"Are you sure this is the right place to be
doing this?"
Rory asked in a voice barely above a
whisper.
"What better place," Celeste said softly, "than Solange's grave?" She shivered a little, though it was far from cold tonight. It was the atmosphere. The tall ornate crypts, a city of the dead, rising all around them. The swirling mists writhing on the ground. The thick black clouds blotting out even the moon and stars.
"I don't like it here," Eve put in, looking around the cemetery with fear in her brown eyes. "It feels…dark. Evil."
"Don't be ridiculous. The ancestral home is a stone's throw from here. Solange is here," Celeste began, but she let her voice trail off. It felt ridiculous to lecture her cousins when she was every bit as uncomfortable herself.
"You could at least do something about the atmosphere, couldn't you, Rory?" Skye asked.
Rory closed her eyes and the others went silent, watching her. In a moment, the ghostly wind that had been moaning and whispering around the crypts and statues faded and died. The dark clouds blotting out the face of the moon broke apart, sailed away like black ghost-ships on a midnight sea. And the full moon gleamed bright and silvery, bathing the crypts in light and shadow.
No doubts for Rory. She cast, and she conjured, and the results were visible, palpable. Rain fell or snow or hail. No questioning her perceptions. No wondering if the voices were only in her head. And no question in her beloved Luke's eyes either. No room for doubt. Eve's power was like that, too. When she moved something with her mind, there was no questioning whether it had really happened. It simply did.
"Hell, I'm not sure that's any better," Skye said. She was looking now at the statue near the Deveaux family crypt. Life-size, lifelike in every way, it was made to look only more real by the moonlight. "God, who put that awful thing here?"
"I'm more concerned as to why," Celeste whispered, eyeing the chiseled, harsh and somehow handsome face, the flowing robes, the hands forever gripping something that had long since crumbled away.
"It's almost as if it's real," Skye said softly. "I keep thinking I can hear its thoughts."
Eve shivered and rubbed her arms. "Yeah? What's it thinking?"
"I don't know. I can only make out whispers."
"Might not be the statue at all," Celeste said. "Might be the whispers of the dead. This place is humming with them. Maybe you're starting to channel them, like I do."
"That's not what it feels like," Skye said. "But then again, how the hell would I be sure?" She met Celeste's eyes.
Celeste understood. Her power and Skye's were the most alike. Skye heard the thoughts of the living. Celeste heard the voices of the dead. Tough to prove either of them. Though she'd never heard Skye speak of her lover doubting her abilities. As far as Celeste knew, Nic was a true believer.
"Can we just get this over with?" Rory asked. Clouds came creeping back over the face of the moon, and she waved an impatient hand and sent them skittering away. "I can't hold the weather off all night." She looked as if she could, with the moonlight setting her burnished red curls alight like a nimbus of power.
"So what do we do?" Eve asked.
"Hold on, I'll ask." Celeste closed her eyes. "Solange? Great-Grandmother, are you there?"
I'm here, child. But you already know what to do. Trust your instincts. They're the instincts of a witch, and will never steer you wrong. It's important you do this.
Nodding, Celeste looked at the others. "Form a circle," she told them. It was the first thing a witch did in most situations. So it ought to work now.
The four cousins formed a loose circle, right in front of the Deveaux family crypt.
"Solange can see us, she says," Celeste said, passing along the impressions she
was receiving from her great-grandmother. "But she can't come to us. She isn't
free yet. She's trapped…in the house."
As she said it, all four of them turned to look in the direction of the house. It was beyond Lafayette Cemetery's stone wall, a few blocks away.
"She says it does her heart good to see the wonder of her family, of her bloodline. It made it worthwhile, the sacrifice she made for us."
Beautiful, all of you, and strong. And you have each found love, Solange went on. But it is with you, Celeste, that I feel the strongest bond. I can speak to you, Celeste. It means so much that you can hear me. And beyond that, of all of you, you are the one who looks so like I did in life. It warms me to see you strong and proud in your caramel skin and raven hair.
"You've been so lonely, Grandmother. For so long. I know how you must ache for your Jonathon, but it will be over soon," Celeste promised.
