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Treasures, Demons, and Other Black Magic
Treasures, Demons, and Other Black Magic Read online
Contents
Title Page
Introduction
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Promo page
Copyright
Treasures, Demons, and Other Black Magic
- Dowser #3 -
Meghan Ciana Doidge
Published by Old Man in the CrossWalk Productions
Vancouver, BC, Canada
www.oldmaninthecrosswalk.com
I hadn’t set foot in the human world for more than a few hours in over three and a half months. Sure, I was stronger and faster than I’d ever been before, and I had a shiny new sword, but I was seriously chocolate deprived. I don’t recommend quitting cold turkey. And the new sword was a problem — to my mind, anyway. It represented all the expectations of a powerful father and a new otherworldly life. A life that wasn’t the one I’d worked so hard to build. It also represented the responsibility I had to bring my foster sister Sienna to … what? Justice? I didn’t know if that was even possible. What I did know was that Sienna wouldn’t stop, and that I couldn’t just leave everything up to fate and destiny … or maybe I was. Maybe I was doing exactly what I was supposed to be doing. If you believed in that sort of thing.
I just hoped that before the chaos and mayhem renewed, I’d manage to get my hands on some chocolate. It didn’t even have to be single-origin Madagascar. I was utterly prepared to lower my standards.
CHAPTER ONE
With one hand on the invisible knife at my hip and one hand twined through the wedding ring charms on my necklace, I stepped out from the golden magic of the portal onto the shores of Loch More. Yeah, Loch More, as in Scotland.
The ground underneath my feet thrummed with wild magic and untapped power. Supposedly, all the grid points around the globe — where natural magic reigned — teemed this way. Too many thousands of years ago for me to comprehend the guardian dragons set up a network of portals anchored at these points. I gathered the portals were rather helpful when it came to saving the world, which the guardians did constantly.
Thankfully such responsibility wasn’t my duty. No, my focus was much more personal.
I drew a little more of the shielding magic from my necklace, and the hair on the back of my neck settled. I unclenched my teeth. The land around me glowed — I could see for miles in all directions — but not with any specific color of magic. Rather, all the natural hues of the earth were intensified. I could actually see magic in the air I breathed.
I’d expected snow, seeing as it was the first week of November, but there wasn’t any. I wondered if that was like people who didn’t know Vancouver expecting it to snow there all the time, which it hardly ever did. Unlike the rest of Canada.
The sun was low in the sky. I’d misjudged the time, which reminded me I also wasn’t sure of the exact date, though I’d tried to keep a rough calendar based on my infrequent calls home. My sleep schedule was erratic, now dictated by exhaustion rather than the rotation of the earth.
Time moved oddly in the dragon nexus. At least three and a half months had passed while I’d trained, studied, and pretty much did anything to avoid the fate waiting for me in the Sea Lion Caves, but it felt like more and less all at the same time. I supposed that was what destiny felt like … or was that inevitability?
Memories of the terror my sister Sienna had created in the caves along the Oregon coast — which, ironically, were a tourist attraction for some people — had melded over the past months with the bloody vision that Chi Wen, the far seer, had shared with me. A vision that showed my loved ones slaughtered on an altar. A vision that had stopped me from following Desmond and Kett back through the portal and kept me training like a woman fueled by vengeance. A vision, mixed with a memory, that had me formulating a plan.
The portal snapped shut behind me, leaving me alone for the first time in a very long time. Maybe as alone as I’d ever been. That was an odd thought.
Anyway, to the point. The shores of Loch More looked like any other lake surrounded by rolling green hills in the late afternoon light of a sunny, crisp day. So pretty. A really, really vibrant green, and seemingly in the middle of nowhere.
Actually, this was the middle of nowhere. It was my second visit. I was seriously glad to see the empty pickup truck parked about a dozen feet away at the edge of the single-lane dirt road. I really hoped it wasn’t a standard shift. I might have forgotten to include that specification in my request. Yeah, look at me, Miss Plan-And-All-That.
