Read A Farewell to Charms Online

Authors: Lindsey Leavitt

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Themes, #Adolescence, #Royalty, #Action & Adventure, #General, #Social Issues, #Fiction - Young Adult

A Farewell to Charms (2 page)

BOOK: A Farewell to Charms
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I
ran my fingers over the mauve toilet seat cover. Who invented those things, anyway? You can’t really fancify a toilet. I reached over and rinsed off my hands in the sink. Bleh. “Okay. So what part of the elephant should we talk about first? Heads or tails?”

“Your choice,” Reed said. “You can tell me when you started working for Façade, or we could finally talk about what happened opening night—”

“Heads it is.” I wasn’t ready to talk about that kiss. What do you say?
Yep. We kissed. It was great. Fantastic.
But I also cared about my best friend’s feelings. And what if that kiss with Reed was only great because we were both magical, and what if Reed didn’t like me like I thought I liked him, and I really shouldn’t be liking anyone right now anyway when there was the world’s magical population to worry about?

Better to start at the beginning. As one of my favorite actresses, Julie Andrews, said in the classic musical
The Sound of Music
—that’s a very good place to start. I ran my tongue along my braces. “So I used to work at the mall pet store, Pets Charming—”

The words came slowly while I tried to piece my history together. But then I got going. I told Reed all about my background—about the wish on a magical fish that ignited my MP (Magic Potential), about Meredith, about my first trip to the Court of Royal Appeals, and my advancement to Level Two.

I didn’t tell him the big thing we needed to discuss—whether or not he knew that Façade was run on stolen magic. I’d only found out the truth by accident, and the head of Façade, Genevieve, claimed that stripping magic and washing the subs’ Façade memories was in everyone’s best interest. I’d tried to push aside all my nagging doubts over the past couple of weeks, but ignoring a secret like this was like finding out all the food in the school cafeteria was secretly pig’s vomit and then still eating it. Those poor subs never had a chance to realize their possibilities. Façade even called the power MP—Magic Potential—and yet the potential part was taken away if the sub wasn’t of use to Façade.

See? The news was so big that I had to find a way to ease into it. But there was something so trusting about the way Reed was leaning in, listening to my every word.

Trusting, and very cute.

“So how long have you been home?” he asked, once I finished sharing Desi’s Career with Façade: The Edited Version.

“I’d just come back from my last job when the play started. Not long.”

“All of that and you’ve only been there since June? Huh.” He was still leaning toward me, and I caught a whiff of his sporty cologne—or soap or laundry detergent or whatever it was that made him smell so good—and realized that we were very close in a very small space. Our knees were practically touching. Did he notice that? Did he think about how I smelled and that it was different than usual because I’d spritzed on some of my mom’s perfume before coming to the party? Because…well, because I knew Reed would be here.

“What about you?” I asked, my voice hoarse.

“I’ve been with Specter longer.” Specter was a newer branch of Façade, specializing in male royalty. Façade was originally female only, so there was a bit of a rivalry between the subbing branches of Façade and Specter. So although Reed officially worked under Façade, it was easy for us to never run into each other with our offices located in different countries.

“How long?” I asked.

“I signed on right when I turned thirteen, so two years, now.”

“How many times have you subbed?”

“Sixty-five jobs and counting.”

“What? But you’ve only been with them two years—”

“But with the Law of Duplicity, it’s been much longer.”

“Yeah, I guess technically you could work hundreds of jobs without missing anything at home. You must have big client demand.” Meredith once described the Law of Duplicity like this: the time we’re on a job is like a piece of string stretched out. The magic has the power to bring those string tips together again, like the time away never happened, returning us home seconds after we left. I mean, it’s more technical than that, of course, but that’s the gist. People at Façade also seemed to age slower, but that might have something to do with their extensive magical makeup line.

“It’s a good schedule,” Reed said. “If you break it down over two years, that’s really only one job every week or two.”

“Still,” I said. “You must be really good if they’re sending you out that much.”

“I do what I do.” He smiled ruefully. “It doesn’t hurt that my parents were both subs. I’m a legacy.”

Façade had legacies? That sounded like a big deal. And if Reed was a big deal, then maybe he knew more cool tricks beyond manipulating manuals. Then again, maybe he already knew everything there was to know about Façade and still thought things were fabulous. “But I thought magic wasn’t hereditary.”

“It isn’t always. But it can be. And in my case, it was.” Reed glanced around the bathroom before lowering his voice.

