Mike nodded down the street. “I’ll try to keep an eye on those two.”
Jamie snickered. “Watch out for tin cans.”
He walked off whistling. It was a good morning when tin cans and alligators were the biggest issues on his radar.
He had a problem. Marcus tugged on the part of Morgan’s outfit that was supposed to snap together and rolled his eyes. “Who’s been feeding you, girl-child?”
She was growing like a weed. And while he was perfectly happy to let her live in only a diaper until she went to kindergarten, doing so seemed to cause an influx of casually dropped-off gifts of clothing. Pink, frilly, five-hundred- snaps-and-ribbons-to-tie clothing.
Getting his girl dressed every morning was a basic act of self-defense.
He reached over into the basket that held her stash of clean outfits. And growled when he hit bottom. Surely it couldn’t be laundry day again already.
An odd scuffling sound and whispers in the hallway had him turning. A couple more bangs and knocks, and then Lizzie pushed open the door with her bottom, backing in with a wagon handle in one hand, a rope in the other. Aervyn pushed the other end of the wagon, grinning. “See, I told you she was awake.”
Marcus watched in stupefied silence as the saddest excuse he’d ever seen for a wagon limped into the room. Followed by a goat.
A
“Not a chance,” said Marcus gruffly. “This is a castle, not a barn.”
“He’s my pet.” Lizzie stuck out her bottom lip. “We thought Morgan might like to play with him while you helped us fix our wagon.”
The wagon needed to go to the junk heap. Three of its four wheels tilted drunkenly, and the fourth one appeared to be missing entirely. “I’d be happy to find you a new wagon. And the goat has to go.” Even castles with stray alligators in their moats had to have some standards.
“We need
It was his brother’s face, right down to the mischief in the making. Grief kicked Marcus in the ribs and stole his breath.
It had been a week. The intolerable sorrow wasn’t a constant companion anymore-he owed Evan that much. But it still cracked his heart too many times a day to count.
Aervyn climbed into his lap. Somehow the child always knew when he needed a small boy to hold. Marcus held tight to the warm, strong little body-and found his breath again. “Well then, we’ll see what we can do.” He looked over at Lizzie. “But the goat needs to go.”
The grin Lizzie shot at Aervyn was pure female satisfaction.
And Marcus realized, far too late, that the goat had simply been a way to get the wagon in the door.
If Lizzie ever earned her way to the top level of Realm, he was going to hang up his spellcubes and retire.
He felt laughter tickling his soul-and hoped Evan could hear.
Nell sat down on the sand beside Elorie, her stomach making loud, rumbling noises. “If you ever decide to kick Aaron to the curb, we’d be happy to let him move in with us.”
Elorie laughed. “I think he’d be claimed before he made it out of Fisher’s Cove.” She started unloading the picnic basket. “He said something about fried chicken in here.”
No wonder the basket smelled like seventeen kinds of awesome. Nell reached over to help. “Think we’re done?”
Her partner looked up and down the beach. “I want to take one more walk around all the wards after we eat. Just to be sure.”
They’d already walked the lines three times, but Nell wasn’t arguing. She took the lid off the container of chicken and nearly wept. “If Witch Central finds out about this, you guys are going to have to add a second wing to the Inn.”
“Tell that to my husband.” Elorie rolled her eyes. “He’s been talking about having regular Friday night chicken dinners. Here and in Realm.”
“He’s totally insane.” Nell grinned and contemplated crispy golden goodness. “We’ll be lining up halfway to California.”
“I think that’s the idea.” Elorie touched her pendant gently. “We all have our own ways of trying to build comfort and ritual into this new way of life. My husband believes in the power of food.”
It wasn’t just Marcus whose life had been upturned by the full-time move to Realm. The gravitational center of Fisher’s Cove had also shifted. And a small fishing community steeped in tradition was doing its very best to rebalance. Villagers entirely unused to technology were braving transport spells to come visit Marcus’s online abode, bearing pies and berries and glasses of tangy lemonade.
And several dozen coders had found themselves hijacked to the beach one night, swept up in a heady mix of Celtic fiddling, lobster, and old-fashioned hospitality.
They journeyed to Realm, the people of Fisher’s Cove-and they kept the home fires burning bright.
Nell bit into her chicken and figured they had some awfully good weapons. This was the kind of food people dreamed about. “It’s a good idea. We need to find him some sous chefs.”
“Good luck with that.” Elorie chuckled. “I think the last witch he tried to deputize was Sean. It didn’t end well.”
Maybe Aaron needed a little help selecting his apprentices. “He might try Sierra. She’s responsible, safe with a knife, and she could use some cooking lessons.” The triplets reported a lot of boxed mac and cheese during their frequent visits.
Elorie nodded slowly. “That could work, especially the cooking lessons part. I like it.”
Nell grinned. It was good to get back to the normal, garden-variety witch meddling. She reached for another drumstick. “Anything else to solve while we eat?”
“Teach Sean your air-weave-loop trick?” Quiet pride radiated from the woman responsible for witchling training in Fisher’s Cove. “He has the skills, I think, and some tightly controlled magic would be good for him.”
Nell had plenty of experience with boys of Sean’s variety. “How about I teach Kevin first?”
Elorie blinked. “You think he can do it?”
It would be a stretch-but yeah, she did. And if the last couple of weeks had taught her anything, it was that the quiet twins should never be underestimated. “Only one way to find out.”
“Ha.” Elorie dug in the basket for napkins, highly amused. “Sean will practice until his magic runs dry if his twin has a trick he can’t do.”
Nell grinned. That was the idea. “The power of a dare.” And Kevin wouldn’t have to say a word.
Elorie quieted, her mind suddenly solemn. “It’s what Evan did, isn’t it?” She sat a moment, arranging her words. “This village has spent more than forty years trying to get Marcus back into the land of the living.” Her smile was a mix of wistful and impressed. “And all it really took was a dare from his twin.”
Nell looked around the beach-and hoped she and Elorie were adding one more strand to keep the dare alive. Evan had told Marcus to go home and live.
They were trying to make the first part of that possible.
Once, long ago, he’d sat in her gardens, just as he did now. Moira watched her nephew, sitting in the castle’s cornflowers, playing with a pile of shiny rocks.
And a set of small, green toy soldiers.
Her heart caught. Oh, Evan. Her soul ached for the boy who couldn’t come to play-and rejoiced for the one who finally had. “Good afternoon. Can an old lady join you?”