Spellcasters

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Book: Spellcasters by Kelley Armstrong Read Free Book Online
Authors: Kelley Armstrong
altar.
    “Paige?”
    Savannah’s whisper sent me a foot into the air. I spun to see her jogging across the lawn.
    “There’s a car circling the block,” she said. “I’ve been watching out the front window.”
    Her eyes were red. Had she been crying? Why did I make such a mess of everything? Before I could apologize, she grabbed my arm and dragged me across the yard.
    As we stepped through the back door, I glimpsed myself in the hall mirror. Blood, vomit, and dirt streaked my face, hands, and kimono. Just then lights flashed through the living room sheers. A car engine died.
    “Oh, God,” I said, staring into the mirror. “I can’t—”
    “I’m clean,” Savannah said. “I’ll answer it. You go wash up.”
    “But—”
    The doorbell rang. Savannah shoved me into the living room. I ducked below window level and ran for the other side of the house.
    Leah hadn’t settled for placing an anonymous call to the station’s overnight answering service. No, she’d called the local sheriff, Ted Fowler, at home, babbling hysterically about strange lights and screams coming from the woods behind my house.
    Fowler had thrown on clothing that looked like it came from his bedroom floor and driven straight over. In reward for his haste, he found the smoldering remains of a Satanic altar a scant ten feet beyond my backyard.
    By dawn my house and yard were crawling with cops. By disposing of the cat corpses, I’d only made things worse. When Fowler saw traces of blood and no bodies, his imagination leaped to the worst possible conclusion. Murder.
    Since East Falls wasn’t equipped to deal with homicide, the state police were called in. On the way, the detectives woke up a judge and got him to sign a search warrant. They arrived shortly before five, and Savannah and I spent the next several hours huddled in my bedroom, alternately answering questions and listening to the sound of strangers tearing apart our home.
    When I heard the oven door open, I remembered the Hand of Glory under the sink. I bolted for the hall, then checked my pace and walked into the kitchen. One officer rifled through my cupboards as another waved some kind of light wand over the contents of my fridge. They glanced at me, but when I didn’t speak, they returned to their work.
    Heart thudding, I waited as the cupboard searcher moved to the cabinets under the counter. When he reached for the sink cupboard, I whispered a spell under my breath. It was a form of cover spell that would distort the appearance of an object. While it wouldn’t have worked on the entire Satanic altar site outside, it would do fine for the wrapped bundle under the sink.
    As he threw open the cupboard, I said the last words and directed the spell at the object to be hidden. Only there was no object there. The hand and the towel were gone. The officer did a cursory search, then closed the cupboard. I hurried back to the bedroom.
    “What did you do with it?” I whispered.
    Savannah looked up from her magazine. “With what?”
    I lowered my voice another notch. “The Hand of Glory.”
    “I moved it.”
    “Good. Thank you. I completely forgot. Where’d you put it?”
    She rolled onto her stomach and returned to her magazine. “Someplace safe.”
    “Ms. Winterbourne?”
    I spun to see the lead detective from the state police in my bedroom doorway.
    “We found cats,” he said.
    “Cats?” I repeated.
    “Three dead cats buried a short distance from the scene.”
    I motioned toward Savannah and lifted a finger to my lips, gesturing that I didn’t want this discussed in front of her. The detective moved to the living room, where several officers were lounging on my sofa and chairs, muddy shoes propped on my antique coffee table. I swallowed my outrage and turned to the detective.
    “So it was cat’s blood?” I said.
    “Apparently, though we’ll run tests to be sure.”
    “Good.”
    “Killing cats might not be on the same scale as murder, but it’s still a serious

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