Page 68 of Casters and Crowns

Page List
Font Size:

At least there was one thing Baron could be certain of.

“You sought me out,” he said, “because you’re trying to break a curse.”

Her eyes widened, but she said nothing.

“After enough time, your specific inquiries concerning magic painted a picture. I’ll warn you now, there’s no guarantee I can reverse it, but if you tell me the details, I’ll do what I can.”

In the back of his mind, he tried to push away the memory of his father thrashing in bed, the frantic servants, the physician’s voice—

“I can’t,” Aria whispered. At Baron’s frown, she mouthed soundlessly before looking away.

“Physically can’t,” he said. Not a question.

Her gaze returned with hope.

Well, that excused some of her subterfuge. Baron grimaced.

“Any physical restraint is a Stone Caster’s work. Did Widow Morton have someone else with her? Richard Langley, perhaps? Did he touch you?”

The Cast restricting communication wouldn’t harm her, and it wouldn’t be particularly strong, but it would act as a blanket over Widow Morton’s work. Her fluid Cast, the real curse, would be harder to find beneath the Stone Caster’s cover.

Aria frowned. “Only a ... servant woman. She had the palest blonde hair I’ve ever seen, almost white. But she had no witch’s mark.”

For a moment, Baron started at the description, thinking of his stepmother, Sarah. As if no one else in the world were blonde.

“Perhaps Widow Morton allied with an unbranded Caster from Patriamere,” he suggested. “For the curse itself, what did the widow give you to drink?”

Her frustrated expression spoke volumes.

“All right.” He raised a hand. “It’s a blood curse, then.”

Remembering the curious notes from her journal, the warning not to drink crossed out and replaced byblood, he’d guessed the truth, but it had been worth hoping otherwise. Any number of curses could be Cast in freely spilt blood, as long as there was enough hatred behind the intent. Considering the death of herson, Baron imagined Widow Morton had been able to manage a great deal of hatred.

Curses. The worst side of magic, the side fed by rage, discontent, fear. Baron had Cast only one in his life, shortly after his branding. He remembered the hot tears, the raging fury inside, the desire tobreak something. He’d poured all of that into one of the orchard trees, superheating the water in every branch and leaf. The tree had exploded, as if by lightning strike, and Baron had been lucky to escape with his life, though a surgeon had spent the rest of the day pulling splinters from his skin and stitching him closed. He still had scars across his chest.

Curses were like that. The Caster always paid a cost.

“Do you need my blood?” Aria’s voice trembled.

Considering the last time she’d bled in the presence of a Caster, the fact that she offered spoke to a wealth of bravery. Baron realized he’d not given her enough credit for that day in the kitchen.Anyonewould have been afraid to take the cup he offered, but she had reason beyond most to refuse. Instead, she’d given him a chance.

“No,” said Baron softly, “just your hands.”

She wore no gloves, and he removed his, extending his hands. She slid her fingers into his. Soft. Warm. Nearly flawless.

“What’s this?” He brushed his thumb over a long, thin scar on her pointer finger.

Aria winced, squinting through one eye. “My first foray into the kitchen. That wall you pointed out has been off-limits to me ever since, and on that subject, thank you again for saving me earlier.”

“I haven’t saved you yet.”

He closed his eyes, focusing on the steady point of contact between their hands, pushing away the distraction of her lilac perfume. For a moment, there was only darkness—then, pulsing faintly at the edge of his senses, he found the song of her blood.It rose to envelop him. The Cast already in place revealed itself in the rhythm of her heartbeat, like a sharp note in every third chord of a melody. If it were a beast in a lair, it rumbled with the contentment of a king resting on a throne of skeletons, a beast which would not be removed except on condition of its own death.

It was worse than Baron had imagined.

“This is fatal.” He opened his eyes, grasping her hands with more force than intended. “She means tokillyou.”

Aria’s expression did not reflect the same shock, only a resignation.