JUST A LITTLE MAGIC Chapter 2
I was stunned. Gobsmacked. Janine ... raped? And dead nine months later? The date Lillian had mentioned was less than nine years away.
I looked over at Janine. She seemed pretty calm - maybe she'd had a long time to get used to discussing this subject. I turned back to Lillian.
- "How .. how can you know this?"
- "I was tracking Janine's future. Obviously, not a day at a time. But I checked in on her birthdays. When I looked for her on her 28th birthday ... I couldn't find her."
"She was dead. She died a day after giving birth. I was shocked. But I also found it strange, because on her 27th birthday, she didn't have a boyfriend, much less a husband. I went back 9 months, to the moment of conception."
Lillian was also fairly calm as she told me this story. She had impressive self-control - or perhaps she'd also had time to get used to the facts she was relating.
"Janine was sedated, Pete. It wasn't a drug. It was a spell."
- "A magician?"
Lillian paused, to take a sip of her drink.
"No, Peter." she said. "It was an archmage."
- "Is an archmage ... like an archbishop - one step higher?"
- "An archmage is much more powerful than a mage. By several orders of magnitude."
- "Were you able to find out who it is?"
- "Yes." said Lillian. "His name is Robert Clifford."
***
My real father was an archmage? And a rapist? A murderer?
He'd gone to the hospital where Janine delivered the baby. He killed her, and stole the child. No: he was
going
to do that - in the future.
- "Why would he do that?" I asked. "It's unbelievable!"
- "I asked myself the same thing." said Lillian. "Why would he kill Janine? And why steal the baby? But then I wondered if he had done the same thing to someone else."
"It was difficult, time-consuming, and extremely painful. I'd seen your - Clifford. I followed him back through time, one day at a time. And then I saw it."
"One month before Janine's murder, he murdered a woman who had just given birth, in Osaka, Japan. Police were baffled, because her newborn child was missing."
"And one month before that, he murdered a woman in a hospital in Tampa, Florida. Her newborn baby had disappeared, too."
This was the freakiest story I'd ever heard. My father was a serial killer? And baby-snatcher? I glanced at Janine, but her face was expressionless.
"That made me wonder if there was a pattern of some kind." said Lillian. "Three dead women. Three stolen babies. Why would Clifford want these babies?"
I did a little research on the two other women, in Japan, and Florida. Do you know what I found?"
I shook my head.
- "Both of those women were from magically-talented families."
- "What? How could you know that?"
- "We
know
these things, Pete. If a magically-talented woman is looking for a magically-talented man, she can find one. We keep track of bloodlines. If Janine had wanted talented children, she might have found a Baba who would have suggested a mate like ... you."
Me?
I couldn't help it - I looked to Janine. There it was - that incredible expression that I found so daunting, and yet so appealing at the same time: half-closed eyes, the quarter smile ...
Damn. Janine and me?
- "Wait - what's a
Baba
?"
- "A matchmaker. She knows the magical families, and can find a suitable husband or wife - if you're looking."
"I'm sorry." said Lillian. "I got side-tracked. Back to the story: I looked into mysterious deaths of talented women, combined with missing babies. I wasn't surprise to discover that there were several - and none of the girls involved were married at the time. Then I began to backtrack, nine months earlier, to find out who had impregnated them."
- "No."
- "Yes. Clifford, every time. It took me a year to track him down on every occasion, but once I had a pattern, it was easier to follow."
- "A pattern?"
- "Oh yes." said Lillian. "That's the whole reason behind it. At first, I couldn't understand how the dates of the murders were connected. Then I went further back, looking for some kind of link between the women involved. May I show you something?"
She reached under their coffee table, and slid out a briefcase. Lillian opened it, and pulled out a single sheet of paper. She handed it to me.
JANUARY 9 2001
FEBRUARY 8
MARCH 9
APRIL 7
MAY 7
JUNE 5
JULY 5
AUGUST 4
SEPTEMBER 2
OCTOBER 2
NOVEMBER 1
NOVEMBER 30
DECEMBER 30
It made no sense to me. "I'm sorry ..." I said.
- "My birthday is December 30th." said Janine.
I looked at the paper again.
