The Secret Circle: The Captive Part II and The Power

The Secret Circle: The Captive Part II and The Power Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: The Secret Circle: The Captive Part II and The Power Read Online Free PDF
Author: L. J. Smith
waited for the peridot to turn aside and lead them all to Faye’s doorstep.
    But Diana was walking on.
    Cassie felt a violent surge of relief—and of bewilderment. Where were they going ? They were passing Number Seven, another vacant house. Passing the Hendersons’, passing Adam’s, passing Suzan’s. They were passing Sean’s—oh, my God, Cassie thought, we’re not going to my house?
    But they were passing Number Twelve as well. Diana was following the pendulum’s swing, leading them out onto the point of the headland.
    And there the crystal began to spin in circles again.
    “What’s going on?” Laurel said, looking around in astonishment. “What are we doing here?”
    Adam and Diana were looking at each other. Then they both looked at Cassie, who came slowly forward from the rear of the group. Cassie shrugged at them.
    “This is the place where Number Thirteen used to be,” Diana said. “Right, Adam? The house that was torn down.”
    “I heard it burned down,” Adam said. “Before we were born.”
    “No, it wasn’t that long ago,” said Melanie. “It was only about sixteen or seventeen years ago—that’s what I heard. But before that it was vacant for centuries. Literally.”
    “How many centuries?” Cassie said, too loudly. For some reason she found her fingers clenched around the piece of hematite in her pocket.
    The members of the coven turned to her, looking at her with eyes that seemed to shine slightly in the moonlight.
    “About three,” Melanie said. “This was Black John’s house. Nobody ever lived in it after he died in 1696.”
    The hematite burned against Cassie’s palm with icy fire.

Chapter 3
    “T his is all too weird for me,” Laurel said, shivering.
    “But what does it tell us?” Deborah challenged.
    “It’s another link to Black John,” Adam said. “Other than that, nothing.”
    “So it’s a dead end, like the cemetery,” Faye said, looking pleased.
    Cassie had the feeling they were wrong, but she couldn’t explain why, so she kept her mouth shut. Something else was worrying her, worrying her terribly. The piece of hematite that right now felt as heavy as a bit of neutron star in her pocket . . . it had come from the ruins of Black John’s house. It might even have belonged to him. Which meant that she had to tell Diana about it.
    People were wandering around, breaking up into small groups. The meeting, for all intents and purposes, was over. Cassie took a deep breath and went to Diana.
    “I didn’t get a chance to talk to you earlier,” she said. “But I wanted to tell you about something that happened yesterday.”
    “Cassie, you don’t have to tell me. I know it wasn’t like Faye said.”
    Cassie blinked, thrown off balance. “What did Faye say?”
    “We don’t even have to talk about it. I know it’s not true.”
    “But what did she say ?”
    Diana looked uncomfortable. “She said—you were over at her house last night, playing—well, some kind of game.”
    “Pizza Man,” Cassie said distinctly. When Diana stared at her, she explained, “Pizza Man He Delivers.”
    “I know what it’s called,” Diana said. She was scanning Cassie’s face. “But I’m sure you would never . . .”
    “ You’re sure? You can’t be sure,” Cassie cried. It was too much—Diana’s blind insistence on her innocence. Didn’t Diana realize that Cassie was bad, evil?
    “Cassie, I know you. I know you wouldn’t do anything like that.”
    Cassie was feeling more and more agitated. Something inside her was getting ready to snap. “Well, I was there. And I did do it. And”—she was getting close to the source of the anguish inside her—“you don’t know what kind of things I would or wouldn’t do. I’ve already done some things—”
    “Cassie, calm down—”
    Cassie reeled a step backward, stung. “I am calm. Don’t tell me to calm down!”
    “Cassie, what’s wrong with you?”
    “Nothing’s wrong with me. I just want to be left
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