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to follow her through the kitchen to the utility room. The steel coal chute door, built into the brick exterior wall, had been sealed shut. Now, a washing machine and dryer occupied the place the coal bin would have been years ago.

Nora lowered her voice to a whisper. ā€œJerome told me heā€™d seen a ghost waving a finger at him when he was playing in here one day. Scared him, but not so much that he didnā€™t try to scare me and Charlotte, too, by luring us here, hoping weā€™d see something.ā€ She squeezed between the machines and moved her hands over the bricks, tugged one, and a false front pulled from the wall. ā€œThe ghost was protecting this.ā€ She reached into the cache in the wall and pulled out a book.

ā€œWhat is it?ā€ I asked.

ā€œA book of spells.ā€

Chapter 3

When Nora extended the book toward me, I backed away. The first spell Iā€™d cast, before I understood my gift, had resulted in the death of my best friend. ā€œA spell book? As in ā€˜direct the magic?ā€™ Arenā€™t you the one who taught me magic with intentions comes with unintended consequences?ā€

ā€œI did. The first rule of magic,ā€ Nora told me. ā€œAnd an important reminder for those who donā€™t know how to harness their gifts.ā€

I certainly hadnā€™t known how. After my first spell, Iā€™d stayed far away from anything remotely magical for fear of killing someone else. ā€œIsnā€™t a spell, by its nature, an intention?ā€

She set the book on the washing machine. ā€œWhat else have you learned about the magic?ā€

After a summer of confusion, Iā€™d come to accept the magic was a part of me, and I was a part of the world around meā€”interconnected. Do what you will, but do no harm.

When I didnā€™t answer immediately, the tingling in my head let me know Nora probed my thoughts. ā€œYou saw firsthand what happens when someone intentionally sets out to harm someone else,ā€ she said.

Memories of flames shot up around me. I cleared my throat to dislodge the phantom congestion and wrapped my arms around myself. I struggled to breathe, put out a hand to steady myself.

Someone took hold of my wrist and I let out a startled shriek before I met Noraā€™s eyes, bringing me back to the laundry room. Her lips moved, a silent incantation. Her voice was soft, soothing. ā€œBe here. Now.ā€

The witch Iā€™d come to refer to as that womanā€”I hadnā€™t wanted to know her nameā€”had locked me in my workroom and set it on fireā€”intentional harm. She had died instead. Too often, a random word or a restless night returned me to that day.

I took measured breaths to steady my racing heart. The book of spells was still on the washing machine. My voice croaked. ā€œWhat spells have you invoked?ā€

Nora rubbed my arms. ā€œI cast a spell for protection around you when you were born.ā€

The stubborn ache of being abandoned tugged. ā€œWhy didnā€™t you come for me when my parents died?ā€

ā€œWeā€™ve talked about this,ā€ she said. ā€œJerome didnā€™t tell me your parents had died for two years. From what Jason said, he and your mother had made a pact to keep you from me unless your magic presented itself. Didnā€™t you tell me you did all you could to suppress the magic after you discovered your gifts? I suspect they never knew.ā€

A nervous laugh bubbled up. ā€œApparently Jason knows.ā€

ā€œOnly because you found your way to me.ā€

Another uncomfortable thought pushed its way forward. ā€œDo you think Iā€™m the reason Jason stayed away from home, from Uncle Jeromeā€™s? Because he didnā€™t want to be near a witch?ā€

ā€œYouā€™d have to ask him.ā€

The book rose from the washing machine on its own and floated toward the cache in the wall. Nora grabbed it. ā€œNot quite yet,ā€ she said. She carried the book through the kitchen and to the dining table.

I followed, maintaining a distance between myself and the grimoire. Did I want to know its secrets?

ā€œWe canā€™t know, of course, if Jasonā€™s daughter will inherit the gift, but if she does, youā€™ll need to do your partā€”whether he likes it or not,ā€ Nora said.

ā€œYouā€™re telling me Iā€™ll need to cast a spell to protect her?ā€

ā€œThe book will tell you, when the time comes. Thereā€™s always a chance Jason will come to terms with our legacy before then, but in any event, his daughter will need to be protected from herselfā€”her, or whoever is born into the legacy next.ā€

At times like these, I wished I had the answers, that life was more transparent, more straightforward.

Nora opened the book and a tendril rose from the pagesā€”smoke? Dust? A triquetra, the three circles of a Celtic knot, were drawn on the first page. Reflexively, I covered the bracelet my mother had given me, a pattern of triquetras.

Nora slid a finger under a yellowed page and turned it gently. Letters seemed to crawl from her hand into the book. I held my breath as I watched them spell out my name beneath hers in a sort of family tree. Nora closed her eyes and sighed, then pushed the book toward me.

ā€œItā€™s yours now.ā€

I was tempted to protest, to tell her I didnā€™t know what to do with it, but after the events of this past summer, I knew better.

ā€œHow did you do that?ā€ I asked, running a finger over my name.

ā€œThe books, all of them, are living things. They respond to you. Anticipate what you need. The same way your name wrote itself in this book, a spell will call to you when you need itā€”like with the other grimoires.ā€

I shuddered. This book knew my nameā€”the letters had moved to the page like spiders. ā€œWhy doesnā€™t that reassure me?ā€

Nora laughed. ā€œDonā€™t fret. In all the years Iā€™ve known it was here, Iā€™ve only used it twice.ā€

I turned another brittle page to a drawing of a baby over a neatly written paragraph that read like a nursery rhyme.

ā€œThe first spell,ā€ Nora whispered over my shoulder. ā€œTo protect the daughters when they are born.ā€

ā€œBut

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