Table of Contents
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Praise for the Art Lover's Mysteries by Juliet Blackwell Writing as Hailey Lind
Brush with Death
“Lind deftly combines a smart and witty sleuth with entertaining characters who are all engaged in a fascinating new adventure. Sprinkled in are interesting snippets about works of art and the art world, both the beauty and its dirty underbelly.”â
Romantic Times
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Shooting Gallery
“Lind's latest creatively combines mystery, humor, and interesting art tidbits. The unique charactersâincluding aging art forgers, art thieves, and drug smugglersâadd depth to this well-plotted cozy.”â
Romantic Times
“If you enjoy Janet Evanovich's Stephanie Plum books, Jonathan Gash's Lovejoy series, or Ian Pears's art history mysteries . . . then you will enjoy
Shooting Gallery
. . . . The book is a fun romp through San Francisco's art scene with some romance and a couple murders and car chases thrown in for good measure.ӉGumshoe
“An artfully crafted new mystery series!”
âTim Myers, Agatha Award-nominated author of
A Mold for Murder
“The art world is murder in this witty and entertaining mystery!”
âCleo Coyle, national bestselling author of
Espresso Shot
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Feint of Art
“Annie Kincaid is a wonderful cozy heroine. . . . It's a rollicking good read.”â
Mystery News
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First published by Obsidian, an imprint of New American Library,
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First Printing, July 2009
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Copyright © Julie Goodson-Lawes, 2009
eISBN : 978-1-101-08217-1
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To Aunt Mem,
my first (and favorite) witchy woman
Acknowledgments
As always, special thanks are due to so many.
To my wonderful literary agent, Kristin Lindstrom, who has inordinate, obstinate faith in my writing; and Kerry Donovan, for her ongoing support and editing flair, and for encouraging me to explore my witchy ways.
To the supportive, boisterous NorCal Sisters in Crime (y'all know who you are). To Sophie Littlefield for always egging me on, and to Cornelia Read, James Calder, and Tim Maleeny for poker, dinner in bed, and long discussions of genre and mystery. I feel like I've been invited to sit at the cool kids' table.
To the warm and welcoming Come as You Are (CAYA) coven in Berkeley, California; the wonderful staff of the Sacred Well on Grand Avenue; and to all those witches, sensitives, and sorcerers who spoke to me and wish to remain anonymous.
Muchisimas gracias a todas las curanderas y brujas que me hablaron con confianza.
To my mother's big, unabashedly Texan family for great expressions, bear hugs, and Southern food.
To my sister CarolynâI missed you this go-round! Thanks for your unselfish help and laugh-out-loud suggestions. And to my sister, Susan, for her unflagging enthusiasm and novel suggestions.
Thanks to Jace, Shay, and Suzanne for their read- throughs and critiques. To Anna for
all
your help. And special appreciation to Bee, Pamela, Jan, Mary, Chris, Brian, the entire Mira Vista Social Club . . . and a thousand kisses to my guy Sergio.
And finally, a shout-out to Oscar, the suitably black cat, who insists that I
will
fall for his feline ways.
Tis the witching hour of night,
Or bed is the moon and bright,
And the stars they glisten, glisten,
Seeming with bright eyes to listen
For what listen they?
JOHN KEATS (1795-1821)
Chapter 1
Witches recognize their own.
So I could tell this customer was . . .
different
. . . the moment he walked into my store. Not to mention the bell on the door failed to chime.
He was gorgeous: golden hair glinting in the light of the amber sconces, eyes the blue of a perfect periwinkle, tanned skin with just a hint of whiskers inviting one's touch. Tall and graceful, he had the too-perfect, unreal beauty seldom seen outside a movie theater. And we were a long way from Tinseltown. This was San Francisco, where “silicon” referred to computer chips, not plastic surgery. Here, people were only too real in their endearing, genuine lumpiness.
But what really drew my eye was the energy he emitted; to a witch like me, he was as conspicuous as a roaring drunk at an AA meeting.
The stranger approached, the lightness of his step suggesting a talent for sneakiness. I waited behind the horseshoe-shaped display counter and fingered the protective medicine bundle that hung from a braided string around my waist.
“Lily Ivory?”
“That's me,” I said with a nod.
He placed an engraved business card on the glass countertop and pushed it toward me with a graceful index finger.
Aidan RhodesâMale Witch
Magickal Assistance
Spells CastâCurses BrokenâLove Potions
Satisfaction Guaranteed
145 Jefferson Street, San Francisco
“Male witch?” My eyes wandered up, down, and across his muscular frame. “Are you often mistaken for a female?”
This was San Francisco, after all.
“Rarely, now that you mention it.” A glint of humor lit up those too-blue eyes. “But most people don't realize men can be witches.”
“Sure they do. They just call them warlocks.”
He winced. “Warlock” means “oath breaker” in Old English, and calls to mind the men who betrayed their covens in the bad old burn-the-witches-at-the-stake days. Some male practitioners called themselves “wizards” or “sorcerers,” but most preferred “witch.” It was a solidarity thing.
There are as many different types of witchesâthe good, the bad, the magnificently venalâas there are familiars. Still, the vast majority of us are female. I had an inkling of the power of a traditional women's coven, but in my experience male witches were wild cards with a tendency to stir up trouble.
Nothing about Aidan Rhodes suggested otherwise.
“Cute accent,” he said. “You twang.”
“It's not my fault. I grew up in Texas.”
“I know. I knew your father.”
“Really.”
“We worked together.”
“Is that right?” My tone was nonchalant, but my mind was racing. Aidan Rhodes was not overtly threatening, but if my father was involved, all bets were off.
I glanced over at my coworker, Bronwyn, who was across the room preparing a concoction for a middle-aged client with a nasty case of eczema and a nastier case of an unfaithful husband. The women's heads were bent low as Bronwyn ground up dried herbs with a wooden mortar and pestle. They appeared absorbed in the task. Too absorbed. Aidan Rhodes, male witch, must have cast a cocooning spell. If so, they wouldn't hear a single word we said; indeed, wouldn't be aware of his presence at all.
“It's not every day someone like you moves into the neighborhood, much less opens a shop.” Aidan's long, elegant fingers caressed a pile of hand-tatted lace collars in the wicker basket on the counter. “A retail store, thoughâthat surprises me. Unusual career path for one with your . . . talents.”
“Is there a reason you're here?” I asked, upgrading the man from a curiosity to an annoyance. I wasn't usually so abrupt with potential customers, but it seemed unwise to use the shopkeeper's standard greetingâ
May I help you?â
in case I inadvertently obligated myself to him.
There's many a slip twixt cauldron and lip
, my grandmother Graciela had drilled into me. Words mattered in the world of spell casting, and a slip of the tongue could have dire consequences.