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Wilted (A Witching Pen Novellas Prequel)
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Wilted
(A Witching Pen short story prequel)
Wilted (A Witching Pen Short Story Prequel)
text copyright © 2012, Dianna Hardy
First published by Bitten Fruit Books, February, 2012
Republished by Satin Smoke Press, December, 2013
All rights reserved.
In this work of fiction, the characters, places and events are either the product of the author's imagination, or they are used entirely fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
No part of this book may be reproduced by any means or in any form whatsoever without written permission from the author, except for brief quotations embodied in literary articles or reviews.
Cover images: Canary Wharf Skyline © Dianna Hardy | Magic Realms
Cover design by Dianna Hardy
Bitten Fruit Books / Satin Smoke Press
Surrey, UK
https://www.bittenfruitbooks.com
https://www.satinsmoke.com
Blurb
Fifteen-year-old Elena hides her magical abilities from everyone, except her best friend, Karl. Inseparable since they were very young, they've always shared everything together, including the darkest parts of their lives.
Elena's beginning to realise that her feelings for Karl are growing into something more. But her mother's about to drop a bombshell on her – one that will change the course of her life, and heart, forever.
~*~
This short story prequel to The Witching Pen series, takes place ten years before the events of The Witching Pen.
This UK-based story is suitable for YA readers, but it should be noted that The Witching Pen series is aimed at adult readers.
More information can be found at https://www.thewitchingpen.co.uk
Elena stared at the daffodils in her window box. They were starting to wilt, as if the weight of the grey sky was pushing down on them. She hated it when flowers wilted – they looked so sad that way, as if they were crying and no one could tell.
The energy in her body hummed and coursed towards her palms, lighting them with the subtle green glow she was so familiar with. Instinctively, she walked towards her window.
Surely this isn't the same as bringing an animal back to life, right? This is a plant – plants are different.
Who was she trying to convince? She damn well knew that if her mother found out, she'd be in for it big time. Still...
She leaned across her sill, and hovered over the window box, her hands coming up of their own accord, or so it seemed. Bollocks to it, she just couldn't help it – this is what she did best: heal things. Bringing one, tiny plant back to life could hardly unbalance the world, could it?
Her hands glowed more brightly.
A car sped by in the road below, reflecting its colour in the window as it did so. She ignored it, but was startled out of both her thoughts and her healing trance, when across the street and five doors down, Karl came – half-running and half-limping – out of his house. A tirade of verbal abuse followed him, tingeing the air with its malice.
One glance at her best friend's stricken face was enough to have her hurtling out of her room and down the stairs, already opening the front door with her magic.
Another thing mum would kill me for, she winced. Mustn't use magic frivolously.
Her heart hammered in her chest. Karl never looked distressed – not even at the worst of times. She was the panicky one – he was the rock.
She reached the front door, just before he reached the steps leading up to her porch.
“Elena…” he panted.
“God, Karl, what is it?”
“Dad…”
And that was all he needed to say.
Elena ushered him in, closing the door behind him. His legs didn't seem to be holding him up too well, and when he stumbled over his own feet, Elena caught him under the arm, and offered him her shoulder. She might be two years younger than him, but at fifteen, she was tall – almost as tall as Karl – and her wiry body, which she so often hated when looking at her friends' blooming breasts and hips, always surprised her with a physical strength it didn't look like it should be capable of.
Karl's dad had beaten him; she was sure of it, despite her not being able to see any bruises.
“We need to go to my room,” she told him.
He groaned as he glanced at the stairs. “I don't know if I can climb…”
“Mum'll be back soon, and you know how she gets when you're around. We'll have more privacy up there. Come on – lean on me.”
Although he clearly hated the idea of putting his weight on her, he did it anyway, and allowed her to support him as he dragged his feet up the steps. When they finally made it to her room, he tumbled inside and aimed straight for the bed, where he lay on his back, hands covering his eyes. They were shaking slightly. Elena wondered if he was trying not to cry.
She closed her bedroom door, and stuck her dressing table chair under the handle for good measure – her mum could be a little unpredictable when Karl was around, and without a doubt, she'd be able to sense he was in the house as soon as she got home.
She perched on the edge of her bed, with her hands on her lap, and waited.
Eventually, Karl's trembling ceased. When he looked at her, his blue eyes burned hot, making him look like he had a fever. He was holding back tears.
Her own eyes welled up in response. “I'm so sorry.”
He took her right hand in his. His touch was gentle, but when he spoke, his voice broke with anger. “Don't you ever apologise for him. Fucking bastard.”
She flinched. Karl didn't get angry often. He avoided anger like the plague, because anger was everything his father was, and everything he swore he'd never be.
She squeezed his hand in comfort. “What happened?”
