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  To the witches: Rebecca, Kayla, and Tiffany. I love you guys.

  And to all the women out there who have a little witch in them.

  Don’t ever forget you’re magic.

  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter One - Dubh

  Chapter Two - Dayna

  Chapter Three - Dayna

  Chapter Four - Meiner

  Chapter Five - Samuel

  Chapter Six - Dayna

  Chapter Seven - Meiner

  Chapter Eight - Dubh

  Chapter Nine - Samuel

  Chapter Ten - Meiner

  Chapter Eleven - Dayna

  Chapter Twelve - Dayna

  Chapter Thirteen - Dubh

  Chapter Fourteen - Cora

  Chapter Fifteen - Samuel

  Chapter Sixteen - Dayna

  Chapter Seventeen - Meiner

  Chapter Eighteen - Dayna

  Chapter Nineteen - Cora

  Chapter Twenty - Dayna

  Chapter Twenty-one - Dubh

  Chapter Twenty-two - Samuel

  Chapter Twenty-three – Meiner

  Chapter Twenty-four - Dayna

  Chapter Twenty-five - Meiner

  Chapter Twenty-six - Cora

  Chapter Twenty-seven - Meiner

  Chapter Twenty-eight - Dayna

  Chapter Twenty-nine - Dayna

  Chapter Thirty - Meiner

  Chapter Thirty-one - Dayna

  Chapter Thirty-two - Meiner

  Chapter Thirty-three - Dayna

  Chapter Thirty-four - Dubh

  Chapter Thirty-five - Samuel

  Chapter Thirty-six - Cora

  Chapter Thirty-seven - Dayna

  Chapter Thirty-eight - Samuel

  Chapter Thirty-nine - Dayna

  Chapter Forty - Dayna

  Chapter Forty-one - Samuel

  Chapter Forty-two - Dayna

  Chapter Forty-three - Dayna

  Chapter Forty-four - Cora

  Chapter Forty-five - Meiner

  Chapter Forty-six - Dubh

  Chapter Forty-seven - Dayna

  Chapter Forty-eight - Dayna

  Chapter Forty-nine - Meiner

  Chapter Fifty- Dayna

  Chapter Fifty-one - Meiner

  Chapter Fifty-two - Meiner

  Chapter Fifty-three - Dayna

  Chapter Fifty-four - Dayna

  Chapter Fifty-five - Cora

  Chapter Fifty-six - Dubh

  Chapter Fifty-seven - Samuel

  Chapter Fifty-eight - Dayna

  Chapter Fifty-nine - Cora

  Chapter Sixty - Samuel

  Chapter Sixty-one - Meiner

  Chapter Sixty-two - Dayna

  Chapter Sixty-three – Dayna

  Chapter Sixty-four – Meiner

  Chapter Sixty-five – Dayna

  Chapter Sixty-six – Meiner

  Chapter Sixty-seven – Cora

  Chapter Sixty-eight – Meiner

  Chapter Sixty-nine – Dayna

  Chapter Seventy – Meiner

  Chapter Seventy-one – Cora

  Chapter Seventy-two – Dayna

  Chapter Seventy-three – Dayna

  Chapter Seventy-four – Meiner

  Chapter Seventy-five – Dubh

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  CHAPTER ONE

  DUBH

  The best way to hunt a witch was to look for patterns of three.

  Three stones set into a wild, overgrown path. Three chimneys sending twisting ribbons of smoke into a clear sky. Three gates before the inner sanctuary—each more heavily spelled than the last. Find the house of threes, and you’d find the coven.

  Dubh had traveled for days. In fact, he’d almost driven past the place. His tourist map was filled with colorful pins at every stopover—Kiss the Blarney Stone! Visit the Irish National Heritage Park!—but this miserable little village didn’t warrant a mention. He’d blown past the welcome sign without a glance, almost continuing into County Wexford. Almost. Something had pulled at his insides as he’d reached the village limits, tugging painfully at his guts. He’d turned the rental car around and followed the sensation down a rambling back road that twisted endlessly through green fields, leading him to this driveway in the woods. And there it was. A farmhouse with three crooked chimneys, windows shuttered against the dark forest.

