It was hardly ideal weather for the resurrection of one’s great-aunt, but Sera Swan’s magical power, while impressive, hadn’t the slightest influence over the obnoxiously blue skies.

Autumn had only just arrived in the northwest of England, bringing with it an unseasonably merry sky, leaves of toasted gold and burnt orange, and, most distressingly, the corpse in the back garden.

“You could do with a cup of tea first,” Clemmie remarked. “You’re a mess. You can’t go resurrecting people when you’re all blotchy and snotty.”

Sera chose to ignore the insult, as well as its dubious logic. “Are you sure this will work?”

“Would I lie to you?”

“You lied to me an hour ago when you told me the Tooth Fairy ate the last of the peanut butter. The Tooth Fairy! How old do you think I am?”

“Yes, yes, all right,” Clemmie cut in hastily. “I may have been known to fib in the past, but new leaves have been turned.”

Sera was quite sure a barren wasteland stood a greater chance of turning new leaves than Clemmie did but decided not to say so.

With a swish of her bushy red tail, Clemmie turned and trotted back to the house. “Well? Are you coming? Jasmine’s dead and I haven’t got opposable thumbs. That tea won’t make itself, you know.”

It was just as well the inn was empty this weekend and there were no bystanders to observe this scene, for as scenes went, it was decidedly peculiar. It was like the beginning of a bad joke. A corpse, a witch, and a fox walked into a bar…

(Actually, it was more like a corpse and two witches, and one of those witches happened to be trapped in the form of a small, chubby red fox. Sera wasn’t sure if that would improve the joke or not.)

Sera, who was fifteen years old and frankly out of her depth, hesitated beside her great-aunt’s body.

Was she really going to cast a spell with nothing but Clemmie’s word to go on?

Clemmie, who had turned up out of the blue a few weeks ago and had yet to offer any real answers about who she really was or how she’d ended up trapped in fox form?

She was the very opposite of trustworthy, but Sera was going to have to trust her today or she would lose Great-Auntie Jasmine for good.

The upshot was that Sera had plenty of power and not enough knowledge, while Clemmie had plenty of knowledge and not enough power.

That was all that mattered right now. And anyway, if Clemmie was lying to her, what difference would it make?

Jasmine was dead. A failed resurrection spell couldn’t exactly make her any deader.

The azure skies wheeled above, still objectionably cheerful.

Sera couldn’t believe that it had only been a few minutes since Clemmie had found her in the kitchen, said “There’s a situation you have to deal with outside, but just so you know, I hate tears and hysterics,” and led her out to where Jasmine had dropped dead in the garden.

Sera remembered little of what had happened after that, though her raw eyes informed her that there had indeed been plenty of tears and probably one or two hysterics.

Sera did remember that she’d stood up to go find a phone. The sensible thing to do, she’d reasoned, was to dial 999 and let a grown-up take charge.

Then Clemmie had tutted, stopping her in her tracks. “How tiresome. I expected Jasmine to have more sense and better manners than to die in the garden. On a warm day like this, she’ll get icky very quickly. We’ll have to work fast.”

“What are you talking about?”

Whereupon Clemmie had revealed she knew how to resurrect the dead.

As a collector of rare, powerful spells of dubious legality and even more questionable morality, Clemmie knew all sorts of spells that other people didn’t.

Sera already knew this because Clemmie could not resist telling her at every available opportunity.

She had never had the power to cast most of said spells, she’d admitted somewhat petulantly, but that had not dampened her fondness for knowing more than everybody else.

Sera hadn’t known that this particular spell was in Clemmie’s hoard, however, because the legality of a resurrection spell wasn’t dubious at all. It was, in fact, very illegal.

“It’s a law from back when witches actually had the magic necessary to cast a spell of this size,” Clemmie had explained.

“None of us have had that much power in yonks.” Then she’d cocked her fox head, eyeing Sera with a bright, speculative gaze.

“ You might, though. You’re the most gifted witch the Guild has seen since Albert Grey.

You might actually be able to bring Jasmine back. ”

“Tell me what to do,” Sera had said at once.

“Don’t you want to think about it first?”

“No.” Thinking was exactly what Sera wanted to avoid. If she started thinking, her heart would crumple at the thought of losing the woman who had been more of a parent to her than her own parents had ever been. No, thinking was out of the question.

