Chapter 10: Breaking Down
Living within three feet of someone was harder than Sage had imagined. Not because of Thorne—though navigating the bathroom situation […]
Living within three feet of someone was harder than Sage had imagined. Not because of Thorne—though navigating the bathroom situation […]
Sage woke to pain. Not the dull ache of too little sleep or too much stress. This was sharp, searing,
Three days later, Sage found it. She almost missed it—a single line in a text so old the pages crumbled
Sage couldn’t sleep. She’d tried. Spent two hours lying in bed, staring at the ceiling, listening to the cabin settle
The Council chambers felt colder than last time. Or maybe that was just Sage, still shaken from the magical backlash,
Sage had been awake for three hours and hadn’t left her bedroom. Not because she was hiding. She wasn’t hiding.
The safe house was a cabin. Of course it was a cabin. Sage stood in the gravel driveway, staring at
The neutral ground turned out to be a coffee shop. Sage stood across the street, staring at the cheerful blue
The Witch Council didn’t call emergency sessions lightly. In the hundred and fifty years since its founding, there had been
The lavender wouldn’t stop screaming. Sage Mitchell pressed her palms against the greenhouse table, trying to steady herself as the