by Various Authors
Release Date: November 30th 2015
Summary from Goodreads:
Good witch. Bad witch. White magic. Black magic. Kitchen magic. Pick your potion. Ready for Halloween? The authors of the Blazing Indie Collective, who brought you the Falling in Deep Collection, are brewing up something new. Check out all the novellas in The Witching Hour Collection coming October 2015:
Melanie Karsak: Witch Wood
Claire C. Riley: Raven's Cove
Claire C. Riley: Raven's Cove
Eli Constant: Sleeping in the Forest of Shadows
Elizabeth Watasin: Charm School: The Wrecking Faerie
Erin Hayes: I'd Rather be a Witch
Carrie Wells: Playing with Magic
Evan Winters: The Witch of Bracken’s Hollow
Minerva Lee: Spun Gold
Blaire Edens: The Witch of Roan Mountain
Poppy Lawless: The Cupcake Witch
Limited edition box set!
This collection will be available until the end of
the year only!
The
Witching Hour Collection
Limited edition box set!
This collection
will be available until the end of the year only!
Good
witch. Bad witch. White magic. Black magic. Kitchen magic. Pick your potion. he
authors of the Blazing Indie Collective, who brought you the Falling in Deep
Collection, are brewing up something new. Check out all the novellas in The
Witching Hour Collection
Melanie Karsak: Witch Wood
Claire C. Riley: Raven's Cove
Eli Constant: Sleeping in the Forest of Shadows
Elizabeth Watasin: Charm School: The Wrecking Faerie
Erin Hayes: I'd Rather be a Witch
Carrie Wells: Playing with Magic
Evan Winters: The Witch of Bracken's Hollow
Minerva Lee: Spun Gold
Blaire Edens: The Witch of Roan Mountain
Poppy Lawless: The Cupcake Witch
Claire C. Riley: Raven's Cove
Eli Constant: Sleeping in the Forest of Shadows
Elizabeth Watasin: Charm School: The Wrecking Faerie
Erin Hayes: I'd Rather be a Witch
Carrie Wells: Playing with Magic
Evan Winters: The Witch of Bracken's Hollow
Minerva Lee: Spun Gold
Blaire Edens: The Witch of Roan Mountain
Poppy Lawless: The Cupcake Witch
Find our authors
on Amazon!
SUMMARY OF BOOKS
The
Cupcake Witch by Poppy Lawless (Sweet Romance with Paranormal Elements)
When Julie inherits a magical recipe
box, she never could have dreamed it would turn her life upside down. Too bad Horatio
Hunter wants to turn those newfound dreams into ashes. They say the course of
true love never runs smooth. That’s nothing a magical cupcake can’t solve.
WITCH
WOOD BY MELANIE KARSAK (Dark Fantasy)
Harm none, and be ready for zombies.
In the little town of Brighton, Amelia’s
practice of Wicca marks her as a curiosity both at home and at school. However,
when modern treatments fail to make a dent in the flu outbreak sweeping the
globe, those who once ridiculed her white witchcraft turn to Amelia for help.
The residents of Brighton soon depend on the very magic they once ridiculed to
save their lives.
THE
WITCH OF BRACKEN’S HOLLOW BY EVAN WINTERS (Horror)
Damon knows that the Witch of Bracken's
Hollow is just a myth. However, when a voice whispers Damon’s name at the
witching hour, he must sort out history from myth, fact from fiction, and he
must do so before the children he is charged to care for suffer the same fate
as Rachel.
TWISTED
MAGIC BY CLAIRE C. RILEY (Fantasy Romance)
It’s a darkness that doesn’t want to let
go...
'The only way for Sarah and Peter to
rise out of the ashes is to first burn everything down to the ground.
SLEEPING
IN THE FOREST OF SHADOWS BY ELI CONSTANT (Dark Fantasy)
Going to the voice that summons her may heal
Tilda’s body, but it will also cause her to lose everything she’s come to love.
And once she enters the forest of shadows, returning to human life might prove
impossible.
PLAYING
WITH MAGIC BY CARRIE L. WELLS (Paranormal)
Liza Scott is far too busy enjoying life
in college and playing video games to be bothered by recurring dizzy spells.
