Black Magic Sanction. Ким Харрисон

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as they all relaxed.

      My tension, though, spiked as the witches left their posts to join the tall woman at her computer. The humming of the barrier eased as they lessened their collective attention holding it, but the circle was still strong enough to stand.

      The oldest man was wearing a large amulet, probably defunct this close to the coast. Earth-magic user, obviously, which made the older woman with the laptop their ley-line master. His cuff links were Möbius strips, and my face warmed when he handed Nick a stack of bills.

      Nick shoved the money in his bag with unusual haste and turned to me. “We’re even now,” he said, his brow furrowed, and I flipped him off. His lips tightened and he looked away. “Don’t call me again,” he said to the man as he started for an elaborately tooled wooden door, but upon reaching it, he hesitated. “You either,” he said to me, and then he … sort of … smiled?

      Don’t call him? I thought. Like I ever would? But I forced my breathing to remain slow as I glimpsed the hallway beyond the door, an idea trickling through me. Carpet and soft colors, pictures on the walls. I was in a private home, not an institution. As the witches watched the door shut behind him, my hand crept back to my jeans pocket to find the lump of my phone. Holy crap, Nick had reminded me of a way to get out of here. An active phone line could break a circle—if one was skilled enough in taking them down.

      The door snicked shut, and I heard a sigh from one of the five witches. “I really dislike that man,” one said.

      “Me, too,” I said loudly, then pulled my fingers back from the cramping sensation of the barrier. It was still too strong—they needed to lower their guard more.

      Apparently they’d been waiting for Nick to leave, because they gathered behind the sandy-haired witch with the laptop to face me like a jury. The woman looked to be an athletic forty, but I was willing to bet that her surfer-toned body was actually closer to a hundred. You don’t find that grace or confidence in a mere forty years, even if you can keep your balance in a tight curl. Her short hair was bleached by sun and salt, not chemicals in a salon, and her narrow, angular nose was peeling from sunburn.

      Balancing her was the older witch with that nonfunctioning amulet. He appeared to be about forty as well, and his clothes were stodgy and expensive looking. They clung to him a little tightly, telling me he usually had a slimming charm. Settling in behind them was the middle male/female pair who both appeared to be a spelled thirty, and behind them, a young, gawky guy who was more than likely Vivian’s counterpart, probably close to my age and still gaining his full, deadly potential. They all wore the coven’s Möbius glyph, the chunky thirtyish woman using it to hold back her long blond hair.

      “Rachel Morgan,” laptop woman said, her voice taking on a formal cadence. “You have been brought here before the coven of moral and ethical standards to answer for several serious crimes.”

      I sighed, holding little hope of coming out ahead here. “Why didn’t you come see me? We could’ve settled this over coffee. It would have been less dramatic than Vivian destroying some store’s produce section. The FIB was there and everything.” I mentioned it only because I wanted them to know there was a report filed. This wasn’t going to simply go away.

      Sure enough, the woman looked up, cool and unshakable, but her finger twitched.

      “Brooke? ” the older man said in sharp warning, eying my strawberry-tangled hair. “We agreed Vivian was there for reconnaissance only.”

      Oh! It really is her name then, I thought. Brooke barely shrugged, but I could tell she was pissed at me. Yeah, this is all my fault.

      “The subject’s pattern changed. I was afraid we’d lose her,” Brooke said. “There wasn’t time to ask everyone’s opinion. It was a calculated risk, and Vivian was willing to take it.”

      The subject’s pattern changed, eh? Al sending me home early, perhaps? Just how long had they been watching me? Angry, I rubbed an ash-coated chunk of strawberry off my sleeve. “I don’t care what Kalamack told you, I’m not a threat,” I said, and there was a nervous shifting among them. Clearly they were surprised I knew he was involved.

      Brooke’s lips tightened, and she glanced back at them, irate. “We think you are.”

      “I’m not,” I shot back, glancing at the witch with the long blond hair listening to the oldest man whispering in her ear. “Trent’s a big drama queen.”

      Damn it, I was going to smack Trent. I was going to smack him good. I was not a demon to be pulled around like a pull toy.

      Peeved, Brooke turned to the whispering behind her. “Will you do that later?” she griped, and I tested the barrier to find it still strong. The line I was connected to surged, and I scrambled to handle it. Earthquake, maybe?

      The oldest man, the one with the useless amulet, gestured mockingly to Brooke to get on with it, and she gave him an equally sour look. Is there a schism? Can I use that?

      The sun-bleached tips of Brooke’s short hair swung as she focused on me. “What an elf thinks is of no concern. Your actions are. You have undergone the sentence of shunning but have not changed your ways. You leave us little choice, Rachel Morgan, and are hereby formally charged with willfully allowing a witch to be taken by a demon.”

      This was so full of crap, I almost laughed. I’d been cleared of this by the I.S. months ago. “Which one?” I shot out. I was being railroaded. This was so unfair.

      Brooke looked annoyed by the interruption, but it was the oldest man who said, “You call him Al, I believe.”

      I grimaced. “Not the demon. Which witch?”

      The gawky young man with the off-the-rack suit stammered, “There’s been more than one?”

      There had, but if they didn’t know about Tom’s dying and Pierce’s taking his body, then I wasn’t going to tell them. I pressed into the barrier, finding it wasn’t humming anymore, but I jerked back as if it was. “I don’t want to be blamed for someone else’s stupidity. If we’re talking about Lee, then yes. He dragged me into the ever-after and tried to give me to Al. I fought Lee, and lost. Al took Lee instead.”

      Brooke’s smile was a bare hint of one, but it was ugly and I felt a shiver. “The better witch,” she said, and I nodded, realizing she was not an honest, upright woman. I didn’t care if her aura was a clean, almost clear blue; her morals were gray.

      “Bet that didn’t end up in your report,” I said bitterly. “I saved the witch who tried to give me to a demon. Is that why you’re doing this without a jury?”

      The witches behind Brooke looked discomfited, but she simply glanced at the screen. “You are accused of calling a demon into a court of human law,” she continued.

      “To put a murdering vampire behind bars, yup. I did.” No jury on earth would convict me for that. “What else you got?” My foot was shaking, and I pressed down on it to get it to stop. Brooke was starting to sweat, but it wasn’t fear. It was excitement. She liked something.

      “You are accused of giving a rare artifact to a Were to further your position in his pack instead of turning it over to us for proper reinterment,” she said.

      “You never told me you wanted it,” I said, hand on my hip. Hey, if I was going down, I was going down bitching. “And I was David’s

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