Jethro
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I NODDED.
What else could I do?
If I refused, Kes would step in. If I refused, I would be killed.
My eyes fell on my grandmother. She hoisted her nose higher in the air, waiting for me to start. Cut had deliberately brought Bonnie to watch—to be there if I failed.
I have no intention of failing.
I’d managed to stay cold the moment I stepped into Nila’s quarters. Even when she’d looked into my eyes and snuggled into my chest, I hadn’t warmed. I intended to remain aloof and removed until it was over.
It was the only way.
Cut stepped back, squeezing his mother’s shoulder.
Bonnie Hawk looked up at him, smiling thinly. He was her favourite. But just like her son, she couldn’t stand her grandchildren.
Jasmine. She stands Jasmine.
That was true. If there was anyone who’d excelled in this family and played perfectly in the role she’d been given, it was Jaz.
Cut said, “Begin, Jet. Pretend we aren’t here if it will make you feel any better.”
I held back my snort. I never wanted to forget that they were here. If I did, I’d lose any hope of being icy and slip. I’d find a way to take it easy on Nila and avoid certain parts of this debt—just like I’d done with the First Debt and not freezing her the way I should have.
Today, there would be no leniency. Today, Nila must be strong enough to face the full brunt of what my family would do to her.
Stop avoiding the truth.
What you will do to her. You alone.
In that instant, I wanted to hand the power over to Kes. Make him do it—so Nila would hate him instead of me.
Nila stood quivering beside me. The air was chilly but not cold enough to warrant the chattering of her teeth or blueness of her fingers.
She’s petrified.
And for good reason.
“Jethro, I suggest you begin. I’m not getting any younger, boy,” Bonnie muttered.
Daniel snickered, gulping down another mouthful of beer. “Snap, snap, old chap.”
Kes crossed his arms, locking away his thoughts completely.
I looked to the piece of equipment that had been secured to the pond’s banks. It remained covered by a black cape—for now.
Soon, Nila would see what it was, and she would understand what would happen.
But first, I had to be eloquent and deliver the speech I’d been taught to memorize since I’d been told of my role.
Grabbing Nila’s arm, I positioned her on the patch of earth that’d been decorated with a thick pouring of salt. I’d done the design. The sunrise had witnessed my artistry as I followed an ancient custom.
Nila’s eyes dropped to her feet as I pressed her hard, telling her with actions alone not to move.
“Oh, my God,” she murmured, slapping a hand over her mouth.
My wintry ice saved me from feeling anymore of her panic; I locked my muscles as I prepared to recite.
The pentagram she stood in gave a giant hint as to the debt she would be paying.
Her black eyes met mine, her hair whipping around her face, just like it had when she’d found the graves of her ancestors.
It was almost serendipitous that she would pay this debt now—especially after I’d thought that she’d looked like a witch casting a curse on the Hawks.
“As you can see, Ms. Weaver. You stand in a pentacle star. It’s well known that the five-pointed star represents the five wounds of Christ. It’s been used in the Church for millennia.
Yet a reversed pentagram is the symbol of dark magic—a tool wielded by Wiccans and practiced regularly in witchcraft. ”
My family stared enraptured, even though they knew the tale by heart.
Nila seemed to shrink, her eyes never leaving the thick rivers of salt penning her in a motif of wickedness.
“Your ancestor was found practicing the dark arts, for which she escaped severe punishment. In the 1400’s, it was common for poor folk to seek help from those who promised quick riches.
They’d be lured into believing a weed would cure boils or a toad would turn them into a prince.
Those who had luck with their spell or incantation did more than just seek men or women who practiced magic—they wanted the power for themselves.
They became immersed in Wicca and turned their backs on religion.
“Needless to say, they were caught. Their whereabouts would be noted, their stores of dried herbs confiscated, and the sentence no one survived decreed. They were a traitor to their faith, but they would be given a choice—prove their innocence by drowning, or admit to their sins by burning at the stake and returning to the devil they worshiped.”
Nila’s pasty cheeks shimmered with cascading tears. Her nose went red from cold and she wrapped her arms around herself, partly to ward off the chill but mostly to keep herself from running.
No ropes bound her. She could leave. She could run.
But she also knew we’d catch her and I’d have to add another punishment for her disobedience.
All that I knew. All of it I understood with one look into her glassy eyes.
I even knew she wasn’t aware she was crying—completely enthralled and mortified with where my tale would go.
Taking a deep breath, I continued, “All of what I said is true. However, it came with rules—like most things.”
Cut nodded as if he’d personally been there and watched the pyres burning.
“Destitute people were caught while those wealthy enough weren’t.
