Love and Choices
A Tabitha And Kevin Story
By Circe
Copyright (c) 2006 All rights reserved.
Author's note: This story is set in the same universe as the other
Tabitha and Kevin tales, but with some new main characters. You should
not need to read the other tales to follow this one.
Trouble found Melissa Brookwell and Lyle Mansford at a mall coffee shop
one fine spring morning in Bardstown, Kentucky, just a few months before
their wedding. Melissa had been happily shopping for bridesmaid gifts
and the bulging bags at her feet were evidence of her quest. Although,
she admitted to herself guiltily as she toyed with the end of her braid,
more than a few of the items were for her.
Lyle tilted his head at her and set down his coffee. "A penny for them,"
he proposed.
"Hmmm?"
"Your thoughts. Whenever you mess with your braid you're thinking about
something."
Melissa dropped the heavy braid of glossy midnight hair and rolled her
dark green eyes. "Just a penny? Well that might be all they're worth. I
was just thinking about -"
"-the wedding," he finished for her. She stuck her tongue out at him and
he grinned. "Don't worry, I think it's cute how obsessed you are. I've
learned way more about wedding gowns and invitations and table settings
than I ever wanted to know."
"Obsessed? You ain't seen nothin' yet, buddy. Wait until we have a
baby."
Lyle gave her a mock look of despair. "Wait a minute, who said anything
about a baby! Can't we, like, get a dog instead? They never talk back
and you don't have to pay for college."
Melissa's eyes narrowed. "Hey, you're the one who said he wants a big
family, as I recall."
"Just kidding, honey, put your claws away," he said with a laugh.
"Hmph. Maybe I should talk to your sister and ask her for some real
claws." She swept her fingernails through the air at him.
His smile only got bigger. "Careful what you ask for. You know how
Tabitha likes to show off her transfiguration skills - you might get a
tail as well."
"Meow," she said turning up her nose in a fine display of feline airs.
"Very funny. But yes I do want a big family. It was fun always having
someone around to play with or better yet, to annoy."
Melissa shook her head. "I can't imagine it. I always wanted a brother
or even better a sister but four of them? I don't know if I can do as
good a job as your parents did." She raised an eyebrow. "Wasn't it kind
of tough since, well you know."
"What, the fact that they were all witches and warlocks and I wasn't?"
Melissa looked around and shook her finger at him. "Keep your voice
down; mundanes are everywhere you know."
He rolled his eyes at her. She hated when he did that even if he did
have adorable grey-blue eyes. "No one's listening. Besides, these are my
people."
"You are not a mundane. Just because your only power is scrying doesn't
make you one of them."
"Really? What do your parents say about that?"
"Lyle!" Melissa desperately wanted to change the topic. His expression
was too serious though and she knew he would accept nothing but the
truth. "They think it's because your father is a mundane. They're
worried that our kids might turn out the same."
Lyle nodded slowly. "They might be right." He paused and looked into her
eyes. "And what about you?"
Melissa reached across the table and held his hand. "As long as they
have an even number of arms and legs I'll be happy."
Lyle laughed. "I think you need to raise your standards just a little.
Well, if the first one comes out wrong we'll just keep having them until
we get one that your father will approve of."
Melissa's narrowed her eyes at him but could not help but giggle.
Finally she got control of herself. "Did I tell you what he father said
last time we talked about grandkids?"
Lyle groaned. "No...?"
"He told me, 'Daughter, what is this nonsense about having so many
babies? I tell you, the apple does not fall far from the tree. This is
his father's influence.'"
Despite himself, Lyle laughed as Melissa managed to lower her voice to a
fair imitation of her father's. "Well you can say this for him: he's
consistent. I hope he and Dad will eventually get along. I have my
doubts."
"Honey, he's still shocked that a witch from an old family like your
mother would marry a mundane. The fact that Tabitha is dating a mortal
just adds fuel to the fire. I think we'll be old ourselves before he
gets over it."
Lyle nodded and sighed. "They are at least being cordial. I guess we'll
have to work on friendly later." Lyle decided it was time to get their
fathers out of their minds. His expression turned sly as he said. "Your
father will come around when we have some kids and he sees how well they
turn out. - much better than only kids. They're always so selfish and
arrogant."
"Hey! You take that back!" She punched him in the arm, hard.
"Ow! You're stronger than you look, you know," said Lyle, rubbing his
arm.
"Hmph. That remark is going to cost you more than a bruised arm."
"Oh?" he said cautiously. "Does it involve eye of newt?"
"So clich?. No, I'm thinking dinner. At La Jardien - and I want
flowers."
Lyle looked aghast. "Do you know how much that place costs?"
Melissa smirked. "So you'll have to inspect a few more houses. You
should have thought of that before saying mean things about your poor,
helpless, little fianc?e."
