Chapter 18 - ARC Hall
Blind As A Witch
Breakfast was rough. Olivia and Ellis werenât talking, and their eyes never strayed anywhere near the other, yet they still managed to pretend, along with everyone else, that nothing had happened. It was the politeness of knives. I got the feeling that everything would be all right as long as I didnât do something sillyâlike breathe too deep or move when I didnât have to.
When Ellis left for work, Rall excused himself from the table so he could say goodbye to her at the door.
Olivia and I were left alone with Nylah.
âWhat did you do this time, Olivia?â Nylah demanded.
âWhy would I tell you?â Olivia asked.
Nylah stood up abruptly. On her way to the door, she paused by Oliviaâs chair and said in a low, angry whisper, âCanât you leave mother alone for once in your goddamn life? Do you have to be such a pain?â
âDonât worry, Iâll be gone soon. Then you can have your perfect life back.â Olivia looked up at her sister. âIsnât that what you want?â
Nylahâs top lip twitched, as if she was tempted to sneer. An emotion moved behind her face. It reminded me of a heavy velvet curtain rolling in loose waves. There was a sense of dark blue and depth.
She left.
I pressed the back of my hand up to my eyes, one after the other, trying to rub away the feeling of seeing things that I shouldnât be able to see.
âI need more coffee,â I whispered to myself.
When I opened my eyes, Olivia had the urn in her hand. She poured a hot layer of coffee into my tepid cup and nudged the sugar bowl closer.
Olivia glanced up when I didnât move and saw the look of wonder and surprise that Iâm sure lit up my face like a blaring neon sign.
Her lips twisted up on one side, her nose wrinkled up, and her brow furrowed. Iâd seen that look once or twice before; if you took a scowl and added a heavy dash of someone grumbling âyeah, yeah,â that would almost cover it.
Dare I say, it made her look kind of cute?
Certainly not out loud.
âThank you, Olivia,â I said.
She shook her head, quick, as if my thanks were nothing but an annoying bug that landed on her hair.
I reached out and started adding some sugar to my coffee.
âYouâre rubbing your eyes again,â Olivia said. âDid you see something?â
âI donât know.â I took a sip, then gazed at the pale reflection of the inside rim of my white mug shining off the dark coffee. âIâve beenâ¦feeling thingsâ¦lately. Itâs like seeing them, but Iâ¦canât.â
That line was lame, even by my low conversational standards, and almost as clear as a bottle of ink.
In an effort to redeem myself, I said, âI thought I saw something in Nylahâs face a moment ago. Some kind of emotion.â I added in a mumble, âIt makes my head hurt.â
I took another sip.
âI wouldnât have chosen you,â Olivia said.
That was the sort of loving endorsement Iâd come to expect from her, but I raised my eyes, hoping I might be able to figure out what had brought it on this time.
She stared at her half-finished toast. When she shrugged, it barely moved her shoulders. âI wouldnât have chosen anyone. But Kirby means a lot to me.â She took a deep breath and looked right in my eyes. âSo this is my family. Now you know.â
There was a sharp clink as I put my coffee cup down in its saucer. âOlivia, I donât care what your family is like.â
But I did care. A lot. Anyone couldâve heard it pouring into my protest until it spilled over the top of the words, turning them into a big fat lie. I wasnât trying to be dishonest, but I didnât know how to explain itâwhy her family mattered, and why it didnât.
Olivia watched my face for a second, then stood up and turned. âI have to go check on a few things.â
âWeâre going out again, arenât we?â
âOf course.â Her voice was brimming with contempt for the fact I felt the need to ask. She disappeared out the door.
âAttagirl,â I whispered to my coffee.
Rall stopped by when he saw I was alone in the dining room. He informed me that his walking buddies hadnât heard anything, but they promised theyâd ask around.
âWhat about you?â he said, âDid you learn anything?â
âOfficer Ansel doesnât like paperwork,â I said.
âAh.â He smiled. âFew people do, you know.â
An hour later, I was back in my winter coat, walking beside Jacky and Olivia. As always, Olivia was thrilled to have me.
âI told you they wonât let you in,â she said.
âBut theyâll let in Jacky?â I said. âThat doesnât seem fair.â
âMr. Noctis is my mentor and a torrman. Youâre just overly inquisitive!â
I pointed at her with both index fingers. âThatâs why you brought me!â
She rolled her eyes.
âIf you keep doing that,â I said, âone day theyâre going to roll around so far youâll be able to see your own brain.â
âMaybe then Iâll know what I was thinking when I invited you,â she said.
