"Arcane Circle" - читать интересную книгу автора (Robertson Linda)CHAPTER FIVEMy bedroom’s creamy-yellow walls were bathed in the flickering glow of white candles and the sweet, heavy scent of nag champa incense filled the air. Nana and Beverley were asleep in their beds, and Johnny and I were alone in my room. I’d promised to try this mind-probe thing and, despite feeling more like sleeping than scrutinizing, I would try it. Plus, with the w#230;rewolf head honchos en route, Johnny needed whatever information he could get. “How do we do this?” he asked. “First, we take our pants off.” I dropped my jeans, leaving me in a long-sleeved tee and cotton boy-short panties. He growled approval and dropped his jeans atop the discarded guitar-strap-sling without a word. I approved of the black stretch cotton boxer briefs. They were snug where they needed to be snug. Regardless of his injury, it was obvious his libido was doing just fine. “Since when did you start wearing underwear?” I asked. “Since the summer’s over.” Just below the hem of the shorts, tattoos of blocky Aztec figures adorned each thigh. Drawn with thick lines and colored in with dark shades of red, these tattoos weren’t my favorites. “Sit on the bed and, here, take these pillows.” “Please tell me that this is going to involve some kind of kinky sex magic thing.” “Sorry.” “Damn.” “This isn’t even going to stir up a lot of energy like magic does. It’s mostly a meditation. The saline and salt should have cleansed the magic completely from your wound, but if you feel even a hint of energy affecting your injuries, let me know, okay?” “I “I know but …” “But what?” “When we made love at the haven … you know Menessos did something, right?” He arched a brow. He could have given into anger or laughter. “He didn’t have video cameras in our room, did he?” “Oh, hell. Not that I know of.” I had a sinking feeling inside. That bastard just might have. “He did something magically, through his link to me. He said that we’d already imprinted on each other, and he gave it a nudge into a fuller emotional bond. When it happened, we both murmured, ‘ He squinted. “Now that you mention it … sort of.” “Well, if, because of that or the “You imply that I could be tweaked in way that is both wrong I licked my index finger and gave him a point on the air scoreboard, then began rearranging my closet. Once all of my clothing hangers were pushed from the right side toward the middle, some old poster frames were exposed. Behind those were smaller frames, and behind them, a rectangle of slate, a little more than a foot wide by two feet long and less than a half-inch thick. The slate was cool and smooth under my fingers. I hefted it out and leaned it against the bed. I passed Johnny a fluorite stone and proceeded to cast a circle around us. Before calling the elements to guard us I corrected my wording to invoke the “spirit of the elements” and not the elementals themselves. Probably not necessary, but it wouldn’t do to have any of the elemental animals from the grove trying to break into the house, so better to over-think in this instance. The personalities of the elements arrived as I had always experienced them before. I knew earth was present when a tingle touched my skin. Air was announced by a warm breath swirling around me, lifting my hair. I called to fire, and felt its nips and small gnawing bites of response. Lastly, I called to water and felt the pressure and the pull of a current, then it subsided and buoyancy took hold until it all faded away. At this point, I lit an extra white candle. Sitting cross-legged on my bed in front of Johnny, I used the pillows to elevate my knees so they could touch his and be nearly level. When I positioned the heavy slate on our knees, it took a minute to make adjustments but finally the slate slab rested on our bare skin and seemed reasonably level. “Is this the genuine version of the Ouija board?” Johnny asked, fingers skimming over the gray-black smoothness. Symbols of all types had been drawn on the surface in faded and occasionally chipped white paint. “Kinda. ‘Ouija’ is just a made-up name and we aren’t using it to contact spirits or demons or what-have-you. But it is something that can help in … well, communication. This piece of slate has supposedly been in my family for generations. The story goes that in the 1860s my great-great-great-grandmother stole this slate from the ruins of an altar to Hecate and painted these symbols on it to ensure she got it out of Greece.” “So your whole family is made up of spunky chicks?” “Spunky?” “Spunky and a liar? Say it ain’t so.” “More like spunky with Alzheimer’s.” “Oh. What are all these fancy scribbles?” Confident he recognized the numbers and the alphabet, and could read the “yes,” “maybe,” and “no,” for himself, I explained the rest. “Runes, zodiac symbols, planetary symbols, astrological glyphs, the various stars, here … you know a pentacle.” It was in the middle of the rectangle. I pointed to symbols. “These are just stars with more points. A hexagram—like a Star of David—has six; the heptagram has seven; here’s eight, the octogram; and nine, one form of an enneagram. Here’s the symbol for infinity, and you know the Wedjat and the ankh.” There was no wasted space, yet the symbols weren’t crowded. They each had their place. “Why’d we have to take our pants off to hold this slate?” “So the physical energies in our bodies have direct access.” “I do like direct access,” he said. I chalked another point into the air for him. “And this?” He held up the fluorite. The purple and blue hues were frosty, not glossy. It wasn’t smooth and round like a marble, but a normal tumbled stone you’d find in the bins of any rock-hound’s store. It had edges and flat spots. “It isn’t the same as those.” He pointed to the purple stones I’d placed with the white candles. “Those are sugilites and they are receptive. This is fluorite and it’s projective.” “Meaning?” “Meaning those stones around the circle will aid in drawing the answers out of you, while this one will project those answers onto the slate.” “And the purple theme?” “Spiritual. We’re tapping our souls, but we’re also tapping your subconscious.” I waited a second. “You feel all right?” “I’m kinda horny.” My nonplussed expression made him defend the statement. “What?” His attention flitted from my chest to my face. “I’m in your candlelit room, that little aphrodisiac stick is smoking, and I’m on your bed in my skivvies.” “That little stick is incense, nag champa, and it is for meditational purposes. As in calming.” Johnny sniffed the air, wiggled his brows. “I disagree.” “I meant, does your “Yeah, yeah. My arm is