Written in the Stars Read online




  Follow the Circle:

  Book 1: So Mote It Be

  Book 2: Merry Meet

  Book 3: Second Sight

  Book 4: What the Cards Said

  Book 5: In the Dreaming

  Book 6: Ring of Light

  Book 7: Blue Moon

  Book 8: The Five Paths

  Book 9: Through the Veil

  Book 10: Making the Saint

  Book 11: The House of Winter

  Book

  12

  Written in the Stars

  Isobel Bird

  Contents

  PerfectBound Special Feature:

  The Universal Check Ritual

  Chapter 1 “Ten!” “Nine!”

  Chapter 2 “How was your party?”

  Chapter 3 “When are you going back to school again?”

  Chapter 4 “I knew it!” Sasha said triumphantly.

  Chapter 5 As she stood waiting for Jane to answer. . .

  Chapter 6 “Astrology has been around for thousands of years.”

  Chapter 7 “Still here?” Kate dropped her backpack. . .

  Chapter 8 Cooper stopped running and bent over. . .

  Chapter 9 “Hey, sis.” Annie laughed at Becka’s. . .

  Chapter 10 On Friday night Cooper went to see Jane.

  Chapter 11 “Happy birthday.” “Thanks,” said Kate.

  Chapter 12 “I’ve got Annie’s chart here. . .”

  Chapter 13 Cooper picked at the piece of bread in her hand. . .

  Chapter 14 Annie turned the pages of the photo album slowly. . .

  Chapter 15 “I haven’t been here in a long time,” Kate said. . .

  Chapter 16 “Thanks for inviting me out with you guys. . .”

  Chapter 17 Annie picked up the phone for the sixth time. . .

  About the Author

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  CHAPTER 1

  “Ten!”

  “Nine!”

  “Eight!”

  “Seven!”

  “Six!”

  “Five!”

  “Four!”

  “Three!”

  “Two!”

  “One!”

  “Happy New Year!”

  A shower of brightly colored confetti rained down from overhead as Annie looked around at the happy, smiling faces of her friends. The noise of horns and laughter filled her ears, and all around her people were hugging and kissing each other in celebration of the new year. She turned, looking for someone to celebrate with, and saw Tyler standing behind her. Why not? she thought after hesitating for a moment. She opened her arms. “Happy New Year,” she said, stepping toward him.

  She bumped into Kate, who had stepped forward at exactly the same moment. The two of them stopped and looked at one another awkwardly. Annie glanced at Tyler and saw that he was looking uncomfortably at the floor.

  “Happy New Year,” Annie said, trying to sound enthusiastic, and put her arms around Kate.

  Kate hugged her back. “Happy New Year,” she said softly.

  The two friends parted and stood next to one another, not saying anything. Tyler had disappeared into the crowd. Annie wished she could do the same thing. What had she been thinking? She should have known that something like this would happen. It was hard enough being at the party with both Tyler and Kate there; even thinking about giving him a celebratory kiss should have been off-limits. It had only been a little more than a month since Kate had found out about the brief sort-of-affair between Annie and Tyler, and things between them were still slightly tense.

  “Hey, you guys, what’s with the gloomy expressions?” Cooper and Sasha came up to Annie and Kate. Cooper had dyed her hair bright red for the occasion. Seeing it for the first time earlier in the evening, Annie had remarked that she looked like a living sparkler.

  “I think they need some sweeties to kiss,” Sasha said, grinning. She looked at Cooper. “Shall we save them from their misery?”

  “By all means,” Cooper replied. She turned and kissed Annie as Sasha planted one on Kate. “Happy New Year!”

  Annie and Kate couldn’t help but laugh. Their friends’ silliness had broken the tension. The four of them stood together, surrounded by the noise of the party. They were at Thea’s house, where their classmates and teachers from their weekly Wicca study group had gathered—along with the members of the Coven of the Green Wood and assorted friends—to ring in the new year. They had spent the past few hours eating and talking, waiting for the big moment to arrive. Now that it had, the party seemed to really get going. Someone turned on music, and people began dancing.

