Shadows, Maps, and Other Ancient Magic (Dowser Series Book 4) Read online




  Contents

  Title Page

  Author's note

  Introduction

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Promo

  Copyright

  Shadows, Maps, and Other Ancient Magic

  - Dowser 4 -

  Meghan Ciana Doidge

  Published by Old Man in the CrossWalk Productions

  Salt Spring Island, BC, Canada

  www.oldmaninthecrosswalk.com

  www.madebymeghan.ca

  Author’s Note:

  Shadows, Maps, and Other Ancient Magic is the fourth book in the Dowser series.

  While it is not necessary to read both series, the ideal reading order is as follows:

  Cupcakes, Trinkets, and Other Deadly Magic (Dowser 1)

  Trinkets, Treasures, and Other Bloody Magic (Dowser 2)

  Treasures, Demons, and Other Black Magic (Dowser 3)

  I See Me (Oracle 1)*

  Shadows, Maps, and Other Ancient Magic (Dowser 4)

  Other books in both the Oracle and Dowser series to follow.

  *The Oracle series is set in the same universe as the Dowser Series. I See Me (Oracle 1) contains spoilers for Dowser 1, 2, and 3.

  I had new cupcakes to bake, a new treasure to hunt, and a new dragon in town — literally. Who wouldn’t be ecstatic filling their days with chocolate, trinket collecting, and martial arts training?

  Yeah … me.

  Because no matter how much chocolate I ate, I couldn’t fill the dark pit in my soul. A darkness born from blood alchemy. A darkness that reeked of the black magic I now knew I was capable of creating.

  Maybe it was time to walk away.

  But what if there were important things left to do? What if I was the only one who could do what needed to be done?

  I wasn’t sure I could handle the responsibility, but as long as I had my chocolate stash and a good friend to back me up, I was willing to give it a try.

  CHAPTER ONE

  The blade was inches from my neck before I felt it. Thankfully, I had my blond curls clipped back today. Otherwise, I would have gotten an unwanted and unneeded haircut. I flung myself sideways, rolling over my shoulder and coming up on one knee to block the reverse strike with my jade knife.

  The over-the-head blow glanced off my knife and was knocked to the side, but the force of it reverberated down my arm in a wash of pain. I slid back on the white stone floor even as I rolled forward onto the balls of my feet to step into my attacker. This close, his sword was all but useless.

  Unfortunately, he was faster than me, or I would have managed to gut him.

  Instead, he grabbed the wrist of my knife hand and twisted my arm up over my head, then around my back. This forced me to pivot away or have my shoulder dislocated. He pinned my knife hand, the wrist still painfully twisted between my shoulder blades. I had to rise up on my toes to lessen the pain of the hold.

  “Branson!” I screeched, completely forgetting the formality with which I was to address the sword master of the dragons. “I was meditating.”

  He brought his blade up to my neck. I managed to get my left hand around his wrist, but had to practically lay my head back against his shoulder to avoid having my throat slit.

  “I don’t think you are capable of such, warrior’s daughter.” Branson’s voice was deep, his tone brusque. He was wearing traditional black training leathers, with a laced vest that left his well-muscled arms bare.

  I twisted his wrist to try to get the blade away from my neck. His forearms were adorned with tattoos of water dragons, which I’d mistaken for snakes when I first met him.

  I gained an inch.

  The sword master hadn’t spoken directly to me for over a week after that display of ignorance. Drake — the fourteen-year-old apprentice to Chi Wen the far seer and adoptive son of Suanmi, the fire breather — had delighted in relaying Branson’s drills during my period of punishment.

  “Are your fingernails green?” Branson asked now, completely bemused.

  “Jade is the new black, baby,” I said. “You should see my toes.”

  Then I kicked him in the head.