But she is soon faced with life-altering information about herself medically
and metaphysically. Overnight, Liza has to face the changes in her life and her
new role as witch royalty. But what she really wants to focus on is the
gorgeous Fathom Burke who suddenly seems to know who she is. Maybe it’s
coincidence, but maybe, just maybe, it’s magic.
I’D
RATHER BE A WITCH BY ERIN HAYES (YA Fairy Tale/Paranormal)
Jordyn wasn’t careful with what she
wished for. After making a reckless choice that destroyed her life along with
the life of her high school sweetheart, Jordyn fled her small town and became a
professional mermaid. Being around water suppresses her earth-based magic, something
she desperately needs. Yet Jordyn can't suppress who she really is --- a witch.
And she will finally have to embrace being a witch to learn the truth which
will change her life forever.
THE
WITCH OF ROAN MOUNTAIN BY BLAIRE EDENS (Paranormal Romance)
Campbell and Maeve are thrown together
in a quest to find out why Delphine was branded a witch. It will take both of
them to get to the bottom of a nineteenth century story love story that may
impact them more than they realize. Can they banish a ghost without rekindling
an old flame of their own?
CHARM
SCHOOL: THE WRECKING FAERIE BY ELIZABETH WATASIN (Lesbian Romance)
Teen witch Bunny has a perfectly wicked
girlfriend in vampire biker Dean, until a dark faerie comes along. When Bunny
resists Fairer Than's charms, what will Fairer Than do about it?
SPUN
GOLD BY MINERVA LEE (Fairy Tale Retelling)
Spin this straw into gold or die... Will
Stiltskin is last of his clan and heir to its fortune and sorcery. Lyra, the
shy, beautiful daughter of the town's Miller, prefers books and walks by the
river to suitors. But when her foolish father's boast lands her in the king's
dungeon, Will's love unlocks Lyra's secret and forbidden magic. Together they
must save her life and the future of their love from a cruel King's impossible
task....And keep the power of gold away from selfish hearts.
~~~ EXTRAS ~~~
Author interview with Melanie Karsak, Author of
Witch Wood
1.
What's your favorite witch
movie or novel?
I like my witches a little old fashioned. I would start with The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer
Bradley to see the roots of the modern pagan movement. In terms of movies, I
would definitely avoid seeing “The Blair Witch Project” again because I totally
puked my guts out midway through that cult classic, but I like something light
like “Practical Magic” as well.
2.
What was the inspiration
for your witch novella?
The Harvesting Series is a genre mashup. It begins like a classic
zombie horror story then the series begins to slowly reveal that there are
other supernatural forces in our world…vampires, fey shifters, and so on. These
dark forces have been trying to exterminate us for eons, and they finally
discovered a way by causing a virus that turned mankind into zombies. Along the
way, some people with special powers emerge…a medium, a tarot reader, and in
this novella, a white witch named Amelia. Mankind is about to make their last
stand, and they are going to need Amelia’s help.
3.
Tell us about your main
character: white witch, dark witch, or something in-between?
Amelia is a Wiccan, a white witch. She’s someone who has a special
gift. She can see, and heal, people’s energy, their auras. She’s also not bad
at casting spells and doing herb work. Her special talents have always set her
on the outskirts in the past, but that’s about to change.
4.
Cast your characters. If
your novella was made into a movie, who would play your main characters?
For fun, check out the image graphic I made!
5.
Do you believe in
magic?
Yes, I do. I do believe people have the ability to use energy to
influence their environments in positive or negative ways.
6.
What else should we know
about your novella?
This novella is a tie-in for my larger series, but it hold its own
as a stand-alone. We will see Amelia face the early days of the outbreak and
how she and her friends handle that situation. There is an epilogue at the end
of the novella that features characters from the main series, so if that
strikes your fancy, check out The
Harvesting after you read Witch Wood
to get started!
Excerpt
from The Cupcake Witch by Poppy Lawless
Holding the whisk tightly, I swirled the
pale-yellow batter around the bowl, the sweet scents of vanilla, brown sugar,
and bitter dark chocolate perfuming the air. Even though it was a cool autumn
morning, the heat from the oven made the kitchen feel toasty warm. I’d been
baking all morning: expresso mini cupcakes with cappuccino flavored frosting,
matcha green tea macaroons, and strawberry rhubarb coffee cake. The kitchen
smelled divine. Now, with a pot of coffee brewing and a batch of chocolate chip
walnut cookies just about ready to go into the oven, I could almost relax.
