Mom gave me a weird look, so I quickly amended. "Not that I'd mentioned the witches and ghosts being real, but something about the way supernatural-"
"It's the last night of the month, Izzy," Mom said, shaking her head. "You won't need to write that essay."
I lowered my fork. "Right."
Pushing her plate away, Mom rested her elbows on the table. "You hadn't forgotten, had you?"
Of course I hadn't. I just...maybe hadn't thought of leaving Ideal so soon after the banishing was done. Which was stupid. If Mary's ghost was put to bed, what reason did we have to stay?
Mom got up from the table, carrying her plate to the sink. "In any case, tonight's the night. I picked up a few canisters of salt at the grocery store. They're in the pantry."
Dishes clattered, and Mom turned on the faucet. "You did a good job," she said, her back to me. "You were able to figure out who the ghost was, and now you'll banish her, and no one's gotten hurt. No one except that boy in your P.E. class, at least. You want me to come with you tonight?"
"I think I can manage pouring some salt onto some dirt," I said, hating how petulant I sounded.
Mom must not have liked it either, because she sighed and turned to face me. "Not every case is glamorous, Isolde. Some of them are just...pouring salt. Saying a few words. Moving on."
"I guess," I replied. In the silence that followed, I could hear the steady plink-plink of water dripping from the sink.
Mom turned around. "Have you liked school?"
Surprised, I lifted my shoulders in a shrug. "Kind of," I told her. "I mean, I've only been there a month, and it hasn't exactly been a thrill a minute. Are all high schools so...dull?"
Mom's mouth quirked in what might have been a smile. "Mine was."
My fork skidded across the spaghetti. "You went to high school? Like, a regular one?" As far as I knew, no Brannick ever spent much time in the human world. We were too busy training and fighting and saving everyone from unholy evil.
"For a little while," Mom said. "Me and my sister. Our mom was working a job in California that ended up taking a lot of time. She thought it would be a good idea for us to at least try school while we were there."
"Did you like it?"
"That's like asking if I liked all my teeth pulled out through my nose," she said, and while I wanted to laugh, that sounded so much like something Finn would've said that my chest felt tight. "So that's a no, then," I finally managed to say, and Mom gave a dry chuckle.
"It wasn't all bad. I liked history, and there was something...I don't know, novel about it, I guess. It wasn't for me, but I was grateful for the experience. Eventually." She hesitated again, like she couldn't decide if she should say anything else. Then she said, "It let me know what I didn't want."
Her eyes met mine across the kitchen. "And I'm sorry, Iz. For you and Finn. I should've let the two of you have a choice, too. Before now."
"You would let us...choose not to be Brannicks?" I asked. It seemed like the most impossible thing in the world. This was who we were, what we were born to do. You didn't just get to reject your entire bloodline and sacred calling.
But Mom nodded. "If it's what you wanted."
The words hung between us until finally Mom cleared her throat. "Anyway, yes, school is boring. And soul sucking. But everyone should go through it, even if it's only for a little while."
"So what now?" I asked then, pushing my plate away. "I pour some salt and we pack up and leave?" The idea should've filled me with jubilation. A month of regular high school was more than enough for anyone, and it would be nice to get back to our house. And sure, I'd miss Romy and Anderson. And Dex. But Mom was right; we didn't have room for friends in our lives.
Of course, there was one mystery that still needed solving. One thing that might keep us in Ideal a little longer. "But if someone is raising ghosts, what's to stop him or her from just raising another one once we salt the grave?"
Mom pinched the bridge of her nose between her thumb and forefinger. "Good point."
I swallowed. Now or never. "Also, um, one of the kids in PMS...er, the ghost-hunting thing. He's Prodigium."
When Mom's brows shot up, I faltered a little. "Or at least I think he is."
"Think?" Mom repeated. "Iz, you always know when someone is Prodigium. You even know what type."
"Usually, yeah," I said, tucking my hair behind my ears. "But this guy...I can't tell. I didn't even know he was Prodigium until he touched me." Mom's brows went even higher, and I quickly added, "On the hand. In a handshake. No bathing suit areas involved."
She studied me for a long moment before saying, "Are you sure it was magic you felt, and not...other things?"
"Yes!" I exclaimed, throwing up my hands. "God, why does everyone keep saying that?"
Hand on one hip, Mom stared me down. "Who is everyone?"
I swallowed. "Just...just Torin."
"So you told Torin about this boy being Prodigium, but not me?"
It sounded kind of bad when she put it like that. "I just...I wasn't sure it was anything, and I didn't want to bug you while you were working."
"Isolde, I do not know how many times I have to tell you this, but Torin is useless more often than not. If you need advice or help with something, you come to me, and be honest and upfront."
"Like you're being with all your 'research'?" As soon as the words were out of my mouth, I regretted them.