Darkbound (The Legacy of Moonset)

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Authors: Scott Tracey

Tags: #teen, #terrorist, #family, #YA, #paranormal, #fiction, #coven, #young adult, #witch

BOOK: Darkbound (The Legacy of Moonset)
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Woodbury, Minnesota

Copyright Information

Darkbound: The Legacy of Moonset, Book 2
© 2014 by Scott Tracey.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any matter whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Flux, except in the form of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

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Any unauthorized usage of the text without express written permission of the publisher is a violation of the author’s copyright and is illegal and punishable by law.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Cover models used for illustrative purposes only and may not endorse or represent the book’s subject.

First e-book edition © 2014

E-book ISBN: 9780738739373

Book design by Bob Gaul
Cover design by Kevin R. Brown
Cover illustration: Aaron Goodman

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o
n
e

It is 100 years since our children left.

Oldest Written Records from the
Hamelin Town Chronicles
(1384 A.D.)

I was finally back in school, after a week of security protocols and constant supervision, and now there was a sorority girl trying desperately to piss me off. Now, instead of just one blowoff class about magical theory, the five of us had two: one before lunch and the other at the end of the day.

Kelly was barely older than us, a recent college graduate who split her time with the Witchers between teaching and babysitting duties that came with being Cole and Bailey’s guardian. She smoothed her hair back every time she got nervous, until her hands spent more time in her hair than on the podium she stood behind.

“Malcolm? What do you think about the Coven bond?”

Five pairs of eyes turned to me. I’d taken up a spot in the back of the room where I could slump down in my seat and work on the Civics essay that was due on Friday. Nobody but me was concerned about all the school we’d missed after
nearly getting possessed or murdered a few weeks ago. The
others were still riding high on this new curriculum.

Somehow Justin had talked the Congress into actually giving a damn about us. He had that way about him sometimes. It’s the only reason I was here right now. He made me promise to show up, but he couldn’t make me participate.

They waited. Jenna rolled her eyes. Bailey and Cole looked nervous, and Justin calm but worried.

Kelly seemed desperate to be the kind of teacher she thought we needed. I’d seen her in the halls that first day, the bottled blonde with the dark eyes and California tan. None of the guardians ever showed up at the school, so at first I didn’t recognize her. She’d changed from the comfortable, casual look, opting instead for something better suited to a private school. Her discomfort was obvious.

If I was a nicer person, I’d smile at her. Give her a silent moment of reassurance. I knew that, aesthetically, she found me attractive. When guys checked out girls, they were obnoxious about it. Active. There was a running commentary, obvious gestures, or catcalls: ogling by the ignorant. But girls were sly predators of appreciation. They waited until they were unobserved before polite smiles turned hungry, and casual eyes devoured. Kelly always looked at me with hungry eyes.

Girls have looked at me like that since I was twelve or thirteen. I’d become immune by this point. Kelly wasn’t much of an authority figure, but she wouldn’t have been the first to stare too long.

We were wrangled in a small classroom in the fringes of the school, a room that I was pretty sure had only been storage a few weeks ago. Whipping up a new class in the middle of the semester meant scraping the bottom of the barrel, I guessed. The walls were a stark, chipped gray, plaster grooved away by something small, like a screwdriver or a pair of scissors.

It was all such a joke. Didn’t any of them realize it? The Congress, suddenly giving a crap about the five of us. Like they’d really just turned over a new leaf and now we were all besties. I couldn’t believe I was the only one who was skeptical.

Justin wanted me to wake up and smell the magic. To give our latest fresh start a chance. Like it was okay that we’d been used as bait, that we could have
died,
all so the adults surrounding us could smoke out a warlock. In exchange, now we would be taught magic like the rest of the kids our age.

It was remarkable how quickly Justin and the others fell in line after that. All it took was a little attention, and all four of them were eager puppies who would do anything they were told.

I was the lone holdout. I didn’t want anything to do with Illana Bryer’s plans for us. But they didn’t see it. All they saw was getting everything they’d ever wanted. Nevermind that it was the last thing I wanted. They didn’t understand me. They never had.

How did I feel about the Coven bond? Or how did I feel about this
class
? Coven Bonds for Dummies. “I … think this is a waste of time,” I said finally. Jenna snorted, because of course she had to make her opinion known immediately. “Why does it even matter what I think?”