“Here,
taste this,” I said to Dad, scooping up a small bite of the dough with a spoon
and sticking it into his mouth before he could protest.
“You’re
going to give me salmonella poisoning,” he said then sighed deeply. “A little
food poisoning is worth it. So good, but they taste…different.”
“Bad
different?”
Dad
shook his head. “Tasty different.”
“Organic
brown sugar and sea salt.”
“I’m
going to gain ten pounds before you go back to college next week,” he said with
a laugh then turned back to his paperwork.
Sighing,
I placed the cookie dough on the baking sheet and stuck it in the oven. How was
I going to tell Dad I wasn’t planning on going back? With Mom gone…well, I just
didn’t even know why I was there anymore. It wasn’t like I had ever wanted to
go to college. I wanted to be a baker. But Mom wanted me to be a dentist, so I
was studying pre-dentistry. Now, Mom was gone. The pain of her loss still felt
like a huge lump in my chest.
I
poured Dad and myself coffee and sat down at the table. He was thumbing through
a heap of real estate briefs. Dayton Real Estate was busier than ever, and with
Mom gone, an agent short. Dad was running himself ragged.
I
spooned some raw sugar into my cup and tried to think of something to say other
than the fact that I hated school. It was nearly the end of October and thus
far junior year had been a bust. I told Dad I wasn’t ready. After losing Mom
that summer, I just couldn’t get my head back into the game. I didn’t want to
waste my life pursuing a career in dentistry just because everyone, but
especially Mom, thought it would be a good move for a smart girl like me. Mom’s
death had taught me many things, the most important being that life was short.
Why was I working so hard for a future I felt pretty apathetic about?
“Here
is the property in Chancellor I was telling you about,” Dad said, saving me
from having the dreaded conversation once more, as he handed me an envelope. From
inside, I pulled out a yellowed photograph of a tiny little Tudor-style
cottage. Under the photo, the words Serendipity
Gardens had been written in faded pencil.
“It
looks like a witch’s cottage. Mrs. Aster, the woman who left us the
building…how did you say we were related again?” I stared at the photograph as
I twirled one red dreadlock around my finger. The little building was a mess,
the glass nursery overgrown, but there was something quaint, almost fairy tale
like, about it.
Dad
was eyeing the table full of sweets, finally settling on one of the mini
cupcakes, popping it into his mouth. “These are amazing, Julie. Seriously,” he
said after a moment. “Mrs. Aster was Grandma Belle’s husband’s sister.”
“And
how does that make her related to us?”
“Through
marriage only, but we are her closest living relatives,” Dad said then
shrugged. “I’ve got the property into the MLS system, but I need to run over to
Chancellor this week and put up the signs. Probably won’t be hard to move the
old place. I already have a message—which I haven’t even managed to return
yet—from Blushing Grape Vineyards inquiring on the property. Need to get that
sign up, see if I can fish any other bids out of the pond. Maybe the college
will want the property, turn it into an office or something. On the corner of
Main Street and Magnolia, the location is great. We’ll probably get a good
price if we can get some competition,” Dad said then paused. He looked up at
me, a serious expression on his face. “You know, Chancellor College offers science
degrees. Jules, I know you aren’t happy…” he began then stopped. Trying again,
he switched directions by saying, “Maybe if you were closer to home, things
might be easier.”
Panicking,
I picked up the envelope. “Chancellor, eh? Don’t they have a harvest festival
at this time of year? Why don’t I take the signs over? I’ll grab a pumpkin
spice latte or something.”
My
dad pushed his glasses back up his nose then ran his hand through his hair. Was
it my imagination or did his hair look whiter? His face was certainly more
drawn. He must have shed twenty pounds from his already thin frame. Mom’s death
had hit us both hard. It was just manifesting differently. Dad was running
thin, and I was running scared. I didn’t want to waste my life following the
dream Mom had lain out so neatly for me. My real passion had always lain in the
kitchen. Fondant. Buttercream. Meringue. Ever since I got my first Easy-Bake
Oven, I knew what I wanted to do, who I wanted to be. My dream, however, had
never jelled with what Mom had wanted. And as much as it hurt, Mom was gone. I
could keep going to college for her, but that didn’t feel right. I needed to do
something. Something needed to change. And in the meantime, I was failing my
classes.
