Read Witch of Christmas Past Online
Authors: Kendra Ashe
Zane was waiting for me at the lighthouse, but Delia hadn’t arrived.
“If you have second thoughts, now would be the time to back out,” I told him.
“Hmm … okay. If you say so.”
Delia’s car was so small that I sure hoped she didn’t hit a clump of weeds too hard. No doubt it would total the thing.
She parked next to Lady Luck and got out, lugging a large book and small leather bag that I assumed must contain her casting supplies.
“I hope you’re ready for this,” she said, shaking her head in what I interpreted as dismay.
“Don’t worry, Delia. I have faith in you.”
A frown tugged at the corners of her mouth. “Glad you do, because I’m not sure I do.”
I fell into step beside her as she headed toward the beach. “I’m confused about something, According to Granny’s letter, the portal is offshore. How are we supposed to reach the right spot in order for you to do the spell?”
“Can you do that?” I gasped.
Delia gave me a sideward glance. “You were a witch at one time, right? I can’t believe you were never fully trained.”
I gave her a guilty smile. “That was kind of my fault. Granny wanted me to train, but I wasn’t that interested. Annabelle was always the better witch anyway.”
“Hogwash!” Delia waved my words away. “You were just lazy.”
“Whatever!” I rolled my eyes.
“I don’t even know how you are going to see out here,” I commented, letting my sour outlook shine through.
Delia settled on a spot that was only a few feet from the water’s edge. “This will have to do.”
Pulling a flashlight from the pocket of her jacket, she handed it to Zane. “Here, make yourself useful. Keep the light pointed to the area where I’m working.”
“Of course, Ms. Antson.” Zane gave her a gracious smile and switched on the flashlight.
If she’d ruffled his feathers with her comment about his usefulness, he wasn’t letting on.
Delia pulled a bottle of white powder from her bag and started sprinkling it on the sand, making a complete circle around her.
“Isn’t it dangerous for us to be outside the circle?” I asked.
I wasn’t an expert witch, but I knew that much.
“It probably is … but you have to go through the portal, and you cannot do it if you are inside the circle with me,” she explained.
Well, that made sense.
“Okay, are the two of you ready?”
We both nodded.
“When you see the portal, jump into it. The spell will only keep it open on the other side for three days. I’ll do my best to make the spell strong enough that it remains open the entire time it is supposed to, but I am not giving any guarantees. I suggest that you find Stella and bring her back as soon as possible.”
“How will we know if it is still open on the other side?” I asked.
Delia shook her head. “I have no idea.”
Delia pulled a golden pocket watch from her bag and set it in the middle of the circle. She then took an hourglass from the bag and placed it on top of the watch.
Raising her eyes to Zane and me, she said, “Get ready.”
Zane grabbed my hand and squeezed.
I didn’t mind. In fact, it actually felt good.
Raising her arms to the sky, Delia’s v
oice boomed through the night. “
Tolle tres soles aperuit statim reddemus que tempore
!”
Latin wasn’t one of those witchy areas that I had excelled in, so I could barely make out what she was saying.
Delia sprinkled something on the hourglass and there was a sudden flash of light.
My heart dropped into my stomach when the sea started gathering into a shimmering wall of water right in front of us. Within seconds, we were staring at a hundred feet of churning water.
Suddenly there was a black hole in the wall of water.
“Go now!” Delia hollered.
We were swallowed by an inky void so completely empty of light; it actually felt as if I were drawing the darkness into my body through my lungs. Abruptly, it changed to blinding white light, and then there was a rainbow of color.
Before I had time to process this strange journey, I hit bottom with a hard thump.
Sharp - agonizing pain tore through my arm, shooting all the way up to my shoulder.
“Say … what are you doing on our stage?”
My mouth fell open. All I could do was lie there on the stage, frozen.
But Zane was there to save the day. Grabbing my uninjured arm, he pulled me to my feet. “We have to get out of here!”
After fleeing through a maze of rooms and props, we finally found a door that exited into a little alley. Instead of heading down the alley, as I would have done, Zane pulled me around the front of the building and across the street. At first I thought it was a foolish move until I realize how quickly we were swallowed by the multitude of people crowding the street.
