A Spoonful of Magic

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by Irene Radford




  Praise for the novels of Irene Radford

  “Grabbed me from the first page with its dynamic action, compelling characters and their relationships, insightful world building, and a sweet romance that only adds to the suspense.”

  —Deborah J. Ross, author of The Seven-Petaled Shield

  “Radford’s considerable gifts as a mesmerizing storyteller shine with undeniable luster.”

  —RT Reviews

  “An accomplished fantasy author, Radford has weaved a magical, captivating adventure that was hard to put down. . . . It is full of fantasy, magic, action, adventure, mystery and excitement.”

  —Night Owl Reviews

  “Intriguing. . . . Reeled me in and wouldn’t let me leave.”

  —LitPick

  “This action-packed plot makes for engaged and thoughtful reading.”

  —Kliatt

  DAW Books Presents the Finest in Fantasy by

  IRENE RADFORD:

  A SPOONFUL OF MAGIC

  The Pixie Chronicles:

  THISTLE DOWN (Book 1)

  CHICORY UP (Book 2)

  The Dragon Nimbus:

  THE GLASS DRAGON (Book 1)

  THE PERFECT PRINCESS (Book 2)

  THE LONELIEST MAGICIAN (Book 3)

  THE WIZARD’S TREASURE (Book 4)

  The Dragon Nimbus History:

  THE DRAGON’S TOUCHSTONE (Book 1)

  THE LAST BATTLEMAGE (Book 2)

  THE RENEGADE DRAGON (Book 3)

  The Stargods Trilogy:

  THE HIDDEN DRAGON (Book 1)

  THE DRAGON CIRCLE (Book 2)

  THE DRAGON’S REVENGE (Book 3)

  Copyright © 2017 by Phyllis Irene Radford.

  All Rights Reserved.

  Cover art by Lindsay Look.

  Cover design by G-Force Design.

  DAW Book Collectors No. 1776.

  Published by DAW Books, Inc.

  375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014

  All characters and events in this book are fictitious.

  Any resemblance to persons living or dead is strictly coincidental.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal, and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage the electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  Nearly all the designs and trade names in this book are registered trademarks. All that are still in commercial use are protected by United States and international trademark law.

  Ebook ISBN: 9780756412920

  DAW TRADEMARK REGISTERED

  U.S. PAT. AND TM. OFF. AND FOREIGN COUNTRIES

  —MARCA REGISTRADA

  HECHO EN U.S.A.

  PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.

  Version_1

  For Miriam Elizabeth Bentley Radford, my mom who taught me how to cook without burning down the house. (Close call a couple of times.) And Catherine Cassarno who taught me to dance from the heart.

  Contents

  Praise for the novels of Irene Radford

  Also by Irene Radford

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-One

  Twenty-Two

  Twenty-Three

  Twenty-Four

  Twenty-Five

  Twenty-Six

  Twenty-Seven

  Twenty-Eight

  Twenty-Nine

  Thirty

  Thirty-One

  Thirty-Two

  Thirty-Three

  Thirty-Four

  Thirty-Five

  Thirty-Six

  Thirty-Seven

  Thirty-Eight

  Thirty-Nine

  Forty

  Forty-One

  Forty-Two

  Forty-Three

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  One

  “HAPPY ANNIVERSARY, DAFFY. And thanks for the last thirteen years, the most wonderful years of my life.” G raised his champagne flute and waited for me to click mine against his.

  And waited.

  Oh, tell another whopper, you lying S.O.B.

  Somehow, I cracked something resembling a smile.

  “Gabriel Sebastian Deschants, what is my name?” I knew he hated his full name. He’d been G for so long he probably didn’t remember how he signed our marriage license application. I’d never seen his birth certificate.

  He grimaced, and I almost rejoiced in causing him a small bit of pain. He deserved it.

  Still, we’d been married for an unlucky thirteen years, together nine months before that. That should count for something.

  But it didn’t. Not to him anyway.

  “Daffy, what is this about?” He set his flute down carefully and speared me with his fabulous royal blue eyes. He knew what he was doing. Used car salesmen melted under that gaze. Bank loan managers lowered interest rates by three points under the scrutiny of that gaze.

  Not me. Not any longer anyway. I fell victim to him the first day we met. After that, I’m not sure if any decision I made was mine or his channeled through my mouth.

  “You haven’t used my real name in so long, I just need to know that you remembered.”

  “Daphne Rose Wallace.” He ground out each word as if dragging them from the back of his memory, a place he didn’t go very often.

  “Daphne Rose Wallace Deschants now.” I lifted my own gaze to him. “Remember the Deschants part?”

  “Of course, I remember. This is our wedding anniversary. What’s got into you, Daffy?”

