Abigail Widdowson (
acrookedchild) wrote in
undergrounds2015-06-01 08:03 pm
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Fires at Midnight
June 1st, night:
Abigail had never seen the Reds and Night Council in action before. She'd stayed tucked away in Geap Manor, learning about the Night Council and Institute and all those things she'd face in the real world, but she'd only heard of them. They existed only as an abstract concept. Being in Barnet was an entirely different situation.
On the surface, it seemed peaceful. Emissaries came from the Institute to the factions -- the vampies and the covens being the central focus, but there were others who looked for people who were different. The meta-humans. From what she could tell, they were simply being convinced to join the Institute.
But there were darker things at work, too.
Her attention was primarily on the covens. Most of them seemed to welcome the influence of Redbright, as it meant they were closer to the heart of Circle Daybreak. For a light witch, that was everything. But she saw what some of the others tried to hide because she was looking for it. One skittish girl had particularly caught her attention, so Abigail followed her, meaning to pull her aside when it was safe.
Someone else had been waiting to get her alone, too, though.
From where she'd stood, Abigail watched as the man -- a large one, all brawn but very quiet too -- grabbed the girl. None of her magic could protect either her or the victim, so Abigail had ducked down, hiding behind the large bin. She'd tried not to even breathe as she listened. The girl screamed, and the man threatened her. If she didn't give him the names of her fellow dark witches, he'd kill her.
Over and over, she'd said there weren't any others. She didn't know who they were. She didn't know where they were. He hadn't been satisfied. So, he stabbed her twice. As the girl slumped down against the brick wall, the man took her purse and ran. Anyone who found her would see a mugging gone bad.
She waited for some time, trying to make herself stop shaking, before she pulled herself to her feet and staggered away from the bin and scene, almost completely without thinking that the noise and smell of blood might easily have drawn others who weren't part of the engagement.
June 3rd, day:
Abigail kept to herself on the second. She'd always been taught to mind the phases of the moon, so she'd stayed in Geap Manor all that night, safely tucked away from anything that might want to hurt her. After that, though, she went back to Barnet.
The girl's face hadn't ever left her. She could still hear her screaming.
But it told Abigail what she had to do. There was still the official order that every dark witch who wouldn't renounce the magic she practiced had to leave Barnet. Those were the ones Abigail was trying to help now.
The cards she distributed (passed off to people she could recognize as witches who didn't seem to be violently opposed to dark witches) were simple:
Need to leave Barnet? Have nowhere to go?
Help is available.
020 7946 0660
Call or text. Any time day or night.
Dangerous? Possibly. But that was why she had a cheap burner phone for the calls and texts.
She had no solid plan as she went around the borough that day, handing a card or two where it seemed appropriate and leaving them tucked inside the right books in the right stores, places she knew they'd be found by the people who needed them.
June 6th, night:
The job was nearly done, and Abigail knew it. She had done almost everything she could, and she felt she'd helped at least some people. Others were dead, yes, and there were a few fools who thought they could continue to pass as Daybreak under the close scrutiny of the Redbright Institute and their people. Them, Abigail couldn't help, and she was afraid of them. After all, they knew her name, knew about her activity here. But she couldn't let fear stop her.
Still, she waited in a pub she'd been using as a waypoint. She'd made it clear she was leaving Barnet and not coming back at 22:00, period. Any last minute stragglers were welcome to come up until that point, which meant she still had an hour to wait. Just in case.
Abigail had never seen the Reds and Night Council in action before. She'd stayed tucked away in Geap Manor, learning about the Night Council and Institute and all those things she'd face in the real world, but she'd only heard of them. They existed only as an abstract concept. Being in Barnet was an entirely different situation.
On the surface, it seemed peaceful. Emissaries came from the Institute to the factions -- the vampies and the covens being the central focus, but there were others who looked for people who were different. The meta-humans. From what she could tell, they were simply being convinced to join the Institute.
But there were darker things at work, too.
Her attention was primarily on the covens. Most of them seemed to welcome the influence of Redbright, as it meant they were closer to the heart of Circle Daybreak. For a light witch, that was everything. But she saw what some of the others tried to hide because she was looking for it. One skittish girl had particularly caught her attention, so Abigail followed her, meaning to pull her aside when it was safe.