I would make the same choices again, Celeste. I did the right thing.
"Now what?" Eve whispered. She pushed a hand through her short, dark brown hair, a nervous gesture.
Take out the stones.
"Take out your pieces of the stone," Celeste said. She lifted her head, looked around the circle at each of her cousins in turn. Rory reached into a backpack, took out a hunk of stone, dropped the pack onto the ground. Skye had an expensive-looking handbag, large and brown with a gold clasp. She took her piece from that, then set the bag aside, her eyes only on the stone. Sable-haired Eve carried her stone in a leather satchel with a drawstring top. She took it out and tossed the satchel amid the crypts and pottery. Celeste took her own stone from the silk bag she'd taken to carrying belted around her waist. She held it in a two-handed grip, out in front of her, and the others copied her stance.
Put them on the ground, Solange whispered.
Celeste nodded. "Put them on the ground."
As she said it, she knelt down and, reverently, she laid her piece upon the well worn, oft-tread ground. The others did likewise, kneeling, lowering the pieces of stone to the ground, reluctantly letting go of them, and finally straightening again.
And Celeste spoke the words her grandmother gave to her.
"The stone was split, the curse was spoken. The stone is healed, the curse is broken. So mote it be."
"So mote it be," the other three repeated in one voice.
On the ground, the stones began to vibrate, to tremble. As the four women watched in wonder and awe, they moved. Slowly, tentatively at first, then with more vigor. Some of the pieces turned, rotating themselves into the correct position. Then, in one sudden burst of frantic motion, the four pieces slammed together in the very center of the circle the women had formed. Light burst from them, a blinding orange-yellow glow that brightened to pure white at the seams — sparks flew as the pieces melded.
And then the light died and the Stone of Power lay there in the very center of the circle, whole, not even a crack to show where it had once been broken.
Celeste felt something, a rush that made her jerk her gaze in the direction of the house. "Solange is free!" she shouted. She felt the woman waft into the cemetery to join her descendants with a warm, rose-scented breeze.
And then she appeared there. Translucent, wispy, like a veiled, smoky reflection of Celeste's own face, above an old-fashioned dress with a high lace collar.
"Solange," the others whispered.
They could see her, too!
But Celeste's joy was short-lived, for she saw the look on her great-grandmother's ghostly face, saw the fear in her eyes and felt the bolt of panic that shot through the other woman's heart as she looked beyond her descendants.
Celeste followed her gaze and she saw it, too. The statue, looming behind her cousins seemed to be…coming to life.
Something spattered on the ground, like stones being dropped by handfuls, and the three cousins turned, all of them, only to freeze in horror when they saw what Celeste and Solange had already seen.
The statue, the frightening, horrible statue, was…moving. The arms, hands, seemed to flex slightly, and stone crumbled and fell away.
"My God, look at the eyes!" Skye said.
They all did, seeing that those eyes were no longer the eyes of a stone statue, but the eyes of a man. A living, angry man.
"Girls! You must flee!" Solange shouted.
But even then, the statue was shaking off more of the stone, protesting in a deep growl as he struggled to get free. "I don't understand, Solange. We broke the curse. We set you free. What's happening now?"
"Yes, Celeste. You broke the curse. You've freed me. But in so doing, you've also freed him."
"Who is he?" Rory asked, staring from the ghostly apparition of her great-grandmother to the crumbling statue.
"Darien," Skye replied. "I can read his thoughts loud and clear now. He's the wizard from the legend. And he intends to kill every one of us and take the stone."
"Over my dead body," Eve whispered. She waved a hand at the statue, and it went flying off its pedestal, smashing onto the ground in a cloud of dust.
Seconds later, though, the man himself, Darien, rose from that pile of broken rock, an evil smile on his face as he brushed plaster and dust from his robes. "Thank you, Eve. It would have taken me another twenty minutes on my own." He looked at the Stone of Power, lying there on the ground among them. "I'll just take my stone and be on my way."