  “Let’s go out on the porch,” Sasha said over the music. “It’s getting crowded in here and I’m hot.”

  The four friends wove their way through the dancers, escaping into the kitchen and then out onto the deck at the back of the house. Annie, the last one to leave, shut the door behind her, blocking out the sound of the music. The girls collapsed into chairs on the porch.

  “I never thought I’d be the one to need a break from a party,” remarked Cooper, laughing. “Those witches sure can get rowdy.”

  “I know,” added Sasha. “Give them a little more of my mom’s punch and they’ll be doing a circle dance all over the place.”

  They sat quietly for a while, looking up at the night sky. The moon was halfway to fullness, and the winter sky looked like black ice embedded with diamonds. The air was cold, but there was no wind, and the coolness felt good on their warm skin.

  “So, who made resolutions?” Sasha asked after a few minutes. She looked around questioningly at the others.

  “I don’t make resolutions,” Cooper said. “It just sets me up for failure, and who needs that?”

  “Oh, come on,” Sasha shot back. “I know you. You’d never turn down a challenge. Spill it. What have you resolved to change this year? No, let me guess. You’re going to volunteer at a soup kitchen, stop swearing, and lay off chocolate.”

  Cooper snorted. “Yeah,” she said. “Right after I save the rain forests and learn French. Hardly.”

  “Then, what are you going to do?” Kate asked her.

  Cooper shook her head, looking annoyed. “You’re not supposed to tell anyone your resolutions,” she said. “That way no one else knows when you break them ten minutes later.”

  “We’ll tell you ours if you tell us yours,” Annie teased.

  Cooper sighed. “Fine,” she said. “If you really want to know, I have three resolutions.”

  “Three?” Sasha said, sounding shocked. “Aren’t you ambitious.”

  “And not one of them is laying off chocolate,” Cooper informed her. She looked around at her friends. “I can’t believe I’m telling you guys this. Okay, the first one is that I’m going to try to get along better with my mother.”

  “That’s a good one,” said Annie. “Very classic.”

  “Yeah, well, it’s probably the hardest one,” said Cooper. “She’s been a real pain since my dad moved out. Anyway, the second one is about my music. I want to write a bunch of songs with Jane and actually record a CD.”

  “Impressive,” Kate remarked. “Does Jane know about this plan?”

  “Not yet,” Cooper answered. “My dad said he’d help us out. One of his clients owns a recording studio, and he owes my dad a favor. Now I just have to convince Jane to do it.”

  “How hard can that be?” Sasha asked. “I’d think she’d be all over that.”

  Cooper nodded. “I hope she will be,” she said. “You never know with Jane.”

  “Where is she tonight, anyway?” said Kate. “I thought you invited her.”

  “I did,” replied Cooper. “She said she had another party to go to.”<
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  “Okay, so far we have being nice to Mom and becoming a rock star,” said Sasha. “What’s number three?”

  “That’s the easiest one,” Cooper said. “I want to lose ten pounds so I look better in a swimsuit.”

  The other three stared at her, their mouths open in surprise. Cooper looked back at them for a moment, then smiled. “Got you,” she said.

  The others groaned. “You had us there for a second,” Annie said. “I was waiting for you to tell us that you were going to have a boob job, too.”

  “That’s next year,” Cooper quipped. “Seriously, though, my third resolution is to exercise a little more. I know it’s boring, but it would be nice to actually move around a little every now and again. Not too much. But maybe a little running or swimming or something.”

  “I’m impressed,” Kate said. “Your resolutions are much better than mine.”

  “Which are?” asked Cooper.

  Kate took a deep breath. “Actually, there’s just one.”

  “It better be a good one, then,” Sasha said. “There’s no grading on a curve when it comes to resolutions, you know.”

  “It’s pretty big,” Kate said. “I’ve decided that this year I’m going to be totally honest.”

  Cooper groaned. “Oh, please,” she said. “When’s the last time you told a lie?”

