“The Nekomata is an ancient supernatural being first encountered in China in the year 589 AD. Nekomata is a shapeshifter that can take any form, including human, but prefers to spend time in a natural state resembling a large cat with a forked tail. The Nekomata tends toward allegiance with the Dark One as it is a necromancer, gaining power by using the dead. As such, it is extremely dangerous to Hecate as it preys on the gravesites that are conducive to her power.” I slapped my hands over my face. “Oh shit, Poe.
“Looks like Nekomata knows exactly why this house is worth twice the market price.”
I brushed back my bangs and ran my palms over my hair. “Wait, wait. Let’s not get ahead of ourselves. Maybe the name is a coincidence. I’ve got a spell on this place. Nothing supernatural gets in without an invitation. Even Rick had to ask my permission.”
Poe clacked his beak together. “Your father invited him in. He is the rightful owner of the property and is of your blood. Depending on how the spell was cast, that would be enough.”
I moaned. “Wouldn’t I know to restrict it to my own invitation?”
“If you had, Prudence wouldn’t have been able to invite Rick in if she needed him. You were thinking ahead.”
“Fuck. Fuck. Double Fuck!” I stomped in a circle. “I’m such an imbecile. He even used his real name.”
“Cocky SOB.”
“What are we going to do?”
“Mmm, High Priestess of the Grave, I think I should point out that the timing seems noteworthy…the
Book of Flesh and Bone
is in such high demand trolls and finfolk are dying for it, a possessed human says she thinks you have it, and a Nekomata shows up to buy your house. If I was a betting bird, I’d say someone knows something about you that you don’t.”
“Like what?”
“Like maybe the book is hidden in this house.”
I stared at him dumbly. “If it was, wouldn’t you know? You said you’ve been with me in my past lives.”
“Not all and not always. Plus, Dear Witch, there were things so important you kept them even from me.”
“Then how do I find out? I don’t remember and there’s no one left alive to ask.”
Poe tipped his head to the side. “Why not ask yourself? The book holds your memories…remember?” He chuckled.
And that’s when it dawned on me, I’d been so worried about learning what was written on the pages, I’d forgotten the magic of the book itself. The Book of Light held my memories. All I had to do was ask it to show them to me. I’d conveniently forgotten to use this particular ability because the last time I had, I relived my own tragic death, pain and all. In fact, it was the death that kicked me out of the memory. I wasn’t entirely sure how to control how much I experienced of my former life. The idea of being a prisoner of my past frightened me, and I wasn’t just speaking metaphorically.
“I don’t want to do this.”
“Your only other option is to ask Rick.”
“I have no idea where he is.”
“Then put on your big witch panties and get in there.”
“You wouldn’t possibly know how to put the brakes on a memory would you?”
He shook his head. “I only know that the past can’t hurt you. Not really.”
“The past can totally hurt you. That’s why people say ‘don’t live in the past.’ People who suffer from PTSD are injured by their pasts on a regular basis.”
Poe cleared his throat. “You won’t physically die.”
I rolled my eyes and gave him a sarcastic thumbs-up. “Thanks for the pep talk.”
“Just trying to help.” He sighed.
I turned back to the book, resting my hands on either side of the crease. In a loud and clear voice, I said, “Show me what happened to the
Book of Flesh and Bone
.”
Light poured out of the pages, filling the attic, blinding me. When I could see again, I was in another world.
* * * * *
T
he smell of dried herbs and smoke filled my nostrils. I was nestled in a wooden chair, watching the fire crackle under a cooking caldron. As before, I was living my memory from the inside out, along for the ride as my former self took the wheel and drove me through the events of her past. I was in a cozy cottage. Daylight shone through a small window near the door and my stomach growled for the lunch warming in the pot.
There was a knock on the door. I made sure my lengthy black hair was braided and coiled neatly behind my head. With a surprisingly dark, russet-colored hand, I smoothed the fabric of my floor-length black skirt as I moved to answer it. I was covered in yards and yards of black material only broken by a wide lace collar.
Rick was on the other side of the door. Not the Rick I knew, but a softer, more innocent version. Human. He was dressed in the Puritan fashion, black suit, white collar. His dark hair fell in long waves to his shoulders.
“Good day, Enrique.”
He smiled, and a blush colored his cheeks. Breath caught in his throat, his eyes flicked away bashfully. “Miss Lockhart, you must excuse me, as I find your beauty arresting and forget myself even as I try to speak.”
“If thy speaketh truth, then come partake of it, as you have before.” I gave him a sultry smile, leading him inside by the hand, and closing the door behind him.
Rick’s voice broke when he answered me, “I pray a day will come when I can openly do so as your husband. But not today. I’ve come to warn you. Monk is convinced of your guilt and will not be undone. He comes now to take you to the stake.”
I snickered. “Monk will not take me. The impertinent windbag hath not the strength.”
“Please. I beg of you. Run. You must flee.” Rick took my hands in his, tears flowing openly down his face. “You cannot ask me to watch you burn. Though the flames not touch my flesh, the fire would consume me, eternally.”
“Do not worry thyself, Enrique. I shall plead my case, and Monk’s wrath shall pass over me.” All I had to do was look Monk squarely in the eye, and I could bend his thoughts to my will.
“Pass over you? When you have stew in your pot and still the hint of meat on your bones.”
“I’ve kept stew in many pots.” I lowered my voice to a whisper. “But even I have limits.”
A gaunt cheek pressed against mine, and I could feel his bones under the thin blanket of his skin. He was starving. All of them were starving. And I had a pot of stew. “Would you share my lunch with me?”
“No, no, listen to me. It is different this time, my love. The entire town, aside from me, is
chanting
for your blood. Please take my words into your bosom and flee. There is a place in the woods to the north. If you leave now, you can make it before dark. The whole town is coming.”
