Witches' Magic Read online




  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Table of Contents

  Glossary

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Connect with Morgana

  Next Book In This Series

  Also by Morgana Best

  Glossary

  About Morgana Best

  WITCHES’ MAGIC

  MORGANA BEST

  Witches’ Magic

  (Vampires and Wine, Book 4)

  Copyright © 2017 by Morgana Best

  All rights reserved.

  ISBN 9781925674521

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to any person, living or dead, is purely coincidental. The personal names have been invented by the author, and any likeness to the name of any person, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  This book may contain references to specific commercial products, process or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, specific brand-name products and/or trade names of products, which are trademarks or registered trademarks and/or trade names, and these are property of their respective owners. Morgana Best or her associates, have no association with any specific commercial products, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, specific brand-name products and / or trade names of products.

  By this act

  And words of rhyme

  Trouble not

  These books of mine

  With these words I now thee render

  Candle burn and bad return

  3 times stronger to its sender.

  (Ancient Celtic)

  CONTENTS

  Glossary

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Connect with Morgana

  Next Book In This Series

  Also by Morgana Best

  Glossary

  About Morgana Best

  GLOSSARY

  The author has used Australian spelling in this series, so for example, Mum instead of the US spelling Mom, neighbour instead of the US spelling neighbor, realise instead of the US spelling realize. It is Ms, Mr and Mrs in Australia, not Ms., Mr. and Mrs.; cosy and not cozy; 1930s not 1930’s; offence not offense; centre not center; towards not toward; jewellery not jewelry; favour not favor; mould not mold; two storey house not two story house; practise (verb) not practice (verb); odour not odor; smelt not smelled; travelling not traveling; liquorice not licorice; leant not leaned; have concussion not have a concussion; anti clockwise not counterclockwise; go to hospital not go to the hospital; sceptic not skeptic; aluminium not aluminum; learnt not learned. These are just some of the differences.

  Please note that these are not mistakes or typos, but correct Aussie spelling and terms.

  AUSTRALIAN SLANG AND TERMS

  Big Smoke - a city

  Blighter - infuriating or good-for-nothing person

  Blimey - an expression of surprise

  Blue - an argument

  Bluestone - copper sulphate (copper sulfate in US spelling)

  Bluo - a blue laundry additive, an optical brightener

  Boot (car) - trunk (car)

  Bonnet (car) - hood (car)

  Bunging it on - faking something, pretending

  Cark it - die

  Come good - turn out okay

  Copper, cop - police officer

  Coot - silly or annoying person

  Drongo - an idiot

  Fair crack of the whip - a request to be fair, reasonable, just

  Flat out like a lizard drinking water - very busy

  Galah - an idiot

  Garbage - trash

  G’day - Hello

  Give a lift (to someone) - give a ride (to someone)

  Goosebumps - goose pimples

  Laundry (referring to the room) - laundry room

  Like a stunned mullet - very surprised

  Mad as a cut snake - either insane or very angry

  Miles - while Australians have kilometres these days, it is common to use expressions such as, “The road stretched for miles,” “It was miles away.”

  Mow (grass / lawn) - cut (grass / lawn)

  Stone the crows! - an expression of surprise

  Takeaway (food) - Take Out (food)

  Torch - flashlight

  Tuck in (to food) - to eat food hungrily

  Ute /Utility - pickup truck

  Vegemite - Australian food spread, thick, dark brown

  Wardrobe - closet

  Indigenous References

  Bush tucker - food that occurs in the Australian bush

  Koori - the original inhabitants/traditional custodians of the land of Australia in the part of NSW in which this book is set. Murri are the people just to the north. White European culture often uses the term, Aboriginal people.

  CHAPTER 1

  I loved the roar of the waves crashing on the beach at Lighthouse Bay. It was a comforting sound, but now, as I walked along the beach sinking my toes into the wet sand, I was anything but comforted. After all, in the short time I had been in Lighthouse Bay, I had escaped death on more than one occasion.

  I looked up at the rapidly gathering clouds and decided I should head back to Mugwort Manor. I had heard one too many stories about lightning striking people on the beach before the storm had even arrived.

  Perhaps others had the same thought, because the beach was rather deserted, unusual for this time of day. A young couple jogged with an overly enthusiastic blue cattle dog, and a woman with a miniature poodle snatched it up out of their path.

  My regular walks along the beach helped me process everything that had happened to me recently. My aunts had summoned me from the rapid pace of the city to the quieter life at Lighthouse Bay, quieter if you don’t count the homicide factor. They wanted me to manage their Bed and Breakfast establishment, an establishment that didn’t serve breakfast, the irony of which was lost on the aunts.

  My aunts had told me I was a vampire, much to my shock, and had told me that vampires were not the bloodsucking creatures of myth, legend, and Hollywood. Still, that hadn’t helped me sink my teeth into the matter, no pun intended.