"Helpless? You're about as helpless as-" Lyle saw the look in her eyes
and went with the better part of valor. "La Jardien, huh?"
"And flowers."
"Right, flowers," he said morosely.
Melissa giggled at his expression. Unlike many of their magical kin,
Lyle preferred to make what his father would call an honest living. He
had started a home inspection business and he was doing quite well at
it. She also liked how working outside had given him a healthy tan and
that nice lean build. He could be quite a penny-pincher, especially
lately, but even that was endearing to her. She reached across the table
and took his hand in hers. Lyle gave her a quizzical smile and almost
simultaneously they leaned across the table to share a kiss. The young
lovers were completely oblivious to the smiles and glances from the
customers and waitresses in the caf?. All who saw them turned to
thoughts of loves they had known or hopes of love to come - all that,
is, but one.
A woman paused at the caf?'s entrance, a sneer twisting her lips as her
dark eyes took in the scene and lingered over the two lovers for a long
moment before their owner turned with a swirl of dark red hair and
strode towards the table shared by Melissa and Lyle. The newcomer's
clothing was all black, a long-sleeved black blouse matched with a
flowing skirt, sleek hose, and gleaming black heels. The only other
color to her was the ivory of her skin, the brilliant red of her
lipstick and the gleam of silver jewelry at her ears, throat, wrists,
and every finger.
Melissa was facing the door and her eyes widened at the sight of the
midnight-clad woman. "What the hell is she supposed to be?" she
muttered.
Lyle looked over his shoulder and groaned. His grip on Melissa's hand
tightened as the woman stopped before their table. "Hello, Amy," he said
with a forced smile on his face.
Melissa raised an eyebrow as the woman in black gave Lyle a venomous
look. There was something about her that had the hair on the back of her
neck rising. "I told you my name is not Amy anymore, it is Amanda." She
spared a bit of her poisonous gaze for Melissa. "So, who's the bimbo?"
"What did you call me?" said a shocked Melissa.
"I see you haven't learned any manners, Amy," replied Lyle. "I think you
should leave now."
Amanda's eyes narrowed but she ignored his taunt. "Oh but why? We're all
having such fun." Her eyes shifted once more to Melissa. "Aren't you
having fun sweetie?"
Melissa blinked as a realization struck her. "Um, Lyle-"
"It's ok, Melissa. This is the girl I told you about. I thought she had
finally accepted that it was over, but-"
"Oh it's over, alright, at least all but the reckoning," interrupted
Amy, her gaze still on Melissa. "So he told you about me, Marissa? Did
he tell you why he dumped me?"
"Her name is Melissa. I ended it because you need help. You're obsessed
with..." This time he interrupted himself as he realized that their
argument was being watched by everyone in the caf?.
Amanda looked at Lyle with a smirk on her face. "Go ahead, say it.
Magic. You're right, you know, I am obsessed with it. And I finally
found someone with the real thing, didn't I Lyle? But you wouldn't teach
me, and then you left."
"Lyle? I think--" tried Melissa again.
"Hang on honey," he said, his attention still on Amanda. "I told you, I
can't teach you to have something you don't have. It would be like
teaching you to flap wings. All the lessons in the world won't make you
fly."
"So you said. What about this one? Did you teach her?" Amanda's dark
gaze returned to Melissa.
Lyle sighed. "Melissa did not need any teaching from me. I really think
you should leave now."
"So, she's a witch too? Just as I thought - you left me for someone with
the power. Too bad she's smarter than you." Surprisingly, she grinned as
she spoke. It was a mirthless, feral smile that did not reach her eyes.
"You've figured it out, haven't you Melinda dear?"
"Melissa," she corrected. "Lyle, there's something you need to know. I
don't know what she was like before but now she's--"
"Excuse me," said a stern voice. "What seems to be the problem here?"
All three turned to look at a stout, balding man wearing an apron
emblazoned with the caf?'s logo.
Amanda turned his grin on her. "Shut up," she said, and raised her hand
in an odd gesture. The man's mouth suddenly slammed shut.
"-a witch," finished Melissa.
The store manager glared silently at Amanda and started towards her.
"Stand still," she said and his feet stuck to the tile as though with
glue. One of the waitresses screamed at this display and other customers
began to stand. "All of you be still!" she commanded, and everyone in
the caf? fell silent with the exception of Melissa and Lyle.
Lyle gaped at this demonstration of power. "How? That's not possible!"
"Oh but it is," said a gleeful Amanda. "Melanie over here may be a bimbo
but she knows a witch when she sees one. And I'm stronger than her, too,
stronger than any witch alive. And now I'm going to teach you a lesson,
you bastard!" She raised a hand towards a shocked Lyle, a hand that
began to glow with a deep red light. Not for the first time Lyle found
himself wishing his magical powers were more useful in a fight.