  “That’s not really what I mean,” said Kate. “I mean I’m going to be honest about what I want. I’m tired of doing what other people want me to do or expect me to do. I’m tired of pretending to be something I’m not just so my family will be happier. So from now on I’m going to tell the truth, even when it’s hard.”

  “I take it back,” Cooper said. “That’s major. Good for you.”

  “Thanks,” Kate said. “But I might need you guys to remind me every so often that I promised to do this.”

  “Don’t worry,” Annie told her. “That’s our job.”

  “What about you, Ms. Crandall?” Cooper said. “What’s on your to-do list for the year?”

  “Mine seems really dull compared to yours,” answered Annie. “I kind of went the traditional route.”

  “As in not-biting-your-nails traditional?” Kate asked.

  Annie nodded. “Sort of,” she said. “I want to spend more time painting, and I want to learn how to do something cool.”

  “I knew someone was going to learn French,” Cooper said. “Thank Goddess it isn’t me.”

  “Not like that,” Annie said. “I mean something to do with witchcraft. You know, like working with herbs or drumming or something. I haven’t really decided yet.”

  “Anything else?” asked Sasha.

  “Not unless you count achieving world peace,” Annie said seriously.

  “I don’t,” answered Sasha. “Okay. My turn.”

  “She’s been waiting for this all night,” Cooper remarked to the others. “I bet she even has a list written out.”

  “As a matter of fact, I do,” Sasha said. She fished in the pocket of her shirt and pulled out a folded piece of paper. Opening it, she cleared her throat. “Number one,” she said. “I hereby resolve to commit to a year and a day of studying Wicca, so that next year we’ll all be real witches.”

  “You’re assuming that the three of us are going to be real witches,” Kate said.

  “Whatever,” answered Sasha, waving her hand at Kate. “Number two. I hereby resolve to do better in school so that my mother stops worrying that I’ll be left back and end up the oldest sophomore at Beecher Falls High School.”

  The others laughed, although they knew that Sasha was only half kidding. Sasha glared at them, pretending to be annoyed, and they stopped.

  “Number three,” she read. “I hereby resolve to do daily meditation for at least ten minutes. Number four. I hereby resolve not to think about kissing Fred Durst more than five times while doing daily meditation.”

  “Fred Durst!” Cooper exclaimed. “Can’t you do any better than that?”

  Sasha put down her list of resolutions. “And number five,” she said firmly, looking directly at Cooper. “I hereby resolve not to let the faults of others irritate me.”

  “It does not say that,” Cooper retorted. “Give me that paper.”

  Sasha stuffed the paper back into her pocket. “Okay, so that one I made up off the top of my head,” she said. “But I think it’s a good one, so I’m officially adding it.”

  “Sorry,” Cooper said. “All resolutions must be submitted before midnight or they’re null and void. I’m afraid you’ll have to stick with better grades and not fantasizing about playing kissy face with Limp Bizkit boy.”

  “Ten bucks says I can go without Fred longer than you can be nice to your mother,” replied Sasha.

  “Twenty,” Cooper said. “And you’re on.”

  The two of them shook hands. Annie looked at Kate. “I don’t think they’re good influences on us,” she said.

  “No,” agreed Kate. “They’re very bad. I think we should stop talking to them.”

  “Go right ahead,” Sasha said. “But your parties will be really dull without us around.”

  “Not to mention your full moon circles,” Cooper added.

  Everyone laughed some more, then they grew quiet again as each sat with her own thoughts, listening to the sounds of the party inside. A few minutes later the back door opened and three more people came out onto the deck. One of them was Archer, who the girls knew from their class at Crones’ Circle bookstore. Another was Jace Myers, who they also knew slightly. She was a rabbi, as well as a psychic, and the girls had met her in October when they’d taken Annie to Jace’s house for a birthday reading. They had never met the third woman before.

  “Hey there,” Archer said. “What are you four up to?”

