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“Now pay attention, Little One,” Sulla instructed. “One day you’ll be doin’ this on your own, and I’ll be whisperin’ to you from the wind.”<br />

Amarie liked the sound of that.<br />

She smiled and pulled the first card.<br />

The edges of the vision blurred, and the row of colored bottles came back into view. I was still touching the cracked bluish-green one and the cork<br />

that had unleashed the memory—one of Amma’s, trapped like a dangerous secret she didn’t want to escape into the world. But it wasn’t dangerous<br />

at all, except maybe to her.<br />

I could still see Sulla showing her the Cards of Providence, the cards that would one day form the spread that showed her my death.<br />

I pictured the faces of the cards, especially the twins, face to face. The Fractured Soul. My card.<br />

I thought about Sulla’s smile and how small she looked compared to the giant she seemed to be as a spirit. But she wore the same intricate<br />

braids and heavy strands of beads snaking around her neck in both life and death. Except the cord with the black stone—I didn’t remember that<br />

one.<br />

I looked down at the empty bottle, pushing back the cork and leaving it on the shelf with the others. Did all these bottles hold Amma’s memories?<br />

The ghosts that were haunting her in ways the spirits never would?<br />

I wondered if the night of my death was in one of those bottles, shoved down deep where it couldn’t escape.<br />

I hoped so, for Amma’s sake.<br />

Then I heard the stairs creak.<br />

“Amma, you in the kitchen?” It was my dad.<br />

“I’m in here, Mitchell. Right where I always am before supper,” Amma answered. She didn’t sound normal, but I didn’t know if my dad could tell.<br />

I followed the sound of their voices back through the hall. Lucille was sitting at the other end waiting for me, her head tilted to the side. She sat<br />

straight like that until I was inches away from her, and then she stood up and sauntered off.<br />

Thanks, Lucille.<br />

She’d done her job, and she was through with me. Probably had a saucer of cream and a fluffy pillow waiting for her in front of the television.<br />

I guessed I wasn’t going to be able to spook her again.<br />

As I rounded the corner, my dad was pouring himself a glass of sweet tea. “Did Ethan call?”<br />

Amma stiffened, her cleaver poised over an onion, but my dad didn’t seem to notice. She started chopping. “Caroline has him busy waitin’ on<br />

her. You know how she is, classy and sassy, just like her mamma was.”<br />

My dad laughed, his eyes crinkling in the corners. “That’s true, and she’s a terrible patient. She must be driving Ethan crazy.”<br />

My mom and Aunt Prue weren’t kidding. My dad was under the influence of a serious Cast. He had no idea what had happened. I wondered how<br />

many of Lena’s family members it took to pull this off.<br />

Amma reached for a carrot, lopping the end off before she even got it on the cutting board. “A broken hip’s a lot worse than the flu, Mitchell.”<br />

“I know—”<br />

“What’s all that racket?” Aunt Mercy called from the living room. “We’re tryin’ ta watch Jeopardy!”<br />

“Mitchell, get on in here. Mercy’s no good at the music questions.” It was Aunt Grace.<br />

“You’re the one who thinks Elvis Presley is still alive,” Aunt Mercy shot back.<br />

“I most certainly do. He can dance himself a mean jive,” Aunt Grace shouted, catching every third word at best. “Mitchell, hurry on up. I need a<br />

witness. And bring some cake with you.”<br />

My dad reached for the Tunnel of Fudge cake on the counter, still warm from the oven. When he disappeared down the hall, Amma stopped<br />

chopping and rubbed the worn gold charm of her necklace. She looked sad and broken, cracked like the bottles lined up on the shelves in her<br />

bedroom.<br />

“Be sure and let me know if Ethan calls tomorrow,” my dad shouted from the living room.<br />

Amma stared out the window for a long time before she spoke, barely loud enough for me to hear. “He won’t.”

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