“Walk
around the campus while you’re there. Check out its vibe. See if you like it.”
“Or
not,” I said absently. The last thing I wanted was more college: more homework
I couldn’t get myself to complete, more classes I couldn’t get myself to go to,
more anything.
“You
know, they also have a culinary program,” my dad said carefully. “A letter came
from your college’s advising office. It said you’re failing all—”
“I…I
know,” I stammered, standing. “Can we talk about it tonight?”
He
nodded. “I love you. We’re both just trying to manage here.” He lifted a
macaroon then looked from it to me. “The culinary program. Mom and I always
disagreed...tonight, let’s talk. But you’re making dinner.”
“Of
course. It’s pizza night! I bought portabella mushrooms, arugula, and goat
cheese.”
“You
had me at portabella,” Dad said with a chuckle. “Anything would be better than
those damned frozen dinners.”
“Dad!
You can’t eat that garbage.”
He
shrugged. “What can I say? I don’t have time to cook. Speaking of which, did
you know it only takes five weeks to get a real estate license? Without your
mom, I could use the extra help,” he said then patted the massive stack of
inspection reports, loan documents, and other paperwork that was my dad’s—and
had been my mom’s—life’s work, “and a home cooked meal, on occasion.”
I
picked up the envelope then kissed my dad on his balding head. “Home cooked
meals I can handle.”
My
dad patted my hand.
“Take
the cookies out when the timer goes off?”
“Of
course. I’d never let a Julie Dayton cookie burn. Too precious a commodity.”
I
wrapped my arms around my dad and hugged him tight.
“Love
you,” I said.
“Love
you too, Julie bean,” he replied.
Letting
him go, I grabbed my purse and keys and headed off to the witch’s cottage.
Interview
with Carrie L. Wells, author of Playing with Magic
- What's
your favorite witch movie or novel?
I hated scary movies when I was
younger, and I honestly am not a huge fan of them now. However, I love magic
and the idea of the white witch. With that said, Hocus Pocus is my favorite witch movie.
- What
was the inspiration for your witch novella?
This novella came from watching my
students’ lives change in unexpected ways as they continue through college. I
also love the idea of a witch being less than excited by her new powers and
considering how they may negatively impact her life.
- Tell
us about your main character: white witch, dark witch, or something
in-between?
Liza Scott hasn’t quite figured out
what type of witch she is. We get to watch her discover her power, but she has
decisions to make in the next books. She has considerable power, and now we get
to see what she plans to do with them.
- Cast
your characters. If your novella was made into a movie, who would play
your main characters?
Mix sassy Anna Kendrick as Liza with
her BFF Jake T. Austin as Felix! Add a dose of the lovely Jane Levy for Darcy
and the eyes Zac Efron as Fathom! Finish off with a splash of Olivia Wilde in
the magical role of Fallon.
- Do
you believe in magic?
Absolutely! Magic can be found anywhere
and is the best part of life!
- What
else should we know about your novella?
This is my second novella, and I fell
in love with the idea of writing about someone on the cusp of her life. College
is an amazing time, and I just wanted to make it more amazing. To make it
magical!
Author interview with Claire C. Riley, author of
Twisted Magic
Q1. What’s your favourite witch movie
or novel?
It has to be either The Witches of
Eastwick or Hocus Pocus. And yes, I know how completely different those two
films are, but they are both classics to me, and I watch them every year.
Q2. What was your inspiration for your
witch novella?
I’m a huge fan of Romeo & Juliet,
the whole ‘love that cannot be’ thing really grips me, and so with this in mind
I tried to twist the story on its head and incorporate it into a more modern
setting. And of course include witches haha
Q3. Cast your characters. If your
novella were made into a movie, who would play your main characters?
I imagined someone like Clare Danes to
play Sarah, but that could be because I had the whole Romeo and Juliet thing in
my head. For Peter I definitely saw someone like Kit Harrington :0)
Q4. Do you believe in magic?
In short, yes.
Q5. What else should we know about your
novella?
If you like dark romances and tortured
heroes, then this is for you.
