Page 21 of Big Bear Energy


Font Size:

He didn't have answers. He didn't have evidence. All he had was the bone-deep certainty that this was deliberate, and the growing fear that whoever was responsible had only begun.

11

CHLOE

The temperature had dropped fifteen degrees in two hours.

Chloe stood in the doorway of Corin's orchard shed, watching the sky turn the color of iron as another cold front rolled in. Snow had started falling an hour ago, fat flakes that melted on contact with the ground before freezing into a slick glaze of ice.

"We should move inside," Corin said behind her. "Ground's too hard to work anyway."

She nodded, stepping back to let him close the shed door against the wind. The space was cramped but organized, stacked with hive boxes and bags of soil amendment and tools hung neatly on pegboard walls. A space heater hummed in the corner, taking the edge off the cold.

Corin had been quiet today. Quieter than usual, which was saying something. He'd met her at the gate as always, walked with her through the orchard checking the beds, but there was something distant in his eyes. Pensive. Like he was working through a problem he couldn't quite solve.

She'd caught him watching her twice. Both times, he'd looked away before she could read his expression.

"I found something at the Book Nook yesterday," she said, settling onto an overturned crate trying to ignore if she was being paranoid or not. "Moira helped me dig through some old texts on land sickness."

Corin leaned against the workbench, arms crossed over his chest. "What kind of something?"

"A case study. Scotland, about two hundred years ago." She pulled the borrowed book from her bag and set it on the crate beside her. "A sealed well started leaking. Not water. Magic. Old magic that had been bound into the earth."

His jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. "Go on."

"The land around it started dying. Crops first, then trees, then animals. It spread outward from the source in circles, just like what's happening here." She paused, watching his face. "The well had been sealed for generations. Someone broke it open deliberately."

"Why?"

"The text says a farmer thought there was treasure hidden inside. He broke the binding without understanding what he was releasing."

Corin was silent for a long moment. His gaze had gone distant, fixed on something she couldn't see.

"Did they stop it?"

"Eventually. They found the source and resealed it. But it took months, and the land never fully recovered."

He nodded slowly, still not looking at her. There was something coiled in the way he held himself. Tension beneath the stillness.

"You went out last night," Chloe said. It wasn't a question.

His eyes snapped to hers. "How did you know?"

"You have that look. The one you get when you've been in bear form." She shrugged at his surprised expression. "We work together quite often over this last year or so. I notice things."

He would have smiled at her admittance if the news was better. "I shifted. Walked the boundary. Tried to track the source of the rot."

"Did you find anything?"

"The smell is everywhere, but I couldn't trace it to an origin. It just... dissipates. Like someone covered their tracks. And the well still looks the same. Untouched." He kept glancing at her, then away, like he was wrestling with something. It threw her off balance. Corin was usually so steady, so straightforward. This hesitation was new.

"You want to ask me something," she finally said.

He stiffened. "What?"

"You've been watching me all day. And you keep starting to speak and then stopping." She kept her voice neutral, careful. "If you're wondering whether I'm causing this, just ask. I'd rather have it out in the open."

"I'm not wondering that."