I put my big fry pan on the cooktop. “What object are you going to move?”
“I thought I’d try something small. Like a glass.”
“No glass!”
“Bread? Cheese?” Glo asked.
“No. I’m using the bread and the cheese. I don’t want enchanted food.”
Glo looked around. “How about the toaster?”
“Sure. Do the toaster.”
“Light as air, listen well, rise to the command on words spriggam, barflower, my will be done.” Glo pointed her finger at the toaster. “Spriggam, barflower, my will be done. I command thee to rise.”
We all watched the toaster for a beat and
BANG!
The toaster burst into flames. Diesel pulled the plug and dumped it into the sink.
“I think it rose a little before it caught fire,” Glo said.
“It jumped when it exploded,” Diesel told her.
Glo threw her arms up in exasperation. “I don’t get it. I know I read it correctly.”
“You didn’t need powdered octopus suckers or anything, did you?” I asked her.
“No. It’s all right here in black and white.” Glo read the spell out loud again, following along with her finger. “Spriggam, barflower, my will be done.”
A shout went up from the street.
“Oh no,” Glo said. “Now what?”
We ran to the door and looked out at Mel Mensher. He was standing on my sidewalk, watching three other members of the Spook Patrol chase after the Spook Patrol van.
“It just took off,” Mensher said. “We parked it, and we all got out and started checking our equipment, and next thing, the van’s going down the street all by itself.”
The van jumped the curb at the curve in the road, bumped over Mrs. Dugan’s front yard, and crashed into her oak tree. The three Spook Patrol guys pulled up and stood hands on hips, looking at the van.
“Honest to gosh, it was an accident,” Glo said.
I pushed Glo back into the house and closed and locked the door. “The driver obviously forgot to put his parking brake on,” I said. “That’s our story, and we’re sticking with it.”
Diesel was frying grilled cheese when we got back to the kitchen. “And?” he asked.
“The Spook Patrol van took off down the street all by its lonesome,” I told him.
“Nice,” Diesel said.
He flipped a sandwich onto a plate, handed it to Glo, and put a second sandwich into the fry pan.
“You can cook,” I said to him.
“No,” Diesel said. “I can’t cook. I can make a sandwich if no one else is going to make it for me.”
“I bet I could find a cooking spell,” Glo said.
Diesel and I answered in unison.
“No!”
Diesel gave the second grilled cheese to Carl, and I took over the fry pan.
“It really ticks me off that Wulf is going to get Mark’s charm,” I said to Diesel. “We should have been more aggressive with Mark. We let him slip through our fingers.”
“Roughing up Normals is frowned upon by the BUM,” Diesel said. “Especially if the Normals haven’t done anything wrong.”
“What about Wulf? Wulf kidnaps people and does who-the-heck-knows-what to them.”
“Wulf doesn’t work for the BUM. He has his own set of rules.”
“He killed a man. Why aren’t you ordered to capture him or something? Why are you only authorized to stop him from getting the Stones?”
“Wulf has friends in very high places. Beyond that, I can only assume there are circumstances that justify my orders.”
“You don’t look like a guy who would be good at taking orders,” I said, plating his sandwich.
Diesel fixed his brown eyes on me. “It’s a struggle.”
“Maybe I need to go to wizard school,” Glo said. “Someplace where I could take a course in spell recitation. Do you suppose there’s a wizard school? Maybe an online course?”
“Wizards aren’t real,” I said to Glo. “There are no wizards. And wizard school would be a big scam.”
“Criminy,” Glo said. “Just let me know how you feel.” She looked at Diesel. “What do you think?”
“I don’t know any wizards personally.”
“But do you think there could be wizards?”
Diesel finished his sandwich and put his dish in the dishwasher. “
Could be
covers a lot of ground.”
“Well, I think there could be wizards,” Glo told him. “I bet Ripple was a wizard. And I bet the book is magical.”