fine.” “Put that stone in the middle on the pentacle, then put your hands like this.” I held my hands in front of me as if I was going to clap, but instead of bringing them together, I placed them on the outer edges of the slate. The tip of my middle finger rested at the midpoint of the side, and the cool edge of the stone stretched along that finger, into my palm. Johnny mimicked it. “Your fingertip must touch mine,” I said. He adjusted. Now we held the stone rectangle like a tray we were ready to lift, but we weren’t going to be moving. “Will you be able to keep your arm there for a while?” “Yeah.” “I can get more pillows if you want to prop it.” “Nah. I’m good.” I bit my lip, then said, “I know.” The gleam in his gaze was soft, adoring, a bit sad, and it said much more than flattering words ever could. “I’m ready.” “You’re His breathing was deep. “I am going to ask you questions and make statements. Do not use your voice to answer me. When you hear the stone tumbling around, do not open your eyes. Concentrate on that light, on keeping it in your embrace. Listen to it hum and let it shine through you, down your arms and into the slate.” He nodded. “Go back, reach into the past. You’re waking up in the park. Naked, confused, covered with tattoos. You don’t even know your own name.” I paused. “Now go back further. Reach into the unknown.” Wrinkles appeared around his eyes as if he was squinting. His breathing had quickened. “Don’t force it. Just feel, feel the weight of time lifting from your shoulders. Imagine a clock, and the arms are spinning backward. I do not expect you to know the answers. They are locked away from your conscious mind. But they may not be locked from the subconscious. Just focus on the clock and let your subconscious answer through the stone between us. Breathe. Breathe.” I repeated it a few more times until I could sense serenity around him again. “Good.” Directing my awareness onto the fluorite resting on the pentacle, my first few questions would be easy, to set the tone. “Can you answer?” I whispered as low as possible, almost soundless. The fluorite remained still. I asked again, waited again. Nothing. With closed eyes, I sought that piece of Johnny’s soul I now carried. Breathing in the incense, I imagined that ethereal essence searching for that memory and reached out for my alpha state. I stilled. For an instant, I could have sworn that I’d heard his voice. Targeting that more precise request, the memory awoke and answered my call. It sparked like neurons firing across my brain, and finally it filled my sight. I saw Johnny, in his late teens. His hair was shorter, and he had no piercings, just the tattoos. As before, with Menessos, I was watching Johnny and yet I was one with him, impossibly seeing this moment from the outside, yet also inside his thoughts, feeling his fear. No one cares enough to search for me. I’m a wolf. A wolf! I am … I am. None of us, No one will want me now. Holding on to that despairing sound, keeping it foremost in my mind, I begged, “Who made these tattoos? Who bound his power away from him?” The fluorite tumbled to the left, rolled toward me, spun on blank slate and rolled toward Johnny. The stone stopped on a rune letter that was shaped like an “Ansuz,” I whispered. The rune represented the spoken word and advice. But when the little fluorite spun halfway around, I knew this was a sign to reverse the rune and change the meaning to trickery and lies. The stone rolled to the right, onto the next rune, Raidho. Upon this angular-looking The stone seemed to be simply checking out each rune and twisting. I began to wonder if this was a waste of time. When the fluorite rolled back to Ansuz, then tumbled across the slate as if it were running away and stopped abruptly on Nauthiz, however, my confidence returned; there The stone rolled back to the pentacle and went still. It had given me a kind of recap of Johnny’s story, as if I’d asked for a reading. I hadn’t. Though I prompted it a few more times, it did not respond. I counseled myself to keep a heavy sigh from escaping. Johnny cracked one eye open a fraction. “Is it done?” “Yeah.” I said quick thanks and left him holding the slate while I took up the circle. I moved the candles to the dresser top, let the stones pile on the bedside table, and took the slate back to the closet, where I shifted the frames forward and bent to replace the slate. “Well?” He sounded like he was ready for bad news. From deep in the closet I asked, “Do you know anything about runes?” I twisted to see him as he answered. He was staring at the bed. “Runes? Um, that would be a—” He turned and realized this position and my undies left little to the imagination. He gaped, then shut his mouth and turned away. “No.” I wanted to come out of this feeling like I was helpful. Instead, I’d disappointed him. When the chore of putting everything away was done, I reclaimed my seat on the bed. “What’s wrong?” “I can tell you didn’t get an answer.” There was no blame in his voice, but there was plenty of dismay in his blue eyes. “Not really. It answered more like a rune reading. I’ll have to give it some thought.” He was stepping into his role as Domn Lup and giving up so much … his band was on the top of that endangered list. Making it big in the music industry meant everything to the three band members of Lycanthropia, but Johnny’s new role as front man for w#230;rewolves everywhere could destroy that rock ’n’ roll dream. The band mates weren’t sure they should book any more shows and if they weren’t playing and packing in the crowds they weren’t of any interest to the industry reps. “I’ll cross-reference the symbols tomorrow and see if I can make sense of it then.” He nodded, pensive. His mood had sunk low. It had been a long, wearying day. Still, I decided to give it one more try. “As the Lustrata,” I said, moving onto my hands and knees, “I’m supposed to balance the good and the bad.” I crawled closer, until our lips were an inch apart. “It’s important to me to make sure I give you something good, for all the bad you’re dealing with.” “Well,” he replied, his voice taking that one syllable and letting it trail, growing deeper until he was nearly growling. It was such a male sound, like he was wrapping me in thick velvet with his voice, and when paired with the yearning that took over, it caused the ambiance of the room to change drastically. “In lieu of giving me the name of the person who did this to me, I can think of one other thing you could give me that’s very, very good… .” With my palms on either side of his hips, I whispered, “Let me guess.” |
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