• Home
  • Leigh Kelsey
  • Second Breath Academy 2: How To Kill A Shadow (A Necromancer Academy)

Second Breath Academy 2: How To Kill A Shadow (A Necromancer Academy) Read online




  How To Kill A Shadow

  Second Breath Academy Book Two

  Leigh Kelsey

  This book was written, produced, and edited in the UK where some spelling, grammar and word usage will vary from US English.

  Copyright © Leigh Kelsey 2020

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without the prior written permission of the author

  The right of Leigh Kelsey to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

  www.leighkelsey.co.uk

  Get a free SBA short story How To Unleash Chaos by signing up to my mailing list! Best read after finishing How To Raise The Dead!

  BookHip.com/RGKRMX

  Come chat with me in my Facebook group: Leigh Kelsey’s Paranormal Den

  Cover by Carol Marques Cover Design

  Map by Rainbow Danger Designs

  Interior art by LSK Designs

  Created with Vellum

  Contents

  I. Prey

  1. Illicit Meetings for Beginners

  2. First I Was Afraid, I Was Petrified

  3. Just Decide My Future For Me, It’s Fine

  4. And The Oscar Goes To…

  5. Newly Minted Fugitive

  6. Just A Normal Bus Journey

  7. The Life And Soulwraith Of The Party

  8. Give Me Strength

  9. Bewildering Careers Advice

  10. Well, This Doesn’t Seem Right

  11. This Counts As A Cautionary Tale

  12. Minor Anger Issues

  13. Alone Time

  14. The Storm After The Calm

  15. BFFs

  16. The Wise Master And The Plucky Apprentice

  17. Scares And Sausages

  18. A Living (Er … Undead) Legend

  19. The Truth Will Not Set You Free

  20. Feeling Horny

  II. Predator

  21. Not These Guys Again

  22. Well … Shit

  23. Why Do I Have To Be The Chosen One?

  24. Shortcake and Heartbreak

  25. Under Pressure

  26. Tragic

  27. Queen Beats King

  28. This Is An Awful Idea … But Let’s Do It Anyway

  29. Iain Can’t Reach The Phone Right Now

  30. I’m Cold As Ice (Please Don’t Be Willing To Sacrifice Our Love)

  31. You Have The Right To Remain Immobile

  About the Author

  Find these other books by Leigh Kelsey!

  Blurb

  HOW TO KILL A SHADOW

  SECOND BREATH ACADEMY BOOK TWO

  A heart in peril. Wraiths with a thirst for magic. Kati’s next term at Second Breath Academy will change everything.

  When soulwraiths swarm SBA, Kati’s dream of an ordinary second term goes up in smoke. The shadows are hunting something—or someone—and Kati can’t let go of the idea that it’s all linked to Lady LaVoire, the dark lady who supposedly died ten years ago. Even training to fight with sexy bad boy Salazar may not prepare her for what’s coming.

  Kati is equally convinced that Alexandra Chen knows something about the threat. As the attacks increase, Kati determines to prise answers out of the reaper, even if it means setting aside their enmity. But the threat to Kati’s heart should be her biggest concern. Because one of them is keeping a secret, and Kati may not survive it.

  How To Kill A Shadow takes place in a university-age academy for necromancers and reapers, with plenty of magic, mystery, and romance. SBA is slow burn RH and builds with each book. This is a full-length novel at 50,000 words.

  SBA contains M/F and F/F romance.

  Note

  Second Breath Academy contains steamy scenes intended for adults, F/M and F/F romance, plus a teacher/student relationship. All characters are 18+ consenting adults.

  Thanks so much for reading!

  Leigh

  Part I

  Prey

  Vigilance, competence, necromance!

  Motto of Angellica Houle, Headteacher of Second Breath Academy 1992-2001

  Illicit Meetings for Beginners

  “This is weird,” Kati said, running her thumb over the back of Iain’s hand, nestled securely around hers. “Don’t get me wrong, I like it, but it’s weird.”

  York was snowy and freezing around them, suitably wintry with Christmas only a few days away, and it was packed full of people doing last minute shopping. The perfect place to blend into a crowd if you were sneaking around with your death magic theory teacher.

  “Good weird, I hope,” Iain replied, his blue eyes crinkled as he looked over at her. He was wrapped up in a bulky wool coat and a thick teal scarf, the wool so dense it swallowed the bottom half of his face and made Kati smile whenever she looked over at him. Adorable dork.

  “Good weird,” she confirmed. Although she couldn’t help glancing around, as if a fellow student of Second Breath Academy For Reapers And Necromancers might be out doing their Christmas shopping and catch sight of her and Iain. Or as she really ought to have called him, Mr Worth.

  They were heading down High Petergate, a little cobbled road lined with old fashioned shops and galleries. York Minster peered out from the end of the narrow road, huge and stunning and intimidating, radiating so much history—both the stuff that humans knew and the gory events they were unaware of.

  She and Iain ducked into a tiny little tea room just as it started to snow, finding a table right at the back under a glowing amber lamp, the sound of tinkling cups and saucers all around them.

