A Stroke Of Magic (24 page)

Read A Stroke Of Magic Online

Authors: Tracy Madison

Tags: #Fiction

BOOK: A Stroke Of Magic
13.74Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Kicking the blankets off my legs, I stretched again, trying to work out the kinks that only a full night of sex, broken up with sporadic sleep, could give. Everything about last night had rocked. Would tonight be more of the same? My lips curved into a smile of anticipation.

Hell yes, tonight would be more of the same. Maybe we could even start early.

My stomach growled at the same time the scent of bacon and eggs drifted into the room. He was making me breakfast? Wow. Warmth spilled in, and I sat up in bed, yawning. I looked for my overnight bag, only to realize I’d never brought it in. But Ethan had thought of that too, because he’d left one of his T-shirts on the bed for me.

I slipped it on over my head and then stood, stifling another yawn. Taking the steps down slowly, quietly, I sneaked into the restroom. Using his brush, I smoothed my hair. I washed my face and hands, and gargled with a little mouthwash. I wanted to kiss him again the second I saw him, so no morning breath for me, thank you very much!

When I left the bathroom, it was to see Ethan emerging from the kitchen, dressed in nothing but a pair of boxers, a tray in hand. Many mornings yet to come flashed in front of me, as sure as the sun shining in the windows. Even better, the sight of his naked chest sent another tingling series of shivers across my skin. And his stomach? Tight. Taut. Beautiful.

His eyes found me, and he smiled. My stomach flip-flopped. “I was bringing you breakfast in bed,” he said. “But since you’re awake, why don’t we stay down here?” He winked, and my shivers increased. “For now.”

“That sounds perfect.”

He walked forward a few steps, putting the tray on the table. When I got to him, I balanced on my tiptoes and kissed him. He tasted like sugared coffee, hot and sweet, and he pulled me close for a deeper kiss. I could have stayed that way forever, but at that instant, my stomach growled again. Loudly.

His eyes alight with humor, he laughed. “Sit down and eat. I left the orange juice in the kitchen; I’ll be right back.” Another quick kiss, and he turned around. My gaze fell on his back, and then moved up to his shoulder.

His completely bare, 100-percent mark-free, perfect-in-every-way, right shoulder.

The floor swayed. I gripped the chair next to me, holding on for dear life as everything I knew, everything I wanted, everything I’d believed in mere seconds earlier swirled down the drain as quickly as water streaming from a faucet. My chest tightened. My heart galloped. I tried to find distance, so I could think. So I could figure this out.

No scar. No birthmark. Not even a freaking freckle. How in the hell was that possible? I’d been so
sure.
So very sure. The air grew heavy; so heavy, it hurt to breathe. My chest tightened more, and I dragged a mouthful of air into my lungs and forced it back out. Queasiness spiked in my stomach, sharp and fast, crawling up my throat, almost making me gag. I swallowed hard, gripped the back of the chair harder.

The clinking of glasses in the next room floated into my haze. I needed to pull myself together. I needed to figure this out. But on the heels of that came the realization that there was nothing to figure out, nothing to do but leave. To walk away from the man I loved, who loved me, and go in search of someone else. Someone who was supposed to be the key to saving my daughter, my family, me…and yes, at this point, Ethan.

He reappeared then, a smile on his face, happiness in his eyes. At that moment, I hated myself, hated the fact I was going to hurt him.

“You didn’t have to wait, sweetheart. Dig in. I know you’re starving.” He set the glasses filled with orange juice on the table, and then…well, then he looked at me. And he froze.

My mouth opened, but nothing came out. All I could do was stare at him.

“Are you in pain? You’re completely white. Sit down, Alice.” He pulled my hand free from the back of the chair and guided me into it. “Where does it hurt? Is it the baby?”

I shook my head. “The baby is fine,” I mumbled.

He pulled another chair over, so we sat knee to knee. “What is it? What could possibly have occurred in the last three minutes to cause this?”

“Nothing. Everything.” My chin trembled, my voice cracked.

“Are you sorry about last night?” He paused, inhaled deeply, and then asked, “Did I disappoint you?”

“No!” I couldn’t let him think that. Not only because it wasn’t true, but because I wouldn’t leave that legacy behind. “Making love with you was incredible. I’m not sorry about that in any way.”

“Then what is it? Are we moving too fast?” Confusion merged with concern. “We can go back to taking it slow. No pressures. No worries.”

“That’s”—I gulped air—“not it.”

“Then what? Talk to me.”

