Batter and Spells

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by Zoe Arden

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  CHAPTER ONE

  "Ava!" Trixie cried. "Ava, look at this."

  I turned toward my aunt. Trixie stood at the bottom of the ladder she'd been using all morning. She lifted her hand into the air and the streamer she'd left dangling from the ceiling began to twist on its own. It moved from one end of the room to the other, affixing itself in a far corner so that it was completely stretched out. Glitter melded with the pink crepe paper as if it had been there all along. The entire bakery began to glow a soft silver as the lights hit the glitter and bounced off.

  "Well?" Trixie asked, looking from Ava to Eleanor. "What do you think?"

  "I like it," I told her.

  Eleanor, Trixie's older sister, smiled broadly. "Glitter," she muttered, shaking her head. "No birthday party is complete without glitter. Why didn't I think of that?"

  "Because your brain is muddled with old age," Trixie said, laughing. "Whereas mine is still young and vibrant."

  Eleanor's brow furrowed. Her bright blond hair—a trait Ava shared with both of her aunts—swung around her head in a soft halo. "The last time I checked, we were both in our forties."

  "Yes but I'm just barely into them. You've been there for quite some time. Besides, if anyone asks, I'm thirty-nine."

  "You've been thirty-nine for the last three years," Eleanor said.

  "Witch's prerogative," Trixie said, still smiling. She winked at me and turned to grab another streamer.

  Eleanor lifted one hand, pointed her pinky at her younger sister, and twirled it around in the air. Trixie's hair lifted toward the ceiling and took Trixie with it. Her feet dangled off the ground.

  "Hey!" Trixie shouted. "Put me down!"

  I tried not to laugh but it was impossible. Trixie's hot pink leggings kicked out from under her and the bright yellow shirt she wore flared around her tummy. She looked like a piece of Easter candy. She struggled against Eleanor's spell for a minute before finally lifting her hand and washing it over her body, uttering a soft incantation as she did so. She dropped to the ground, her hair a messy tangle around her shoulders.

  "When you mess with your sister's hair," Trixie said, attempting to straighten out her long locks, "you've crossed a line." She tried using her fingers as a comb to smooth out the knots that had formed but her rings kept getting caught in them.

  "When you call your sister old," Eleanor said, "you've crossed a line."

  They stood glowering at each other, their hands on their hips. Their lips were pursed so tightly they looked like a couple of fish.

  "I have news for both of you," I told them. "I turned twenty-two today. To me, you're both old."

  Their eyes widened. My father, Eli Fortune, laughed from the corner where he'd retreated when Eleanor and Trixie's bickering had begun. He knew better than to get in their way.

  "You can't be mad at me for saying that," I told Eleanor and Trixie as their glares turned from each other to me. "It's my birthday. I'm pretty sure that means I get to say and do whatever I want."

  They looked at each other and a second later their frowns turned to grins. The three of us started giggling.

  "If your mother were here," Eleanor said, shaking her head, "I'm pretty sure she'd send you to your room. She was older than both of us."

  The thought of my mother interrupted my giggles. Even though she'd died shortly after I was born, there were times I felt as if I'd known her. My father and my aunts always painted such a vivid picture of her that I could close my eyes and see her anytime I wished.

  "Come on," my dad said, clapping his hands together, "we've still got a lot to do before the party tonight."

  Trixie grabbed another set of streamers, and Eleanor went back to work on her expansion charm. Our bakery, The Mystic Cupcake, was only large enough to hold a couple dozen people. She was attempting to make it big enough to hold a few hundred.

  "Do you really think we need to expand it so much?" I asked Aunt Eleanor. "I mean, how many people are really going to show up to my party tonight aside from you and Lucy?"

  "You can never be sure," Eleanor said. "I invited everyone."

  I blinked. "Everyone? You mean... everyone here in Sweetland Cove?" Our town was small but it still held roughly 2500 people. I didn't think they would all be showing up this evening. Not all of them even liked me. I'd only been on the island a year or so and was still considered an outsider by many.

  "No, of course not," Eleanor said, laughing lightly. My shoulders relaxed. "I invited everyone on Heavenly Haven."

