Read Do You Believe in Magic? Online

Authors: Ann Macela

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Magic, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Romance, #Contemporary

Do You Believe in Magic? (36 page)

BOOK: Do You Believe in Magic?
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The beauty of his hands. Long fingers, blunt-cut nails, slightly callused, totally male. She knew she must have noticed his hands before, playing on the keyboard, playing with her. If she doubted he was a warlock, his hands would have convinced her as they magically drew trembling, fiery responses she hadn’t known existed within her. It had to be magic.
Their mating had been glorious, beyond any of her expectations, certainly beyond her past experience. She’d never had an orgasm with Walt. He had never given, only taken. Now she knew what had been missing. Well, in truth, a lot more than an orgasm had been missing in that so-called relationship.
Nothing was missing from this one, she was certain. Not caring, not commitment, not trust, not passion. The passion in herself surprised her; she thought Walt had killed it. If so, Clay had resurrected it like a phoenix from the ashes, and the fire bursting forth shocked her.
Then there was love. What was it again, what Daria had said? “They are as in love with each other as it is possible for two people to be.” She had yet to hear him say it, but then they hadn’t done much talking after her apology.
No, she decided, nothing was missing.
Except . . . A tiny vibration in her soul-mate center gave her an idea: he had claimed her in their mating; now it was her turn to claim him.
Careful not to waken him, she had proceeded to have some fun. Now he was awake. She laughed again as she gazed into his rapidly heating eyes. “Hi,” she purred and squeezed slightly with inner muscles.
“Hi to you, too,” he answered, although his voice sounded strained.
“I’m not hurting you, am I?” Another little squeeze.
“Oh, no, not at all,” he gritted, and his eyes darkened to black with just a sliver of silver showing at their rims. His hands flexed on her breasts, and lightning shot through her to her womb.
Still smiling, she leaned straight-armed on her hands and rose and fell slowly along his rigid length. Once. Twice.
The air shimmered in rainbow colors. His silver gaze fiercely bored into hers, and he arched his body into her.
She lost her smile as she repeated her motions, increasing the speed. The rhythm captured them both until breath was short and a sheen of perspiration covered their bodies.
“You’re mine. My soul mate,” she told him, her tone fierce.
“And you’re mine,” he agreed, then pulled her mouth to his, as they both shattered in a bright flash of multicolored lights.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
 