Excerpt of Sleeping in the Forest of Shadows by Eli
Constant
Chapter One
Through the Glass
It calls to me. It is calling to me now.
The thing
that has no face—that thing that is nothing, but is somehow everything—is
hiding outside my window, far off across the field, past the fence, cloaked by
the forest’s dark shadows. Once, some time ago, before my mother was forced to
leave this home, it called to her. I don’t know how I know this, but I do. Now,
I am here and I’m like her in so many ways. The same crow-dark hair atop my
head, the same olive green eyes with rings of silver that are often obscured by
my thick-framed glasses, and the same aristocratic upturn at the end of my
nose—a physical trait that is infinitely unattractive in my opinion.
It thinks I
am her. So, it calls to me.
But my mother
was vibrantly alive and healthy and adventurous when she was my age.
I am not
vibrant or healthy or adventurous.
I am
crippled, wheelchair-bound. If I’m honest with myself, the voice that I hear in
my head could be nothing more than the imaginings of a girl who has lost so
much, a girl who has a great and terrible desire to be wanted. But something
inside of me says the thing is real. So very, very real.
At nearly
eighteen, I should be starting my senior year with all of my friends…with my
best friend Charlie. Especially her. There’s so much that we’d planned to do
together Senior year and now I’ve ruined that along with the laundry list of
other things my touch has spoiled. I just could not bring myself to face that
life with all its walking, talking, chatting students. The kids who thought
life was about parties and books. Because I know the truth now. Life is not fun
and games. It’s not about tomorrow. It’s a tragedy in which you inexplicably
live when everyone else—all those who are better and kinder people than you
are—die.
Sometimes, I
wish I hadn’t survived, that I’d died along with my mother and father and
little brother Toby. But I did not die. I’m very much alive and breathing. And
self-pity is an ugly, ugly thing that keeps life at bay. That’s something I
have to keep telling myself. Don’t feel
sorry for yourself, Tilda. Other people have it worse off, Tilda.
I only listen
to myself sometimes.
I only
believe myself sometimes.
My life is
loneliness, like I am still outside our home hoping the firemen will carry my
family out and that they will be unscathed. But when they do carry them out,
they are burned, blackened, unrecognizable, and they are dead. My
eleven-year-old baby brother. I still see him in my nightmares—how his pajamas,
several inches too short in the legs, are burned through in places to reveal
flaking, charred skin.
Looking
through the glass, which is bubbled and wavy so that the world outside is
always a distortion of reality, I can hear my Aunt Jen yelling my name. Her
voice is loud and threatens to ruin my connection with whatever lies beyond the
wall of great pines and thick foliage. Real or not, the ever-strengthening
threads that connect me with it are something I can cleave too, a tether of
security as I stand on the precipice, my childhood behind me and the great
chasm of adulthood yawning in front of me. Life isn’t always beautiful. No,
sometimes it is a gnarly, thorn-bearing fruit that cuts the throat as you
swallow. Reality is bitter and bloody.
A singular
tear, wet and salty, escapes my right eye and crawls down my face. The slowness
of its movement is nearly unbearable. I wipe it away with the corner of my
shirt and stare at the woods, one part of my brain cataloging the details of
the landscape as the rest of my mind wanders away to other things.
The bright
shades of the emerald forest have just started changing, their tips becoming
ochre and crimson. I do not look forward to the dull browns that will come
after the fleeting and vivid shades of fall. Even though autumn has always been
my favorite season, when I can hide my tall frame and thick hips beneath the
folds of fuzzy sweaters and patterned scarves, I do not relish in it now.
Besides, I am always sitting these days—my hips out of sight and away from
scrutinizing peers with slim hips and perfect skin.
In my old life, the changing of seasons would
bring Thanksgiving and Dad’s turkey; it would bring Christmas and decorating
the tree. Toby would place the star atop the fir. That was always his job.
Truly, fall
and winter hold little magic for me now.
Magic. As if
there is such a thing. Magic can’t be real in a world where families
senselessly die.
“Matilda
Elisabeth!” Jen yells my given name, even though I hate it with a passion, and
that hatred is what destroys the veil and disconnects the faceless thing from
my mind. As its calling fades, I feel the hum of discomfort returning to my
body. The siren call from the forest often makes me forget how much I hurt
inside. The aching pain that swells so large at times that I think my chest
will burst. “Tilda, seriously, come on! Your appointment is in twenty minutes!”
