Showing posts with label Wolf's Magic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wolf's Magic. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

DIVINE'S EMPORIUM by Michelle Levigne

DIVINE'S EMPORIUM - Book One in Michelle Levigne's Neighborlee, Ohio Series

Maurice was a Fae in a lot of trouble. When he got caught going to extremes, giving the bad guys a taste of their own medicine, his punishment included 2 years of exile in the Human realms -- shrunk down to 5 inches tall, with shrunken magic to match, and stuck with wings no self-respecting Fae would be caught dead in.

Divine's Emporium was a shop on the edge of Neighborlee, steeped in magic, and its owner, Angela, had secrets and magic of her own. She became Maurice's probation officer, to guide him on his journey of learning moderation and to work off his punishment by helping Humans on their journeys to love.

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Chapter One:

The curiosity shop, Heart's Desire, had been in existence exactly two months, three days, and forty-four minutes when Maurice struck gold. All that work, all that planning, all that discomfort of living inside a disguise--all that seething every time he saw that poor half-wit, Forsythe, get kicked around the town that by all rights, he should own. It was all paid for the moment Jordan Price sauntered into Maurice's store and smirked as he laid his gold credit card down on the counter.

Jordan Price, who had capitalized on his father's cheating ways and made bad old Dad look like an amateur. Who realized that his father had cheated Forsythe senior out of his property when they were college boys, and instead of doing the right thing and becoming a hero by restoring the stolen property, set about to make sure Forsythe junior never got a decent break. Who, when his wife stumbled on the paperwork proving that Forsythe owned the property the town was built on, the Price estate, and the gold mine that financed Price Industries, threatened the poor woman and her entire family to silence her. Then he drove her into a nervous breakdown to make sure she stayed silent. While she was in the hospital, he paid a crooked doctor to commit her permanently, under constant medication, and then divorced her so he could marry his slinky secretary who preferred diamonds and furs over honesty.

That same Jordan Price looked like he could buy everything in Maurice's store. Anywhere else, he probably could without making a dent in his credit limit. Inside the tiny mountain town of Sunrise, he could have anything he wanted without paying a fair price. But Maurice and his store weren't for sale, and neither were they ordinary.

Even if Jordan Price wasn't consciously aware of that inconvenient fact, he sensed it. All crooks had ESP when it came to sensing someone who could not only match them at their crooked games, but had an advantage.

Maurice had the biggest advantage of all.

Everything in his store was based in magic. Because Maurice was a Fae, born with magic in his blood, born with a long life ahead of him and a driving need for entertainment. Tormenting bullies had been his latest and most satisfying hobby for the last seven or eight years. With a flick of his fingers, he could make everything in Heart's Desire disappear. Including everything that he sold to the people of Sunrise; take it right out of their homes without leaving a clue to what had happened.

It was all illusion, just like their self-induced illusion that they were decent, hard-working, honest, charitable people. There were a few people in town who still had hearts and listened to their consciences. Maurice watched how they treated poor, half-wit Forsythe, and he rewarded the good ones. The ones who dared to help Forsythe while Jordan Price and his cronies were watching were the real heroes of the story, as far as Maurice was concerned. He was just there to deliver the lightning bolt of justice.

And today, after all his hard work, planning and plotting and watching the people of this town and deciphering what made them tick and what made them sweat, he was about to win.

Checkmate.

D-day.

Jordan Price finished putting his credit card down on the counter and looked at the crooked, white-haired, half-deaf woman perched on her stool--Maurice's most triumphant and amusing disguise so far--and he sweated. Three drops on his left check. Four drops on his right. And a veritable rainforest springing to life at his hairline.

Which, if Maurice was correct, he had just noticed was receding at an alarming rate.

Maurice amused himself at night, when he couldn't sleep, by picking which specific hair follicles in Jordan's head would die next.

"I want--" Jordan stopped short, his voice cracking. He straightened up, licked his lips, coughed to clear his throat, and started again. "I need to speak with you about that photo." He gestured at the photo encased in the antique silver frame hanging on the wall behind the counter.

Underneath the magic Maurice had wrapped around it, the frame was actually an innocuous plastic dime store frame, painted to look silver, with a photo filler of one of those generic, happy families playing at the seashore.

Maurice was exceedingly proud of the spell at work on that frame. The image was always different, depending on who looked at it. His spell dove into the mind of the observer and dug out the most embarrassing, terrifying, life-destroying memory, and superimposed it on the photo.

He could have looked into Jordan Price's mind through the spell to see what mortified and frightened the big town bully, but Maurice had his standards. He had done enough stupid, selfish things in his long life--starting with giving Christopher Columbus the wrong directions to get from Genoa to Madrid--he didn't want to see what others had done. He was rather proud of himself that he still had that much mercy in his soul.

That didn't mean he wouldn't or couldn't take advantage of the hundreds of guilty consciences in this self-satisfied little town. So far he had sold that same photo to sixteen men and forty-three women--either proving that women had more money or listened to their guilty consciences a lot sooner. He knew of at least another sixty or so people on the verge of breaking down and coming in to remove the evidence of some blight on their past.

For each person who paid for and left the store with the photo, Maurice gave them a subliminal kick in the pants to urge them to be nicer to their fellow man, starting with poor half-wit Forsythe, and then made them immune to that particular spell, so they no longer saw the photo and frame. They had a couple of hours of terror when they couldn't find the incriminating photo they had just purchased, but when they came back to the store--and they always did--they wouldn't see it hanging behind the counter anymore. And the photo always reappeared, to wait for the next guilt-stricken, sweating bully or cheat to come in and pay to ensure no one would learn their horrific secrets.

Jordan Price was the crowning achievement. The first and most important reason Maurice had settled in the little town of Sunrise.

"It's not for sale," Maurice said, his disguised voice the perfect combination of frailty and gravel.

"But-- Everything is for sale." Red flushed Jordan's face, and that rain on his forehead trickled down, with more appearing at his hairline, ready to take the plunge. "Everybody has his price."

"Especially you?" Maurice stood up, his disguised body shivering and shaking.

He loved digging the knife in especially hard for Jordan Price, who despised the frail and despised little old women the most--because his grandmother had been the only person in his life who'd ever told him no. Maurice figured Jordan's fear was doubled because his disguise reminded the bully of his grandmother, who had survived several suspicious accidents that would have killed a less stubborn, cantankerous old biddy. Jordan needed to defeat the old woman and beat down his grandmother's memory.

Hah! Never thought all that time studying those head-shrinkers in France and Switzerland would do me any good. Will wonders never cease?

"What do you want for the photo?" Jordan growled. Or rather, he tried to growl. His voice caught and broke, and he backed up a step when the little old woman illusion hiding Maurice's real features leaned on the counter and peered up at him.

"I want to tar and feather you, for starters." The words came out in his normal voice.

Maurice stumbled back from the counter and hit the wall, knocking the photo to the floor. He slapped both hands over his mouth.

He hadn't meant to say those words--he had been thinking them--but he hadn't planned to say them.