  The witch hunter watched the house. There was something unnatural about how still he was, the type of stillness reserved for death, or very deep water. He set his back to one of the oak trees lining the driveway, an ashy cigarette hanging between two fingers. The ember burned orange in the darkness, sending a thin spiral of smoke trickling up. At his feet, spent filters scattered the ground.

  He knew why he’d been called. There were too many witches here for one small town. They were gathering.

  In his pocket his cell phone buzzed violently, and Dubh shut his eyes. He raised the cigarette to his lips and took a drag. In, burning his lungs, filling his insides with fire. Out, tipping his head back, blowing smoke onto the breeze. He knew who was on the phone.

  It rang again.

  His brothers were in town. Soon they’d be reunited. After years of faded recollections and fuzzy, half-dreamed memories, he hadn’t been sure they were real. And yet he did not wish to speak with them before it was time.

  Eventually the phone went silent.

  Dubh watched the house. Minutes passed. Flies buzzed around his head with the smoke, and his left arm ached. When he glanced down, four long scratches trailed along his forearm.

  The women had all felt the same until now, a fleeting enjoyment. They’d stirred feelings in him, fire and righteousness. The way they stared at him, dark eyes, pale faces. Their hair caught in his fingers, their screams in his ears.

  This morning had been enough to sate him temporarily, but he was never fully satisfied. He hadn’t known what he was looking for. Hadn’t remembered.

  Until now.

  There was a little witch in every woman, but not every woman was a witch.

  This would be different. The power rolled off this house in waves. It raised the hairs on the back of his neck and sent goose bumps up both arms.

  These witches would give him the first real fight in years.

  He ran his tongue along the inside of his teeth, feeling the jagged edge of his right canine.

  Not yet. He’d attend to the others first. His sword was ready; Witchkiller would taste blood again.

  In a few weeks he’d return. Push his way through the middle gate, the one with the black iron that curved into sharp fangs at the top. Something to look forward to, to make the days go by faster.

  He always saved the best for last.

  CHAPTER TWO

  DAYNA

  It was two o’clock in the afternoon, in the middle of a particularly monotonous lecture on particle physics, and Dayna Walsh was about to have a panic attack.

  It started the same way it always did. Some small shift in the air around her. Subtle, but enough to make her breath catch. Suddenly it was all she could think about.

  Her chest tightened, and Dayna curled her fingers around the edge of the desk, leaning forward, concentrating furiously on the front of the room. A muscle twitched in her jaw, and she scowled at the whiteboard. Of course it would happen in the middle of class.

  The OCD could get especially bad at school. With nothing to draw her out of her own h
ead, it was easy to get caught in the obsessive spiral. To zero in on her breath, how it entered and left her body.

  Mr. McCabe’s voice droned on, the marker squeaking across the surface of the whiteboard. Morgan Brennan’s acrylic nails clicked sharply on her phone as she shot off text after text. Dayna’s ex, Samuel, leaned over his desk beside her, dark hair falling over his eyes.

  One breath in. Two. Three. Shit. Stop counting.

  Dayna wrapped her fingers around the pendant on her necklace, letting the points of St. Brigid’s cross dig into her palm. The conversation with her father this morning had kicked it off, so if she ended up having a massive panic attack in the middle of the classroom, she had the reverend to thank for it.

  Not here. Not here. Not here.

  Her mind kept swinging wildly from what he’d said earlier—Your mother’s back in town, she’s finally coming home from camp—to her breathing. If she could just fixate on something else, like the second hand inching across the white clock face, or the cringe-inducing marker shriek on the board….

  It was no good; her mind kept looping back.

  Now she was forcing each breath, drawing it in, pushing it out. It felt unnatural. Wrong. Her chest ached, and the low buzz of panic surged, twisting her stomach.

  Fiona Walsh had been at church camp for years; Dayna didn’t even remember what she looked like.