âOh-ho! Good one.â
The edge of her lips almost twitched. Almost.
I tucked my hands deep in my coat pockets. Why hadnât I been smart enough to pack my mittens? Or my hat? âDonât worry,â I said. âIâll look around outside and see if I can spot anything from there. I wonât get in trouble for that, will I?â
âI wouldnât put it past you.â
âHow come they wonât let me into this hall anyway?â
Jacky said, âThis library is of particular importance to the coven. Theyâre careful who they allow inside. You would need either a special invitation or a card from the Torr that identifies you.â
âDo I have one of those?â
I had to ask. Itâd only been two or three weeks ago that Darius had come up and handed me a fancy, heavy-duty faux-leather pocket folder that contained a driverâs license, a passport, and a bunch of other official looking documents.
Iâd pointed to the passport and driverâs license. âAre these real?â
âThey arenât forgeries, if thatâs what youâre asking,â Darius said.
I flipped through the documents, then looked up at the count. âI donât see a birth certificate.â
âYou wonât find your death certificate in there either. As far as the government is concerned, that Emerra Cole is six feet underground.â
âSo Iâm a different Emerra Cole that happens to have the exact same birthday and fingerprints as the dead Emerra Cole?â
âBirthday, yes. Fingerprints, no.â
âYou changed my fingerprints?â
âNo, we changed the dead Emerraâs fingerprints. Itâs always easier to kill off the old you than try to change the new you.â
âWhoâs âwe?ââ
âSorry. No questions asked and no questions answered.â He tapped the folder. âBe sure to put these somewhere safe.â
Iâd taken out the driverâs license, dropped the folder on the desk in my bedroom, and hadnât looked at it sinceâwhich was why I wasnât sure if I was a card-carrying member of the Torr or not.
âNo,â Jacky said, âyou donât.â
âAm I going to get one of those?â I asked.
Big Jacky hesitated for a long time. Itâs hard to explain how bones can look uneasyâyouâll have to take my word for it. âThatâ¦remains to be seen.â
Olivia said, âWeâre here.â
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I looked up.
Most of the other buildings in Craftborough were special because they were old; this one was special because it was the final answer on how much modern architecture was allowed to encroach on the witchesâ territory. They used the wood and bricks that matched the rest of the town, but theyâd been stacked up around a state-of-the-art, three-story design. The ceilings were taller, the windows were wider, and the sheets of glass were joined with thin black seams. The halls that led from the main building to the satellite rooms around the back and sides were lined with windows that mimicked the grid windows of the 1700s, but any pretense of shutters were gone.
There was a generous courtyard made up of large, smooth stone slabs laid down so the seams created a pattern of angles and curves. The seams were inlaid with lines of silver metal. Around the edges of the courtyard were the sagging remnants of their manicured plants, nestled in a layer of snow, waiting for spring to come so they could burst back into life.
In front of it all, there was a stone sign. The inlaid metal lines spelled out the name of the building.
ARC Hallâpronounced âarc,â like the curve of a circle, short for Archives, Reference, and Cultural Hall.
Whenever Jacky called it a library, Olivia twitched with the restrained need to correct him. It was, apparently, more than a library.
âThat,â I said, âis a whole lot bigger than I thought it would be.â
Jacky said, âCraftborough is home to the oldest organized coven in North America. They have a lot of archives. And culture.â
I said to Olivia, âWhy are you so sure that this building has something to do with what happened last night?â
âMy mother mentioned a wardsman,â she said. âTheyâre a special group of witches that maintain the wards the coven uses to protect community property, and the rest of coven property is nothing but a bunch of old buildings that we donât bother protecting.â
I spoke slowly, giving my brain all the time it needed to churn through a few deductions. âSo what youâre saying is that, this morning, we broke into the wrong building?â
âIt wasnât the wrong building. Mother had been there!â
I raised an eyebrow.
âOkay. Fine!â Olivia threw up her hands. âI made a mistake. Are you happy now?â
âOlivia Oliversen, does this mean that youâre human?â I tried to sound as shocked and appalled as anyone would be at such a monumental discovery.
Like many other important discoveries, it was ignored by the public at large.
âYou look around the outside of the building and stay out of trouble,â she said. âMr. Noctis and I will go inside and see if we can learn anything.â
âGotcha.â I gave her a thumbs up.
I split off from them early, lest my trouble-making aura infect them.
As I wandered across the courtyard, I tucked my hands in my coat pockets and raised my face to the meager sunlight. The real reason Iâd come (in spite of Oliviaâs discouragement) was to get away from the Oliversen house. I didnât really think I had much chance of finding anything. Mrs. Oliversen had declared it a false alarmâmeaning theyâd found nothing inside. That made it hard to imagine thereâd be anything of interest on the outside. But I had to do my best.
