Page 50

Story: Bewitched

Sybil frowns, furrowing her brow. “Just promise me you’ll be careful, babe.”

I take a deep breath. “I promise.”

* * *

The coven buzzes with activity as classes come into full swing, and even with the recent murder still fresh, life resettles. Despite all the supernatural aspects of a witch’s life, it’s the mundane routines that move the days here.

I glance out the window from my wards class. Outside, another class is sitting on the coven’s front lawn, growing massive beanstalks in a matter of minutes.

“…the easiest and most durable of wards come in the form of amulets.”

I turn my attention back to the front of my class, where Mistress Gestalt, a guest speaker, is giving the lecture. I take in the elderly witch as she leans on the podium. She’s what the fairy tales not so lovingly refer to as ahag.

Only, the stories didn’t get a lot of things right. For instance, hags don’t need to have warts and sinister features. This one, in particular, is more of a HAG—a Hot-Ass Grandma.

“Tell me,” she says now, “when you think of amulets, what comes to mind?” Her long white hair sways behind her as she walks.

Someone raises their hand, and she points to them. “A stone or pendant you wear around your neck.”

She nods. “Anyone else?”

Someone else calls out, “Signet rings.”

“Good, good,” Mistress Gestalt says. She stops. “What if I told you I was wearing ten different amulets? Do you think you could find them all?”

My eyes sweep over her. She wears a loose royal-blue dress cinched with an embroidered belt, a wrist full of colorful bangles, and leather sandals.

She pulls her hair away from her ear, showing off a copper earring with etched writing. She points to it. “This may be my most obvious example. But I should also tell you that the crowns on three of my teeth are marked with protective wards, and the belt has been embroidered with another spell.”

She points to a few of her bangles, a button at the top back of her dress, and a buckle on her sandals.

“Amulets do not need to be obvious or conventional—there are quite a few I’ve spelled over in the medical field—pacemakers, implants, dentures, and more.”

She spends the rest of the two-hour lecture going over the nuances of amulets and all the spells that can be placed on them. I write down notes on everything she says, determined not to miss a single detail.

A bell trills, marking the end of the class.

“Your instructor wants me to remind you all that your amulets will be due at the end of the week,” Mistress Gestalt calls out. “I myself will be looking them over. The witch who creates the most exquisite work will be offered a formal apprenticeship at my company, the Witch’s Mark.”

I gather my things alongside my classmates, my mind turning over the idea of an apprenticeship. Is that what I want? Eventually, I’ll have to specialize in some kind of magic. I wonder what a career that specializes in amulets would look like…

“Selene Bowers.”

I startle at the sound of Mistress Gestalt calling—and hell, simplyknowing—my name. Of course, a name is easy enough to procure, if you’re a witch.

I glance over at her.

She gives me a soft smile, her light eyes a little vacant. “May I have a word?”

My gaze sweeps over the rest of the witches leaving the room. I don’t know what she could possibly want from me, unless it’s something I’ve forgotten.

After a moment, I nod. “Of course.” I make my way toward her.

“Good, good.” She grabs her notes from the podium and slips them into a bag at her feet.

My heart is picking up speed as I step up to her. I don’t even know why I’m nervous. I think it’s simply habit that makes me assume I’m being recognized for doing something wrong rather than, I don’t know, standing out for my amazing magical talent.

“It’s an odd form ofwitchcraft, yours,” Mistress Gestalt says as she zips up her bag.

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