He bit his lip, shook his head, and then took in a deep breath. “Mum knocked over his whisky glass. It broke. He went mental – he hit her, then pushed her onto the shards of glass on the floor.” His voice went up a notch as he forced the words out. “I lost it … I lost it, Elena.”
“It's not your fault.”
“I grabbed his shirt, pulled him off her, and barrelled him into the kitchen away from her. I got a good punch in, but … well, look at me…”
Karl wasn't exactly a buff seventeen-year-old, despite all the time he spent on the athletics track – he was only just starting to fill out. Maybe in a few years he'd have a chest as wide as his outstretched arm – his ex-army father certainly did – but not yet.
“He pounded me. When he'd brought me to my knees, he started kicking me in the stomach, then … Christ…” He ran a hand through his sandy blond hair. “He started jumping on me – he jumped on my legs.”
Elena grimaced at his story, and then realised she was squeezing his hand too tightly – or maybe he was the one squeezing.
“He just kept jumping. He didn't stop until the phone rang. I can't believe I walked out of there.”
“Actually, you sort of stumbled,” she said, in a vague attempt to lighten his mood. Anyone else would probably have thought the remark callous, but Karl knew her like the back of his hand.
His lips tilted upwards in a small smile. “I did stumble, didn't I?”
She nodded. “Like your legs were made of dental floss.”
He laughed. “What a sight for all our neighbours.”
“I don't think anyone else saw.”
“I'm sure they heard.”
She placed a hand on his thigh.
He winced.
“Can I see your legs? I can heal them.”
“I was sort of hoping you'd offer … but I hate asking you…”
“Don't be daft. Always ask, okay?”
He shot her a grateful look, and then undid his trousers. With a cry of agony, he lifted his hips up and slid them down over his backside.
Elena pulled them the rest of the way down to his ankles, ignoring the building heat in her cheeks. It had not escaped her notice that in the past few weeks, she would occasionally become flustered around her best friend, and she had a sneaky suspicion she knew what that meant. But it was also a little startling, and more than a little frightening, because they'd known each other since she was five and he was seven. They'd shared paddling pools and baths; they'd shared popcorn at the cinema, and pizzas over homework … it was a friendship she couldn't bear to lose.
Pushing the thoughts out of her head, and hoping her face wasn't noticeably red, she brought her attention back to Karl's legs.
“There's not a mark on them,” she stated, and she wasn't surprised. Karl was one of those people that just didn't bruise. In all the time she'd known him, she'd never seen a bruise on him once. A cut, yes – he bled like a normal person – but even his cuts had never welted blue and purple around the edges.
“Well, the bones feel broken,” he said, his voice laced with pain.
“Okay … keep still.” She lay both her hands on him, one on each thigh, again ignoring the way her heart sped up a fraction. Closing her eyes, she concentrated on the energy that so naturally flowed from her palms. It was warm – beautifully warm. She worked with it, the energy and her in unison. It travelled out of her and into him, and in a way, so did she. In her mind's eyes, she saw her green, healing glow wrap itself around his legs like bandages, the light seeping into him, connecting with nerve and muscle … but she needed to go deeper to mend bones. Focusing harder, she pushed further … strange … the bones didn't seem broken… Nevermind – the healing couldn't hurt, so she sent it into his bones as well. The sensation was actually a little shocking; she was so deep inside him. She worried her bottom lip with her teeth – was that her breathing that had turned ragged?
“Elena…”
She felt a tug on her wrist, and with effort, mentally disengaged herself from Karl.
“Elena, stop now…”
“I am … give me a minute.”
Whoa … she felt hot. She could do with a drink of water.
When she opened her eyes, they rested on her friend's face. The look on it froze her to the spot, even as his gaze burned into her. His eyes were hooded, his lips parted, his chest rising and falling in rapid succession, his blushing neck the colour of a red sunset.
Her stomach lurched, and her hands gripped his thighs tighter of their own accord.
He also tightened his hold on her wrist. “Elena,” he whispered, “please let go.”
Confused, she looked down at her own hands, and had to practically will her fingers to uncurl. At the same time, she suddenly noticed that, at some point, he had thrown a corner of the duvet across himself, and he now held it firmly over his boxers as if his life depended on it.
Oh, God!
“Okay,” she squeaked, and all but threw herself up to standing. “I'm sorry,” she blurted out.
His eyebrows furrowed. “No, don't be sorry … it's fine – I'm fine. I just need to think of … er…”
“Horrible things that make you want to puke?”
He looked at her, amused. “Yeah. Margaret Thatcher in a bikini, for example…”
She giggled. “Your dad in a bikini?” she offered.
“It would suit him better than the whisky,” he retorted.
He leaned forward for his trousers. “My legs feel better – there's still pain, but it's less – thank you,” he smiled at her.
“Good,” she nodded.