It seemed forever before Zane stopped. I took advantage of the reprieve to catch my breath.
“Now what?” I asked when I was no longer gasping for air.
He shrugged. “This is your show … remember? Where did your grandmother say she was?”
“She said she was in Whitechapel … and that they called her the Witch Doctor.”
“Okay … this way,” he said, nodding his head in the direction we’d already been traveling.
“How far is it?”
“Whitechapel is at least an hour walk, so we better get moving,” he replied.
“Don’t they have some kind of taxi system? My arm is killing me.”
Stopping abruptly, Zane looked at my arm. By the expression on his face, it was obvious he’d just noticed how it was hanging at an awkward angle.
“It is broke. Why didn’t you say something?” he asked.
“You didn’t give me a chance!” I scowled.
Taking my other arm, he gently led me to a dark deserted alley, I assumed for the sake of privacy. I was right.
“Drink. It will heal your arm.”
I shook my head. “No way!”
“Do it, Izzy!” he commanded.
“I’m a fallen angel … they won’t let me out of the hot spot that easily.”
Almost instantly I felt warmth and a strange tingling sensation spreading throughout my body, especially between my legs. My nipples perked right up as I was filled with images of sleek bodies entangled in the most ancient of dances.
I suddenly found that I was fixated on the thought of Zane feeding on me.
What would it feel like if he were to sink his fangs into the flesh of my breast - my inner thigh?
Just the thought set me on fire. As soon as he pulled his wrist from my mouth, I wrapped my arms around his neck.
“Feed on me,” I breathed.
Grasping my shoulders with both hands, he gently pushed me away.
“Please don’t tempt me, Izzy.” There was a trembling in his voice that sent a tingle down my back.
Swallowing hard, I turned away.
Suddenly, I realized that my arm didn’t hurt and it was no longer twisted.
“Thank you for healing me.”
“We should go,” he urged. “The sooner we find your grandmother, the sooner we can go back to our own time.”
It took over an hour to make our way through the dark streets of London to Whitechapel.
The scenery began to change from what I thought of as average Victorian, to slummy over-crowded streets. There were still people out and about, but now they were scruffy looking men and women of the night, nineteenth-century style.
After about twenty minutes of wandering the dirty streets of Whitechapel, it was time to admit that we were lost.
“We need to start asking people if they know a witch doctor,” I told Zane.
Without comment, Zane stopped in front of a woman whose tattered lavender dress was practically ripping at the seams. There was just no way it was going to hold the woman’s oversized body for long.
I suspected the dress hadn’t originally belonged to her, but there was no way of telling if she’d been given the garment, or if she’d stolen it off some prostitute that had passed out from too much drink.
“Madam.” Zane tilted his head. “Do you know of a woman known as Stella the Witch Doctor?”
When the prostitute smiled, I noticed several gaps where there should have been teeth.
“I can do better than she to ease your pain,” the woman responded, slurring her words.
“Oh, it is not for me … but for my companion.” Zane motioned to me.
The woman eyed me with open skepticism before responding. “The witch doctor be rooming over in Angel Alley. Mrs. Darnell’s place be that way … not far.”
“Thank you.” Zane gave her a tantalizing smile.
It seemed that being a vampire had its advantages, and having a way with people was one of those advantages.
“You get to needing some love … find your way back to me!” She called as we were walking away.
The woman was repulsive, but yet I was strangely drawn to her. I didn’t know if it was just curiosity or if I pitied her. Women had such a rough life in the Victorian age. Hell, they had a rough life in most any time period.
It started to snow before we reached Angel Alley. Although I was wearing a sweater, it would no way keep me warm in a snowstorm.
At first it was a light snowfall, but within a short time the white stuff was really coming down.
“We’re going to get frostbite before we get there,” I complained.
“You maybe. I’m immune.”
“Thanks for all your concern.” I was in a sour mood and wasn’t holding back.
“Relax. We’re almost there.”
I opened my mouth to do some more complaining but then I saw the street sign for Angel Alley.
“Thank God!”
Which one belonged to Mrs. Darnell?
Instead of wasting time on a guessing game, I stopped some guy to ask for directions.
“Excuse me, sir … could you tell me where Mrs. Darnell’s rooming house is?”
