A new Black Witch will rise...her powers vast beyond imagining.
Elloren Gardner is the granddaughter of the last prophesied Black Witch, Carnissa Gardner, who drove back the enemy forces and saved the Gardnerian people during the Realm War. But while she is the absolute spitting image of her famous grandmother, Elloren is utterly devoid of power in a society that prizes magical ability above all else.
When she is granted the opportunity to pursue her lifelong dream of becoming an apothecary, Elloren joins her brothers at the prestigious Verpax University to embrace a destiny of her own, free from the shadow of her grandmotherâs legacy. But she soon realizes that the university, which admits all manner of peopleâincluding the fire-wielding, winged Icarals, the sworn enemies of all Gardneriansâis a treacherous place for the granddaughter of the Black Witch.
As evil looms on the horizon and the pressure to live up to her heritage builds, everything Elloren thought she knew will be challenged and torn away. Her best hope of survival may be among the most unlikely band of misfits...if only she can find the courage to trust those sheâs been taught to hate and fear.
PROLOGUE
The woods are beautiful.
Theyâre my friends, the trees, and I can feel them smiling down at me.
I skip along, kicking at dry pine needles, singing to myself, following close at the heels of my beloved uncle Edwin, who turns every so often, smiles and encourages me to follow.
I am three years old.
We have never walked so far into the woods, and the thrill of adventure lights up my insides. In fact, we hardly ever walk into the woods. And Uncle Edwin has brought only me. Heâs left my brothers at home, far away.
I scramble to keep up with him, leaping over curved roots, dodging low-hanging branches.
We finally stop in a sunny clearing deep in the forest.
âHere, Elloren,â my uncle says. âI have something for you.â He bends down on one knee, pulls a stick from his cloak pocket and presses it into my tiny fist.
A present!
Itâs a special stickâlight and airy. I close my eyes, and an image of the tree the stick came from enters my mindâa big, branchy tree, soaked in sunlight and anchored in sand. I open my eyes and bounce the stick up and down in my hand. Itâs as light as a feather.
My uncle fishes a candle out of his pants pocket, gets up and sets the candle on a nearby stump before returning to me. âHold the stick like this, Elloren,â he says gently as he bends down and holds his hand around mine.
I look at him with slight worry.
Why is his hand trembling?
I grasp onto the stick harder, trying my best to do what he wants.
âThatâs it, Elloren,â he says patiently. âNow Iâm going to ask you to say some funny words. Can you do that?â
I nod emphatically. Of course I can. Iâd do anything for my uncle Edwin.
He says the words. There are only a few of them, and I feel proud and happy again. Even though theyâre in another language and sound strange to my ears, theyâre easy to say. I will do a good job, and he will hug me and maybe even give me some of the molasses cookies I saw him tuck away into his vest before we left home.
I hold my arm out, straight and true, and aim my feather-stick at the candle, just like he told me. I can feel him right behind me, watching me closely, ready to see how well I listened.
I open my mouth and start to speak the nonsense words.
As the odd words roll off my tongue, something warm and rumbling pulls up into my legs, right up from the ground beneath my feet.