The Divide Page 0,64
highlight. This must be what dying was.
Cassie was too weak to smile, but she was grateful her final wish had come true.
It took a second for Cassie to realize that Adam was actually in the house standing over her. It really was him. He took her face into his hands and called out her name. She felt herself falling in and out of consciousness. Like in her nightmares and visions, her sight was both cloudy and vivid at the same time, a disordered, mystifying confusion. But the connection between her and Adam in this heightened moment was intense. The silver cord that hummed between them materialized, brighter and more pronounced than Cassie had ever seen it before. It appeared so lifelike, she swore she could reach out and touch it with her fingertips.
Her chest overfilled with love as she followed the cord's path from Adam's heart to her own. But then as she looked closer, she noticed something strange. There were two silver cords. One was reaching from Adam to her, and the other was reaching from Adam to Scarlett.
In a flash, both cords were gone. Just like that. Cassie wasn't even sure Adam saw it.
That had to be a mistake, a hallucination. It was impossible to decipher what was real anymore and what was her imagination.
"Cassie." Adam still had her face in his hands. "Stay with me, Cassie. Stay awake."
She blinked away the tears that filled her eyes and turned to see all of them there - Diana and the rest of the Circle.
They had Scarlett surrounded.
"Give us the Master Tools," Diana said. "And we won't have to hurt you."
"I'd like to see you try." Scarlett laughed.
Diana stood motionless. It took a moment for her to realize she couldn't do magic, but once she did, Scarlett hurled her hands at her. "Praestrangulo," she said.
Instantly Diana clutched her throat with both hands and dropped to her knees, struggling to breathe.
"She's suffocating!" Adam jumped to his feet, and Cassie cried out, but she was still too weak stop him. He charged toward Scarlett, chanting, "Earth my body, water my blood."
Faye and the others fell in behind him. "Earth my body, water my blood, air my breath, and fire my spirit!" Cassie screamed, "It won't work!" But none of them would listen, or maybe her screaming was only as loud as a whisper. She couldn't tell.
"Caecitas!" Scarlett fanned her hand at the group.
Adam cried out first. "I can't see," he said. And then, one by one, each of them shrieked, covering their eyes. Scarlett had blinded them.
Diana was writhing on the floor, turning blue and coughing. Cassie had no strength, but she had to do something. The darkness was in her; she couldn't be afraid to reach down into it. Even if it killed her, it was the only way to save her friends.
It took all her might to climb to her feet.
Scarlett, seeing her get up, grabbed her bags and ran for the door.
Cassie pushed with her mind and let loose a debilitating cry. "Scarlett!"
She searched her soul for the words, the darkest most debilitating spell she could think of, but Scarlett was out the door and gone within seconds.
"Magicae negrae conversam," Cassie said feebly. Those were the words that came to her after Scarlett had escaped.
Diana gasped and inhaled. Adam blinked his eyes back to sight. Slowly, everyone regained their senses. Cassie's strength returned, and she went to Adam and held him.
There were scratches where he'd been clawing at his eyelids.
"Did you just undo Scarlett's spells?" he asked.
Cassie nodded, and then she looked at the sooty, sweaty faces of her friends who'd risked their lives to save her. How could she ever apologize enough for what they'd just been through?
"I was wrong about Scarlett," she said. "But I guess you figured that out by now."
The tint of suffocation still hadn't fully left Diana's face.
"What just happened?" she asked. "Scarlett was untouchable."
"You were right that she's evil," Cassie said, hardly able to look Diana in the eye. "She was doing black magic. She said that was the only magic that would work here. That's why none of you could cast spells."
"But then how did you - ?" Diana stopped herself mid-question, when the answer occurred to her.
Cassie looked down. She could hear Faye walk a circle around the burnt-out room, her boots crackling upon the ruined floor with each step.
"I knew it all along," Faye said. "Cassie has black magic in her."
It was true. There was no use denying it, as