Chapter 11 #3
Raven had been watching from the nearest shelf, silent through the entire display. She dropped to the table now and approached Jinxie with a deliberation that held none of her usual territorial bristle. The calico paused her work. Their eyes met—green to green-and-blue.
"The three-legged strategist has been playing a deeper game than any of us realized." Raven's voice carried something Hazel had never heard from her familiar before: unguarded admiration. "How long have you been mapping this?"
Jinxie's whiskers twitched. "Since the first disturbance. Someone had to."
Raven sat beside her. Close. Shoulder to shoulder, facing the floating map together.
"Show me the rest," Raven said.
And Jinxie did.
The floating map collapsed without warning.
One moment the corrupted ley lines hung in golden suspension above the Codex, and the next they snapped inward like a rubber band released, sucking back into the vellum pages with a sound like a gasp in reverse.
Jinxie stumbled sideways, and Fat Bastard caught her weight against his considerable flank without a word.
Hazel's palm burned where it rested on the Codex. The ancient tome shuddered beneath her touch—not the warm pulse of active magic, but something colder. A flinch.
"Something saw us looking." She pulled her hand back. The Codex slammed itself shut.
Nate's detection tools shrieked a frequency she'd never heard them produce. He killed the sound immediately, but his jaw had gone tight. "We need to move. Now. Whatever Jinxie mapped just pinged back."
Mrs. Shufflewick's tactical glasses dissolved. Her charcoal suit rippled and reformed into layers of Victorian mourning black, complete with a veil she clutched at her throat. Her eyes had gone glassy, unfocused—the telltale vacancy of an uncontrolled channeling episode.
They moved fast. Nate swept the archive for residual energy signatures while Hazel wrapped the Codex in its protective cloth and pressed it against her sternum. The leather thrummed against her ribs—not with its usual companionable warmth but with the rapid staccato of something frightened.
Raven flanked left. Jinxie flanked right, her three-legged gait silent on the hardwood. The male cats formed a rear guard without being asked, Fat Bastard's massive head swiveling between shadows.
They made it to the library's main floor before Hazel felt it.
A pressure. Not physical—magical. Like someone pressing a thumb against the inside of her skull and slowly rotating it, testing the density of her wards. She stopped walking.
"We're not alone." Raven's fur had risen along her spine, doubling her silhouette. "Something's measuring us."
"Measuring us for what?" Hazel reached for Nate's hand.
Their fingers laced together and her Guardian magic flared gold, instinctive, desperate—a shield that wrapped them both before she'd consciously formed it.
The pressure against her wards increased.
Pushed harder. Tasted the edges of her power with something that felt horribly like appreciation.
Through the library windows, Main Street looked ordinary. Afternoon sunlight. Pedestrians. Cricket sweeping his restaurant porch. But the shadows fell wrong. Too sharp. Too attentive. Every dark pocket between buildings seemed to lean toward the library like cupped ears.
Mrs. Shufflewick's veil trembled. When she spoke, her voice came layered—her own precise diction buried beneath something raw and terrified that didn't belong to any character Hazel recognized.
"The spirits say... they say something's coming to collect. The gap in our defenses may have made us visible."
Nate stepped closer to Hazel. His neutralization magic crackled along his free hand, blue-white sparks dancing between his knuckles. "Collect what?"
Mrs. Shufflewick turned to face them. Tears tracked down her powdered cheeks, and her mouth moved in shapes that fought against the words being forced through it.
"Us."
The shadows outside the windows stretched an inch longer. Hazel watched a patch of darkness beneath the hardware store awning slide sideways—against the sun's direction—and settle into a new position with a better sightline to the library entrance.
Nate saw it too. His grip on her hand tightened until she felt his pulse hammering against her palm.
"They know about us," Hazel said. Not a question.
The Codex burned against her chest like a coal, and she understood with Guardian certainty that the intelligence gap from the cursed mail interference hadn't just disrupted their surveillance network.
It had opened a window. And something on the other side had looked through it and liked what it found.
Two practitioners with unprecedented resonance compatibility. A bonded pair radiating enough combined power to light up every magical sensor within a hundred miles.
The Collector's next butterflies.
Raven pressed against Hazel's ankle. "We painted a target on ourselves."
"No." Hazel watched the shadows watch her back. "We painted a target on this entire town."