Recovery came faster this time, Clay reflected as Francie slid off his body and he turned her to spoon himself around her back. His top arm hugged her to him, and she grasped his hand in hers and kissed it after he tried to use it to play with her breast. In retaliation, he kissed the nape of her neck and along her shoulder until she squirmed and nipped his finger.
“Ouch.”
“See what happens when you mess with me?” She kissed the small hurt.
“Yes, ma’am.”
Growl. Rumble.
“Was that me or you?” he asked.
“Both of us, I think. What time is it?”
“I don’t know.” He raised up enough to see his alarm clock on the chest by the bed. “Eight o’clock in the evening.”
“What day?”
“Still Saturday, I think. When did you eat last?”
“Last night, I guess. I wasn’t very hungry this morning.”
“Well, come on, woman. We’ve got to eat something if we’re going to keep this up!” He paused to give her a smacking kiss on the shoulder and a little pat on the behind. When she turned onto her back to give him a teasing glare, he leered, grinned, and promised, “And we are going to keep ‘this’ up.”
He kissed her quick on the lips and levered himself out of bed. Disappearing into the walk-in closet, he called, “Don’t put your jeans back on. I’ve got a robe you can wear.”
“Okay.” She headed for the bathroom. As she washed her hands and splashed water on her face, she inspected herself in the mirror. She didn’t look any different than usual—or maybe she did. Her hair was all over the place, her skin looked flushed, her eyes sparkled. She looked well loved, she decided, and she was, she decided that, too. Funny, she felt no embarrassment or modesty about being naked in front of him. Must be all those years spent in locker rooms, she shrugged. Or maybe with soul mates, you just didn’t care, just enjoyed looking at each other. She smiled in remembrance.
She grew sober as she dried her hands. She and Clay had to talk about being soul mates, discuss seriously what it meant, where they were going. She had to analyze what was happening to her, come to terms with her own reactions to him, with her newfound self-confidence where this particular man was concerned, with the idea of him in her life and her future.
But not this minute. Right now she was going to enjoy the situation and him—especially him.
She finger combed her hair, restored some order, and simply gave up on the rest. He was right, they needed food. When she came out of the bathroom, he was waiting with a dark red, silk robe held open and ready for her. He wore a tattered terry-cloth robe of an indeterminate color that might once have been blue.
She raised her eyebrows in speculation about the robe, then turned her back to him and slipped her arms into the sleeves.
He closed the robe around her, giving her a hug in the process. “A present from Daria,” he clarified.
“I need a shower,” Francie said, wondering if he could read her mind.
“We’ll bathe after we eat,” Clay said. “I’ve heard several times from my stomach, and I’d just as soon appease that first. Come on, let’s see what we can find in the kitchen.”
Francie’s stomach gave a growl, and she laughed. “I agree with you.”
They went down to the kitchen and turned on the lights. “How does some pasta with my mother’s sauce sound? I have some in the freezer she gave me the last time I visited. It would be quick,” Clay suggested.
“Sounds wonderful. Do you have anything for a salad?”
“Check the fridge.” He pulled a large pot out of one of the cabinets.
She opened the refrigerator door and stood back in amazement. “My goodness.”
“What?”
“There’s so much food in here.”
“What did you expect? Cold pizza and beer?”
“Well . . .”
He laughed. “My mother’s training was thorough. I prefer my own cooking to eating out or buying takeout all the time.”
They prepared the meal as if they had been doing it together for years, Francie thought as she sliced tomatoes and sprinkled them with olive oil, basil, and a bit of pepper. Clay opened a bottle of red wine, and in a short time they were spooning Parmesan cheese over linguini with a rich red tomato-and-mushroom sauce.
Neither spoke until they each had three forkfuls in their stomachs.
“I feel like I’m just shoveling it in,” Francie said before she took the next bite.
“Me, too,” Clay nodded, then took a swig of the wine. “I’ve never been this hungry after . . . uh . . . before . . . uh . . .” He flushed and took a bigger gulp.
She couldn’t help but smile inwardly at his discomfort. Of course, he’d been with other women; she recalled what Daria had told her about male practitioners. All their testosterone, indeed. But he was hers now, so she’d let him off the hook—for the moment—by ignoring the statement.
Then he looked even more uncomfortable and swallowed his bite in a big gulp. “Oh, Lord, I forgot,” he said, with an almost-stricken look on his face.
“Hmm?” was all she could say around a bite of tomato.
“In all this talk about soul mates, did Daria mention the bit about barriers, or did Glori cast any spells on
you
?”
“Yes, both.
That’s
been taken care of.”
“Oh, good.” He applied himself to the pasta again.
“This hunger we have?” she said between bites. “Do you think it’s a result of our First Mating?”
“I don’t know. We did expend an awful lot of energy there,” he said, waggling his eyebrows at her.
Francie could feel herself blushing and decided a diversion was in order. “Speaking of energy, I could have sworn different-colored lights, or fireworks, or lightning, or something was in the air. Now don’t get your ego inflated,” she warned in the face of his distinctly smug grin, “I’m serious. Glori and Daria ran a couple of experiments on me, and I could see a little flash of light when Daria cast a spell. It was like that, only much more intense.”
Clay stared at her a moment, then chewed and swallowed. “You know, I did see them. The lights were stronger the second time.”
“I agree. Could it be another manifestation of the imperative?”
“We’ll have to ask my parents. Mother has been doing quite a bit of research into the phenomenon. Daria and Bent haven’t mentioned anything like it.” He took another bite of tomato, then another swallow of wine. “We’re forgetting something else—the notion that the First Mating might increase powers.”
“Daria said something about that. How do you know if it did?”
“The surest indicator is to cast
lux
. That’s the light-ball spell. Its color will give you an idea. Let’s see.” Clay snapped his fingers.
A six-inch globe of swirling blue with a few streaks of indigo light hovered over the table.
“Wasn’t it just bright blue before?” Francie asked. “What do the different colors mean?”
“Yeah, it was.” He stared at it for a moment. “I guess my potential maximum level has gone up. The colors indicate levels, and levels indicate how much power a practitioner has or can aspire to. The colors match the spectrum and after that go up through silver and gold to white. Someone who can only cast a red ball is level one or two. Blue, where I was, is level nine to ten. These designations aren’t exact because there are so many variables, like the type of talent you have and how much you study. If you don’t study, then you may never reach the potential your color designates.”
“That’s right, you mentioned the ‘practice’ part of practitioner. Glori’s ball was indigo and violet, as I remember.”
“Yeah, she’s up around level twelve to thirteen. The top is twenty. She’s the highest in the family, even higher than Mother. Mother tops out about ten, and Dad about nine. Anything above ten is rare and very difficult to attain. After ten, the requirements go up exponentially with each level.”
“What about Daria?”
“Because she can’t cast
lux
, nobody knows for sure. She’s worked with some of the masters, however, and they think she’s a five or six.” He looked at Francie with a speculative glint in his eye. “Then there’s you. I wonder what the mating brought you, Francie. How do you feel?”
She blinked, then ran a quick mental inventory of her parts. “Fine. I feel fine. A few muscles are sore, but I don’t feel like anything changed . . . outside of the obvious, I mean,” she hastily added in reaction to Clay’s raised eyebrows and “Oh, really?” look. “Daria and Glori decided I was sensitive to spells. Maybe the mating enhanced that.”
“I have a hunch those lights indicate more than sensitivity, but I don’t know what. Now that I think of it, I felt like we were in the middle of a fireworks display the second time.” He paused, then grinned. “Wouldn’t it be something if you did become a practitioner, though?” An intrigued look crossed his face. “Let’s try something.”
He rose, rummaged around in a drawer, pulled out some candles, and said, “Come on,” as he went out the kitchen door.
Totally puzzled, Francie followed Clay to his barbeque grill outside on the patio.
He pulled the top off the globular grill and wedged a candle into the rungs of the grill rack. “Let’s see if you can light a candle. That’s
flamma
, the simple spell every practitioner starts with. Here, stand back here with me.” He moved them about six feet from the grill.
“I don’t know about this, Clay,” Francie said. “I feel really foolish, if you want to know the truth, standing here barefoot in a robe, thinking I’m going to cast a spell. Besides, I don’t know how to go about it. What if I start a fire? Assuming, of course, I can make anything happen at all.”
But he wasn’t going to let her off the hook. “You won’t know if you don’t try,” he coaxed. “Don’t worry, novices don’t have much power, and you can’t hurt the grill. Okay, here’s what you do. Spell-casting uses energy, your personal energy. To light the candle, what I do is visualize a small, hot bit of energy, a spark, right here,” he touched his magic center, “and I mentally move it to a spot right on the end of the candle wick. Like this.” He snapped his fingers.
The candle wick glowed, then lit as though a match had been applied.
“You reverse the process to put it out.”
The candle went out at his snap.
“Now, take a deep breath, but don’t hold it, keep breathing, and try it. Concentrate right on the spot where you want the flame. You don’t have to snap your fingers. Mother waves her hand and Dad just frowns at the wick. Just do whatever you feel like doing.”
BOOK: Do You Believe in Magic?
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