Cresent Prophecy Axelle Chandler (beach read .txt) đ
- Author: Axelle Chandler
Book online «Cresent Prophecy Axelle Chandler (beach read .txt) đ». Author Axelle Chandler
âI suppose so, but I donât want to leave Ireland.â She shrugged. âOut here is where the history lives, you know? Thereâs a ruined tower house on your doorstep, so it doesnât get any closer than that. I can earn money doinâ somethinâ Iâm interested in and be among history.â
This woman was too good to be true. She was like the ready-made librarian, know-it-all sidekick out of Buffy The Vampire Slayer. The guy who knew everything because of books. Whatâs-his-name. The plot device needed to fill all the holes with his superior book smarts. Just what this story needed!
âIt gets busy in here,â I said, giving her the rundown of what I needed. âDerrydun is a stop on most of the bus tours, so donât let the calm before the storm fool you. I have commitments that sometimes drag me away unexpectedly, so thereâll be times I might have to leave you to manage the place alone. You good with that?â
She shrugged. âSure. Galway is the same with the tour buses, and I donât mind working alone. I like to be busy.â
âAnd weâre strange around here.â
âArenât all the best people?â
I threw my hands up in the air. âYou say all the right things. When can you start?â
âTomorrow?â
âItâs a date!â I declared. âSee you at ten a.m. sharp.â
After seeing Lucy out, I watched her cross the street, pass under the hawthorn growing in the middle of the road, and get into a little blue car parked by Maryâs Teahouse. The tree didnât move, and I frowned.
When Iâd first arrived in Derrydun, Boone told me the hawthorn had bent toward me, its leaves attracted to my magic like a magnet. Iâd almost expected it to reveal something about Lucy as she passed beneath its branches, but not even a breeze stirred its limbs.
I wasnât sure what I was expecting, but it wasnât that. It had been too easy, her walking in here with her stellar resume and boho hippy sheik. She was perfect for the job, and I needed someone to run things when a witchy crisis was in full swing, so why was I all wound up about it? Maybe all this Crescent Witch destiny stuff was making me paranoid.
I shook my head as a big white tour bus came around the bend and began to slowly navigate its way around the hawthorn.
Maybe there was a way to make sure she wasnât a wolf in sheepâs clothing or so to speak. Iâd been attacked by a wolfâwhich were meant to be extinct in Irelandâalmost gutted by a twisted fae with giant claws, escaped a near drowning by a bunch of Sluaghâshadow fae who ate peoplesâ souls for a livingâand almost put myself into a magical coma when I used all of my magic to heal Boone. I was definitely not going to be brought down by an unemployed archaeologist.
I had to be sure. Right? The last Crescent Witch couldnât take any chances, not when the existence of magic hung in the balance.
When I got back to the cottage that night, I retrieved the spell book from underneath the floorboards in the bedroom and brought it downstairs. Sitting on the couchâwith its awful floral and beige color schemeâI began studying the pages.
Lucy was way too good to be true. I had an uneasy feeling, but I wasnât sure if it was my gut talking or the lingering doom and gloom of the battle for magic giving me a complex. There had to be a way to know for sure if she was a fae or under the influence of one.
The spells at the beginning of the book were written in Irish and Latin, the pages were wobbly and brown with age, and the further I went, the clearer the words became. It was a trip through time, though how long ago was anyoneâs guess.
I hoped I would be smart enough to put a spell of my own in there one day. After experiencing the magic I unleashed when I was fighting the craglorn, I knew it was in me. It was just putting it on paper that was the problem. I didnât know which words to use to describe the instinct Iâd used, let alone what kind of spell would be useful. You couldnât teach love. It just was.
The front door opened and banged shut, revealing Boone. He stomped his feet on the mat and kicked off his boots before shuffling into the lounge room.
âAh, here comes the Iron Chef,â I said, hinting I wanted him to cook dinner. It was the only way he was going to get a meal that wasnât microwaved.
âWhatâs an iron chef?â he asked, sitting beside me.
âItâs this show that used to be on one of the TV channels back home,â I explained. âFrom an Asian country, I canât remember which. It was a game show where chefs competed against one another in an arena.â
âWhat did they win?â
âThey won the title of Iron Chef. Duh.â
âThatâs it?â
âWhat do you mean, âthatâs it?ââ I air quoted the last part.
âSurely, they won cash and prizes. I thought that was the point of those programs.â
âSurely, the achievement is worth more than money and a bunch of stuff,â I said with a pout. âDonât mess with Iron Chef. It has a cult following, you know.â
âYouâre weird.â
âIâm weird? Youâre the fox in humanâs clothing.â
Boone puffed out his chest and winked. âAye, I am a bit of a fox if I do say so myself.â
âCan you change into a pig?â I made a face.
âVery funny.â
Turning back to the spell book, I began flicking through the pages again. Tracing my fingers over worn handwriting and diagrams, I tried to piece together a plan.
âWhat are you doinâ?â Boone asked, looking at me like Iâd sprouted a second head.
âI want to see if thereâs a way I can test her,â I muttered.
âTest who for what?â
âLucy.â
âWhoâs Lucy?â
âThe
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