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    The Coven


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      The Coven- Cate Tiernan

      Morgan’s powers are stronger than she ever imagined. She has

      visions, she lights fires with her mind, and her spells work

      miracles. When her boyfriend Cal, a member of the same coven,

      insists that witchcraft is in her blood, Morgan is confused. Her

      parents definitely aren’t witches. They do seem to be keeping

      something secret, though-something about Morgan’s past.

      Sweep: The Coven

      Cate Tiernan

      EBook by: TheLiz

      PrologueI was dancing In the atmosphere, surrounded by stars,

      seeing motes of energy whizzing past me like microscopic

      comets. I could see the entire universe, all at once; every

      particle, every smile, every fly, every grain of sand was

      revealed to me and was infinitely beautiful.

      When I breathed in, I breathed in the very essence of

      fife* and I breathed out white light It was beautiful, more than

      beautiful, but I didn't have the words to express ft even to

      myself. I understood everything; I understood my place in the

      universe; I understood the path I had to follow.

      Then I smiled and blinked and breathed out again, and I

      was standing in a darkened graveyard with nine high school

      friends, and tears were running down my face.

      "Are you okay?" Robbie asked in concern, coming over to

      me.

      At first ft seemed he was speaking gibberish, but then I

      understood what he had said, and I nodded.

      "It was so beautiful," I said lamely, my voice breaking, I

      felt unbearably diminished after my vision. I reached my finger

      out to touch Robbie's cheek. My finger left a warm pink line

      where it touched, and Robbie rubbed his cheek, looking

      confused.

      The vases of flowers were on the altar, and I walked

      toward them, mesmerized by their beauty and also the

      overwhelming sadness of the flowers* deaths. I touched one

      bud, and it opened beneath my hand, blooming In death as It

      hadn't been allowed to in life. I heard Raven gasp and knew

      that Bree and Beth and Matt backed away from me then.

      Then Cal was next to me. "Quit touching things," he said

      quietly, smiling. "Lie down and ground yourself."

      He guided me to an open spot within our circle, and I by

      down on my back, feeling the pulsing life of the earth centering

      me, easing the energy from me. making me feel more normal.

      My perceptions focused, and I saw the coven clearly, saw the

      candles, the stars, the fruit as themselves again and not is

      pulsing blobs of energy.

      “What's happening to me?” I whispered. Cal sat cross

      legged and lifted my head onto his lap, stroking my hair strewn

      across his legs. Robbie knelt next to him. Etan, Beth and

      Sharon circled closer, peering over his sholder at me as if I

      were a museum display. Jenna was holding Matt around his

      waist, as if she were afraid. Raven and Bree were the farthest

      back, and Bree looked wide-eyed and solemn.

      “You made magick,”Cal said, gazing at me with those

      endless golden eyes. “You're a blood witch.”

      My eyes opened wider as his face slowly blotted out the

      moon above me. With his eyes deeply into mine, he touched my

      mouth with his, and with a sense of shock I realized he was

      kissing me. My arms felt heavy as I moved them up to encircle

      his neck, and then I was kissing him back, and we were joined,

      and the magick crackled all around us.

      In that moment of sheer happiness I didn't question what

      being a blood witch meant to me or my family or what Cal and I

      being together meant to Bree or Raven or Robbie or anyone

      else. It would be my first lesson in magick, and it would be

      hard learned: seeing the big picture, not just a part of it

      1. After Samhain

      This book is given to my incandescent one, my fire fairy,

      Bradhadair, on her fourteenth birthday. Welcome to Belwicket.

      With love from Mathair.

      ><

      This book is private. Keep out.

      Imbolc, 1976

      Here's an easy spell to start my Book of Shadows. I got it from

      Betts Jowson, except I use black candles and she uses blue.

      To Get Rid of a Bad Habit

      1.Light alter candles.

      2.Light black candle. Say: “This holds me back. No more will I

      do it. No more is it part of me.”

      3.Light white candle, Say” “This is my might and my courage

      and my victory. This battle is already won.”

      4. Picture in your mind the bad habit you want to break. Picture

      yourself free from it. After a few minutes of imagining victory,

      put out the black candle, then the white candle.

      5.Repeat a week later if necessary. Best done during a waning

      moon.I did this last Thursday as part of my initiation. I haven't

      bitten my nails since. --Bradhadair

      I woke slowly on the day after Samhain. I tried to resist

      the light behind my eyes, but soon I was awake, and there was

      nothing I could do about it.

      My room was barely light It was the first day of

      November, and the warmth of autumn had leached away. I

      stretched, then was flooded with memories and sensations so

      strong that I sat straight up in bed.

      Shivering, I saw again Cal leaning over me, kissing me. Me,

      kissing Cal back, my arms around his neck, his hair soft

      beneath my fingers. The connection we made, our magick, the

      electricity, the sparks, the way the universe swirled around us

      ,,. I am a blood witch, i thought I am a blood witch, and Cal

      loves me, and I love Cal. And that's the way it is.

      The night before, I'd had my first kiss, found my first love.