Wellâ¦my bestish.
I didnât whip out a deerstalker cap and magnifying glass or anything. I used the silver lines in the paving stones as the worldâs least exciting balance beams, and every now and then, Iâd gaze at the pewter-colored sky broken up by the dark branches of the bare trees. Whenever I caught someone watching me, I waved. If youâre a bald girl, people tend to look at you when they think youâre not paying attention. I didnât mind. Sometimes peopleâusually childrenâwould wave back.
I passed the long side of the main building and two and a half satellite buildings before I reached what I considered to be the back of the complex. At the edge of the employee parking lot, there was a short brick wall that served only one purpose: to hide all of the ugly, embarrassing metal boxes the complex needed to function.
It was the curse of every designer. You went out of your way to make an aesthetically pleasing building, then along comes all those pesky practical concerns. The easiest solution was to shove the important stuff behind the beautiful stuff and plant bushes. Whoâd see it back there, anyway?
The overly inquisitive. Thatâs who.
Whoever had designed ARC Hall must have missed the memo about using bushes. The ground was still covered with stone slabs, though they didnât extend out as far as the ones out front, and they werenât kept spotless.
When I made it around the satellite buildings, I discovered that the main building butted up against a tall hill. The builders had dug out the section that didnât fit in with their plans and bricked up the new cliff face to keep it from spilling over. As I looked down the length of the building, I could see the hill and the supporting brick wall tapering off a few feet back from the front corner of the Hall.
Even in this man-made architectural mini-canyon, there were paving stones.
There was also plenty of room for me to walk between the wall of the building and the wall supporting the hill, so I could successfully complete my mission of walking around the outside of the Hall.
What a great hiding place, I thought as I stepped between the two walls. Do the librarians ever come back here to get away from work?
I doubted it. Librarians struck me as a dedicated and conscientious group of people.
But if I understood Olivia right, then the people who worked there werenât merely librarians.
And how do you store culture in a building?
Halfway through the canyon, my wandering thoughts focused on an object sitting in the shadow of the building. It was some kind of squat cylinder with a large tag.
I looked around. The walkway was dark and empty. The only litter I could see was a scrap of paper that had escaped from someoneâs lunch, and a disposable cup that had been carried into a corner by the wind.
I peered back at the cylinder. Whatever it was, it looked too heavy to have blown there.
Maybe someone does hide back here.
When I moved closer, I realized the cylinder was a tin can. The tag was the lid, pulled back to expose whatever the contents had been.
Ewww.
I went to pick it up and throw it away, but when I was within two steps of it, I ran into the ward.
I hadnât been expecting it, and there was no warning it was there. I was walking along, nothing in front of me, and then that nothing became a wall. Bright blue light filled my vision. I stumbled back.
âWhat theâ¦â
Once I was steady on my feet, I reached out slowly. As my hand approached the invisible barrier, it glowed a deep indigo, becoming brighter and bluer as my fingers got closer. I rested three of my fingers on the wall of nothing. Under them, an electric cerulean blue spread out, fading into something dark and almost purple the further away it was from the point of contact.
I laughed.
Touching the ward didnât hurt. It felt like a really solid piece of air. I watched the blues and purples slide around as I ran my hand over the surface. As I swept my arm around in a giant circle, I noticed something on the ground at my feet. A line of snow had melted to reveal a metal inlay. I squatted down and slid my hand closer to the stone below me. Sure enough, the ward was attached to the silver line.
Huh.
Iâd used the other silver lines as balance beams. They hadnât been wards.
I heard a voice in my head that sounded suspiciously like Big Jacky: They werenât active wards.
Jacky-in-my-head made a good point. The witches would probably take down the wards in the front of the building when it was open, but no one was supposed to be back here, so they could leave them up the whole time.
But how was I supposed to get that stupid can?
And how had it gotten there in the first place?
I looked around again. Near the base of the hillside wall was a broken branch. It was mostly bare, with one fork sticking off the end, giving it a convenient Y shape. It looked long enough to be useful.
I picked it up and poked the ward with it. There was no reactionâno glow, no pretty blue and purple lights. I used the forked branch to hook the can, then dragged it out of the ward toward me.
Tuna.
I laid the stick aside and picked up the can.
The flecks of fish that were still in it were soggy from the snow that had melted inside, but they were old enough I couldnât smell them. I examined the layer of snow around the edge of the building, close to where the tuna had been resting.