Diesel got a bottle of water from the refrigerator. “Have you ever let Lizzy hold it?”
“No!” Glo scooped the book off the counter and handed it to me. “Do you feel anything?”
“It might be a little warm.”
“Is it glowing?”
“No, but it has a faint green aura.”
“What does that mean?” Glo asked.
I shrugged. “I don’t know. I’m new to all this.”
We looked at Diesel.
“No clue,” Diesel said. “Not my area of expertise, but the grilled cheese was excellent.”
“So maybe someone put a whammy on my book, and that’s why the spells don’t work right,” Glo said. “Maybe there was some rival wizard, and he jinxed Ripple’s book.” She took her book back and shoved it into her tote bag. “I’m going to talk to Nina from the Exotica Shoppe tomorrow. I’ll get to the bottom of this.”
I walked Glo to the door, and we looked down the hill to Mrs. Dugan’s yard, where a tow truck and police car were parked, lights flashing. Mel Mensher had joined the rest of his crew at the crash scene, and all was quiet at my house.
“Shoot,” Glo said.
“Faulty parking brake,” I reminded her.
Glo grimaced, got into her car, and drove away.
“I like her,” Diesel said, standing behind me. “She has imagination.” He slid an arm around my waist and rested his chin on the top of my head. “I like you a lot more. No logical reason for it.”
I thought it was great that he liked me, but it would be better if he knew why.
“I know why,” he said, reading my mind, his lips brushing against my ear, “but I’d jeopardize my standing as a macho
jerk if I gave you a big gooey list of reasons. And if I was honest, it would lean heavy to smooth skin and soft breasts.”
“Unh.”
“Is that a good grunt or a bad grunt?”
“I thought you were reading my mind.”
“Sometimes your mind is a mess.”
“I was thinking your standing as a jerk is intact.”
His arm tightened slightly around me, and he kissed me just below my ear. “That’s a huge relief.”
The kiss sent a rush of pleasure humming through me, and I unconsciously murmured,
“Mmmmmm.”
Good grief, I thought. Did I just make that utterly rapturous sound? Did I actually
moan
out loud? Over a kiss, no less. And it wasn’t even a
hot
kiss. The kiss had been almost
friendly
!
“I made that sound because I was thinking about cupcakes,” I told him.
“Sweetheart, you
wish
a cupcake could make you feel that good.”
I was speechless. I felt my mouth drop open and my eyes go wide.
Diesel grinned down at me. “On a scale of one to ten, how offensive was that remark I just made?”
“Seven.”
“I’m off my game. I can be much more offensive than that.”
Something to look forward to.
He turned his attention to the Spook Patrol at the bottom of the hill. “I think we owe them a favor,” he said, pushing me out of the house, locking my front door behind us.
“What kind of favor?” I asked. “I thought we didn’t like them.”
He took my hand and tugged me down the sidewalk. “They’re okay. They’re just doing their job.”
We walked past the cop car to Mel Mensher, and Diesel expressed his sympathy. “Too bad about your van,” Diesel said to Mensher. “How are you guys going to hunt spooks without it?”
“The tow truck guy said the damage was minimal,” Mensher told him. “And in the meantime, Richie went to get his wife’s minivan.”
“I have some information you might find interesting,” Diesel said. “Can I borrow your notepad and pen?”
Mensher pulled his pad and pen from his jacket pocket. “What kind of information is this?”
Diesel wrote something in Mensher’s book and handed it back to him. “See for yourself.”
Mrs. Dugan was standing on the other side of Mensher. She had her arms folded in front of her, watching the van get towed off her tree. She was in her seventies, with short white hair and a fireplug body. Her husband had passed on, and she lived alone with an obese beagle named Morty. Mrs. Dugan and Morty walked by my house twice a day taking their constitutional.
“Will your tree be okay?” I asked her.
