Read The Heart of the Phoenix Online

Authors: Brian Knight

The Heart of the Phoenix (12 page)

Zoe rose without a word and shambled her way toward the door.

“Tomorrow night,” Erasmus agreed. “I hope you’re all as good as Ronan told me, because this is not going to be easy and I don’t like wasting my time.”

 

* * *

 

The next night Zoe was late, and after fifteen minutes of twiddling their thumbs Erasmus started the lesson without her.

“Do a page from your book, two if it goes easily,” Erasmus said. “Then you’ll spend an hour or so working with me.”

“Doing what?” Katie already had their book in hand. She tapped it with her wand and it sprang open for her.

“That depends on what I see before we start.” Erasmus planted himself on his stool and settled back to watch.

Trying to ignore him as best they could, Penny, Katie, and Ellen stood before the book and watched text flow onto the next blank page.

“An extra-dimensional what?” Penny thought it sounded like science fiction.

“Extra-dimensional space,” Katie said.

“Hiding a space inside another space,” Ellen said.

“Why would you want to do that?” Penny looked up from the book at the sound of Erasmus chuckling and gave him the kind of look that makes babies cry, but Erasmus pretended not to see it.

“Just keep reading,” Katie said.

They practiced the precise wand movements described, whispered the power word over and over until they were sure they had it right, then Ellen gave it the first try.

“Absconius,” she made the three tight clockwise circles in front of her face and watched a momentary rippling in the air.

Zoe arrived moments later, slipping through the door with a furtive glance over her shoulder before she closed the door silently behind her.

“Sorry, they ran late tonight. I don’t think I’m going to be able to come tomorrow night.” Zoe saw Erasmus swiveling toward her and open his mouth, preparatory to a rant, and cut him off before he could begin. “You picked a bad time to start night classes.”

“She can catch up when she moves back,” Penny said, and Erasmus settled into his grumpy silence.

They caught Zoe up on the Absconius spell and resumed practicing. Ellen was the first to get it right a half hour later. A small opening to nowhere appeared before her, swirling in the air like a whirlpool.

“What now?” Ellen sounded shocked to have pulled it off. She took a wary step back from it.

“Put something in there before it closes,” Erasmus said, and when Ellen pulled at a small silver ring on her left hand pinky, he stopped her. “Something you wouldn’t mind losing.”

Ellen looked around, then bent and plucked a fist-sized stone from the dirt. After a moment of hesitation, she reached forward, flinching as her hand passed through the little vortex, and deposited the stone inside the extra-dimensional space. The vortex flickered as she withdrew her hand, then spun itself out of existence.

The girls stood and waited, and finally Zoe said, “What now?”

“Now nothing,” Erasmus said. “It stays put until you go back for it.”

Penny and Katie were poring over the page again for instructions to bring it back, but couldn’t find them.

“Next page,” Zoe said.

“Do we have time?” Penny asked.

“We do if you guys hurry up,” Erasmus said.

Within the hour all four could open extra-dimensional spaces, though none bothered to hide anything in them after Ellen. They wasted no time in activating the next page, which did have the instructions they’d hoped for. It had two spells, the first to locate the hidden extra-dimensional space, the second to open it again.

Zoe went first this time, pointing her wand in the general direction of Ellen’s hidden rock. She made no movements, only pointed and spoke the power word, “Aperius.”

A nearly transparent mist flowed from her wand tip, thinning to invisibility as it spread in the air before her. At first nothing else happened, then a spot a few feet in front of her nose began to glow an electric blue. The glow lasted for perhaps ten seconds before it faded.

Penny, Zoe, and Katie tried to locate the other hidden spaces to no effect.

“You won’t find them,” Erasmus said. “If you don’t put something material in them, they collapse.”

The thick plumes of mist from their multiple revealer spells were dispersing, and then their wands began to glow.

“Woah!” Penny turned to Erasmus and saw the near transparent mist settle around his cane, which also started to glow.

“Look at the book,” Ellen said.

Penny, Zoe, and Katie turned to the book in unison and saw it glowing.

“That’s a handy spell,” Erasmus said. “Reveals a magical field or object.”