Jordan stared at him, eyes wide, the red color seeping out of his face, and sweat literally dripping down his cheeks, soaking his silk collar and...

No, wait a minute. Nothing was dripping. No color seeped.

"Oh, heck," Maurice snarled, just as he felt his body dissolving in one direction and his old woman disguise shredding in another direction. "Come on, let me finish!"

Blackness took over. It could have lasted for a heartbeat or a year, or a decade.

That was the irritating thing about the Fae realms, and life in the Fae enclaves. Time didn't run in synch with the Human world, and other Fae didn't have the fine respect for clocks and calendars--and the baseball and television seasons--that Maurice did.

He blinked and found himself sitting on a backless wooden stool, pinned under a spotlight inside an ocean of blackness. He was in his own body--at least his captor had let him wear comfortable clothes, his favorite slate gray cashmere sweater and matching slacks and his new Italian loafers--and he had iron manacles around one wrist and both ankles, attached to iron chains. The leg chains extended into the darkness beyond the pool of silvery-blue light. The arm chain led up into the air, vanishing in the darkness just beyond the stream of the spotlight. No matter how Maurice turned, he couldn't see what it was attached to.

Common sense said not to get off the stool. It was more than possible there was no floor, no ceiling, and no walls in this room--if he was in a room at all.

"Come on, guys! Do you know how much work I put into that scheme? Let me finish the game, at least. The guy was a bully. He deserved what I was going to give him."

Maurice winced as his words seemed to hit a wall a hundred miles, or maybe a hundred years away, and were absorbed. Chances were good that whoever had yanked him away from Sunrise--just at the culmination of his game!--wasn't even listening. Or if he, she, or they were listening, they weren't going to respond.

That was what he would do, if he was on the Fae Disciplinary Council. Lock up the miscreant, leave him alone for a while to squirm and protest and sweat, and then bring him out for judgment. Eventually.

It was the eventually part of the formula that worried Maurice.

Being a Fae, he could normally conjure up food, water, and some form of entertainment while he waited. But since his captors were Fae also, that automatically meant measures to curtail his magical powers.

Fortunately, he wasn't so deathly allergic to iron that he got poisoned by the touch of it or sickened by the smell of it, but he was allergic enough to get a bad rash. And iron squelched his powers to minimal levels. He could use his whimpering, trickling levels of magic to conjure up a book to read or his new iPod to listen to some music, but that would take away all the magic he was automatically using to fight the hives and sneezing that always came with the touch of iron. And if he tried to hoard his magic until he had enough to burst one manacle, he would be miserable, sneezing and scratching and wheezing and seeping--and bored--and what good would it do to break just one manacle? He would be wiped out, magic-wise, and his captors would be able to come back at their leisure and restore the manacle while he still sat there, waiting for enough magic to break the other two manacles. And his allergic reactions would get worse, and he would still be bored.

So Maurice sat there, as still as he could so the manacles wouldn't slide down off his sweater cuff and his socks wouldn't slide down, allowing the iron to touch bare skin. He spent his time thinking very hard about his possible judges, his possible crimes that he would undoubtedly be found guilty of committing, and his possible punishments. He wished heartily that he could be bored, but his imagination was even more acutely developed than his sense of irate justice.

"Yeah, Willy Shakespeare, we had some good old times at the Globe, but you didn't know squat when you talked about 'now my soul's palace is become a prison.' I really think you were three sheets to the wind when you wrote that line."

Maurice sighed nostalgically and raked the fingers of his free hand through his mop of thick black curls. He had spent those three decades living it up in Elizabethan England, not paying attention to culture in its embryonic form. True, he had spent a lot of time at the Globe, but most of it had been devoted to helping girls pretend to be boys so they could get a job in the theater...so they could play girl roles. Elizabethan England was simply strange, to him.

"And good old Lovelace was off his rocker when he said 'Nor iron bars a cage.' I'm allergic to iron! He didn't know squat about iron chains," Maurice muttered, and tried to pull the cuff of his sleeve down a little lower around his wrist, to offer a little more insulation against the iron manacle.

For punctuation, he sneezed five times in a row, violently enough his head felt like it would snap off his neck, and he nearly hit himself in the face with the manacle when he tried to hold onto his head. In the waiting room before judgment fell, anything could and often did happen, so he wasn't taking any chances.

The crusty old fogies on the Fae Disciplinary Council weren't taking any chances on him getting away, were they? He was stuck, no two ways about it.

"Hey, I know you can hear me!" He tipped his head back to look up at the source of the light. "Isn't there something in the Fae Disciplinary Rules about cruel and unusual punishment?" His words didn't seem to get absorbed so entirely this time. Was that a good sign, or bad? "Come on, guys. I was just having a little fun."

Yes, but your idea of a good time coincides unpleasantly with others' ideas of a bad time, a disembodied, unfamiliar, creaky voice whispered in the middle of his head.

All right, so he was wrong. The Council was keeping an eye on him every second until they brought him up for judgment.

But to be fair--would anyone be fair?-- he had gotten caught when he stopped to help someone who wasn't having a good time.

All right, he hadn't exactly stopped. He'd more like put on brakes and sank roots and stayed to torment that snarking snake of a bully, Jordan Price. Maurice liked jokes just as much as the next guy, and making someone look ridiculous was good clean fun. But he drew the line at prolonging that embarrassment for days. Or in this case, years.

It had seemed like the right thing to do, at the time. Hadn't it been bad enough Price's father had cheated Forsythe's father?

Maurice admitted, he might have looked the other way and let Price keep cheating Forsythe, but the guy's insistence on not only tormenting poor half-wit Forsythe but taking away every chance he had for a little fun, a little comfort, and a semblance of a decent life--that riled Maurice. And it took a lot to rile his righteous indignation. So Maurice had set up shop, taking on the guise of a slightly dizzy old woman, partially deaf and near-sighted, and had opened the doors of a store that promised to fulfill everyone's dearest wish.

Whatever someone wanted, they could find it in his shop.

Amazing the number of greedy souls in one tiny town.

Anything they bought made their imagined deficiencies worse when they stopped using it. And then there was the photo. Too many of the people in Sunrise didn't have guilty consciences to touch any longer, but everyone had something to fear. Those with the dirtiest, deepest, darkest secrets had more fears than anyone else.

Maurice could have become a millionaire in a matter of months, but he'd drawn the line at taking the money of people who couldn't afford to have the rug ripped out from underneath them. Too bad the dusty old fuddy-duddies on the Council wouldn't take that into consideration. They might even forgive him because he was on the side of the downtrodden.

Unfortunately, Maurice suspected the amount of fun he had had would cancel out all the good he had done.

"It's time," came a disembodied, not-male/not-female voice, as the darkness congealed around Maurice, revealing a long, dark room with a vaulted ceiling of domed, churning black clouds. A door appeared about ten miles away, and swung open. The iron manacles and chains on his ankles vanished, and an iron ring appeared in the air, attached to the other end of the chain attached to Maurice's wrist. It slid through the air, toward the open door.

