The Uncanny Raven Winston Read online

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  "He tried." Rafi’s voice carried a hint of amused pride. "He was trying to get the watch, but she beat him."

  "Her years of training have really paid off. Remind me to commend the Portland community." Rafi, an enigmatic grin lighting up his face, shook his head emphatically. "What?"

  "I just told you. She wasn’t trained. I mean, she was, but only for a couple weeks. Before that, she had no idea she was one of us. Think about it," Rafi said, clearly impressed, "barely trained and she beat him. Of course, she had been hopped up on donuts, but it’s still impressive."

  Olivia’s stomach growled at the mention of food. She stood up, flipped open the report cover, and looked at the photo of a lanky, dark-haired white woman. Barely trained and she had survived going toe to toe with the Mauvais.

  "But you said the Mauvais had the watch. That doesn’t sound like she won."

  Rafi’s face beamed like a pre-teen gushing over the latest boy band. "She pulled all the power from the watch into herself. The Mauvais got the watch, but it’s nothing more than a decorative trinket now. He’ll be fuming once he finds out."

  Barely trained and she now held the watch’s power within her. "We need to call her in," Olivia said with grim decisiveness.

  "Are we locking her down or inviting her to work with us?"

  Olivia closed the folder.

  "We'll see."

  1 - HOME DESIGN

  I HATE IT when Fiona looks at me like that. I mean, I expect it from Dr. Dunwiddle, but when Fiona gives you that I’m-so-frustrated-I-could-smack-you glare, you know you’ve screwed up.

  Okay, I admit the book I was supposed to be shelving — hands free, mind you — might have traveled a bit farther than I intended. And, well, there might now be a book-sized hole in Fiona’s wall.

  In my defense, I had offered to put it away using good old Norm muscle power. She's the one who insisted I use my magic to place the book back on the shelf.

  You know when you reach into the fridge and lift up an opaque jug thinking it's full to the brim with orange juice, cashew milk, wine, or whatever liquid suits your fancy? Your muscles prepare themselves to heft a certain amount of weight. So when you lift the jug that your roommate/spouse/child/self put back nearly empty, you end up overdoing it and banging the damn jug right into the top of the fridge while your muscles are shouting, "Hells yes! We are so strong!"

  That’s pretty much what I’ve been doing with my magic these past couple weeks.

  Again, in my defense, the book was really thick and looked like it should have weighed at least six pounds. When I gave it a magical little lift and push…Bam! It went straight through the drywall, through the insulation, then through the siding of Fiona’s schoolroom that makes up most of the ground floor of her house.

  I couldn’t figure out why she was so agitated. I mean, Fiona now had a perfect peekaboo view of Spellbound Patisserie, along with the tantalizing smell of baked goods wafting through her home.

  I also couldn’t figure out why it mattered so much to me that I’d annoyed her. After all, a month ago I wouldn’t have given a flying rat’s fart about upsetting any human on Planet Earth, except for Mr. Wood — my boss at the funeral home where I illegally put makeup on dead people for their final show.

  In fact, I took personal pride in being able to put up someone's hackles against me in less than eight minutes. I was like the rodeo queen of keeping people at a distance. Now, here I stood worried, bothered even, that I’d upset Fiona, one of the few Magics who had shown an enormous amount of patience and understanding with me.

  So far.

  Oh, by the way, while there are supposedly flying cats in MagicLand, there are no flying rats. Although they can be very aerodynamic if you ask them to tuck up their paws while you magically zip them around through the air.

  Probably best if you keep that one from PETA.

  "Really, I think it’s an improvement," I said, looking appreciatively at the damage.

  "Cassie, you put a hole in my wall," Fiona said with controlled matter-of-factness.

  "But now you have the tasty scent of cake filling your home."

  "Since I should really lose a few pounds and ought to stay away from Spellbound’s product line, I don't see how that's a benefit." She almost, almost tapped her toes with impatience, but then seemed to think better of it. Even so, Fiona standing with her hands on her round hips and arms akimbo was a clear sign of her frustration level.

  "Still, when you do get the urge to go, now you can check to see if there’s a line before you head out." As I looked through the hole to demonstrate this excellent new amenity, my heart jumped. Before I could control my mouth, I said, "Look, there's Alastair."

  I blurted this too brightly, trying in some weird way to use good cheer to cover up my confusion over this man. He was one of my instructors. He had known my parents. But he had also known the person who may have killed my parents. And while he had seemed to want to help me in my fight against the Mauvais, something about his involvement that day and his actions in the two weeks leading up to it, left my suspicion systems on high alert.

  Unfortunately, while Team Brain was trying to be analytical about all this, Team Heart stubbornly refused to listen. Even though Alastair couldn’t match a pair of socks to save his life, he was devilishly good looking, he had a shy charm, he had great taste in sweet treats, and my attraction toward him was bulking up like a boneheaded jock who’s chugged too many protein shakes.