  Kati shuddered as she adjusted to the warm temperature, flushing with pleasure as Iain helped her out of her cold coat and caught her hands as they sat, rubbing them between both of his to warm them up. It was all so new, their relationship, but Kati was loving every second of it. And with SBA on a break for Christmas, she and Iain had plenty of time to figure out how to be a couple.

  Plus, anything beat sneaking around cold, sunlit corridors during the day while everyone was sleeping just to steal a few kisses and a cuddle. She and Iain hadn’t gone further than kissing and touching—yet. But they’d come close a few times, usually interrupted by Dolly, Kati’s black pug familiar, or Blaze, Iain’s silver wolf familiar—the most powerful familiar known to their kind. Dolly had sulked for a good hour this morning when Kati had said she couldn’t come into town with her and Iain, but if Kati wanted any sort of intimacy, she’d be hard pressed to get it with her familiar’s snarky comments dropped telepathically into her head. And it really wasn’t fair for Dolly to come, since Blaze couldn’t—humans tended to react badly to the sight of big, silver wolves stalking down their cobbled streets.

  Iain stripped off his heavy wool coat, unwound his scarf, and gave her a warm smile. There was still a hint of surprise in his eyes every time he looked at her, as if he couldn’t believe Kati even liked him. “I’ll go order for us. Tea?”

  She nodded, desperate for a warm drink after the frost outside. “Milk and—”

  “Two sugars,” he finished, his Caribbean blue eyes glinting behind his glasses and his mouth quirked up. “I should hope I know how you like your tea by now.” He ducked to place a kiss on her mouth before placing their orders, but Kati hooked her fingers into his jumper and deepened their kiss, satisfaction and pleasure sweeping through her as he groaned.

  When they separated, Iain’s face was flushed pink but he had a wicked gleam in his eye. “Kissing me like that in public? You’re tryi
ng to make a scandal of me, Katriona.”

  Kati flashed a grin, shrugging casually even as her whole body went hot, her face flushed. “You make it so easy.”

  Heat filled his gaze and for a long second, Iain held eye contact, looking like he wanted to take her there and then, tea room full of people be damned. But then he blinked, shook his head, and went to get their drinks.

  Kati sat back in the chair and watched him as he got into the queue, a smile on her face and her stomach full of butterflies. She wished this Christmas break could last forever, but if it did, she’d never graduate. She’d never get her necromancy license, and she’d be forced to work a normal, boring job. Or practise necromancy without the weight of an agency behind her, leaving her open to being taken advantage of. And that was if her clients didn’t decide they’d rather kill her than pay her fee. It had happened to private necromancers before.

  No, Kati needed to return to SBA for her second term, and then her third. And then her second year. And then her third year. Just eight more terms, and she could be with Iain whenever she wanted, out in the open instead of sneaking around, all cloak and dagger.

  Eight more terms. Souls. Kati debated bashing her head on the table. Fuck, graduation was so far away. How was she going to cope when she returned to SBA? Only seeing Iain for an hour each day, having to sit through his lessons and pretend she wasn’t closely acquainted with the spot on the side of his neck that made him groan low in his throat.

  She could always graduate after one year … she’d have a partial license, she’d have the agency behind her…

  A plate was set on the table before her and Kati jumped, a smile automatically spreading across her face as she locked eyes with Iain, his brown hair splayed messily around his face and his glasses slightly askew. No ink stains on his fingers today, but she could see a very faded grey splotch on the side of his neck. Souls, he was cute. And all Kati’s.

  As long as no one finds out about our relationship, a pessimistic voice added, and for once it wasn’t Dolly snarking, just Kati’s own bleak thoughts.

  Would their relationship survive if one of the teachers or—souls forbid—students at SBA found out? Kati wasn’t a minor, and Iain wasn’t a pervy old man, but there was a power imbalance there. She knew people would sneer at their relationship. Would Iain lose his job, as he feared? Would Kati be kicked out for corrupting her teacher? She doubted Madam Hawkness, SBA’s headteacher, would see it that way, but it was pretty much what had happened. Not that Iain had done a stellar job of resisting her temptations; one kiss and he’d been hers. And she’d been a hundred percent his.

  He knew all her secrets now, knew her fears, and Kati knew his. It was a pleasant feeling, to be known as well as Iain knew her, to be able to tell him anything from vast, important life decisions to rambling, meaningless stories. It made her warm inside. And her face heated on the outside, too. Soulsdamned fair complexion; she couldn’t hide anything.

  “I took the liberty of ordering us cake,” Iain said brightly, oblivious to Kati’s train of thought as he sat opposite her. “And I got you an extra large slice.”

  “See, this is why I like you.” Kati grinned, pulling the cake toward her and spearing it with a fork.

  “Because I bring you extra large slices of chocolate cake?”

