Read The Council, A Witch's Memory Online
Authors: J.C. Isabella
Christy’s mom was Minnie, the owner of the diner. “Oh, great. I’ve been helping out, waitressing and stuff.”
“That’s nice.” I nodded. It was getting painful. I had no idea what to say to her. She was so hard to read. One minute she was nice and chatty, the next she stammered and excuse and went away. Maybe she was just flighty.
“I have to go.” She said with a nervous look around me to Henry, who was swinging back and forth on the rope. But before she left, she paused. “You’re lucky to have him.”
I raised an eyebrow. “Uh, thanks. I know.”
“Sometimes we take things for granted.” She glanced back at Henry again. Her expression sad all of a sudden.
Okay, what the heck was she talking about? “Are you alright?”
She forced a smile. “It’s just…he reminds me of my brother.”
“Oh.” I never knew she had a brother.
“He…he died. It was a long time ago.” She cleared her throat and waved goodbye to Henry, and smiled at me again before taking the path back to the parking lot.
I looked back at Henry. He was goofing off now, really getting the rope going. The tree branches were starting to creak and sway overhead.
I shaded my eyes and watched him swing, wondering if he’d start beating his chest and bellowing. “Was Christy acting weird, or was I imagining things?”
He slowed the swing and dropped to the ground. “Yeah, she was funny today.”
I sat on a rock and stuck my feet in the water. “Did you know she had a brother?”
He sat next to me, “I didn’t.”
I told him what she said.
“That would explain a lot.” He said, surprised.
“Why?”
“Sometimes I feel like I upset her, and I’ve asked her what it is I’ve done, but she never answers me.”
Christy was smart. She knew I would tell Henry about her brother. “I can’t imagine what that must be like.”
He nodded. “Ready to swim?”
“Yep.” I was glad for the subject change.
He stood. I had to tilt my head back to look him in the eye. He was so tall, six feet. Lucky me being short, I had a great view of his chest.
“Is that new?”
I looked down at my swimsuit. “Yeah, I got it a few days ago. Why?”
He grinned, heading back for the swing. “It suits you.”
“Har, har.” Was he checking me out?
Okay, I really needed to get a grip. I thought my infatuation with Henry had died down to a manageable simmer over the past few months. But the more I looked at him, the more heated up I felt, as if it was back to a rolling boil.
Not good.
Henry gripped the rope and swung into the cool water, splashing me.
I jumped back.
Reflex. Old habits die hard.
He swam around, giving me a playful smirk. “Come on Venna, I’m growing old just waiting for you.”
Closing my hands around the worn rope, I pulled back and raced forward, my feet leaving the ground. I was airborne and hit the water with a loud splash.
When I came up Henry shot back onto the shore. Swinging in again, he sent a title wave over me.
I held my breath, treading water. My feet didn’t touch the bottom. The lake was deep. Way over my head.
Much to my relief, Henry popped up beside me. Out of habit I latched onto his arm, cursing my fear of drowning and forcing it away.
He frowned. “Sorry.”
I splashed him. “Stop it, I’m fine.”
“You’ve never been a confident swimmer.” An emotion passed quickly across his features. Worry? Irritation? I couldn’t tell. He reached out a long finger and touched my chin.
“It’s not a big deal.” It was as if the spot he touched electrified. The air positively charged around me. Pulsing with energy.
“Will you be all right here for a minute?”
I managed to bob my head in the affirmative.
Disentangling from me, he swam to the shore and retrieved a two-person raft from a shed park rangers stashed water toys in, and made his way back into the water.
I grabbed on and levered myself up. Henry came on next to me. We lounged back, gazing at the treetops canopying over the lake. The dense leaves kept the water nice and cool, burning sun at bay. Aside from the small group of kids quite a ways down on the other side, we were alone.
We’d shared a raft and floated around lazily before, this wasn’t anything new. But now all these familiar feelings had overcome me, I was drowning in so many emotions I couldn’t put names to them, and they were all for Henry.
I made the mistake of thinking I could control my emotions by acting indifferent, pretending my feelings were nothing more than friendship-based.
I closed my eyes and let my head drop to the side. It came in contact with his arm.
I froze, waiting to see how he reacted.
He relaxed even more, shoulder going slack. Letting out a deep breath, almost a sigh. He didn’t seem to mind my using him as a pillow, so I didn’t bother moving.
Even if he wanted me to move, I’m not sure I could.
I was too comfortable and too stupid.
The lap of lake water against the tube almost lulled me to sleep, along with Henry’s warm skin under my cheek.
I scooted a little closer to him after a while. I heard him chuckle and he moved closer to me. But then I heard something else, a whooshing sound.
The muscles in his arm tensed and I opened my eyes. He was watching the children across the lake intently.
“What’s that noise?” I didn’t bother moving, since he was watching them. I’d figure he’d relay the information.
He didn’t answer me and continued to watch them, looking a little concerned, but not enough to alarm me.
“Henry?” The next sound I heard was a crackling, followed by another whoosh.
“Look out!” Henry threw himself at me and we toppled into the lake.
The cold shocked my heated skin. I sucked in a mouthful of water, trying to figure out which way was up. Kicking hard, I surfaced and gasped in disbelief.
I wasn’t at the lake anymore.
Chapter 6
A rocky shore jutted out to my right under a heavily clouded gray-green sky. Foamy seawater swirled around me, lapping incessantly. Beastly thunder rumbled in the distance. I squeezed my eyes shut. They burned from the salty spray hitting my face.