  “Just enjoying the quiet,” said Kate. “It was getting a little bit crowded in there.”

  “Tell me about it,” Jace commented. “I think there are fewer people in Times Square than at this party.” Jace turned to Annie. “How did things work out with your ghosts?” she asked, referring to the reading she’d done for Annie on her birthday, in which the spirits of Annie’s deceased parents had spoken to her.

  “Oh, it was all fine,” Annie answered. “Weird, but fine.”

  Jace nodded. “I thought it would be,” she said.

  Annie looked up at the night sky. Seeing Jace brought back all the memories of the period when she’d thought that her parents’ ghosts were angry at her. She’d even gone back to their old house in San Francisco and attempted a ritual to send them back to the spirit realm. Luckily, she’d figured out what was really happening and had been able to speak with her parents on the night of Samhain. Doing that had helped heal the hurt she’d been carrying around inside of her since their deaths, and she’d finally been able to move on with her life.

  Even better, while in San Francisco she had met Becka Dunning and her father, Grayson, who now lived in the house where Annie and her family had lived. Annie and Becka had become friends. Mr. Dunning and Annie’s Aunt Sarah had also hit it off, and had been seeing a lot of each other since October. In fact, Annie’s aunt was on a weekend trip with Grayson Dunning at that very moment. She was due to come home the following afternoon, and Annie couldn’t wait to hear how things had gone.

  “The stars are so bright tonight,” Annie remarked. “Look at that one just below the moon. It’s like someone turned on its high beams or something.”

  “That’s not a star,” said the woman who had come out with Jace and Archer. “It’s a planet. Jupiter, actually.”

  “Everyone, this is Olivia Sorensen,” Archer said as the others looked at the woman. “She’s going to be teaching class for the next couple of weeks as we study astrology.”

  “You’re an astrologer?” Kate asked.

  “And an astronomer,” Olivia answered. “I work for the planetarium. A number of years ago I was asked to write a paper debunking astrology. Unfortunately for the journal that asked me to write the paper,
I became a believer instead. Now I do both.”

  “Olivia is amazing,” Archer told the girls. “I have her do my chart every year, and she always surprises me with how on target she is.”

  “Well, it is a science,” Olivia said. “Although I admit that it takes different skills to read an astrological chart correctly. You have to be willing to go beyond the realm of numbers and formulas and see the larger pattern they’re a part of.”

  Annie studied the woman carefully. She herself had a scientific mind, and she was always interested in meeting others who, like her, were involved in things that traditional scientists might consider a little too weird. Olivia definitely looked like a science person. Her blond hair was cut shoulder length, and she was dressed in black pants and a dark blue shirt. Also, she wore glasses with black plastic frames, much like the ones Annie herself wore. As Annie watched, Olivia reached up and pushed the glasses up her nose in a familiar gesture that made Annie smile to herself. She’s a lot like me, she thought. I’m going to like her.

  “Are you a witch?” Sasha asked Olivia.

  “Me?” Olivia said, sounding surprised and a little embarrassed. “Sort of. I mean, I’m not officially a witch or anything. I don’t belong to a coven. But I’m interested in Wicca.” She paused for a moment. “I guess you could say that I’m witch lite.”

  Annie laughed. Olivia glanced at her and smiled shyly, then laughed, too, as if sharing a private joke. The others looked at them in mild amusement. Then Cooper looked at her watch.

  “It’s almost time for me to be in bed,” she said, standing up. “Who wants a ride home?”

  “I do,” Annie said.

  “Kate?” asked Cooper.

  “Sure,” said Kate. “Let me get my coat.”

  The girls stood up to say good-bye to their friends. “I guess we’ll see you on Tuesday,” Annie said to Olivia as they shook hands.

  “I’m looking forward to it,” Olivia replied.

  Kate, Cooper, and Annie went inside, leaving Sasha and the others on the deck. They collected their coats, said good-bye to a few more friends, and left. Soon they were in Cooper’s car on the way home.

  Cooper dropped Kate off first, then headed to Annie’s.