Cassie knew deep within her soul how powerful the Circle actually was when they worked together. They didn't need to rely on a protection spell to keep them safe. Why couldn't Adam see that?
"I can't talk about this with you now," Cassie said. "I need some time to myself. To think."
Adam stood up. His eyes turned as dark as the sky in a storm. "I love you," he said. "And if you have to be upset with me in order to prove that love, that's fine. But I'm not willing to lose you."
He put his hands on his hips. The sun glimmering through the window brought out all the different colors in his hair, the shining waves of red mixed with brown and gold.
"If time is what you want, okay," he said. "I'll be here when you're ready. But I have one request."
He paused to make sure Cassie was listening carefully to him.
"What's your request?" she asked, still not returning his gaze.
"Don't do anything rash without talking to the Circle first." Cassie buckled. That wasn't exactly a fair thing to ask of her.
"Promise me," he said.
She made the mistake then of looking into Adam's pained, loving eyes. He wasn't a coward. He was a good, brave soul, and he always wanted the best for everyone.
"Please," he said. "Don't do anything reckless." Cassie was no less angry with him than she was when he arrived, but she also loved him with all her heart. And she was powerless against the urge to put his troubled mind at ease. "I promise," she said.
But she knew it was a promise she probably couldn't keep.
Chapter 23
Darkness for miles, that was all Cassie could see. A red-toned darkness like the insides of her own eyelids, but her eyes were wide open. She sensed the ramshackle house far out in the distance, hidden within the blackened night.
She called out, Scarlett!
Scarlett didn't come to Cassie in this dream - Cassie went to her. She forced her way through the pitch-black night as if blind and mad, holl ering Scarlett's name. It was like traveling through outer space in a starless universe, but with persistence Cassie hit upon what she was searching for. The house. And through the rickety door of the house, Cassie discovered Scarlett. She was bound at the wrists and ankles to a splintered wooden post, and she was screaming.
They were whipping her. Whoever they were. Cassie tried to make out the hunters' faces, but she couldn't. They didn't have faces; they were formless black entities like ghosts. She could only sense their trembling dark souls and how they were frightened to the point of brutality. It was their fear driving them, fear of the unknown, of the supernatural, of witchcraft. Like Holy War soldiers, their faith in their own righteousness was unbreakable, and their capacity for violence against their enemies was extreme. They whipped Scarlett mercilessly over and over again, unaffected by her screams.
Cassie wondered why the hunters didn't tape Scarlett's mouth shut, to quiet her. And then the thought occurred to her like a light being switched on. The hunters wanted Scarlett to talk, to spil information - not only the secrets of her magic, Cassie realized, but the secrets of the Circle, who they were and where to find them. Scarlett cried and shrieked and spit at the shapeless hunters, but no words escaped her bruised mouth. Was she bearing all this pain to protect the Circle? And to protect Cassie?
Her beaten body hung from the wooden post limp and wilted like a dying flower. Her face was a mess of blood and dirt, and one of her eyes had swelled completely shut.
Her damp red hair dripped like blood down her bony shoulders. She'd been stripped almost nude; her torso and legs were streaked with lash marks and purple welts. How much longer could she possibly take such abuse?
Like in the last dream she'd had, Cassie couldn't move.
Her feet were frozen in place at the doorway - from where she could see Scarlett but wasn't sure if Scarlett could see her. She called out to her from where she stood.
Scarlett, I know where you are, she said. And I'll be there soon. I promise.
With that, she jolted awake.
My sister, Cassie thought, my poor, dear sister. She'd rather Scarlett give the hunters what they wanted, to tell them the entire truth about the Circle, if it meant they'd release her alive. Better that than seeing her die to protect them. Scarlett had come to New Salem to seek out the them. Scarlett had come to New Salem to seek out the safety of the Circle, not the other way around. How had the situation come to this?
But Scarlett was still alive, that much Cassie was sure of.
And as long as she was still alive, there was still time to rescue her. Maybe if the Circle understood that Scarlett was being tortured for protecting them, they'd consider rescuing her a little more seriously. Maybe they'd finally accept her as one of their own.
And then there was a piercingly loud sound in Cassie's ear. She looked over at her nightstand and realized her phone was ringing, but who could be calling at this time of night?
"hello?" Cassie answered cautiously, half-believing it was going to be one of the ancient witch hunters from her dream on the other end of the line. But the scratchy voice that apologized for waking her belonged to Deborah.
"What's happened?" Cassie knew if Deborah was calling her in the middle of the night that someone was either hurt or dead, possibly both.
"Someone set Laurel's lawn on fire," Deborah said.
"Burning in the shape of the hunter symbol." If Cassie hadn't just woken from a nightmare, she would have sworn she'd just entered one.
"Laurel's been marked," Deborah added, in case Cassie didn't comprehend the full magnitude of the situation.
Cassie suddenly felt like she was suffocating, like one of the hunters from her nightmare had grabbed hold of her neck and was squeezing the breath out of her.
"Cassie?" Deborah said. "Are you okay?"
Cassie coughed. Laurel. Of all people to be marked, they'd gotten to sweet, peace-loving Laurel. How could this be happening?
"I'm just shocked," Cassie said. "Go on." Deborah resumed speaking in her gravelly whisper. "So we're going to have a Circle meeting early tomorrow before school. To figure out what to do."
"Of course," Cassie said. "I'll be there."
"We're meeting at Diana's. At six thirty A.M."
"Okay." Cassie felt shaky and weird. Her voice didn't come out sounding like her own. Those invisible hands were still squeezing her throat closed, making it hard for her to breathe. "Is Laurel all right?" she managed to ask.
But the phone clicked. Deborah had already hung up. It struck Cassie as strange that of all the Circle members who could have called her with this news, it was Deborah who did it. Not Adam or Diana.