
Vol. 1 Ch. 11.1
Morning light spilled through my apartment windows like water seeking the lowest point, pooling on the floor where I sat cross-legged, eyes closed, breath even. Three days had passed since Markus and I had worked our magic by the Hudson, redirecting Aurelia’s dark energy back to its source. Three days of waiting, watching, feeling the subtle shifts in the air like changes in barometric pressure before a storm. I’d expected something to happen—that was the point, after all—but nothing had prepared me for what came next.
I unfolded my legs and stretched, feeling the pleasant ache of muscles held still too long. The meditation had become essential lately, a tether to sanity in a world where the dead spoke to me and magic coursed through everyday life like an underground river. Jason had reported improvements since our working—a newfound clarity, diminished cravings, an ability to focus on recovery that had previously seemed impossible. Small victories, I’d thought. Signs that our intervention was working exactly as intended.
I padded to the kitchen, my bare feet silent on the hardwood floor. Water filled the kettle with a hollow sound. Three tea bags waited in my favorite mug, the one with the chip on the handle that somehow made it more mine than any unmarred vessel could be.
Mister B. materialized near the window, his form wavering like heat rising from summer pavement.
“Green boy doing better?” he asked, his voice rough as always, no pleasantries, no preamble.
“Seems to be,” I replied. “He’s attending daily meetings, seeing a new therapist, even talking to Summer about the trust fund Seamus had set up.” The kettle began to whistle, a high note that trembled in the air between us.
“Good,” Mister B. nodded. “Balance restoring itself. As it should.”
I poured steaming water over the tea bags, watching the liquid darken. That’s when my phone vibrated against the counter, skittering across the surface like something alive. Edward Summer’s office. I felt a flutter of apprehension in my chest, not quite fear but something adjacent to it.
“Ms. Vega.” Summer’s precise voice carried unusual weight, a tone I hadn’t heard from him before. Something had happened.
“Mr. Summer,” I said, abandoning my tea. “Is everything alright?”
“I believe we need to speak regarding the Green family situation.” Each word measured, deliberate. “Something rather… extraordinary has occurred.”
I caught Mister B.’s gaze across the kitchen. He drifted closer, attuned to the importance of the call.
“Has something happened?” I kept my voice neutral, betraying nothing of the sudden acceleration of my pulse.
“Indeed.” A pause hung between us, wire and satellites and cell towers transmitting his careful hesitation. “Aurelia Green came to my office yesterday evening. In a state I can only describe as… severely altered.”
“Altered?” I prompted, watching Mister B. lean toward me, his spectral face intent.
“Under the influence of something potent,” Summer clarified. “Though interestingly, the doctors found no evidence of any known substance in her system when she was hospitalized the previous night.”
My fingers tightened around the phone. “I heard she had some health issues recently.”
“Issues,” Summer repeated with subtle emphasis. “Yes, one might call them that.” His voice lowered slightly. “Ms. Vega, in my thirty-eight years of legal practice, I have witnessed many confessions from clients in various states of distress. But never anything quite like what transpired in my office yesterday.”
I waited, sensing him organizing his thoughts on the other end of the line. The silence stretched between us, a living thing with weight and substance.
“Aurelia admitted to forging Seamus’s will,” he stated finally, the words precise and deliberate. “She provided specific details about how she altered the document after his death, including the clauses that disinherited Jason.”
Though I had anticipated some consequence from our ritual work, the directness and speed of this development caught me off guard. The spell we’d worked was meant to return the addiction energy to its source, not to force a confession of fraud.
“That’s… significant,” I managed, my tea cooling untouched on the counter.
“Significant hardly begins to address it,” Summer replied. “She not only confessed to document forgery—a felony, I might add—but insisted on making immediate legal reparations.”
I sank into a kitchen chair, my legs suddenly unreliable. “What kind of reparations?”
“Complete restitution,” Summer said, disbelief evident in his voice. “She signed documents transferring nearly the entirety of Seamus’s estate to Jason, as she claims he originally intended.”
“The entirety?” My voice sounded distant to my own ears.