“Chanting? The town is chanting?”
“Monk has a book. They are chanting a prayer to weaken you because they say you are a witch.”
Pulling back, I peered at him shrewdly. “You’re sure?”
He nodded, his eyes pleading with me. “Listen. You can hear them coming.”
He spoke the truth. The sounds of a crowd in the distance were already audible and the first pangs of fear rocked through me. “Enrique, we are betrothed, yes?”
“Yes.”
“And you intend to give yourself to me, body and soul?”
“Of course.”
“Will you pledge your life to me now? Bind your soul to me, whate’er may come, we will be together into eternity?”
With both hands, he cradled my face. “Yes. I love you, Isabella. For eternity.”
Locked deep within his gaze, I reached into my pocket. I’d made the ointment for an emergency such as this. Still, I hesitated. I cared for Enrique, and if the spell came to pass, he’d be cursed by my hand. But desperate times called for desperate measures.
Between us, I opened the tiny jar. Under the lid was a razor sharp barb. I captured one of his hands from my cheek, and positioned it palm up, then jabbed the barb into his finger.
He gasped. “What are you doing?”
“Binding us for eternity.”
He did not argue, just searched my face with the trust of a child.
I watched his ruby red gift drip into the balm, then plucked my own skin. My darker, older blood oozed over his. Mixing the concoction with my finger, I commanded him. “Unbutton your shirt.”
“Isabella, there is no time.”
On my tiptoes, I planted a brazen kiss on his lips, snaking my tongue into his mouth, all passion and wet heat. Rick responded with the inexperienced lips of a virgin and another shiver of guilt passed through me.
He unbuttoned his shirt.
I found the place over his heart, yet unscarred, and drew a scythe with the gooey paste. In the old language, I spoke the spell.
“
In the name of my mother
Goddess of night
I bind thee, my vessel,
Caretaker of light
Willingly given
Sacrifice thine
Human no longer
Caretaker mine.
”
The chanting had grown louder, and I could sense the crowd outside the door. Suddenly my skin felt too tight.
Damnation! Where had Monk found that spell?
The door was kicked in and clawing hands swept me from my home. In a sea of black wool and white collars, I lost sight of Enrique. My body, weakened by their chant, was pinched, yanked, and torn until I was brought to a stake near the church. Once they bound me to it, Monk arrived.
The man of little stature approached with a great book engulfed in his arms. I recognized the tome right away, the
Book of Flesh and Bone
. A sister from Salem had told me about it but I never thought it would make it this far. The pages were made of flayed human skin, the cover layered with the same. The ink contained human blood and the inlaid design on the spine was not pearl but human teeth. Legend said it was written by the devil. I wasn’t sure I believed in a devil, per se, but if there
was
a source of all evil and darkness, certainly he was the author of this tome.
“Finally, justice.”
“Justice? You call this justice? Burning an innocent woman without so much as a trial?”
“Innocent? The fire will prove your innocence.”
“If I burn, I’m innocent, and if I don’t, I’m a witch? That is my trial?”
Monk turned away, and one of the men approached, torch in hand. My heart pounded. My breath came in pants. Enrique had tried to warn me, but how was I to know Monk had the book?
As the flames caught, and licked up my body, I separated myself from the excruciating pain, pulling back from the memory, and becoming an observer of my own death.
Isabella’s left hand, charred and blackened, rose to waist level, light shooting from her fingers as her final words bubbled from her dying lips. “
Caretaker of the light, always
.” Enrique’s body seized as the light plowed into him, flopping on the ground and contorting in pain. The crowd turned to watch him fall, but I knew their own fate was moments away. The book would demand its price.
Darkness swallowed the memory, my soul slipping from my charred remains. And that’s when the
Book of Light
spit me out into the attic.
C
aw.
Snap. Snap.
Flap, flap, flap.
I
opened my eyes to find Poe dancing on my chest.
“Are you dead?” he asked.
“Do I look dead?”
“Actually, yes. Although more animated than five minutes ago.”
Sweeping Poe from my chest, I sat up and straightened my shirt. “How long have I been out?”
“About an hour. I was beginning to worry.”
“I saw my own death, again. Honestly, I’m not sure how useful the memory was. I barely got a glimpse of the
Book of Flesh and Bone
. Most of the memory was about Rick.”
“Maybe that was as close as she could get you. Maybe the book is trying to say that Rick was the last person to see it. If that was your first and last memory, Rick may be the key.”
“Fantastic.” Sarcasm oozed from the word. “So we are back at square one.”
“You sound less than enthused about the prospect.”
“Poe, I’m not sure I can even trust Rick. After what happened with Gary, how can I know he’s being honest with me? And there’s something else. Something I never realized before the
Book of Light
showed me.”
“What?”
“Isabella, the first…me, she lured Rick into being the caretaker. You should have seen how smitten he was for her. But he never understood who she really was. He gave himself to her without truly knowing the price.”
“He must have loved her greatly.”
“And resent her presently.”
Poe lowered his head. “What are you saying?”
“I’m not sure.” I shook my head. “I just feel heavy in the center of my chest, like I’ve wronged him. Part of me wonders if he’s wronged me in return.”
The raven flapped to the window where the last light of day was fading quickly behind the glass. “Maybe you should get over it and make up. He’s your only hope of finding the book before Julius does.”
“Maybe you should mind your own business, Poe,” I snapped. I didn’t need his commentary. But as I dragged my magic-drained sack of bones from the attic floor and pulled back the plastic flap so that Poe could go hunting in the cold winter’s night, for the first time I saw Rick in a new light. Not as a predator, trying to capture and dominate me, but as my prey, a prisoner of my past, of my heart. The thought saddened and sobered me.