  Our waiter came over with the bill for our very expensive dinner enclosed in a discreet black folder. He must have sensed the end of our sojourn. “Was the meal prepared satisfactorily, Madame?” he asked hesitantly, staring at the slices of rare prime rib still on my plate, along with half the garlic mashed potatoes and roasted asparagus. And the still full flute of champagne.

  “The food was just right.” I smiled genuinely at the troubled waiter.

  “Daffy?” G slapped his credit card into the black folder and handed it to the waiter.

  “Eugene, Oregon may look like a thriving metropolis built around a major university and agricultural crossroads, but it is still very much a small town in attitude,” I said almost reluctantly. As much as I had practiced my speech, I still hesitated to say what I needed to say.

  Maybe I should just keep quiet.

  But I’d never be able to live with myself, live with him, if I didn’t get it out there.

  “Everyone knows everyone else and they gossip. A lot.”

  Was that the beginning of a blanch on his face? I wanted to make him squirm, and he’d given me the ammunition.

  “Last week when you were supposed to be in Dubai on business, Belle tripped over her own shadow and broke her wrist. She got a black eye to go with the blue-an
d-green cast. You didn’t answer your cell. You weren’t registered in the hotel where you said you’d be. And the emergency number of your employer is disconnected.”

  He had the grace to look away.

  “However, I received an email from one of your email accounts with pictures attached.”

  His blanch took on a green tinge.

  I held up my phone with the most incriminating photo showing. A naked G with an equally unclothed blonde sprawled upon a mattress. The white sheets and pillowcases looked like they were from an anonymous motel or a dorm room. I couldn’t see enough of the woman’s face to tell if she was jailbait young or old enough to know better. G didn’t have his wedding ring on in the photo.

  “Daffy, whatever you have heard . . .”

  “What I see.” I grabbed the phone and flipped to the next photo and the three after that. The time stamp on the pictures, from a high-quality camera showed 02:07 AM. Dated three nights before.

  The next morning I’d received a phone call from Flora Chambers, a neighbor who had moved three blocks away to a newer and better house, and fellow officer of the PTA, wondering why G was in old downtown instead of Florida as I’d told her at the last PTA meeting.

  “Where? How?” G’s throat worked like his fine dinner was about to come up. “You have to know that photos can be altered. Not everything is at it seems. You know this town. . . .”

  “What about this one? It’s a close-up. No distortions from window screens or sheer drapes or glass or anything. She’s draped all over you like a tick on a dog’s ear!”

  He waved the phone away and tried to fix me with that compelling gaze again.

  Had he used it on more young women? I focused on the bridge of his nose rather than let his eyes persuade me away from my course of action.

  “You didn’t deny it, G. You just tried to dismiss the evidence.”

  “Isn’t that the same thing?”

  “No.” I pushed back my chair and stood. Suddenly, I was more disappointed than angry. Deep inside, I’d truly hoped he had a logical explanation for his actions. Something weird and unbelievable. In this town, not much was too weird and unbelievable to discount. I’d grasp anything he offered at this point.

  “This is not what it seems, Daffy.” He gulped. “Parlor trick magic is . . . This town embraces the weird. Mundane cameras can’t capture magical illusion.”

  “Spin me another one. If you didn’t want to get caught, why did you email me these pictures?”

  “I didn’t. Someone had to have hacked my account. Which address?”

  “Your work account, chiefofficer_GSD@globalwiz ardsoftware.org.”

  For half an instant, his eyes went wide with . . . fear? What did he have to be afraid of?

  “Look, Daffy, there is a dark and ugly world out there that neither you nor the kids are prepared . . .” He trailed off and looked away rather than finish his explanation, which didn’t look very logical or believable from where I stood.

  The waiter hastened back with the processed credit slip. I waited for G to sign it with his hand-turned wooden fountain pen that always resided in his breast pocket. I watched him add in the tip and sign with upright letters, very unlike his usual florid flourish. I needed to make sure he didn’t stiff the kid and force me to pay for the lavish dinner out of my own savings. He’d done that once before. I’d dismissed it then as his being totally distracted about work. Not tonight. If he was distracted, it was because I confronted him with the truth for a change.

  I didn’t truly know where his money came from. If he was hanging out in sleazy motels with bimbos rather than traveling the world negotiating trade contracts and software installations, then what did he do?

  “Don’t do this now, Daffy. We’ve had thirteen wonderful years together.” He took my elbow and escorted me out to the parking lot. I shook him off. “I need you now more than ever.”

  “You need me to babysit your children. Thirteen years when I’ve raised your son as my own. I adopted him on our wedding day, so he’d never need to ask about the mother who died giving birth to him. I’ve given you two wonderful daughters, kept house, cooked, and picked up after you.”

  “And I love you for that. I do truly love you despite the temptations I face every day. I built you a wrought-iron-and-glass greenhouse that fills a quarter of the backyard where the stables used to be. That should prove something of my devotion to you.”

