other things more scary. Thereâs being snatched from your home in the middle of the night and locked away without a chance of even speaking to your own child. Thereâs fearing that youâll never get out.â
âWe really shouldnât be talking about this,â Shea whispered, glancing up at the closest guard tower. The man wasnât looking in their direction, but that didnât mean a thing.
âTheyâve already locked me up,â Terri said firmly. âTheyâre not going to shut me up, too. You know, before this happened, I was like anyone else, reading about magic and the witches and how BOW and the MPs were doing their duty to protect the people . . .â
Shea took Terriâs elbow and started walking. She wasnât sure why, but somehow she had the feeling that it would be more difficult for their jailers to overhear them if they kept moving in and out of crowds. And she tried to subtly warn her studentâs mother that being outspoken in prison wasnât necessarily a good thing. âTerri . . .â
She walked and shook her head before giving Shea a half smile. âI know. I know they listen. I know they watch.â Her gaze slid to the side, where two female guards stood together, watching over the prisoners. âBut Iâm still a citizen. I still have rights.â
âNot really,â Shea told her.
âThereâs a sad statement.â
âYou have to be careful,â Shea said. âNo one here is concerned about your ârights.â To them, weâre less than human. Theyâd like nothing better than a chance to take us all down. So if you want to see Amanda againâdo what you can to stay unnoticed. Donât stand out in this crowd, Terri. Blend in. Donât make waves. You might drown in them.â
She huffed out a breath. âSeeing Amanda. Whatâre the chances of that, I wonder.â
âProbably not good,â Shea admitted, then added, âbut youâll make it worse for yourself in here by not being careful.â
âI know that, but underneath all of the fear, I am furious ,â she said softly and her voice toughened up as if to prove it. âIâve met a few . . . interesting women here and the thing is, theyâre no different from me. Not at the bottom of it, you know? I mean, weâre all just people. Some good, some bad.â
Oh, Shea wished she had met Terri under other circumstances. They could have been friends. Instead, they were prison mates with definite dates of expiration. âYeah, the problem is, that doesnât seem to matter.â
âAll Iâm trying to say is if people would just talk to witches, they wouldnât be so afraid.â
âYouâre right. But at the moment,â Shea told her, keeping her voice low, âfearâs in charge and logic didnât even get a seat at the table.â
They walked through the yard, the breeze off the harbor carrying the smell of the sea and the illusion of freedom. Off in one corner, a lone woman sat with her knees drawn up, back against the wall, quietly crying to herself. Just seeing the emotionally beaten woman stiffened Sheaâs spine.
She wasnât going to be afraid. Not anymore. She was through being the helpless victim, racing through the dark, trying to avoid her enemies by disappearing into an uncaring crowd. Talking to Terri had helped, too. Terri had allowed her own sense of injustice to trump her fears and Shea could do no less.
Dropping one arm around the other womanâs shoulder, Shea said, âWeâll find a way out.â
And she realized she believed it. She wasnât going to be locked away here forever. Sheâd find a way out even if Torin didnât come for her. Damned if sheâd let these bastards win. She and Terri would get out. Somehow. She wouldnât be a statistic and simply disappear.
She wouldnât lie down and die without a
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