      I had also betrayed my best friend, created a rift in my new

      coven, and realized my parents had lied to me my whole life.

      All of this happened on Samhain, October 31, the witches'

      New Year. My new year, my new life.

      I lay back down in bed, the coziness of my flannel sheets and

      comforter reassuring. Last night I had seen my dreams come

      true. Now I knew, with a coldness in my stomach, I would pay

      the price for them. I felt much older than sixteen.

      Blood witch, I thought Cal says that's what I am, and

      after last night, after what I did, how can I doubt it? It must be

      true. I am a blood witch. In my veins flows blood that has been

      Inherited from thousands of years of magick making,

      thousands of years of witches intermarrying. I'm one of them,

      from one of the Seven Great Clans: Rowanwand, Wyndenkell,

      Leapvaughn, Vikroth, Brightendale, Burnhide,and Woodbane.

      But which one? Rowanwand, both teachers and hoarders

      of knowledge? Wyndenkeil, the expert spell writers? Vikroth?

      The Vikroths were magickal warriors, later related to Vikings. I

      smiled I didn't feel very warriorlike.

      The Leapvaughns were mischief makers, joke players. The

      Burnhide clan focused on doing magick with gems, crystals,

      and metals, and
    the Brightandales were the medical clan, using

      the magick of plants to heal. Or ... there was Woodbane. I

      shivered There was no way I was of the dark clan, the ones

      who wanted power at any cost, the ones who battled and

      betrayed their fellow clans for control of land, of magickal

      power, of knowledge.

      I considered it. Of the seven great clans, if I was in fact

      from one of them, I felt most like the Brightendales, the

      healers. I had discovered that I loved plants, that they spoke to

      me, that using their magickal powers came naturally to me. I

      hugged myself, smiling. A Brightendale. A real blood witch.

      Which means my parents must also be blood witches, I

      thought It was a stunning notion. It made me wonder why

      we'd been going to church every Sunday for as long as I could

      remember. I mean, I liked my church. I liked going to services.

      They seemed beautiful and traditional and comforting. But

      Wicca felt more natural.

      I sat up in bed again. Two images kept coming at me: Cal

      leaning over me, his golden eyes locked on mine. And Bree, my

      best friend: the shock and pain on her face as she saw Cal and

      me together. The accusation, hurt, desire. Rage.

      What have I done? I wondered.

      I heard my parents downstairs in the kitchen, starting

      coffee, unloading the dishwasher. Flopping back down in bed, I

      listened to the familiar sounds: Not every single thing in my life

      had changed last night.

      Someone opened the front door to get the paper. Today

      was Sunday, which meant church, followed by brunch at the

      Widow's Diner. Seeing Cal later? Would I talk to him? Were we

      going out now, a couple? He had kissed me in front of

      everyone—what had it meant? Was Cal Blaire, beautiful Cal

      Blaire, really attracted to me, Morgan Rowlands? Me, with my

      flat chest and my assertive nose? Me, who guys never looked at

      twice?

      I stared up at my ceiling as if the answers were written

      on the cracked plaster. When the door to my room burst open,

      I jumped.

      "Can you explain this?" my mom asked. Her brown eyes

      were wide, her mouth tight, with deeply carved lines around it

      She held up a small stack of books, tied with string. They were

      the books I had left at Bree's house because I knew my parents

      didn't want me to have them, my books on Wicca, the Seven

      Great Clans, the history of witchcraft A note attached to the

      books said in big letters: Morgan—You left these at my house.

      Thought you might need them. Sitting up, I realized this was

      Bree's revenge.

      "I thought we had an understanding," Mom said, her

      voice rising. She leaned out my bedroom door and yelled,

      "Sean!"

      I swung my legs out of bed. The floor was cold, and I

      pushed my feet into my slippers.

      "Well?" Mom's voice was a decibel louder, and my dad

      came into my room, looking alarmed.

      "Mary Grace?" he said. "What's going on?"

      Mom held up the books as if they were a dead rat "These

      were on the front porch!" she said. "Look at the note!"

      She turned back to me. "What do you think you're doing?"

      she demanded, incredulous. "When I said I didn't want these

      books in my house, that didn't mean I wanted you reading

      them in someone else's house! You knew what I meant

      Morgan!"

      "Mary Grace," my dad soothed, taking the books from her.

      He read their titles silently.

      My younger sister, Mary K., padded into the room, still in

      her plaid patchwork pajamas. "What's going on?" she said,

      pushing her hair out of her eyes. No one answered.

      I tried to think fast "Those books aren't dangerous or

      illegal. And I wanted to read them. I'm not a child—I'm sixteen.

      Anyway, I was respecting your wishes not to have them in the

      house."

      "Morgan," my dad said, sounding uncharacteristically

      stern. "It's not just having the books In the house, and you

      know it We explained that as Catholics, we feel that witchcraft

      is wrong. It may not be illegal, but it's blasphemous.”

      "You are sixteen," Mom put in. "Not eighteen. That means

      you are still a child." Her face was flushed, her hair unbrushed .