  Well, first I twisted my own head quickly to the right, dropped underneath the blade at my neck, and spun away to face him again. Unfortunately, he was still holding on to my wrists, so my arms were now crossed in front of me. I threw all my weight backward. This off-balanced the sword master enough that he stumbled forward, letting me snap a kick between our crossed arms directly underneath his jaw. I had always loved having long legs.

  Oh, yeah. Befuddlement of ancient beings was my new secret weapon.

  Branson grunted, lost his hold on my wrists, and staggered back. My entire right leg went so numb that it wouldn’t actually take my full weight.

  I’d been sitting cross-legged and eyes closed in the center of the dragon nexus when Branson attacked me. The circular room was supported by gilded columns, between which nine ornately carved doors were situated. Two archways stood across from each other, leading deeper into the nexus — to the residences of the guardian dragons, as well as the library and the training rooms.

  Still listing to the left, I raised my knife before me as I faced off with the sword master.

  I was wearing my standard uniform of printed T-shirt and jeans. And though my brand-new teal-with-white-piping Liz Fluevogs offset my black-and-white ‘UM — Element of Confusion’ top in an utterly cute way, I really needed to see about getting the shoes fitted with metal plates and toes. All the better to kick indestructible people in the head.

  It was my day off from training and the bakery, so I really hadn’t expected to be attacked. But I was never without my jade knife, not since I’d found the large stone along the Fraser River outside Lillooet and hand carved it myself. I hadn’t even known I was an alchemist at the time, and therefore capable of creating magical objects. I’d just seen the stone and known it should be a knife — a knife imbued with so much of my magic now that no one could disarm me, not without knocking me out. Nor could anyone touch the knife without my permission without being burned by it.

  Branson shook his dark head as if clearing it.

  I smirked. I’d never managed to rattle him before.

  He slowly raised his golden double-edged sword to answer my poised knife. His blade was a slimmer, longer version of the bejeweled broadsword that my father Yazi, the warrior of the guardians, wielded. Its pommel and hilt were utilitarian, though.

  Branson had been in training for the mantel of the warrior before he’d been gravely wounded as a fledgling. No, dragons weren’t completely indestructible. Just don’t mention that to any of them. Occasionally, the sword master’s old wound showed up as a limp. Despite that, and the fact that he was at least a hundred years older than my three hundred and fifty year old father, I’d never knocked him off his feet.

  “I’m not here for a lesson, sword master,” I said, struggling to remain polite — and to hide the fact that I still couldn’t feel my right leg. My wrist also felt severely sprained from being twisted harshly behind my back. “I await the treasure keeper.”

  Branson grinned, but it d
id little to lighten his perpetually stern face. He had that same hint of Asian ancestry to his features that Drake did. I didn’t think he and the fledgling guardian were related, but I was far from an expert on dragon genealogy.

  “Life is a lesson,” Branson said.

  Ah, damn. Dragons only got all preachy right before they kicked my ass. Granted, I usually deserved an ass kicking — I attracted trouble almost as easily as I attracted or found magic. Except that dragon-inflicted bruises usually took a couple of days to heal, and I had a birthday party to go to tonight.

  I narrowed my eyes at my trainer, causing all the overly golden hues of the room to blur together behind him. Dragons adored surrounding themselves with gold and jewels and art, and it was a little much sometimes. The heart of the dragon nexus was all gaudy Greek temple mixed with oriental motifs, though each door was carved in artwork that represented the specific territories of each guardian. The room was also saturated with guardian magic, hence me not tasting Branson’s magic as he approached.

  The narrower my eyes got — I was working on my intimidation factor — the wider Branson’s grin grew. Indigo eyes, blond curls now falling out of my hair clip, and sun-kissed skin didn’t much help in that department. I was fairly certain it was my ample assets that made me less than imposing, though, since I was the spitting image of my father and he scared the crap out of everyone even while laughing. Actually, it was the absolute power that rolled off him when he laughed that was terrifying.

  I’d narrowed my eyes too far. Now my eyelashes were making my vision fuzzy.