People fantasized about doing what I could do. About being able to bend the world to their whims. Witches. Magic. Power. I fantasized about a senior year unmarred by devastation and changing schools, where I spent all one hundred eighty days in the same building. With friends who preferred sneaking beers and watching the game to sneaking spells and toying with chaotic forces.

All I wanted was one day without magic. Was that really too much to ask?

I sat up, grunted when my knees slapped against the metal bar underneath my desk.
What do I think about the Coven bond?
A few weeks ago, it had been the Coven bond that had nearly gotten all of us killed. One of us had been infected by Maleficia, dark magic, and the infection had spread into all of us like we were a single organism being brought down by a virus.

Everyone knew the saying “a chain is only as strong as its weakest link.” What we didn’t know was that it had been a witch who had first coined that phrase. And she’d been talking about the Coven bond. The idea that our lives weren’t really our own had never been more clear. I could live my entire life on the straight and narrow, and one of the others could destroy me in a matter of minutes. They were my biggest threat, and my biggest weakness rolled up into one.

They said that was how Moonset devolved. That when Justin and Jenna’s dad snapped, his invocations to the Abyss corrupted his entire Coven. It took years to put them down, and along the way they’d murdered thousands of people, stolen grimoires and priceless artifacts that were never recovered, and committed acts of terrorism that had struck more than just the magical world. Moonset didn’t care which terrorist groups took credit for their attacks, they encouraged it. The world was happy to speculate in its ignorance.

All because one member had been weak and succumbed to the dark power of Maleficia, of the Abyss itself. Now our parents were all dead—executed—and we lived in their shadows. One mistake was all we could afford. One mistake might even be too many.

Bailey turned away, ducked her head in shame. She’d been our weak link, but it wasn’t her fault. The darkness slipped in while her guard was down, after exhausting herself trying to do the right thing and save innocents. She blamed herself. Our entire Coven could have been taken, and all that strain weighed heavily on her. Since we’d been saved, Bailey had withdrawn, prone to nerves and more apprehension than I’d ever seen out of her.

Being in a Coven meant you could do things other witches couldn’t. You had strengths they didn’t. And you had other people to rely on when there was trouble. But that’s not all it meant. It meant that you were in the line of fire more often. You had no choice but to deal with the bickering between Coven mates. You were shackled to other people for the rest of your life. Their weaknesses were your weaknesses. Forever. They could manipulate your friends in order to manipulate you.

And those were just the
normal
problems I had to deal with.

“And why do you think that?” Kelly asked.

“Don’t bother asking him.” Jenna reclined back in her chair, hands tangled in her hair as she shook it out. “Malcolm hates everything.”

No, I just hate the things you like.
I decided not to say it. There was no point in fighting with Jenna. She and I never agreed on anything, but this was something we worked extra hard at disagreeing on. Jenna thought magic would solve all her problems. She hated the idea that anyone else had the authority to tell her what kinds of magic she could or couldn’t use.

I could be honest. Tell them everything I was thinking. But what was the point? Jenna would play the wounded princess. Cole would sulk. Bailey would probably cry. Justin would get that constipated look he got when trying to mediate, even when he’d already chosen a side.

I chose to be silent. To wait it out. Kelly would get bored eventually, and she’d learn not to call on me soon enough. Focus on the others who
wanted
to be here.

She stared me down at first, probably assuming I’d crack sooner or later. “Malcolm?” she prompted. Like I’d forgotten to speak.

I pulled out my mp3 player and popped in one of the earbuds. Only one, to maintain the pretense that I cared about this class. Cared about Coven bonding.

“These lessons are only going to work if all of you are committed,” Kelly continued. It was ironic that Kelly was pulling double duty. At home, she was both a guardian and a jailer. And now she filled the same role at school. Charged with putting us down if we gave them even a whiff of dark magic. “The Coven bond works by finding the common ground you all share, and tapping into it. Without that basis, these lessons won’t do anything but waste your time.”

I slowly, insolently, stared her down as I slid the second earbud in and let the rest of the class blur into a montage set to industrial rock. Jenna’s shoulders squared in front of me, and even though she never once turned around, I knew that all her focus was on me.

I sighed. It had been a few weeks since our last big blow up. I guess we were due.

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