heavy bag of coins, which he then placed next to Cena’s plate of food. “This is part of what I owe you.”
Cena glanced at the bag. “When will I get the rest?”
“Soon.”
“How soon?”
Livius’s jaw tensed. “Very soon.”
“I’d almost forgotten how much you like to give vague answers when you know I’ll only be pleased by specific ones.” Cena fixed him with a predatory smile. There was a strand of meat stuck between two of his yellowish teeth. He glanced again at Maddox. “You’re the one I’ve heard about, aren’t you?”
Maddox didn’t like so much attention on him. “Me?”
“The witch boy who can speak to the dead.”
That was the trouble with secrets. Once they started to spread, they ceased being secrets at all.
“It’s all a con,” Livius said quickly. “The boy has no talent other than a keen ability to earn his old man the coin I need to pay you back.”
“A con, is it? From what I’ve heard, it’s a rather successful one.” Cena kept his attention on Maddox, which made him feel exceedingly uncomfortable. It didn’t seem to be in his best interest for this man to know the truth.
A sharp intake of breath drew Maddox’s attention to the right of the tent. His stomach lurched to see that the spirit girl had reappeared.
“You again!” she managed. Her gaze frantically moved through the tent. “For a moment, I thought I’d gone home, but I’m still here. And, again, trying to find my way in this strange place has led me straight to you.”
“Livius, your son suddenly looks rather unwell,” Cena observed.
Livius’s expression was tense. “He’s a sickly boy. Some days I wonder how much longer he has to live.”
The lie was so quick to leave Livius’s mouth that Maddox wondered if it might be the truth. Something behind the words sounded like a threat.
“Go, boy.” Cena flicked a finger at him. “Go outside and get some sunlight on your face and some air in your lungs. Let me talk to your father for a while in private.”
Maddox didn’t have to be told twice. He felt Livius’s glare on him as he departed the tent without another word. He walked fifty paces through the festival grounds before he stopped and slowly turned around.
The spirit girl—Becca Hatcher was what she’d called herself—stood directly behind him. She looked the same as she had the day before, in her strange woolen tunic and trousers, so unlike the other girls her age attending the festival.
How old had she been when she died? About his age or a little younger?
All he knew for sure was that she was the most beautiful girl he’d ever seen in his entire life.
He blinked with surprise at the thought. No. Spirits aren’t beautiful. They’re dark and evil.
“Are you going to talk to me, or what?” Her dark blue eyes flashed with impatience. “You’re starting to make me feel like I’ve gone completely mad.”
That made two of them, actually.
“Where am I?” she asked, glancing around at the busy festival. “This is all so weird.”
He understood most of her words, but some of them seemed as unusual and foreign to him as her clothing. “You need to leave me alone, Becca Hatcher.”
She turned a smile on him this time, a bright smile that made a warmth rise within him. She certainly didn’t look anything like the shadowy creatures he’d encountered before. “Just Becca is fine. And thank you.”
Livius doesn’t let me talk to girls, he reasoned with himself. That must be why I’m so distracted by this one.
No, not a girl. A spirit. Dark and evil, remember?
Now he was annoyed.
“Thank you for what?” he asked, crossing his arms tightly.
“For acknowledging my existence.”
He eyed the people milling past him with uneasiness. “I’m acknowledging nothing.”
“If you say so. Who are you? What’s your name?”
“I’m not telling you anything,” he said sharply. He had to take control of this situation. He wasn’t defenseless against such creatures. She’d best be wary of how far she pressed his patience. “You need to go. Now.”
“Go where?”
“Back to where you came from.”
“That’s exactly what I want to do, but I have no idea how. It’s . . .” She drew in a shaky breath. “It’s so hard to explain. All I know is I was in the shop with Crys, and that book . . . I swear, this is all because of that book!”
“What book?” He didn’t want to ask, but he couldn’t help himself.
“The book.” She gestured wildly as if this would help explain. “It was