Total pages in book: 101
Estimated words: 97229 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 486(@200wpm)___ 389(@250wpm)___ 324(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 97229 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 486(@200wpm)___ 389(@250wpm)___ 324(@300wpm)
And so my body died, and my soul lived.
Hans pulled his wrist away from my mouth and I gasped as I stared at the world anew. This time it was me who gave Hans a blood-red kiss – red with his blood as well as mine. Perfection.
I was kissing him hard as a rumble sounded loudly underneath the bench. The walls shook on either side of us as something spluttered and gurgled, returning from the depths.
Yes, of course…
I felt the spray of fresh water.
It was flowing free.
Hans broke the kiss and turned me along with him to face the spring, and it was alive again. Like it should be. It was just another thing in the chain of things that were meant to be.
I recited the legend.
There will be nine witches from the bottom of Orcop to the end of Garway Hill as long as water flows.
I was one of the nine witches.
The water was flowing again.
My spirit was home.
Hans wrapped me in his arms, and I held him back, like I’d wanted to do as Mary. Her dreams were coming to life as mine.
“Happy Halloween,” he said, and I laughed.
“The first of many more to come, I hope.”
“Many, many more to come.”
We watched the spring in silent harmony, loving our quiet embrace of our new life… until a voice sounded out like a screech in the dark.
“KATHERINE!”
I tensed in Hans’ arms. What the–
“KATHERINE! GET HERE NOW OR I SWEAR TO GOD, GIRL, YOU’LL FUCKING REGRET IT!”
It was Grandma, and she sounded insane. Absolutely fucking insane.
Chapter Thirty-four
Hans stood up from the bench and I felt the power in his stance as he prepared to face her for me, but I didn’t want him to. I didn’t need him to. I put a hand on his arm gently and shook my head as I rose to my feet myself.
“Let me,” I said.
I pulled my dress back on as Grandma kept screeching from the other side of the grounds, but I wasn’t frantic about it. I didn’t rush to run to her, just walked slowly, enjoying the darkness of the night with my fresh new eyes.
“KATHERINE!” she screeched again, and then she started in shock as she saw me standing there.
“I’m here,” I said, “and I won’t be regretting anything. You’ll never make me doubt myself again.”
She was holding a crucifix and brandished it at me like I was going to curl up on the floor in agony, but it made me laugh.
“Oh, Grandma! God doesn’t hate me. The higher power wants us to be true to ourselves, not living a lie for other people.”
“THAT’S STUPID, GIRL!” she tried, but I shook my head.
“It’s not going to work with me anymore. I’m not going to let you kick me with your criticism every time I want to be myself.”
“Nor me,” another voice sounded out, and wow, there was my mum, walking through the grounds towards us, wrapped up in her favourite thick green cardigan.
My heart soared.
Grandma looked between us like it was a conspiracy, but Mum was as calm as I was. She arrived at my side and took hold of my hand, and stared Grandma right in the eye.
“You either love us for us, or you don’t love us at all. Your choice.”
“DON’T BE–” Grandma began, but Mum shook her head.
“Which is it going to be? Do you love us or not?”
Grandma looked so hateful.
“And what are you going to do if I don’t? Are you going to curse me and throw me to my death like you did your father?”
I clenched Mum’s hand, but I didn’t need to. She stood firm.
“Except I didn’t kill my father, did I? It was your magic as well as mine that caused it. If I’m a murderer, then you are too.”
Grandma flinched. Shocked. Because Mum was right. It wasn’t just her roar of magic that had rocked the tower that night. Not at all.
“We’re all witches,” Mum told her. “Accept it, and you can accept the love between us all.”
Hans approached from behind and stood beside us, all three of us looking at the woman battling her demons. We had none left of our own.
Grandma was still clutching at her crucifix as a car pulled up in the gateway. The glow of headlights blinded us all, and the figure walking towards us was nothing but a silhouette.
Wow. It was turning into quite a gathering. Who the hell was this now?
I heard one word. Serena. And my mum dropped my hand.
“Thomas?!” Her eyes strained to see him. “Thomas? Is that you?”
My God, I heard the love in her voice. The figure was walking towards us, but he didn’t make it anywhere close. Mum went running to him in a full sprint and he was ready for her. He held her tight in his arms. I watched them open-mouthed.