  “Yes,” she agreed emphatically, devouring the bite. She had another, and then a third, but got distracted by the way Iain’s tongue darted out to catch a smear of chocolate on his bottom lip before she could have a fourth. Kati’s pussy throbbed. Soulsdammit, not now. She swore she got needier with every day they were together.

  With every minute.

  “It’s not the only thing I brought you,” he said mysteriously, and for a split second, as Iain reached into his worn-to-hole leather satchel, Kati genuinely thought he would pull out homework. But instead he presented her with a gift-wrapped box, a neat ribbon bow patterned with gold foil stags on the top.

  Kati was suddenly, fiercely glad she’d gone shopping with Naia and Rahmi on Wednesday and got a present for Iain, too. Kati’s friends knew about her relationship, though she’d sworn them to secrecy. Naia didn’t approve, but that was only because she hadn’t seen Kati and Iain together yet. They just worked. When Naia saw that, she’d understand.

  “What is it?” Kati asked, accepting the gift but squashing a forkful of cake into her mouth, not willing to be parted from the glorious confection.

  Iain laughed, rolling his eyes. “Why would I tell you that? Open it.”

  Kati didn’t need telling twice, but she hesitated to rip into the wrapping paper. And yes, she was just pathetic and sentimental enough to keep the paper and bow intact, preserving it rather than throwing it away.

  Inside the wrapping paper was a purple box covered in silver starbursts and delicate filigree designs, rectangular and long. Kati’s stomach did a somersault. She could only think of one thing that came in a box this fancy, this shape. Swallowing, her heart pounding, she lifted the lid and blinked hard as tears stung her eyes.

  “I know you hate your current one,” Iain hurriedly explained. “I didn’t want you to have to keep it for three years until your graduation, and I thought you’d appreciate one of your own. One that isn’t linked to a traumatic event.”

  Kati swallowed the lump in her throat and nodded, smiling as she lifted the silver dagger off its plush velvet cushion. It was simple and elegant, its tip sharp and thin but the blade curved wider around the middle before meeting a handle wrapped in red fabric. The quillion was embossed with a star, a moon, and a sunburst. An athame—a necromancer’s tool, used to end someone’s life in order to bring them back as an immortal Eternal.

  Kati hated her old one, like Iain said. All it did was remind her of that day in the Stolen Tower, surrounded by psycho ghosts, petrified and howling with pain while Ingrid the Terrible—ex-headteacher of SBA, a necromancer famous for decapitating people, and a poltergeist who’d tried to kill Lavellian, Kati’s supernatural history teacher—terrorised Kati and her two best friends.

  She’d assumed she’d be stuck with that athame for three years or until she graduated—whichever came first—since most necromancers used academy-issued tools, but this … Kati tried to swallow the lump in her throat.

  “Thank you,” she said, clearing her throat when it came out thick. She looked up at Iain when she was sure she wasn’t going to burst into tears, giving him her best smile. “I love this. A lot.”

  The look he gave her was soft and pleased.

  “My present for you seems a bit shit now, though,” Kati said with a laugh, taking a messily-wrapped parcel from her bag and handing it over. “There’s two in there though, so I win.”

  His answering laugh was warm and rich and made Kati’s stomach flutter again. Those butterflies were getting out of hand.

  “A pen!” Iain exclaimed, as if Kati had given him the holy grail. “I keep losing mine, how did you know?”

  “You mention it a thousand times per day,” Kati replied with a snort, returning to her cake but unable to keep glancing at her new athame. It was probably the best gift she’d ever been given. If you didn’t count her invitation letter to SBA, anyway. “It works, I checked.”

  Delighted, Iain began scribbling on the back of their receipt and Kati tried not to laugh. “You do realise that was the bonus present, right? I spent fifty pence on it. Did you see the scarf?”

  “I saw it,” he replied, his blue eyes alight. “I love it.”

  But he kept scribbling with the pen. “You’re like one of those cats who prefer the box to the actual toy they’ve been given,” she remarked, watching him with what she was sure was a disgustingly loving expression.

  He rolled his eyes, and then went still, sitting up suddenly as his gaze fixed on her. “It’s the twenty-first of December.”

  “I’d noticed,” Kati replied.

  “Your results must have come in,” he went on urgently, his vivid blue eyes piercing her. “Did you get them this
morning? You should go home to see if they’ve arrived while you’ve been out.”

  Kati suppressed a groan. “Remind me how many classes I need to pass to attend next term again.”

  Iain sat back in his chair, but he didn’t look too worried. That made one of them. “All of them.”

  “That’s what I thought,” Kati muttered, but she forced herself to take the brown envelope out of her bag anyway, smoothing it out on the table. “Fancy opening the envelope of doom for me?”

  Iain raised an eyebrow. “I’m sure that would break several SBA rules.”

  Kati pursed her mouth, and with a deep breath she grabbed her new athame, demeaning it by using it as a letter opener. Biting the bullet—and her bottom lip—she wrenched the sheet of paper out and read the results.

  Everyone was given a score out of a hundred for each class. She needed at least thirty-five—the equivalent of a D—in every single one to pass.