"The hell you will!" Eve crooked a finger, and the Stone hurled itself toward her. She caught it, staggering backward and grunting at the impact, the weight of it. Her knees buckled, but her cousins surrounded her, helping her support its weight.
"The house," Skye shouted. "Get it into the house!"
They moved as one, Eve hurling tree limbs and rocks at the wizard every time he started to pursue them. Darien's limbs were stiff — probably from years of disuse. Celeste hoped his powers were as weakened.
"He's gaining on us," Skye said without looking back.
"Let's see him get through this," Rory shouted with a look at the skies.
Black clouds blotted out the moon, and a bolt of lightning shot down, blasting the earth in front of the wizard's feet.
"Righteous dead, arise and come to our aid!" Celeste shouted.
And immediately mists rose, swirling and writhing from the ground, from the crypts. They twisted and swirled, and the wizard stopped, stunned by what he saw. His gaze turned first one way and then another as the shapes surrounded him, moaning and shrieking, blocking his escape.
The women ran the rest of the way and managed to get the Stone into the house. They set it on the first table they came to, a coffee table, where Solange's tools were laid out as if awaiting her return. Eve turned and flung a hand toward the door, closing it behind them, turning the locks without touching them. Then she turned to face the others.
"So now what?" she asked.
"I don't know," Skye said. "I only know he was thinking he couldn't let us get the Stone into the house. So I figured it was our best bet."
Solange stood near the table, her hands hovering over her tools, the look on her face full of longing. Celeste felt her thoughts. She was itching to pick them up, to hold them again, to wield their power, but she was afraid to try. Afraid of the disappointment she would feel when her hands moved right through them. She turned, to face the women, her progeny, choosing instead to answer their questions.
"You were right, Skye," Solange said. "I've been imprisoned within this house for many years. And I may be noncorporeal, but I'm not without power. I've cast a circle around this place every night since I left the world of the living. A circle of protection, reinforced, its power magnified, night after endless night. Nothing evil can enter this place. He can't touch the Stone here."
"Then that's it? We've done it? Mission accomplished?" Rory asked. "It can't be. It's too easy."
"I'm afraid you're right, Aurora. Oh, we're safe enough, so long as we stay here."
Celeste nodded her understanding. "Don't you see, Rory? We meant to free Solange from her prison. Instead, we've just joined her here."
Rory blinked, looking outside. "We can't leave?"
"Not without the risk he'll attack us," Eve said.
Skye shook her head slowly. "I don't think he'll wait around or leave it up to us to decide when or whether to leave the protection of this place. He'll try to find a way to force us out. So we'd better figure out how to face him and win, when he does."
Celeste looked at Solange, as she eyed her tools again. "I hope you don't mind us using them. Eve brought them — they'd been in storage at her place in California for a long time."
"Of course I don't mind. I just wish…" She let her voice trail off and, tentatively, reached a hand down to close it around her beloved athame. But her hand passed right through the double-edged dagger.
Celeste bit her lip, feeling the acute sadness that passed through Solange's heart. She moved around the coffee table to sit upon the sofa in front of it. "Use me, Solange."
Solange looked at her. So did the others.
"Are you sure?" Solange asked.
"I am. Come, use your tools. You have the power, more than any of us. Maybe you can tell us what to do next, how to fight him. How to win."
Nodding slowly, Solange moved to where Celeste sat, and turning, she sat as well, as if she were going to sit upon Celeste's lap, only she didn't. She took up residence in the seat of her great-granddaughter's soul — in the core of her body.
She opened Celeste's eyes. Celeste could feel everything, was aware of everything, but not in control. She felt like a puppet, with someone else at the strings. Her hands closed around the athame and caressed it. Then they moved to light the fresh incense in the censer and the candles as well.
Her lips moved, but it wasn't her voice that spoke, and bade the others bring fresh water for the chalice. She mingled water and salt in the cauldron, and lowered the blade of her dagger inside, and a burst of pure energy blasted from the union of force and form, dagger and bowl, male and female. A sphere of electric blue light expanded to encompass the entire house. Never had Celeste felt such power from any magic she had created. And yet she did, now, with Solange at the helm.
