by Katie Cross
“Let’s hear it,” Leda said, her eyes on me.
“Better sit down,” I whispered, grateful beyond words that they had come. “It might take a while to explain.”
They listened without interruption. Camille sat down halfway through, her knees wobbly. By the time I finished, Leda stood at the window with her hands behind her back, her jaw tight.
“She’s rotten,” Camille whispered. “Wicked and rotten, and I can’t believe it.”
“I can,” Leda muttered.
“What do you think Miss Mabel is going to do?”
A dark feeling crept over me just thinking about it, as if saying her name brought the fog from Letum Wood into my room.
“I don’t know,” I whispered. “It could be anything.”
“She wants to make you angry,” Camille whispered, her face scrunched in thought. “That means she’ll do something bad, or try to take something away that means a lot to you.”
“You’re a big comfort,” I muttered.
I didn’t like the direction she took because I had already been there myself. Leda leaned back against the wall, her arms folded across her chest. Her white nightgown peeked out from beneath her ratty scarlet robe. The big toe of her left foot stuck out from a slipper that looked too small by several sizes.
“Do you think she’ll stop you from going to the Samhain Festival?” Camille asked. “It’s tomorrow. I’d be angry if she tried to stop me from going, especially with all the food that’s going to be there. Miss Celia is making pumpkin frosting for her cinnamon buns.”
Attending a feast that celebrated death didn’t sound appealing to me in the first place, not when I fought against my own impending demise every day. I wondered if I could use Miss Mabel as an excuse not to attend.
“I don’t think she’ll try that,” I said, my neck emitting a pop when I tilted back to stare at the sloping ceiling. “Think a bit … bigger.”
“That’s not the only thing to worry about,” Leda said. “Miss Mabel obviously has plans for you. That would scare me more than getting a little angry. Whatever she’s up to is not going to be good.”
“Would she give you a bad grade for no reason?” Camille asked, looking hopeful. A loopy giggle threatened my composure. Miss Mabel worked on a scale ranging from ruthless to inhuman. Grades weren’t her kind of vindictive delight. I wondered if Camille spoke of her biggest fear instead of mine.
“No,” I said as Leda rolled her eyes. “It would be far worse than that.”
“Whatever Miss Mabel ends up doing, you’ll have to be careful,” Leda said. “She’s going to make it hurt.”
Her words were haunting. I pulled my knees to my chest to ward off a sudden chill.
“I know,” I whispered.
We all fell silent, caught up in the ghostly swirls of the unknown future.
I ventured into the classroom the next morning to find Miss Mabel perusing a book. She slammed it shut as I walked in and shot me a smile. Eight or nine stacks of publications sat on my desk and the floor around it, occluding the whole workspace. Seeing my eyes on them, Miss Mabel swept her arm over the piles.
“Your new curriculum,” she said. “Since you did so well on your first mark, I thought we’d jump right into your next one. Don’t worry. I know now that you’re awful at homework, so I’m going to give you a month to read all these. We’ll play off your greater strength of using magic more than books this time.”
The spine of one book read, Contrivance Curses and Their Uses Today. Another book I’d never heard of was called, The Complete Anthology of Dark Curses and Hexes. Confused, I read the titles again to make sure they were correct. Contrivance curses were rooted in a rare kind of magic the Network didn’t allow. Miss Mabel ran her finger down one stack of encyclopedias with a look of innocent detachment.
“I thought you’d like to get the Advanced Curses and Hexes mark.” The tone of her voice suggested that, even if I wasn’t interested, I didn’t have a choice.
“Advanced Curses and Hexes?” I asked before I could stop myself. Another rare mark, one that flirted with lines of appropriateness. Approval to teach it was difficult to gain. I hadn’t known it was an option.
Then again, she had a special in with the High Priest. Her warm bed and base desires could probably get courses far darker than this approved.
“Of course. It’s always good to know how to curse someone, Bianca. One never knows when one might need that skill.”
