“Because he is different,” Milly said.

“So am I. So are you.”

“Not like Peter.”

“Are you saying that he’s special?”

“Yes. Henry and Claire Warren were not your ordinary, run-of-the-mill psychics, and neither is their son.”

“I still don’t like the way Peter’s acting,” Holly said, not backing down.

“It’s a fight you cannot win, my dear.”

Holly felt otherwise. She started to say so, when she heard the buzzer ring.

“That must be Peter,” she said, and hurried from the kitchen.

* * *

Holly stuck her eye to the peephole in her aunt’s front door.

“Hello, Max,” she said, opening the door.

The old magician put his arms gently around her upon entering. “I’m so sorry about poor Reggie. It must have been horrible to see him go.”

Holly stifled a tiny sob. Max lifted her chin with the tip of his finger, showed his hands empty, and made a beautiful red rose appear out of thin air.

“Thanks, Max,” she said.

She hung his overcoat in the hall closet. In the living room Max took his usual spot on the couch. He looked exhausted, and took several deep breaths. Holly sat beside him and took his hand. “You’re very warm. Are you feeling all right?”

“My heart has been racing all day,” Max replied. “To lose two of your soul mates is brutal. Have you talked to Peter? Is he going to join us? We have to talk Milly out of this.”

“Peter is on his way,” Holly said. “Aunt Milly and I were just talking about him. Have you noticed how he’s been acting lately? He’s like a man possessed.”

“We’re all on edge,” Max said defensively.

“That’s not what I mean. Peter’s changed.”

“What do you mean?”

“Don’t tell me you haven’t seen it, Max. He’s turned brutal.”

“Not Peter.”

“Yes, Peter. I want someone to tell me what’s going on.”

Max wiggled his fingers. A shiny silver dollar appeared, which he adroitly rolled back and forth across his knuckles. He split the silver dollar into two half-dollars, showed both sides of his hands, and split the half-dollars into four quarters. A smile lit up his face.

“Like it?” he asked.

“It was wonderful.”

“Did I fool you?”

“Please stop avoiding the question.”

He fished the various coins out of his sleeves and returned them to his pockets. “There is nothing going on, Holly, other than Peter is discovering certain things about himself that he will need to come to grips with. Our job is to be there for him, and help guide him.”

“But-”

He shushed her with a finger. “You want to know why Peter’s acting this way? That is something for him to tell you one day, not me, or anyone else. Do you understand?”

She shook her head helplessly. “No, I don’t.”

“Peter is evolving. Part of his evolution will be in the choices that he makes, and how he deals with these special gifts that he’s discovering. The worst thing we can do is to interrupt this process, and make him question himself. Do you understand now?”

“No.”

“What don’t you understand?”

“Why I can’t be let in on the secret.”

Her aunt slipped into the living room, still wearing her apron. “Hello, Max. How are you holding up?” she asked.

“I’ve had better days. How about you, Milly?”

“If I could, I would make us all wake up from this horrible dream.”

“If only that were possible. Come join us. We were talking about Peter.”

Milly joined them on the couch, and sat to Holly’s right. An uncomfortable silence followed. Holly hated when grown-ups went mute.

“For the last time, what is wrong with Peter?” Holly asked.

“She’s like a dog with a bone,” Max said to Milly.

“You’re not being fair,” Holly said.

“Life isn’t fair,” her aunt reminded her.

“Peter scares me,” Holly said, raising her voice. “Is he some kind of demon? Should I be afraid of him? I have a right to know what’s going on.”

Another silence followed. Max cleared his throat.

“Would you like to tell her, or should I?” the old magician asked.

“Oh, why don’t you,” Milly replied.

Max faced Holly, and held her hands with both his own. “Since you asked, here it is. Peter is a warlock, and not just in name only. He’s a real one.”

An icy finger ran down Holly’s spine. In books and the movies, warlocks were depicted as humans who had attained magical or mystical powers which they used for the betterment of mankind. Nothing could have been further from the truth. Warlocks were evil people who had entered into pacts with the Devil, and were the worst form of deceivers. Other psychics viewed them as heretics, and Holly was having a hard time believing that Peter was one.

“But he can’t be,” she said.

“But he is,” her aunt corrected her.

“He can’t be. I would have seen it long ago.”

“Peter inherited it from his parents, who became warlocks as children,” her aunt replied. “It’s in his genes.”

Holly shook her head in disbelief. She was in love with Peter, and had been for as long as she could remember. How could she have possibly missed this?

“How long have you known?” she asked.

“I saw it when Peter was a boy,” Milly said. “He roughed up a bully at his school, and really hurt him. Max saw it as well. Didn’t you, Max?”

“Afraid so,” Max said. “There is a demon simmering just below the surface. I saw it several times when I was giving him magic lessons. I learned to give in, and never argue with him. Eventually, the demon would leave, and he’d go back to being his normal, fun-loving self. When he was searching for a stage name, I suggested Warlock because it sounded magical, but there was another reason as well.”

“Because he is one.” Holly rose and went to the window. The oak trees in Central Park were filled with her aunt’s beloved crows, lined up in a military-like formation.

“Will he stay like this?” she heard herself ask.

“Only if we let him,” her aunt replied.

“What do you mean? How do we play into this?”

“Every person, be they a witch or warlock or what-have-you, has a guiding force in their lives,” Milly explained. “The guiding force in Peter’s life is us. Our job is to surround Peter with positive influences. That was how we raised him, and it worked wonders. The same must hold true now. You cannot fight fire with fire.”

“So when he acts like a monster, I should be nice to him,” Holly said.

“Yes, my dear,” her aunt said.

“That’s going to be hard.”

“Try.”

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