"My name is Melissa," said his fianc?e with a loud growl that startled
Amanda. She quickly said several words that Lyle could not follow and
made a motion with her hands that looked as though she were wrapping her
fingers around a ball. The red glow abruptly faded from Amanda's hand.
"And you may be strong, but you don't know a damn thing about magic."
Amanda's eyes grew wild. "What did you do? You bitch! What did you do?"
She made wild swirling motions in the air as though trying to find
something.
"I cut you off. No magic until I release you. Now I think we'll take you
to see the coven where they can decide what to do with you."
For the first time, Amanda's eyes showed fear. "No!" she screamed and
fumbled at one of the bracelets on her right wrist. Her form wavered as
though seen through heat waves and then vanished.
Melissa sighed. "Damn. I should have guessed she would have made some
charms."
"What the hell just happened here, Melissa? She wasn't a witch before!"
"I don't know, honey, but I think we need to make our own exit." Melissa
nodded at the others in the store who were beginning to stir from their
enchanted paralysis. Lyle left a few dollars on the table and the two
quickly headed for their car.
**********************************************
Melissa's apartment was just a few blocks from the mall on the outskirts
of Bardstown, so the couple returned there to decide what to do and to
take advantage of the protective spells Melissa had cast there. Melissa
had called her mother as they drove, and Lorinda told them to stay put
until she could contact the rest of the Coven.
"Interesting day," said Lyle as he sprawled on the couch.
"You have a gift for understatement," Melissa told him as she perched
near him. "Now, I think it's time you tell me a little more about
Amanda."
"You mean Amy? That is her real name, you know. She wants to be called
Amanda because she thinks it sounds more elegant, more like a witch's
name." He paused. "I've told you a lot already. She was the daughter of
a contractor that I met when I was doing some work in a new housing
development. She was a little weird and a bit of a Goth but she also had
a wicked sense of humor. We went on a few dates, caught a concert, and
then she found out that I could do magic."
"What? Showing off to get girls?" said Melissa with a smirk.
"No, of course not. I was trying to figure out why a house's foundation
was cracked and didn't feel like crawling around underneath the house. I
was using my mirror to scry when she walked up behind me. I know you
wouldn't believe it from today's little performance but she can be quiet
as a shadow when she wants to be." Melissa looked skeptical. Lyle
shrugged and went on. "Anyway, when she saw the house's crawlspace in
the mirror she spazzed. She begged and pleaded with me to show her how
to do it. I tried to explain that it wasn't possible but she kept after
me for weeks. I finally couldn't stand it anymore and ended things."
Melissa sat back and sighed, shaking her head. One hand idly toyed with
her long braid. "You're absolutely sure she had no powers?"
"None, nothing, nada. She certainly wanted them though."
"And you had not heard from her again?"
"Not recently. There were a few calls and emails but I basically ignored
them and she stopped soon enough."
Melissa raised an eyebrow. "You ignored her? Big mistake, honey, not to
mention rude."
"Hey, you didn't have to deal with her. She was obsessed! I tried to get
her to talk to a counselor but she wouldn't have it."
Melissa leaned against him and snuggled happily as he put an arm around
her shoulder. "I'm trying to be jealous but I just feel sorry for her -
and worried about what she might do."
"How long will your spell last?"
"It's hard to say. I put everything I had into it so it ought to be good
for a few hours at least, maybe more. Long enough for the cavalry to
arrive." She wrinkled her nose. "She is so strong though - how in the
world did she get so strong?"
Lyle stroked her cheek with one finger. "Don't worry. The coven knows
about her and I'm sure they'll track her down soon enough. No matter how
strong she is she can't stand up to all them when they work together."
Melissa nodded and smiled. "And here I am, safe in your arms."
Lyle snorted. "Other way around, I think. You're the powerful one here."
Melissa laughed and gave him a kiss. "Oh stop, you know what I meant,
you foolish man you." She kissed him again to take the sting out of her
words.
Lyle loved kissing Melissa. Her smaller form fit so well in his arms and
her soft lips and teasing tongue could drive him to distraction.
Sometimes it frustrated him that she seemed content to do nothing but
kiss and cuddle, but after the strange encounter with Amy he was happy
to just be with her.
All that ended when a shudder traveled the length of her body, and she
squirmed in his arms. "Let me up, please," she said with a quiet
desperation that startled him. He released her and she quickly sat up.
"What's wrong?"
"I don't know. I just suddenly felt...weird."
There was a wild look in Melissa's eyes that chilled Lyle. "Amy's up to
something isn't she?"
"She can't be. As strong as she is there's no way she could break my
ward on her that fast."
