Chào các bạn! Vì nhiều lý do từ nay Truyen2U chính thức đổi tên là Truyen247.Pro. Mong các bạn tiếp tục ủng hộ truy cập tên miền mới này nhé! Mãi yêu... ♥

8.2

I couldn't help but wonder when our eyes met each other whether he shared the same thought. He clutched the door a little tighter, a forced smile pushed into his cheeks that didn't meet his brows, and he quickly looked away.

"I am glad you have awoken Celandine." Was he? "I've had some extra towels delivered so you can use the shower, Gray, someone's going to bring new sheets up in five."

Well, if I couldn't head home, I'd settle for a shower at least. Shakily I followed Leo before the vamp could protest, feeling ready to hibernate for a year. A smidgeon of magic power had returned to my stores, but I still couldn't detect where it was replenishing from.

"Can I open a window?" Was the first thing I asked stepping foot in his room. The air was so thick, it was like waiting for a meal that was then delivered to the next table.

"Why?" He pulled a face at me. "The air-con is on."

I'd noticed, moving away from him to avoid further clogging up my lungs. He locked the door behind us, chain and all, as I fired out a massive sneeze.

"Bless you, tea?" He asked, moving to pick up a tiny kettle from a small table in the corner.

"No." The rest of the room was as sparse as Grahame's. A double bed, door to a shower room. Sporadically flowered curtains hung from a single glazed window and a small table was placed with two overlarge chairs.

He sighed. "Coffee?"

I stood in the middle of the room, not wanting to touch anything, "No."

He flicked the kettle on, turning over a mug from a stack. "Okay well, take this." He leant over to give me a piece of folded red paper. "What do you want to eat? It's on me." I stared at it, flicked it over, then passed it back.

"Steak?" I asked.

"We only have a leaflet for Chinese."

"What's wrong with Chinese Steak?"

"The Chinese doesn't do a steak!" He ran his hand through his hair, exasperated.

"Oh. Anything meaty then is fine." That seemed to only rile him up further. The kettle began to boil.

"What, like Chow Mein, Kung Pao?"

I didn't know those animals. Were they names? Was Leo offering me people? I gave him a critical eye.

One way to find out. "Sure."

He let out a breath, seemingly deflating with the compromise as the water finished boiling with a click.

"I'll order, the clean towels are in the bathroom." He poured the kettle. "Listen, I get you'd rather not be here, you don't seem to like the council, and I know you didn't want to pull me out of Fae. But right now we've got bigger problems, that gem, for starters, and the sorcerer is still out there."

The things unsaid hovered silently between us.

I itched my nose. "Where is here exactly?" It looked like a hotel, it smelt like a hotel and was full of people like a hotel. Yet not a single person had batted an eyelid as we'd entered smeared in dirt and blood.

He stirred the cup a little bit too fast.

Please say a hotel.

"This is the Midlands branch of the SPCC."

So I heard him talking, but nothing he was saying was making sense.

My voice was dangerously low. "Did you just say we were in a branch of the supernatural policies and control council headquarters?" The literal centre of a bunch of people that I'd wanted to avoid? The walls suddenly felt a lot smaller. Glancing towards the locked door, I noticed he gripped the spoon tighter. I should've left Leofstan in Fae and hightailed it. The striped wallpaper was closing in by the second.

"I'm leaving," I announced trying to look casual walking towards the door.

"Celandine, wait!" He called as I reached up to slide open the bolt. A sharp sting jumped off into me.

Recoiling and trying to flick the pain off I turned incredulously towards him, "You've spelled it?" I accused.

Leo stopped stirring, and for the first time since I entered the room, he looked at me properly, chin set. A dishevelled curl had escaped from his hair and hung unkept over his forehead.

"Yes." He simply answered before going back to vigorously pounding the mug. "You pushed magic into me." His voice was in an elevated pitch, and a muscle of his neck spasmed.

"And now my reserves are too low to break the spell on the door." I pointed out bitterly.

"Mm." Was his response as he compressed the tea bag and almost cracked the porcelain. Ripping open a small sachet, he tipped in some milk before returning to stirring. "Well," he began, discarding the spoon with a clatter, "maybe you should take this as a blessing that you cannot tamper with another spell you do not understand!" The air crackled slightly around him.

I scoffed. His face turned to genuine surprise when I took a step toward him. "Do you know what your problem is Leofstan Ortwin?" My voice was a yell as I stormed across the room, "You think you're all that!" I stood in front, gesturing wildly with my hands.

Taken aback, his magic dispersed.

"Not once has it occurred to you that someone can be on your level with magic. Hell, you think you're so freaking awesome!" I dropped my tone, jaw clenched, crossing my arms. "If you'd taken a moment just to consider maybe I was, it'd still be Tuesday!"

He said nothing, just reached to the side and picked up the teacup. A small smile tugged into his cheeks.

"What?" I snapped. There was nothing to be smiling about.

"You're right."

"Exactly, and then you almost killed..." I replayed the conversation.

With the grace of a dancer, he sat down in one of the chairs, taking a sip of tea, smile broadening into a grin. "No one has possessed the audacity to educate me on my flaws in a long time."

Inside my chest, the space suddenly became lighter. He turned the smile towards me and the walls of the room expanded phenomenally. I fell into a chair as the strength fled my knees.

His smile slipped. "Thank you for extricating me from the Fae-lands. But never send me magic again. Next time, I will not be able to stop taking it." He clenched his hands around the cup.

"So I just wait for you to simply die and drain me accidentally instead?"

"This is why removing the gem is one of my top priorities. Some of the greatest minds can be contacted here, I have no doubt we can find a resolution."

We both fell into silence apart from the ticking clock as he sipped his tea, lost in thought. I couldn't let them look closely, but this link was starting to become more trouble than it was worth. Restlessly letting my eyes wander, I glanced at the locked door again. With nothing else to do, I finally settled on trying to figure out the source of my magic.

"Can you tell where I am replenishing magic from?" I asked, it was grating on me terribly. "I know it's returning. But it just is. There isn't a spot or anything."

Not answering straight away he took a sip out of his cup, cradling it in both hands, staring into it for a few breaths. When he finally set it down on the table, his face had relaxed into his usual relaxed mask.

Reaching down to my magic store deep inside, I observed it, trying to catch anything that might change.

"Hold on." Leo downed his cup with a sigh. "I can sense you leaking from here." He leant over the table, dwarfing my gemmed hand with his by placing his on top. "When you channelled your magic to me, I couldn't detect it until too late, when its effects had already rooted." He brushed a thumb over my hand, sending a shudder down my spine. "What were you doing differently?"

Hmm. I'd let it trickle, send it to one path. Whereas now I was just kind of trying to search everywhere at once. So instead, all of the magic that I was sending out, I pulled it together to funnelled it into smaller tendrils. As opposed to trying to throw a net, I set paths.

And it was as if I was seeing the world anew.

Everything was coated, some places more than others in what I could only describe as dust. Leo was rather untouched, but he was coated by a different substance that reminded me of how I'd seen his magic in my garden. The dust was slowly drifting towards me from every surface, and as I waved my hand around, it followed, but it steadily drifted away too. When I concentrated I could see outside the clumps moving around two natured folk carried on with their days through the window.

Focusing on the particles I was losing, they slowly started drifting back instead.

"Congratulations, Celandine, you are no longer leaking magic." Slightly smiling, he squeezed my hand. I jumped, having completely forgotten he was there. It was the first time I noticed the dark circles under his eyes and the tip of his ear had healed but was now missing a notch. 

For just a moment more, his hand lingered.

* * *

Bạn đang đọc truyện trên: Truyen247.Pro