The whole Circle really believed they could do it. They thought they could triumph over evil without resorting to darkness. Cassie envied them, really. There was a time she had believed that was possible, too.
But what could she say? They were her Circle, and she was obligated to go down with them, if that's what they were going to do.
"I'm with you," she said. "Let's go get our Tools back."
Chapter 14
That night Diana and Adam gathered salt water from the rising tide, while Cassie and the others prepared the secret room for a locator spell to find Scarlett. Suzan and Deborah set up candles on all four cardinal points: north, south, east, and west. Sean lit their wicks one at a time. Chris and Doug cleansed the air with smoking jasmine censers, while Melanie laid out energy-clearing crystals. Cassie allowed a small part of herself to fill with hope. Maybe they did have enough good magic behind them to stand a chance in this fight. Getting the Master Tools back from Scarlett could change everything.
Diana and Adam returned from outside with a stone cauldron filled to the brim with seawater. They set it down on the floor, and the group joined hands around it, enclosing it in a circle. Just as they had the last time the Circle performed this spell, they all concentrated on the water - on its clarity and depth, its ability to reshape its form to any container, and its utility as a mirror. Then they invoked the elements.
"Power of water, I beseech you," Diana said. Together the Circle softly repeated the locator chant four times:
She who is lost shall now be found
Hiding places come unbound
They stared into the cauldron as Diana called out, "Let the water show the location of Scarlett."
Then they watched, waiting for the images to come.
Cassie focused hard, directing all her yearning and desire onto the water. She bent her mind, begging it to cooperate. When the first image started to form she felt a gust of energy rush through her.
It was an old house - seventeenth-century old. And it was surrounded by a heavy iron gate. The house looked like it should have been a museum, no longer suitable to live in, but not unlike many houses in New Salem and on the mainland.
Then Cassie saw a bridge, but not one she recognized. It could have been any bridge anywhere; nothing about it struck her as unique. It disappeared as quickly as it had appeared.
Finally a strange picture began coming together on the surface of the water. Bit by bit, a startling portrait came to light: a man with his head and feet locked through holes in a wooden board. His hands were chained behind him. Cassie knew what she was looking at - she'd seen one of these before. It was a prisoner in colonial-era stocks. Then the water turned to a disquieting black.
Cassie wasn't sure what to make of the strange series of images. It seemed like the spell hadn't worked nearly as well as it had the last time. But Adam looked up at the others with understanding in his eyes. "I can't believe it," he said. "She's so close to New Salem."
"I know that place." Nick nodded along. "It's the old Stockbridge Mission House, just on the other side of the bridge. It's supposed to be abandoned, but I guess it's not anymore."
"Well, what are we waiting for?" Faye asked. "Let's go get her."
"Hold on." Diana blew out all the candles and snuffed out the incense. "First we should research what spells would be useful against Scarlett. So we're at least prepared for a face-off."
Laurel pulled out a notebook and began jotting down a list. "We should study our defense spells," she said. "And definitely remote summoning spells. Melanie, can you look into what crystals might be of use?"
Faye flicked Laurel's pencil from her fingers. "Forget all that. We've got Cassie."
Cassie looked down at the tattered throw rug, not wanting to acknowledge Faye's comment. Of course Faye was champing at the bit to attack the hunters. All she cared about was breaking her mark, even if it meant Cassie performing dark magic. But what Faye didn't understand was the more Cassie used dark magic, the darker she became. Or maybe Faye did understand that, but she was still willing to sacrifice Cassie to the dark side for their cause.
"Cassie's not using black magic when we go up against Scarlett," Adam said. "Under any circumstances. But aside from that, I agree with Faye. We need to act right away, even if we don't have all the research."
Diana gawked at Adam from across the living room table. "This isn't something to rush into," she said. "Need I remind you how in our last battle with Scarlett, she made you blind with a single wave of her hand?"
Suzan and Deborah, who were sitting side by side on the sofa, chuckled meanly.
"I remember," Adam said. "And it wasn't just me, it was all of us. But thanks for bringing that up."
Adam turned to Nick for support, assuming they might for once fall on the same side of a dispute. "Don't you think it's do-or-die time?" Adam said to Nick. "Study period is over. Am I right?"
Cassie's insides were seething. She wanted to go after Scarlett and get the Master Tools back more than any of them, but deep down she knew what they were up against - she was the only one who really understood what they were up against. It was her responsibility to speak up.
"Having learned something from the trap I walked into in Cape Cod," she said, "I don't want to face Scarlett unprepared. She's stronger than all of us put together. We got lucky last time - we got her to run away, but we couldn't overpower her. The only way we stand a chance of defeating her now is by outsmarting her."
Cassie directed her attention to Adam. "That was a great pep talk and all, but a positive attitude and a whole lot of hope aren't going to cut it. We need to be realistic. We should have an arsenal of spells at our fingertips before we step through the door of that house. One or two more days of preparation is all we need. It's not much."
"I'm with her," Deborah said. "Cassie should be the one calling the shots on this mission."
Nick raised his hand. "I second that."
Adam's cheeks turned crimson, and Faye let out a begrudging sigh.
Laurel picked up her notebook and pencil. "Okay then. Who has something to add to the list?"
Adam lingered at Cassie's front door, waiting for the others to leave her house with their individual assignments. He tilted his head at her and averted his eyes. "We should talk," he said.
"About what?"
"Scarlett."
"It seems like she's all you want to talk about lately," Cassie said.
Adam's coy look changed into something more serious. "I understand why you're upset, Cassie. But I didn't suggest we find Scarlett so I could ask her out to dinner." He smiled. "You know that."