Finally, she lowered the blade to the table and bent her head over the scrying mirror.
"Mothers of my mothers," Solange's voice said. "Grandmothers of my grandmothers, tell me what I must know."
The mirror seemed to cloud over, and all the women leaned closer to see what it was their great-grandmother was seeing through Celeste's eyes.
"It's gone on too long," Eve whispered.
Celeste heard it all, but couldn't reply.
"She's right," Rory said. "She's been leaning over that mirror, whispering for hours, and we have no idea if it's doing any good. Meanwhile, he's still lurking around out there, doing God knows what."
"No, he's not."
Both the other women turned to stare at Skye.
"He's not out there anymore," she said. "I don't feel him. He's gone."
"Where?" Rory asked.
"I don't know. He's…beyond my range, I guess."
Eve sighed, and moved to the sofa where Solange sat in Celeste's body. She put a hand on her shoulder. "Come on, Celeste, we need you back here now. Solange, let her go, okay? This isn't doing anyone any good."
The eyes that looked up at Eve were not Celeste's. But Celeste felt them smile. "Yes, you're right," Solange said. And then suddenly, Celeste's body went limp as something solid was stripped from it. She sagged on the sofa, stunned, weakened.
"Celeste? Honey, are you all right?"
Her cousins' hands were on her, shaking her, helping her. She sat up straight, blinking her eyes into focus, and noting that Solange sat beside her on the sofa. Was she more transparent than before? Thinner, somehow?
"Celeste?" Eve leaned close, shaking her gently. "You okay?"
Celeste met her cousin's worried eyes, then smiled. "Not really. How about you call me a paramedic?"
Eve returned her smile. "Nice try, but your paramedic isn't here for a reason. We all decided the men would be safer away from all this."
"I know. But if he could have seen what just happened…" A hint of sadness washed through her, but she reminded herself that she had more important things to worry about here than her own validation.
Celeste turned to Solange. "What did you learn?"
Solange looked at her, then at each of them in turn. "My time here will soon be over. At sunrise, I will be reunited with my Jonathon, and together we will have to move on, into the afterlife."
The girls exchanged glances, each more worried than the one before. "But Solange, we need you here. We need you to help us defeat Darien," Celeste whispered.
"You have me. I live, in each of you. Celeste, my power to speak to the dead lives in you. But don't use it only to speak to the dead, or channel their words. Use it to call on the ancestors of the Deveaux line and to channel their power. The magical force of every witch in our ancestry is yours to wield, if you but ask."
She blinked in shock, stunned that this could be true.
"Eve," Solange went on. "My power to convert energy into physical force exists in you. But don't just use it to move objects. Use it as the force it is. A force field of protection, a blast of invisible might, a beam of light in the darkness. Don't limit yourself to moving objects. A witch who wields magic can change anything in the physical realm — its shape, density, visibility, anything."
"My God, can that be true?" Eve asked softly.
Solange turned then to Skye. "Skye, like me, you can read the minds of your enemies and of strangers, yes. But has it occurred to you that not only can you read the thoughts of your cousins, you can send your thoughts to them, as well? You didn't know this, I know, and it is a skill, but I have every confidence you can do it. Because of your power, the four of you can communicate without making a sound. You can call for help, send out warnings, communicate with anyone at any distance. Do you understand?"
Skye nodded slowly, her eyes expressing awe.
"And you, Rory, your power is not limited to weather alone. That's just the first visible manifestation you've noticed. It is my power, alive in you, and the one I first learned to master. It is the power to command the elements — earth, air, fire and water. You can use it for more than just rain and wind. You can use it to create, to destroy.
You need only realize there is nothing in the universe that is not made up of those four basic elements, and engendered with life by the fifth — that of spirit. You can create at will. Make a mountain by calling on earth, a sword by conjuring ore and fire. You can do anything."
She stood and moved into the center of the room. "Between you, you have all the powers that I had. Like the pieces of the Stone, you four need to come together, to realize you are limited only by your own minds, to work as one, in order to defeat Darien, and to save the love in your lives."
Celeste blinked. "But we've…already done that, Grandmother. We've found love, each of us."
