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Read an Excerpt From Rachel Griffin’s The Nature of Witches

Read an Excerpt From Rachel Griffin’s The Nature of Witches

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Read an Excerpt From Rachel Griffin’s The Nature of Witches

A fierce, romantic story about a world on the brink of destruction, the one witch who holds the power to save it, and the choice that could cost her everything…

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Published on May 19, 2021

A story about a world on the brink of destruction, the one witch who holds the power to save it, and the choice that could cost her everything she loves…

We’re thrilled to share an excerpt from The Nature of Witches—a romantic YA fantasy about a climate maintained by magic, and the devastating effects of increasingly dangerous weather—publishing June 1st with Sourcebooks Fire. Author Rachel Griffin has partnered with One Tree Planted to plant a tree for every preorder the book receives

For centuries, witches have maintained the climate, their power from the sun peaking in the season of their birth. But now their control is faltering as the atmosphere becomes more erratic. All hope lies with Clara, an Everwitch whose rare magic is tied to every season.

In Autumn, Clara wants nothing to do with her power. It’s wild and volatile, and the price of her magic—losing the ones she loves—is too high, despite the need to control the increasingly dangerous weather.

In Winter, the world is on the precipice of disaster. Fires burn, storms rage, and Clara accepts that she’s the only one who can make a difference.

In Spring, she falls for Sang, the witch training her. As her magic grows, so do her feelings, until she’s terrified Sang will be the next one she loses.

In Summer, Clara must choose between her power and her happiness, her duty and the people she loves…before she loses Sang, her magic, and thrusts the world into chaos.


 

 

Chapter One

“Being an Everwitch means two things: you are powerful, and you are dangerous.”

—A Season for Everything

Everything is burning, so many flames it looks as if we set the sky on fire. The sun has long since vanished, hidden behind a haze of smoke and ash, but its magic still rushes through me.

The fire has been raging for six days. It started with the smallest spark and became all-consuming in the span of a breath, flames spreading chaotic and fast, as if they were being chased.

Starting the fire was easy. But putting it out is something else entirely.

It’s our last wildfire training of the season, and it’s more intense than all the other training sessions combined. The fire is larger. The flames are higher. And the earth is drier.

But wildfires are a threat we now have to deal with, so we must learn. There are more than one hundred witches from all over the world here on campus to take this training.

The other witches help. The springs provide fuel, growing acres and acres of trees to sustain the fire. The winters pull moisture from the trees before stripping them bare, and the autumns stand along the perimeter of the training field, ensuring the fire doesn’t spread beyond it.

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The Nature of Witches

The Nature of Witches

We have to learn, but that doesn’t mean we’re going to burn down our entire campus in the process.

The rest is up to the summers, and we have one job: make it rain.

It’s not easy. The winters pulled so much water from the ground that it feels more like sawdust than dirt.

My eyes sting, and a layer of ash clings to the sweat on my face. My head is tipped back, hands outstretched, energy flowing through my veins. Summer magic is a constant rush, strong and powerful, and I push it toward the woods, where water soaks the earth and a lazy stream moves through the trees. The power of the witches around me follows, and I send it further into the forest.

It weaves around trees and skims the forest floor until it finds a particularly wet stretch of earth. Goose bumps rise along my skin as the heat of my magic collides with the cold moisture. There’s enough water here to coax from the ground and into the clouds, enough to vanquish the fire and clear the air of smoke.

This is the first time I’ve been involved in a group training session since I was on this same field last year, practicing with my best friend. Since the magic inside me rushed toward her in a flash of light, as bright as the fire in front of me. Since she screamed so loudly the sound still echoes in my ears.

I try to push the memory away, but my whole body trembles with it.

“Keep your focus, Clara.” Mr. Hart’s voice is steady and sure, coming from behind me. “You can do this.”

I take a deep breath and refocus. My eyes are closed, but it isn’t enough to erase the red and orange of the fire, a dull glow I’ll continue to see long after the flames are out.

“Now,” Mr. Hart says.

The rest of the summers release their magic to me, weaving it into my own. I tense under the weight of it. Our combined power is far stronger than individual streams flitting around the forest, the way a tapestry is stronger than the individual threads within it.

But it’s so heavy.

Most witches could never support the weight of it. Only a witch tied to all four seasons can control that much magic. Evers are rare, though, and our teachers didn’t have one in their generation—I’m the first in over a hundred years—so this is a learning process for us all. But it doesn’t feel right, holding the magic of so many witches.

It never does.

“Deep breaths, Clara,” Mr. Hart says. “You’ve got this.”

My hands shake. It’s so hot, heat from the fire mixing with heat from the sun. The magic around me hangs heavy on my own, and I focus all my energy on pulling moisture from the ground.

Finally, a small cloud forms above the trees.

“That’s it. Nice and easy,” Mr. Hart says.

The cloud gets bigger, darker. Magic swells inside me, ready to be released, and the sheer power of it makes me dizzy. It’s a terrible feeling, like I’m on the brink of losing control.