Even in this space, even when our words were supposedly muted, I could tell it was hard for him to talk about Façade too. “Part of the reason my parents work in agriculture and move around so much is because they’re doing research for the agency. They work for the Organic Magic department, figuring out which organic things house magic. So I actually already knew about your pet-store fish—we’ve been tracking them since we moved to Sproutville. Along with dozens of other organisms—it’s a hot pocket of activity. Who’d have thought Idaho would be so magical?”

Not me. I pulled my legs up to my chest and rested my chin on my knees. “So did you always have magic, or did you have to have it…ignited?”

“Same rules. My ignition happened with a seal at the zoo. It was pretty staged—my parents paid the seal trainer fifty bucks to pick me during the animal show. But I was still nervous that nothing would happen, that I didn’t have MP. And everyone’s ignition is different—some people don’t even know anything happened, and others have a big magical explosion. Kind of depends on how your magic shows itself and what your talents are.”

“So? What happened to you?”

“My mom says the water literally glowed when I touched the seal.”

“Wow. I had a stupid fish blow bubbles.”

“It’s all relative,” Reed said. “I went into the family business right away. The second we got home, I was out the door and off to work.”

“And do you like working at Façade?” I searched his face as I spoke, hoping for a little hesitation.

“Don’t you?” Reed asked. “I bet you love wearing all those tiaras.”

I snorted. “I still haven’t worn a tiara! That’s something I would change—every sub should get her own tiara.”

“Very important,” Reed agreed.

“What about you?” I nudged his knee, hoping we could go deeper. “Would you change anything?”

Reed looked up at the ceiling. “Um, no? It’s the most fantastic job known to man. Or woman. Don’t you think?”

I shrugged. If Reed thought everything was peachy, he obviously didn’t know about the poor subs who had their memory washed and magic stolen. If he did, would he still think it’s the best job ever? Or would he team up with me so together we could…what? Take over the magical world? “Reed. I have something I should tell you—”

There was a knock on the door. I guess door-knocking at a high school party is approved for bathrooms, just not front doors. Noted. “Hey, whoever is in there, you need to hurry. There’s a line.”

I cringed. Reed could block Façade, but not the one other eighth grader in the cast. Celeste Juniper, my ex-best friend. Former enemy. And now, since I’d helped her win second runner-up at Miss Teen Dream Idaho she was…a frenemy? Still, I did
not
need her walking in while Reed and I were talking in the bathroom. Who knew what rumor she would start.

Reed jerked his head toward the tub and whispered,

“Get in.”

I did, soundlessly. He closed the shower curtain behind me. I crouched down and watched through the little slit between the curtain and tile.

Reed cracked the door open. “Hi, Celeste. Where’s the fire?”

Celeste’s voice turned to syrup. “Reed! I didn’t know you were in there.”

“Yeah, and I don’t see this line you were worried about.”

Celeste giggled. “If you don’t make things urgent, people don’t listen.”

“Well, I was just making an
urgent
phone call.” Reed held up his cell phone for added effect. “And I need privacy. So would you mind finding another loo? Please?”

“Loo! I love your Englandy words.”

“I’m from New Zealand.”

“Same thing.” She pouted her lips. “I just need to check my makeup. What do you think? Do I look all right?”

I swallowed a laugh. Watching Celeste flirt without any reciprocation was awesome.

A ringing interrupted my thoughts. Oh. My phone was ringing. Wait, let me rephrase that. MY PHONE WAS RINGING. I ripped it out of my pocket and tried to turn off my cell, but you can’t unring a ring.

Celeste peeked behind Reed. “Is someone else in there?”

“Nope. Just me.”

“But that was a phone. In the shower. And you’re already holding your phone.”

Either the girl had superhuman strength or she caught Reed by surprise, because she pushed past him and opened the shower curtain. I waved feebly.

“Desi? What are you…Oh, my gosh…Were you two—”

“No!” Reed and I shouted in unison.

“We were just talking,” I said.

“About…about the play. And, er…” Reed shot me a lost look.

“Shakespeare’s comedies!” I added. “He was great at writing misunderstood situations. Just like this.”

Celeste wrinkled her nose. “You were talking about Shakespeare. In the bathroom.”

We nodded.

“What you two want to do together is
your
business.” Celeste placed her hand over her heart. “You don’t have to worry. I won’t tell a
soul
that you were in here. I’m just going to find another bathroom now so you two can…be alone.”

She skipped away. Not good. I laid my head down on the side of the tub.

“What do you think she’s going to tell everyone?” Reed asked.

I raised my head. “Probably that we got married and have three kids.”

Reed’s expression turned thoughtful. “I always wanted four children, if that’s all right. Perhaps twins, if you can arrange it.”

