body, making room for tears, shaking muscles, and a torrent of what ifs, and all I wanted was to make sure my boys were okay, that the vines hadn’t cut off their ability to breathe or—

“Mom, we’re okay, we’re okay. Where are Leilani and Sallie?” Harper asked.

Ivy, unbind; ivy unwind. Ivy, unbind; ivy unwind. And thank you.

The vines writhed in my clenched hands. I let go. They unwove themselves and whipped away, leaves waggling like round, green fingers, to the areas we designated as theirs. I grabbed Harper’s face and kissed his cheeks, and Thatch let me do the same.

“I think they’re with James and a couple of the other witches,” I said, as they came to their feet and shook dirt out of their hair. “Belle and Rowan set up a triage area in the living room. I’d appreciate it if you two would check in with them.”

They tried to protest.

I tried to wield the wand of parental authority, realized they’d been through enough, and waved them off. “Go,” I said. “Do what you need.”

Their hugs squished the air out of my lungs. They tore off, passing Wes as he trotted up from the back yard.

“I’m sorry they got away, Calliope,” Wes chuffed, coming to stand beside me. “But now we know who killed the wee trolls.”

“Do we know?” I asked. Because I had the sinking feeling Doug and Roger were in this mess more deeply than I wanted to imagine.

“Sallie, lass, come here.” Wes waved her over from where she’d been waiting under the deck and wrapped an arm around the distressed teen’s upper back. “Tell your cousins’ mum what you told me.”

“I’m so sorry.” Tears poured down Sallie’s cheeks, mingling with the bloody streaks on her face, throat, and the front of her dress. “I’m so sorry I didn’t figure it out earlier so I could warn you.”

“Warn me about what?” I asked, bringing her into a hug to soothe her tremors.

“My parents. It was them. They’ve been going after the hidden folk, threatening them, trying to get them to leave the land so Meribah could buy up the properties.”

Wes looked at me and nodded. “There’s more.”

Sallie let out a long, shuddering breath. “They’ve been away from the house so much. I got lonely, which was why I started my pie business, and one day, when they’d actually been home for longer than five minutes, I asked about getting apples and other ingredients wholesale. They told me to be patient, that pretty soon I would have access to as many apples as I wanted. I just wanted to have something of my own, Aunt Calliope, something of my own I could be good at.”

I hugged her tight. There was nothing I could say, no more questions I could ask. “Wes, can you take Sallie to Belle and Rowan, please? And Sallie? You can stay here, with me and Harper and Thatch. You don’t have to go back to your parents.”

I hoped I could stick to that promise. With the teenagers accounted for, I went to check on Abigail.

She and Clifford were gone.

I ran into the house, asked Rowan and Belle if they’d seen or treated either of the elder Pearmains or if they’d left with anyone. They hadn’t.

Standing on the front deck, I scanned the yard. Sections of turf had been disturbed in the melee. I took the stairs in one jump and ran to where chunks of sod been had been sutured together, their edges rolled and tucked under. I tried to wedge my fingers into the grass and rip the sections apart, but the ground was not giving up what had been taken.

Tanner had followed me out of the house.

“She took them, Tanner. She took them,” I said, scrubbing at the ground with my flattened palms.

“We’ll find them,” he assured me.

Hyslop and Peasgood were on their backs some distance away and likely going into shock. I had to let go of my grief and help them. Or get them to someone who could. Tanner picked up one of the men, jogged him over to the care of our witch healers, and returned for the other. When he returned the third time, he grabbed a scarf off one of the chairs and wrapped it around my shoulders before lifting me to stand.

He crushed me in his embrace.

“I think I know where she’s taken them,” he said, smoothing my hair, his breath running ragged on its way in and out. “I have to go.”

Tanner released me and gripped the braided cord of his necklace, the very one I had never seen him take off. He pulled the cord over his head and from around his waist and placed both loops around my neck. “Calliope, do not take this off for anyone but me. Can you promise me that?”

He tucked the burnished pouch under my blood- and dirt-stained shirt and pressed his hand against the center of my chest.

“I promise,” I said. “Please, be careful.”

Tanner nodded once, turned, and ran toward his truck.

“And please come back.” I wasn’t sure he heard me.

The emptiness threatening to submerge me in that moment was an emptiness I had known a few times before. When I crossed the threshold into the A-frame house after my mother had died and understood her laughter would never again entice me into her room for a tea party. Again, when Doug walked out of our house after telling me he wanted a divorce—more than a divorce, to wash his hands of me.

And now.

We were so lucky that only two people had been lost in the fray, but those two people were dear to me. They were gone, taken by an entity I did not understand, with motivations that were still unclear, to a place I might not ever find.

“Calliope.”

I didn’t recognize the voice calling me. I scanned the overturned tables and chairs, the matte black silhouette of the Old One, the house lights blazing over the front and back porches.

“Calliope.”

The voice was coming from high in

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