      I could see silver strands among the red. It hit me that in four

      years she would be fifty. That suddenly seemed old.

      "You live under our roof," Mom continued tightly. "We

      support you. When you're eighteen and you move out and get a

      job, you can have whatever books you want, read whatever

      you want But while you're in this house, what we say goes."

      I started to get angry. Why were they acting this way?

      But before I said anything, a verse came into my head.

      Leash my anger, calm my words. Speak in love and do no hurt.

      Where did that come from? I wondered vaguely. But

      whatever its origin, it felt right I said it to myself three times

      and felt my emotions ratchet down.

      "I understand," I said. Suddenly I felt powerful and

      confident I looked at my parents and my sister. "But Mom, It

      isn't that easy," I explained gently. "And you know why, I

      know you do. I'm a witch. I was born a witch. And if I was,

      then you were, too."

      2. Different

      December 14, 1976

      Circle last night at the currachdag on the west cliffs.

      Fifteen of us in all, including me, Angus, Mannannan, the rest of

      Belwicket, and two students, Tara and Cliff. It was cold, and a

      fine rain fell. Standing around the great heap of pat, we did

      some healing for old Mrs. Paxham, down to the village, who's

      been ailing. I felt the cumhachd, the power, in my fingers, in

      my arms, and I was happy and danced for hours.

      --Bradhadair

      My mother looked like she was about to have a stroke.

      Dads mouth dropped open. Mary K. stared at me, her brown

      eyes wide.

      Mom's mouth worked as If she was trying to speak but

      couldn't form the words. Her face was pale, and I wanted to

      tell her to sit down, to take it easy. But I kept silent I knew this

      was a turning point for us, and I couldn't back down.

      "What did you say?" Her voice was a raw whisper.

      "I said I'm a witch," I repeated calmly, though inside, my

      nerves were stretched and taut. "I'm a blood witch, a genetic

      witch. And if I am, you two must be also."

      "What are you talking about?" Mary K. said. "There's no

      such thing as a genetic witch! God, next you'll be telling us

      there are vampires and werewolves." She looked at me in

      disbelief, her plaid pajamas seeming young and innocent

      Suddenly I felt guilty, as if I had brought evil into the house.

      But that wasn't true, was it? All I had brought into the house

      was me, a part of me.

      I raised my hand, then let it fall, not knowing what to say.

      "I can't believe you," Mary K. said. "What are you trying

      to do?" She gestured toward our parents.

      Ignoring her, Mom said faintly,"You're not a witch."

      I almost snorted. "Mom, please. That's like saying I'm not

      a girl or I'm not human. Of course I'm a witch, and you know
    it

      You've always known it"

      "Morgan, just stop it!" Mary K. pleaded. "You're freaking

      me out You want to read witch books? Fine. Read witch books,

      light candles, whatever. But quit saying you're really a witch.

      That's bullshit!"

      Mom snapped her gaze to Mary K., startled. "Scuse me,"

      Mary K. muttered. I'm sorry, Mary K.," I said. "It's not

      something I wanted to happen. But it's true." A thought

      occurred to me. "You must be one, too," I said, finding that

      idea fascinating. I looked up at her, excited. "Mary K., you must

      be a witch, too!"

      "She is not a witch!”my mom shrieked, and I stopped,

      frozen by the sound of her voice. She looked enraged, the veins

      in her neck standing out, her face flushed. "You leave her out

      of it!"

      "But—," I began.

      "Mary K. is not a witch, Morgan," my dad said harshly.

      I shook my head. "But she has to be," I said. "I mean, it's

      genetic. And if / am, and you are, then..."

      "Nobody is a witch," my mom said shortly, not meeting

      my eyes. "Certainly not Mary Kathleen."

      They were in denial. But why?

      "Mom, it's okay. Really. More than okay. Being a witch is t

      wonderful thing," I said, thinking back to the feelings I'd hid

      last night "It's like being—"

      "Will you stop?” Mom burst out "Why are you doing this?

      Why can't you just listen to us?" She sounded on the verge of

      tears, and I was getting angry again.

      "I can't listen to you because you're wrong!" I said loudly,

      "Why are you denying all of this?"

      "We're not witches!" my mom screeched, practically rattling

      my windows.

      She glared at me. My dad's mouth was open, and Mary K.

      looked miserable. I felt the first hint of fear.

      "Oh," I snapped. "I guess I'm a witch, but you're not,

      right?" I snorted, furious at their stubbornness, their lies.

      "Then what?”I crossed my arms and looked at them. "Was I

      adopted?"

      Silence. Long moments of the clock ticking, the thin,

      scratchy sound of elm twigs brushing my windowpanes. My

      heartbeat seemed to go into slow motion. Mom groped for my

      desk chair, then sank into it heavily. My dad shifted from foot

      to foot, looking over my left shoulder at nothing. Mary K. stared

      at all of us.

      "What?" I tried to smile. "What? What are you saying?

      I'm adopted?"

      "Of course you're not adopted!" said Mary K., looking at

      Mom and Dad for their agreement.

     


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