Maurice had to follow, sneezing and itching abominably as the manacle slid off the insulation of his cashmere sweater and settled on his wrist. His eyes watered and his nose dripped and he couldn't even snap his fingers and conjure a handkerchief. No way was he wiping his nose on his cashmere sweater when he came to stand before the Council.

The door ten miles away leaped forward and swallowed him. Maurice fully expected the jagged iron teeth of a portcullis to slam down on him when he put his foot over the threshold.

Twenty tiers of seats rose up through the rainbow-streaked shadows as the room solidified around him. His Italian loafers tapped on a jeweled tile floor. That dratted iron ring hovered in the air over his head, making him hold his arm at right angles to his body, with the chain swinging and clanging against itself.

The thirty members of the Fae Disciplinary Council were hard at work in the stands. They wore various robes and wigs and other costumes denoting judges in various cultures and centuries, with casual disregard for proper colors, mixing and matching styles. Stacks of papers appeared in front of them and drifted down to the tables, to sparkle and vanish as soon as they were read and signed.

Most of the Council members kept working, ignoring Maurice when he showed up. All except for two: Chief Council Speaker Asmondius Pickle, dressed in lavender, with lavender owls perched on his shoulders, and Strictus Hooper, sitting two seats to the right of Pickle, wearing his usual sour cabbage green with a neon green Georgian wig sitting crooked on his bald head.

"Maurice..." Asmondius sighed as he rested his elbows on the table in front of him. "Lad, you are a problem. Always have been. You have a keen sense of justice, and there's something to be admired in a Fae who doesn't like injustice or bullying. But when you turn into a bully yourself, and have too much fun in the pursuit of justice, well..." He shrugged, his robes shifting into saffron in places.

"Your sentence is exile," Strictus Hooper snapped. He sniffed. "Since you seem to like Humans so much, you are sentenced to two years of exile in the Human realms. No communication with the Fae enclaves, no visits home."

That didn't seem so bad, but Maurice knew there had to be a real stinger hidden under the supposed mercy of the Council. He braced himself.

"Two years in...reduced circumstances." Strictus smiled, and that worried Maurice. The last time Strictus had smiled... Come to think of it, Maurice couldn't remember the last time Strictus had smiled. Not that he spent time voluntarily in the old sourpuss's company, but such an unusual event would have been reported in the Magical Mumbler.

Reduced? His brain snagged on that word, images of what it could mean flitting through his thoughts.

"Humans think we're only five inches tall and have wings like butterflies." Strictus steepled his fingers, and leaned back in the tall chair so his wig flattened and lifted off his bald scalp for a moment. "You shall spend your time of exile as Humans think the Fae are. And the scope of your magic shall match your size." He snapped his fingers, and an enormous cabbage-green gavel appeared out of thin air and slammed down on the table in front of him.

Maurice's mouth dropped open. He couldn't think of a single word to say. The reverberating thud-clang of the judgment gavel would have drowned out any sound he made, anyway.

The reverberations continued, growing louder, making the room shake. The iron manacle fell off his wrist, but before he could gather up his magic and try to slip into a sideways dimension and make tracks, he felt something squeeze down on him. His back itched abominably. He opened his mouth to shout, to deny what was happening... A squeak emerged instead of the shout he'd intended. He dropped to his knees.

The lights flickered, and he landed on a marble floor.

Around him were a ball-and-jacks set, with all the pieces larger than his head, a glass jar of rainbow-colored rocky candy sticks taller than he was, and an iridescent globe that looked like a transportation and communication globe, but set in a stand of dark metal shaped like a coiled dragon, with rubies for eyes. An old-fashioned brass cash register towered over him like a three-story building.

"You must be Maurice," a woman said, and her voice came from high overhead.

Okay, he liked tall women, but this was ridiculous.

Before his neck could get a cramp from looking up and up and up, Maurice's perceptions changed, and he realized that this heart-shaped face and waterfall of hair in ten shades of gold and cinnamon weren't particularly tall. He was very, very short.

Unable to resist, he looked over his shoulder. Wings. Butterfly-shaped, glistening, iridescent, lacy, rainbow-streaked wings fluttering like the lashes of a coy maiden flirting with him, moving a little faster the longer he looked at them. Maybe if he turned around and pretended they weren't there, they would fade away. Fae hadn't had wings for thousands of years.

How could they do this to him?

"Cute, but not you," the woman said. That was laughter sparkling in her big blue eyes, and putting a rich tone in her voice, but she didn't smile. Somehow, her sympathy and attempt not to hurt his feelings just made the whole situation worse. "Especially not with those Italian shoes. I hope you won't end up with permanent holes in that sweater. Cashmere?"

He barely restrained his tongue and changed his words to something less offensive. "Who the heck cares?" Maurice had always been a quick study, and he put all the pieces together here within a few seconds, despite his head reeling from the utter indignity--five inches tall, and wings no self-respecting Fae would wear to a costume ball! "I suppose you're my probation officer?"

"Angela." She nodded, making it a little bow, and didn't do him the indignity of offering a finger for him to shake. She wore a slightly faded, long blue dress in a shapeless style that Maurice thought had been referred to as a granny dress, or was it a hippie style? "This is Divine's Emporium. I can't understand why Asmondius wants you to spend two years here, but I've known him long enough to know he has his reasons. Why he would consider Divine's a punishment..." She shrugged.

A communications globe shimmered into being just above the globe sitting in the dragon stand. Angela shook her head, her lips quirking up a little more toward a smile, and held out her hand. A scroll popped out of the globe to land in her hand, then it popped like a soap bubble and vanished. She smoothed the skirts of her dress underneath herself, and sat down in a little white scrollwork chair that appeared from nowhere behind the counter in what looked like an old-fashioned general store.

Maurice took a good look around while she read the scroll.

No general store he had ever known looked like this place. For one thing, if he moved his vision sideways a little, he could see the slits in reality where extra rooms and extra height above the ceilings and slides into other dimensions were hidden, waiting to be opened up and used. The actual physical rooms themselves contained a mish-mash of different styles of shelving; wrought iron, glass, chrome, plastic, and wood. Antiques and toys, penny candy and dozens of styles of dishes, handcrafted wooden furniture, kites, wind chimes, candles, were piled willy-nilly on them. The list went on and on. And scattered through everything, he caught the glimmer of magic waiting, resting, poised to spring into action. The place reminded him a lot of his shop.

That was when the last few pieces started falling together in his mind. Maurice had the dreadful feeling Angela was one of those do-gooders who existed to grant the wishes of others and made a regular nuisance out of themselves, insisting that people who were perfectly happy were actually miserable and didn't know what they wanted or needed. And usually by the time these do-gooders threw up their hands in defeat and fled town, they had ruined a dozen lives.

Too bad. Angela looked like she had an actual sense of humor, which most do-gooders, in Maurice's experience, lacked.

Oh, Maurice, old boy, you are in one heck of a lot of trouble.

"So Asmondius wants to teach you a lesson," Angela said, her words accompanied by the rustling sound as she rolled up the scroll and tucked it into the pocket of her granny dress.

