Crescent Legacy Nicole Taylor (top young adult novels .TXT) đ
- Author: Nicole Taylor
Book online «Crescent Legacy Nicole Taylor (top young adult novels .TXT) đ». Author Nicole Taylor
âSo when you came backâŠâ
âI was takinâ a stab in the dark. I knew all the piecesâin that, our stories differâbut controllinâ what Iâd spent a lifetime rebellinâ against wasnât easy.â
I opened my mouth to say âyou didnât have Carman breathing down your neck,â but it was just another excuse. Iâd been full of them since sheâd turned up last night. Coming back from the dead was a huge thing, and here I was just waiting to dump all my crap on her head. I finally had a mother, but it didnât mean I had to regress twenty years into adolescence. Besides, she said it herself. I was the head of the coven now. I guess that meant I had to act like I knew what I was doing at least some of the time.
I sighed and rubbed my finger over the condensation on the side of the pizza box.
âThe worst was knowinâ I wasnât there when they needed me most,â she added. âGuilt held me back for a long time.â
What did I say to that? The Nightshade Witches had burned our family alive while she was living in Australia and raising a family. Who knew what wouldâve happened if sheâd remained. Aileen was right about all the what-ifs. All we had was now.
âWe canât afford to wait anymore,â Aileen said. âNow Iâm back, itâs only a matter of time before Carman finds out. We have the element of surprise.â
She was right. If Carman knew Aileen was here, she would alter her plans to compensate, and we would lose the only advantage we had.
âRight, down to business then?â I asked.
âIâd love to have more time with you, but magical apocalypses and all.â
âMaybe after, we couldâŠâ I shrugged.
âWeâre goinâ to kick her witch ass,â Aileen declared. âBut we have to have a plan.â
âAny ideas? Because that stabbing in the dark thingâŠâ
âWe need to lure her here.â
âWhat?â I shot to my feet, the chair almost falling over. âYou do know if she gets to the hawthorn, itâs game over. Kaput.â I dragged my finger across my neck. âCurtains for the Crescents!â
âWe canât leave Derrydun, Skye. Without anyone guardinâ the hawthorn, everyone will be in danger.â
âWhatâs stopping her from breaking into any of the hundreds of hawthorn trees over Ireland, anyway?â
âTheyâre all sealed.â
âI know that but why ours? Itâs where the spell was cast, wasnât it?â
Aileen nodded. âCrescent spell, Crescent hawthorn. Weâve got the master key flowinâ in our veins. The network has to originate from somewhere, and itâs that tree out in the forest.â
âThen we have to lure Carman here and not fail. EasyâŠnot.â
I had no idea how we were going to do that. I hoped Aileen had some aces up her sleeve because my suggestion was to troll Carman on Facebook. Somehow, I didnât think the thousand-year-old witch had a profile.
âIf we take out Carman, the rest will fall,â she added.
My mouth dropped open. âSo the fae who follow her, her sons, her powerâŠâ
âItâs all linked to her.â
âThat makes things a little easier.â
âSheâll be heavily guardedâŠand warded, so no. Not so easy.â
âAnd Boone?â
Aileen ignored me, which signaled the answer wasnât a good one, crossed the kitchen and peered out the window. âWe have another problem to deal with first.â
âWe have more problems?â I wailed.
âI canât go out there,â she stated, pointing to the outside world. âTheyâll think Iâm a zombie.â
âYouâll have to come out of the closet eventually,â I said. âYou canât hide in here the rest of your life. I should call Mairead.â
âMairead? What about Mairead?â
âUhâŠâ Iâd left that part out, too, about the kidnapping and the disclosure.
âSkyeâŠâ
âI, uh⊠There was an incident with a talisman and a van with tinted windows, a kidnapping, and Mairead dropped out of Trinity. Then there was a thing with her managing Irish Moon and wanting to be an artist. Oh! And her parents disowned her, so she lived with me for a while, then they made up, and she put barcodes on all the stuff in the shop, and here we are.â I picked up the frozen pizza. âHungry?â
âSkye!â Aileen exclaimed. âIn all my lifeâŠâ
I winced. âAm I grounded?â
Chapter 16
I raced out of the cottage, acting a sight more spritely than I was feeling. I was running on fumes, fueled by adrenaline, powered by life or death. I leaped over the garden bed, commando rolled over the low stone fence, fell on my ass, and then catapulted toward the main street like I was competing in the Olympics.
Rounding the corner, I weaved around a startled Father OâDonegal, who shook his fist at me as I went, hurdled over a pile of donkey poop, then landed on the doormat in front of Irish Moon like a long jumper landing in a sandpit. New world record! Someone play the national anthem!
âMairead!â I shrieked, barging into the shop.
âGive it a rest,â the Goth girl grumbled, emerging from underneath the counter.
âWhat are you doing under there?â
âIâm hungover.â
Skipping the lecture on the dangers of binge drinking and brain cells, I grasped her shoulders and shook. Her head flopped back and forth, and her scowl deepened.
âWhat part of hungover didnât you understand?â she declared, swatting my hands away.
âIâve got news!â I chortled. âBig news! Humungous, ginormous, elephant-sized news!â I flung my arms wide.
âAre you on drugs?â
âAm IâŠâ I pouted and turned my face to the side. âWhy, I never!â
She rolled her eyes and blew a strand of hair off her face.
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