  My eyes bulged from their sockets. "You what?" I squealed. "You invited everyone on the entire island?"

  Eleanor looked at me as if I'd lost my marbles. "Of course, I did. Why shouldn't I?"

  I looked at my father, who just shrugged.

  "Why would you invite everyone in Mistmoor?" I asked. "They don't like anyone in Sweetland Cove."

  Mistmoor Point was the only other town on Heavenly Haven, a small island off the coast of Florida. Mistmoor and Sweetland had never exactly gotten along.

  "There are exceptions," Eleanor said.

  "That's true," Trixie jumped in. "What about Felicity? And Lincoln?"

  "Your aunts have a point," my dad said. "Tazzie Singer has always been friendly with Sweetland. You wouldn't want to exclude her, would you?"

  "No, I just..." I let out a loud sigh. I was looking forward to my party this evening, I just didn't want anything to go wrong. Mistmoor and Sweetland didn't mix well together. It seemed like the sort of set up that was just asking for trouble. Then again, there were only a handful of people from Mistmoor likely to show up. I'd be happy to see Felicity, Lincoln, and Tazzie. I doubted anyone else from there would come.

  "Okay," I said, sighing and picking up a crystal bowl.

  "Besides," Eleanor said, "even Mistmoor needs something to take its mind off this Polly Peacock nonsense."

  I set the bowl on a counter as the door chimed and Natalie Vargas walked in. For once, she wasn't dragging her two small children along with her.

  "Did I hear you say Polly Peacock?" Natalie asked. She had brown hair that was tied back into a low ponytail. She tugged at it, her eyes shining brightly, as she waited for the latest bit of gossip.

  "I was just saying that we needed something to take our minds off things," Eleanor told her, trying to ignore the greedy look in her eyes. Natalie's gossiping had gotten worse when she'd hit thirty a few months ago, as if entering a new decade had triggered some internal desire to spread rumors.

  Natalie's eyes gleamed brightly. "Well, for the record, I can't believe that they actually released her. It's a terrible thing. Practically tragic." The twinkle in her eyes only grew stronger. I knew she was building to something big. "That being said, I heard Polly's planning on moving to Los Angeles. She wants to be a movie star."

  Natalie waited for her words to sink in. My dad and aunts all looked at each other, our brows crinkled. My dad finally cleared his throat. "I don't think Polly's allowed to go that far on her parole."

  "Besides," said Eleanor, "Polly never said anything about wanting to be an actress when she was still living in Sweetland Cove."

  "Well," Natalie said gruffly, "that's just what I heard. I thought you might be interested, considering your history with her."

  I groaned, trying not to think about the last time I'd seen Polly. She'd tried to kill me and my old boyfriend, Damon Tellinger. Damon was human and had been so freaked out afterward that he'd broken up with me and left Heavenly Haven for good. I hadn't talked to him in months. Not that it mattered much now that I had Colt but I couldn't help wondering about him sometimes. I hoped he was doing well.

  Natalie's eyes strayed to the counters lined with strawberry rose cupcakes and dark chocolate truffle cookies. "I just came in for a few snacks for the kids. I could care less about Polly Peacock." She moved toward the counter and picked up a tin of caramel cookies with calming extract and a second tin of party-time pralines. "I think I'll just get these."

  "Lucy says that Polly
's moving to the mainland," I told them all. "She heard it from her father."

  Lucy Lockwood was my best friend and almost as big a gossip as Natalie Vargas. Lucy, however, had a certain degree of tact when discussing rumors that Natalie had never been able to develop.

  Natalie laughed. "That's ridiculous. Why would she want to move to Florida when she can go to California and see celebrities? With her background, she'll fit right in. Everyone knows that movie stars are all drug addicts and murderers."

  The door chimed and I looked over to see Tootsie, Snowball, and Rocky walk in. Snowball was my familiar, an all-white cat I'd found as a kitten. Actually, she'd found me. She was still only a year old but she had grown so much in the time we'd bonded that I sometimes had a hard time believing she had ever been so small.