  They had neglected to tell me what had happened to my parents, who had gone missing five years earlier. My aunts insisted they didn’t know, but I didn’t believe them. Call it a vibe.

  And speaking of vibes, my right eye was twitching, a warning sig
n. I wondered if it was a warning of lightning, and cast a worried glance over my shoulder. Sure enough, the sky that had been blue and sparkling only minutes earlier was now black and threatening. I picked up speed, rounded the corner, and nearly fell over my cat.

  “Hecate!” I exclaimed. “What are you doing here?”

  The cat, of course, did not respond, but sat and regarded me with wide yellow eyes. I stroked her back for a while, until she lost interest in my attentions. She then hissed and ran back in the direction of the manor.

  Now I was convinced that something was afoot, and it was probably more than thunder. Had there been earthquakes in these parts? I had read that animals reacted strangely just before an earthquake hit.

  As I walked past Lucas O’Callaghan’s cottage, I looked for any sign of occupation, despite the fact I knew he was at his winery, the winery that made Witches’ Brew. Witches’ Brew tasted like wine to a normal person, but actually was a potent brew with just the right amount of specific nutrients that vampires needed.

  I was surprised that Barnabas Butler was not at his usual post, in a chair with his easel just outside the gate to the jungle-themed cottage. A new guest, Barnabas Butler was a watercolourist, the starving-artist-in-the-garret type. When I had asked him where he sold his paintings, he had given me a lengthy and boring lecture about money being the enemy of art. I would have been worried if he hadn’t paid for his accommodation in advance.

  My skin was prickling, although I put that down to the electricity in the air. I heard the first crack of thunder in the distance. Thunderstorms always carried a feeling of anticipation, although I wasn’t entirely convinced that the weather was responsible for the way I felt. I usually enjoyed the scent of the breeze preceding a thunderstorm and the fragrance of the plants which seemed to be amplified at those times.

  Aunt Dorothy was at the back of the manor, tending to the kale in her vegetable garden. She looked up when she saw me, and waved a gloved hand.

  I was about to return her greeting, when Hecate hissed and sprinted around the side of the house.

  “Follow that cat, Valkyrie!” Aunt Dorothy said. “Something’s wrong, you mark my words.”

  I shrugged and did as she asked. I had given up asking the aunts to call me Pepper. They always insisted on using my legal name, Valkyrie.

  The black cat certainly was acting strangely. Her fur was standing on end, and she was prowling as if stalking something. There were no birds or mice in front of her, at least not that I could see. I walked around the side of the manor, stubbing my big toe on one of the flagstones and cursing loudly as I fell headfirst into the wall. I disentangled myself from the jasmine vines and looked down to see the edge of one of my toenails had broken off. Beach sandals were no match for this pathway.

  The crows overhead were noisier than usual, and the butcher birds were making a loud commotion.

  I rounded the corner, and watched as Hecate approached what looked to be a large bag of rubbish that someone had dumped on the porch.

  Only a few more steps, and I gasped.

  CHAPTER 2

  I t was the body of a man.

  I edged forward gingerly, my breath caught in my throat. He had been stabbed, a knife protruding from his chest.

  I stood, frozen to the spot. Who would murder someone in broad daylight? I gathered my wits and ran over to him, trying to avert my eyes from the knife. To my shock, he was still alive. I whipped my phone from my pocket and called 000, emergency. “Ambulance,” I said to the female voice. “And police. Hurry! There’s a man outside my home and he’s been stabbed. The knife is still in him. Hurry!” I said again.

  The voice calmly asked for the address, which I supplied. “Help is on its way,” I said to the man, although looking at him, I realised that help would come too late.

  He was trying to speak. I crouched down, and put my ear close to his mouth, forgetting for a moment that the voice on the phone was still speaking.

  “Beware of Lucas.”

  Was that what he said? Or was it, “Beware of Lucas’s…”? I couldn’t make out the words. I leant a little closer and asked, “What did you say?”

  Too late. He was gone. It was only then that I noticed the note impaled by the knife in his chest that read, Agnes, you’re next!

  The voice on the phone asked me if I was all right, and I was about to answer. I didn’t get the chance. I dropped my phone in fright when a scream pierced the air behind me. I spun around to see Bella Barker, her hands pressed to her cheeks. I rarely saw Bella, the aunts’ cleaning lady. She was a hard worker, and kept to herself. I hurried over to comfort her, but the aunts emerged from the front door of the manor, right behind Bella.

  Bella hurried over to the body. “Is he dead?” She felt for a pulse, which I thought showed great presence of mind in the situation. She looked up at me. “No pulse.” Her hands flew back to her cheeks.

  Aunt Agnes was as white as a sheet, and was trembling violently. “A stranger is dead, right on our doorstep,” she said loudly. “Whoever could he be?”