  I sighed, opened my eyes, and gave my knife hand a roll. The overly stretched tendons and ligaments crunched, but then snapped back into their proper place.

  That was better.

  I smiled, extended my left hand forward to balance my right, and stepped sideways to circle Branson.

  If he wanted a tussle, I was up for it. Bruises or no bruises.

  The sword master lost his grin as he stepped opposite to me. He watched my every move, my every twitch, with deadly intent. I was never going to get the upper hand when he was focused like this.

  I thought about flashing him to throw him off — and not just because I kept wondering how his sword-callused hands would feel sliding up my inner thighs. A totally inappropriate thought, yes. But then, I hadn’t had sex in way over a year. I hadn’t been kissed in ten months. Even my constant chocolate high couldn’t keep my serotonin levels up perpetually.

  I decided against the flashing because I knew Branson would be utterly aghast — and might even refuse to be in the same room with me ever again. Plus, I wasn’t wearing my prettiest bra at the moment. It had been far too long since I’d had any reason to wear anything other than a serviceable sports bra.

  Attempting to not massively broadcast my intent, I abruptly lunged forward, thrusting my knife for Branson’s heart.

  Then, completely blindsided, I got shoulder checked by a small mountain.

  This knocked me flying off my feet and cracked my head against one of the nine pillars that encircled the heart of the dragon nexus.

  Remember the only way to reliably disarm me these days?

  Yeah, knock me out.

  So that happened.

  ∞

  Waking up after getting your neck broken was never fun. I knew because this was my second time. The first time, I’d been visiting a morgue with a vampire and was flung head first into a cement wall by a zombie. A zombie who’d been the corpse of someone I’d really, really hoped to thoroughly date. A zombie piloted by my dead sister, Sienna. I still mourned for what might have been, had Hudson survived my sister’s bloodlust. Yeah, silly me. Who agrees to go to a morgue with a vampire, right?

  This time, by the taste of honey-roasted almonds that lingered in my mouth, I’d been attacked by Drake. Yeah, the fourteen-year-old fledgling guardian had just — utterly playfully — tried to kill me.

  Despite the fact that my brain felt completely shattered in my skull, I attempted to open my eyes.

  Qiuniu, the most breathtakingly beautiful man I’d ever had the absolute privilege to lay eyes on, was leaning over me.

  “Gran will be pleased,” I muttered. My voice was cracking. Pearl Godfrey, aka the chair of the witches Convocation, aka my grandmother, had decided that the healer was the perfect pairing for her granddaughter. Yes, one of the nine guardian dragons of the world. Despite the fact that his dark caramel skin, high cheekbones, and deep brown eyes were completely gorgeous, his guardian status was terrifying enough to keep my hormones way in check.

  “Your neck is still vulnerable, warrior’s daughter,” Qiuniu said. “I would recommend you protect it better.” My throat had been nastily gouged out by the five-inch claws of a demon, ten months ago on the beaches of a resort town on the west coast of Vancouver Island. A demon from the horde raised by my now-dead sister. Yeah, there was definitely a pattern to the last year of my life.

  “I didn’t expect to get attacked in the dragon nexus … twice,” I muttered.

  Qiuniu rewarded my grumpiness with a blinding smile. “Shall I heal you, alchemist? Though you are not moments from death as I was led to believe.”

  The healer glanced over his shoulder, turning his body just enough that with a slight and painful twist of my head I could see Drake behind him, shuffling anxiously from foot to foot. Even from my supine vantage point, I could tell that the fourteen-year-old had grown at least two inches since I’d last seen him. He also needed a haircut. His dark bangs were brushing his impossibly full lashes. I was surprised Branson hadn’t taken clippers to him yet. The trainer had often muttered about my hair being an impediment to my achieving my “perfected warrior form.”

