Miss Mabel's School for Girls (19 page)

Read Miss Mabel's School for Girls Online

Authors: Katie Cross

Tags: #Young Adult, #Magic, #boarding school, #Witchcraft

BOOK: Miss Mabel's School for Girls
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My throat thickened. “Yes, Miss Mabel.”

“Well, I like a girl who is willing to do what needs to be done. Tell me, what kind of negotiation are you wanting?”

I took a deep breath. It seemed as if I lived on the hinge of intense moments, each building on the next, that determined my life. But if any of them mattered, this one mattered most. This is where I stood or fell. This is what all my study, all my hours of training, all the sleepless moments of childhood, culminated in.

“Remove the curse from my family.”

Miss Mabel stopped and took me in for several minutes. Her lazy smile returned, as if she’d just sized up a competitor.

“You want this very much, don’t you? Yes, I see you do. Isadora mentioned something of your strength, but I never expected this.” She paused to regard me. “You’re just like Hazel, you know. You’ve got a real soft spot for family. Well, as a rule, I never give something without gaining something of equal value.”

I didn’t say anything, already prepared for that.

“So, what are you willing to give me?” she asked.

“Time.”

Intrigued, she lifted an eyebrow and encouraged me to continue. I had planned out this conversation for years, and was terrified to find it going exactly as I’d thought it would.

“Five years of my life after I receive my marks.”

“Well, that’s quite an offer. What will I do with you during those five years?”

My throat constricted. Now things got dicey. I had to get her to agree to one purpose. If not, Miss Mabel could have me do anything she wanted. Surviving meant nothing if I had to live it at her beck and call.

“Teach for you for free. No pay, just room and board.”

“Oh, Bianca. Girls like you aren’t meant to be teachers.” She scoffed. “I think we could find something far more useful for you.”

The silence that followed pressed on my chest. I held my breath.

“Five years,” she murmured, drumming her fingers along her arms. Her blue eyes glowed in the moonlight. “Quite an offer.”

She spun around to face me.

“I’m not entirely opposed to a deal, but it will be on my terms, not yours. The Esbat should be coming up soon. Have you ever heard of an Esbat before, Bianca?”

The Esbat was a meeting of the Network’s Council of Leaders. The ten oldest and most respected witches in the Network sat on the Council, and they met with individual coven leaders to discuss Network business. No one but those attending knew when it would be, and even they were only notified a day or two in advance. 

“Yes, I’ve heard of it.”

“I’ve been thinking about taking an Assistant with me to take notes for years now. I get so bored doing it myself, but I’ve never had a student I thought could complete the Esbat mark. It’s so advanced and difficult. You’ve already shown a bit more spunk than the rest.” 

She paused, mulling it over.

“Yes, I think this will work. The Esbat meeting could pop up around then. If you can earn the Esbat mark, it may be worth your grandmother’s freedom. Not yours or your mother’s. Just Hazel’s.”

Her words echoed in my head.
Just Hazel’s.
Both disappointment and hope whispered through me. It wasn’t my life, but at least it could spare Grandmother some relief from her pain. The curse was more than just the slow destruction of bone and joints. It was a heavy weight that pressed down over time. My mother called it her invisible shackle, following her, waking with her, bearing down on her.

“Not that Hazel has much life left,” Miss Mabel added as an afterthought. “Cheer up, Bianca. Everyone dies at some point, whether it’s fair or not.”

“Yes,” I said with a steely voice. “But at least she wouldn’t be in so much pain when she passed.”

She acted as if I hadn’t spoken.

“I need you to show me that you’re worth something before I remove the curse from you completely. Prove yourself to me by finishing the Esbat mark in three weeks, then we’ll ease Hazel’s transition to death.”

Stunned, I blinked several times, hoping it would clear my mind.

“Three weeks?” I repeated.

“Did I stutter?”

Her cool tone took on a sudden warning, her mood changing as fast as a blink.

“No, Miss Mabel,” I said, truly disarmed for the first time.

The curriculum for the Esbat mark was the most difficult schoolwork the Network offered. The Network expired many marks, marks that faded away because times changed and so did needs. The Esbat mark lay dormant but not forgotten. Only a witch with a hope to work in the Network as a leader, or directly with the High Priestess, ever attempted the Esbat mark. It was all books, studying, and memorization. A veritable prison of classroom time and scrolls. For Leda, it would be heaven.

For me, hell.

A bolt of inspiration told me that she knew. Miss Mabel knew how much I hated bookwork, how difficult it would be to sit at a desk and memorize ancient languages, to concentrate for that long with no escape. My throat tightened just at the thought of it.

“Miss Mabel–”

“It’s possible to pass it after only three weeks instead of the usual twelve week course, and has been done once before. At least, I think.”

A quarter of the usual time. She’d found a weakness to exploit within minutes of when I met her. A weakness I’d never planned for.

You signed up for an interesting school year, Bianca,
I silently chided myself.
One you’ll be lucky to survive. You’ve already underestimated her.

Isadora’s warning came back to me with a flash.

“If I don’t earn the mark?” I asked, using the last of my reserves to fake a confidence I didn’t have.

“You’ll still have the contract to work as my Assistant until you earn all three marks.”

The words
and then you die
seemed to hang in the air.

Too simple.

“And?”

She smiled, “You’re very wise, Bianca. Never get into an agreement you don’t thoroughly understand. If you don’t earn the mark, I’m not going to punish you. At least, not directly.”

“Then what will you want?”

Miss Mabel walked to the other side of the room in a slow saunter. Her dress slipped over the floorboards with a whisper.