Someone else had been waiting to get her alone, too, though.
From where she'd stood, Abigail watched as the man -- a large one, all brawn but very quiet too -- grabbed the girl. None of her magic could protect either her or the victim, so Abigail had ducked down, hiding behind the large bin. She'd tried not to even breathe as she listened. The girl screamed, and the man threatened her. If she didn't give him the names of her fellow dark witches, he'd kill her.
Over and over, she'd said there weren't any others. She didn't know who they were. She didn't know where they were. He hadn't been satisfied. So, he stabbed her twice. As the girl slumped down against the brick wall, the man took her purse and ran. Anyone who found her would see a mugging gone bad.
She waited for some time, trying to make herself stop shaking, before she pulled herself to her feet and staggered away from the bin and scene, almost completely without thinking that the noise and smell of blood might easily have drawn others who weren't part of the engagement.
June 3rd, day:
Abigail kept to herself on the second. She'd always been taught to mind the phases of the moon, so she'd stayed in Geap Manor all that night, safely tucked away from anything that might want to hurt her. After that, though, she went back to Barnet.
The girl's face hadn't ever left her. She could still hear her screaming.
But it told Abigail what she had to do. There was still the official order that every dark witch who wouldn't renounce the magic she practiced had to leave Barnet. Those were the ones Abigail was trying to help now.
The cards she distributed (passed off to people she could recognize as witches who didn't seem to be violently opposed to dark witches) were simple:
Help is available.
020 7946 0660
Call or text. Any time day or night.
Dangerous? Possibly. But that was why she had a cheap burner phone for the calls and texts.
She had no solid plan as she went around the borough that day, handing a card or two where it seemed appropriate and leaving them tucked inside the right books in the right stores, places she knew they'd be found by the people who needed them.
June 6th, night:
The job was nearly done, and Abigail knew it. She had done almost everything she could, and she felt she'd helped at least some people. Others were dead, yes, and there were a few fools who thought they could continue to pass as Daybreak under the close scrutiny of the Redbright Institute and their people. Them, Abigail couldn't help, and she was afraid of them. After all, they knew her name, knew about her activity here. But she couldn't let fear stop her.
Still, she waited in a pub she'd been using as a waypoint. She'd made it clear she was leaving Barnet and not coming back at 22:00, period. Any last minute stragglers were welcome to come up until that point, which meant she still had an hour to wait. Just in case.
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But seeing what had happened to Jennifer -- Jennifer Carter, she'd learned from the news, which had presented it just as a local tragedy -- made her certain. There is nothing else she can do.
"But I have to."
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Sliding his hands into his pockets, he comes closer to her.
"Hard to come back from a decision like that." She knows, he thinks, but the warning comes anyway.
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"I think the word 'impossible' is more appropriate." If anyone from Redbright or the Night Council finds out what she's doing, she will be permanently marked. Any hope of studying at the Institute will be gone forever. Probably always has been for being a Widdowson, regardless of what Sylvia had said. "But... yeah. I know."
It still has to be done. She has to do it.
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"Need a ride anywhere?"
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"Yeah. Dunno where though. But I could use a ride. And to talk a bit."
It sounds weird, and she knows it. She probably sounds like a psycho. Or just a dumb little girl meddling in things she shouldn't.
"I just... I've got a few questions."
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And yet, he'd offered all the same. Jerking his head down the street for her to follow, he starts walking. "We can figure out the where."
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It's easy to fall into step with him. To take a couple steps to walk almost right beside him. It's like at the party. The closer they walk together, the less suspicious any of it seems. A young man and a young woman? Only look odd walking to the same car if there's distance between them instead of, at least, a friendly closeness.
"I must seem totally mental right now. It's just... been a long day."
And it would be an even longer week, she knew.
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"I'm a werewolf. We're pretty used to mental."
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"What does it mean to you?" she asks quietly. "To be an alpha. I... think I kind of understand what it is, technically. But... personally. What is it?"
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"It still feels too early to say," he admits, watching the ground beneath their feet intently. "I don't know when that's gonna change."