A flicker of magic caught Maurice's attention. He turned his sight sideways, to see the scroll slide through a convenient slit in reality, filed for safekeeping.

"Because the shop you set up to teach those villagers a lesson was a parody of my shop--"

"Can't parody what you don't know exists," he offered.

"Granted." Another twitch of her lips, another smile stifled. "Asmondius thinks you have a need to squash bullies and help the underdog, but you need to learn discretion. To study and think before you leap into a situation." She sighed and gestured for him to follow as she stepped away from the counter. "Let me show you around."

Maurice almost snarled at her to wait for him, because it was a doggone long drop to the floor and he wasn't sure how he could get down. Then he remembered he had wings. Did they actually work? Angela seemed to assume they would. He fought down the urge to lean back against a sharp corner and scratch hard, and flexed his shoulder blades. With a gust of cotton candy-perfumed air--oh, please, did they have to be that cruel?--he was airborne.

He followed Angela into the back of the store and through a storage room. She led him outside, where he got a good look at a snowy slope going down into a winter wonderland of forests and meadows and a wandering, ice-coated river. Turning around, he saw that the shop was in a big Victorian house, gold, with cupolas and lacy olive-green gingerbread trim and dozens of windows. He had to rub his eyes when the sideways vision showed him more slits where magic could come in and out and doorways inside the shop leading to other places and times.

"Divine's Emporium exists to heal and assist those who come here looking for help. We guard other worlds and times, secrets and dangers. We don't force help on anyone, we don't take over anyone's life. A lot of people you would probably label misfits come here because they know they'll be loved and accepted here." Angela's voice went stern and the sparkle in her eyes turned into a blaze of power like multiple spotlights focused on him. "I don't want you mocking any of my friends, understand?"

"Understood." Maurice had the strangest urge to salute, but he knew Angela would not be amused.

"You're here for two full years, Human time. You have to find opportunities to help Humans. I'm not allowed to give you specific orders, but I can make suggestions. Strong suggestions. And lots of guidance." She gestured for him to follow her back inside.

He noticed that Angela didn't leave any footprints in her snowy garden. He muffled a whistle of admiration.

The evening was spent in fitting out his quarters and giving him a tour of all the rooms that belonged to Divine's Emporium. Angela didn't suggest he move into the antique dollhouse, and he was grateful. Instead, his apartment fitted out with dollhouse furniture was set up in a hutch, with plenty of room for him to float from one floor to the other with the doors closed, providing him with a sense of privacy.

Angela laughed aloud when he found dozens of sets of clothes for the G.I. Joe and other male dolls that she had in stock, and discovered that most of the clothes fit him. The magic that made his wings appear created slits in the clothes when he tried to put them on, and mended them when he took them off. Even his cashmere sweater, to his relief.

Except for his size and the wings, nothing else about him was changed. He had feared the Council would change his hair, but it was still a short, curly mane of jet black, his shoulders were just as wide--in proportion to the rest of him, of course--and he still had his fencing/rock climbing/track-and-field physique. He had worked hard for that, rather than using magic to keep himself looking good, and he felt his first flicker of gratitude that the Council hadn't taken that away. For instance, making him a reedy wimp with lavender hair and weak ankles.

That night after dinner, he and Angela played poker. The cards were taller than Maurice--he resorted to using his much-reduced magic to holding them in mid-air--and he had to keep peering around them to see Angela. The poker chips were bigger than his head, but on the plus side, he kept winning, so his piles of chips were taller than his head, too. He was pretty sure that Angela didn't let him win, so his spirits were much brighter when he headed for bed.

During the poker game, Angela gave him a verbal tour of the town, and brought the globe in its dragon stand upstairs to her apartment, as a visual aid. She let Maurice know the globe was known as the Wishing Ball by all the children in town, and quite a few of them believed in magic, so it was quite possible that some of the more alert children could see him--meaning he had to proceed with caution when there were children in the shop.

While she talked about the town, images appeared in the Wishing Ball. Divine's Emporium sat on the edge of the town of Neighborlee, Ohio, overlooking the Metroparks. Willis-Brooks College was over one hundred fifty years old, and took up a good portion of the town. The center of town had a square with the requisite Civil War monument, playground, and gazebo, and was surrounded by a lot of old-fashioned-looking buildings, giving the moonlit downtown area a sense of belonging in the previous century. Maurice decided he liked Neighborlee, just before it occurred to him that a quiet town would make it hard to find people to help.

* * * *

"Mistletoe?" Maurice perched on the top shelf behind the store counter, where the coffee shop shimmered on the edge of becoming solid and two extra rooms waited just half a step sideways in reality. It was Saturday morning, just one day after he'd arrived in his exile.

He wrinkled up his nose at the mistletoe Angela was hanging in bunches from the pull cord of the ceiling fan. "You're wasting mistletoe on Humans, Angie-baby. They can't see into the parallel dimensions, and even if they could, they have to be pretty quick to reach through the slits and pull their dreams-come-true back into reality with them. Not one Human in a million can do it."

"We Humans have a magic of our own," she responded serenely, and climbed down the ladder. Angela looked up at the gold balls and red ribbon, bits of green leaves and white berries, and smiled. She had hung clumps of mistletoe in every room of the shop, and the sideways dimension rooms.

"Yeah, and how long has it been since you were an ordinary Human?"

"I don't exactly recall." Her smile faded a little. "But even at the beginning, I doubt I was ever ordinary."

"You're one weird chick."

"Coming from someone five inches tall and wearing wings Tinkerbell wouldn't be caught dead in, I think I'll take that as a compliment." She stepped up behind the counter, to give the Wishing Ball one last polish with Windex and a paper towel.

Maurice tried to be angry, but he burst out laughing instead. He watched her polish the rainbow-smeared metallic ball for a few seconds, studying his reflection in it. Angela confused him, and strangely, he almost liked it. This period of exile, shrunken body, shrunken magic, and being invisible to almost everyone he came into contact with, wasn't going to be easy. But he sensed that having Angela for his probation officer would make all the difference. For the first time in his life, he had limits he couldn't charm or scheme his way around, but maybe that wasn't such a bad situation after all.

"How come you make magic so easy to come by here?" he had to ask, after she stepped around the counter and opened the first of three boxes of ornaments that looked--and sparkled with real magic--like the Wishing Ball.

"Magic is always easy to come by, for Humans, but they have to know to look for it and know to want it. They're usually so caught up in their physical world, they think it's the only one, and they miss the magic. I just make things a little more obvious. Divine's has a reputation for amazing things happening. People who don't believe in wishes outside these doors believe here. I take them back to simpler, happier times, when the world was filled with possibilities." She smiled and brushed a loose strand of hair back over the shoulder of her gold-trimmed, crimson velvet gown. "Perfect. Almost time for the party."

"Doesn't look like a party." He glanced around, half-expecting food and chairs, decorations and music to appear from a sideways dimension.

"It's my annual decorating party." She flicked her fingers at the ceiling in the corner of the room. The room itself stretched out three more feet and the ceiling raised another two feet. "Keep a sharp eye out, Maurice. You could get your first assignment this afternoon."

