the huntress 04 - eternal magic

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by Hall, Linsey




  Table of Contents

  TITLE PAGE

  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

  THANK YOU!

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  DEDICATION

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  GLOSSARY

  ABOUT LINSEY

  COPYRIGHT

  Contents

  TITLE PAGE

  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

  THANK YOU!

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  DEDICATION

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  GLOSSARY

  ABOUT LINSEY

  COPYRIGHT

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  ETERNAL MAGIC

  Dragon’s Gift: The Huntress Book 4

  by Linsey Hall

  CHAPTER ONE

  “Oh no.” I almost groaned when I caught sight of the golden sphinx crouched in front of the pyramid a hundred yards away. “It’s a sphinx.”

  “Twenty bucks he has a riddle for us,” Del said.

  “Yep. And I’m terrible at riddles.”

  An enormous Egyptian pyramid stuck out of the desert like a sore thumb, the only thing for hundreds of miles. An ocean of sand rolled around us, hills and valleys stretching far into the distance. I’d lost track of how long we’d spent bouncing along on our camels.

  Del tugged the brim of the hat over her forehead and muttered, “You’re lucky I love you, Cass. Because of all the places for the dampening charm to be, it ended up in the middle of a freaking oven that blocks my magic.”

  I made a noise somewhere between a laugh and a moan. Sweat dripped down my back, and my own hat was doing a miserable job of keeping my nose from burning.

  “I actually quite like Aladdin.” I patted my camel’s neck. He snorted, no doubt unimpressed by the name I’d bestowed upon him.

  Normally, Del would use her powers as a transporter to teleport us straight to our desired destination. This pyramid, however, had been built by supernaturals in a weird part of the Sahara that blocked teleporting. It also blocked humans from getting near the pyramid, which was a small mercy considering that human archaeologists would definitely set off the magical booby traps inside.

  No one wanted that. Not the archaeologists, who’d have their perception of reality rocked by the magic, and not the supernaturals, who tried to stay hidden from them.

  Best to leave it to professionals like us.

  “This is going to be some seriously old-school tomb raiding,” I said to Del.

  “No kidding. Riding a camel across the Egyptian desert in order to break into a pyramid is pretty much the height of cliché for a treasure hunter.”

  “I’ll take it. The cliché stuff is sometimes the coolest. It’s cliché for a reason, right? Everyone wants to do it.” And even if it wasn’t cool, I really wanted that dampening charm. I’d have ridden a yak a thousand miles through the tundra to get my hands on it, so a camel through the desert was no problem. I had plenty of incentive.

  Victor Orriodor, the monster from our past hunted us. One day soon, we’d clash for good. I’d accepted it. Del, Nix, and I had concealment charms that hid us from him, but mine was faulty because of my new nullification power.

  Which meant the time for running was almost over. We were at the point of kill or be killed. I planned to do the killing. But I had to get my powers back first or I’d never survive the confrontation.

  I hoped the dampening charm would be the way to do that.

  We were only a hundred yards from the pyramid now, close enough that I could make out the features of the golden sphinx who guarded the exit. His face was human, his body that of a lion’s. He glittered in the sunlight almost like gold.

  “He looks 3rd millennia BC,” Del said. “They’re usually the toughest to—”

  She gasped as the sphinx lunged into the air and bounded across the sand toward us, his enormous stone body moving as if it were made of flesh and blood. Sand kicked up behind him as his powerful legs dug into the ground.

  “Oh, hell.” I tightened my grip on Aladdin’s reins. Normally we’d approach, wake the sphinx up by tripping a lever or something, then answer the riddle to get through.

  But this guy was gung ho. That was never good. It was the lazy temple guardians you wanted, if you had a choice.

  He landed in front of us with a thud, his massive leonine body looming overhead. I tilted my head back, nearly blinded by his brightness.

  “Holy magic,” I breathed. He really was made of gold. I’d thought it a trick of the bright sun, but no. He was one hundred-percent, Grade-A golden goodness.

  Covetousness welled in my heart, a greed so fierce that my fingers itched to pet the sphinx and coo nice kitty. Then tie him up and stick him in my trove.

  Del and I were FireSouls, supernaturals believed to share the soul of a dragon. Like dragons, we had a thing for treasure. My idea of treasure was normally weapons and leather goods, but I could make an exception for a giant hunk of gold.

  I shook my head, trying to focus on our reason for being here.

  “What is your purpose?” he boomed.

  I dragged my gaze away from the shining sphinx and looked at Del, whose eyes were wide as saucers.

  “To take you home,” she said breathlessly.

  “Del!” I hissed. “Get ahold of yourself!”

  Though I wasn’t much better off. I may have lost my FireSoul powers last week, but I still seemed to possess the covetousness.

  “Yeah, yeah,” Del muttered, her gaze vacant. “I’m fine. It’s just…shiiiny kitty.”

  “Kitty?” the sphinx boomed.

  Oh, hell. We were screwed.