"I know," Solange said, lowering her eyes. "Unfortunately, so does he." She looked toward the window. "And that's what he will use to force you to come out of the protection of this house. The men you love."
"He's gone after the men?"
Solange nodded. "Where did you leave them?"
"At a hotel in the French Quarter," Celeste said. She looked at her cousins, and as one they said, "The Biltmore."
"We have to go! God, if he hurts Ben…" Celeste's heart froze over at the thought of Ben facing the biggest evil she had ever seen. "If he hurts Ben, he's going to wish he'd stayed made of stone."
"You're not ready," Solange said. "You have no plan."
"We can't wait, Solange." Celeste reached out as if to take her ancestor's hand, even though the touch was one that could never be. "The men we love are in danger. There's no time for thinking, for planning. Only for action."
"Does Darien have any weakness, Solange? Any flaw we can make use of?" Eve asked.
Solange lowered her eyes. "His craving for power. And…his love for me."
The four cousins went silent, and stared at their forebear with their eyes wide. "He…loved you?"
Solange nodded. "As much as he was capable of loving anyone," she said. "But to him, love meant possession. Ownership. Control." She looked at each of them. "That's not what love is. But you know that. That's why you're rushing out of here without preparation. Perhaps — love can be enough. I didn't believe it was. But if I had…"
"Can't you come with us, Solange?" Eve asked.
She shook her head. "Without one of us here to maintain the circle's energy, he might find a way to break through and take the Stone."
Can someone find me a dress?" Celeste asked. "One like the one Solange is wearing?"
The cousins exchanged glances, as Celeste began to wind up her hair.
The cousins joined hands, met each other's eyes, then looked at Solange. "We won't let you down," Rory promised.
"See to it you don't."
"Just keep that stone safe until we get back."
She nodded. "Until dawn."
"We'll make it back on time."
Solange moved to the table where the Stone of Power sat surrounded by her tools, and leaned over the scrying mirror. "I'll watch you from here, and stay in contact through Celeste." She looked up at the four of them, standing hand in hand. "You can do this. I know you can."
With a nod, they headed out.
The Biltmore was empty. A crowd stood on the street, surrounding the aged building while flames leaped from every window and licked at its outer walls. Fire trucks surrounded the entire place, and the four cousins joined the crowd of onlookers. Celeste had put on a long coat, to cover the long dress she wore. She'd glimpsed herself in the mirror, and had been so startled by her own appearance she'd nearly cried out. She was the image of her great-grandmother's portrait.
Skye closed her eyes. "The men are inside the hotel. All of them, and him — he's there, too."
"We have to get inside."
Celeste heard Solange whispering to her. "She says to shrink into ourselves, to become one with the things around us. She says we can create an illusion of invisibility."
"Right," Rory said. "We're just going to turn invisible. Even if we could do that, how the hell could we walk through fire unharmed?"
Celeste recited the words Solange spoke into her mind. "We can't burn. We're ice." Then she repeated the phrase, over and over.
One by one the others joined in. Celeste focused on Rory, on tapping into her power, joining her in mastery of the elements, becoming ice, becoming transparent.
As they chanted together, a heaviness settled over them, a state of relaxed, limitless potential. She saw her cousins' eyes change, felt their breathing change, was certain they were all breathing as one, in fact, and that their hearts beat in a single powerful rhythm.
They focused, they drew in, they quieted their minds and tried to become the things they saw. Rory moved her arms and drew a shield of smoke around them, further blocking them from notice as they moved past the firefighters. She waved another hand and the wall of fire parted to allow them through. And they did it — they moved right past the police and firefighters and through the doors into the hotel lobby, and there was no hint there of flames or smoke. Inside the hotel things looked as normal as ever.
"What the hell is this?" Eve asked.
Skye said, "He's keeping the fire on the outside. It's to keep everyone out. He won't let it inside to destroy anything until he's ready."
"Where are they?" Celeste asked.
Again, Skye focused. "Third floor — ballroom."
Yes. Do come up. We've all been waiting.
"Hell, he knows we're here," Rory said.