“Handy,” Penny agreed.

Next they tackled the spell to reopen Ellen’s extra-dimensional space, which they all nailed the first time they tried it; same wand movements, but counter clockwise, and a different power word. Ellen was last this time, waiting for Zoe’s to expire and the special vortex to vanish again before she started. When it reopened, she reached inside and retrieved the hidden rock. A few seconds after she removed it, the vortex collapsed.

They turned to Erasmus.

“So, are we up to your high standards,” Katie asked, exercising her usual sarcasm.

Erasmus smiled.

“You’ll do.”

 

* * *

 

He drilled them on attack and defensive stances for the next half hour, and then had them practice shield spells for another half hour. He seemed reasonably happy with their performances, and let them go with a promise that they would be defending themselves against real spells the next night. Penny hoped that whatever he sent at them wasn’t too bad; she wasn’t confident that she’d be able to stop everything he sent at her.

The next night proved her fears weren’t entirely baseless. She stopped most of the weak shocks and magical bolts he sent at her, but not all. She wasn’t alone either: by the end of the night they all ached from multiple hits from his spells. They improved with every lesson though, and a week later he was using more powerful and more painful spells against them. Blocking stronger spells was harder work, but soon they were able to deflect everything he sent at them.

His methods were stricter, his lessons harder than when they had taught themselves, but there was no denying his effectiveness. Penny thought that if they ran into the Birdman after a month of working with Erasmus, they would clean his clock easily.

They also made quicker progress in their book than they had in months, mastering new spells almost every night, and though Zoe missed one in three lessons because of her parents’ driving schedules, she managed to mostly keep up. The days passed, summer moved toward fall, and school became more than just a nebulous future event; it became real and imminent.

Erasmus became a fixture in Dogwood as the entire town watched him harangue the construction crews and schmooze the displaced shop owners into returning. Susan was still undecided, but Penny thought Erasmus was wearing her down. She had hired Jenny back part time, she said to let Penny enjoy the rest of the summer, but Penny thought it might be a first step to reopening Sullivan’s.

The former Sheriff Price had left town, and Ernest Price’s wife had finally returned, but the Price family barely stirred from their ranch. When the girls did catch Rooster or his brother James around town, the boys gave her no more than a cursory glare before going their own way.

Acting Sheriff Michael West was settling into his new job and awaiting a special election, but had no serious contenders. He had quit pestering the girls about their dangerous pastime, and Erasmus had started hinting that he’d like to get Michael into training with the girls.

The last week of summer vacation came, and on the morning of Zoe’s arrival, Penny awoke in Aurora Hollow, her pajamas wet to the knees from the creek, standing in front of Ronan’s cave and staring down into the unknown darkness.

 

* * *

 

Penny saw Katie and Ellen waiting near the gazebo in the park as Susan drove them past.

“Excited?” Susan parked her van in front of the park, across from the rebuilt storefront that used to be Sullivan’s. Penny saw her look, then turn away quickly when Penny saw her looking. “You guys will be waiting all day. They won’t be back until this afternoon.”

“I wanna be here... just in case they’re early.” Zoe hadn’t shown up for the previous night’s lessons. They hadn’t dared to contact her, too great a chance of her mom or dad overhearing, but Penny thought it was because they were pulling an all-nighter, which would put them hours ahead of their original schedule. “We’ll find something to do until she gets here.”

Penny was more curious about what Susan was going to do for the rest of the day. There were no deliveries on Sunday, and she wasn’t a churchgoer. Penny thought Susan might finally be ready to talk to Erasmus about renewing her lease and reopening Sullivan’s. Penny hoped she would, she was tired of having to order books online and wait for them to show up in the mail, and she knew she wasn’t the only one who missed having a real bookstore in town.

“I’ll be around,” Susan said. “Don’t get into any trouble.”

“I won’t,” Penny said, and ran to meet her friends, but thought,
easier said than done
.

Halfway to the gazebo, Katie and Ellen saw her coming and waved, but their attention was drawn away to the street behind her. She heard the aggressive growl of an engine and turned to see James and Rooster Price rolling slowly past, watching her, Rooster with a sullen resentment, James wearing a smirk.

