“Not without a body. She would have suspected witchcraft.”
“Even so, would the tribe have treated her like a widow? She was without a husband.”
“She wouldn’t have allowed them to treat her so. Nor would she remarry. She would have waited for me, hoping I found a way to return to her.”
“But you couldn’t.”
And now his wife was dead. A hundred bewitched years had passed, leaving a gothic gap between them. To Allie, it seemed tragically romantic. But it made her envious, too. She’d always wanted someone to love her in the way Raven loved Vanessa.
“How did you meet her?” she asked.
“We attended the same boarding school, and we had feelings for each other then. But I didn’t ask her to marry me until we were older. Until I danced with her at Fort Sill.”
She tried to picture a social event on the military reservation, but her mind drew a blank. “Will you tell me about it sometime?”
“Sometime,” he repeated, as though speaking of it now would make him sad.
“I should alter the painting.” She stood up, thinking about the night Vanessa had waited for him, the same night Sorrel had crushed the colors of his soul. He wasn’t an angel. He was a warrior, fighting to survive, to bear the loneliness he’d endured.
The destruction of his life.
His life. Suddenly those two words hit her like a fist. A jolt of danger. A warning.
She looked at Raven and the lights went out. Nothing glowed but the vanilla-scented candle she’d lit earlier.
Then that went out, too. But not from the storm.
Allie sensed a witch.
“Raven?” She said his name. She couldn’t see him, not even the slightest outline of his body, of his wings. The room was pitch-black.
He didn’t answer.
She heard the whoosh of air, and when the lights returned, he was gone.
Samantha wouldn’t quit hissing.
“I know,” Allie said. She was scared, too. Her pulse was pounding harder than the rain.
Was Zinna’s magic returning? Or was there another dead sorceress at work? For all she knew, Grandma Sorrel had popped in from the grave.
She had to search the loft. If Raven was still here, she had to find him. And if he wasn’t…
Cautious, Allie walked from room to room. Samantha followed, eager to fight off evil forces. Of course at any given moment she could turn tail and run. Or hide under the nearest chair. Lately that seemed to be her strong suit.
When Allie came to Olivia’s room, she stalled, apprehensive to enter. The door was ajar. But that was how Olivia had left it.
“Okay,” she whispered. “Here goes.” With a deep breath, she went inside and turned on the light.
The bed was draped with a satin quilt, reminding her of the lining of a coffin. The sheers on the windows were Victorian lace, but they could have been ghouls in bridal gowns.
She looked at the closet-door mirror. The only reflection was hers. And Sam’s. They just stood there, staring at themselves.
Then the cat spun around and growled.
Raven was perched on top of Olivia’s armoire. Yes, perched. He was a bird once again.
Allie’s pulse quit pounding.
Apparently the whoosh of air she’d heard in the dark was him shape-shifting and flying away. But she wasn’t sure what had drawn him to this particular room, if it was coincidence or if the witch had pulled him in this direction.
Not that there was a sorceress in sight. Nothing stirred. No shimmering shadows. No supernatural surprises.
Only a raven peering down at her, and a cat that slipped under the coffinlike bed.
Raven cawed in the silence, his call unmistakably loud, deep-pitched and powerful. Allie thought about Edgar Allen Poe’s poem, wishing she knew the words.
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