“If you do not complete the Esbat mark in three weeks time, you will serve me for thirteen years from today. I’ll extend the curse to cover the length of your servitude. You will not be allowed to see or speak to your family, no exceptions for death or sickness.”

My heart stuttered. Thirteen years? I may never see my mother again. Grandmother would die without me. I’d be in bondage to Miss Mabel in dark magic hell and escape only through death at the end of it.

I floundered. It would be three sleepless weeks of learning new languages, creating impossible trust potions, and memorizing Network leadership structure. The idea made my head hurt. Miss Mabel waited with her hands folded behind her back.

Battles never go the way you plan,
Papa always taught me.
The best talent any Guardian or Protector has is the ability to adapt his or her plan to the circumstances. Above all, have confidence in yourself.

Of course I’d do it. I hadn’t lived sixteen years waiting to die. I’d go out fighting, no matter what form the battlefield took, no matter how bleak the stakes looked. I squared my shoulders and met her steely gaze.

“I’ll do it.”

“Fantastic. I’ll write up a contract tonight that you can sign in the morning. I love contracts. They prove what a good person I am.”

She stopped, and took on a motherly tone. “Sweet Bianca. You do look tired. We have a lot to do tomorrow. Go to bed, darling. A good night’s rest will help this all feel better.”

In Vino Veritas

A
thick book dropped on my desk with a thud and puff of dust the next morning, rattling the half-full inkwell. The quill, made of tiny emerald and gold feathers lay across the top of the desk, glistened with wet ink I’d just used to sign the contract.

“Now that the contract is signed, we can move forward to your education. This is the textbook on the history of the Esbat.”

Her long-sleeved, deep blue dress swished as she walked past me. From where I sat in the attic classroom, I could see out the back windows and into the gloom of the lifeless forest. One lonely desk stood in the middle of the floor. A fire crackled behind me. At the front, a blackboard ran from floor to ceiling and covered the whole wall, like Miss Bernadette’s classroom. Cryptic swirls decorated the edges of the blackboard; it almost looked like an extension of Letum Wood.

The book smelled new, and the pages were undisturbed and fine, filled with symbols and script. I turned each page one at a time, perusing decades of information. The appendixes in the back contained three separate languages known only in the Central Network and allowed only in the Esbat.

“That is a special book. The High Priest is a very thorough man in his oversight of Network Education and has to approve every student who takes the Esbat curriculum. He put a special protective spell on this book that no one else knows, which makes it so only you and me can see the information. That prevents the secrets within from being gathered by unapproved eyes. The ink that you write your homework scrolls in is also special and will only be visible to you and I.”

She held out her hand, palm up.

“Let me see your middle finger.”

I hesitated, but she wiggled her fingers in an impatient gesture. I reached forward, holding my hand above hers, not wanting to touch her. She grabbed it, produced a small golden dagger in the center of her palm and pressed it to my fingertip before I could pull away. Her hands felt warm.

“Ouch!” I tried to jerk away, but she held me fast. A single red drop formed at the tip. She grabbed the inkwell on the edge and let the drop fall.

“There,” she said, releasing my hand. “That will tie you to the ink.”

Miss Mabel followed the same procedure, cutting a tip on the end of her middle finger. Once she squeezed a drop of blood out, the cut vanished.

“And that ties me. No one else will read your work. Once I’m done correcting the papers, I’ll burn them as a precaution.”

Tempted to heal my own cut, but not wanting her to see me perform the magic – she’d surely make me explain how I knew it – I sucked on the tip of the finger until the bleeding stopped. It tasted coppery, like putting a sacran coin in my mouth.

“The Esbat mark focuses on protecting the Network,” Miss Mabel continued, positioning herself behind me to look over my shoulder. Her blonde hair swept my arm and sent chills across my skin. “Secrecy as well. There are several languages you’ll need to learn, at least be passing conversant in, by the final test for the mark. They are used during the meeting and are typically the hardest part of the class.”

I recognized a few words from old spells and history books Papa used to teach me. These languages had been around for centuries.

“To begin with,” Miss Mabel said, “you need to read the entire book. I’ll quiz you on it as soon as you’re done. If you answer any question wrong, you’ll read the book again before you go to bed. Any questions?”

“No.”

“Miss Celia will bring your lunch up today in order to optimize your time. I’ll be in my office. Do not bother me.”

The sound of her shoes disappeared with the closing of a door. With a sigh, I glanced at the clock.

“You can do this,” I said. “One day at a time.”

I opened to the first page and began to read.

The day shifted away from me, chronicled in the crawl of the sunbeams across the floor as the hours passed. Miss Mabel gave no indication of life, not even a creak of the floorboard. The restless quiet made me uneasy, and I found myself staring out the window several times, lost in thought. Without meaning to, I spent most of my lunch hour just flipping through the pages to look at the painted pictures.

After the final event of the Competition, the solitude and silence were a welcomed reprieve, but I missed my friends. My thoughts often strayed towards Camille and Leda, as well as Miss Bernadette’s warm classroom.

Head throbbing, I turned the final page of the book later that afternoon and closed it in relief.

Take that, devil woman.

Miss Mabel swept into the classroom.

“When was the first Esbat held?”

Her words came in a fast, demanding clip. I straightened up, startled by her sudden entrance.

“O-over four hundred years ago.”

“What is the most common ingredient among the four simple truth serums?”

My voice sat in my throat, paralyzed. I didn’t remember reading about truth serums. She stopped and turned to look at me.

“Well?”

Grandmother sold ingredients for serums, potions, and simple baking spices at the shop in Bickers Mill. A wizened old man often came in, a worker at Chatham Castle. He bought spices for truth serums in high quantities from us all the time, so I took a wild guess.

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