* * *
“WE have to go.” Charlotte stared at Malcolm Rooney, towering over her by eight inches. Around them, the Rooney house was a flurry of activity: short, plump Helen Rooney dialed one number after the other on her cel , going down the list of contacts, while their two teenage sons stockpiled weapons on the porch. As soon as she’d arrived, their oldest son and daughter had left to carry the message down to the neighbors, and now armed men mil ed about at the house.
“Now you listen to me,” the big man leaned closer. “They’re safe behind the wards, and Éléonore is a tough old lady.
She can handle herself. Sixteen men is a lot of firepower. We sure as hel aren’t going to ride out there unprepared, or we might as wel just slit our own throats and be done with it.”
“They’re alone in the house!” She saw a dozen men ready to go.
“It wil be fine,” Malcolm said.
She looked into his eyes and knew arguing was useless. He would do this at his own pace or not at al .
“Another hour, and we’l be good to go.”
“An hour?” He was out of his mind.
You could get the entire town up and moving in thirty minutes.
“It wil be fine,” Helen Rooney said, the phone stil to her ear. “It just takes time to get everyone together, that’s al .
Everything wil be okay.”
The sickening, nagging feeling in the pit of Charlotte’s stomach said otherwise.
Malcolm pul ed a shotgun off the wal .
“You’re lucky East Laporte is a different place now than it was six years ago. Back then, you would’ve gotten no help, but now people wil come together.”
He turned his massive back to her. She realized what was happening: the Edgers were delaying on purpose. Nobody wanted to confront sixteen armed men, so they were dragging their feet, hoping things would resolve themselves.
Charlotte took a deep breath and let go of her persona as an unassuming Edge healer. She raised her head, sinking the icy, unmistakable tone of command into her words. “Mr. Rooney.”
He turned, surprise stamped on his face. He had expected the Charlotte who lived down the road. Instead, he got Baroness Charlotte de Ney, the Healer of Ganer. She stood before him, the ful power of her magic in her eyes, her power radiating from her. The house was suddenly silent.
“Your wife is developing
osteoporosis, you have an enlarged prostate, and your youngest son doesn’t have ADHD, as your wife told me; he has hyperthyroidism. If you want any of these problems to be treated in the future, you wil stop patting my shoulder and tel ing me not to worry my pretty little head about it. You wil get this mob together now and fol ow me out there, or so help me gods, I wil make your life hel . You think those aches and pains you feel now are bad.
After I get through with you, you wil be a broken man. Move.”
* * *
TULIP went rigid in her arms. “Don’t look,” Éléonore whispered.
Daisy flailed, throwing al of her weight. “No! No, no, no . . .”
The slavers dragged her to the ground and pinned her hand to the edge of the sidewalk.
Knife flashed. Daisy screamed, a wordless, sharp shriek of pain.
“Left pinkie,” the slaver announced.
“You planning on getting married?
Because I’m about to take the ring finger.”
Tulip jerked, trying to get out of Éléonore’s arms.
“Stop!” Éléonore tried to hold on, but the girl bucked like a wild beast, suddenly too strong to hold. Éléonore gripped her, holding on, Tulip’s panicked kicking pushing them against a window.
A shot rang out. Glass shattered and something bit Éléonore in the shoulder, right into the bone. Her fingers slipped, suddenly weak. Tulip shoved her back and scrambled toward the door.
“No!” Éléonore screamed.
Tulip burst out of the door and onto the lawn.
Éléonore jerked the door open. “Stop, Tulip!”
A hot, piercing pain struck Éléonore in the chest, pitching her back. She lost her balance and fel onto the porch, half-hidden by the wooden rail.
Suddenly it was so hard to breathe. The air turned bitter. They had shot her, she realized. She began pul ing power to herself. The magic came slow, like cold molasses.
At the ward stones, Tulip turned and was looking at her with wide, panicked eyes.
“Tulip, is it?” the scarred slaver said.
“Don’t look at her. Look here. Is this your friend? Sister maybe, no? Sister, then.”
“You open the ward, and they wil kil you,” Éléonore cal ed.
“I give you my word,” the slaver said.
“Nobody wil kil you.”