Where the snow had been thinnest, it had already melted down to the stone, making it harder to tell, but I thought a few of the melted spots might have once been paw prints.
âThatâs a strange way to feed a cat.â
I stood up and continued toward the front of the building. My mind was filled, ear-to-ear, with a wispy sense of puzzlement centered around tuna cans. As I walked, I absent-mindedly trailed my left hand along the ward.
âHey! Hey!â
I looked up.
In front of me, at the end of the wall, was a young woman. She wasnât wearing a coat, and in an effort to keep herself warm, her arms were folded tightly across her chest and her fingers were tucked in her armpits. She was around my age, and she had thick, wavy black hair cut in a chin-length bob. She looked angry.
âYou!â she cried. âStop playing with the ward!â
I glanced at the blue shimmer to my left, and let out an embarrassed laugh.
âSorry.â I pulled my hand back to my side.
âWhat are you doing back here anyway?â she demanded.
I picked up my pace in case whatever excuse I thought up wasnât good enough. When I was beside her, I held up the tin can. âI saw some litter.â
When I saw her eyes move from the can up to me, I gave her a smile befitting a good Samaritan.
âWhy were you playing with the ward?â she asked.
âIâve never run into one that kept me out before. It felt kind of weird, you know?â
She sighed and turned back toward the front of the building. I followed her out of the walkway.
âYou must be a visiting witch,â she said.
âNot exactly.â When she turned to me, her face full of alarm, I rushed to add, âBut I am an initiate! I mean, I know about wards and all that, right?â Her alarm morphed into skepticism, so I blathered on to prove how at-ease and blameless I was. âThe ones Iâve run into only keep out monsters and things.â
âWhere the hell are you from?â
My head flinched back when I heard the shock in her voice. After blinking once or twice, I said, âDoes it matter?â
Her cheeks went red, and she shrugged. âNot really. It seemed weird to me. Malign wards are a lot harder to work with than normal wards. Thatâs the kind of thing you only put up when youâre expecting trouble.â
I do live with death every day. Unless heâs on a business trip.
Since I couldnât tell her that, I tried to change the subject. âWhatâs the difference between a malign ward and a normal ward?â
We turned the corner at the front of the Hall. The courtyard spread out in front of us.
The witch said, âA malign ward is designed to keep out things that might harm the people inside it. A normal ward just keeps out everything.â
I tapped the can with the index finger of the hand that was holding it. âBut not, likeâ¦everything, everything. Right?â
âWell, everything alive.â
âBut it doesnât keep out cats.â
She stopped and turned to me. âHow did you know that?â
I held up the can again. âPaw prints.â
âOh.â Her shoulders relaxed, and she kept walking.
I hurried a step to catch up to her. âDoes the fact you came out here mean that youâre the one maintaining this ward? Could you feel me playing with it?â
âIt was freaky. Like someone running a feather over my brain.â
I smiled. âI really am sorry about that. I didnât mean to go around tickling you.â
The witch glanced my way, saw my smile, and gave me a half-smile in return. By then we were in front of the main doors. Knowing my welcome only extended so far, I stopped. The witch stopped beside me.
âItâs okay,â she said. âIt was kind of a welcome break. Itâs pretty crazy in there today.â
Oh, hey! If she wanted to extend her unofficial break, Iâd be happy to keep her there.
âWhy?â I asked.
âWe walked in this morning and found an urgent new assignment, coming right from the top,â she said.
âWhat kind of an assignment?â
She waved her hand dismissively. âInventory stuff.â
âI thought you were a wardsman. Do all the wardsman have other jobs in the hall?â
She laughed. âIâm not a wardsman. Not even close.â
âButââ
A loud, cheerful cry interrupted me: âMiss Cole!â
The witch took one look at the three people approaching us and swore under her breath.
âSorry, she muttered, âI have to go.â
âYeah,â I said. âHey! Uh...thank you.â
She nodded to me, then hurried to the door.
Ellis Oliversen kept coming, her long, fawn-colored coat waving around her legs with every stride. There was an unknown man beside her wearing a reddish-brown wool coat over a suit. Everything he wore looked slightly rumpled, as if heâd mugged someone else to borrow their clothes. But that could have been nothing but a judgment by comparison because, walking in front of him, wearing a tailored navy-blue three-piece suit, long heather gray coat, and dapper tieâlooking as if he was born to that level of styleâwas Mr. Owen Ashworth, the sorcererâs torrman, and the most handsome man Iâd ever met.
He was the one that had called my name. As he walked toward me, he smiled as if heâd unexpectedly run into an old friend.
I held back my groan.