of glass flying everywhere.
A knobby elbow pushed its way out of the sack, followed by a bony hand, each finger armed with a two-inch, black talon. The hag was coming.
Jim dashed across the parking lot. The car, a huge â69 Dodge Charger, snarled like a living thing, racing straight for the boy. Jim sprinted, so, so fast . . .
Please make it, honey. Please!
The head of the hag emerged, one baleful pale eye then the other, a crooked long nose and wide slash of a mouth filled with shark teeth.
The muscle car was almost on the boy. Jim was ten feet away.
Please, please, please donât get killed.
Jim swept the boy off his feet and the car rammed him and smashed into a pole.
It hit him. Oh gods, the Charger hit him. Something inside me broke. I froze in agonizing horror.
The hag crawled out of the magic and perched on Mr.Dobrevâs chest, clutching at him with her long, creepy toes. She was my size but emaciated, bony, her meager flesh stretched too tight over her frame, while her skin sagged in loose folds and wrinkles.
The car revved its engine. It was still there. It didnât disappear and that meant its target was still alive.
Jim leaped over the Chargerâs hood, the boy in his arms, landed, and sprinted to us.
The hag reached for Mr. Dobrevâs throat. I painted the last stroke on the curse and slapped it on her back. âPoisoned daggers!â
Three daggers pierced the hag, one after the other, sticking out of her back.
The Charger reversed and chased after Jim.
The hag screeched like a giant gull, spat at me, and kept going. It didnât work.
I grabbed a new paper, wrote another curse, and threw it at her. The curse of twenty-seven binding scrolls had worked for me before. The hag clawed at the paper. It pulsed with green. Strips of paper shot out and fell harmlessly to the floor. They shouldâve tied her in knots. Damn it!
The car was feet behind Jim. Please make it! Please!
The hag clawed at Mr. Dobrevâs neck.
I grabbed a pickle jar and hurled it at her head. It bounced off her skull with a meaty whack. She howled.
âGet off him!â I snarled.
Jim leaped through the broken window. The Charger rammed the opening, right behind him, and stopped, its engine roaring, wedged between the wall and the wooden frame. Stuck!
I grabbed another jar and jumped on the counter. The hag screeched in my face and I pounded her with the jar. âGet off him, you bitch!â
The Charger snarled. The metal of its doors bent under pressure. The car was forcing its way in.
The jar broke in my hand. The pickle juice washed over the hag. She clawed me, too fast to dodge. Her talons raked my arms, searing me like red-hot knives. I screamed. She let go and I saw the bones of my arms through the bloody gashes.
Jim released the boy. The child scrambled to the back ofthe store. Jim leaped to the Charger and hammered on the carâs hood, trying to knock the vehicle back. The Charger roared. Jim planted his feet, gripped the hood, and strained. The muscles on his arms bulged. Iâd seen Jim lift a normal car before, but the Charger didnât move.
I punched the hag in the head, putting all my shapeshifter strength into it. She wasnât getting Mr. Dobrev as long as I breathed. The hag clawed at me again, screaming, slicing my shoulders, her hands like blades. I kept punching her, but it wasnât doing me any good.
Jimâs feet slid back. A moment and the car would be through.
It was a car. I knew cars and Jim knew hand-to-hand combat. âSwitch!â I screamed.
Jim glanced at me, let go of the carâs hood and leaped onto the counter. His knife flashed and the hagâs right hand fell off.
I dashed out of the store, jerked a mirror off Pookiâs driver side, and ran back in. The Charger was halfway in, its wheels spinning. I wrote the curse, slapped the paper onto the hood, and planted Pookiâs mirror on it.
Magic crackled like
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