  I’d have hoped an Egyptian sphinx wouldn’t know the word for kitty, but he’d been enchanted to speak English, so he knew exactly what Del had called him.

  The sphinx sat on his haunches and reached out with two massive paws, swooping us up, one in each paw. My head spun as we dangled in our smooth, hard cages. Shit. There was no way to budge a monster made of metal.

  “Sorry!” I shouted. “You’re not a kitty! You’re a sphinx!”

  “Yeah, a real badass sphinx!” Del yelled, struggling to break the sphinx’s grip. “Toughest one I ever met!”

  If I hadn’t lost my powers last week, I could be out of here in a flash. I wouldn’t use my lightning, because it’d go straight through the metal and fry me, too, but I could use my illusion power to scare the crap out of him so he’d drop us.

  Unfortunately, none of that was an option now.

  In a fight last week, I’d acquired the power to nullify other supernaturals’ abilities. Because I was a FireSoul, I could steal other people’s powers. I hadn’t wanted to take that cursed power, but it’d been the only way to prevent catastrophe. As a result, my new nullification power canceled out my innate powers. I’d been a mess ever since it had happene
d, and I hated it, but that didn’t mean I wouldn’t try to use it.

  The sphinx shook us. My brain felt like it rattled in my head. I closed my eyes and tried to ignore it, focusing on my new gift, which was a weird kind of non-magic. that canceled out other supernaturals’ magical gifts.

  The strain of trying to manipulate the unfamiliar magic broke sweat across my skin. I’d been practicing my new power, but hadn’t made much progress. I felt only emptiness within, an uncomfortable feeling of nothingness that rolled in my stomach like hunger and queasiness combined.

  I gave up and shouted, “Del! Use your phantom power!”

  “Right! Of course!” Her bright gaze drifted back to the golden sphinx. “Just a bit distracted, is all.”

  “Come on!”

  She shook her head violently as if to clear it. Though my FireSoul liked gold, Del’s looooved it. It was a dangerous, but unavoidable, weakness.

  Del’s magic surged on the air, her signature distinct. The scent of fresh laundry and the feel of soft grass beneath my feet were a delight compared to the hot, hard grip of the sphinx.

  Her skin shimmered as she turned a transparent blue, and her black hair became a silvery indigo. When she’d gone full phantom-ghosty, she slipped from the sphinx’s grip and landed on the sand.

  The sphinx roared, the noise pounding my eardrums. I winced.

  He swatted at Del with his free paw, but it sailed right through her.

  Del drew her sword. The blade flared a fiery cobalt. Whenever Del was in phantom form, the objects she touched took on the properties of a phantom.

  “Get ready to run!” She turned corporeal for a second, swinging her now solid steel blade at the sphinx’s haunches.

  It bounced off with a clang and she cursed. The sphinx batted her away with a paw, clearly more annoyed than angry. She landed on her butt in the sand.

  “I don’t think I can get you out of this, Cass,” Del said.

  Damn.

  “We’re just visiting,” I said. “How do we pass?”

  The sphinx looked at me, his massive nose level with mine.

  “A riddle,” he said.

  Of course.

  “It accepts the blind and grants them sight.”

  Uhhh… My brain blanked. I glanced at Del. She shrugged.

  “Can I get a clue?” I asked.

  “No.”

  “Phone a friend?”

  The sphinx shook me. “Wrong!”

  “A moment! Just a moment!” I shouted.

  He stopped shaking. I pressed my fingertips to the golden charm hanging at my throat, igniting the magic that fueled the communications spell.

  “Nix?” I said. “You there?”

  “Yeah. What do you need?”

  “Thank magic.” Nix was Del’s and my other half—other third?—and she was my phone-a-friend when on tomb-raiding jobs. Riddles were surprisingly common, and I was awful at them. Normally, I worked alone so I needed the help, though Del had come along on this job because I could no longer use my dragon sense to find things, and I needed her to use hers to lead us to the dampening charm.

  “Got a riddle for you,” I said as the sphinx glowered. His fist tightened on my ribs, and I saw stars. When it loosened a bit, I gasped out the riddle to Nix.

  “Takes the blind and grants them sight?” Nix asked. “Oh jeez, that’s tough. Let me Google it.”

  The clickity-click of her keyboard keys sounded through the charm. The sphinx shook me.

  “Hurry up, Nix!” I shouted. My ribs felt like they were grinding together.

  “Hang on, hang on, I’ll get it!”

  I wished we weren’t treasure hunters who had to rely on Google, but there you had it. It was the modern age. What job didn’t rely on Google?

  The sphinx tightened his grip slightly. “Answer!”

  “Nix!”

  “Uh, uh.” The keyboard clickity-clicked. “School! It’s a school!”

  “School!” I shouted. “A school takes the blind and makes them see! It, uh, gives them knowledge to understand and see the world around them.” Right? For magic’s sake, I hoped it was right.

  “Correct.” The sphinx nodded.

  I sagged in relief. “So I’m good? You’ll let us pass?”

  “Yes. But you must find your own way into the temple.”