It didn’t mean that women who dined on cakes and tea and employed servants to wash away their crimes didn’t dally in potions—far from it.
They were the most proficient. They sold their concoctions to other well-to-do housewives and bribed any official who dared to ask questions about their faith. ”
I made the mistake of looking at Nila again. Her lips parted and a silent word escaped.
Please.
Tearing my gaze away, I forced myself to continue, “Your ancestor was no different, Ms. Weaver.
She blatantly did what she wanted. She brewed so-called elixirs and cast so-called curses.
And she did it all from the drawing room of the Weaver household—the same household the Hawks cleaned and maintained for her.
“A few years passed where she went undetected, but of course, she made a mistake. She suffered the misfortune of creating a potion for an aristocratic friend’s offspring. It didn’t work. Her remedy didn’t heal the friend’s child—it poisoned him.”
Nila buried her face in her hands.
“Word got out, and the mayor came knocking. He’d turned a blind eye up until now, but he could no longer ignore her wrongdoings and buckled under the pressure of whispering folk.
“When he arrived to arrest her, Mrs. Weaver announced she’d been doing it under duress. She was a kind, simple woman with no more power in her blood than the next.
“Needless to say, the mayor did not believe her—he’d seen with his own eyes what happened to the boy who’d died from one of her vials.
But he was on the Weaver’s payroll. If he sent the richest man in town’s wife to the stake, he would kiss his extra salary goodbye.
But if he didn’t bow to the wishes of his parish, he could face the noose in return. ”
I swallowed, hating the next part. When Bonnie had told me what’d happened, I’d been almost sick with rage. To think that the Weavers got away with such things.
My lips twisted at the ironic truth. Now it was us who got away with murder—right beneath the noses of the law.
“Mrs. Weaver came up with a solution. She promised it would benefit everyone. Everyone but the Hawks, that is.”
Nila bowed her head, hunching into herself.
Bonnie snapped, “Listen, girl. Listen to the disgusting actions from the bloodline who birthed you.”
Nila’s head came up; her shoulders straightened. Her jaw set and she latched her gaze on mine, just waiting for me to continue.
Shoving my fists into my jeans pockets, I said, “She told the mayor a secret...a lie. She said it wasn’t her practicing, but the hired help’s fourteen-year-old daughter.
She said she’d caught her red-handed selling potions from the kitchens.
She fabricated untruths of how my ancestor’s daughter had been swindling and tarnishing the Weavers name for years.
“The mayor was happy with such a tale. He would have someone to answer to the angry mob and at the same time keep his salary. The Weavers gave him a bonus for his loyalty and the poor Hawk daughter was carted away to be thrown into jail to await trial.”
Daniel laughed. “Get it, Nila. Do you see where this is going?”
I glowered at him.
Cut snarled, “Shut up, Dan. This is Jet’s production. Let him finish.”
Daniel sulked, tossing his empty beer bottle into the reeds by his feet.
I sighed; it was almost over.
No, it’s not.
I still had to extract the debt.
I hardened my heart, blocking out everything but the next ten minutes. If I sliced up my day and focused on bite-sized pieces, I could get through this.
I would get through this.
“For a week, she rotted in the cells with barely food or water. By the time the trial came to pass, she was delirious with hunger and disease. The Hawk daughter pleaded her innocence. She stood before a court of twelve and begged them to see reason. She tore apart every conviction against her and argued her case that any right-minded human would’ve seen was all Mrs. Weaver’s doing. But the truth does not set you free.”
Nila twitched as I said it, her eyes flaring with knowledge from our past discussion on the matter.
Looking away, I said, “She was sentenced to burn at the stake at sunrise.”
Nila moaned, shaking her head in horror.
Bonnie Hawk muttered, “Now do you see why we hate you so?”
Rushing ahead, I finished, “One saving grace was she was granted a choice. The daughter was told she could prove her innocence or admit her guilt.” Moving toward Nila, I wound my fingers in her hair, cursing my heart for tripping as the black strands rippled around my knuckles.
“What do you think she chose, Ms. Weaver?” I brushed my nose against her throat, doing my utmost to tame my cock from reacting to her delectable smell.
“Fire or water...what would you choose?”
Nila shook harder, her eyes like black orbs of dread. She tried to speak, but a croak came out instead. Licking her lips, she tried again. “Innocence. I would take innocence.”
“So, you would prefer to drown by water than be purged by fire?”
Another tear trickled down her cheek. “Yes.”
“Yes, what?”
Bracing herself, Nila said loudly, “I would choose water.”
I nodded. “Exactly.
“And that’s what my ancestor chose as well.”