Spells Trouble Kristin Cast (a court of thorns and roses ebook free TXT) đ
- Author: Kristin Cast
Book online «Spells Trouble Kristin Cast (a court of thorns and roses ebook free TXT) đ». Author Kristin Cast
âEm, Iâm so sorry. Is your mom any better?â Mercy balanced the phone on her shoulder while she rinsed the pot sheâd used to make the cocoa.
âAbsolutely not. Meemaw and Peepaw canât make it to the funeral, even though it wonât be for four more days. Theyâre on a Greek island cruise and said something about not being able to get a flight out from any of their ports of call. Mom thinks thatâs bullshit, and I have to agree. But, Mag, the truth is they never liked Dad, and they hate his parents. Plus, you know my parentsâ marriage hasnât exactly been goodânot that that matters to Mom right now. Sheâs, like, totally broken, Mag. She keeps talking about everything she shouldâve and shouldnât have said to Dad. And then she cries so hard I swear I think sheâs going to puke. Itâs awful.â Emily paused to sob softly and then blew her nose. âSorry.â
âHey, take your time. Iâm totally here for you.â
âThanks.â Emily sighed deeply. âSo, Mom only left her bed when Grandma got here, and when Grandma ignored her and started cooking Mom retreated back to her bedroom and the bottle of pills the doc gave her.â
âCan I please come get you? Even for just an hour or so? I made hot chocolate. I could add some witchy herbs to it to help you relax.â Mercy put the pot in the dishwasher and cringed as it clanked noisily against a plateâthough Em didnât seem to notice.
âRelax?â Emilyâs laughter was filled with sarcasm. âI canât relax. Iâm the only one holding it together. I had to answer, like, a zillion funeral questions todayâincluding stuff about Dadâs casket. Jesus.â
âBloody hell, Em, canât the adults do that? You have a house full of them.â
âOh hell no. My house is filled with old people who are barely functioning. I swear if I wasnât here Dad would be on a slab in the morgue for fucking ever.â She sobbed brokenly into the phone. âWilson keeps asking me what Dad would want.â
âWilson? Isnât he just a first-year apprentice?â Mercy was sure she remembered that he was fresh out of college. Em liked to say he still looked like a very gawky, zitty teenager. âHowâs it okay that heâs running the funeral home?â
âOh, heâs not really. Mr. Burton, from Sunset Funeral Home in Champaign, is really in charge, but Wilson keeps calling me and asking me details about Dadâs service. How do I know what my father, who was murdered when he was thirty-nine years old, wanted when he died? Itâs not like he chatted with his sixteen-year-old daughter about his fucking funeral arrangements!â
Mercy wiped her hand on a dish towel and felt sad and sick and angry all at the same time for her friend. âEm, just tell Wilson to figure it out by himself!â
âI c-canât.â Emily sniffled. âSomeone has to at least try to do what Dad would want, and I seem to be the only somebody who cares.â She started sobbing again.
âOh, Em. Iâm so sorry. I love you so much. I wish I could do somethingâanything.â
âYou can.â Emily blew her nose. âKeep texting me. Even if I donât answer. Just being here for me is everything.â
Mercy heard a womanâs voice calling Emilyâs name.
âI gotta go. Grandma wants me to taste something. Again. Itâs disgusting, Mag. Everything she cooks has way too much salt in itâlike it was made with tears.â
Mercy didnât know what else to say except, âI love you, Emily Parrott.â
âYou, too, Mag.â And the cell went dead.
Mercy walked around the corner from the kitchen. Hunter and Xena raised mirrored brows at her.
âNo way she can do it.â Mercy sat between them as she let out a long, disgusted exhalation. âI knew Emâs mom was a flake. Not just because sheâs from that super rich family from New York and she always seemed to be looking down her nose at the rest of us, but because she was never here. I liked her dad a lot better. I mean, he forgot thingsâlike school stuff.â
âAnd her birthday,â Hunter added.
Xena hissed sharply and said, âThere is never any excuse for forgetting a kittenâs date of birth.â
âYeah, all of that, but he was a nice man. And he told Em he was proud of herâa lot. But her momâs family isnât even coming back for the funeralâwankers.â
âThatâs awful,â said Hunter.
âHer dadâs parents are here now, but they wonât speak to her mom and theyâre so wrapped up in their own grief that theyâre not helping Em at all. You guys, sheâs having to make all the decisions for her dadâs funeral.â
âOh! Poor kitten! Will she not escape to us?â
Mercy shook her head. âNo. She feels like sheâs the only adult in the house.â Mercy met her sisterâs turquoise gaze. âH, itâs going to have to be Kirk.â
Xena growled.
âBloody hell, Xena, stop!â Mercy told the cat person, who cringed back like she was afraid Mercy would swat at her. Mercy rubbed a hand across her face. âIâm sorry, Xena. I shouldnât have yelled at you like that.â Then she turned to her sister. âSeriously, H, if you can think of anyone else who already knows weâre witchesâand I mean real witchesâand who we can trust, Iâll totally go with you to talk to her, or him. Do you?â
âIâve already thought about it. I considered Heather.â
âHeather? As in the president of the drama club?â
Hunter nodded. âYeah. Remember a few Samhains ago she came by and asked Mom for some Wiccan tips because she wanted to write a modern version of Macbeth and make the witches draw down the moon?â
âI remember,â Mercy said. âI also remember she kept talking over Abigail the whole time she was explaining the points of a pentagram to her. Heather is one of the most arrogant people I know.â
âActually that would be Kirk,â muttered Xena
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