Bewitched (Bewitched, #1)(50)
My stomach twists with unease. Twelve days to figure something out before I officially go into debt.
I scrub my face, feeling lost.
There was something though, wasn’t there? Some solution to fix this?
What was it?
I grab my school bag from where it lay and dig through it. When my hand closes over my journal, I pull it out and flip through the last several pages of information.
My eyes flick over assignments, schedules, handwritten directions, and descriptions of locations.
Not that, or that, or that.
Am I misremembering?
On the next page I turn to, a piece of paper flutters out.
I catch it, then flip it over in my hand.
Kasey
Beneath the name is a phone number, and beneath that, in my own handwriting, is an additional message.
Offer to join a spell circle.
$500 gig
Seems shady and is probably a bad idea. Skip unless desperate for cash.
I don’t remember writing this note, and I can’t quite grasp the memory it came from, but the name Kasey…I think I know which witch that is.
I worry my teeth over my lower lip, my intuition rioting at the thought of participating in anything shady. Entanglements like that have stripped other witches of their coven affiliation.
I glance at my bank account one more time before I decide.
I can look for a job, a student loan, or a grant to cover my needs in the future. But in the meantime…
I enter the number into my phone and send a text.
I want to attend the spell circle.
CHAPTER 22
Witches party. A lot. Normally, I’m all for that.
Tonight I’m not.
“Sybil, you cannot be serious,” I say when I enter her room in the evening. She’s already pulled on a sequined minidress that changes color depending on which direction you smooth out the sequins. It’s the kind of outfit that begs for hands to touch it.
“Witches are getting murdered on campus grounds after hours,” I say. Already, I heard talk that the coven is thinking of imposing a curfew.
She glances up at me, holding an eyeshadow palette and brush in her hand. Her gaze slides over my lounge pants and loose shirt. “Why aren’t you dressed? I texted you about the party hours ago.”
“Because it’s not safe,” I say slowly. It’s been three nights since I found Andrea, the witch who was murdered in the woods. She’d been unaffiliated with any known coven, simply moving through the area.
Still, her name will be burned into my memory until my magic takes it.
Sybil blows out a breath. “Did you see anyone when you came down to my room?” she asks out of nowhere.
My brows come together. “What does that have to do with anything?”
“Did you?” she presses.
I shake my head.
“Did you hear anyone when you were walking through our house?”
My brows furrow further. “Why does that even matter—?”
“The rest of our housemates are already at the party, which yes, is across the Everwoods on lycanthrope territory, and yes, the world is a dangerous place, but the world has always been a dangerous place for witches, Selene.”
Other witches were already out in those woods? The thought chills my blood. Why is no one else taking this seriously?
Sybil continues. “The Marin Pack is patrolling the forest, and the coven’s head witches have cast protective wards on the area. Whoever is killing witches would be unable to hurt any witch without the entire coven and the shifters knowing.
“Besides,” she throws in casually, “they’re saying the women weren’t killed in the woods, just moved there.”
A shiver wracks my body.
As if that’s much better.
“And you’re going to walk through those woods alone?” I ask.
“Goddess, Selene, I was going to walk over with you, but I can find another witch to head over with if you’re not coming.”
Hell will freeze over before I let my best friend travel across those woods with some random housemate who may not be looking out for her the way I will.
Even if it gets me freaking murdered in the process.
I blow out a breath. “Fine,” I say, “I’ll come along, but only so you don’t get yourself killed in your quest to get drunk and laid.”
Sybil lets out an excited squeal. “You’re not going to regret it.”
I highly doubt that.
“Pretty sure the people who invented heels were fans of waterboarding, iron maidens, and the Spanish Inquisition,” I mutter as I pull on a thigh-high boot from Sybil’s closet. I wear a deep-blue minidress with exaggerated bell sleeves. “And I’m the loser who’s wearing them,” I continue, “all so I can drink cheap booze and make poor decisions.”
“My goddess, Selene, stop channeling your inner eighty-two-year-old and cut loose a little.”
I make a face as I pull the other boot on. “My inner eighty-two-year-old has figured some things out,” I retort.
“Don’t you want to see the werewolves’ territory?”
Not really.
“Plus, Kane is going to be there—”