I said the only thing I thought, the only thing I could. “You don’t have a scar.” A big, fat tear dripped down my cheek. And then another, and another. The tightening in my chest let loose, and the tears turned to sobs. Gasping, I tried to form words, tried to talk, but I couldn’t. How could I have done this? How could I have made such a massive mistake?

“Are scars that important to you? Because I do have plenty, you know.” His voice was light, but his eyes were filled with worry. Standing, he put one foot on the chair. “Look, there’s one here on my thigh. See?” He held his arm out. “And here. There’s the one you saw the other night.” Swiveling at the waist, he pulled the band of his boxers down, just a little. “And look here, sweetheart, that’s a nice one. Plenty of scars, so nothing to cry over.”

I heard the humor in his tone, his way of trying to make me laugh, and wow—I loved him even more, if that was possible. But of course, that didn’t help. It didn’t stop the sobs from tearing out. It didn’t change the fact that he didn’t have the one scar I so needed him to have. The one scar I’d somehow talked myself into believing he
would
have.

Stupid. So stupid of me.

He sat down in his chair again, lightly grasping my arms, his gaze seeking, searching. “Since it’s not our compatibility in bed, I can fix anything. I hate to see you this upset. What is it? Tell me and I’ll fix it. Give me the chance to try.”

I angled away, not able to look into his eyes. “It’s not fixable. I’ve made a terrible mistake, Ethan. I am so sorry.”

His breath caught. “Do you love me?”

“I do.”

“Well, then, it can’t be too horrible. Because I love you back!” He tipped my chin, so we were eye to eye. “You can trust me. What is this about?” Cupping my face in his hands, he leaned over and kissed me.

I pulled back, wiped my hand over my lips, and then my cheeks, trying to dry the tears that refused to stop. “You’re not going to want to hear this. I don’t want to say it. I don’t want to believe it.”

For the first time, his eyes hardened. “Maybe not, but if this is going where I fear it is, then I need to.”

He was right, so I nodded. I reined in my emotions, calmed my breathing, and steadied my voice. None of this was easy, because all I wanted to do was tell him everything was okay, that I loved him and that was that. For a second, I actually considered it, but then…the dream came back in all its vivid heartbreak. So I told him everything, beginning with Miranda’s warning and ending with my dream about my daughter. It was hard. Harder than anything else I’d ever done, getting it all out, saying everything I knew, thought, and believed. Telling the amazing man I’d fallen in love with that I couldn’t be with him.

Through it all, he listened and didn’t ask any questions. At the end, when there was no more to say, his face was impassive. A shield had dropped into place. “You’re leaving me because I don’t have a scar on my shoulder; is this correct?”

“I don’t want to. But this is bigger than me. More important than me.” My throat closed, and the pain grew and grew inside until I could hardly stand it. “This is about my daughter.”

He cleared his throat, his eyes moving past me. “I understand that, Alice. I’m even willing to set my skepticism aside and believe in…magic. What I can’t comprehend is how you can’t believe in what you feel for me. What I feel for you. And that
on the basis of a drawing,
you’re willing to walk away.”

“I have no choice. I promised myself—” It didn’t matter what I said, because there was no way I could make him understand what I barely could.

“The other night, I told you I wouldn’t go away unless you told me to. And now, that’s what you’re doing,” he clarified.

“I don’t want to,” I said again.

“Then don’t.” When I didn’t respond, he grabbed my hand. His mask slipped a little. “There is nothing I can do or say to convince you to give us more time, to see where this leads? To trust in how we feel?”

His willingness to try, despite what I’d said, made it worse. Why couldn’t he hate me for being like his fiancée? Push me away for being insane? No, he had to be understanding and loving and I so wanted to say yes. More than I’d ever wanted anything else. But I thought again of that dream, and the horror that awaited my daughter, awaited Ethan and me, if I followed my heart. The tears came again, and I tried so hard to hold them back. “I can’t.”

He released my hand. In a flat, emotionless voice I’d never before heard from him, he said, “That’s that, then.”

Everything inside of me bottomed out. “I’m sorry.”

A light of anger flashed in his eyes so fast it surprised me. “It’s your choice, Alice. I love you, but I can’t—won’t—force you to stay with me. To give us a chance.” Just as quickly, the anger subsided. “I hope you find what—who—you’re looking for.”

There wasn’t anything more to say. I grabbed my purse, ran out of his apartment, and drove home. My body shook the entire time, and I could hardly see through the fog of tears that continued to flow. It didn’t matter that I’d made the only decision I could, because now all I felt was an empty, gnawing pain deep inside.

It wasn’t until I got home and collapsed on my bed that I realized I still wore Ethan’s shirt. Lovely. I’d run from his place like a maniac in nothing but a T-shirt.