There was an awkward pause. Her heart sank. They rarely had awkward pauses … was this the beginning of the end? It was no secret that Karl had 'feelings' for her, although they never talked about it. What was very much a secret, was that it seemed she was developing feelings for him too. What did she do with these? If it meant the end of their easy, close friendship, she was ready to bury them forever. God help her, he was the closest thing to … anything … that she had in this world. When she had started her period two years ago, it hadn't been her cold, unfeeling mother, she'd gone running to first … it had been Karl. She couldn't lose him – she just couldn't.
His attention-grabbing cough brought her out of her silent distress. He had the waistband of his jeans in one hand, still clutched the duvet with his other, and was looking at her quizzically. “Do you think you could…”
“Oh! Right, of course,” she swivelled around to face the door so he could dress himself, the rustling denim and sliding zipper sounding ridiculously loud as he did so.
“So, what's going to happen when you go back home?” she asked, glad to steer her thoughts – both their thoughts – onto a different path.
Karl snorted. “Dad will be slumped in front of the TV ignoring everything but the football, and Mum will be fussing over him, pretending nothing even happened.”
“And what will you do?”
“Eat pizza with you. It's Thursday – study night. You're still coming over after dinner, right?”
Relief melted her insides. Their study nights were utterly pointless for him, because he was two years ahead of her and knew everything anyway, but he still insisted they have them, and if he wanted to meet tonight, that meant all wasn't lost.
She whirled around, unable to stop tears from springing to her eyes. “So we're still friends?”
He looked at her, surprised, and then his face softened as he walked towards her and briefly took her in his arms. “Of course we are, idiot.”
She guffawed.
“I'm sorry I…” he paused, then met her gaze with nothing but openness and honesty. “I find it hard to control myself around you sometimes. But you don't have to worry.”
He flashed her that smile she knew so well, and for the first time she could ever remember, it made her insides go gooey.
“You don't have to control yourself all the time.” It was out of her mouth before she could stop it. Sirens went off in her head.
What the hell did you just say?!
His smile faltered, and that same look he gave her on the bed resurfaced for a second before he fought it back. “Erm…” He looked confused.
She was more confused … especially when the next thing she did was take a step towards him so she was right up against his chest.
Earth to Elena! What are you doing?
What was she doing? She had no idea. It was as if something inside her was ruling the show, leading her legs, controlling her lips, which had now parted and hovered just centimetres from his.
Karl's hands encircled her waist – maybe he meant to push her away, but instead, he just seemed to become as rooted to the spot as she.
Her heart thudded, pulsing blood through her veins at the speed of a gale. The roar in her ears was deafening. She could feel the air between their lips thicken, become electric…
Karl let out a little moan, and without warning, his hands slid up her back; fingers caressed her long, dark hair, tugging at the strands, tilting her head back… He lowered his mouth, their noses brushed together—
“Elena!” Her mother's shrill voice from the bottom of the stairs shattered the moment, and that 'something' inside Elena screamed in rage. It was momentary, and then the panic set in.
They stared at each other in shock, then leapt apart. Working in synchronicity, Karl straightened the bed, as Elena removed the chair from under the door. She smoothed her hair down; he smoothed his T-shirt down. Her mother's heels sounded outside the door.
“Mum?” Elena called out, trying her best to sound casual. “Come in.”
Katherine Green, mother turned stranger, opened the door. She stared at Karl, icily. “I thought you might be here.” Her clipped tone cut through the still lingering heat in
the air, and Elena hoped to God she couldn't sense what had just taken place.
Her hope died when she saw her mother's eyes narrow, then widen slightly in surprise, before becoming clouded with an expression she couldn't name.
“I bought us Chinese, Elena. It'll be ready in fifteen minutes.” She turned back to Karl. “I trust you're just leaving, boy?”
Elena caught the clench of Karl's jaw out of the corner of her eye, and her own anger swelled, although for the moment, it wasn't quite as imminent as her sense of panic. Karl hated being referred to as 'boy' and her mother knew it – which is why she did it. It was a dig at his too young looks, his too smooth chin … his inadequacy in general. Of course, he wasn't inadequate at all, but what an awful thing to make him feel, when she knew the family issues he struggled with on a daily basis.
Elena steamed. She wondered if her mother wanted her to hate her, because this was the right way to go about it.
“Yes, I was, Mrs Green.”
Considering the way he was feeling when he'd first stumbled into her house, Elena thought it a small miracle his voice was as steady as it was right now.
He turned to her. “I'll see you after dinner for study?” he asked, gently.
“I'll be there,” she replied with a smile.
Karl held her gaze a second longer, then strode past Elena's mother, and down the stairs. For some inane reason, she felt like crying when she heard the front door shut behind him.
She looked back at her mother, and thought she caught sorrow in her eyes, but then it suddenly wasn't there and she was sure she must have imagined it.
“Fifteen minutes, Elena,” came the curt order, as she swivelled and walked out of the room, then, “We have a few things to talk about.”
Great.
Just great.