Curse of the Celts by Clara O'Connor (most romantic novels .TXT) ๐
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- Author: Clara O'Connor
Read book online ยซCurse of the Celts by Clara O'Connor (most romantic novels .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Clara O'Connor
There was silence at the table as we took this in. Magic was waning amongst the Britons. What would the council do if they had that information? It was the threat of the magic wielded by the Britons that kept our societies separate, that prevented the Empire from using its superior firepower and technology to dominate this island.
โThis is no small matter. They have your scent now. How much power did you use to attract their attention and bring them to our plane?โ
I looked to Marcus who had paused in eating too but kept his head down. I wasnโt sure what to do; Devyn had barely spoken since we arrived, and Marcus was scarcely recognisable. His gaunt, shrunken appearance showed the toll the last few days had taken on him โ his fatherโs death, depleting every last drop of his power in his desperation to try to heal those spirits, and then being hunted through the forest. As he met my eyes, his were vacant but he shrugged, giving his consent that I should tell the tale.
โIt was Marcus. There were these people, so many of themโฆ all showing signs of the same illness thatโs been sweeping the city. Marcus is a doctor. Heโs had some success in healing people, but he uses magic to do so. It comes from within him, and he knows he isnโt supposed to go beyond a certain level; he knows he can only save a small number. Out there in the woods, there were so many, and Marcus kept trying to save them, one after another. He used a lot of power, more than he should have. Thatโs how he got burned out,โ I explained.
โI see, but when they came, Marcus was a dried-up husk. Youโre the one that was the juicy bone, the one theyโll be back for. I canโt do much for him till he gets some energy back. Letโs work with what you have and make sure you know how to give โem a kicking they wonโt soon forget should they be foolish enough to return.โ Callum surveyed the table and, leaning across, heaped seconds onto our plates. โNow, eat up; youโll need your strength.โ
After breakfast the next morning, I followed Callum through the halls of the college, relieved to find my handfast tether to Marcus had extended to a greater distance now we were beyond the unstable border ley line. We wound our way through a labyrinth of stone passageways, some small and narrow, some wide and littered with portraits of stern men and women, no doubt professors and deans of generations past. Some wore elaborate Celtic dress while others were in simpler, more modern garb; most were distinctly Briton in style but occasionally we passed one with more exotic robes and colouring. In Londinium, people came from all over the Empire, which was why Devynโs darker skin fitted in so easily, but these people wore culturally rich clothing, indicating that they were from outside the Empire โ Africans and Americans, though some dressed vaguely in the imperial style. I wondered if they might be people like Devynโs mother, people who fled persecution at home to live outside the reach of the Empire.
Our feet echoed on the flagstone โ or rather mine did. Why did it seem like I was always the loudest person in the vicinity out here in the Wilds? Everyone walked like ghosts, barely making a sound. I supposed that, living in the city, I had grown up accustomed to the basic comfort of my own safety; even down in the stews I had never had to fear being attackedโฆ Pestered by beggars maybe, but there was never any real danger that someone there would assault an elite. In the city, the danger wasnโt being heard but being seen by the ever-present cameras. The same was not true out here in lands where it still held that the best insurance of oneโs safety seemed to be to tread lightly and carry a big stick.
Finally, we arrived in a courtyard. It was large and surrounded by stone walls with small casement windows higher up. The yard itself was divided up into quarters, each with its own unique characteristic. There was a large oak tree in the centre.
โEach section of this courtyard represents one of the four elements of which magic is made up,โ Callum explained. โThey are here to help you connect to them and train, but first we need to find out which of them you hold an affinity with.โ
I glanced up at the windows, uncomfortable at the thought that others might be watching.
Callum caught me at it and correctly interpreted my nervousness.
โOh, donโt worry about the windows; those are the halls of residence, and most everyone has gone home for the festivities.โ
โWhat festivities?โ
โWhat festivities? What do they teach you behind those big walls? Donโt you know anything about the people with whom you share this island?โ
โYes,โ I snapped back. โI know that itโs Samhain and that the dead can cross over.โ
Which, admittedly, was fairly recently acquired knowledge.
โI can see that this might be pertinent information to someone crossing the borderlands, but itโs a great deal more than that. It is the harvest festival. After all the work has been done and the fires are lit for the winter, there are bonfires and dancing and feasting. The beloved dead are invited to dine, and people disguise themselves from the dead who come with evil intent.โ
So maybe I knew hardly anything. At least it explained why the halls were so deserted. As long as no one but Callum was going to be watching me make a complete and utter fool of myselfโฆ I hated this, hated not being able to do anything well. I had striven my whole life to be perfect at everything, to do well at school, to have appropriate friends, to look good, to be deserving. To be worthy of my parents,
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