Born in Fire (Page 44)

“I’m going to cut through that spell, bust into the house, and see what happens.” I patted my weapons. They were all present and accounted for.

“That’s it? Just take it as it comes?” Callie asked.

“Yup. That’s the thing with criminals—when they get cornered they’re more violent and largely unpredictable. I’m usually the one who corners them, so…”

“She wasn’t knocking your style,” Dizzy whispered. “She’s excited. I would like to say, however, that I do not like this plan. It’s not my style at all.”

“Are you ready, Dizzy?” Callie asked.

“No.”

“That’s his yes.” Callie nudged me. “Let’s go. We need to analyze that spell as you cut through it. It wouldn’t hurt to get more acquainted with your magic, either.”

“This is crazy,” I said, looking around the empty lane in front of the house. It was deep into the night. “Having you along is crazy.”

“Yes,” Dizzy affirmed.

“He means no, it’s not. C’mon.” Callie nudged me again.

“You two have some serious consent issues with each other.” Taking a deep breath, I stalked forward and pulled out my sword, staring at the blackened windows, the drawn shades. My pouch was open at my waist, carrying all the spells I could fit in it, including the essentials for which Callie and Dizzy had refused compensation.

“Okay, here we go,” I whispered, hoping the other two could hear me.

The vibration of magic buzzed through my veins as I neared the hedge. Getting closer, I identified two different spells. The walkway to the front door was protected by the same block that had closed off the path to the unicorns’ island. This one was weaker in power.

I moved to the hedge, feeling that spell out. Less power still, cast by a different mage lacking finesse and an understanding of the craft. It was piecemeal, almost, like someone not very focused had muddled their way through the incantation.

“These people are still learning their craft,” Callie whispered as she walked closer.

“Get back,” I seethed, motioning her away. “Someone is liable to jump out. You never know.”

“Oh, hush.” She pushed me aside and opened her hand, revealing a small handful of herbs. Though she didn’t utter any words, the small mixture puffed up purple smoke. It grew into a sort of fog and drifted toward the spell, filling in the narrow opening. She wiped off her hand before digging some leaves out of her satchel. “Crush and blow, dear.” She handed them to Dizzy, who’d walked up behind her in a hunch. “Crush and blow.”

Dizzy took what was offered and, visibly shaking, crunched up the leaves in his fist. Also without muttering any words, he flung the leaves at the lingering purple haze. The two spells merged and started to circle, the leaves caught in a whirlwind, turning around and around. The swirling haze gradually turned orange, and then violet, before lightening to a pastel pink. A blast of light soundlessly filled the gap in the hedge before rocketing ten feet into the air. Slowly, it fizzled out. The magic within vanished with it, not even leaving a residue.

“Wow. That’s handy,” I whispered.

“You have the power, you just need the education,” Callie said, turning toward the hedge.

“I meant, handy if you aren’t me.” I grinned and barely stopped myself from powering up my blade. I’d almost forgotten that I didn’t have to do that anymore. I stabbed forward, piercing the middle of the other spell. It frayed. Too easy.

“Get back!” I yelled, leaping over the hedge.

The door burst open and a green blast shot out, too far right. Another came right for me. I slashed at it, breaking it apart as though it were paper. He shifted, which was when I saw the staff pointed toward me.

Who was this guy, Gandalf?

I threw on the brakes and dove to the side as a rush of air barely missed my arm. Hopping up, I was readying for the next spell projectile when a bolt of lightning struck down from the sky. It let out a boom as it hit the mage, spitting light and electricity. He convulsed where he stood and dropped the staff, which blasted out another rush of air. It hit the hedge and frosted it over. His body fell, smoke rising from his burning hair.

“Holy sugar tits, Batman,” I said, out of breath and looking skyward. When I glanced back, Callie had a huge grin on her face. Dizzy burped like he might be close to throwing up, but he shot me a weary thumbs-up. “It’d be worth learning magic just for that,” I muttered.

I eyed the door but ran alongside the house instead. If there were others in that house, they were waiting for my grand entrance.