I took a step toward the truck, my supple leather knee-high boots crunching the grass. It was obviously colder than I thought it would be. I could have put a jacket on over my leather getup, if only for show. Though to get my hands on a jacket, I’d have to seek out humans, and that was contrary to the objective of this brief excursion. I wasn’t interested in getting into a situation where Chi Wen’s horrific vision of the future had a chance to manifest. I was dodging destiny today … and caves … and loved ones for that matter.
So yeah, a jacket would have been a good idea. The dragons believed in training — and fighting, actually — in laced leathers. If I’d tried to change before leaving, I would have tipped my hand. Thankfully, I still had my trusty Matt & Nat satchel. My katana — a gift from my father — nestled between my shoulder blades where I wore it slung across my back. The two-handed, single-edged sword was easily accessible over my right shoulder. Its twenty-eight-inch blade was deadly sharp. The sword had been commissioned specifically for me — well, the alchemist part of me — and created as an empty vessel into which I could channel and store magic. The responsibility that came with such a gift weighed on me heavily, and I’d put my current plan into action only two days after Yazi had presented the sword to me.
Yazi was the warrior of the Guardians. Also, my father. My newly found father, who I’d never known and was still trying to get to know in between his guardian duties and my training schedule. He wanted me to train and train and train until I was strong enough to actually stop a train. Pulou the treasure keeper wanted me — rather obviously — to treasure hunt with him. And Suanmi, the fire breather, wanted me out of sight and out of mind. The six other dragons hadn’t really weighed in, but I’m sure they would — given a hundred more years or so. Time held little meaning for any of them.
Guardians were perpetually swamped saving the world from whatever threatened it with extinction. Some, I’d heard, frequently disappeared for years deeply entrenched in their duties. Others, like my father or Baxia the rain bringer — who dispelled tidal waves and hurricanes if she was capable — moved from territory to territory as called upon. Chi Wen, the eldest guardian, didn’t seem to comprehend time at all — whether it was a single day or week or a month. But, if it wasn’t for the nine of them, I don’t think humanity would have made it through … well, anytime.
Ignorance — and I speak from a deep understanding of the concept — was definitely bliss.
A chilly gust picked the blond curls up off the back of my neck, bringing with it the earthy, floral scent of witch magic. I paused, my hand once again on the invisible jade knife at my right hip
. Actually, it was the sheath — a gift from Gran — that was spelled to make the knife invisible, not the blade itself. That blade was the length of my forearm, hand carved from jade I’d found along the Fraser River on a hike outside Lillooet. The knife, along with the necklace of wedding ring charms I never took off, were the first magical items I’d made, even though I had no idea that I was an alchemist at the time.
A young woman, her hair a fiery mass of wavy curls, became visible as she stepped out from a witches’ circle a few feet to the left of the front of the pickup truck. She was about my age, gazing at me with muted green eyes that stood out against her pale skin. She wasn’t at all beautiful — her nose too big and chin too small — and yet she exuded an earthy sensuality. Men would shoulder by me to get to her any day.
“Hello, witch,” I said. “Impressive cloaking spell.”
The redhead nodded. “It’s a family thing,” she said. “Rooted in the rocks of our ancestral land.” She gestured around her. “Amber Cameron, granddaughter of Mauve, Convocation secretary, at your service.” Her accent would quadruple her heartbreaker status.
Okay, then. The witch’s magic was dim compared to the power of the portal and the grid point, hence my not picking it up right away. She carried the earthy base that identified her as a witch. Against that, her own magic was sugared, vanilla tones but not sickly sweet … brown sugar toffee, maybe? Also, the witches Convocation had a secretary? Like, to take notes and distribute minutes?
“It’s a portal, then,” Amber stated rather than asked.
