Gran told me that the only person who can send a spirit back is the one who called it up," Thea said. "But the problem is that you have to be able to see the spirit, you have to be close to it. Then you can do the sending-back spell."
"Okay," Dani said, nodding. "But-"
"Wait, I'm getting to it." Thea got up and began to pace the few steps between her bed and Blaise's. She spoke slowly at first, then more rapidly. "What I'm thinking is that this can't be the first time this has happened. Sometime, somewhere, somehow, some witch must have called up a spirit and let it get away. And then had to go out and get hold of it again."
"I'm sure that's true. But so what?"
"So if we could find a record of how she did it-how she tracked the spirit down-we might be in business."
Dani was getting excited. "Yeah-and it wouldn't even have to be a case of a summoned spirit. I mean, some spirits just won't go to the other side at all after they've died, right? Maybe there's a record about how one of them got sent across the veil."
"Or a story. Or a poem. Anything that would give us a clue about how to get them to stay in the same room with you while you do the spell." Thea stopped and grinned at Dani. "And if there's one thing Gran has lots of, it's records and stories and poems. There are hundreds of books in the workshop."
Dani jumped up, dark eyes snapping. "I'll call my mom and tell her I'm staying over tonight. Then- we find it."
After Dani called her mother, Thea called Eric to make sure he was okay. Now that she knew there was a demented spirit on the loose she was worried about him.
"You're sure you're all right?" he said. "I mean, I still feel awful about taking you to that place. I wanted-well, I'd like it if we could see each other without something terrible happening."
Thea felt as if someone had squeezed her heart. "Me, too."
"Maybe we could do something tomorrow. If you're up to it."
"That would be good." She didn't dare to keep talking to him with Dani around. It would be too easy for anyone listening to guess her feelings.
The first thing Thea noticed in the workshop was that Blaise had taken her new project with her.
She must be close to finishing it.
"I'll start here," Dani said, standing in front of a large bookcase. "Some of these look really old."
Thea picked another case. There were books of every kind: leather-bound, paper-bound, cloth-bound, suede-bound, unbound. Some were printed, some were handwritten, some were illuminated. Some were in languages Thea didn't know.
The first shelf yielded nothing except an interesting spell titled "how to make an elixir of abhorrence, which works quite as well, or perhaps a little worse than the traditional Elixirs of Loathing or Detestation, and is less delicate and expensive than the Elixir of Odium used by royals and members of the nobility, and will also keep extremely well for a very long time."
Hmm...
Thea put that book aside. She'd looked through another half a shelf when Dani said, "Hey, I found your family tree."
Thea scooted over. "Yeah, that's the one Gran keeps. It doesn't go anywhere near back to Hellewise." She laughed.
"Who's this guy?" Dani put her finger on a name. " 'Hunter Redfern.' I thought the Redferns were that hotshot vampire family."
"Lamia family. I mean, there's a difference, you know. Someone who's made into a vampire can't have kids."
"But what's the lamia guy doing in your family tree?"
"He's the one who did a kinship ceremony with Maeve Harman, back in the sixteen hundreds. She was the leader of the Harmans then. See? And we're all descended from their daughter Roseclear."
"She did it with a vampire? Creepy."
Thea smiled. "She did it to stop their families from fighting-they had a feud going on. And so now all of us modern Harmans have a little vampire blood."
"I'll remember to watch out if you start looking at my throat." Dani traced a finger down the tree. "It looks like you and Blaise are the last of the female Harmans."
"Yeah, we're it. The last Hearth-Women."
"That's a big responsibility."
It was almost exactly what Gran had said. Thea suddenly felt uncomfortable with family trees. "Yeah. Um, I guess we'd better keep reading."
It was several hours later when Dani said quietly, "I've got it."
"What?" Thea went to sit by her. The book on Dani's knees was bound in green with a crescent moon and three stars on the front-a Night World symbol for witches.
"It's a book of humorous stories, but they're supposed to be true. This one is about a guy named Walstan Harman back in seventeen seventy. He died, but he didn't cross over. He just hung around town playing jokes on everybody-appearing at night with his head under his arm and stuff like that. He never stayed in one place long enough for them to catch him, though."
"So how did they track him down?"
Dani flashed a triumphant smile. "They didn't. They lured him in.''
Light dawned for Thea. "Of course-I'm so stupid. But how?"
Dani's slender finger swept down the page. "Well, first they waited till Samhain, so the veil between the worlds would be thinnest. Then Nicholas Harman
had this big feast prepared, this huge table piled up with Walstan's favorite food." Dani made a face.
"Which happened to be mince pie made with bear meat and pumpkin, with a cornmeal crust. They have a recipe for it here, too. Gah."
"Never mind that. Did it work?"
"Apparently. They set up the table with the pies in an empty room, then they cast a circle around it.
Old Walstan was attracted to the food-I guess he just couldn't resist taking a look, even if he couldn't eat it. And when he came down to check it out, they
opened the door and nabbed him."
" 'Sent him speedily and conveniently through the narrow path to the airy void,' " Thea read over Dani's shoulder. The story sounded genuine-only someone who'd actually seen a summoning or a sending-back would know those words.
"So now we know how to do it," Dani said. "We wait until Halloween and then we lure her. We just have to find something she likes-"
"Or... something she hates," Thea broke in as an idea struck her. They stared at each other. "Like what she saw at the old gym," Dani
breathed. "Something that reminded her of what they did to her."
"Yes, except..." Thea stopped. Her mind was rating on, but she didn't want to share her thoughts with Dani. Except that the humans might already be doing something oh ? Halloween, something that would attract Suzanne. If the police opened the old gym, the Halloween party would be an incredibly strong lure. All those horror booths...
So if I wanted to draw her somewhere else, I'd need to be doing something even worse, something that would remind her even more of what happened to her. And I'd need bait, somebody she'd want to kill. A human. Somebody who'd work with me, who'd be willing...
Not Eric.
Her thoughts came up short as she realized where they were leading. She found that her hands were icy cold and her heart was pounding slowly.
No. Not Eric, no matter what. Not even to save lives.
She pushed the thought from her mind. Of course there was some other way, and she'd find it. There was time....
"Thea? You still with me?" Dani was watching her.
"I was just trying to figure it all out." Thea forced herself to speak calmly, to focus on Dani. "Urn, listen, there's one good thing I just thought of-we may have a little time. If Suzanne is still watching the old gym, it could work for us. As long as the gym is closed up, people won't go in there, and she won't be able to get anybody."
"I hope so," Dani said. "I mean, I understand why she's upset, but nobody deserves to die the way Kevin did. Not even a human."
Late that night, while Dani was breathing peacefully in Blaise's bed, Thea lay and stared at the faint glow above the window curtains.
It wasn't just visions of Kevin. Her mind kept returning to what Dani and Gran had said about her responsibility.
Even if I send Suzanne back, even if Gran gets well, even if I manage to keep Blaise from killing Eric... where am I?
I'm a renegade witch. And there's no future for Eric and me... unless we run away. But that would mean him leaving his family forever-and us being hunted wherever we went. And me betraying the Hearth-Women and the Night World.
One last thought glimmered before she could force her mind into blankness.
There's no way everybody is going to come out of this happy.