I’ve lost control twice before. The terror that haunts my dreams is enough to ensure it will never happen again.

Sweat beads on my skin, and I have to work hard for each shallow breath, as if I’m breathing atop Mount Everest instead of in a field in Pennsylvania.

I temper the flow and give myself three good breaths. Just three.

Then I start again.

Ash falls from the sky instead of rain, flames leaping toward the heavens as if they’re taunting me.

I find my thread of magic hovering above the forest floor. I let enough energy flow from my fingertips to keep it going, but no more than that.

“Rain,” I whisper.

Water rises from the ground and cools. Tiny droplets form, and all I have to do is combine them until they’re too heavy to stay in the air.

That’s it. I can do this.

I pull the cloud away from the trees, closer and closer to the flames until it hovers above the heart of the fire.

Power moves all around me like a cyclone, and I send it spiraling into the air, toward the droplets that are so close to being rain.

More magic surges inside me, desperate to get out, stealing my breath. There’s a deep well of it, but I’m terrified of letting go, terrified of what could happen if I do. I send out a small stream of magic that does nothing to ease the pressure building inside me, and I force the rest back down.

It isn’t enough.

The rain cloud flickers, threatening to undo all the progress I’ve made. It needs more energy.

“Stop fighting it,” Mr. Hart says behind me. “Just let it happen. You’re in control.”

But he’s wrong. Letting go would be like breaking a dam and hoping the water knows where to go. I know better than that. I know the devastation my power can cause.

There are so many sets of eyes on me, on the rain cloud churning above the fire. I split my focus between controlling the flow of my own magic and commanding everyone else’s, but it doesn’t feel right.

I can’t do it anymore.

I won’t.

The thread of magic collapses, energy thrashing every which way like a loose fire hose.

A collective groan moves through the witches around me. My arms fall to my sides, and my legs buckle beneath me, the pressure no longer holding me up. I sink to the ground, and heavy exhaustion replaces everything else. I could sleep right here, on the sawdust earth, surrounded by witches and fire.

I close my eyes as Mr. Hart’s steady voice begins directing the other witches.

“Okay, everyone in the northeast corner, you’re with Emily. Northwest, Josh. Southeast, Lee, and southwest, Grace. Let’s get this fire out.” Mr. Hart keeps his tone even, but after working with him for over a year, I know he’s disappointed.

After several minutes, four strong threads of magic are restored, and the cloud above the fire gets larger and darker. Emily, Josh, Lee, and Grace make upward motions with their hands, and all the water they’ve extracted from the ground rises into the atmosphere, going up, up, up.

They clap in unison, and the droplets of water combine, too heavy to remain in the air.

I look up. When the first raindrop lands on my cheek, a sick feeling moves through my body. It took four of our strongest witches to do what should have been natural for me. Easy, even.

Another raindrop falls.

And another.

Then the sky opens up.

Cheers rise all around me, the sound mixing with that of the rain. People clap each other on the back and hug. Josh pulls me up from the ground and wraps his arms around my waist, twirling me through the air as if I didn’t just fail in front of the entire school.

My hair is soaked, and my clothes cling to my skin. Josh sets me down and high-fives the other witches around him.

“We did it,” he says, wrapping his arm around my shoulder and kissing my temple.

But a training exercise is nothing compared to the unrestrained wildfires burning through California. We’re going to graduate this year, and then it’ll be up to us to fight the real fires. And they’re getting worse.

Witches have controlled the atmosphere for hundreds of years, keeping everything steady and calm. We’ve always succeeded. We’ve always been strong enough.

But the shaders—those without magic—were swept away by the possibilities of a world protected by magic, of a world where every square inch could be used for gain. They began to push the limits of our power and our atmosphere. At first, we went along with it, caught up in their excitement. Then their excitement turned to greed, and they refused to slow down, ignoring our warnings and charging ahead, behaving as if magic were infinite. As if this planet were infinite. Now they’ve overplayed their hand.

We’ve tried to adapt and handle the shifting atmosphere on our own, but we can’t keep up; it’s as if we’re blowing out candles when the whole house is on fire. When we realized that what the world needed was rest, we pleaded with the shaders and pleaded for our home. But we were outnumbered. The shaders couldn’t see past their desire for more, developing land that humans were never meant to touch, requiring control in areas that were only ever meant to be wild.

There isn’t enough magic to support it all.

And now the atmosphere is collapsing around us.

Three years ago, we didn’t train this hard for wildfires. They spread and caused damage, but the witches were always able to put them out before they became devastating. Now there aren’t enough of us to manage all the ways the Earth is pushing back. I think about the acres of land that burned this year in California and Canada, Australia and South Africa, and it’s so clear. It’s so painfully clear.

We aren’t strong enough anymore, and the administration is relying on me to make a difference, to make the difference.

But they really shouldn’t.

By the time graduation comes, I won’t be able to make any difference at all.

 

Excerpted from The Nature of Witches, copyright © 2021 by Rachel Griffin.

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Rachel Griffin

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