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Excerpt:
My troubles all started the day my grandma
discovered my grimoire in her armoire. I’d flung it in when she’d called
up the stairs for me to “hightail it out to the barn” and feed the lambs.
Like I’m supposed to know what “hightail it”
means. Me, Cilla Swaney, world-traveling military brat. Though I
spoke four languages, I hadn’t yet mastered my native Southern.
Until three weeks and five days ago, I’d only
visited I’m-So-Bored-I-Think-I’ll-Die-ville, North Carolina, on the few―and
thank God brief―furloughs Dad got between posts. Now I was stuck here. Forever. Or
at least until Mom closed on our new house in Chapel Hill, which seemed to be
taking forever.
I’d finally cornered the littlest of Grandma’s
late-born lambs, Lemon Balm, between the wood fence and the red barn wall, when
up at the house the back screen door squeaked, and G-ma’s voice rang out loud
and strident, “Priscilla Lou Swaney. You have some explaining to
do!”
I jerked, and warm milk bathed the back of my hand
as LB hungrily nuzzled the emptying bottle I still held to his mouth. All
three names. Oh mein Gott, was I in for it.
My stomach did an odd jittery thing as I peeked
around the side of the barn. G-ma’s brown and green tie-dye skirt swirled about
her mucked-up barn boots as she crunched down the gravel path leading from the
ancient white farmhouse. Her wire headset plugged into the cordless phone that
was clipped in its permanent position at her waist flapped irritably with her
movements.
That’s another thing. Why couldn’t I have a grandma
like the other American kids I knew? You know, a normal one—a
gray-haired old lady who would put on a red hat and go out to gossip with her
retired friends. Or better yet, one who would buy me all the things my parents
wouldn’t and let me veg out all day eating junk food. No, mine had to be some
sort of leftover hippie who ran her own organic farm and forced me to drink all
these vile fermented beverages she brewed up in her kitchen. Really.
“Let me call you back about the raw cheese, Hector.
I’ve got to deal with a little problem first.”
Stopping right in front of me—the “little
problem”—and not a bit out of breath, G-ma clicked off her phone and thrust the
dog-eared pages of Teen Magick into my face. The book
almost, but unfortunately not fully, covered the narrow-eyed look in her green
eyes. Eyes the same color as mine; the only thing we had in common.
She shook the grimoire in my face. “What
is this nonsense?”
Panic gagged me. My fingers itched to snatch my new
spell book from her, but that would have been a dead giveaway.
She thumbed through the first few pages. “‘A Witch’s
First Grimoire.’ ‘Pox your Pimples.’ ‘Divine Tomorrow’s Test.’
‘Ritual for Samhain.’ What are you doing with this trash?”
I’d been so thrilled when I’d found the tiny Spirit
Rising bookstore while shopping with Mom near UNC. This book had called to me
from the window display. If only I’d bought it after Mom had closed on the
house and we were no longer staying at G-ma’s.
“Uh.” I wracked my brain as I bent over
the lamb, his soft head tickling where he rubbed against my bare legs below my
cut-offs. “That…that’s a book I’m reading for research.”
“Research for what?” She waved at a buzzing
fly, and I caught a whiff of the milk kefir she’d been fermenting earlier.
“School doesn’t start for another week. And watch out! Lemon Balm is about to
knock over the milk pail.”
I patted LB on his butt, sending him galloping off
to the dry summer pasture while giving myself time to whip up a better
explanation. “Well, see, before we left Dad in Izmir, he told me that one of
his new airmen claimed to be a Wiccan and asked me to look into it, see if he had
any reason to be concerned.”
It wasn’t a lie exactly. I mean, Dad had voiced
concern over this eighteen-year-old private I’d been hanging with. Of course,
Dad had been freaking about my “seeing” a guy three years older. He’d have
really freaked if he’d known his airman was teaching me more about casting
enchanted circles than giving heated glances. As if an older guy would notice a
geek like me anyway.
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