Arcane Circle
(The fourth book in the Persephone Alcmedi series)
A novel by Linda Robertson
For Richie.
When you read it, youll know why.
Maybe.
Red-Caped Hero Thanks:
Shannon & Dave, Beth & Steve, Melissa, Costie
Because making realistic concert T-shirts and buttons
for a fictitious rock band just kicks ass.
Java-N-Chocolate Thanks:
Michelle, Melissa, Laura, Faith, Rachel, Emily, and Tracy
As always, I am grateful to my writing group
for reading, critiques, support, and the friendship.
Delicioso Thanks:
Samoskys Homestyle Pizzeria
For making such fabulous pizza,
even my characters love it. Yum!
PAMArita Thanks:
Paula Guran
Your keen eyes and wise guidance keep me from
sticking my foot in my mouth,
and to Laura Bickle
for sharing your vast knowledge on
a variety of unusual subjects.
Howlin Thanks:
Jim Lewis. My own wolfy bad boy.
Reverent Gratitude:
For the many-named Muse. You will always rock.
Extra Thanks:
Derek Tatum & Carol Malcolm @ DragonCon;
Larissa @ Larissas Bookish Life;
Rachel Smith @ Bitten by Books;
Abigail @ All Things Urban Fantasy;
Roxanne @ Fang-tastic Books;
Susi & Caroline @ Booklovers, Inc.;
Erik & Justin @ nightstalkersradio.com;
and Scollard;
and all the reviewers, bloggers, and tweeters
whove helped spread the word.
There are too many of you to list and thats fantastic!
Nearly dragging the veterinarian behind me, I raced up the tight and twisting stairs, desperate for him to treat my boyfriend. It was just after two P.M. and the vet, Dr. Geoffrey Lincoln, was already well acquainted with his patient, Johnny Newman. What other type of doctor would make an emergency house call to treat a wrewolf?
Johnny, wearing only dark jeans and an Ace bandage wrapped high around his rib cage, lay on his narrow bed in the attic bedroom of my saltbox farmhouse. Despite a grimace of pain, he made no sound.
As soon as Kirk, a wrewolf from Johnnys pack, saw the doc and me enter the room, he rose from the folding chair next to the bed. He hadnt moved since wed gotten Johnny in the bed hours earlier. Kirk nodded at us and then walked quietly to the foot of the bed.
Dr. Lincoln set his bag on the chair, pulled latex gloves from it, and bent to inspect Johnnys wound. It kept seeping blood and had completely saturated numerous gauze pads and two of the elastic wraps already. In the time Id been gone, the blood had again soaked through layers of padding and was darkening the bandage like an ever-expanding Rorschach blot.
I hoped that I appeared to be holding myself together and functioning, but my shaking hands threatened to expose my counterfeit calm. This is all wrong. Johnny was in wolf form when injured. These wounds should have healed when he transformed back, but they didnt. My fears ricocheted inside me like wild bulletsthe crossfire could shatter my cool and collected faade at any moment, exposing my panic.
A veterinarian by trade, Doc Lincoln had experience with the traumatic wounds animals sometimes inflicted on each other, and he had treated Johnny and other wres before. At five-foot-nine, with receding brown hair, brown eyes, and glasses, the doctor appeared at first glance to be an average man, but the fact that he was willing to provide care to wrewolvesalbeit secretlymade him very special indeed.
He took a pair of scissors from his bag and cut carefully through the wrapped bandage. I need more light.
When Johnny moved his rock n roll self in a few weeks ago, hed brought a table lamp made from a guitar neck. I jerked the shade off and twisted the little knob. A hundred watts brightened the narrow, slope-sided room.
Hold it closer.
I stretched the lamps cord as far as possible. Under the harsh illumination, he peeled the bandage back and exposed Johnnys gruesome chest injury. The three jagged slashes were deep, each at least six inches long. Despite the swelling, each time Johnny inhaled the wounds gaped wider. Fresh blood welled up, flowing across his chest. It was thick enough to hide the winged pentacle tattoo that spanned his pectorals.
Dr. Lincoln examined the gashes, and even though his touch seemed light, Johnny grimaced, compressing his features so tightly the Wedjat tattoos around his eyes almost disappeared. But the wolf king does not whimper. He had recently revealed to his pack he was the fated Domn Lup, able to make a full transformation at will, not just when the moon was full.
At least the doctor was here now. Hed know what to do to help Johnny. Doing something, anything, was better than the helplessness Id felt while waiting for him to show up.
As he completed his examination, the docs thin lips pressed into a firm line and he announced, Ive sewn up worse on you, John, but this doesnt show any indication of that accelerated healing you wrewolves are notorious for. Was it silver that cut you?
Nope. Johnny shot me a grim look that, in effect, passed the task of answering the doctors question to me.
Johnnys wounds had been inflicted by a phoenix raking him with her claws during a dawn battle with fairies. Another consequence of that battle was the myriad elementalsunicorns, griffons, dragons, phoenixesnow grouped in the wooded grove behind my house. I was planning to ask the doc if hed serve as their vetseveral of them were injured.
But, for now, if I told him the source of the injury was a creature that supposedly didnt exist, hed go all skittish and spew questions. He wouldnt believe it until he saw it for himself, so I answered cryptically. It was a creature of magic that cut him.
Magic? The doc rubbed at his brow. Then some residual effect must be preventing the healing.
Magic had a negative effect on wres. It could force them into a partial shift and leave them forever stuck that way: neither human nor wre. Hes the Domn Lup, I said. He isnt as susceptible to magic as other wres. Even as I said it, I realized Id dismissed the obvious. Mad at myself for missing it, anger squashed most of my worry. The docs theory was a good one. This wasnt exactly magical energies being stirred up around Johnny. Magic made physical contact with the intent to damage him. Any wre without the powers of the Domn Lup probably would have bled to death from an attack like this.
Can you cleanse the magic away? The doc mimed waving a wand.
The answer wasnt going to make Johnny very happy. Yes. With salt.
Salt in my wound, the wre grumbled.
My hand gripped Johnnys. Sounds like a song title, I said. Being the guitarist and front man of a band, he could make lyrics out of just about anything.
The doc peered at me over the tops of his glasses. Is using salt like that something you specifically, as a witch, have to do?
You mean: Does it take magic as well as salt?
Medicine is magic to me. But, he reached into his bag, I was thinking more along the lines of washing the wound with this. He lifted an IV bag of saline solution. Its sterile.
He was a thinker. That made me even happier he was on our side. Saline should be fine. Give it a shot.
Are you sure?
I use it to magically cleanse a space, but mundane humans often use salt to protect themselves. Ever spilled salt and then tossed a pinch over your left shoulder? You were supposedly protecting yourself from evil.
Dr. Lincoln turned to Kirk. Would you fetch some towels from the bathroom? Wait, I-I didnt say fetch because youre a I mean, I wouldve said it that way to anyone.