Page 13 of All Hallows Night


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I swallowed hard, my whole body icy. Duncan had thrown himself at the door over and over, and it hadn’t budged. And not six steps away, five robed nutjobs were chanting louder, shouting shit that sounded like Latin, like a curse, like every horror film I’d ever had nightmares after watching.

Someone stumbled into me and I flinched so hard Honey nearly slipped from my arms. A red-faced guy in a clown costume swayed on his feet, his eyes glazed. “Woah, shit, boobs.”

“Woah, shit, sacrificial cult shit,” I hissed at him, shoving him away with my shoulder, pulling Honey closer like a shield against me. I didn’t know what to do, how to get out.

“Open the doors, you freaks,” a girl called Milani Hussain yelled, throwing her wine glass at the circle of robed figures. It hit the shoulder of the tallest one and crashed to the floor, shattering on impact. “Save your cosplay bullshit for comic con.”

This time the figures didn’t turn, no one pointed a menacing finger at her, and she didn’t drop to the floor. Because they were shouting at the top of their lungs, Latin flowing in a rapid, frantic stream that made me icy cold. Duncan had propped Orwell against the wall and threw himself at the door again, Alastor Carmichael right there with him, and three other guys whose names I didn’t know—we’ll call them Batman, Mario, and Vagina after their costumes.

Please, please open…

My heart tripled, until it beat fast enough to thump its way out of my ribs, but I kept my eyes on the door, hoping, praying…

I was about to set Honey beside Orwell Ford and throw myself at the door, too, when Batman lurched forward, momentum carrying him to the foyer floor as the door opened all at once.

I flew towards it, arms and elbows brushing mine as twenty-one panicked people moved at once for the exit—but we never even reached the door.

The scent of blood rose, and another voice joined the chanting, impossible to place in all the chaos. It wasn’t any of the people close to me, but it had to be one of the med students with us. What the fuck…?

Duncan skittered back, his face especially pale, his eyes wide. His face had lost all its life as he recoiled from the doorway, bumping into Honey but undeterred as he fled—her.

My breath caught. I became very aware of the silence, of the sudden absence of chanting, as a wall of cool, solid air pushed us back. My feet skidded across the polished floor, Honey’s too.

And into the room walked a tall, imposing woman of remarkable beauty, her footsteps resounding loudly. I could only look at her for three seconds before my head exploded into pain, my eyes watered, and I was forced to look away, but it was enough to glimpse golden skin, elegant features, waist-length hair in a shade of red so dark it was like dried blood, and eyes in two different colours—bone-white and ink-black. From the iris of her white eye, blood poured down her cheek, the single stain on her staggering beauty.

I gasped down air, drowning, suffocating. My eyes fixed on the floor where black lace trailed behind the woman’s dark dress like a gothic train. I clutched Honey as close as my shaking arms would allow. It was so cold, so quiet, so still. Instinct told me to run and never stop running.

“Oh, god,” Honey began to chant, “Oh god, oh god.”

“Goddess, darling,” the red-haired woman said with a mild smile that did nothing to mask the power trembling in her voice. Power unlike anything I’d felt before. It was the same power that made the walls bleed, that had pushed us back from the door, that covered the strange woman like a miasma. Power that didn’t exist. That couldn’t be real. It wasn’t something that could be explained by natural forces, wasn’t even ley lines or thin veils or whatever else caused a rash of hauntings on Halloween night. This was… it was…

“Magic,” Duncan Ford breathed.

The woman smiled at him, the sharp edges of her lips curling deeper into her cheeks. At once, Rone, Mason, and Orwell stopped screaming, and I sucked in a sharp breath of relief, shushing Honey who still gasped panicked words under her breath.

The power, the undeniable magic in the room, swelled, like a single heartbeat. As if in answer, a loud, dull thud resounded through the room. I flinched when the blonde wizard who tried to get my number exhaled a curse and knelt where—where Rone had collapsed. She no longer leaned against the fireplace but splayed on the floor, her mouth slack.

“She’s—” He shook his head, the bleached horror on his face comical paired with the long silver wig and star-spangled cloak he wore.

“Dead,” the terrifying woman finished for him. “Of course she is. How do you think I’m here?” She laughed softly, a tinkling sound. “Where is my disciple? Come forward.”

I froze, digging my fingernails into Honey’s arm when she whimpered and flinched into me, the redhead’s stare passing over all of us, searching, probing. I swore the coppery scent of blood became stronger, forcing down my nose into my throat until I choked on it.

Why was no one running at this woman, trying to stop her doing—whatever it was she was doing? People had tried to take down the robed psychos. They failed, but still—why was everyone rooted to the spot, just staring as she swept around the room, heads lowered like subjects before a queen?

She surveyed us before gliding through the circle of fire with a contemplative sound. The flames didn’t burn her, didn’t even eat through the delicate black lace of her train. The sight of that unburned lace hit me like a blow. It was—magic was real. I was watching it, right in front of me, and it could have been flame retardant fabric but deep down I knew it wasn’t. Like I knew this wasn’t a creepy initiation for med school. It was bigger. More.

What the hell had we got ourselves twisted up in? My breathing fractured and sped.

“We have to get out of here,” Milani Hussain breathed, grabbing my arm in apparent desperation as the red-haired woman stood in the heart of the burning circle beside Mason Lindgren. Was he—like Rone was he dead?

“You,” the woman—goddess?— breathed, excitement lighting her face as she regarded Milani. I kept my attention on her chin, not daring to look higher, primal terror warning me away from those mismatched, bleeding eyes. “There is terror in your blood. Whose line do you hail from?”

“I don’t know what you mean,” Milani gasped, digging her nails into my arm. “I don’t know who you are or what’s going on, but I’m not part of this. I only came to this party to fuck Duncan, so count me out of—this. Whatever it even is.”

“Are you my disciple?” the terrifying woman asked, the air quivering with the power in her voice. It pressed on my chest, crushed my lungs until I wheezed.

“No,” Milani whispered, shrieking when the red-haired woman lifted a hand, like the robed figures—who were conspicuously still and silent now—had earlier. Milani was ripped away from my side, the toes of her high heels dragging across the floor like she was possessed. With power thumping, alive in the air, I wasn’t sure possession was wrong. “Let me go,” she hissed. “Please, I won’t tell anyone—”

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