“Coming.” I
don’t bother yelling back at her. The house is not gigantic; my voice carries
easily down the hallway. I think Jen just likes raising her voice, hearing the
octaves change as she gets louder. My responses aren’t always so calm; often, I
scream back at her until we are both mad and brash things filling the house
with discord.
It takes me
time to move from the bay window seat to the wheelchair. I’m still getting the
hang of it. Aunt Jen has picked me up off the floor more than once. I’m lucky
the house is one story, that the doorways are wide—which is unusual in such an
old farmhouse.
Despite
everything, I love it here with Jen and I can’t imagine what would have
happened to my mother’s family home if my grandparents had sold it rather than
willing it to Jen. It was in poor shape and my aunt has put her life’s savings
into restoring it the way it once was when she was a child—bright white siding,
hanging flower pots screaming with irreverent color, hunter green storm
shutters and even the rooster-shaped weather vane atop the roof. The only thing
Jen hasn’t repaired is the fencing along the edge of the woods.
Several of
the fence posts are crooked in the ground and the paint is peeling, but it is
still white enough to be stark against the darkness of the thickly grouped
trees in the forest. Sometimes, leaving
something undone is a promise for tomorrow. It’s a stupid thing to think.
Finally, I am
in the wheelchair, but I find that I do not want to move.
I hate to
leave this room and reenter the world outside, because Jen has made my room so
wonderful. It is my own little sanctuary.
The walls are
a soft gray and the curtains are an ethereal, gauzy white embroidered with
delicate ivory flowers. The chandelier above my bed is original to the house,
but it has been restored so that the pale yellow flower sconces are sunny and
re-glazed. Everything has been picked out with so much care—the paisley
pillows, the pastel throw blanket, the faux fur rug that is so soft. I’ve felt
the material a hundred times with my fingers, imagining how it would feel under
my feet, imagining how my toes would sink into the luxurious fibers. It makes
me sad that I cannot stand on it each morning after waking.
My room is
the best room in the house really, the largest. Jen doesn’t want the room for
herself; maybe she just feels sorry for me after everything.
When they
were children, Jen and my mom shared the room—up until my mom was shipped off
to boarding school at sixteen. My mother never explained why she was forced to
go and Jen was allowed to stay. Maybe the room just reminds Jen too much of
mom. Maybe it reminds her that her sister is dead. I find it comforting,
because I can feel mom here. But I can also understand. I see the grief and
pain in Jen’s eyes sometimes when she looks at me—how her expression goes blank
because of how much I resemble mom. She’s called me Heather once or twice and
she rarely comes into the room while I am here, like I am the ghost of my
mother and seeing me in the room is too much to handle.
“Seriously,
Tilda, come on!” Jen’s voice is
louder and more insistent.
“It’s not
like this is easy,” I mumble under my breath, trying to call up some angry, but
I can’t really be angry, not with Jen. She didn’t have to give me a place to
live, assume the burden of caring for a crippled niece, but she did. And she
chooses to care for me every day. I half expect her to wake up one morning and
have changed her mind.
As I begin to
move toward the door, I feel a pressure in my stomach. A hook in my navel
linked to a line that is desperately trying to yank me backwards—to the window,
to the thing that is calling to me. I am connected once again. The call is
getting louder. I’ve only been here a few months and each day the summons
becomes more compelling.
My hands are
already hurting from gripping the wheels of my chair and I’ve barely moved at
all—just a few yards out of my room and down the hall towards Jen’s little art
studio next to the kitchen. I know I need to get stronger, that recovery will
be a long road. If I can recover. The
doctors say there’s only a fifty-fifty chance that I’ll walk again. The beam
that fell on my back was so heavy. I remember the sound my body made when it
crashed into me and how it felt—that unsettling crunch as my body caved inward,
the way the lower half of my body went numb after the initial sharp,
excruciating pain.
My aunt is
standing, still wearing her paint-covered apron and working on a large piece,
the largest yet. It nearly blocks the longest wall. It’s a line of three robed
figures and the only colors she is using are purple, blue, and white, but
somehow she’s created such depth that the figures seem to walk off the canvas
and come towards me. It touches me for some reason. I want to be one of them, a
robed girl hiding me from the world.