This wasn’t real. It couldn’t be. I was at the lake swimming with Henry. And now I was in the ocean? Was I dreaming? Hallucinating?
I opened my eyes again and was met by the same dark and unfamiliar surroundings.
“
Henry?” I shouted, after coughing up a mixture of lake and seawater. “Where am I?”
An icy wave hit me from behind. I flailed helplessly, gagging on the water rushing into my lungs. The current was so strong, I could only hold my breath and pray I wasn’t pulled out to sea.
“
Help!” something hard jabbed my side. I shoved at it and realized it was a large plank of rotted wood. There were several swirling around me.
I grabbed for one, but it did nothing to help me float.
“
Don’t panic,” I said, repeatedly.
Henry told me that panicking always makes it worse.
But he’d told me this a couple years ago when we were cramming for a math final.
It was all I had though, so I tried to keep calm and head for shore, but I was starting to freak out.
Rain began to fall. My legs were tired, stomach sloshing from the salty water I’d swallowed bobbing up and down. My arms slapped against the water uselessly.
I grabbed onto a different plank of wood, managing to use it as a flotation device. It kept my head above water, and I was able to keep my eyes on the shore.
It felt like forever. I had to stop to catch my breath and rest a couple times. I was panting and coughing so much my head spun.
I was exhausted and feeling myself start to slip under, just before I felt the sandy bottom squishing between my toes, and as I pushed on, rocks biting into my feet. I couldn’t see through the murky water to avoid the jagged stones. But I didn’t care.
I’d almost made it to safety when I felt someone was behind me.
“
Henry?” I glanced back.
I found my footing on a softer spot. The water still touched my chin, waves rocking me. I let the wood go, cupping my hands over my mouth to amplify my shouting. “Henry!”
He wasn’t here. But his presence surrounded me. I could have sworn if I looked over my shoulder again he would be there.
He wasn’t.
I was waist deep now, gasping with relief. I wasn’t going to drown in the water. But I was going to drown from the terror starting to sink in.
I was in another place.
Henry was gone.
My hands started to shake and my teeth chattered. I tripped a couple times, hitting my knees on rocks in the water. My chest heaved from heavy sobs.
I trudged forward, panic filling every inch of me, and almost made it to the shore when something thick and warm hooked around my waist and yanked me back. Pulling me under the waves.
“
No!” I screamed, water surging into my mouth, and amazingly, I broke to the surface again.
Chapter 7
I fought the thing curled around my waist. Clawing, flailing, nothing was going to stop me from reaching the shore. Drowning wasn’t an option. I would find Henry and tell him where I was.
“Venna, calm down!”
I opened my eyes, realizing I’d had them closed. My vision blurred, but I felt hard ground under my back, and the warmth of the sun on my face.
“Are you hurt?” Henry’s concerned voice broke the rest of my trance. I blinked, focusing as his horrified face swam into view. “Venna…you feel like ice. What happened?”
I inhaled deeply, staring up at the sky. A blue sky.
The lake. I was back at the lake. The air was warm. The day bright and sunny. No storm. No waves of icy water. I was perfectly safe. Freezing. But safe.
How was this possible?
“Venna, talk to me, please.” He hovered over me on his hands and knees. “I thought you drowned. You were sinking to the bottom of the lake. Why didn’t you swim?”
My bottom lip trembled and I sat up buried my face against his neck. I wanted to stay wrapped in his arms forever. The contact between us felt so sweet and unbelievably good.
“I couldn’t find you.” I whispered hoarsely, my voice raw from screaming and coughing up saltwater. I could still taste it.
His hold tightened. “You were disoriented. I knocked you off the raft.”
“No, Henry. I saw something, like a movie playing in my head.” Tilting back, I met his gaze. “I wasn’t here. I came out of the water somewhere else.”
“Tell me.”
I shuddered and held on tighter to him. “It’s like I was there. The waves hit me. I felt it, and I could taste the saltwater. It was s-so cold.”
“You’re sure you aren’t hurt?”
“No, I don’t think so.”
“Give it a minute, you’re disoriented.”
I nodded. “But why did you knock me off the raft in the first place?”
“The kids set off a rocket. Instead of aiming it skyward, they aimed it at us.”
“You’re kidding.”
He pointed at our raft. Next to it in the water was a large white cylinder.
“Those little brats.”
Henry smirked. “Do you want to try standing up?”
“Yeah.”
He stood, pulling me with him. The second my feet touched the ground I cried out in pain. My skin was on fire. I startled Henry. He almost dropped me. “What?”
I bent to inspect my feet. Crimson stained my pale skin where the rocks had cut me.
Impossible.
“Venna, what happened?” Henry set me back on the ground and knelt to examine the cuts.
I wiggled nervously, trying to pull away. He wouldn’t let go. “I tried to make it to the shore in my dream, or whatever it was. There were rocks.”
He cursed. “How bad do your feet hurt?”
“Not too bad, as long as I don’t walk,” I grimaced. The bleeding had stopped. “Thankfully, I’ve always been a fast healer.”
“Is there anything else you’re not telling me?” he looked seriously at me. a muscle jumped in his jaw
I let out a breath, giving in. “Well, a plank of wood hit my right side.”
His eyes went wide. Before I could scoot away he peeled the back of my suit forward. I stared down at an angry red mark almost the size of my hand. Thankfully, it didn’t feel as bad as it looked.