“The Central Park townhouse, several condominiums, and approximately one hundred twenty million dollars in financial assets,” Summer confirmed. “Essentially everything except for a modest trust established for Aurelia’s daughter.”
I felt a coldness in my fingertips that had nothing to do with the temperature of my apartment. “And she did this willingly?”
“Willingly and with a strange insistence on speed,” Summer replied. “She appeared… driven. Compelled, almost, to make these arrangements immediately.”
The attorney paused, and I could sense his professional composure briefly faltering. “Between us, Ms. Vega, her behavior was unlike anything I’ve observed in her throughout our long association. She exhibited symptoms similar to withdrawal—perspiration, tremors, disorientation—yet spoke with absolute clarity about needing to ‘make things right.’”
“People sometimes experience moments of clarity in crisis,” I offered neutrally, though my mind raced with implications. The return spell had accomplished more than we had anticipated—not just reflecting Aurelia’s addiction magic back to her, but seemingly compelling her toward a kind of cosmic justice.
“Perhaps,” Summer conceded, though his tone suggested skepticism. “Whatever the cause, the legal consequences are very real. Jason Green is now the primary beneficiary of his grandfather’s estate, as Seamus apparently intended all along.”
“Have you informed Jason?” I asked, sensing there was more to come.
“I attempted to reach him last night, but was unsuccessful,” Summer replied. “Given your… consultation role in this matter, I thought you might be able to contact him more readily.”
“I’ll let him know immediately,” I promised, already planning what I would say.
“There is one other detail,” Summer added, his voice lowering further. “After completing the paperwork, Aurelia left my office and has not been seen since. Her household staff reports she never returned home, and her phone appears to be disconnected.”
A chill ran through me that had nothing to do with the temperature. “She’s missing?”
“Technically, yes, though as a legal adult of sound mind—at least in the legal sense—she’s entitled to her privacy,” Summer said carefully. “However, given her condition when she left my office, I admit to some concern.”
“I understand,” I said, mind reeling with the implications. “I’ll speak with Jason and update you if I learn anything relevant.”
We exchanged a few more words before ending the call. I sat motionless at my kitchen table, the untouched tea a silent witness to my racing thoughts.
“The energy found its expression,” Mister B. observed, breaking the silence. “More completely than anticipated.”
“Too completely?” I wondered aloud, a weight settling in my chest that felt alarmingly like responsibility. “We intended to return the addiction spell, not to…”
“Not to what?” Ma’s voice joined the conversation as she materialized beside the table, her presence warm despite her incorporeal nature. “Not to force her to make amends? To confess? To set things right?”
I looked up at her familiar face, finding comfort even in her challenge. “Those weren’t our specific intentions,” I pointed out.
“Perhaps not,” Grandpa’s gentle presence filled the opposite chair, his form more suggestion than substance in the morning light. “But when natural balance is restored, it often manifests in ways that address all imbalances, not just those we specifically target.”
I rubbed my temples, where the beginnings of a headache pulsed. “I need to call Jason,” I decided, reaching again for my phone. “And then Markus. This development goes beyond what either of us predicted.”
“Magic is never precise,” Auntie announced, appearing suddenly by the window, arms crossed over her chest. “It’s not surgery. More like dynamite. You aim in a general direction and hope for the best.”
“That’s not exactly reassuring,” I muttered, scrolling to find Jason’s number.
“Wasn’t meant to be,” she replied with characteristic bluntness. “Truth rarely is.”
As I pressed the call button, I couldn’t shake the feeling that the energy we had redirected had taken on a momentum of its own—a cascade of consequences extending far beyond our original working. The spell had worked, yes, but with an intensity and scope that left me uneasy. Like throwing a pebble into a pond and watching a tidal wave rise in response.
For better or worse, we had set in motion forces that were now unfolding according to their own internal logic. And somewhere in the city, Aurelia Green had vanished, carrying within her the returned energy of her own dark magic—compelled toward justice, driven to confession, and now… gone.
My hands were steady as I waited for Jason to answer, but I felt a warmth in my chest, an uncomfortable heat that I recognized as something dangerously close to guilt.
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