Cursed Legacy: The Windhaven Witches Series Carissa Andrews (read along books txt) đ
- Author: Carissa Andrews
Book online «Cursed Legacy: The Windhaven Witches Series Carissa Andrews (read along books txt) đ». Author Carissa Andrews
âYouâve got to be kidding me,â I snicker.
âNot even a little bit,â he says, taking a deep breath and stepping forward. He rests his hands along the sides of my arms and I look down, suddenly acutely aware that everything we see here isnât even real. Our actual bodies are somewhere elseâand theyâre fading. Dominic clears his throat and continues, âYou have powers no necromancer has ever had because youâve been to the other side and returned.â
âAnd you had to bring me here to tell me that?â I say, incredulous. âI learned that a year and a half ago. This is ridiculous.â
âNo, itâs not,â he says, dead serious. âYouâre not just a necromancer, Autumn. Youâve evolved, and you have to figure out how to embrace it so you can break your familyâs curse. Thatâs what this place is telling me. Itâs what everything has been pointing towardâI just couldnât make sense of it.â
âEvolved?â I mutter, clenching my jaw. âInto what, Dominic?â
He inhales, pinching the bridge of his nose. When he looks up, his eyes plead with me as he says, âA sin-eater.â
I canât help it, I actually snort at him. âA what?â
âI didnât make up the name, for crying out loud,â he says, defensively. âLook, I donât know what being a sin-eater entails, I just know you are one. And itâs how youâre going to break the curse. That is what you still want, right?â
âOf course it is,â I snap.
âThen you need to learn to harness it. Whatever you did to evolve, it happened when you were a kid. Maybe thatâs the problem. You wonât listen to meâŠbut maybe youâll take her more seriously,â Dominic says, tipping his chin upward.
I look over my shoulder, confused. Behind me, a little girl with red hair and hazel eyes stares expectantly back at me. The girl is meâor at least, seven year old me.
I turn back to Dominic with wide eyes and a creepy sense of déjà vu taking over me.
âWhen I first saw you back at Windhaven Academy, I couldnât get the words veritas vos liberabit out of my head. You know this,â Dominic says, raising a hand to the ceiling. âBut hereâs the thing⊠I didnât know why. I just knew that you needed the message. Of course, I knew instantly who you were. I knew there were things you didnât know and needed to uncover. But that wasnât what it was all about. Not really.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âNow I understand why. Itâs a helluva lot deeper than your family history. It was about you specifically. About who you really areâwhat you really are and what youâre capable of doing,â he says quietly.
âAnd this revelation only came to you because you âleveled up?ââ I say, shooting a sideways glance toward the little girl behind me. Sheâs still there, waiting patiently.
âYes,â he says, point-blank. âNow, go. Get some answers. Iâll be ready to go back when you are.â
âBut what aboutâ?â I begin.
Dominic shrugs. âThemâs the rules. You gotta get your answers before we can go back.â
I groan, unable to make sense of anything heâs saying. However, thereâs a fierce sense of curiosity and truth vibrating in the energy of the space.
âFine,â I say. Gritting my teeth, I turn back to the little girlâthe younger me.
Wordlessly, she raises her right arm, extending her hand to me. With a final glance at Dominic, I take her hand.
Instantly, the world around me shifts, falling away like a virtual reality thatâs been completely altered. At first, I canât see anything. Itâs like the entire space has been erased and Iâm surrounded by nothing but a beautiful, white light that emanates a sense of peace beyond anything I can comprehend. Yet, Iâm not alone. I can still feel the warmth of a small hand in mine.
As the white light pulls back, Iâm suddenly in a small, dank cavern. Water fills much of the space and it drips from the ceiling, walls, and pools across the bottom of the enclosure. I donât know how I can see, since thereâs no light source anywhere. Yet somehow I can, but I wish I couldnât. Along the far side of the space is a stack of bodiesâall children. All are in various states of decomposition. My body included.
Memories flood back to me and Iâm acutely aware of the fact that this is the place where I died.
I remember the VodnĂkâthe way his demeanor had changed after he got me away from the manor and the safety of my parents. Heâd been so nice, telling me heâd show me a place where the mermaids lived. Iâd believed him because I was trustingâtoo trusting.
The feeling of my soul when he had ripped it from my body, burns through my insides. He had wanted to collect it, stealing it away in his jar as a prize, just as heâd done to countless others.
I hadnât let that happen, though. Something inside me had shifted and grown more powerful by not being bound to my body. It wasnât my time yet and somehow, I knew that. I had tapped into something primal and expandedâbreaking the rules. I refused to go into his container to be a part of his collection.
In that moment of clarity, a man was at my side, entering the cavern by way of his dark, smokey portal. His silver eyes held me like a warm embrace as he took my hand, guiding my soul away from the catastrophe the VodnĂk had created.
Wadeâs father had been thereâheâd been with me the day I died. Heâd guided me to the other side, just as he was meant to. Only, when I got there, I couldnât let go of the intense feeling I couldnât stay. I had to return because I still had work to do.
It wasnât meant to be this wayâŠ
We had sat on the edge of the pond, dangling our feet over the edge of the dock. For
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