But they are
walking.
And I am
not.
“Do you like
it?” Jen says over her shoulder, not looking at me. “It’s almost finished.” She
turns around, hands on hips, a satisfied smile on her face.
“Yeah. It’s
nice I guess.” It’s such an understatement. I love the painting, but it’s so
hard to be positive about things these days. “Why were you yelling at me if
you’re not even ready?” I huff, rubbing the palms of my hands roughly to drive
away the soreness.
“Because I
can give you a rolling head start, take off my apron, put on my shoes, grab my
purse and still beat you out to the car with time to spare.”
“I’m not that
slow.” I grumble, not amused—but my aunt certainly is; her face is stretched in
a self-satisfied grin.
“Don’t
mumble.” Jen turns away from me and applies a streak of bright white next to a
stretch of deep blue.
“I grumbled.
There’s a difference.”
“Oh really?”
She turns to me, cleaning her brush with a stained cotton cloth.
“If I mumble,
it can be for any reason. Grumbling means that I’m mumbling because I’m
unhappy, displeased, despondent or generally grumpy.”
“If you say
so. Grumbling or mumbling or anything in between. How about we toss the ‘tude
and get to your appointment.” Jen unties her apron, takes it off, and lets it
fall to the floor. “How’s your bag before we go?”
Frowning, I
feel the collection sack strapped to my leg. It’s still very flat. “It’s fine.”
I’m not sure I’ll ever get used to the catheter and waste collection set up,
but it’s a fact of my life now. One of
the many joys of paraplegia. Cringing, I place my still-throbbing hands on
the wheels again and I make my way to the kitchen door—it whines like a dying
cat when you open it, because Jen forgets to oil it, no matter how many times I
remind her. I’d do it myself, but the spray is in a bottom shelf in the
pantry—one of the only rooms in the house with a doorway too narrow for my
chair.
We always enter and exit out the back, because
that’s where the ramp is. Jen has taken to parking on the lawn by the ramp
instead of the front drive. It makes it easier for me, but I always feel bad
when I see where the grass is dying.
Things seem
to die around me, especially things that I love.
And I love
grass, as stupid as that sounds. I love the feel of it on my bare feet; I love
stretching out on it beneath a warm sun, and I love the way it smells when it
is fresh-cut. So, inevitably, all the beautiful emerald blades are turning
brown. Because things that I love die.
This is a fact that haunts me.
Excerpt from The Witch of Bracken’s Hollow by Evan
Winters
Standing in
the backyard of the Unity Road Baptist Church Retreat, Damon Daugherty gazed
out across the black waters of Deep Run Lake to the woods that ran into
Bracken’s Hollow and for unknown miles beyond. For the umpteenth time that day,
Damon struggled with the strange feeling that he was somehow peering not just
through space but backward through time. There he stood in the present on a
chilly October day. The sound of laughter came from inside the lodge where his
friends were preparing dinner in the kitchen. Damon, on the other hand, labored
with refuse. In each hand, he held a trash bag, both of which sagged heavily
under the weight of discarded bottles, cigarette packages, and all the rest of
the debris that had been left on the trails around the lake by local kids over
the course of a long summer worth of secret parties in the woods. Damon had
spent the afternoon cleaning up the campsite in preparation for the teen
retreat he would be hosting that weekend—his first as the youth minister of
Unity Road Baptist. His labors that day had been simple and straightforward,
requiring little in the way of mental effort.
But even
after several hours working under a cold October sun, Damon couldn’t help but
feel out of step with the present moment. Excitement ticked in his chest, a
childish impatience so strong that it bordered on anxiety. Damon supposed it
was to be expected. Though he was a grown man with a set of new challenges
before him, he had grown up a member of Unity Road Baptist. He had attended
many retreats at Deep Run as a kid, and it had been over ten years since his
last visit.
All
afternoon, as Damon had worked along the bank of Deep Run, he had found
memories waiting to ambush him around every corner. For the first few hours, as
he picked trash out of the trail that ran along the lakeside, he couldn’t help
but glance from time to time out to the dock expecting to see his junior high
school buddies cannonballing off the end or challenging each other to dive all
the way to the bottom and return with a handful of mud from the mucky bottom.