Her eyes flashed with another little smile.
“I have Network approval?” I asked, just to be contrary. After what I heard last night, I’d snarl and snap my teeth at her if it wouldn’t make her suspicious. It felt good, mixing fear with a bit of courage, making me feel like I stood up to her, when really I depended on her for my life.
“You let me deal with them.” A glint of something in her voice made me feel cold. “You’ll have bigger things to worry about. We’ll start immediately.”
Deal with. Right. That’s why she had the High Priest over last night.
She walked her fingers along several books as she spoke, peering at me over the top of one stack. A book lined with purple leather shot out of a nearby column and fell into my arms. It hit with a thud, taking the wind out of me.
“I want you to read about hexes and complete these papers. When your overview is finished, we’ll start practicing.”
My eyes widened. No one put the Advanced Curses and Hexes mark into action. The normal class practiced a few little hexes but not the higher levels. The potent curses could maim, or not respond to a counter-curse if executed wrong. This situation was escalating into realms best not explored. Even Papa wouldn’t have expected this from me, and he challenged me in everything.
“Practice?” I repeated.
“Yes, of course,” she said. “This is the advanced class, isn’t it? The Network needs witches who understand how and why these curses are used. That way they can track down the people who use them. If you don’t know how they work, how can you be of any use?”
“They practice them in a controlled situation,” I said. Miss Mabel rolled her eyes.
“Yes, well, this is a controlled situation, isn’t it? Now, I suggest you stop questioning my decisions.”
I pretended like I didn’t hear the bite in her tone. Who would I curse? I could think of a few volunteers: Priscilla, Jade, and Stephany to name a few. But no, I wouldn’t even do that to them. So how would I practice? Ignoring my unease, Miss Mabel handed me a scroll of parchment. I suppressed the urge to ask if she could be my test subject, imagining how lovely it would feel to hit her in the face with an eternal wart curse.
“Miss Mabel, can I talk to you about–”
“Memorize these hexes, answer the questions, and prepare to demonstrate them tomorrow morning.”
“Yes, but my–”
“There’s an assigned list of reading on the board. Start on them. Good luck.”
“What about my grandmother?”
The words exploded from my mouth, forcing themselves on her, leaving me speechless in their wake. I waited, my breathing stalled, for her response, looking between her perfect sapphire eyes.
Puzzled, she tilted her head to one side.
“What are you talking about?”
I blinked several times.
“Our agreement said you would free my grandmother from her curse if I got the Esbat mark in three weeks.”
Her expression of innocence was too perfect to be real. When her confused stare deepened, an uneasy feeling began to spread through me, like the slow creep of water.
“Whatever are you talking about?”
“My grandmother’s curse,” I replied, an edge of desperation in my tone. “The contract we signed–”
“Are you talking about your contract with me? Because that doesn’t have anything to do with the Esbat.”
“Yes, it does.”
“Your contract is an agreement to work with me through the duration of your education
here. If you want to take a look at my records, that is all I have in my file.”
“We both signed the agreement to free my grandmother!” I cried. “Here, in the classroom, when we signed the Assistant contract. If you don’t remove the curse, she’ll die!”
I shut my mouth with a snap as realization dawned on me.
Something infinitely stronger than pain.
Her eyes narrowed into devious slits.
“Then bring your copy of this agreement forward, and I’ll have a look at it.”
My heart pounded as she extended her hand, waiting. I didn’t have a copy of the agreement, and she knew it.
“Or you can bring forward a witness that saw both of us sign the contract,” she offered. “We can do it either way.”
The cloying tone of her voice made me sick, and I wanted to throw up. No witness. I had no witness.
Unable to bear it, I looked away and tried to get control of my breathing. No. Of all the things to do, this was the worst of all. I’d never even thought of getting my own copy.
All that work, all those sleepless nights, wasted.
Very angry.
