shoulder as he pointed to the now-empty bog. “We have to help her!”

He tried to turn, stretching his waist as far as he could. Rory frowned. It was a young lad. A child couldn’t help him.

He again attempted to press forward to where she had gone under. If he could just take a few more steps…

“Get help!” Rory turned to glance back, only to see the boy coming toward him. He couldn’t be more than ten years. “No, stop. It’s not safe.”

The child didn’t listen.

“Stop. It’s not safe,” he repeated, switching to a local dialect. He had no idea how far he’d traveled inland. Ireland was not his homeland, and he did not know the terrain or how close he was to help.

The lad still came forward, his steps sure. The skin on his nose had peeled as if he recovered from too much time in the sun. His brown hair hung in long tangled strands and had not been washed in quite some time.

“Stop,” Rory yelled louder, waving his muddy hands for the boy to stay away. From what he could see, the child was alone.

Rory tried to force magick from his fingers to fling the boy back without touching him. Nothing happened.

Rory watched in horror as the lad stepped closer, waiting for him to sink. Miraculously, the ground stayed firm beneath the boy’s feet as he circled Rory. He moved as if the bog wasn’t waiting to swallow him.

“It’s not safe,” Rory insisted. He was careful not to move, not wishing to disturb the earth beneath the boy. “Get help,” Rory ordered. The child’s luck wouldn’t last too long.

The boy stopped behind him. Rory felt small hands on his shoulders. For a second, he thought the child was going to attempt to pull him out.

“Jenny Greentooth,” the boy whispered, jumping up to press all of his weight on Rory’s shoulders.

Rory lurched, trying to resist as he sank deeper into the bog. On reflex, he pushed his hands in front of him to counteract the attack. His fingers sank beneath the surface. The bog swallowed his waist.

“Och!” He grunted as the peat encased his manhood in its chilly grip.

Rory jerked his hands from the muck and slapped behind his back. The boy laughed as he let go, and Rory heard the child’s footsteps running away.

The ground bulged where the woman had gone under, rising and falling as if it breathed. With each lift it grew higher until the surface broke and a peat-covered hand poked through. Dirty fingers slapped the earth.

How was this possible? The woman should be dead.

Rory felt his body sinking deeper.

A second hand appeared. Through the clumps of mud, he detected short claws. The woman pulled herself out of the bog. Though he could pick out small similarities, this creature was not the woman he’d seen disappear.

Peat-covered hair clung to her shoulders. Mud slicked her face and bony arms. A long hiss of breath left her mouth, showcasing rotted teeth marred with decaying leaves. A clump fell from her face, taking what should have been a nose with it.

“Ya must be Jenny,” Rory said, not bothering to hide his repulsion as the hag crawled on her stomach from the bog to move along the surface. He struggled to push out of the muck, but the lad had sunk him too deeply.

Jenny smiled, eyeing him like trapped prey she was ready to devour.

“Lovely day for a stroll, isn’t it?” Rory had charmed far more dangerous women than her. He gave her his most winning smile.

The bog witch’s voice crackled an undistinguishable answer. Apparently, his charms were lost on Jenny, and she continued toward him.

“Och, this is going to be a tough one,” he muttered, unsure what he should do. Panic began to fill him. Without magick he was helpless, and he knew there was no easy escape from Jenny and her enchanted bog.

Chapter Two

Green Vallis, Wisconsin, Modern Day

When the guidance counselor had sat Jennifer Greene down to talk about her future after high school, waitressing in a small Wisconsin town fifteen years later, living on tips and free employee meals, had not been on her list of dreams. The tater tot nachos at the Crimson Tavern were heavenly, but they weren’t health insurance and a 401k.

That was the not-so-funny thing about life. It rarely ended up as intended.

Jennifer had not planned on her mother leaving after a car ran over her older brother. She hadn’t imagined her strong father would get so sick he couldn’t walk. She hadn’t planned on choosing between a college scholarship or a job to take care of him for six years until he succumbed to the big C. She hadn’t planned on her friends disappearing from her life one by one by one because they’d moved on and couldn’t relate to her struggle. She hadn’t planned on her dad’s medical bills, a reverse mortgage on her childhood home, or the extremely desperate loneliness that led her into the arms of a man who would leave her when they thought she’d gotten pregnant. It had been a false positive, but the betrayal stung.

“All it takes is a dash of destiny, and everything can change.”

Her mother told her that the night she left. The look on the woman’s face used to haunt her. She’d been so…excited. Who could be that happy knowing they were abandoning their child? Jennifer had been six, and it was the only thing she remembered about the woman. She’d thought about those words a lot in her life.

“All it takes is a dash of destiny…”

Jennifer stood beside the quiet street outside the Crimson Tavern. Dash of destiny—it sounded like an ingredient in a lousy family recipe. She’d had about all the dashes she could handle. So far, her life’s destiny tasted sour and left her more than a little bitter.

Headlights turned off of Main Street and ventured toward her. The downtown streets were constructed of red bricks that had shifted over time to make for bumpy roads. The

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