“It’s got some bark peeled away, but I think it’ll be fine,” she said. “I couldn’t help but notice Ophelia’s cat came back. I saw him sitting in your window earlier today. Isn’t that nice. I was worried about him. It’s not like he’s a normal cat. What with his eye and all.”
“Do you know how he lost his eye?”
“No. Ophelia would never talk about it. She was very sensitive when it came to that cat.”
“Do you know his name?”
She thought a moment. “I don’t believe I do.”
I said good-bye to Mrs. Dugan, and Diesel and I made our way up the hill to my house.
“I thought Cat 7143 came from the shelter,” Diesel said.
“It did. But it turns out it was my Great Aunt Ophelia’s cat.”
“Makes you wonder, doesn’t it,” Diesel said.
“Compared to the rest of my life these days . . . it’s not even a four on the one-to-ten wonder scale. What information did you give to Mensher?”
“I gave him Wulf’s Boston address,” Diesel said.
That got a smile out of me. “Does Wulf have a sense of humor?”
“He won’t have one about this.”
“Not at all?”
“The first time Mensher clicks off a picture, Wulf’s sphincter will get so tight his eyes will cross.”
We were almost at my house when Richie motored past us in a green minivan. He stopped next to the tow truck, and in the glare of headlights, Mensher and his crew off-loaded equipment from the broken van to the new minivan. There was a short discussion between Mensher and the tow truck operator, Mensher and his crew piled into the minivan, and the minivan drove away and disappeared around the corner.
“Off to Beacon Hill,” Diesel said.
“You threw them under the bus.”
“Yep.”
“What if Wulf does the burning claw thing on them?”
“They’d probably get a reality show out of it.”
“The last guy to get the burning claw also got dead,” I told him.
“Wulf won’t kill these guys. Unless he’s in a really bad mood. And even then, he’ll probably just maim one or two of them.”
“Oh great. Now you’re making me an accessory to maiming.”
“It’s not like it’s major maiming,” Diesel said. “It’s only a handprint.”
“That’s horrible.”
“You’re such a girl,” he said, smiling at me, like I was dumb but redeemingly cute. He pulled me the short distance to the Cayenne, opened the door, and motioned me in.
“Where are we going?” I asked him.
“We’re going to stop a potential maiming.”
______
Beacon Hill is a quiet, historic neighborhood in the heart of Boston. Streets are narrow and tree-shaded. Sidewalks are bumpy. Houses are pricey, ranging from shabby chic to totally renovated and opulent. Parking is impossible.
The Spook Patrol had somehow managed to snag the last legal parking place on the hill, and Diesel settled for a space that wasn’t so legal. He parked blocking a driveway one house down and across from the green minivan.
Months ago, when I first came to town, I took a walking tour of the area, so I knew we were on one of the more desirable streets. The houses were mostly Federalist style. Some were single-family and some had been converted to expensive multitenant condos and apartments.
Wulf lived in the middle of the block in a single-family, perfectly maintained example of a Greek Revival brownstone. The small, manicured front yard was bordered by a fancy black wrought-iron fence. Curtains were drawn, but a bar of light was visible in a second-floor window. The Spook Patrol was parked smack in front of the house.
“I don’t see Wulf’s car,” I said to Diesel.
“He has parking in the rear.”
“Do you think he’s home?”
“I know he’s home,” Diesel said.
“Do you have an ass cramp?”
“Big-time.”
Beacon Hill streets are lit by gas lamps. Not as efficient as halogens, but bright enough to watch the Spook Patrol guys organizing themselves. There were five of them, including Mel Mensher. There was Richie, a chubby guy I’d heard called Gorp, a Pakistani named Milton, and a skinny little guy no one ever talked to. Richie was on his cell phone. Mensher, Milton, and Gorp shuffled back and forth on the sidewalk, looking at the house through binoculars, taking readings with their ghost-o-meters. The skinny little guy hauled a camp chair out of the minivan, set it up on the sidewalk, and settled in with his computer.