How to Stone a Crow (Witch Like a Boss Book 2) Willow Mason (inspiring books for teens .txt) đ
- Author: Willow Mason
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<Why? You want me to answer that so you can twist it to be my fault? Thatâs what you all think, isnât it? I must have done something wrong.> She retreated until her back was hard up against the sofa cushion. <The only thing I did wrong was love my witch when she wasnât worth the trouble. Violetâs the one who did something wrong. Sheâs the one who should be sanctioned.>
âHaving a child whoâs allergic isnât aââ Genevieve broke off as I shook my head. âWhat?â
âSaraâs not allergic to cats. It was a lie.â
<Yes. Because Violet is a liar. A bald-faced liar. She said she wasnât going to touch that treasure. She said finding it was a big mistake and she wouldnât dabble in anything so evil ever again. But she did.>
My spine locked in place with a painful twinge, my shoulders hunching as the muscles tightened into rock. âShe found the treasure?â
<None of them was meant to touch it. They swore an oath they wouldnât. But she couldnât help herself. When Sara was born, the idea came into her dreams and wouldnât let go. I triedâ> Paisley broke off, choking out a sob like it was a large hairball. <I tried to stop her. I pleaded with Carson to stop her, but she put him under a spell. When I went to Jac and Evie, begging them to intervene, it just made everything worse.>
âPaisley.â I waited until the cat looked directly into my face. âWhat was the treasure?â
<An old amulet. He said if you placed it behind his grave, it had the power to make everyone in your life safe. But he lied.> Her head twitched as though caught in a powerful sneeze. <Benedict Kelburn always lied.>
âIf the treasure wasnât what he said, what was it?â
<I think it was a trap. I think he used it to gain dominion over their souls.>
We phoned Carson but he didnât know where such an item would be. âViolet didnât care much for jewellery,â he apologetically told me, as if it were a crime. âBecause of that, I know each piece she did have, inside-out. She just wouldnât have an amulet. She hated wearing anything around her neck.â
He couldnât place it with Evie either and Wes just sounded lost. âIt could be hidden in our stock, somewhere, but I canât think where. Are you sure Jac had it?â
No. I wasnât sure of anything.
<Itâs a lot of trust to place in a cat whoâs lied at just about every turn.>
True, but our options were limited.
âCan you describe it in detail?â I could send out a searching spell but only if I had a clear target in mind. The last thing we needed was to chase over half of Briarton, finding every single amulet in existence.
<There was a crow engraved on the surface,> Paisley eventually managed between fits of panic. <Thatâs part of the Kelburn family crest.>
I stared at my fingertips as they prickled with pins and needles. âThe stone in the cemetery.â The blood drained out of my face, leaving it numb. Iâd touched it. Iâd moved it. Was there a âBad witchâ sign coming for me?
I spun on my heel, running out the door. âWe need to get back there.â
We ran, following the same path as before. Our foot traffic over the past few days had worn it into an easily followed track.
âRemember the days when I didnât know there was a graveyard out back?â I said between pants to Annalisa. âThey were good times.â
<Save your breath,> she warned me as her lithe body streaked ahead. <You might need it when we get there.>
A sobering thought.
âOver here,â Jared called, leading the pack. âWe can cut around the back of the gate and come in from a different angle. If heâs expecting us, that might catch him off guard.â
<Not when youâve yelled it at the top of your lungs to everyone within hearing distance,> Annalisa snarled. <Why donât you just explain our plan in detail to the man?>
As if we had a plan.
Even though we were the length of a rugby field away from the plot, I heard the cawing of birds above our thundering feet, my heaving chest, and the blood pulsing through my ears. One swooped down from behind me, scoring my scalp so blood trickled down my face.
I kept running but held a hand up, warding off another attack.
Andrew greeted us at the gate, howling and screaming warnings in turn. âGet away. The murdererâs here! GET AWAY.â
I would dearly have loved to follow his advice, but I bent nearly double and followed Jaredâs lead, running around the side of the gate. The twisted wrought iron did nothing to disguise us but the overgrown grass sprouting along the edge shielded most of our passage from view.
<The birds are overhead. Youâre not hiding from anything.>
âGroup together,â Patrick shouted. âWe can fend them off easier if we stand in tight formation.â
I wasnât sure the ragged clump we formed counted but I hit out at an attacking bird while Jared stopped another behind me.
âNow what?â
I turned to Genevieve shocked. âYouâre the supreme. Shouldnât you be the one telling us that? How do you destroy a powerful object?â
âFind it first.â She sent out a quick pulse of magic that sent a nearby crow tumbling to the ground. âBefore this lot take us all down.â
Patrick took a talon to the cheek as he dropped his guard. âLook.â
It was hard to when my eyes wanted to hide away from stabbing beaks, but I forced myself to stare around me. Taken individually, the birds were small projectiles, each intent on doing harm. Together, they were starting to take a larger shape. A man, looming over us. King Kong on a muscle training day.
âStop them forming,â I yelled, hitting one bird with my fist, and zagging a line of magic to hit another from the sky. âGet them with your magic. Theyâre more susceptible to it than punching.â
Patrick groaned, then yelled in victory as
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