"Assignment." He huffed. "Am I supposed to be Santa's helper, or just a vending machine for all your hopeless Human friends?"

Angela's eyes darkened a little, sending a shiver of apprehension down his back between his fluttering wings--which fluttered faster, despite his best efforts to keep them still. It occurred to him that if she wanted to stomp on him, there was no magic in the world, or wings, that could get him out from under her foot, no matter how hard he tried.

"Attitude will get you nowhere. If you don't straighten out, I'll make you spend the entire Christmas season as the angel on top of the tree." She gestured in the corner where she had expanded the room, as if the tree was already there.

"Yeah? You and whose army?" Maurice sneered, praying she would take it as a joke.

Angela just smiled at his words, but somehow he had the feeling the joke was on him, and he had just said something really stupid. He gulped hard and offered his most charming smile. Of course, how charming could that smile be, when it was probably about one-half of an inch wide?

"Okay, I take that back. Lesson learned."

"You hope." She looked around the room, gave a nod of approval, and sauntered out of the room. As if he wasn't there anymore.

The first person who showed up certainly didn't look like she was ready for a party. She was pale under her gallons of rusty freckles and cold-reddened cheeks, short, with bowed shoulders and hips that looked a mile wide under a damp, bulky down jacket that hung past her knees and made her look like the Michelin Man.

Maurice winced, too fascinated by the pitiful creature to turn away when Angela called her name--Holly--and greeted her with a hug.

"I rescued some more books," Holly said as she handed over three bulging, straining plastic grocery bags to Angela. "They weren't even going to put these in the Friends of the Library sale, just toss them. Sacrilege."

Angela took the bags of book with a smile and put them on the counter, pulling out a few from each bag. "Just because the binding and cover is a wreck doesn't mean the words inside are any less precious. Let's see if we can work our usual magic and find a new home for these treasures."

Maurice hovered overhead while Angela and Holly looked through the battered, ragged old books. He flew closer to look at some book spines, and an unseen force pushed him out of the way when Holly reached for the same book.

"So... I'm guessing if nobody can see me, they won't be able to touch or hear me, either? Man, that's worse than the silent treatment," he groused, and settled down on the shelf where he could get a good view of what they were doing without overtaxing his wings.

The people who come in here are a lot closer to believing in magic and other worlds and the Fae, but they're my friends, so no straining their sense of reality, you hear me? No nasty tricks, no hiding things, no illusions and sound effects. Got me? Angela said, straight into his mind.

Full of surprises, Angela definitely was.

He gave her a stiff, military-precise salute. "Got it--it's the angel on the tree until New Year's, if I don't fly straight and true."

Angela glanced over her shoulder at him, eyes sparkling with laughter, and nodded once in satisfaction. Then she went back to work on the books with Holly. They concluded that all the books could be salvaged with a little work and tender loving care. Holly took them upstairs to deposit in one of Angela's storage rooms.

Maurice supposed since Angela could create rooms as she had need, she probably had a room tucked away in a spare dimension of reality full of all the tools and materials needed to restore books.

He kind of liked it that Holly cared about books. Then again, from some of the things she'd said as she and Angela examined the rescued books, he guessed she was a librarian. He kind of liked her for rescuing books that were about to be discarded, for Angela to mend and put on her shelves. Despite his adventurer reputation, he did love to fall into a book and travel through his imagination.

Come to think of it, Holly looked like a librarian--although she needed wire-rimmed spectacles and a skirt down below her calves, instead of patched jeans, faux-fur boots, and an oversized white Mickey Mouse sweatshirt. Her hair, when she pulled off her Cleveland Browns stocking cap, disappointed him. He expected frizzy red to go with all those freckles and her pale complexion. It was more a dishwater brown, straight, with a few specks of ginger, and damp from the exertion of carrying those books.

"So... I love a good book," he said, when Holly stepped out of the room. "But please, please don't tell me she's my first assignment. I mean, she's cute for a librarian, but I don't do makeovers."

"You might be surprised, if you got to know Holly. Maybe she doesn't need a makeover at all."

"Yeah? Without one, how am I ever going to dupe some schmoe into falling in love with her?"

"You have a lot to learn," she responded quietly. "How about you get an eagle's eye view of things?" Her smile turned sweet, and Maurice had the awful feeling that when Angela looked sticky sweet, she was more dangerous than the entire Fae Disciplinary Council with malfunctioning magic, jazzed on diet cherry cola.

"What's that mean?" He didn't bother with bravado, but at least his voice didn't quaver. He was only five inches tall, after all, and she was his probation officer.

"You'll find out."

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Monday, August 30, 2010

THE RETURN OF INNOCENCE by Duane Simolke

THE RETURN OF INNOCENCE: A FANTASY ADVENTURE

Duane Simolke blends humor and romance with exciting fantasy action.

Visit Theln, a planet of magic, dragons, nobility, and heroes. Sasha Varov was born into a noble home in the Thelni kingdom of Jaan, but Sasha's father dared to oppose the king's sorcerer, Wuhrlock. Sasha and her family became exiles on a desolate island. At sixteen, Sasha left her island home to buy seeds in Jaan. She stumbled into a series of misadventures that ended with the death of Wuhrlock and made Sasha a legend, known as "Innocence." Never mind that the legend barely resembled the truth, or that Sasha caught Wuhrlock in an unguarded moment.

When Sasha returned for more seeds, the people of Jaan expected her to defeat a much more ruthless and powerful sorcerer. Duane Simolke wrote the short story "The Return of Innocence" in 1983. With contributions by Toni Davis, he later developed it into a novel.

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Excerpt:



The relentless wind whipped the sails as the shroud of darkness that sometimes entombed them began to return. Darkness had descended and slowly disappeared in the same fashion, and at the same time, on each of their previous three days at sea, always around noon. As she gazed at the warship anchored beside theirs, Sasha absently toyed with one of the long, meticulously plaited braids of deep chestnut-colored hair that usually flowed down her back. She often pulled a braid over her shoulder when lost in thought.


Her attention became riveted on the massive claw marks on the ship’s hull. Deep gouges ran at some points from stem to stern, indicating that the ship and her undoubtedly unlucky crew had come across a dragon or sea serpent. By the looks of the nearly shredded topsail and hole-riddled mainsail, the crew barely survived; the tales they shared quickly spread unease among the men who rode with Sasha toward the kingdom of Jaan.


Usually, she didn’t pay much attention to the random vessels that came and went during her journey away from the islands. However, her curiosity rose after she heard some of the sailors talking about it with hushed voices in the galley during breakfast. Now she idly fingered the ornate dirk that was belted at her side along with the scarred broadsword that her father presented to her after she managed to best one of Jaan’s better, younger apprentice swordsmen in a practice session at her father’s small, makeshift soldiers-at-arms school.