Skye shot her a look. "You heard that?"
Rory's eyes widened. "God, Solange was right. We can tap into each other's powers."
Celeste led the way, and they trooped up the stairs. She could feel the fear shivering along her spine, and more than that, she could feel it in her cousins, as real and clearly as she felt her own. But she felt their determination, too, their love for their men.
And then she felt Ben, heard his thoughts through Skye's mind. He was wishing to God she would stay away, that she wouldn't charge in here, believing herself some kind of witch who could save the day. This guy had real power, and Celeste could get hurt, or killed.
She saw the look Skye sent her, but didn't acknowledge it, didn't indicate whether she had heard the thoughts. She saw Skye's surprise at knowing Ben didn't fully believe in Celeste's capabilities. It didn't matter, she told herself. She loved him, and she knew he loved her.
Then they were there, in front of the ballroom's arching, double doors. With a wave of her fist, Eve flung them open.
The scene that opened out before them was gut-wrenching. Tables were overturned, chairs broken and scattered like matchsticks. Shards of glass lay everywhere, and the crystal chandelier was demolished on the floor. A man lay pinned underneath the weighty mass, struggling to lift it off him. And Rory's cry of "Luke!" told them all who he was. Skye's focus was on Nic, who lay crumpled in a corner, blood trickling from his nose and mouth, unconscious, and Ben was bending over him, trying to help. Travis lay still and motionless near a wall. Outside the windows, flames raged and smoke billowed. But none made its way inside.
It was surreal.
Rory said, "Eve, get the chandelier!" Then she waved her own hand even as Rory turned toward the fallen crystal, and it hurled itself across the room, smashing into a wall.
In the center of all the destruction, Darien stood. And it was Celeste who walked up to him. "Let them go. Your business is with me, Darien."
He looked at her, his eyes widening. Across the room, Ben turned to look at her, too, and his face was etched in a frown.
"Solange?"
"Darien, all this is unnecessary. Please, it's between you and me. We can settle it — together."
"You don't love me," Darien whispered, not moving a single step closer. He didn't back up either, though, as Celeste moved closer. "You never did. It was always him."
"I've had a long time to think about that," she said softly.
Darien narrowed his eyes. "You're trying to trick me."
"I —" She reached for him.
"It's too late!" He whirled and sent her sailing across the room with a blast of magic. Her back slammed into the wall and she sank to the floor, hurting everywhere.
"Celeste!" Ben shouted her name and raced toward her, cradling her gently, stroking her hair from her face.
She blinked up at him. "It's all right. I'm…all right."
"Celeste," the wizard mocked. "I should have known. It's amazing how much you look like Solange."
She struggled to her feet, Ben helping her. "I don't just look like Solange. I am Solange. We all are."
Darien frowned.
Then she heard Skye's voice in her mind. He's going to blast you!
And even as Darien hurled a bolt of power at her, Eve flung her own arm, and a polished silver tray sailed upright and hovered, weightless, in front of Celeste. The bolt hit it and bounced right back on Darien, who smashed into the wall behind him.
"You're weakened, Darien," Celeste said, striding forward. She waved a hand, testing out Eve's telekinesis, and the tray was flung aside to land on the floor with a clatter. She heard Ben wonder what the hell he was seeing here, through Skye's ESP.
"It doesn't matter. Even weak I'm more powerful than four novice witches."
"But we're not four," she replied.
"We're one." They said it all together, and Celeste thought Solange's voice was with them.
"They say this hotel is haunted," Celeste said.
"They say every hotel in the French Quarter is haunted," Darien replied. "So what?"
"Let's see if they were telling the truth about this one." She lifted her arms. "Spirits of the dead! Rise up and lend your aid to the cause of good! We, the descendants of Solange Deveaux, call on you to rise up!"
The others came closer, raised their hands and pressed their palms to Celeste's and to each other's. Eve looked at the floor. "Open, floor, and floors below, open earth and realms below, open portals to the Underworld!"
A great gaping black hole opened in the floor, one that seemed bottomless.
"Holy mother," Ben whispered.