But then I pulled it up over my face so it covered my nose and mouth and breathed in. In barely the beat of my heart, he was there with me, just by the scent of his shirt. I curled up, held myself as tightly as I could, and tried to imagine my life without him. The pain grew even stronger, so instead I pretended he was holding me, and that when I woke up he’d still be there lying next to me.

It was still just pretend.

Chapter Seventeen

Grandma Verda waved her files in the air. “I know this hurts, but it’s been a week. You need to set up some of these dates.”

I blinked but didn’t respond. The past seven days had been hell. I’d almost called in sick the Monday after ripping my heart and Ethan’s to shreds, but I’d missed him so much, even with the pain, I had to see him; so I’d forced myself to go. Only to find
he
was the one who’d called off—for an entire week. The rumor was he’d gone to Ireland to see his family, but I had no clue as to whether that was the truth. He’d missed several important client meetings, though, the Kendall account for one, so likely the rumor held weight. But that didn’t make me miss him any less.

Elizabeth put her arm around my shoulders. “Sweetie, you don’t have to do this yet. Take the time you need.”

“She can’t. It might not be any of these men, either,” Grandma interjected, as stubborn as ever. “This isn’t a game.”

Chloe laced her fingers together, watching me. She’d stayed with me the entire week, only leaving my side for work, returning the favor I’d done for her so long ago when Kyle had broken her heart. I focused on her. “What do you think?”

She stared at me, sadness lurking in her eyes. “I don’t know. In any other circumstance, I’d say it was too soon.”

I blinked again, still surprised the crying had stopped. Oh, the pain hadn’t lessened; if anything, it had gotten worse. But somehow, I’d drained myself of tears.

“There’re only four men to begin with.” Grandma Verda yanked off the rubber band holding a particular stack of files together. “One afternoon is all it will take. We can set up…what’s it called? Where you meet one right after another for an hour or so each?”

“Usually it’s only like fifteen minutes, but you’re talking about speed dating,” said Chloe. “But you can’t push her, Verda. That isn’t fair.”

“None of this is fair. But she left Ethan for a reason, didn’t she?” Grandma turned to me. “Didn’t you? If you’re unwilling to move forward, then you might as well have stayed with him and been happy until the doo-doo hit the fan.”

Her words hit hard, like being slammed by a Mack truck. Because she was completely correct. And no way was all this pain going to be for nothing. “Fine. But I can’t set it up. Someone else do it and just tell me where to go and when to be there.” I paused, realizing I was really going to do this. “And if any of you has a clue as to how I’m supposed to recognize the right man when I’m in love with another, please let me in on it.”

Chloe reached her hand out toward Grandma, accepting the files. “I’ll do it. I can talk to them on the phone and feel them out a little, maybe.”

I almost asked how that would help, but then the doorbell rang. I didn’t think, I didn’t take a minute to consider why a blast of hope rushed through me; I just ran to the door and swung it open. Disappointment settled in, but I slapped on a smile. It was my brother Scot. With his slightly damp-at-the-edges hair, flushed cheeks, and overly bright eyes, he could have just run a marathon. Even with my misery, that should have been my first clue. “What’s wrong? You don’t look so good.”

“Nothing’s wrong. Why would you assume something is wrong just because I’m visiting you on a Saturday?” He strode into the dining room. “I tried calling you. Twice. Don’t you ever answer your phone?”

Before I could respond, let alone close my door, I saw our mother approaching at top speed from down the street, our father following at a slightly slower pace. I squinted, in case I’d imagined it. I hadn’t. “Urn, Scot? Why are Mom and Dad here?”

“Shit. How’d they get here so fast?” He came up behind me and shut the door—not quite in my mother’s face, as she hadn’t actually gotten there yet, but pretty dang close. He leaned back, as if barricading it. “Listen to me.”

Crossing my arms, I tried very hard to disregard the dread I felt. “Talk fast. You have, like, ten seconds.”

“Um. Okay. She called me this afternoon and I accidentally let it slip that you’re pregnant.” Sweat beaded on his forehead. “I didn’t mean to. It just came out.”

“Seriously?” Like I needed this in the middle of everything else! “Awesome. Thanks for the notice.”

“Hey. I tried calling you. It’s not my fault you didn’t answer.” He tossed me a sheepish grin. “Want to escape out the back? We can probably make it if we go now.”

“She’d just chase us down.” I sighed. This wasn’t his fault; it was mine. I’d turned my ringer off, and I’d continued to ignore something I shouldn’t have. But still, why today? Why now? “It’s probably better to have it out in the open. But geez, Scot, learn to keep your mouth shut.”