  Aunt Dorothy pushed past her. “Why, it’s Collier Cardon!” she said. “Don’t you know your own ex-boyfriend, Agnes?”

  “Hush, Dorothy,” Aunt Agnes snapped. “Of course it’s not him.”

  “It’s him! It’s him!” Aunt Dorothy said.

  “You know how bad your eyesight is, Dorothy,” Maude said firmly. “It doesn’t look anything like Collier. Besides, Agnes hasn’t seen him in years.”

  The aunts turned around in unison and looked at Bella, who had receded into the background. “Bella, take the rest of the day off,” Aunt Agnes called out to her.

  Bella once more removed her hands from her cheeks. “Sorry, what did you say?” She cupped her hand behind her right ear. Agnes repeated her words, more loudly this time. “But, but, won’t I need to speak to the police?” Bella stammered.

  “We can’t worry the police about this,” Aunt Agnes all but yelled. “It will be bad for business. You understand, don’t you, Bella?”

  Bella was quick to agree. “Yes, of course. Whatever you say.”

  I was surprised that Bella agreed, but I expected she thought there would be a big fat bonus in it for her. “I’ve already called the police,” I told them.

  The aunts were visibly distressed by my words. Aunt Agnes rubbed her forehead. “Shouldn’t you have consulted us first, Valkyrie?”

  I crossed my arms over my chest. I didn’t want to say too much, given that Bella Barker was there. No doubt the aunts had their own reasons to keep this murder from the police. As the sound of sirens grew ever closer, Agnes turned to Bella once more and spoke loudly and clearly. “Go to the kitchen and make yourself a nice cup of tea and wait there for the police. After they speak to you, take the rest of the day off.”

  Bella scurried away. “I take it he was a vampire?” I asked the aunts.

  They all nodded. “Lucas should have handled this, not the police,” Aunt Agnes said. “Collier was a vampire. This is a matter for a Cleaner.”

  I sighed, as I usually did when reminded that Lucas was a Cleaner, one of the most dangerous vampires. Cleaners were responsible for keeping the fact that vampires and Shifters existed from the general public. They cleaned up after any murder that was perpetrated by vampires or Shifters. I pointed to the knife protruding from the man’s chest. “I thought vampires bit people, not stabbed them.”

  The aunts exchanged glances. “You’ve been watching too much TV,” Aunt Agnes said dismissively. “Valkyrie, you mustn’t tell the police that he was an old boyfriend of mine.”

  “Surely they’ll find out,” I protested.

  Aunt Agnes shook her head. “We haven’t dated in centuries. The police will never know.”

  “Bella will tell them,” I said.

  Aunt Agnes was still shaking her head. “She’s as deaf as a post without her hearing aids, and she’s waiting for new ones. She wouldn’t have heard us talk about it. Honestly, I don’t know why the two of you ha
d to mention it.” She addressed those words to Dorothy and Maude.

  Maude put her hands on her hips. “Why do you always say, ‘The two of you’? It was Dorothy. I was doing a good job of covering up. Dorothy was the one who opened her big mouth, not me. Every time Dorothy does something, you always say, ‘The two of you,’ but it’s always just Dorothy.”

  Aunt Agnes rolled her eyes. “Don’t you think we have more important things to worry about right now, Maude?”

  Aunt Maude shrugged and leant over the body. “Should we leave that note pinned to him?”

  Dorothy and Agnes went over to stand next to Maude. “No, because it connects me to the murder,” Agnes said, shaking her finger at Aunt Maude.

  “The fact that he’s on your porch kind of connects you to the murder, anyway,” I pointed out.

  Agnes ignored me and reached for the note, but I yelled, “Stop! Forensics might find evidence of the note and find out it’s been removed. That will cast suspicion on you, nothing surer.”

  The aunts exchanged glances. “I suppose you’re right,” Aunt Agnes said reluctantly. “If only this was like the good old days, before the police knew anything about DNA.”

  The other aunts murmured their agreement.

  The sirens grew louder as a large silver Ford followed by an ambulance appeared around the trees, and both rapidly came to a halt. Detective Mason and Detective Oakes jumped out of the car.

  CHAPTER 3

  I hadn’t seen Detectives Mason and Oakes since the murder before last. They had swiftly banished us to the living room, while they attended to the body. We were all sipping Witches’ Brew. A crack of thunder startled me, causing my wine goblet to tilt precariously. The sky darkened, the remaining shards of sunlight filtering through the window revealing millions of particles of dust. Clearly, Bella hadn’t done this room today. Still, it was a pretty sight, as the light caught the crystals hanging from one of the lustreware vases and reflected rainbow patterns on the opposite wall.

  I put the goblet down and leant back in the seat, clutching a hideous, faded tapestry cushion to me. Had I done the wrong thing in calling the police? The aunts sure seemed to think so. In fact, Aunt Agnes was on the phone to Lucas right at that minute, speaking in hushed tones.

 

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