Realizing he's being a little too open, he squares his shoulders, makes an effort to sound less uncertain. "But my pack needs someone. Right now, that's me."
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"Circle Midnight has never had a coven. At least not in recent memory. Members hide in Daybreak covens or are trained apart. Like I was. But they're all separate."
Which made them easy to quiet and easy to remove without anyone raising a fuss. It wouldn't help Jennifer, but it might prevent others' from suffering her fate. If they could be knit together.
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It's not what he expected, either. The idea of witches being so splintered seems wrong to him. He thinks of when it had just been Laura and himself, and a shudder winds its way down his spine. It's not fair has to be the stupidest response there is, but the words stick in his mind.
"That just sounds like it'd make things more dangerous." He sighs. Maybe that doesn't make sense. "A werewolf without a pack is weaker. But it also doesn't have the guidance. The control."
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"Most just study on their own in secret, which is where a lot of the horror stories about dark magic come from." Possession, death, all sorts of things that came from young, unexperienced witches teaching themselves to summon and contract fae. "I was taught it by my parents, then my uncle. But even then, one witch alone? Can't do even half of what three can. Seven or nine? Even better."
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It doesn't take long to get to his car, because he's spent much of the day pacing the same area. "Here." Opening it with a click of his keys, he nods towards the passenger side before climbing in himself. The interior of the camaro is clean and tidy and pine-scented. Derek inhales it as he turns over, once again, what she's said. He has to fight off thoughts of his own family. A coven has never seemed more like a pack to him.
"These witches chased out of Barnet might not even get that kind of offer."
If they wanted it, that is. Limited though his empathy may be, Derek cannot imagine that he would.
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Which might drive more of them off, guarantee there was no place for them in Daybreak.
She's supposed to be seeing the world, making a contract with a fae, and securing the future of the Widdowson line. Not... this.
"That's why they--" No. That was wrong. She was them; they were her. "We need a coven."
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He looks at her, sidelong, considering.
"Not many are being proactive right now," he says, in a way that might imply but you are.
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But the Widdowson name is an old one. Five hundred years ago, they were a force to be reckoned with. Then, the curse had taken hold, and their prominence decreased. There was still a legacy to the name, though. It couldn't just be brushed aside or shouted down.
Besides, it was just as safe to do this as it was to do anything else for her. At least this, she could believe in.
"It's insane. I know it is. But I'm doing it. I need to."
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"Your cards. Have they been working?"
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Geap Manor was unforgiving toward strangers staying too long. Especially when they were of the same sex as the last surviving one and, therefore, unsuitable to carrying on the line. Or, at least, that's how she'd felt. That the house had a will and mind of its own, and it did not take challenges well.
But they had a few days, at least, to gather themselves.
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"You need to be careful with that," he says sharply, but the sentiment there is almost unthinking. Derek's will would have him slow to give a damn, but the reality has always held true: he is perilously quick to become invested, and right now Abigail is putting herself in danger.
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If she was going to do this. Going to unite at least some of the witches into a coven. They'd need a safe place to meet, one that wasn't as obvious as Geap Manor. But acquiring property, especially if she wanted to make it hard to trace back to her, takes time. Right now, she doesn't have it.
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"Well, I guess it's better than nothing," he says, yielding that much. To the witches she'll help, it's probably definitely better than the alternatives. "What's the opposition been like?"
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Which gives her time, at least.
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Still, Abigail's sudden passion for the cause makes him wonder - he doubts she's become so invested, when compared to her indecision at the ball, over so little activity. But he's not about to ask.
On the other hand:
"Enfield will probably be next on their list." That's where her family originated, right? Look at him, helping out.
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"It probably will." Because it's a logical progression. A place where there was no one source of power. Of course Redbright would expand there next. And depending on what happened... "My family's home is there."
Geap Manor. A testament to the ability of the Widdowson family to withstand the trials of time and suffering. So much magic and blood had been poured into that house, both its foundation and over the years it had been inhabited.
"With what they'd done in Barnet? I-- It's possible they'll try to burn it down."
She isn't sure they'd actually do it, but there is just that part of her that can't help but be terrified it might happen. Jennifer is dead. Why wouldn't they burn a house? She takes a deep breath and sighs, shaking her head.
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