  And our class time together wasn’t helping one bit with this confusion. See, the Mauvais — that’s this evil wizard who wants to go all Voldemort on the world — would love to capture me to tap into my magic for his own nefarious purposes. A comforting thought if ever there was one. As such, it was imperative to get me trained in how to protect myself. But I also needed intensive and immediate instruction on how to control my magic since my powers were currently overflowing like a leaky diaper.

  As part of this more rigid, more in-depth training, my lessons with Alastair these past couple of weeks were no longer the back-and-forth banter sessions over cake they had been before my showdown with the Mauvais. They were now physical and focused primarily on defense.

  As with any defense-oriented class, there were plenty of awkward moments of close contact. This close contact also led to a few near kisses, from which Alastair would — after a couple tension-filled seconds — catch himself, fumble his way backward, and launch into some tidbit of magical history no matter how out of context it was for the lesson at hand. All the while, his embarrassment would bring the most adorable sparkle to his eyes…

  Ugh. See how ridiculously enamored I’ve become. Pathetic, right?

  However, in my most recent sessions with Alastair, it seemed he wasn’t jumping back quite so quickly. Which would be fine if I was your run-of-the-mill Magic, but I’m an absorber. That means I can suck away someone else’s magic without even trying. As an absorber, you’re supposed to be taught from a very young age how to tame your abilities so you don’t end up draining your entire neighborhood.

  Thanks to missing out on my magical formative years and thanks to my recent overdose of magic, my absorbing side was running as wild as a lion who’s just escaped from the zoo. Just as it would be dangerous to hang out with that rogue lion, it was risky for any Magic to be near me too long.

  Which meant Alastair’s willingness to spend time with me, and spend that time in close proximity to me, was creating a battle royale between Team Heart’s ever-intensifying crush and Team Brain’s incessant questions regarding his true motives.

  Of course, when I was around Alastair, Team Heart usually won out and all these doubts fell right out of my head. Especially when he would lean in close to adjust my hands into a spell’s proper sequence and his breath on my neck would send goosebumps all down my arm…

  Sorry, where was I? Oh right, I was telling you a story about a hole in a wall.

 
; "Yes, I'm aware Alastair is there," Fiona said, distracting me from drooling as Alastair shifted a square box under his arm. He checked both ways, then darted across the street and headed straight for my remodeling job. Realizing I was staring, I turned away. Fiona had a knowing look on her face. "Look, Cassie, a few people, including Alastair, are coming by. We need to talk."

  "Somehow I don't think the topic is about getting a team together for the Starlight Parade this year," I said, referring to a silly bit of annual fun in the non-magical Portland world.

  "No," she said so crisply you could have topped the word with cheese and served it as a savory snack.

  "Is this about my parents?"

  I can’t tell you how much I wanted her to say yes. Every part of me wanted to find them, wanted news about them, wanted to be reunited with them.

  My parents, who I’d thought abandoned me to a childhood trapped in wickedly nasty foster homes, turned out to be heroes in the magic world. Everyone believed they had died in action, but the Mauvais hinted that they might be alive. As had Dr. Runa Dunwiddle, who is not the kind of person to tell you lies just to boost your mood.

  "No, it’s not, and I know you think we’re not taking the rumors seriously, but it is being looked into. So, please let the matter of your parents be handled by proper investigators. You poking around and playing detective is exactly how the Mauvais will get his hands on you."

  "Then what—?"

  "Hello!" Alastair called through the hole in the wall. At the sight of him, Team Brain responded by tensing my shoulders, while Team Heart did a couple cartwheels in my chest. Welcome to the Infatuation Roller Coaster, everyone. "I like what you've done with the place, Fiona."

  I smiled and raised my eyebrows at Fiona as if to say: See, everyone’s going to love this new, innovative feature in home design.

  In a curt tone, Fiona told him to go around to the front door then focused her stern, green eyes back on me. My smile dropped.

  "That," she pointed to the hole, "is what's going to be discussed."

  2 - TOO MUCH MAGIC

  ONCE INSIDE THE house, Alastair lifted a lemon cake decorated with summer strawberries from the box. Fiona directed him to take it upstairs to her sitting room, telling him we’d join him shortly. With Fiona following, I went into her kitchen to make coffee under her careful scrutiny.

  Thankfully, she was too busy welcoming the no-longer-dead Busby Tenpenny to notice when my Boiling Charm went too far and instantly turned an entire kettle of water into steam. I quickly refilled the appliance and opted to use the on/off switch just like normal people do to heat water for the French press. I then pulled down a tray and arranged five sets of cups and saucers on it, as well as cake plates and forks.

  Without breaking a single thing.

  And let me tell you, that really was a feat to be proud of. See, even though the bones of one of my hands had recently been crushed into a billion pieces, that hand refused to give up its delusions of being functional.

  As such, it kept reaching for things, only to bash into them and send shocks of pain up my arm. It was annoying and embarrassing, but since Dr. Dunwiddle insisted there was no such thing as Skelegro, I was stuck waiting for the hand to heal the old-fashioned way.