Someone behind them honked, and James picked up his speed. Moments later they were gone, leaving Penny standing alone with a creeping sensation of dread cooling her spine.

 

* * *

 

“What did those,” Katie then called Rooster and James names that made Ellen giggle and blush at the same time, “want?”

“Same thing they always want,” Penny said, sitting to join them at the gazebo. “For me to fall over and die.”

“Dad thinks they’re up to something,” Katie said, snarling in the direction James’s flashy car had disappeared.

“Your dad thinks Rooster is up to something,” Ellen said, trying fruitlessly to keep a neutral voice and serious expression. Her lips twitched as she tried to suppress a grin that stubbornly refused to die. “Rooster doesn’t have the brains to plan anything too awful. I’m surprised he remembers to dress himself before stepping outside in the morning.”

Katie shifted her snarl to Ellen.

“Not Rooster, you dope. His dad, his family.”

“How does he figure that?” Penny was curious to hear this. The occasional covert smirks she’d seen James Price give her and Susan since his family’s trouble with Morgan Duke and the torching of downtown Dogwood were unnerving, but not sinister. She expected anger, it was Susan who had defied him by refusing to sell the piece of property that was the key to his entire plan, and it had been Penny who exposed his connection with the Prices, but James had remained as smug as ever following his father’s catastrophic fall from grace in the community.

“Well, he’s not sure,” Katie said. “Avery Price resigned as sheriff before the city council could organize a recall election, and no one here has seen him since, but Ernest is hanging on. He had to sell his business block, his insurance company wouldn’t cover him after it found out his business partner arranged the arson, and he’s had to sell off a lot of his other property to cover legal expenses.”

Ellen seemed thoroughly uninterested in Price’s legal and business problems, and this was all old news to Penny, who had heard it from Susan as it happened.

“No one around here wants to work with him anymore, his farm barely pays for itself, and he lost most of his income with downtown. Dad says if he was smart he would sell everything and relocate to some place where no one knows him... but he’s hanging on to his farm and sticking around.”

Penny had also heard this from Susan, who had leased Price a large chunk of the land Penny owned to farm. Susan had refused to release him from his lease following the devastation of his crop, also destroyed by his once silent partner in an attempt to burn down the house Penny and Susan lived in. Susan was essentially the only person in Dogwood still cheerfully doing business with Ernest Price, because it meant him paying for the use of land he could no longer use.

It’s his own fault
, Susan told Penny after a brief but heated argument with the man. She had tried to maintain a serious expression, but had broken into the sort of grin that reminded Penny of comic book villains contemplating the demolition of orphanages.

“So,” Penny said, trying to streamline Mr. West’s suspicions. “Your father thinks he’s up to something because he didn’t run away?”

“Well, yeah,” Katie said. “He’s losing money, and no one here wants to do business with him anymore. It doesn’t make sense for him to stay.”

Penny agreed with Mr. West, but kept her suspicions to herself. Her distrust wasn’t based on anything logical, only the smug smirks James kept aiming her and Susan’s way. It was the expression of a person who knows it isn’t over yet. A person who has one more trick up his sleeve, and can’t wait to spring it.

 

 

Chapter 7

 

The Secret of Aurora Hollow

 

The honk of an air horn announced Zoe’s return just before noon, and the girls ran to meet the truck they’d watched take Zoe away a few months earlier as it pulled into the church parking lot.

Zoe’s father, tall and muscular with hair almost as long as Zoe’s, stepped down from the cab and stretched his spine. He surveyed the town around him, pausing for a moment to watch a couple of boys at the river fishing, then saw Penny, Katie, and Ellen running his way. Zoe’s mother appeared next, stepping down from the high cab more slowly and cautiously. She was a small, brown-haired woman, almost comically mismatched when she stood next to her husband. Zoe exited last, and though she had been meeting them in secret almost every night for the past month, Penny was still excited to have her back. Zoe spotted them and waved, then braced herself for impact as Penny, Katie, and Ellen charged.

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