  Even the mere thought of Camp Blood of the Lamb made her pulse stutter, and she shifted in her chair, trying to force herself to think of something, anything else.

  In front of her, Mia Blake brushed dark hair over her shoulder, and Dayna made herself focus on the way her hair fell in waves halfway down her back. Her own hair was only the tiniest bit wavy. Maybe she should curl it….

  God, this was stupid. And it wasn’t working.

  She smoothed a hand over the base of her throat, breaths coming short and fast.

  There was a soft hiss from beside her, and she glanced over. Sam was leaning sideways in his desk, a scrap of paper in one hand. She could make out his blocky writing from there.

  Someone forget to tell Mr. M it’s the last day?

  She grimaced at him, nodding. Every other teacher played games or watched movies the last day before summer, but Mr. McCabe decided on a lecture.

  Sam tucked the note into his desk and glanced over at her again, brow furrowed. “You look pale,” he whispered. “You all right?”

  Most definitely not all right. “I’m fine.”

  The classroom dimmed suddenly, as if the sun had moved behind the clouds. But darker.

  Dayna frowned, turning for the window. Beyond the green stretch of schoolyard the sky was speckled with black. It blotted out half the sun, a cloud of…what were they, bugs?

  Murmurs started up around the classroom. Everyone was staring now.

  “What is that?” Morgan Brennan shot out of her seat, her phone hitting the desktop with a thud. A second later someone cried, “Birds. They’re birds!”

  As if the revelation had cleared her vision, she saw them. Flock was the wrong word for this, there were too many. It was an approaching storm cloud, casting the school into shadow.

  Nobody moved as the birds drew nearer.

  She could make out more every second. A blur of coal-black feathers and wickedly sharp talons.

  They were impossibly close.

  The muffled screams of the birds reached through the windows the second before it happened, and someone had the sense to yell, “Get down!”

  There was a rapid thud, thud, thud as feathery bodies hit the windows.

  Shock rooted Dayna to the spot. She felt each impact through the soles of her feet.

  The sound of shattering glass jerked her awake, and she dove for the desk as a blur of smoke-colored feathers hurtled toward her. She scraped the heels of her hands on the carpet, hardly registering the pain. From there she could see Morgan’s legs, hear her screams. Students were falling, birds clawing their faces, wicked talons tangled in hair extensions, tearing at designer T-shirts and hoodies, bloodying faces.

  Something hit her desk with a thud, and Dayna scrambled back. Her elbow smashed into the chair leg with a bone-jarring crack, and she gasped, blinking tears away as a bird glanced off the desktop beside her.

  This was a nightmare, some bizarre dream. She’d wake up any second now.

  Samuel was there suddenly, his arm warm against Dayna’s skin, his back to the chaos as he tried to shield her. His eyes were wide, one hand clutched over his mouth. He gripped her arm, and she didn’t pull away.

  Something crashed to the floor behind Dayna, and she jerked back, nearly knocking Samuel over.

  A crow lay on the carpet.

  Although…not a crow, she realized. It was too big.

  A raven.

  The bird struggled, wings flapping, beak open in distress. A jagged piece of glass was embedded in its chest, glittering under the fluorescent lights. One shiny black eye blinked at Dayna. It seemed impossible the bird should focus on her, but it locked on her face and stayed there, shining with a kind of intelligence that made her stomach squirm. Its chest heaved once and then fell still.

  A second later the classroom went abruptly silent. Some of the students had fled, others stayed huddled under their desks. Most of the ravens seemed to be dead or dying.

  Dayna edged her way out to stare at the bird, her heart drumming hard against her rib cage.

  The raven’s eye had never moved from her face. Like it had been fixated on her right up until the moment of its death. Her hand shook as she let it drift toward the raven’s chest, over the glass embedded there.

  It looked peaceful in death, and strangely elegant. Long and sleek with coal-black feathers. The way it had looked at her…as if it meant to say something but hadn’t had the chance.

