out of the office, grinning. She found Zach in the kitchen. “Hey, Daphne.”
“Hey, Shaggy.”
“Are those barbeque?” She reached for the bag.
He held it over his head. “Get your own.”
Lana stuck her tongue out at him. “You know there isn’t much we can do to help them, right?”
He lowered the bag to the counter with a sigh. “Yeah, I know.”
“There’s still stuff we can do.”
He crinkled the top of the bag. “Like bring them chips?” He looked so lost, like a kicked puppy. She just wanted to cuddle him, but she didn’t think Chris would appreciate finding her stroking his brother’s head.
“Do you really think Cole is going to fight fair?”
He paused. “He has to. There are certain rules to wizard duels that must be adhered to. If they aren’t, the duel is automatically won by the wizard who did follow the rules.”
She settled onto one of the counter stools and propped her chin in her hand. “But Cole isn’t a wizard.”
“True.” He popped a chip in his mouth, but she could practically hear him thinking things through.
She kicked her foot back and forth, fighting the urge to pace. “What are the odds he’ll cheat somehow?”
“Not sure. I don’t know him the way Christopher does.”
She had to know. The thought of it was driving her insane. “Is this a duel to the death?”
Zach stopped popping chips in his mouth. “Death?” He swallowed. “I’ve heard of very few wizard duels that ended in death.”
“Yeah, but Cole wants Christopher to hurt, remember? So would he make it a duel to the death?”
Zach frowned, and she caught a glimpse in his determined expression of the kind of witch he would be when his training was over. Man, the court is going to have an interesting time with him. “No. Damn it, he wouldn’t.” He grabbed her hand and dragged her back into the workroom. “Chris, we need an extra protection amulet.”
“Why?”
“Do you really think he’ll leave Lana out of this?”
Chris froze. “The duel is between him and me. Lana will have no part in it. Besides, she’s already wearing a protection amulet.”
“Your strongest amulet? Besides, who said it would have anything to do with the duel?”
Chris’s head rose. Zach just stood there, clenching Lana’s hand in one of his own, the other held out for the amulet he’d demanded. “Zach?”
“I have a very bad feeling, Chris. Give me the amulet.”
Lana’s eyes widened. “Give him the amulet.” If Zach’s instincts were screaming at him that loudly then she knew she’d need whatever it was he was planning on doing.
Chris held out the amulet. “If he goes after her, he’ll be expecting wizard’s magic.”
“And witch’s, for that matter.” Daniel propped his butt on the edge of Chris’s desk.
Zach smiled. It was feral, cold, and nothing Lana would have thought him capable of. From the looks on his brothers’ faces, they never would have either. “But he won’t be expecting me.”
Chris stared at his brother for the longest moment before an identical smile crossed his face. Lana shivered. “Good.”
Zach turned, dragging Lana out of the room behind him. “Zach?”
“Trust me.”
She blew her hair out of her eyes. What are you planning, Zach? She watched him frantically lay out items on the kitchen counter, his expression hard and his movements precise and controlled. He knew exactly what he wanted and where to find it. The more she watched, the more it made sense. And the more it made sense, the more frightened she became. He needed to get to court and he needed to get there soon.
If Zach is capable of this, what else is he capable of?
* * * *
The chamber door clanged shut with an ominous sound. How Cole had managed to obtain a dueling chamber on such short notice Christopher didn’t know. He had the feeling he’d used his family connections to cut through the red tape.
The Godwins sat on Cole’s side of the chamber, glaring at the Becketts through cold eyes. In particular Lana and Annabelle Evans seemed to be garnering the most attention. Arthur Godwin’s expression was particularly vile when he saw the mark on Lana’s neck, the unmistakable stamp of a Beckett mate.
It was a typical dueling ring
, a simple white ring like you’d see in a circus, perhaps. But where the circle of a circus ring would be plain white bags or pavers, this white ring was etched with arcane symbols in all sorts of colors, the markings necessary not only for the shielding spell that would encase them once the duel started but full of protection spells designed to make sure that those outside the ring would suffer no ill effects from whatever magic the duelists utilized. Instead of grandstands there were comfortable padded chairs opposite one another, enough to hold the members of each family plus a few extras. Since neither Cole nor Christopher had called anyone but family, some of those chairs on each side remained empty. The floor of the circle itself was simple dirt, earth necessary to ground certain spells or to be used against your opponent in whatever way you could. A water fountain gurgled nearby. A chimenea already had a fire burning merrily inside. Incense scented the air directly above the dueling ring, the burner hanging by a golden chain. These items allowed elemental magic to be used once the shields snapped into place.
Christopher stared at his opponent, mentally checking each and every one of his preparations. Two amulets, a piece of paper with a specific rune in gold lettering, a silver lighter, a stick figure, black ribbon, three round silver links attached to each other, and his Athame. Not much on the surface, but each one had a purpose. He couldn’t, wouldn’t turn and look at his family or his mate until after this little fight was over. He needed to concentrate solely on kicking Cole’s ass so hard he’d feel it in the afterlife. This stupid rivalry had to end.
He planned on ending it tonight.
He’d already hashed all of the details out with Gareth, who had agreed to be his second. Together they’d found a way a man could take the power of another being and bind it in such a way that the person could never again do harm to others. It was an old spell, rarely used by any but the council’s Enforcers, and could wind up costing Christopher more than it cost Cole. But if it meant keeping Lana safe, Christopher would risk it. Cole was a menace. He needed to be dealt with. Cole’s willingness to harm innocents in his little war with Christopher just cemented Chris’s resolve.
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