He was joking, of course, but…I still had a little happy jolt. Twins! I would dress them in matching overalls whenever we helped Reed’s parents on the farm. I wondered if our kids would be magical, too, what kind of zany adventures the old Pearson family would have—

“So, what should we do?” Reed asked.

“What? Oh.” I scrambled out of the tub. “I better call Kylee before Celeste finds her. Hold on a second.”

Kylee answered on the third ring. “There you are. I just tried calling you.”

“Yeah, sorry.” And thanks for calling at
exactly
that moment. Spot-on timing, my friend. “Did you finish your private lesson with Oberon?”

“Gah!” Kylee exclaimed. “That guy is such a flirt.”

“He’s never flirted with me, and we’re married.”

“Where are you?” she asked.

Oh. I should have come up with a battle plan before calling. All that talk of twins muddled my head. (Would they have Reed’s skin color? I hope so. I burn easily, and I wouldn’t want to have to worry about sunscreen every time we went to the beach in New Zealand.)

How long had Reed and I been in there talking? Half an hour? Even if it was five minutes, Kylee was going to grill me on our conversation. I didn’t think she would buy the Shakespeare comedies line, either. “Oh, I ran into Reed.”

“Really? Seriously, where are you? I’ve been all over the house.”

I stood. “Um, in the bathroom.”

“You ran into Reed in the bathroom?” Kylee asked.

“No. Well, sort of. Nothing embarrassing. He was, er, washing his hands. So we talked for a second.” I slapped my forehead. I was awful at this. “Just go to the kitchen. I’ll meet you there.”

I hung up the phone. “Reed. I know this is kind of a weird request, but can you, um, stay away from me? For the rest of the party? It’s just, I have to go talk to Kylee, and I don’t know how to act around you when she’s there. It’s been hard enough covering up my own magic from her, but she’s going to figure out that there’s more between us now.”

Reed raised his eyebrows. “More between us?”

“I mean, MAGIC. We both have it. And Façade. So, you know, it’s a connection. A work connection. We’re colleagues.”

“Colleagues.” Reed moved his jaw, like he was chewing on the word. “Okay. But don’t worry about magic. I’ve covered it up my whole life. I’m a master of mystery.”

“Well, keep up that disguise anytime the three of us are together. Things should be just how they were before.”

“Right. How they were before.” Reed leaned over the sink and washed his hands. “But can we meet up again? Later? There are other things we need to talk about.”

“Sure.” I was halfway down the hallway when something occurred to me. Did he mean other things about Façade? Or other things about…about us?

F
or the first time in my life, I was glad to have a ten o’clock weekend curfew. Well, not a curfew, exactly. My dad still used the word
bedtime
.

Dad picked up Kylee and me around the corner from the house. She didn’t bring up Reed. I think she was waiting for me to, and there was no way I was going to talk about
that
elephant. So we talked about the party food the whole way to Kylee’s house. When we pulled into her driveway, my dad looked at us in his rearview mirror.

“I’m glad you girls had fun at the party and didn’t, I don’t know, swing from chandeliers. But next time you might want to branch away from the chips and dip.”

“Thanks, Mr. Bascomb.” Kylee unclicked her seat belt and turned to me. “Hey, Des? Can we talk for a second? Outside?”

My dad fiddled with the radio dial. “Go ahead. I’ll just listen to my music while you discuss the different pizza toppings.”

Kylee and I slid out of the car and sat down on the curb. My dad was playing this old band called Bon Jovi and air-guitaring. “Do you think he was born a dork, or is that something you develop?” I asked Kylee.

“It’s genetic. Look at you.”

“Funny.”

She twirled the tip of her braid. “So, you’re killing me. Tell me what happened. You ran into Reed in the bathroom, and then what?”

“I told you. We talked for a bit.”

“What about?”

I yanked a weed from a crack in the sidewalk. Our magical employer. Same old. “Play stuff.”

“Did you talk about Reed losing his donkey head?”

You mean did we talk about kissing? “Kylee, why do you have to grill me every time I talk to Reed? It was a regular old conversation, just like any other conversation I’ve had with him.”

She dropped her braid. “I don’t get the same chances to talk to him.”

“That’s because you never create opportunities.”

“So, did I come up?”

“No.” I tried to keep the edge out of my voice, but I swear we’d had this talk a million times. It was mildly annoying before, but now this just plain sucked. What was I supposed to say to her? Yes, we liked the same boy, but I didn’t
know
he was the same boy when I started to like him, because he
wasn’t
the same boy at the time—he was a prince. I’d spent months thinking I liked Prince Karl, when all the wonderful things about him were really Reed pretending to be Karl. And I would tell her this, but if I did, I’d get fired. And maybe lose my magic.