The doorbell rang. We both ignored it.

“I’m glad you’re not mad at me.” He bent over to give me a quick hug. “Okay. I’m gonna take off. Good luck with Mom and Dad.”

Grabbing his arm, I pulled him toward me. “What? You really think I’m going to let you leave? Not hardly.”

“I…uh…thought you’d want to handle the rest yourself.”

“Um. No.” I didn’t let him argue, just opened the door.

My mother’s gaze went directly to my stomach. “How could you not tell us?”

“Isobel, calm down. She’s a grown woman. We should have waited and let her come to us when she was ready.” My father smiled at me, but concern gleamed in his eyes. “I’m sorry. I tried to stop her from coming over, but she wouldn’t hear of it.”

“It’s okay, Dad. She’s right. I should have said something a long time ago. Let’s go into the living room. Grandma, Elizabeth, and Chloe are here.”

“Do they know?” my mother asked.

“Yes. They’ve known for a while,” I admitted, leading the way.

Elizabeth was in the papasan chair. My parents took the couch, next to my grandmother. Scot sort of eased himself against the wall, next to Chloe, and I sat in the chair across from everyone. “Okay, should I talk or do you want to?” I asked my mother.

Her gaze softened, and the tight way she held her shoulders relaxed. “I just want to know if you’re okay. And when you’re due. Oh, and who the father is.”

The calmness in her tone surprised me. Kudos to her for keeping it together. And somehow, it helped me too. “I’m okay. The father is Troy. Remember him? And I’m due in September.”

She pushed a strand of hair behind her ear in a nervous gesture. “You never introduced us, so no, I don’t remember Troy. And if he’s the father, why isn’t he here?”

“He’s the guy whose wife totaled your apartment?” Scot asked.

“Yes, and he’s not here because he’s not going to be involved. And it’s better that way.”

My mother asked more questions; so did my dad, and I answered them all. Honestly, it wasn’t nearly as difficult as I’d thought. Really, it was the only thing that had gone right lately, because as soon as our conversation ended, a huge amount of relief slid in.

That is, until my mother said something that pushed me back over the edge. “I’m glad to know now, but I wish you’d told us earlier. You’ve always been so secretive. I don’t understand where you get that from.”

I sighed, exasperated. “It seems that keeping secrets is something this family is good at. Including you.”

Her eyes narrowed. “What are you talking about?”

I narrowed mine right back. “Miranda. And the little family gift that I should have known about forever ago. Why’d you keep that a secret, Mom?” I bit my lip. I hadn’t meant to sound so harsh. But dang it, the
secret
comment really got to me.

“Alice! Mom isn’t a part of that,” Elizabeth said.

“That’s her own fault,” said Grandma Verda. “I certainly gave her the gift. It’s about time all of this came out. I’m so proud of you, Alice!”

“I have no idea what you’re going on about.” My mother looked at my father. “Marty? Do you know what’s going on?”

“This has nothing to do with me. But maybe you should listen to them.” He leaned over and picked up my newspaper.
Great.
This was my father’s number-one technique for tuning everyone out. Well, that or the TV, but he wouldn’t turn that on now. Not without serious repercussions from my mother.

Refocusing on her, I asked, “You don’t know? Seriously?”

“She knows; she just doesn’t believe. It didn’t work for her and it came back to me.” Grandma Verda shrugged. “You have to be willing to accept it, and she never was. Even worse, she thinks I’m a batty old woman who just made everything up.”

“Mom! That’s not true. I’ve never called you batty. A little eccentric, maybe.” My mother curled her arms around herself, as if warding off a chill. “It’s nonsense.”

“It’s not nonsense. Every woman in this family has had the magic. Except for you, which is just fine, Isobel. It’s not right for everyone.” Grandma Verda squared her narrow shoulders. “But don’t you go mocking it, or Miranda, just because you don’t understand.”

Confusion zipped over Scot. “Magic? Miranda? What’s going on here? Have you all lost your minds?”

“It’s real, Scot,” Chloe said. “I’ve seen things myself.”

My dad stood, still holding the newspaper, and beckoned to my brother. “This is something that doesn’t concern us. Let’s go to the kitchen and let them talk.” When Scot hesitated, my father said, “Now, son.”

After my dad and Scot had escaped the madness, I collapsed on the couch next to my mother. “Why don’t you believe?”

“Because it’s ludicrous. That’s why.”

“And why did Dad leave? It sort of seems like he knows.”

“I told him about it a long time ago, when I tried to give it to Isobel. Joe knows too, but that was an accident.” Grandma Verda frowned at my mother. “They both believe, and Marty has asked me to help him out with a spell here and there over the years.”