  Fiona, apparently not wanting her dishes to go flying through any walls, carried the tray upstairs, where Mr. Tenpenny doled out the treats. Cake and caffeine sorted, I took a seat in an agonizingly-stiff, wooden chair, while Fiona, Dr. Dunwiddle, Alastair, and Busby sat in plush chairs passing judgmental stares over me. Okay, Alastair’s stare was more mischievous than judgey, but the others? Very judgey indeed.

  "I'll get right to it, Cassie," said Fiona just as I’d taken a bite of the cake and was preparing to swoon in strawberry bliss. "You're too powerful and you aren't learning to control it."

  "I am," I said, gulping down my forkful of cake. "I can change a feather into a rock just as quickly as the advanced students."

  "But there's an inconsistency," Fiona insisted. "When you trained with Lola you were able to show excellent control." She was referring to my lessons with Lola LeMieux during which Lola had turned me into her personal Magic Maid service. But I had to agree that even after I’d spent two weeks dusting, vacuuming, and rearranging furniture, Lola’s walls had remained free of any unexpected new openings. "Now, you’re demonstrating no finesse."

  "Look," Dr. Dunwiddle said, cutting me off from muttering my excuses. She used to hate me, but ever since I proved myself against the Mauvais, she had switched gears to only mildly disliking me. "We’re not blaming you."

  "It certainly feels like you’re blaming me," I said, my defensive instincts throwing up a barrier so extensive and sturdy it would have put the Great Wall of China to shame.

  "This isn’t an accusation or implication," said Mr. T, "but you pulled in a great deal of power from the watch when you fought the Mauvais. Your magic levels are off the chart. Since you’re barely trained as it is, the extra strength makes it harder to manage."

  "So, how do I get my magic levels under control? Could you just prescribe me some magic statins," I quipped, and I thought it was a pretty clever quip, but there was Dr. D giving me the stink eye.

  "I feel it's my fault," Alastair said. "After giving her the donuts, I should have stuck by her side when she went to Vivian’s."

  Yes, about that—

  I darted my gaze between my other three interrogators, hoping one of them would ask what I’d been finding myself unable to. Really, why had they not addressed this before?

  Alastair had fed me a heap of donuts on the day he believed I would be coming face to face with the Evil One. In addition to being an absorber, I’m an even rarer Magic who’s also a giver, meaning I can donate magic. Or have it taken from me against my will. Alastair had to have known those sugar bombs would boost both the absorbing and the giving side of my magic.

  So the question remained: Had he given me them to strengthen me for the fight ahead? Or had he hoped the Mauvais would capture me and use my sugar-charged magic to strengthen himself?

  My eyes locked on Mr. Tenpenny’s. I raised my eyebrows in a prodding way. He gave a slight nod.

  "After enhancing Cassie’s magic with sugar, you let her walk into danger. Is that what you intended?" Mr. T said, voicing my own thoughts in his rich, posher-than-the-Queen accent.

  "I did not," replied Alastair, clearly offended. "I wanted her to have an advantage if something happened. I’d planned to be there, but Cassie and the Mauvais found each other first. Fiona, if you recall that day, you’re the one who stopped me to tell me how Cassie’s draining went. Remember how impatient I was?"

  "You could have just said something," Fiona said.

  "I wasn’t certain what you’d think. I mean, I didn’t know Cassie would steal the watch, but I did know she was up to something. I had hoped to keep it between me and her because I didn’t want to stir up trouble for her."

  He stopped and took a sip of tea, watching me over the rim of the cup. The deep blue eyes were now serious, all hint of the earlier mischief gone. "Maybe it was foolish of me, but I thought with a little help from the donuts, she and I could work together to face the problem, but by the time I did get there. Well…"

  He let the sentence trail off, holding back from telling them I was the one who didn’t let him in. I was the one who refused his help, unsure if he’d come to fight with me or against me. "Anyway, she was doing well. When I did get in, I was merely helping finish up what she had started."

  I don’t know, it may be my inability to trust, but this sounded a little weak to me. Still, when Alastair next met my eyes there was sincere apology and maybe a hint of guilt in his look.

  "This is beside the point," said Dr. Dunwiddle. "The sugar in the donuts not only kept her from being able to be fully drained, but it also amplified the power she absorbed from the watch, which would have been a huge dose for even the most capable Ma
gic."

  "So, maybe I just cut back on sugar for a bit," I offered, hating the idea the moment I said it.

  My ability to absorb may have allowed me to pull the trick with the watch, but Dr. D was right, the watch’s power had thrown my magical strength into overdrive. If I’d wanted to, I could have probably sucked up all the magic in the room, swirled it into a tornado, and funneled it into Alastair’s cake box.

  But I had been making a sincere effort in my training over the past couple weeks. Part of this effort stemmed from not wanting the Mauvais to turn me into a rechargeable magic battery, but also because if it turns out Alastair’s not on the side of evil and I do allow myself to succumb to this force between us, it would be nice not to completely de-magic him.