“A spell like this will require a great deal of your magic,” Clemmie had warned.

“I have plenty to spare.”

“And what about the Guild? What happens if they find out?”

Choosing her love for Jasmine over her loyalty to the British Guild of Sorcery wasn’t exactly difficult for Sera.

The Guild was strict, stuffy, and entirely too fond of looking down their noses at almost everybody.

Their snobbery (and the inevitable generations of inbreeding that came with it) meant that of all the witches born in the country each year, the vast majority were born into the fifteen or so families who could trace their magical history all the way back to the founding of the Guild in the 1600s.

As soon as these precious darlings took their first steps, off they toddled to be educated in the ways of magic and their own intrinsic superiority at the Guild’s opulent estate in Northumberland.

And while it was true that even young witches born outside these lofty circles were invited to share in the same education, it was worth mentioning that the ones who accepted were certainly not given the same treatment once they got there.

(Luckily, most sane outsiders, upon ascertaining that magic was a real thing and, moreover, that they could do it, were understandably of the view that mysterious, hitherto unheard-of guilds were not to be trusted, and chose instead to remain in their homes and study the textbooks the Guild sent them there.)

Sera’s Icelandic mother didn’t have so much as a magical hair follicle.

Also, she was Icelandic, ergo foreign . Sera’s witch father, meanwhile, had limited power and had been the first known witch in the history of his Indian family.

Also, he was Indian, ergo extra foreign.

Sera’s lack of Guild-approved pedigree was the reason, therefore, that no one from that prestigious society had bothered to pursue the matter when Great-Auntie Jasmine, left to care for tiny, mischievous, terrible-twoing Sera after her parents had ambled off on one of their many adventures, had declined their token offer to educate her at the estate.

Eight years had passed, during which time Sera had practically memorised every book that the Guild had sent her, before Albert Grey, who was by far the most powerful witch in the country, had noticed that one of her monthly progress letters mentioned the successful casting of a spell that was well beyond the talents of most fully grown witches, never mind those of a ten-year-old.

He had descended upon the inn with the Chancellor of the Guild in tow, whereupon they’d ridden roughshod over Jasmine’s objections and insisted that Sera be sent to their country estate at once to be appropriately educated as Albert’s apprentice.

That had been five years ago. More than enough time to discover exactly what the Guild was and what it wasn’t.

All of which was to say that Sera knew the Guild hadn’t given her a second thought until she’d proven herself too gifted to ignore, so as far as she was concerned, Jasmine, who had loved her without question since the day they had met, came first.

Now Sera wiped the last tears off her face, turned away from the corpse at her feet, and followed Clemmie back into the house.

As she crossed the kitchen to turn the kettle on, Sera could smell sugar, the soda bread she and Jasmine had baked that morning, and the familiar scent of Jasmine’s Nivea cream. A lump settled into her throat and made itself thoroughly at home. What if the spell didn’t work?

It was horribly unfair. Jasmine was only fifty-six. She had a clubfoot and used a cane, but Sera couldn’t remember the last time she’d even had a cold! Why hadn’t she been allowed to have another thirty years?

An excessively sweetened cup of tea soothed her nerves a little and, thanks to Clemmie’s impatient tsking, almost burned her tongue right off as she drank it too hot and too fast.

“Done?” Clemmie demanded. “Ready? Let’s go. We’ve done quite enough dillydallying. What if someone turns up looking for a room? We could do without a witness.”

Her phone rang and Sera jumped.

“Ignore it,” said Clemmie.

Sera ignored her instead. The only people who ever called Sera on her own phone were her parents (infrequently) and her best friend, Francesca (at least twice a day).

Knowing full well that whichever of them it was, they would keep calling until she answered, and that that was hardly going to help her concentrate on the most difficult spell she’d ever cast in her life, she sought out the phone and answered it.

“Hi.” Sera’s voice was a little raw from the tears and the nerves, but she felt sure she sounded mostly normal.

“I have the most exciting news!” Francesca squealed on the other end of the line, her usually crisp vowels and faultless enunciation lost in what was obviously very great excitement indeed. “You’ll never guess!”

“Francesca, I can’t—”

“Father wants you to come skiing with us this Christmas!”