When he smiled I saw that he was missing as many teeth as the prostitute. I was suddenly thankful for my dentist back in Storm Cove.
I called him Mr. Waddles on account of his bottom half was so chunky, and he reminded me of a duck when he walked.
“Margaret’s place be there.” The man pointed to a rickety old building with peeling paint.
“Thank you.”
“Are you Mrs. Darnell?”
“That be me.” She nodded.
“I’m looking for Stella. Which room is she in?”
“Upstairs.” She pointed a bent finger to a very narrow staircase. “Stella’s room is the third door to the right.”
Already on my way up the stairs, I tossed a thank you over my shoulder.
Zane was on my heels. “Are you sure this is going to be your grandmother?”
“Yes.” I could barely keep my excitement from bubbling over. It had been way too long since I’d seen Granny.
As soon as we got to the door, I knocked several times. “Granny! It’s me … Izzy!”
When my knocks were met with silence, I knocked again. “Granny!”
Still there was no sound of someone rushing to the door to open it, as I’d hoped.
Zane tried the knob. “It’s locked.”
Although I wasn’t so sure how good a broken lock was going to be for Granny, it did get us in the room.
Stepping to the bed, I examined the book. I wasn’t surprised to see it was a Dickens novel,
A Christmas Carol
. Just the book Granny would be reading in December.
“Now what?” Zane asked.
“We wait. Hopefully, she won’t be long.”
He had a point, but wherever she was, I couldn’t imagine my Granny being out too late, even back home, let alone in a place like nineteenth-century Whitechapel.
Exhausted, we both collapsed on the bed. Before I knew it I was dozing off.
The next thing I became aware of was sunshine streaming in the small window. Blinking against the glare, bits and pieces of the night before returned.
“Where’s Granny?” I asked, rubbing my sleep-swollen eyes.
“I have no idea. She never returned.”
“Why didn’t you wake me up?”
“You needed the sleep. I thought we could start fresh this morning,” he explained.
He was right. I’d needed sleep, but I couldn’t help but feel we’d already wasted too much time.
I was ready to tell him as much when I heard someone at the door.
Zane heard it the same time I did. He put a finger to his lips to keep me quiet.
A moment later the door swung open and Granny walked in. She was wearing a long, colorless gray skirt in a style that I’d seen on hundreds of women since crossing the time barrier.
She was completely silent, as a variety of emotions played across her face. First I saw fear, and then shock, but all that was quickly washed away as pure joy took hold of her.
“Izzy! Pumpkin Pie! I can’t believe you made it.”
“Pumpkin Pie?” Zane echoed Granny.
I threw him a look of warning.
Granny glanced over at Zane. “And look here … you even brought a vampire with you.”
She was still smiling, but there was clear disapproval in her eyes.
“I thought it would be best if I brought along someone familiar with this time period,” I explained.
I wasn’t exactly prepared to answer questions about back home. I didn’t really want to lie to my Granny, but I also knew that it wasn’t a good time. Instead of fibbing, I did the next best thing by sidestepping her questions.
“We waited all night for you. What kept you out?”
Those cursed with moon madness, as it was known in modern times, would go berserk during a full moon. There hadn’t been a case of moon madness on Mystique Island for decades, but I knew it wasn’t uncommon during the nineteenth century.
“It will be a full moon tonight. I’ve been busy diagnosing people and administering cures.”
Poor Granny did look exhausted.
“Do you have any idea who the witch is?” I asked.
Zane drew his brows together. “Why would a witch in 1883 send people to Mystique Island during the twenty-first century?”
“Looks like things just got a whole lot more complicated,” I sighed.
Zane shook his head. “That’s not our problem. We are here to get your grandmother and get back.”
“We have to figure out what this witch is up to, and who she has sent over to our island. It wasn’t that long ago we were dealing with Jack the Ripper,” I reminded him.
Zane leaned one shoulder against the wall. “Okay then … what do you suggest?”
“Why don’t we just come right out and ask the evil bitch what she’s up to?”
“Then what are you thinking?” I asked.
“Can’t do that.” I shook my head. “We have less than three days to get back to our own time … or we’ll all be stuck here. Like I said … we’ll ask her.”