Wicked Charms (Lizzy and Diesel 3)
“You’re playing on the losing team, and the stakes are high.”
“Another warning?”
“An offer to come over to my side. There are dark forces who know about you, know about your special abilities. When they come for you, they won’t be easy to evade.”
“I’m just a baker. I don’t even have a Facebook page. How would anyone know about me?”
“You aren’t just a baker. You are an asset and a very rare and useful one. That kind of secret doesn’t stay secret very long from people who crave power. How do you think I found you? How do you think my cousin found you? And are you so sure he isn’t interested in the stone for himself?”
“I’ll take my chances with Diesel.”
“I could make your life very pleasant,” Wulf said. “Or very uncomfortable. Which will it be?”
“Neither. Just leave me alone, and let me do my job.”
“Finding the Avarice Stone for Diesel?”
“Making cupcakes.”
Wulf’s lips curved ever so slightly into a hint of a smile. His eyes were dilated totally black. There was a flash of light, and he was gone.
I looked over at Cat. His tail was bushed out like a bottlebrush. “It’s a whole-wheat waffle,” I said to Cat. “It’s sort of healthy.”
—
Dazzle’s Bakery has been owned and operated by a Dazzle since Puritan times, and is now managed by Clarinda Dazzle. The shop is ancient, consisting of two rooms downstairs and a small apartment upstairs. The store part of the bakery fronts onto a narrow street that’s close to the harbor. The floor is the original wide-plank pine. The walls are whitewashed. The glass display cases are filled with cupcakes and cookies. Wicker baskets holding a variety of breads and breakfast pastries line the back counter. Clara and I work in the kitchen behind the shop, and between the two of us we make everything that’s sold up front.
I rolled into the bakery at five o’clock. I flipped the light switch, and dialed into ’60s rock on my iPad. I love this part of my day when everything is a new beginning. I love that I’m the one to unlock the door and bring the bakery to life.
I slipped on a white chef coat and got the yeast dough started. I had just moved on to cupcake batter when Clara showed up at five-thirty. Clara is divorced, is in her early forties, and lives in the apartment above the shop. She has a wiry mass of black hair shot with gray that she tries to contain in a knot at the nape of her neck. Her nose is Wampanoag Indian. The rest of her is sturdy New England pilgrim stock. I’ve been told that special abilities run in her family, and that she used to be one of us. Several years ago she made an unfortunate choice in the bedroom, and Clara was the one to get stripped of her power.
“We have a lunch takeout for twelve with meat pies and cupcakes today,” Clara said. “Plus Mr. Duggan will be here at ten for his standing order of pretzel rolls.”
“I’m on it.”
Two hours later Glo swept in with her tote bag on her shoulder and her broom in hand.
“Your tote bag has a big bulge in it,” I said to Glo.
“I know. I made the most amazing purchase. I passed by a yard sale on my way to work just now, and a voice called out to me.”
“Like when you bought Ripple’s Book of Spells.”
“Exactly! Only this voice belonged to Emily Shipton. It was her yard sale.”
“What did she sell you?”
“A Magic 8 Ball. And she swore it could predict the future.” Glo took the 8 Ball out and held it in her hand. “Emily said it was empowered by her distant relative Mother Shipton.”
“Mother Shipton was an English prophet who lived in a cave and died in the 1500s,” Clara said. “The Magic 8 Ball is a toy invented by Mattel in the 1950s.”
“It could have been Mother Shipton’s spirit,” Glo said.
I looked over at Broom, and I swear I saw him twitch.
Glo dropped the Magic 8 Ball back into her tote. “I asked the 8 Ball if Lizzy would have another exciting night with Theodore Nergal, and it said, ‘As I see it, yes.’?”
“Who’s Theodore Nergal?” Clara asked.