"You got that right," Celeste said. Then she looked at Rory. "The dead say they need form, substance to help them take shape."
Rory nodded. "Fogs, mists, rise and swirl! Elements of water and air, give shape to the spirits!" she cried.
And then it happened — from the hole, shapes emerged, forms, ghosts, rising and swirling.
Rising to his feet, brushing himself off, Darien shook his head and smiled. "Nice parlor trick, my girls, but what can a few ghosts do to harm me?"
"Depends on the ghosts," Celeste said. Then raised her voice, and it sounded more powerful even to her own ears, than it ever had before. "Ancestors, mothers of my mothers, grandmothers of my grandmothers," she intoned. "Every witch that came before us, I call on you now to come to the aid of your children! Lend us your power!"
Eve flung up a hand, and the roof split and cracked. Rory called up the wind, and it blew completely away and the entire room filled with wraiths, women, ancestors. Witches!
"My God, there are so many of them!" Skye cried. "Do you see them? Do you?"
Power flooded into the four women. They all felt it and, suddenly, felt each other in a way they never had. Celeste sensed, saw, heard, smelled, experienced and…knew, everything that the others did. It wasn't like losing her individuality but more like gaining a missing part of herself. And each of her cousins' powers, and of her ancestors' powers, became her powers. And hers became theirs. They were one force, one being.
And Celeste saw Ben looking at her, his face wild with wonder. So she glanced down at herself and saw that she was…glowing.
He started forward, instinctively wanting to defend her. But she spoke to him with her mind. It's all right. We're all right. Take care of the others, Ben. Don't let them die.
His eyes widened, but he nodded his acceptance. He quickly moved to the center of the room, grabbed Luke under the arms and hauled him away from the action, out of the line of fire.
Around the four women were countless others. Shapes in the mist, ancestors, witches all. Celeste felt them, heard them, whispering spells and incantations, lending their own brand of magic and power to that of their descendants.
And then she felt something else. Darien, gathering his strength, knowing that without the Stone, they couldn't hope to defeat him.
"We need the Stone," Celeste whispered as Darien lifted his hands to aim a killing blast at the witches. "Solange…"
"Solange!" they all said in unison.
Before they could finish the summons, Solange appeared there right in front of them, the Stone in her ghostly hands, above her head, like a trophy. Darien's bolt hit it, and bounded back on him.
"Stop attacking us, Darien," Solange whispered. "You'll only succeed in destroying yourself."
"We're one now," Celeste said, though her voice sounded like a chorus of voices. Stronger than any power could be alone."
"Damn you, Solange," Darien screamed. "If I can't have you, no one will!"
He hurled another bolt at her, and this time, every witch in the room swooped around her, each of them touching the Stone of Power with her essence, if not her actual hand. The Stone glowed with the power they channeled into it, and this time when the wizard's bolt hit, it was absorbed. It glowed from within the Stone for an instant, then reemerged magnified, gleaming white lightning. It hit Darien full in the chest, and he shimmered for only a moment, then disintegrated into a million sparkling bits of light and color.
For a moment there was only silence. Then Solange said, "Go into the light, Darien. Into the arms of the spirit, and heal, and learn, and renew. I forgive you."
The sparkles vanished, rising into a beam of light that shone down through the missing roof of the hotel.
It seemed a weight and a darkness left the room as he did. And suddenly, the roof was intact again, the ballroom restored to order, as if nothing had ever happened, and the fire outside was gone. Ben was helping the other men to their feet. They all looked stunned, shocked, but physically, all right. And they kept their distance, in reverence or respect or maybe fear of all the ghosts surrounding the women.
Solange looked at her four offspring with pride and love shining from her eyes. "Release the spirits you raised, girls. People will be coming soon, and you'll have far too much explaining to do if they find you surrounded by ghosts."
The women joined hands again, closed their eyes. Celeste whispered, "Thank you dear ones for your presence, your magic and your aid. Go in peace and with our love. Hail and farewell."
"Hail and farewell," the others repeated.