Oh, yeah. P.S., I have magic.

“Okay,” she said. “Jeez. Sorry.”

Here’s the thing about having magic: everyone has an emotion or trait that allows him or her to tune into his or her power. Mine’s empathy, so when I emotionally relate and connect to my clients, I’m able to channel my magic to help them. And that ability to magically serve isn’t exclusive to royals, despite what Façade would have its employees believe.
Anyone
could benefit from my magic, if I could just figure out what, exactly, I was capable of doing. So far, I’d managed to conjure up an agency bubble, talk to Celeste with my mind, and figure out what a lot of princesses wanted. But I had yet to come up with a concrete way to use my powers in real life.

Right now would be a really good time for some magic. But it’s not like I could shoot a love potion out of my finger so that Kylee liked some other boy and our problem disappeared. It didn’t work like that.

Wait. Unless it did! I had no idea what I was able to do using my magical emotion. Maybe I
could
clear this all up with a little cupid action.

I squeezed my eyes shut and concentrated on my supportive, sweet best friend and her crush on Reed and all her needs and feelings and problems and hopes. I pictured the perfect boy for her—someone funny and smart and talented and cute and NOT REED. I knew Kylee so well; it wasn’t hard to get my empathy pumping. Then I pointed, willing all my power to pool into my fingertip. Crush be gone. Alacazam!

“Des? Why are you pointing at me?”

I opened one eye. “Do you feel…anything special when I do that?”

“Do what?”

“Point?”

“Besides weirded out? No.”

I dropped my hand. Stupid Cupid.

“What, are you trying to put a hex on me so I’ll stop asking about Reed?” Kylee’s eyes lit up. “I saw that in this teen horror movie,
Planet Hex
, where this girl had a wand inserted into her fingernail, but it was controlled by an alien from this alternate
galaxy
—”

I sighed while Kylee rambled on about the flick. My magic powers were a bust, but at least I deflected her questioning by reminding her of another scary movie.

“—but then she ended up
liking
the alien, so it all worked out.”

“Mmm hmm,” I said.

“So, anyway.” Kylee flicked a rock in the gutter. “Did Reed ask you to the Winter Ball when you were in the bathroom?”

“What are you talking about?” Sproutville’s Winter Ball was a huge festival with ice skating, hot chocolate, snowy sleigh rides, games, and yes…a “ball,” which was really just the community center jazzed up with decorations and a cheesy DJ. There weren’t many chances for girls my age to dance with boys, so they got all dressed up and pretended the “ball” was something fancier than it was. “Reed and I aren’t going together,” I said. “Don’t be ridiculous.”

Kylee didn’t look at me when she spoke. “The only thing ridiculous is that you’re keeping something from your best friend.”

“I’m not.” I rubbed my forehead. “Seriously, I told you that Reed and I—”

“I know you, Des. I know when you’re nervous. I know when you’re lying. And things have been different ever since the play started. It’s like sometimes…you’re someone else, thinking about some other world. And you don’t tell me
anything
anymore.”

I started to interrupt, but Kylee held up a hand. “Don’t deny it. And it’s like, it’s like Reed knows you better than me, even though you only saw each other at rehearsal.
You’re
different around
him
.”

“Kylee! Listen, you are my very best friend and I tell you absolutely everything I can.”

“Everything you
can.
But not everything.” She shook her head. “And that’s what hurts the most. More than the fact that we like the same boy and I think he likes you. I can get over that eventually. It’s a crush, not undying vampire love. I was already getting used to the fact that I would never be able to talk to him. But I think he knows what’s up with you. You’ve told him, but you won’t tell me.”

I didn’t say anything. I
couldn’t
say anything. She was right. About all of it. And it blew my mind that Kylee knew me so well, that she was perceptive enough to know that I had a huge secret. It was just a much different secret than she thought.

Kylee stood up and brushed off her jeans. “Sorry, that’s been on my mind for a while. I guess the party just brought it out. I’m going inside.”

“Yeah, I better go before someone from the party walks by and sees my dad head-banging in his car,” I said. “Can we talk more? Tomorrow?”

“Maybe next week. I need some time to, um, think.” Kylee gave me a weak smile before running up her driveway and disappearing into her house.

Whew. I didn’t have many solutions here. I had to either tell her the truth about Reed and Façade, or get my magic to fix everything. Otherwise, our friendship was going to take a serious hit. And it’s not like there are a million Kylees running around Idaho, or even the world. Or even this galaxy.