I stopped down a ways and dug out one of the extremely volatile spells I’d lifted from John. After placing it by the wall, I picked up a rock and threw it on the casing. The spell exploded, releasing darts of red as it did so. Bricks spat out in every direction, melting once they hit the ground. I cut through the aftershock of useless magic unable to take shape—he’d missed the second half of that spell—feeling a disturbing prickle along my skin. Ignoring it, and hoping that decision wasn’t a really bad move, I launched into the house, sword in hand.

Two guys were staggering up from beside the front door.

“Surprise!” I yelled as I threw a casing. It hit between the two and roared to life, crackling and sputtering acid. One of the mages jerked away and screamed, the thing in his hand falling to the ground. Whatever it was started clawing up him, freezing his leg in place as it did so.

The other mage already had a casing broken and ready, and he shot a hex toward me. I dropped like a stone, hitting the ground and rolling to the side. The spell splatted against the back wall and ballooned into a bubble before freezing solid.

So, they’d not only expected me, they were trying to capture me.

Fat chance.

I flung out a capsule filled with black powder—I didn’t just fight with magic. It hit the man and fell uselessly to the ground. He laughed like a moron and dug in his pocket. I threw two more spells, aimed at their feet.

“Women can’t do magic,” his pal said, cackling. They were both loony-tunes.

The first had another spell out. He crushed it between his fingers, a slick smile on his face. He thought he was really good at this magicking stuff, I could tell.

The house started to rumble. The walls shook.

Crap, maybe he was right.

Like a dart, green shot out from between his fingers. Unfazed, I quickly cut it out of the air and waited for what came next. The structure around me screamed. Fissure lines cut through the paint on the walls.

The two spells I’d rolled released, purposefully delayed. Flames spurted out, lashing the more active mage’s legs with heat. It ignited the black powder, which exploded. His feet flew out from under him as the house roared around us.

Heart in my throat—the power was way greater than this dopey pair should be capable of—I ran out of the hole I’d created in the wall. I had to get Callie and Dizzy to safety before I came back and figured out how to beat this surge of power. There had to be someone else pulling the magical strings.

Bricks ground into each other.

“Get clear,” Callie shouted from somewhere behind the hedge.

“You get clear,” I yelled back, running at them. “Get out of here. I’ll handle it.”

A groan sounded right before an enormous crash. The walls blew out the side of the house, and part of it flattened, like a giant hand had swatted it down.

I dove behind the hedge. Bricks flew over and rolled along the ground. I belatedly realized that a wall of magic buffered the hedge, keeping the bricks from shooting through it.

I saw two pairs of lit-up green goggles fifteen feet away—the Bankses. Like usual, they were arguing about something.

“Are you guys okay?” I asked, army-crawling to them.

“Are you okay?” they replied, speaking together.

“Yeah. Thanks for the magical wall.” I drew up next to them but didn’t rise off my belly. “Duck. Get your head down.”

“I told him you’d get clear,” Callie said.

“It was too close. We should’ve told her we were using that one,” Dizzy replied angrily.

“We didn’t even know we were going to use it; how could we have told her?” Callie said.

I peeked up over the greenery, surveying the ruined residence. That was when what they were saying sank in. Well, that and the fact that the house had been flattened right where the mages were standing.

“You guys did this?” I asked, more than a little in awe. I’d never seen anything like it, not on such a large scale.

Callie’s head came around, her state-of-the-art, badass goggles not matching the pink velvet sweats—she’d refused to change, wanting to be comfortable in the battle. “Of course. Now hurry, make sure we got everyone.” She turned back to Dizzy. “We gave them far too much warning.”

“It’s ten square feet of a house!”

“Still, we should—”

I didn’t wait around. I hopped up and ran around the non-flattened area, feeling clunky spells meant to either keep people out or warn of intruders. On the other side, I ran past a shed, waiting for something to surge out after me. Nothing happened. Further on, at the rear portion of the flattened area, I spied two legs sticking out of the rubble. He’d been at a back door, or maybe he’d been trying to get free. Either way, he hadn’t made it out.