  “You love me for the services I give you. That I raised your son for you while you traveled the world. Not because you love me. But I do thank you for the greenhouse.” I jerked away from him and headed from the parking lot toward the sidewalk.

  “Daffy, where are you going?”

  “Home.”

  “The car is this way.”

  “I’ll walk.”

  “It’s over a mile! And it’s dark. Anything could be hiding in the bushes.”

  “Anything like us?” Three young men—barely out of their teens—appeared before me. The center boy, taller than the others by half a head, had a wealth of straight black hair but pale skin and eyes. Three days’ worth of beard dirtied his face. He aimed a gun at my head.

  His eyes didn’t quite focus and looked a bit glassy.

  A hasty glance over my shoulder showed us just beyond range of the parking lot lights and security cameras.

  What better place to steal drug money than right outside the most expensive restaurant in town! Well, maybe not the most expensive, but right up there with the four-star hotels and such.

  I froze with fear.

  “That’s wise, lady. Now give us your purse and no one gets hurt.”

  I fumbled for the tiny evening purse hanging from my shoulder on a gold chain. It didn’t contain much: some small change, house key, credit card, driver’s license.

  House key! They’d know where I lived and could get in. My kids were home alone. I couldn’t do it.

  A breath of air stirred behind me.

  G leaped forward, pulling his fancy fountain pen from his breast pocket. As he moved, the pen telescoped out into a long wand and shot red laser light at the muggers. He took a classic fencer’s pose, right leg forward with his no-longer-pen aimed straight forward, and his left arm up, behind his head for balance.

  He wiggled the wand. The red light did not sear a hole into the skull of the boy with the gun. No. Nothing so conventional. Nothing so normal.

  The light spread into a complicated web that encased the boy and his gun into a sparkling cage of immobility.

  A flick of G’s wrist generated two more cages to keep the other two muggers from fleeing.

  I couldn’t move. Couldn’t think. Couldn’t understand.

  Inside the cages, the three boys blinked in bewilderment; they breathed shallowly. Nothing else moved. Not even an involuntary quirk of the lips or flick of a trigger finger.

  “For the crime of frightening my lady, you will leave here with no memory of what you did and no knowledge of what that weapon is. You will feel compelled to complete one thousand hours of public service . . . each. Any money you might have used to buy drugs you will donate to charity,” he intoned, as if reciting a ritual.

  Ritual. That was the key.

  He flicked the pen/wand three times, as if tapping each boy on the head. The electrical cages dissolved. The center boy looked at the gun in his hand in horror and dropped it. It clattered noisily on the sidewalk. Then they ran off, each in a different direction, as if they did not know each other.

  G pocketed the gun. It hardly distorted the lines of his custom-tailored suit.

  “Th . . . that’s not an ordinary pen.” He’d had it as long as I’d known him. He had it tucked into his breast pocket even when wearing G-casual, a polo shirt and khakis.

  “Not exactly. No.” He stared at it a long moment. Then it collapsed back into its normal shape. I didn
’t see what he did to make it happen.

  “It’s not some fancy electronics gadget either.” My mind began working again. A few oddities about my husband began to make sense. Like bringing home tree-fresh peaches in January because I had a craving. Or always having the little bit of snow that fell shoveled off our long gravel driveway before dawn, before he got out of bed, or when he was “away” on business.

  Or juggling fifteen breakable items as a party trick. Especially if he left them hanging on their own for long breathless moments. Come to think of it, he’d only performed that trick once, at a party of his friends and business associates. Never with my friends.

  Oh, yes; he had magic. A lot of people in this town had parlor trick magic.

  This was something else entirely. And that pen was . . .

  “No, it’s not ordinary.”

  “What is it?” A wand if I had a guess.

  “For your own safety, you don’t want to know.” He lifted that fabulous blue gaze to my face and held me captive. “Daphne Rose, you do not remember. . . .”

  “The hell I don’t!” I broke free of his hypnosis—or enthrallment—or whatever it was. I had to turn my face so that I didn’t look directly at him, any part of him.

  Especially the bulge that began stirring in his crotch. He was turned on by this . . . whatever it was.

  “You just used ritual magic to subdue three drug addicts and force them to dedicate their lives to service rather than finding their next fix. Did you cure them of their addiction, too?”

  “No, I can’t do that. I can only redirect their resources and energy until their bodies become clear of the addiction and their brains reset.”

  “Nice of you. So where did the ritual magic come from?” My anger was stirring again, as much as his lust. “That’s a whole lot more than a parlor trick.”

  “How do you know about ritual magic?”

  “This is Eugene, Oregon, G! Home of the Fairy Festival, the center of all things weird in the Willamette Valley. You can’t walk two blocks downtown without running into six shops selling some variety of mystical paraphernalia. I’m half owner in a coffee shop that sells incense and crystals and candles and books about magic on the side.” I had to stop to draw breath.

 

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