“I guess even the prodigy Bianca can’t anticipate every test. Poor darling, don’t you know that everyone dies eventually?”
It seemed to press on me, the disappointment, horror, and regret. Despite my luck in the past, I managed to fail the most important test.
“Miss Mabel, I don’t–”
“I’ve done you a favor, and one day you’ll thank me. Just let this be a personal reminder you’ll never forget. When you decide to bargain for your own life or others, you should always have a witness. When negotiating, never leave without a signed copy of your own to prove it.”
She drifted to the hall, humming softly.
“Let’s not make any more bargains until you’re in a better position to do so, hmm? Prove yourself by earning the three marks I have planned. We’ll talk about your own life then.”
Panic filled my chest as she disappeared. The purple book fell to the ground, and I followed, landing on my knees, trying without success to calm myself enough to make sense of the situation. As soon as my mind settled, the truth hit with chilling force.
Grandmother’s health would continue to deteriorate until the curse took her life. My failure to anticipate Miss Mabel’s deceitful nature would contribute to my grandmother’s death. Isadora’s aged voice flickered through my mind.
Don’t underestimate her.
Moving as if blind, I groped for my room and shut the door behind me. As soon as I was alone, I pressed my back against the door and slid to the ground.
I buried my face in my hands and let loose the dangerous pressure expanding in my chest. It flowed in a great current of sobs until my shoulders shook and my eyes hurt from pressing my arms into them to try to stop the tears. But it wouldn’t work, so I fell into the solitude and would not be comforted.
30
Samhain
The wet ink seemed to gleam on my letter. I studied it with a sharp feeling of apprehension.
P,
I need to talk to you. Sometime. Sometime soon. It’s very important.
B
The messenger paper flew out the window with a flutter and disappeared into the chilly sky. I stared after it. My words read bare and pathetic, but I didn’t know how else to write. I’d racked my brain all day. Miss Mabel is planning on using me in an evil, nefarious plot, but I don’t know what it is yet or Miss Mabel went back on her word to remove the curse from Grandmother didn’t convey it well. Besides, there was no telling when he would get it or what he could do. Papa should only be a last resort.
Desperation is an ugly thing. I thought, scrutinizing the spot where the paper disappeared. Sorry, Papa. I hope this doesn’t distract you too much.
A squeal from downstairs startled me out of my thoughts. I quickly shut the window and crept to the door, grateful for any distraction. The giggling of first-years wound up the spiral staircase. A draft under the door brought the scent of cinnamon and cloves into my room.
“Bianca! Get out here!”
Camille whispered my name seconds before she grabbed the knob and shoved the door open. It slammed into my nose, sending me backward with a cry.
“Ow!”
Leda quickly spilled into the room next to her and shut the door behind them. Camille dropped to her knees on the floor with me, where I held the end of my nose and tried to clear my watery eyes.
“I’m so sorry, Bianca! I didn’t know you were right there,” Camille said, but her fervor died down in confusion. “Why were you standing right there?”
I waved her flapping hands away and got to my feet. My nose ached, but the stinging had started to subside.
“I thought I heard noises.”
“Sorry, Bianca, I saw it happen after it was too late or I would have stopped her,” Leda said, dropping onto my bed and not appearing all that remorseful. “You really need to decorate. Even I think the bare walls are getting depressing.”
“It’s the Samhain festival,” Camille said, motioning to the door. “We’ve got to go or we’ll miss the judging.”
“Judging?”
“Yes, Michelle helped me make an apple pie for one of her projects. Mine is up against Brianna’s in the Samhain Best of the Feast competition, and I’ve got to win!”
Camille stamped her foot in determination.
“I thought you loved Brianna?” I asked.
“Yes,” she said. “But not when goodies are on the line. I’m going to win! Let’s go.”
“You made a pie?” I asked, skeptical. There were days I wouldn’t trust Camille’s attention span to differentiate sugar and salt appropriately.
