Natural Witch
“Fine.” Ms. Bristol lowered the gun. “I’ll need an offering of your blood. Just a moment.”
“An offering of blood?” Penny asked, stepping out of the way as her mother turned back into the house.
“This ward is to keep out magical species, except for those who give a blood offering,” Emery said, his gaze on the luminous blue eyes of the woman standing across from him. Her tousled brown hair with streaks of reddish-blonde formed a halo around her head. If he hadn’t seen her run over dead bodies, one of which she’d killed herself, he would think her too timid to embark on the journey he knew had just started. He’d worry that she wouldn’t make it out alive, and his offer to protect would fall through.
But he had seen her in action. He had seen that incredible survival magic track a spell like a dog to a scent, and kill the perpetrator on the other end. Brutal and violent, she had greatness in her, both in battle and in magic. Hell, if she’d inherited even a tenth of her mother’s fire, she’d be just fine.
“How did you find me the other night?” he asked, his voice softening, responding to her daintiness without meaning to. She didn’t seem like she’d use that sword dangling from her hands. A mistake in his perception that would likely get him killed one day.
She glanced behind her, probably looking for her mother. Her feet edged toward the door. “It was on my way home.”
“But the detour signs…”
She shrugged. “I was hesitating because I don’t have GPS. Then I saw the magical weave, so I decided to check it out.”
“You can see the actual magic in a spell?”
Her eyebrows knitted. “Yes. Why, isn’t that normal?”
“For me? Yes. For most everyone else, no.”
Her long black lashes fluttered as she looked skyward. “So I’ll be an outcast in this too. Great.”
A smile worked up his face. “At least you know another outcast, though. So that’s something.”
Her face flushed, followed by a hard scowl. “I suppose.”
He laughed because her expressions were so odd. Her scowl deepened.
“What are you so delighted about?” Ms. Bristol said as she trudged back out with a small plate.
“Wait…is that gold?” Penny asked, inching forward to see. Ms. Bristol held it within the line of the ward, her expression hard and set. “Where have you kept all this stuff?”
Emery pulled a small knife from his back pocket and pricked his finger. He smeared red along the offering plate.
“I take it you’ve kept some things from your daughter.” Emery sucked the rest of the blood off his finger.
“I’ve kept everything from my daughter for as long as I possibly could. Being that she is the least curious girl in the state of Washington, and I’ve tried not to leave her home alone, it was surprisingly easy. Until recently.” Ms. Bristol dragged the plate through the ward.
A small spark was the only sign he’d been accepted. He put his hand out slowly and his finger passed through the plane.
“Did you put this up?” Emery asked, putting his hands where the ladies could see them and stepping toward the door.
“Her father did, many years ago,” Ms. Bristol said. “He was looking toward the future, though I don’t think even he could’ve known how bad it would get. He moved us here without disclosing the address to the guild. Their recordkeeping was limited to handwritten files at that time. Easy to misplace. These days, with computerized recordkeeping, that wouldn’t have been possible.” Ms. Bristol stepped back and brought up the gun, the black holes in the barrels staring at his chest. “I’ve kept the ward active. The first ward used to be just a warning, but I amplified it last night as another line of defense. I’m not nearly as good at this type of magic as he was. My gifts lie…elsewhere.”
“Wise,” Emery said, almost missing Penny’s mumbled “Great, more secrets.” He grinned. “Direct me where you want me.” He walked slowly, keeping his hands up, until he reached a plush recliner in a cozy living room. He glanced around him, taking in the large, decently furnished house. This family had money, though they didn’t spend it lavishly. “Was Mr. Bristol employed in a magical field?”
“He was a top-level Sheriff, set to carry out the decree of the Regional, though that title would make a lot more sense if they had expanded like they’d planned.” Ms. Bristol sat opposite Emery on the couch, the gun resting on her lap, but at such an angle that she’d still put a hole in him if she pulled the trigger. “Penny, sit farther away.”