While Kylee was probably home watching something dumb like
My Best Friend Was Abducted by an Alien,
I put on

Casablanca
, a movie I had always adored but now watched with special attention. Right before our play had started, Reed quoted a line from this movie. And my princely crush, Karl, said the same lines the first time I met him. Karl later claimed he hadn’t even heard of
Casablanca
. So how many freshman boys know lines from a seventy-year-old movie and use them in conversation? Reed
had
to be Karl’s sub. He had to.

The movie ended, and the music from the credits was interrupted by a familiar vibrating sound from inside my purse. My manual. Wait, my manual? Now?

So much for a quiet night at home.

Darling,

I hope this finds you well. I snuck into your final performance and saw you kiss that poor boy’s costume head. I hope it was dry-cleaned regularly. But, brava! So much spirit and talent. So strange that you would be cast alongside another employee of Façade, and a rather valuable one at that.

Yes, we know about Reed Pearson. Of course we know. Although a relationship between subs is permissible, it’s not promoted. We don’t want you comparing circumstances—it’s important to remember every sub has a different experience. You are all special to the agency. So although we certainly won’t forbid you from remaining friends with Mr. Pearson now that you’re aware of your commonalities, we do hope you keep your interactions light. Focus on adolescent concerns, whatever those may be. No plotting to take over the greatest magical organization in the world. Ha!

In other news, preparations have already begun for my promotion to the Façade council. Such a delicious secret I’ve been carrying around—the news will be announced at an upcoming formal ceremony. What to wear, what to wear? While I consider that, you should get started on your next gig. Yes, I’ve included your Betterment of Elite Sub Training, better known as BEST. Although BEST is still considered part of Level Two, we’ve never had a sub rise so suddenly, and we’re still making arrangements for your promotion. Usually, a match is selected after a sub has worked for a particular client many times over many years. So we’d like you to do this job while we finalize your long-term position.

And don’t worry. This list might seem daunting, but now that you’re so in tune with your magical emotion, we know you’ll shine in any position! Empathy can be felt for the strongest or feeblest of princesses, and once you get going, your magic will take care of the rest. Mastery of this BEST list would be impossible, so do what you are able. Further information on this particular princess will be available once we feel you’re prepared for the task. Which should be soon. You’ve had your time to play, now it’s time for work.

Ta-ta,

Meredith

Betterment of Elite Sub Training

  1. Gymnastics
  2. Coding and advanced computer technology
  3. Lock-picking
  4. Fencing
  5. Karate
  6. Sculpture
  7. Build up a tolerance to pain
  8. Stealth

I shook my manual a couple times. Somehow, I’d been sent a list for a ninja movie action hero, not a princess. But the words didn’t budge. This was legit.

At least I knew how to use my magic when I was subbing. I literally put myself in my client’s shoes and intuitively knew what they wanted or needed. And I was going to need all the help I could get because…Building up a tolerance to pain? That has to be breaking some employment laws right there. And it’s not like they had stuntwoman training in Idaho. Not to mention
gymnastics.
Given my inability to do a somersault, the outlook was not good.

As always, I had no clue when Meredith would be back. The BEST list was created to prepare me for my next job, and in the past I’d had weeks, even months, of research before beginning the gig. Quality over quantity, Meredith said. But that obviously wasn’t the case anymore. They wanted me, and they wanted me soon.

What
they wanted me to do, I still couldn’t say. But

I had a feeling this job was not going to involve a ball gown.

I spent the rest of my weekend preparing for my BEST by watching old ninja movies and fiddling with a homemade lock-picking kit I had read about. As far as building up a tolerance to pain, I’d once heard that my favorite actress, screen legend Audrey Hepburn, used to pluck her nose hairs when she needed to cry in a movie. And yeah, the exercise brought tears to my eyes. I just hoped my biggest casualty was losing nose hairs, not major body parts.

I didn’t do any more research beyond that. I could have done a search on karate/fencing/gymnastic princesses in the sub chat room and figured out my client’s name. Really, how many princesses fit that BEST description? But I needed more time to talk to Reed before I went back to work. I wasn’t ready for Façade just yet.

Then again, I wasn’t really prepared for school on Monday either.

It started in homeroom when Celeste’s boyfriend, Hayden Garrison, leaned over and whispered, “So how long have you been going out with that guy from New Zealand?”

Why was Hayden Garrison talking to me? He never talked to me—the kid still thought my name was Daisy. Six months ago, when I still had a stupid crush on the guy, I would have danced with glee. Now I just stared at him blankly.

“Huh?”

BOOK: A Farewell to Charms
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