  “I’m sorry, warrior’s daughter,” Drake called out apologetically. His voice was far too loud against the serenity of the nexus. Well, the typical serenity. You know, when I wasn’t getting attacked and almost killed. “I’d forgotten how delicate you are.”

  “She is only half-dragon, fledgling,” Branson admonished. He was standing, sword sheathed and hands crossed behind his back, to one side of Drake.

  I might adore being treated like I was precious, but I wasn’t interested in being insulted or underestimated by immortal creatures.

  I sat up.

  Qiuniu shifted back on his haunches to allow me space. “I would be pleased to heal you, Jade Godfrey.”

  His utterance of my given name flooded through me like the tingly warmth that came from sipping great champagne. You know, like panty remover.

  I gritted my teeth against the feeling and cranked my neck right, then left. Qiuniu actually flinched from the cracking sound. Blood rushed into my skull with a painful pulse, pounding right at the top of my spine. Good. The pain would keep me from getting all cozy with the guardian. I wasn’t at all interested in mixing up magic and emotions anymore. And by emotions I meant sex, of course.

  “I’m good,” I said. This came out gruffer than I intended, but Qiuniu, who was the second-youngest guardian next to Haoxin, didn’t take offense as easily as some of the older guardians.

  He smiled, sweetly disappointed. The guardian’s healing was administered via a searingly hot kiss. At least it was when he’d healed me in the past. I momentarily wished my stubbornness away … it was a great kiss, and I didn’t want to be bruised all evening …

  Then, with a wash of golden magic that literally took my breath away, the portal behind me opened. The portal that led to the territory of Australia.

  Qiuniu stood in a smooth movement, so swift I could barely track it. And I was sitting inches from him.

  Drake froze, with the foot he’d been about to transfer his weight onto jutted out to one side.

  Chocolate — an intense, spicy blend of smoky smoothness without a hint of bitterness — flooded my taste buds, as the warrior of the guardians stepped into the nexus behind me.

  “Hey, Dad,” I said weakly, cranking my aching neck around to lay eyes on my
father as the portal snapped shut behind him. Though I knew him to be over three hundred and fifty years old, Yazi appeared to be no older than thirty-five. His tanned skin and sun-bleached blond hair screamed ‘surfer dude.’ His grim scowl and the golden sword he carried casually by his side screamed ‘pissed-off demigod.’ The fact that his hard-shelled, samurai-inspired armor was splattered with blood and ash didn’t ease the intimidation factor.

  “Jade,” he said. My name came out as a growled threat to everyone arrayed in front of me.

  Branson and Drake instantly dropped to one knee with their eyes downcast. Qiuniu twitched, as if he’d stopped himself from doing the same.

  A different kind of pleasure flooded through me, and I tucked my chin to hide the smirk that was now spread across my face. What a freaking brat I was. All pleased that my father had rushed to the apparent scene of my death … for the second time. I’d never had a dad growing up. Yazi and I had only met just over a year ago. I told myself I was allowed to be pleased that he cared for me.

  “Healer,” Yazi said.

  “Warrior,” Qiuniu answered.

  “Thank you for attending my daughter.”

  Qiuniu inclined his head. “My pleasure.”

  Err, wrong thing to say. Yazi narrowed his eyes further. By the look of his armor, he’d been off saving the world from some terrible something that I wanted to know nothing about.

  I scrambled to my feet, not at all worried about looking dignified or powerful now. “It was an accident,” I said. My words were breathy and rushed. My throat was still healing. I threaded the fingers of my left hand through the wedding rings I’d soldered like charms to the gold necklace I wore twined three times around my neck. The wedding rings contained glimmers of residual magic, which I’d mortared into the necklace with my own magic. As with my knife, I’d created the necklace before I knew I was an alchemist. I wore it constantly. As best as I could tell, given that I couldn’t actually see or taste my own magic, it seemed to collect more of my residual power daily. In the past, I’d used it to shield myself from harmful spells, but in tense situations — like this one — it was more of a comfort blanket.