Penny, who had been lowering herself onto the other end of the couch, straightened and moved to the recliner next to it.
Emery swallowed, the prolonged focus of the gun starting to get to him. “He was pretty high up. If I may ask, how did he die?”
“On the job. That’s all they would tell me. I wasn’t in the guild. My craft is too lowly for the likes of them. They don’t release their secrets outside of the organization, not even about a family member’s death.” Ms. Bristol’s face was so hard it could cut granite. “But he’d said things before he died. He was uneasy about some of the laws he was told to uphold. Then he put up these wards and told me to hide our daughter if he should die. Hide her away and never let the guild know of her existence. That was before the accident. He wasn’t a man to get easily riled up. He was mostly calm and placid, like Penny. The most important thing to him was his daughter, so I didn’t hesitate. I did exactly as he asked, but I kept an ear out for any whisperings. The guild grew more corrupt, and I grew more watchful over Penny.”
“My brother was a Regional, trying for a promotion to Baron,” Emery said, the pang of loss cutting him.
Ms. Bristol shifted, and he could see the surprise in her eyes. “That would’ve put him just a step down from the High Chancellor, correct?” He nodded. “He must’ve been powerful.”
“He was a natural. As am I… As is Penny.”
Ms. Bristol sucked a breath through her teeth. It didn’t come back out.
“How did your brother die?” Penny asked into the sudden hush, her voice deep and soft, the pain of loss evident. “Do you know the details?”
“No. Just like you, I only know he died on the job. It’s the details I intend to find out. That, and who ordered it. I know who killed my brother, and he’ll see his judgment, but I want the initiator as well.”
“You don’t think it was the High Chancellor?” Ms. Bristol asked.
Emery shook his head, rage burning in his gut. “I’ve ruled him out. He wants to bring me in alive. He wants my power at his disposal, though he’d try to reset my mind through torture or shock therapy. I can only guess he would’ve wanted the same from my brother. No, he wouldn’t have ordered my brother killed.”
“So who does that leave with enough clout?” Ms. Bristol asked.
He ran his fingers through his hair. “A Baron or a Regional would’ve had the power to order it. And only they could’ve prevented an in-depth investigation afterward.”
“My late husband didn’t get an investigation at all,” Ms. Bristol spat out. A few seconds of concentrated blinking cleared the sudden gloss over her eyes.
Emery nodded solemnly. “He is far from the only one. He had some status, but that only goes so far.”
She nodded, blinking quickly again. The sudden emotion didn’t show in her voice when she said, “You want to find those responsible. Fine. If I didn’t have a daughter, I might’ve fixated on revenge too. But then what?”
“I kill them.”
Her lids drooped and her eyes turned dull, indicating she’d known that, and he was wasting her time. She was a hard woman. “How will that change your future? Anyone you kill will simply be replaced with someone just as corrupt. And it will increase their motivation to bring you in.”
“They’ll never find me.”
“And you’ll never have any peace knowing that they won’t stop looking.”
He stared at her with an open mouth. She was right. He’d been so focused on avenging his brother that he hadn’t thought much of the life beyond.
“You are shortsighted and ill-prepared. You plan to march right into the demon’s nest, without an exit plan, or even a plan at all, and you think you’ll somehow protect my daughter at the same time?”
Each of her words felt like a bludgeon to his head. He had no idea how she did it, but it was extremely effective.
A very hard woman. He felt a little sorry for Penny.
He tried to find a better answer than “Yes?” but failed. He half wished she’d just pull the trigger now and put him out of his misery.
She shook her head and sighed, her body bowing in the process. “I wish you well in your journey, but you’re an idiot and no way will I trust you with my daughter.”
Black fog drifted through the space between them, showing him what danger was to come: Ms. Bristol would put her gun aside and stand. While she showed him out of the house, Penny would stand behind her mother, her eyes pleading. Her voice mute.
The fog cleared, and the scene was as before.