Dressed in stout brown leather breeches, cropped black leather traveling boots, a tight-fitting cloth vest, and a short traveling cloak to ward off the sudden, chill sea breezes, Sasha decided she looked rather boyish this morning. Normally, she would prefer the free-flowing clothing she wore on her family’s homestead. However, this mode of dress allowed her more freedom for defending herself, if needed.


Her eyes narrowed as she surveyed the ailing vessel more carefully, and as the sky grew darker. Thoughts of what awaited her in Jaan flitted through her mind. Only yesterday, she had reached seventeen, but she had already experienced more adventure than most noble-born women could ever hope to see. Not that she had wanted any more high drama or swashbuckling mayhem. Truthfully, she really just wanted the peace and contentment that her family once knew in Jaan, the kingdom of her birth. Sasha sighed as a pang of loneliness and not a little bit of resentment at her circumstances stabbed at her insides. She shook her head, as if to dispel the cobwebs of longing that clung to her mind, and her braids fell back into place.


She looked up from her musings at the sound of the light, rolling gait that marks a man who has spent most of his life at sea. She smiled slyly as the young captain approached her and bowed. He was fairly good looking, with light tan-colored skin and almond-shaped, brown eyes that looked rather worldly for his apparent age. He smiled back at her, briefly revealing a perfect set of almost impossibly white teeth. His face was thankfully bereft of the coarse, bristly hair that attached to the faces of the other sailors like an affliction.


Now he’d be an interesting candidate for a spouse, if I were looking for one, thought Sasha, though she’d never heard of a Westerner marrying an Easterner. But she then told herself it must violate one of the cosmic laws, like the one that magic users can’t occupy the same territory as each other, or the one that no one should ever eat meat in a horse’s presence. She asked herself, Who could keep up with all those rules, and what bothersome idiot made them all up in the first place?


“Falon Shin, Captain Ferik,” she said, greeting him in the local Kael dialect. She knew very little Old Thelni, but people of all dialects knew the basic greetings and courtesies from the ancient tongue. Though they all shared the same written version of Thelni, their dialects often made it difficult for them to understand each other. Still, starting with Old Thelni, in a person’s dialect, showed respect for that person’s heritage, and a noble-born like Sasha paid attention to such matters. “Are you feeling as restless as everyone else?” She gestured about herself in reference to the swift yet silent motion of people going about their tasks around her.


Captain Ferik raised an eyebrow in silent observation. “Perhaps it would be better if you were below decks,” he said. “It’s getting too dark to see, and we don’t know what attacked that ship.” His eyes scanned the horizon and the ship sailing away from them.


Sasha chuckled lightly. “Are you worried about me? How touching! However, there’s nothing out here but them.” She pointed to the battle-scarred ship that disappeared into the approaching darkness.


“There’s more than wind at work here,” the captain remarked. “One eclipse is a bad omen, but four within a month can only mean one thing…sorcery.”

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Wednesday, August 11, 2010

WOLF'S MAGIC by Rebecca Royce

WOLF'S MAGIC by Rebecca Royce is the story of Azriel Kane, fifth brother in the royal Westervelt wolf pack. Always different from his siblings, Azriel prefers to spend his time underground in a lab than out fighting battles to save the pack from destruction. In his own way, he feels he is contributing to the pack's success. However, when fate plants his destined mate in a cage where he can't ignore her, Az will be forced to face up the demons that have plagued him since childhood and be the shifter she needs him to be.

Leah St. James has no idea who she is or how she came to be trapped in a cage in Azriel's lab. The only thing she is certain about is that she is not a wolf and that she wants out of her false wolf body as soon as possible. Counting on Az to save her from the same doomed fate as the other wolves Az is given to study, from the distance of her cage she can see Az for who he really is and not the false front he presents to the world.

But Kendrick Kane is not done with Westervelt and when he steps up his game to eliminate the Kanes from Westervelt, Az and Leah will need each other to discover the truth behind his evil plans, that is if Azriel can finally reveal the secret he has been keeping since he was a child.
With Leah's help, can Azriel finally take his place in the pack hierarchy or will they fail and lose Westervelt forever?

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Chapter One


Leah woke up covered in brown and white fur still trapped in a cage. Dear God, please let me not be a wolf, please let it all be a dream.

Blinking twice, she looked down, her whole body deflating as she realized it wasn’t a dream--she was actually covered in fur. How could any of this be happening? Her moments of lucidity were becoming fewer and fewer and even more frightening were the fact that her memories of her insane times had grown more vague. Now, not only could she not control what she did when the madness overtook her, she also had no recollection of what happened.

Maybe it was a blessing. The things she’d remembered from the earlier episodes had left her feeling horrified.

And then there was him, the man who watched her from outside the cage. Other wolves came and went from the cages, he paid attention to them, but not like he’d been attentive to her. Not to mention she couldn’t figure out why all of the other wolves--or maybe they were actually people trapped in wolf bodies too--got to go somewhere and she was kept locked in her cage.

She couldn’t talk, couldn’t do more than growl or whine, and even those abilities were pathetic at best. The beagle she’d grown up with, Max, had done a better job of communicating than she could.

The man stood up from his desk. When he wasn’t poking and prodding at her or the others, admittedly gently, he was always sitting at that black wooden table that seemed to function as his work station, hunched over a book or staring at a computer screen. The last she remembered before she’d had her previous episode was him falling asleep in the chair, head down on the desk. Didn’t he ever leave? Wasn’t there some family somewhere wondering where he was?

On that same note...wasn’t there someone looking for her?

That was part of the problem. Other than her name--Leah St. James--and the absolute certainty to the pit of her soul that she was not a wolf and should not be in the body she inhabited, she had no idea--zero--who or where she came from.

The man’s hair, brown to the point of almost being black, stuck up like he was a child instead of an adult she guessed to be around thirty years of age. Thin but broad shouldered, he was muscular and looked like he could handle himself in a fight. Hmmm...that was a funny thing to think. Evidently she was the kind of person who thought of others in terms of their ability to fight. Did that mean she came from someplace violent?

His destination was clearly her cage. All the others were empty. Her heart picked up speed. She admitted it; she liked looking at his eyes. It was fun seeing the concentration and intensity in his brown-eyed gaze. Also, his smell was enticing. His scent reminded her of water, or at least the way the ocean smelled on a clear, crisp morning when no one else was on the beach.

She added the thought to the pile of interesting observations she was making about her inner dialogue. Maybe some of it would give her a clue as to who she was.

“Hello there.”

Huh, usually he didn’t speak other than unintelligible mutterings when he took her temperature or swabbed one of her claws. It’s not like she could answer him. Still, if he wanted to talk at least it was nice to hear someone else’s voice...

“Can you understand me?”

His voice was like chocolate syrup being poured over vanilla ice cream. It was just a perfect combination of taste and texture, like the universe had designed those two things to go together, in other words it was heavenly. She shivered from the intensity.

He noticed her small shake and hesitantly reached inside the cage. She couldn’t blame him for his nerves. She was a wolf, she might bite him. After a moment, he reached farther and stroked her fur.

“Are you okay? Are you cold?” He drew his eyebrows down in a slant. “You’re eyes are so intelligent, so different from the others.”