“Yes! Now let’s go, or I won’t give you any.”
Which wouldn’t be the worst thing, Leda’s face seemed to say.
Samhain, the yearly feast for the dead. How had I forgotten? I’d seen the decorations every time I went to the dining room for days now. Hollowed out pumpkins littered the school, lighting the way up the stairs with candles sticking out of the middle, and cluttering the tables in the library. Miss Celia made a special wax candle that smelled like allspice when it burned, so the aroma of pumpkin pie permeated the school. Gold foil tablecloths decorated the dining room at breakfast, and the broad green leaves of pumpkin vines grew along every fireplace mantel, twining themselves around the staircases.
“Oh, that’s right,” I said. “I forgot about the feast.”
Camille shot me a look that made it clear she didn’t think that was possible. Who would forget a feast? Leda cast an eye on the piles of books that scattered across my desk, studying Contrivance Curses and Their Use Today with a dark look. She turned her gaze to the floor, fading into her future-searching haze.
“Small wonder you even remember where you are.” Camille looked at the books on my desk. “You’ve got half the library in your closet up here. Now come on!” she tugged on my hand impatiently. “We’ve got to go. If I’m not present I forfeit the reward.”
“What is the reward?”
“Immortal glory and prestige for the rest of my life!”
“A basket of baked goodies to satisfy Camille’s insatiable love for food,” Leda said, earning a proper scowl from Camille, who jerked her away from the pile of books and produced a black crepe hair ribbon as we made it to the bottom of the iron stairs.
“Here,” Camille said, handing it to me. “This will be all you need. At least you’ll be wearing black to welcome the spirits of the dead to our feast on their behalf. No one will care if you’re still in your school clothes. Besides, no one expects you to dress up anyway.”
“They’ll just be happy if you wear shoes,” Leda said with a wry grin. I acted as if I didn’t hear her reference to the first match, grateful she didn’t know about my slip-up at the Esbat.
Leda wore a black dress, similar to Camille’s in style, but obviously different in execution. One sleeve hit the elbow, the other ran to
her wrist. Gaudy black and gold sequins scattered across the front in random array. Camille’s looked more organized, but not by much. The sequins had been traded for large gold beads; the skirt’s layers of sheer material fluttered as she ran down the stairs and came up just a bit too short behind the knee, something Miss Scarlett’s eyes would not miss. I had a feeling the mistake came from poor planning, and not a girlish intent to display her legs. Both dresses had to be Camille’s work, as I doubted Leda cared about something like how to thread a needle when hunger still existed.
“Miss Celia’s already put the crossed brooms above the main door to signal the start of the feast,” Camille said. “We’re late!”
Three second-years on the main stairwell ahead of us wore equally outlandish black dresses, regaled with complicated shawls they had knitted in their free time. One sported a golden tiara. The others wore gold earrings.
“You look great in gold, Leda,” I said, motioning with a cheery grin to the uneven hem of gold ribbon around the edge of her skirt.
Leda glowered at me as only Leda could.
“She does, doesn’t she?” Camille said with a look of pride. “I thought about adding some more, but she said she wouldn’t wear it. I’ve been working on it for days now. It’s part of the reason I’m still failing Geometry.”
The sound of the celebration met us as we descended into the soaring entryway. A few third-years bustled by, slipping out the side door and into the yard in gauzy black dresses sent from home. They didn’t have poor attempts at elegance attached to them, like most of the first-years. Instead, they opted for a more alluring, refined look with sleek skirts and shimmering necklaces, easily upstaging the younger girls. Hundreds of candles floated in the air, illuminating the undersides of the trees that the fading sun couldn’t reach. It created an eerie, death-glow kind of feeling.
Michelle and Rebecca worked with Miss Celia at the tables, frantically setting out all the utensils and plates. Food flew from the kitchen and out to the yard, descending into their appropriate spots. Miss Celia directed them as if they rained from heaven.