My mother gasped. Elizabeth’s jaw dropped. Shivers sheathed my skin. “This is getting weirder by the second,” I mumbled. I’d never have guessed, in a million years, that my brother and father already knew about the magic. About Miranda.

Covering her face with her hands, my mother sighed.

Ack. She wasn’t handling it well. I even felt bad about bringing it up. I glanced at Elizabeth, Grandma, Chloe, and then back to Mom. “We don’t have to talk about this around you. I should never have said anything.”

A hard shiver rippled through Mom. Slowly, she removed her hands. “Thank you.”

That should have been the end of it, at least for now, but of course it wasn’t. Because at that instant, the scent of roses filled the air. I glanced at Elizabeth, and she noticed too. Strangely, so did Chloe, if her expression was anything to go by. I didn’t have a chance to wonder why, because almost immediately, a kaleidoscope of colors swirled into the room, tiny glimmers of light darting every which way.

Of course.
I’d been trying to get Miranda’s attention for a week, and
now
she decided to show up. My ghost grandmother had the most interesting, and frustrating, sense of timing.

My mother’s cheeks whitened. “What is that? What’s going on here?”

Grandma Verda clapped her hands. “Oh! It’s her. She’s coming!”

“Who’s coming?” asked Chloe.

“Miranda.” And wow, was she putting on a show. She certainly had a…gift in the special-effects department. The colors zipped around the room, the lights danced, and then there she was, in the center of all of it. I sort of wanted to strangle her; not that ghosts could be strangled, but…well, I wasn’t very happy with her.

Grandma Verda stood, her body trembling with excitement. “I wondered if I’d ever see you again. I’ve wanted to see you again.”

The light around Miranda pulsated. “I told you that you would, Verda. I don’t break my word.”

Chloe shrank against the wall. Not in fear, or even shock, but by the look in her eyes, pure amazement. “Wow. Just wow.”

My ghostly grandmother laughed in her tinkling way. “Hello, Chloe. Thank you for taking such good care of Alice. She needs you, and you need her. I’m so glad you have each other.”

Chloe nodded, but continued to stare, wide-eyed, at her.

Miranda smiled in my sister’s direction. “Elizabeth…I’m pleased to see how happy you are. Things are going well for you, yes?”

“For me, but not for Alice. She could use some help.” Elizabeth’s eyes beseeched our ancestress. “Can you please help her?”

She shook her head, a glimmer of sadness in her eyes. “I’ve done all I can do. The rest is in her hands.”

“I’m right here. Talk to me! I’ve been trying to get you to all week. Why haven’t you come?” The shaking in my voice pissed me off. “Do you know what’s happened? Do you know how I feel?”

“I’m so very sorry you’re in such pain, Alice. But I can’t interfere. You need to find the solution for yourself. Nothing has changed there.”

I wanted to argue with her. Hell, I wanted to—somehow—force her to answer my questions, to make everything better, to tell me that my feelings were right, even without a scar. But how do you make a ghost do anything she doesn’t want to do?

Gliding to my mother, Miranda’s form shimmered, and she smiled again. More pulsating lights and colors surrounded her, like a rainbow on speed. “Isobel, I’ve watched you for your entire life. Everything Verda has told you is the truth, but listen carefully: My love for you has nothing to do with the magic or the gift. It’s within your rights to turn it away.”

My mother nodded, and she seemed calm enough, but her complexion scared the hell out of me. This was probably way too much for her. What amused me, though, was how her good manners overrode her fear, her skepticism. “It’s nice to meet you, Miranda. Uh…you look very nice today.”

Elizabeth chuckled. Grandma Verda shushed her. Me? I just stayed quiet. I couldn’t speak, but I couldn’t turn away, either.

“If you ever change your mind about the gift, it’s there for you…whenever you want it,” said Miranda. “You don’t need to be afraid.”

My mother stared at Miranda, and questions dotted her eyes but she kept them to herself. “Okay, then. Well. It was nice meeting you,” she repeated. “I’m going to go to the kitchen now and talk to Marty and Scot.” Standing, she took one more long look at Miranda and then quietly, and quickly, left the room.

Once she’d disappeared, Miranda turned back to us. “She’ll have questions eventually, but not yet. Be ready for them when they do come, answer them honestly, and she might surprise you.”

Other books

Zombie Hunter by Ailes, Derek
The Olive Conspiracy by Shira Glassman
The Mysteries of Algiers by Robert Irwin
The Miracle Man by James Skivington
Approaching Menace by June Shaw
Boonville by Anderson, Robert Mailer
The Baby Jackpot by Jacqueline Diamond