Others? Did he mean the wolves that came and went? She flipped her head around just to make sure there weren’t any others around that she didn’t know about. Belatedly, she realized she could sniff the air to tell but using her nose to know anything was still pretty foreign to her. Half the time she wasn’t sure what any of the sensory input she received even meant.

“And your fur...it’s brown and white, it still hasn’t lost its luster. It’s soft.” He was downright petting her now. She wished she were a cat, so she could purr. Oh wow, when was the last time she’d been touched? She closed her eyes. Really touched? He was gentle and he knew all the right places to rub. Behind her ears, it really itched; he moved his hand and scratched there. Her tongue fell out of her mouth.

Dear heavens, she panted. Her eyes flew open. If she were human, she would blush with humiliation. Here was this stunning man just barely touching her and she was acting like a real wolf for goodness sake. Daring to look at him, she didn’t see the horror she expected to find at her behavior.

Instead, he seemed to be considering her even more closely. He’d put both hands in the cage. With one he continued to scratch between her ears while the other made long, divine strokes up and down her spine.

“You like that, girlie? I bet that feels better.” He leaned his head up against the bars of the cage and she could see that a small scar, a thin line really, marred his face from the tip of his left eye down to his chin. It wasn’t noticeable from afar but up close it gave him a sexy, scary look. “Can I tell you a secret? I’m not sure how much more of this I can do. I’m so tired of all of you dying. I’m exhausted from not being able to figure this out.” Dying? Terror poured through her blood, she wished she could scream but it only came out a whimper. He stroked her harder. “Did you actually understand what I just said?”

Staring straight in his eyes, she willed him to understand that she did--she knew everything he was telling her.

Pulling his head off the cage, he nodded. “You did. None of the others ever could. I’m sure of it.” This seemed to excite him. She could hear his heart rate increased. The wolf senses would be cool if they weren’t so terrifying and bizarre.

“Okay, listen to me. I don’t know how they did this to you. I know everything about wolf magic, I’m an expert and even I can’t figure out how the witches did this to all of you. We thought at first that after the change they addicted you to a chemical to make you obey but now we know that’s not true. You all just like the stuff so you go looking for it. With or without it, you’ll die.”

She had no idea what he was talking about. Wolf magic? The change? She whined in confusion.

“All right, I’ll start over. Do you remember what happened to you? Do you remember when the witches did this to you?”

She lowered her head onto her paws. It was so frustrating to not be able to speak. No, she wanted to scream, I have no idea, I have no memory and did you say witches?

An alarm sounded in the room, loud and piercing it caused pain to vibrate through her body like nothing she’d ever felt before. The man jumped back like he’d been struck, he jerked around.

“Shit. They’re here.”

Who was here and what was that alarm? Couldn’t he make it stop? She was howling now and she couldn’t seem to stop.

A boom sounded in the room momentarily covering the alarm. A bright orange light temporarily blinded her. Oh God, this was panic. Anything she’d felt before being locked in the cage and being a wolf was nothing compared to this. What the hell was going on? Was she going to die in this cage?

Smoke filled the air. She choked and gagged. This was hell. These wolf senses in this place with these horrors happening were too much. She needed it to stop. Where was the man? What had happened to him? She hadn’t seen him since the bright light that had blinded her. Had he died in the explosion?

The cage shook from beneath. It jarred her like she was on an airplane not quite steady in the sky. Two hands appeared on the cage bars in front of her followed immediately by the man’s face as he pulled himself up. He was coughing, his eyes unfocused.

He pulled keys out of his pocket and inserted them into the lock. After turning it, he opened the cage.

“Run.” He coughed, his eyes losing their focus as he collapsed to the floor.

She leapt out of the cage onto the floor. It had, evidently, been some time since she’d used her legs. They felt unsteady and difficult to move. Her heart pounded hard as she stared down at the man who had kept her captive in a cage for weeks. He’d been gentle when he’d touched her and she’d actually been able to start communicating with him just minutes earlier. Plus, it seemed like he’d hurt himself to set her free.

Not to mention there was probably no way in hell she was going to stop being a wolf without his help. Ignoring the voice in the back of her head that wanted her to acknowledge she also thought he was adorably cute, she bit down hard on his shoulder.

He didn’t even react to the assault from her teeth. Dragging him as hard as she could, she realized she’d never have been able to do this as a human. He’d be way too big for her to manage with her hands but her wolf abilities were stronger. They’d made it to the back of the lab and up some of the stairs huffing and puffing from the exertion when she smelled the people behind her.

Dropping the man for a second, she lunged around. The door to the lab was closed and someone--she sniffed the air--no two people were pounding on it and shouting. She forced herself to listen past the siren. What were they saying?

“Azriel, can you hear us?” Pound, pound, pound. “They welded the door closed from the outside. Hang on in there, brother. We’re getting it open.”

Someone had welded the door closed? She growled at the thought. This was horrendous. People died in fires and lord knew with all of this fur she was getting really hot. The man on the outside had called him brother. Was that a term of endearment, like you might call someone ‘man’ or ‘buddy’ or were the people out there his family?

Leah shook her head from side to side. No, she couldn’t go through this alone. Maybe it was wimpy to admit it but she was terrified of dying in the flames that she could see were rapidly approaching the staircase. Bending her head, she licked the man’s face. He needed to wake up. Maybe there was another way out of the lab. He needed to tell her.

The man groaned, his head moving from side to side before his lids opened showing his brown eyes. He coughed, violently. Covering his mouth with his arm he sat up as he looked at her. One hand reached out and stroked the top of her head. “Hey, lady-wolf, did you drag me over here? I told you to run.”

Well, she wasn’t any frickin’ good at following directions evidently. If she lived through this she would add it to the list of things she was learning about herself. Gesturing with her head, she whimpered at the door.

The man narrowed his eyes and struggled to his feet. She noticed he dragged one leg behind the other slightly, an old wound or something that had happened today? She didn’t remember seeing him do it before. As if the limp didn’t bother him, he took the stairs two at a time.

“Theo, Gabriel...is that you?” He shouted over the noise toward the door.

“Az, fuck, that’s a relief. We’ve almost got it open.”

The man nodded, which she found funny considering the people on the outside of the door couldn’t see it. It was almost as if he was talking to himself in his own head. Leah thought the man who had answered from the outside, either Theo or Gabriel, sounded genuinely relieved.

“No, no...listen...speak to me with your voice, okay? I’m not alone in here. The wolf--the one I’ve told you about, the one who hasn’t died--she’s with me, she saved my life, Theo.” He turned to look at her. “She’s really something, she can understand me, which means, if you can, speak so she can hear us too, just in case something happens to me.”

“Alright. Are you sure the fumes aren’t getting to you?”

The man laughed. C’mon, they were going to die and she’d placed all of her hopes on a person who found something about this funny? Maybe it was she who wasn’t right in the head.

“I’m sure, Theo.” The man turned back to her and crouched down. He turned his head back to the door and shouted. “Listen, I’m going to shift to get some extra protection from the flames. Keep talking aloud.” Reaching forward, he pulled her into his arms and whispered in her ear. “Don’t be afraid. It’s still me.”

