The Prof Croft Series: Books 0-4 (Prof Croft Box Sets Book 1) by Brad Magnarella (best business books of all time txt) π
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- Author: Brad Magnarella
Read book online Β«The Prof Croft Series: Books 0-4 (Prof Croft Box Sets Book 1) by Brad Magnarella (best business books of all time txt) πΒ». Author - Brad Magnarella
Horror prickled over me like a violent rash. βBurned down? What happened?β
βThere was fire.β
βYeah, thanks, but does anyone know what started it?β
βNo. Fire destroyed everything. House. Farm. Horses.β
βAnd Lazlo?β I asked, my voice dry and husky.
βThey think he was inside house. In cellar.β
βWhat do you mean think?β I asked. βDid they recover his body or didnβt they?β
βNo one will go to farm now. Ghosts have been seen.β
βGhosts? What ghosts?β
βDo you want me to take you back to town?β
βNo, I want you to take me to the farm,β I answered stubbornly.
βI can take you in morning.β
βThereβs no time,β I said, which was true. If the Front could be believed, I had roughly two days until Lichβs returnβand one of those days would involve travel back to the States.
I expected Olga to object, but she released the brake, and the truck began to rumble forward again. We rode in silence. She twisted the headlights on shortly and rain sliced through the beams. The forests and fields darkened around us. Olga snapped on the radio, and a man singing a sad ballad crackled from the speakers. I refused to believe she had the right farm, refused to believe it had burned to the ground and that Lazlo was β¦ missing? dead?
No, I decided. Once I show her where it is, sheβll realize she was thinking of a different farm, a different person. But I couldnβt forget what Connell had told me about Lich eliminating the most powerful wizards, sacrificing them in his effort to bring the Whisperer into our world.
After thirty minutes that seemed longer than the flight over the Atlantic, a derelict chapel appeared among some trees. βThe turnoff is up here on the right,β I said, squinting past the headlight beams and pointing. βThere. The farm is about a kilometer down that drive.β
Olga pulled in front of the drive and idled. βThis is as near as I will go.β
I almost asked her why before remembering what sheβd said about the ghosts. This was the farm sheβd been thinking of.
βDo you mind waiting for me?β I asked.
She looked at the bills I held toward her. βOne hour,β she said at last, accepting them. βDo you have light?β
I started to nod before realizing my staff wouldnβt work as well in the rain, especially if it started coming down harder. Olga reached beneath her seat and handed me a brick-shaped flashlight. When I snapped it on, shadows sprung over Olgaβs face, making her appear sinister.
βBeware the ghosts,β she said. βYou will know them by their whispers.β
Her words sent a bone-deep chill through me. Gripping the flashlight and my cane, I stepped out of the truck and into the Romanian night.
I made my way up the drive, rain pattering over a poncho Iβd pulled from my pack and slid into. Though it had been more than a decade, I remembered every turn in the dirt drive and even some of the larger trees that bordered it. Toward the end of my training, Lazlo had challenged me to direct force invocations down the winding drive to a target without rustling the leaves. It was as hard as it sounds.
At the final turn, I stopped and looked out over an open yard that was almost unrecognizable.
No.
Olga was right. The place had been decimated by fire, and judging by the weeds growing up through the heaps of charred timber, it had happened a number of years ago. I stepped forward, shining the flashlight over the ruins of the main house and then the barn. The place where Lazlo had helped me to construct my mental prism, to strengthen and hone it, push energy through it β¦ gone.
Even the fencing that had once penned his beloved horses, Mariana and Mihai, had burned to the ground. My heart thudded sickly in my chest.
I turned back to where the house had once stood. Though I could see nothing through my wizardβs senses, dark energies seemed to pollute the atmosphere. Perhaps my own sense of foreboding. Far away in the mountains, wolf cries echoed.
They think he was inside house, Olga had said. In cellar.
I drew my sword and aimed it at the hill of ruins. βVigore!β I shouted.
Energy pulsed bright from the blade, overcoming the dampness to slam into the ruins and plow it back in a wave. Chunks of charred timber rained down in the fields beyond. With a second force invocation, I cleared the remaining debris from the trapdoor that led down to Lazloβs cellar.
I stood over the door and listened. All I could hear was the rain tapping my poncho. The door broke away when I pulled the handleβthe hinges had been baked black. I set the door aside and shone the flashlight down the steps. During my time with him, Lazlo had forbidden me from going down to his lab. That had been fine by me and my phobia then, but now I had no choice.
If Lazlo had been trapped, his remains might tell me something.
I set the flashlight down and, with a Word, summoned a glowing shield and descended. The steps groaned underfoot. At the bottom of the steps, I grew my light out. The brightness revealed a small room overgrown with black mushrooms and mold. Similar to what Iβd seen in the Refuge, the wet growth swarmed over everything: stacks of old books, shelves holding vials and spell implements, even over the remnants of a casting circle that took up most of the floor.
In the circleβs center lay a mound. No, a body.
Lazlo?
The body was on its side, facing away from me. As I approached, my light illuminated wisps of dark hair, a deflated wool sweater and trousers, the last tucked into a pair of battered rubber boots. Kneeling, I set my sword down, gripped the bodyβs bony shoulder, and pulled it toward me. For a moment the body stuck to the ground before releasing with a wet rip.
βJesus!β I cried, and jumped back.
My heart thundered in my chest as I looked at
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