What Remains Bailey Bradford (free ebook novel .TXT) đ
- Author: Bailey Bradford
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âI did that, didnât I?â
It wasnât a question, but Laine still nodded.
âHang on, Miriam, will you? Apparently I busted Laineâs lip when I woke up. Or was asleep. Whichever. Be right back.â Sev was already up and almost to Laine by the time he finished babbling.
Laine lowered the washcloth under Sevâs pointed look and felt a stream of blood trickle down his chin. He swiped at it with the cloth then covered his lip again. âYou didnât do it. I mean, you did, but I should have moved,â Laine said around the wet material.
Sev glared up at him. âI did do it. You not moving doesnât make it your fault. But it was an accident, you know I would never deliberately hurt you. Iâm sorry.â Sev stood on his toes and bussed Laineâs jaw. âForgive me?â
âAlways.â Like Sev even needed to ask. Laine wrapped an arm around Sevâs waist and gave him a hug. âSo, no feeling guilty for either of us?â
Sev stepped back and tapped his chin, his eyes turned up as he looked at the ceiling. âWell, no, but I will quit giving you shit about what you said.â
âThen it was worth it,â Laine said fervently. He took Sevâs hand in his and headed for the bed. He and Sev sat on the edge. âOkay, Miriam, what can you tell us?â
âWell, besides the fact that the two of you are about as sweet as that tea you like, I can tell you it wasnât anyone here who did it, but yes, a spell was definitely cast.â
âHow do you know? I mean, that it wasnât anyone there?â
Miriam harrumphed at Laineâs question. âBecause Vincent and I both are very adept at scrying. And before you ask, yes, I said scrying. Itâs a form of divination thatâwell, it worked, okay? After we discerned that it wasnât Wicca magic used, we had to find out what kind it was.â
Laine looked at Sev who shrugged. âHow many kinds of magic are there?â
âMore than you care to hear about,â Miriam said. âAnyways, Vincent, Chris, Rich and I, along with eight others in the coven, focused our energies. We all felt pulled to four very distinct pointsânorth, south, east and west. A direct line of each, mind you. We split into four groups and each one found the exact spot. Like if I was holding a compassâwell, I was, I stopped exactly when the needle was perfectly aligned to the North. My senses were leading me forward, so we kept walking. The other groups did the same in the other directions. What we found, exactly three-point-three miles outside of town, were four very small but ornate altars.â
âYâall donât use altars?â
âWe do, but these werenât ours. The offerings on the altars wereâŠwell, they werenât anything weâd have used. Nothing illegal, mind you, but things that make me and Vincent certain thereâs a curandero or curandera in or near McKinton.â
Laine looked at Sev. âYou know anything about curanderos?â
âSome, yeah. My grandmother took me to one right after she got me out of the institution. The curandera looked me in the eye and Iâd have sworn she looked all the way into my soul. She murmured some things I didnât understand, then told my grandmother that I was âpreciousâââhe smirkedââand had the gift of communing with the dead. Grandma never doubted me from then on.â
âIf itâs a gift, why would a curandero interfere like this?â
âLaine, not every curandero is good, although the majority are. Thereâs good and bad in all religions and professions,â Miriam pointed out. âAnd the curandero who did this might not think they did anything bad. He or she may see it as aiding lost spirits or some such crap.â Miriam put enough emphasis on the last word that her disgust was patently obvious. âRegardless of the reason, we can undo this. But, I canâtâŠI canât guarantee all the spirits will return. Some might choose to stay where theyâve been sent.â
âConner will come back,â Sev said when Laineâs throat felt too tight to speak. âSo will the others who interact with their loved ones. They hung around after death to be here for us, I donât think theyâll change their minds.â
Sev sounded so sure, but Laine wasnât. Hadnât he thought Conner might want more than just drifting along as a spirit? If Conner had the opportunity to be reborn, have another go at life, why wouldnât he take it? The manâŠspirit, was vivacious and playful, like someone who just enjoyed existing. Wouldnât he enjoy it more in the flesh?
Or maybe he was content to move on to whatever spiritual plane others went to when they died. Damn it, Laine didnât know, but he suddenly had to wonder why Conner would ever choose to come back to Sev and him.
Laine became aware that Miriam wasnât speaking and Sev was looking worriedly at him. He cleared his throat and gave Sev an apologetic look. âIâm sorry, I kind of zoned out there.â He had a feeling, from the way Sev was watching him, that he would have to give a full explanation once Miriam was off the phone.
âItâs okay, I know itâs a lot to take in, but if youâre fine with us moving the blessing to the following night, weâll cast the spell to bring the spirits back tomorrow night instead.â
Sev was nodding eagerly.
âThat will work.â Laine just hoped he and Sev didnât have to learn to live without Conner in their lives when it was all said and done.
âThere is one other thing,â Miriam said with what sounded to Laine like reluctance.
âWhat?â
Miriam was silent so long Laine thought she wasnât going to answer. When she finally did, Laineâs entire body went cold. âI know I said the curandero might have had the best of intentions, but he or she might not have, too. We found a few strands of black hair on each alter, set in melted wax. In caseâŠin case the spell was directed to hurt Severo, I think
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