Internally, she gasped as a warm, blinding light surrounded the man--no wait, she had heard his name, and what was it?--Azriel shifted in front of her eyes into a wolf. His limbs reshaped quickly, dark brown fur pushing out of his arms and legs to recover him. He shook his head and the eyes that stared at her were wolf eyes.

She blinked twice. It was all so familiar, like she’d seen it before. Not that she’d seen it happen to him but to someone whose face she couldn’t recall. Maybe it had happened to her. How else would she have become a wolf? Azriel, the wolf, moved forward, nudging her with his head to get closer to the door. He’d told her not to be afraid and strangely enough, she wasn’t. The fire and the smoke had taken up most of her nerves. Azriel’s turning into a wolf was nothing in comparison to the rest of it. Besides, maybe it meant he could teach her to do it and then she could shift back too.

Following him to the door, she heard one last pound. Turning around, she saw the black and grey smoke making its way up the stairs. She’d never be able to breathe that stuff. If it reached them, they’d have very little time to get away before they both suffocated.

The door flew open. She didn’t need to be told to run through it. Azriel hung back until she passed him and darted through the entrance first. After the blazing heat of the lab, the outside felt freezing. She shivered as she looked at the two men who were shouting for them to move away from the door.

They were tall--maybe taller than Azriel--but she could see the family resemblance immediately. The same dark hair and high cheekbones on each of them meant that they were family traits. But to Leah, that’s where the similarities stopped. In the afternoon sun, she could see that their eyes, although brown, were not as kind or warm as Azriel’s had been.

Just the same, she ran after them, turning around to see if Azriel followed. He was but that wasn’t what made her feet falter. The door that had been opened led underground. She’d been so busy getting free she hadn’t noticed she’d had to travel up three steps to reach the outside once she’d gotten through the entrance. She’d been trapped in an underground lab?

What the hell was this place? She sniffed the air as she looked around. It looked as if she was deep in the middle of the woods. Whatever was going on, Azriel and the rest of these people had held her in a cage in an underground lab in the middle of the woods. It was like something out of a teenage angst novel.

Note to self, evidently she knew about teenage angst novels. She sighed and it came out of her mouth like a moan.

Strong arms picked her off the ground. She yelped before she realized it was Azriel and relaxed.

He turned as he held her to the taller of the two men. “Give me that blanket.”

Looking down she became suddenly aware that Azriel was completely naked as he held her. She gulped, at least internally. His body, well the parts she could see since she was held up against him, was sculpted like Michelangelo’s David. It was as if someone had decided to sculpt the perfect man and Azriel had been created. Of course, a very important portion of the male anatomy was totally hidden from her view...

She shook her head. It was disgusting that she was even thinking about it. Did she need to make a mental note that perhaps she was a sex addict or maybe it had just been a very long time since she’d had sex? No, she had to quit that line of thinking. Clearly, she was not focusing on the things she needed to be thinking about at that current time.

“Here.” One of the other men, the taller of the two who had scars on his face, handed Azriel a blanket, which he quickly wrapped around her. Grateful for the warmth, she again wished she could wrap herself up in it and never move.

“Dude,” the shorter of the two brothers spoke. “She has fur, you’re buck naked. We brought the blanket for you.”

“Thanks, but I’m okay. The lady wolf has been down in the lab for several months--it’s always hot--and she’s just been through a fire. I don’t want her to catch a chill.”

“That’s awful considerate of you, little brother.” It was the taller of the two again. So far, Leah preferred him to the other one.

Azriel coughed. “Who did it?”

“We were hoping you could tell us.”

“How could I do that?”

“The magic alarm went off and then we saw on the monitors that your place was on fire. By the time we got here, the door was welded shut.”

She snuggled closer to Azriel, he still smelled like the ocean, as he had in the lab, but now he also smelled like the woods after a storm and that made her smile. He wrapped his arms around her tighter and the three men started walking. At the moment, she had no idea where they were going and for some reason she was completely fine with that.

“I never saw who firebombed the room. I was overwhelmed with the smell--you know that sick, sour milk smell that spreads before the fire from one of those things starts?”

The other two nodded their assent.

The shorter brother spoke again. “You’re holding her kind of tight there, Az. What have you been doing down there in that lab with her for so long?”

Leah wished she could bite him. If she had to be a wolf, maybe she should act like one. It could be fun.

“She can understand you, remember?” Azriel sighed and she remembered her impression of him from earlier in the day. He was tired, the kind of tired where he’d long since noticed how exhausted he really was. She thought there was an expression for that: bone weary.

She wondered why she cared.

Az continued. “I’ve been trying to figure out why she’s still alive.”

“Does she behave any differently than the others?” This time she appreciated the shorter one’s questions. She’d like to know the answers to that too considering she couldn’t really remember too many details since she’d opened her eyes about an hour earlier. No, that wasn’t entirely true; she knew lots of things about Azriel, just nothing about anything else. Was that odd?

“She has longer times of clarity--or at least as far as I can tell it’s clarity. I only started talking to her this morning so I don’t know if she’s been able to understand me this whole time or if it’s a recent development that’s going to precipitate some kind of change.” He paused. “I’m hoping it’s not the kind of scenario where she gets absolute understanding before she completely degrades and then dies.”

Oh wow, she hoped that too. Please, please, please don’t let it be that.

As if remembering that she understood him perfectly, he gave her a squeeze. “Anyway, she does have episodes where she is like the others: aggressive, almost feral, and desperate for the serum. I keep waiting for her physical appearance to alter like the others. Her fur should be falling out or oily and disgusting, her eyes should be glazing over. One of the last stages is the drool. It’s everywhere and damn if it doesn’t stink something fierce.”

The shorter man took a sniff. “She smells pretty good to me. For a wolf, she has a scent resemblance to lilacs.”

A growl formed from Azriel’s throat that had Leah’s ears poking backwards. She shivered; in no way did she like that sound.

“You don’t need to be smelling her, Gabriel.”

“I can smell whoever I want. What is the matter with you?”

The taller man laughed aloud, his eyes filled with laughter. “Oh boy, do I remember this phase; I all but killed Rex.”

Azriel’s whole body had gotten very still. All Leah could feel was the beating of his heart. “What does that mean, Theo?”

“It means from the way you’re behaving towards that ‘made’ wolf, Azriel, I would say the reason she is still alive and not altered like the others is because she is your mate.” Theo patted him on the shoulder. “Welcome to the party, brother.”

His what? Okay, someone was going to have to explain that. Wolf or no wolf she was going to make them go into more detail about exactly what that meant. She knew nothing about herself. No way could she be his ‘mate’. It was simply out of the question.

She might have a husband at home waiting for her; searching all over the place and not knowing that she had somehow become a wolf. Azriel’s ocean scent mixed with the smell of the woods hit her again and she wanted to smile.

Maybe it wasn’t such an impossibility that she belonged to him, but it was still scary as hell.

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