  “Fair enough.” I’d hoped he’d tell us how to get in, but as long as he wouldn’t eat me, I’d be happy.

  “But hurry. I grow hungry.”

  I nodded frantically and saluted. “Aye-aye.”

  The sphinx’s grip loosened, and I slipped right out, my way no doubt hastened by the sweat slicking my skin. When I tumbled to the sand, the stuff stuck to every inch of exposed skin and snuck inside my clothes.

  I clambered to my feet, wishing I were incorporeal like Del, and then struggled onto Aladdin. All while still covered in sand.

  Life without my powers sucked.

  Del climbed onto her camel, who I’d dubbed Jasmine because she had nicer eyelashes than Aladdin, and we flicked the reins, the camel version of cranking the key in the ignition.

  “Come on, Aladdin!” I shouted.

  Aladdin picked up the pace, galloping across the sand toward the pyramid in the distance. I bent low over his back, trying not to bounce off. My camel-riding skills were seriously rusty, and his gait wasn’t exactly smooth. More drunken horse than racehorse.

  I glanced back over my shoulder to see the sphinx watching us, but he hadn’t followed. When I turned back, we were nearly to the pyramid. It was massive, the stones in far better condition than if this had been a human-built pyramid. Spells protected it, slowing decay and destruction.

  We pulled Aladdin and Jasmine to a stop at the base of the pyramid. I hopped off, then pulled a big water bottle from the saddlebag. Del did the same. I unscrewed the top and held the bottle up for Aladdin.

  He plucked it right out of my hand and held it in his front teeth, then tipped his head back and drank. His floppy lips quivered in delight.

  “Looks like you’ve got that under control.” I patted him on the shoulder. “Be back in a bit. Don’t litter.”

  I turned to see Jasmine snatch the water bottle out of Del’s hand.

  “I like these camels.” Del grinned as she slung her bag crosswise over her back and turned to face the pyramid. “Let’s find a way in.”

  “This has got to be the front since it was the side the sphinx was guarding, but I don’t see an entrance.” The side of the pyramid was smooth and sloped, not the stepped construction of the Mayan pyramids in Mexico.

  “There.” Del pointed to a spot about ten feet above our heads. “See the indented spot? About the size of a door?”

  “Yeah.” I squinted. “There’s no lever or any other way to trigger the door.”

  “Nope,” Del said. “Probably only accessible if you know the right spell.”

  No wonder the sphinx had let us go so easily. There was no easy way in. I glanced back over my head at the sphinx.

  His head swung to look at me, as if he sensed my gaze. He stood and began to slink toward us, his gait now predatory. Stalking.

  I turned back to Del, my heart suddenly pounding. “He’s coming to eat us.”

  She looked warily at the sphinx. “Yeah? But he let us go.”

  “It was all a game.” Which I should have guessed. “He’d known we couldn’t get in and had planned to chomp us all along, but he wanted to play with his prey first.”

  Del nodded, her wide gaze stuck on the sphinx. “He is a cat. And he looks hungry.”

  I frowned as I studied the door above. “There might be an escape lever inside. Something to trigger it from within.”

  “Of course. Only accessible to those worthy enough to get in in the first place.”

  They’d never expected a supernatural like Del to show up one day. She was one of a kind, the only person I’d ever heard of who walked the line between life and death. Half phantom, half human. And she was the ace up our sl
eeve. “You’re going to have to pull your phantom trick, Del.”

  She nodded. “Yeah. I got it.”

  Little notches in the sloped stone wall caught my eye. I pointed them out to Del. “There. That’s how we climb. You go first.”

  I followed Del up the wall, my belly flat against the stone and my fingertips clinging to the little indents. Sweat dripped down my spine as we scaled the side of the pyramid. Every time I glanced over my shoulder, the sphinx lurked closer.

  One time, he was licking his golden chops. My heart raced, and sweat rolled down my spine. Even my FireSoul didn’t want to spend eternity in a golden sphinx’s belly.

  When she reached the indent, Del’s magic surged as she turned into a phantom and slipped through the wall.

  The desert was suddenly a lot quieter without her. I could hear the wind whipping my hair away from my face and feel the sun pounding on the back of my neck.

  A quick look over my shoulder revealed the sphinx only a couple dozen yards away. He was close enough for me to make out the details of his face, and boy, were his fangs long.

  “Come on, Del,” I muttered.

  A grinding noise sounded, and I turned away from the sphinx. The indented entrance stone was moving backwards, disappearing into the pyramid.

  I scrambled up to the ledge as the stone slid toward the right, into an indent in the wall. A dark corridor stretched ahead, a cool gust of wind blowing out. It smelled dusty and old, and I wondered how long it had been since someone had come in here.

  Probably millennia. Ever since the original builders had died out.

  I shivered, but not from cold.

  It was eerie.

  The stone disappeared entirely into the wall on my right, revealing Del, who was once again corporeal. I walked farther into the tunnel, glancing back to see an enormous golden eye staring in from the exit.

 

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