nodded and looked at Will, who added, âYes, thatâs very generous of you.â
Though Will was actually thinking he wouldnât be coming back here, at least not in their lifetimes. He had no desire to return to a place in which he sensed more danger than in any of the cityâs darkest corners.
âYouâre welcome. Anyway, Iâll leave you to it.â
Chris nodded again, to himself, and walked away.
Eloise was left looking slightly shocked and clearly felt she had to explain Chrisâs generosity. âI think they were pretty close to Jex. Maybe itâs making them feel protective.â
âHow well do you know them?â
âNot that well, but theyâre the nicest people. Theyâre genuine, you know, about all kinds of things, the planet, spirituality, everything.â
Will threw a glance at the picture of the witches and said, âWhat about all of this, the witches and the pentagrams?â
Eloise looked put out by the question and sounded defensive as she said, âTheyâre open-minded, the same way I am.â He immediately felt foolish, only noticing now that one of the silver rings that adorned her fingers had a pentagram on it. âI donât know why, but I kind of got the feeling you were open-minded, too.â
âBelieve me, my mind is open to everything imaginable.â She smiled and he said, âWhat is it?â
Eloise shook her head. âI donât know. Just, sometimes the way you speak, itâs like â¦â She couldnât pin it down and then distracted herself with another thought, saying, âDonât think Iâve forgotten either that you havenât told me anything about yourself yet. Iâve told you my life story and you havenât really told me a thing.â
âI told you Iâm an orphan.â He smiled at her and said, âIâll tell you everything, but not here. Iâll walk you back to your doorway and we can talk on the way.â
âOkay, letâs go.â
They stood up together. Will knew heâd have just a few minutes to create answers for all her possible questions, and the only thing he knew for certain was that he couldnât tell her anything resembling the truth.
He still believed that he was meant to meet her, as much as heâd been meant to choose Jex as his victim the night before, but he didnât believe for a moment that Eloise knew how or why she could be of help to him. And right now, she was his only ally in the world, and whatever he did, he couldnât afford to scare her away.
9
âMy mother died in childbirth. My father remarried, but he died a few years later.â
âIs that why you ran away, your stepmother? You are a runaway, arenât you?â
âLiving with my stepmother was impossible.â
Will felt guilty for suggesting his stepmother had been cruel, even seven centuries after her death, because sheâd been a kind and generous ladyâhis motherâs cousin, sheâd kept alive in his mind the memory of the mother heâd never known. He had no doubt, too, that she would have mourned his death no less than if it had been her own child.
âI can believe it. Everyone I know whose parents divorced ended up with terrible stepmothers. Even Uncle Mattâs girlfriends are always awful. Men just seem to get it wrong every time.â
Eloise turned to see if he agreed with her, and he looked at her and smiled. âI hope I wonât be like that.â
âIâm sure you wonât,â she said confidently, facing forwards again. âYou could have gone to boarding schoolâ that wouldâve got her out of your hair most of the time. Where did you go to school anyway?â
Will was actually enjoying creating this imaginary life for himself, the life of a twenty-first century teenager, albeit one with a slightly unusual background and an unspoken aristocratic
Dr. Seuss
Rhonda Woodward
S.J. West
Donna Hatch
Michelle Stimpson
Julie Nicholls
Ann Purser
Elizabeth M. Hurst
Jeffery Deaver
Castillo Linda