Later, as
he cleaned out the fire pit in the clearing along the eastern path and gathered
a batch of firewood for the next night, the nostalgia was so strong that Damon
could almost hear the hymns he’d sung around that fire pit so many times in his
youth. Then, as he cleaned trash from the trail that led into Bracken’s Hollow,
Damon’s memories of hikes he had taken with his father were so strong that he
could almost feel the man’s footsteps following along the dirt path behind him.
But for all
these fine memories of his youth at Deep Run, one memory lurked under them all,
rising up from the depths of Damon’s consciousness like some submerged
leviathan coming up for air. So, after depositing the trash into the bins at
the corner of the lodge, Damon turned back to the lake and gave it a long,
thoughtful look. Over the course of the past week, as he had been making
arrangements for the retreat, Damon had been quietly bracing himself for his
return to the lake. Damon’s ten-year absence had not been accidental. Damon was
no fool. He had known this memory would come for him. And as he gazed out
across the dark waters shimmering in the late afternoon light, he let it rise
up in him in the shape of a single word, spoken aloud.
“Rachel,”
he said.
Then, as if
in reply, a voice called to him from inside. “Damon! Come on! These steaks
ain’t getting any more done than they are. Least not on my watch.”
“Be right
there,” Damon shouted in reply. Then he turned away from the water and went
inside, forcing himself not to look back. He’d had enough of the past for one
day.
Interview with Blaire Edens, author of The Witch of
Roan Mountain (PNR)
7. What's
your favorite witch movie or novel?
I love Practical Magic, both the movie
and the book. I also adore The Witch of Blackbird Pond and recently reread it
for old times’ sake.
8. What
was the inspiration for your witch novella?
In the summer, I went on a hike to Roan
Mountain, a magical place on the North Carolina/Tennessee border. I knew
instantly that it was my setting. It was misty and mossy and provided a great
backdrop for spooky.
9. Tell
us about your main character: white witch, dark witch, or something in-between?
Delphine is ghost. Having been accused
of witchcraft and murder, she’s determined to wander the mountains until
someone can clear her name. Maeve, a down-on-her-luck attorney sees Delphine
and is so drawn to her story that she makes it her mission to get to the bottom
of a century-old mystery.
10. Cast
your characters. If your novella was made into a movie, who would play your
main characters?
For Maeve, I think Jennifer Lawrence
would be awesome. Bradley Cooper, with the American Sniper muscles, would make
a great Campbell. I’d love to see these two together on the screen again
because they have such great chemistry. As Delphine, I think Anne Hathaway
could pull off the perfect ghostly witch. And Paula Deen for Granny, cause she
can make biscuits in real life.
11. Do
you believe in magic?
Yes. Magic is everywhere. You just have
to know where to look.
12. What
else should we know about your novella?
As a native of the area I’ve written
about in this book, I’m incredibly proud of my Appalachian roots and I hope
you’ll Roan Mountain enough to come visit me someday!
Interview with Minerva Lee, author of Spun Gold
(fairy tale retelling)
1.) What is your favorite witch movie or
novel? I loved watching re-runs of
Bewitched on TV. I always wanted to
wiggle my nose like Samantha! I would love to clean up dirty dishes this
way. My favorite Halloween movie isn’t
really a witch one...I love the Legend of Sleepy Hollow in all its versions
over the years. What a classic timeless creepy story.
2.) What was the inspiration for your witch
novella? Rumplestiltskin. I love
fairytales and legends of all kinds and I like thinking of them in different
ways. I began wondering what the story
could be if Stiltskin was a magical hero and he and the Miller’s daughter were
in love.
3.)Tell us about your main character, white
witch, dark witch or something in-between? Lyra and Will possess a special kind
of white magic...they are able to transform one element into another...Alchemy.
Lyra has forgotten her magic but Will helps her find it.
4.) Do you believe in magic? Yes. If you don’t the world is a dull place
indeed. It may not be the wiggle your nose or wand version, but magic is there
and every once in awhile it reaches out and touches us.
5.) What else should we know about your
novella?
It is just the beginning to a bigger
story. Will and Lyra’s story leads to
another and then back again. Nothing brings out magic more than love.
Buy Links:
The Authors
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