I didn’t answer. She was younger than I’d first taken her to be. Maybe closer to nineteen. She was wearing the most gorgeously comfy green Aran cardigan. It was long enough to cover her ass and well-worn jeans. I wondered if she’d be up for a trade, except she was about four inches shorter than me and had no hips to lament.
“I … Normally my brother would come.” She stumbled over the words. “He’s older and the duty is his. But he’s away at university.”
My silence was unnerving her. I felt bad about that and very unlike myself, but I wasn’t going to blather about dragon magic. Not that dragons were a secret or anything. They were relegated to myth status due to rarity, not mystery. I’d only met a dozen or so myself in the last three months, while living in the dragon nexus that was supposedly their home base.
“The request was for a drop off only, not an escort,” I said, trying to be nice but firm about it. I’d studied up on the protocol of such things before coming. Major portals — ones that lay over the grid points — often had a guardian who oversaw them. Only dragons — or half-dragons in my case — could open and pass through portals unaccompanied. Pulou the treasure keeper could create portals and temporary doors other than the ones that lay over the grid points, but enlisting his help would have alerted my father to the fact that I was leaving, if only temporarily. It was past time that I started cleaning up some messes.
“Yes. Yes,” Amber answered. “I know, but you left too much money.”
“That’s a poor excuse for breaking the rules.” Yeah, that’s just who I was these days — boring, dependable, and on task.
“You are … you can … you’re a witch. Jade Godfrey, granddaughter of Pearl, the Convocation chair.” I’d signed my name to the request. It felt deceptive not to. “A witch who walks through portals?”
“Sure,” I answered. “Let’s go with that. I really don’t have time to —”
The golden, fresh magic of the portal blew open behind me and I groaned inwardly. Damn, I’d taken too long.
I turned in time to see Drake tumble out of the glowing doorway and onto the grass about ten feet behind me. The thirteen-year-old was incapable of simply walking anywhere. He spent every hour of the day charging around. His dark hair fell across his almond-shaped eyes, and he brushed it away as he righted himself. He was grinning ear to ear at me.
“Found you!” the fledgling guardian declared. The portal snapped shut behind him. “Second guess, still pretty good. I was going to try Shanghai, where Yazi and I got the sword, but then I remembered that sorcerer you were looking for.”
Damn it.
“Drake,” I hissed. “Get your ass back through that …” I faltered. I hadn’t actually confirmed it was a portal to the witch.
“Nope.” The thirteen-year-old barreled the last ten steps to my side.
The red-haired witch meeped. Yes, meeped. Even if she couldn’t taste the magic rolling off Drake like I could — all golden honey-roasted salted almonds and steamed milk — he probably looked otherworldly to her.
Drake and I were dressed practically identically, in black laced-leather vests and pants. His were more broken in than mine, though, and his gold broadsword was more obvious across his back. He was as tall as my ears now, and had easily grown an inch a month since we’d first met — and fought a demon together — in the dragon nexus. I figured he’d be six feet in a matter of months. His shoulders and feet were already too wide for the rest of him. Like a puppy, actually. Give him a couple of years and he’d be as formidable as any of the guardians. I’d seen him try to eat an entire roast pig by himself. Yeah, dragons liked roasting things, mostly fowl. Not that I’d ever found the nexus kitchen or managed to get my hands on any chocolate, no matter how many times I tried. The nexus wasn’t a labyrinth or anything. Given that it housed nine of the most powerful beings on earth, it was actually deceptively small — unless you knew where you were going. Yeah, I couldn’t wrap my head around that either.
Just at the thought of chocolate, I began jonesing. I was seriously deprived. I really wouldn’t recommend going cold turkey. Hell, I wouldn’t recommend going one day without some sort of chocolate-imbibing, let alone three and a half months.
“He’s thirteen,” I snapped at the red-haired witch. If she got any more awestruck, she’d melt into a pile of goo. That would be annoyingly sticky.