With teary smiles and beaming eyes, the spirits fled into the void, whispering their love, their blessings, their goodbyes. Then the four cousins waved their hands over the hole in the floor, the portal to the Underworld, and closed it again. Solange knelt and drew symbols in the air over it to keep it that way.
Then she rose and turned toward the window. "It will be dawn soon." She smiled at them. "I want to be at the house when he comes. Will you come with me? Oh, my Jonathon simply has to see what our love has done for the world."
"Of course we'll come with you, Solange." Celeste looked at the men, who stood in awe at the far side of the room. "If…you'll come with us," she added.
She knew her cousins were worried, as she was, that tonight's events would send the men screaming to the far ends of the earth. But they didn't. They crossed the room, instead, each gathering his witch into his arms.
As he held her close to him, Ben whispered to Celeste, "Ask me again if I believe in magic."
"But you made me promise to stop asking you."
He shook his head. "I was an idiot. I'm sorry I doubted you, honey. I'll never doubt you again. Not about anything, magic or otherwise."
"It didn't matter to me, you know. All that mattered was that you loved me."
Ben stared down at her in wonder. "That was never a question, Celeste. And never will be."
He kissed her, then closed his hand around hers, and led her from the hotel ballroom.
They sat in pairs, in the library on the second floor, where the portraits of the Deveaux ancestors lined the walls. And right on schedule, as the sun rose up, Jonathon appeared, seemed to step out of his own portrait and onto the carpeted floor. He looked around at the couples gathered there, then his gaze found Solange, and it never flickered again.
"Oh, my love," he cried. "How I treasure these fleeting glimpses of you. I love you still, Solange. Can you hear me? I love you!"
Solange smiled, tears filling her eyes as she moved forward. "Not fleeting, my love. Not fleeting anymore." She went to him even as he gaped in wonder, and then overwhelming joy.
He opened his arms, and Solange went into them, two ghostly forms embracing as if they would never part.
"Our great-granddaughters broke the curse," Solange told him, though her voice was broken by tears. "And they set Darien free from the evil that held him for so long."
"I hope he finds the peace he never found in life," he said softly. Turning, he smiled at each of the girls. "Thank you, Granddaughters. You'll never know what this means to us."
Hugging Ben closer, Celeste said, "I think maybe we do."
"Maybe you do, at that." Jonathon eyed the men. "These are special women. Cherish them for what they are. Don't try to change them."
"Never," Travis said, his eyes locked on Eve.
"They wouldn't be the women we fell in love with if we did," Luke said, caressing Rory's cheek.
"And we'll never stop cherishing them," Nic put in, a hand resting protectively on Skye's shoulder.
Jonathon nodded, seemingly satisfied with their answers. He glanced at Ben. "And you, son?"
"Celeste taught me to believe in magic," he said, turning to gaze into her eyes. "It's a gift I can never repay, but I'll spend my life trying."
Jonathon smiled. "Good, then." Then he faced his bride again. "So long I've been without you, my love," he whispered, shaking his head.
"But now we have eternity together, Jonathon," Solange whispered. "Always together."
Turning, they moved toward the window and vanished in a flash of light.
For a long moment the others were silent, staring at the spot near the window, choking back tears.
Finally, one of the men cleared his throat, and Eve said, "What do we do with the Stone? We never asked her."
Celeste faced her. "We need to put it back in the cave where it was safe for hundreds of years. And we need to perform rituals and magic daily, to ensure it stays protected this time."
"With four of us on the case, the magic will be stronger than ever," Rory said. "Especially now that we know we can make use of all the magic that ever existed in our line."
"And of each other's," Eve added with a smile.
"Still, better safe than sorry," Ben said.
They all turned to look at him. He shrugged. "I'm just saying, maybe we ought to get started on restocking our supply of Deveaux women. You know, we'll need plenty of daughters to keep that rock safe in the future."
"And if we end up with a few sons along the way, it'll be an added bonus," Nic said.
"I'm all for that plan," Travis put in.
"Me, too," Luke said.
Ben leaned down and kissed Celeste gently. "How about you?"
"Oh, I'm in," she told him, and turned into his waiting arms.
The End