  Tootsie was Trixie's familiar, a fluffy orange cat who had belonged to my mother before her death. Tootsie and I shared a bond as well. Tootsie was very protective of me—almost as protective as Snowball—and was a sort of a secondary familiar, though technically there was no such thing. That technicality had never stopped the connection we shared though.

  Rocky was a gray and white wolfhound who had been Eleanor's familiar since she was a child. He was big, silly, and loved to lick my face whenever I was trying to sleep. He was devoted to Eleanor and would rat me out in a second if he thought I was up to something. I loved him lots but had learned to watch what I said around him.

  "Hi, Snowy," I said, reaching down to scratch Snowball's head as she wound her way between my feet.

  "Snowball has news," she purred.

  "News!" Natalie said, snapping her fingers. "I almost forgot. Do you know who else Dean Lampton and those warthogs at COMHA let out?" She took a breath, not bothering to wait for our answers. "Calista Woodruff!"

  "Who?" I asked.

  Tootsie let out a loud meow. Trixie and Eleanor glanced his way. "Tootsie has news, too," he said, his whiskers twitching. "Tootsie has important news."

  Natalie did not give us a chance to ask Tootsie any questions. "Calista's a dim-witch from Mistmoor who accidentally killed some people a couple years ago. She was twelve at the time. Everyone said she was pure evil."

  "No one said that," Eleanor scolded.

  "Well, they should have," said Natalie, her face twitching.

  "Calista didn't know what she was doing," Trixie jumped in. "She was a child. She's still a child. She can't be older than fourteen."

  Rocky began to bark. He ran up to Eleanor and wagged his tail, licking the back of her hand. "Rocky must tell Mama what he knows. Mama must listen."

  Eleanor scratched his head. "Yes, of course, just a moment." She turned her eyes back to Natalie. "If COMHA did one thing right, I think it was releasing Calista. That girl deserves a second chance."

  Natalie let out a loud laugh. "Well, maybe Polly can take her to L.A. when she goes. The two of them belong there together."

  "I seriously doubt anyone is moving to L.A.," my dad said, blowing up another balloon.

  "If Polly doesn't go to California," Natalie said, crossing her arms over her chest, "then where is she planning to go? She can't come back here; this town would eat her alive."

  "What about Mistmoor?" I ventured.

  Eleanor and Trixie shook their heads.

  "They'd be worse than Sweetland," Eleanor said. "Polly would be a criminal and an outsider."

  "Mama," Snowball said, head-butting my ankle. I reached down to pet his head. "Mama must listen to Snowy."

  "Yes," I muttered, my thoughts on Polly.

  "I bet she goes to the mainland," my dad said. "Calista, too. It's the only thing that makes sense."

  "Nothing about this makes sense," Natalie said. On that, they all agreed.

  The door chimed just then and everyone looked to see who'd entered. My jaw hit the floor. A woman was standing there; her blond hair had been cut since the last time I'd seen her but it was still to her shoulders. It fell in soft ringlets, and she had the pinkest lips you'd ever see without lipstick. I tried to breathe and realized I'd forgotten how.

  Polly Peacock looked around the bakery, her face pale. "Hello," she finally said, as if she were an old friend.

  "Snowball has been trying to tell Mama," Snowy said in a whisper. "Polly Peacock is back in Sweetland Cove."

  Is FREE on Kindle Unlimited (around 330 pages)

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  ReedFoster Press House

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  ALSO BY ZOE ARDEN

  A Cozy Mystery Book

  Standalone Novella : Cake Spell Disaster

  LINK: Standalone Novella : Cake Spell Disaster

  << Sweetland Witch Series >>

  Book 1 : Witch Cake Murders

  LINK: Book 1 - Witch Cake Murders

  Book 2 : The Witching Flavor

  LINK: Book 2 - The Witching Flavor

  Book 3 : A Drop of Witch

  LINK: Book 3 - A Drop of Witch

  Book 4 : Sweet Murder Hex

  LINK: Book 4 - Sweet Murder Hex

  Book 5 : Batter and Spells

  LINK: Book 5 - Batter and Spells

  Book 6 : Portion Disaster

  LINK: Book 6 - Portion Disaster

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  Copyright © 2017 by

  Zoe Arden

  and

  ReedFoster press House

  All Rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

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