“You never would’ve had a taste for human life if I hadn’t given you some of your boyfriend’s.”
Ethan whirled around to face Nora. “That’s why you needed my blood? You said it was to transfer my life force to Sam.”
Nora laughed. “The spell did that on its own. I needed Sam to do a favor for me. In exchange for giving her back her life.”
“A favor?” Of course. “The coven. You wanted revenge on them for kicking you out. So what? You made me into this zombie, witch-killing monster just so you could get back at them for shunning you?”
“They did more than shun me. They took away a power I wasn’t willing to live without. Sure, I’m powerful on my own. But as a coven, we had the ability to do much bigger spells. Ones that would’ve made us invincible.” She walked over to Shannon and grabbed her face, squeezing it in her hand. “But these goody-goodies wouldn’t hear of messing with black magic like that.” She let go of Shannon’s face. “I almost had this one convinced. I even showed her that spell to make every student at that pathetic school bend to her will. But she was mad about some teacher not paying enough attention to her, so she refused to go along with my plan to convince the others.”
Mr. Ryan. He’d stopped Shannon from turning into what Nora had become. He’d saved her by not giving in to all her obvious come-ons. He really was a good teacher.
Nora brought her hand back and slapped Shannon across the face. A big red handprint smeared the blood on her cheek. Nora had slapped the gash she’d cut into Shannon’s face earlier.
“Wait!” I yelled. “You dripped Shannon’s blood into Ethan’s mouth during that spell.”
“She did what?” Ethan spit several times as if that would erase the problem.
“You said that would make sure it was Shannon’s life Ethan drained by being here, but that blood is what’s going to make him feed off others, isn’t it?”
“Very good, Sam.” Nora looked at Ethan. “Oh, and another thing I forgot to mention when you asked me to save your girlfriend—I don’t know how I neglected to tell you earlier—is that she’d see glimpses of the lives she stole. Not only is she killing to stay alive, but she’s being tortured by visions of what their lives would’ve been if she hadn’t fed on them.”
“You sadistic witch.” Ethan lunged at her, but she held her hand up and mumbled something. He slammed into an invisible wall and fell to the floor.
“Ethan!” I bent down to him, making sure he was okay. As angry as I was at him, I still loved him.
“And those visions Sam had,” Nora leaned forward so only the magical barrier separated them, “they were of your future, too. She saw you marry another woman. Guess I was wrong about you falling to pieces after she died. Turns out you would’ve moved on just fine.”
Ethan sprang to his feet and lunged again, but the same thing happened.
“He’s not the brightest one, Sam. Are you sure he was worth all this trouble?”
“Shut up,” I said through clenched teeth. I had to figure out how to get Ethan and me out of here. How to temporarily knock Nora out so we could run for it. But I needed time to think, to form a plan. I had to keep her talking.
Nora laughed. “That’s not what you really want, is it?” There was that almost mind-reading thing she did. “You want to hear all about how I deceived you, don’t you? It was easy, even with that one over there trying to protect you from me.”
“Dylan tried to protect me?” My eyes shot to him.
“The witch box with your ring in it, the necklace, the circle of rocks around your house—those were all me. Every single one of them was supposed to protect you from Nora. To stop her spell from working.”
“You said the necklace was from you,” I said to Nora.
She shrugged. “What can I say?”
“I didn’t have any attacks when I was wearing it, and you couldn’t allow that,” I said, piecing the puzzle together. “You needed me to start dying so you could get me to kill your coven. You stole the necklace from my bathroom that night. You used magic to force a human to break the circle of rocks, so it would look like Dylan broke into the cottage tonight.”
“Yes, yes, and yes. It was the perfect plan. All I needed was a simple spell to make you trust me, which was easy enough after I stole your necklace; it was the personal possession I needed, and thanks to Dylan being a total spaz and not knowing how to talk to you like a normal human being, it was easy to pin everything on him.”
“So you did this to me all so you could kill a few witches who wouldn’t go along with your evil plan? What would happen to me after I killed your coven? What then? Were you going to fix me? Make me human again?”
“I wouldn’t have any further use for you.”
My heart pounded. “You were going to kill me.” That’s why all my future visions of Ethan didn’t include me. I wasn’t alive anymore.
“Don’t make it out to be such a big deal. You were already dead. You shouldn’t be here, and if it weren’t for me, you wouldn’t be.” She stepped closer, lowering the magical barrier she’d created to stop Ethan. “You are nothing more than a pawn in my game. And when I win, I’ll dispose of you. Let you finally rest in peace.”
Ethan made a move for her, but I grabbed his arms to stop him. She was a witch. He couldn’t take her. We were the two weakest people in the diner. Once again I wished I could tap into Ben’s power that was still lingering inside me. I didn’t know how much longer I’d have it. An attack could come on at any time.
Nora laughed and took a seat. “Sam, be a dear and make me some coffee.”
“Are you kidding me?”
“Not at all. If I have to sit around waiting for you two to get all peckish and need to feed, I’m going to need some coffee.”
Waiting on her was the last thing I wanted to be doing, but I still hadn’t come up with a plan. I started for the coffee pot, but Ethan grabbed my arm, holding me back.
“You don’t have to listen to her,” he said.
“Oh no?” Nora snapped her fingers. “Sit down, Ethan.” His face contorted in pain as he was forced onto the stool next to him. “Good boy,” Nora said.
I couldn’t watch her make a puppet out of Ethan, so I shot him a pleading look. He shook his head in protest, but he didn’t try to get up or make any comments, so I considered it a win. I went to the coffee maker and brewed a fresh pot.
As I waited for the coffee to finish brewing, I glanced down at the salt line on the kitchen floor. If I could break the line, Dylan could get free. He’d be able to attack Nora. Then Ethan and I could run away. But Nora always seemed to know what I was thinking. If she read my mind before I broke the salt line, I’d be finished. She’d bind me in magic just like she had done to Shannon, then wait for me to have an attack. Shannon and Dylan would end up dead, and Ethan and I would be next.
I needed a distraction. Something to draw Nora’s attention so I could get to the kitchen.
“How did you pull all this off?” I asked. “You were here at the diner every day. If Ethan could recognize you, why would you chance coming here?”
“Easy. I made sure Ethan never saw me.”
“What do you mean? Did you put a spell on him so he couldn’t see you? Like you did that day when you came to talk to me and the place was packed? You made it so no one knew we were there.”
“Something like that. I made sure he couldn’t leave the kitchen. As long as I didn’t go into the kitchen, I was fine. We’d never meet. And thanks to my new hair color, he wouldn’t recognize me from afar or from any description you gave him.”
Beth had been right. “That day I went to get Ethan to introduce you guys, you went to the bathroom and did some sort of spell. Beth heard you.”
“Beth?” She cocked her head to the side.
“That girl you didn’t like. The one who asked all the questions. She saw right through you. She followed you to the bathroom and heard you doing a spell. You made sure Ethan was too busy to come out into the dining room.”