- "The woman in Japan? She was born November 30th?"
- "Yes." said Lillian.
- "And the woman in Tampa? November 1st?"
- "Yes."
I understood. But I didn't.
- "What does it mean?"
- "Count the dates, Pete." said Lillian.
- "Thirteen."
- "Do you notice anything else?"
- "They're ... about a month apart?"
- "Think of magic." said Lillian. "And the number 13."
It took me a moment. I was thinking of a Baker's Dozen, and playing cards (13 cards in each suit). Unlucky number 13. Magicians ... and finally I thought of female magicians.
- "Witches?"
- "There are 13 witches in a Great coven." said Lillian. "All of these women were -
are
- magically talented. And the significance of those dates? All 13 were born on the night of a full moon."
- "Is that bad?"
Lillian looked solemn. "Their children could be especially powerful." she said.
"But it's worse than that. Look at the dates of the rapes." She produced a second page from the briefcase.
JANUARY 14 2028
FEBRUARY 13
MARCH 13
APRIL 12
MAY 11
JUNE 10
JULY 9
AUGUST 8
SEPTEMBER 6
OCTOBER 6
NOVEMBER 5
DECEMBER 4
JANUARY 3 2029
"Thirteen women murdered. Their daughters all stolen at birth -
and all conceived the night of a full moon."
"Robert Clifford is going to create a coven of witches: all his daughters, all conceived under a full moon - from thirteen magically-talented mothers, all born under a full moon."
***
It was too much to take in. Lillian gave me a few moments to absorb what she'd just told me. It didn't make sense. It was just too ... weird. Too monstrous.
I shook my head.
- "Wait - how can he be sure that these women will end up ... pregnant? And how can all of the babies be female?"
-"
Magic.
" said Janine.
Oh. That.
- "Okay." I said. "If he only gets 12, that's not a coven - is it? So, if you were to get an abortion - wouldn't that stop his scheme? No reason to murder you if there's no baby to steal, right?"
- "Magic." said Lillian. "He would put a spell on these girls. They would find that they were happy to be pregnant. They would
want
to bear these children."
- "He's
that
powerful?"
- "Oh, yes. And with a coven like that ... the damage they could do is incalculable."
- "But .. isn't someone going to notice? I mean, if 13 women are murdered and their newborn babies are stolen?"
- "They'll be spread around the world, Pete. Think of it this way: roughly 360,000 babies are born every day. Slightly over 50% are female. Let's leave it at 180,000, for the sake of simplicity."
The frequency of children born into magical bloodlines is 1 in 25,000. That means that roughly 7 magically talented babies are born every day."
- "That's all?"
- "That's it. So, on average, 3 or 4 females. Sometimes, though, only one. Then there are the ones that don't survive to adulthood, because of illness, accident, war ..."
"When Clifford is looking for a magically-talented female born on, say, the 9th of January, 2001 - there may only be one - and she could be anywhere in the world."
"That's why a series of murders and abductions, spread around the globe, won't attract any attention until it's far too late."
That
was depressing. Still, I had a few more brilliant ideas. That is, I
thought
they were pretty smart until I actually said them.
- "Couldn't Janine hide? Or move?"
Janine rolled her eyes.
- "Magic." said Lillian. "He could find her anywhere in the world."
- Well, couldn't you, like, gang up on him, or something?" I said. "What if the families of the other 12 women joined up with you? Aren't they mages, too? Couldn't you overpower him?"
- "Very few magically talented people actually develop their skills, Pete. Your mother and you, for example: you didn't even know that real magic existed. She has talent, but has never used it. Her skills are non-existent."
"We can't kill him, or even imprison him. We just don't have that kind of power."
- "What about -?"
- "The Police?" Lillian had actually read my mind again. "Do you remember my airline example? Besides, can you picture me in a police station, trying to tell them that my daughter is going to be raped and murdered ... eight years from now?"
It all sounded so hopeless.
- "There must be
something
you can do. We have to stop him, somehow." Oops - somewhere along the way, 'you' had turned into 'we'. But I would help, if I could. I didn't want anything bad to happen to Janine, or any of those other women.
"Can't you get help? From someone?"
Lillian gave me a tired smile.
- "That's what we