  Tears prickled the backs of her eyes. She knew Sam was watching, but she clasped her hands in the air over the bird anyway. Pulling them back, spreading them in a T-shape before her heart. The sign of the battle sword.

  Ravens belonged to the Morrigan, and a witch could not allow their souls to pass this way, panicked and alone.

  Dayna stayed beside the raven, curling her knees to her chest, blinking back tears. Her throat felt tight, and she wasn’t sure if the tears choking her were over the shock of what had happened, or the sight of the dead bird at her feet.

  At least she hadn’t thought of her breathing this entire time.

  She had to force down the hysterical laugh that threatened to bubble up.

  The classroom was growing steadily colder now; the wind rushed in past the broken windows, and the teacher was rounding up the remaining students, ushering them out into the hall.

  A thought kept coming back to her, and as strange as it was, she couldn’t shake it.

  What did the ravens want?

  CHAPTER THREE

  DAYNA

  “So the sergeant is there now? Or did they send animal control?”

  Reagan Etomi’s voice came from the passenger seat, a little fuzzy through the speakerphone, but Dayna could still hear the amusement in her best friend’s voice.

  “Or what passes for animal control in this town,” she replied, easing up on the gas as she turned the corner.

  “So…two guys and a butterfly net?”

  Dayna snorted. “Hey, by the way, you know Morgan Brennan?”

  “Like, Bible-study Morgan?” Reagan’s voice was scornful. “The one who read your journal and spread your sexuality all over the school Morgan?”

  “That’s the one.” Dayna grinned. “Is it awful to enjoy the fact that she got her face all slashed up?”

  “Hell no, that’s just karma. You’re allowed to enjoy that.”

  Dayna smiled. Even though her hands were still shaking on the wheel, and she kept seeing flashes of black feathers every time she blinked, she could feel her shoulders relaxing.

  “But you know what the others will say, right?” Reagan’s voice grew serious. “It’s definitely an omen.
You’re a witch. There’s no way they crash into your classroom and it’s a coincidence.”

  She sighed. Another uncanny habit of Reagan’s: saying exactly what Dayna was thinking. “I know.”

  “We can do a reading. But you’ll have to stop by Sage Widow; the aunties are out of tea. Bronagh says you should pick some up.”

  Dayna groaned. “Fine. I’ll grab it on my way.”

  It wasn’t that she minded the errand. It was that she’d have to go by the church on the way there.

  The Church of the Blood of the Lamb was her father’s territory, and it wasn’t just because he was the reverend there, but because he seemed present in the very structure of the building. It was constructed of blocky gray stone and loomed above every building in the village. Its lines were perfectly straight, and the stained-glass windows of the tower were done in muted purples and blues.

  This was a no-nonsense building. It did not tolerate revelry or foolishness.

  It made her wonder what camp was like, if it had the same somber, prisonlike feeling.

  The idea made her feel slightly nauseous.

  There was a billboard at the bottom of the church lawn. Every week someone arranged the letters on it to spell a different message. Today it said, Try Jesus. If you don’t like him, the devil will take you back.

  It wasn’t the billboard that made her nervous, though; it was the crowd gathering around it. The people at the bottom of the slope held an assortment of cardboard signs. One woman in a long flower-patterned dress held a sign that proclaimed, Repent, Pagans! Another wore a makeshift sandwich board with red marker across the front: Thou Shalt Not Suffer a Witch to Live, Exodus 22:18.

  “Um, listen, I gotta go.” Dayna jammed her foot down on the gas, alarm prickling through her.

  There was a pause on the other end, and then Reagan said slowly, “You’re sure you’re fine? You’re not driving like a maniac, right?”

  “I’m fine. Listen, I’ll see you soon, okay? Bye.” She waited for Reagan’s grumble of affirmation and then hung up before easing off the gas pedal. It should have been disturbing that Reagan knew her that well, but she was used to it.

  Anyway, the sign was probably nothing to worry about. Even though it shook her, she knew it had nothing to do with her coven. Judging by the slogans, they were going after Metaphysical Gifts, the store on Main Street that touted itself as a “Pagan gift shop.”