“Hello!” Drake cried. Unhelpfully, he was grinning at Amber like she was his new favorite toy. His voice was far too loud for the quiet of the countryside.
I put on my stern face. I’d had a lot of practice with it now, specifically with Drake. “I mean it.”
“Nope.”
“Drake.”
“If I go back, I tell everyone you’ve left. You’ve got maybe twenty-four hours before Branson comes looking for you. Want to shorten it?”
Double damn. Branson, the sword master, was our trainer. He was a dragon, but not a guardian. Yep, not all dragons were guardians. As far as I’d figured out, there were less than fifty nonguardian dragons worldwide. Branson had been in line for Yazi’s guardianship … or seat … or whatever, but was severely injured before he could take on the mantel of the warrior. Technically we had tomorrow off — one day of rest every nine days — so I’d known I’d be able to get away fairly cleanly. Until Drake followed me.
“So we’re hunting the sorcerer?” he asked hopefully.
I sighed. Rock? Hard place? Meet my head.
“Sorcerer?” Amber asked. “You seek Blackwell?”
“It doesn’t concern you, witch,” I said, still attempting to be firmly polite. I was quickly losing control of this situation, and I wasn’t even ten steps into it.
“Well, you’ll be heading to Blackness Castle then,” she responded archly. “And I can direct you better than that iPad you had me put in the glove box.”
“Fine,” I said. “There just better be treats in there as well.” Yeah, I’d put that in the request. So? I knew myself that much at least.
“Fudge,” the witch said. “Chocolate. A family recipe.”
I rewarded her with a blinding smile. She managed to not stumble back from the wattage of it, but I sensed it was a struggle as I made a beeline for the truck and went hunting for the offered fudge. It would be insanely sweet. Probably enough to give me a headache. But I found all fudge too sweet, and still I was desperate to get it in my mouth. Um, yeah, I was aware that said a whole lot abo
ut me beyond the fact that I was craving chocolate.
“You’re a witch?” Drake asked the redhead.
“Amber Cameron, granddaughter of Mauve, Convocation secretary.”
Drake bowed to her formally, as if he’d just remembered his manners. “Drake, ward of Suanmi, the fire breather. Apprentice to Chi Wen, the far seer.”
Amber’s jaw dropped. She had no idea what he was talking about, but it still impressed her. People were so like that. Not that Drake didn’t have an impressive pedigree. But why was it that the things we didn’t have or didn’t understand impressed us, even as the wonders we knew seemed ordinary and even trite? If only Sienna had been happy, content with her life and magic —
I yanked open the passenger door of the pickup as I shoved the ‘if only’ out of my thoughts. We were so far beyond ‘if only’s’ that it wasn’t funny or sad anymore. It was just time. Time to stop.
“Show me a spell?” Drake asked.
The witch managed to raise her chin a little at this request. I guessed Drake wasn’t so awe-inspiring when he wanted to see magic so badly he asked for it. Amber had no way to understand that the fledgling didn’t play Adept power games. At the peak of the power pyramid, dragons had no need for such posturing.
She shrugged and stepped sideways into her witches’ circle. She disappeared. I could still pick up traces of her brown sugar toffee magic, though, now that I had the taste of it.
Drake whistled as he paced around the circle. Now that I looked closer, I could see that it was a ring of smallish stones. Ancestral stones, Amber had said. That would be a bitch to lug around, but it was obviously super effective.
However, even shiny new magic couldn’t distract me from chocolate. If I was quick enough, I might be able to get my hands on the fudge without Drake noticing. I really didn’t feel like wrestling him for it. His boundaries and strength weren’t well defined. As in, he had endless strength and absolutely no boundaries. He was a fledgling guardian raised by fully actualized guardians. At twenty-three, I was the only person Drake knew who wasn’t a hundred years older and stronger than him. Dragons weren’t big breeders. Presumably, saving the world from utter destruction every other day got in the way of that … a lot.