"Then what's going on? Do you feel sick or something?"
She looked at him out of the corner of her eye. "Not sick, at least not
exactly."
He reached up to rub gently between her shoulder blades. She stiffened
at his touch. "Melissa?"
"I'm sorry, I just...I need to get some tea or something. Want some?"
She suddenly bounced up from the couch and headed for her apartment's
small kitchen.
"Uh, sure." Lyle's brow furrowed as she watched her retreating back.
What a day it had been, he thought. First an old flame had appeared
wielding powers she should not have and now his fianc? was acting
downright twitchy. Surely the two were connected, somehow, despite what
Melissa had said about her apartment's protection spells. "I'm going to
try and scry for Amy."
"That sounds like a good idea," said Melissa distantly.
Lyle raised an eyebrow at her tone but decided to give her some space.
He reached in a pocket and drew out his trusty hand mirror. A friend of
his had made the frame for it, engraving certain runes in the dark wood
that amplified Lyle's abilities. He may not be a warlock but he could
see further, whether through distance or time, than anyone else he knew.
He set the mirror on the coffee table and began to concentrate on Amy,
seeking her in the depths of the glass. He frowned as the reflection in
the mirror turned to a murky grey mist.
"Should have known," he muttered. Amy had been smart enough to prepare
the charm that had let her escape Melissa, she must have made a charm to
ward against him as well. Still, he stayed over the mirror, brow
furrowed in concentration until a knock on the door interrupted him.
Melissa was still busy in the kitchen so he walked over to the door and
checked the peephole. Smiling at what he saw he quickly opened the door
to reveal two women, one middle aged and the other in her mid twenties.
"Hello, Lyle how are you? And Melissa?" asked the older lady. She was a
well dressed in a light grey business suit-dress and with a pale pink
blouse. Carefully selected jewelry and makeup gave her a very polished
appearance.
"Hi, Lorinda. We're both fine, I think." He cast his gaze towards the
kitchen, then turned his attention to the younger woman. She was nearly
as tall as he was and while her eyes were a deep blue that was nearly
purple and her hair a golden blonde their features were clearly similar.
"Hi Tabitha, it's been a while."
She smirked up at him. "Hi, little brother. I hear you had a bimbo
eruption this morning."
He rolled his eyes. "Cute." He looked at his future mother-in-law with a
long suffering expression. "Do you see what I had to put up with as a
little boy?"
Lorinda smiled. "I'm sure she made things interesting."
Lyle rolled his eyes. "You have no idea. The year she gained her powers
was pretty rough on the rest of us. I don't know how her boyfriend -
what's his name, Kyle? - puts up with her."
"Hey!" protested Tabitha. "I'm standing right here, you know. And it's
not as though you were a little angel you know, Mr. I-can-see-through-
walls. Oh, and his name is Kevin thank you very much."
Lyle raised an eyebrow. "Do I have to bring up the cow incident?"
Tabitha suddenly blushed brightly. Lorinda decided it was time to get
past the siblings' bantering. "The rest of the coven is gathering at the
hall. We've been sent to make sure you're alright and to take you
there."
Lyle nodded slowly. "I suppose that makes sense. I'm not making much
headway trying to find-" Lyle's words were cut off by a sudden crash of
breaking glass. He looked over his shoulder to find Melissa standing in
the entryway to the kitchen, a broken tea-cup at her feet. Her face was
frozen in a strange mix of emotions as she stared, not at him but at
Tabitha.
"No, no, it can't be..." she muttered as she sagged against the wall.
"Please, no."
"Melissa?" asked Lyle as he hurried to her side, but she pushed him
away. Tabitha was there too, but Melissa cringed when she sought to put
an arm around her shoulders. She instead stumbled into the arms of her
startled mother and began to cry.
The siblings exchanged worried glances. Lyle inclined his head towards
the kitchen and Tabitha nodded. The two busied themselves with cleaning
up the broken cup and wiping up the tea as Lorinda held her daughter and
whispered soothing things in her ear.
Finally Melissa's sobs trailed off. Her mother held her at arm's length
and looked into her eyes. "Now, can you tell us what's wrong, honey?"
Melissa nodded, biting her lip. Her gaze flicked to Lyle and Tabitha for
a moment then quickly back to her mother. "That bitch has done something
to me. Something-oh God!" She looked as though she would cry again but
managed to control it. "Lyle and I, we were, you know kissing a little
while ago when I suddenly felt...repulsed." She paused and looked at
Lyle with look of distress. "Lyle, you have to know I love you, I will
always love you." She ducked her head. "It's just that it feels wrong to
kiss you or to be touched by you."
"Wrong?" wondered Lyle. "What could be wrong about that?"
Melissa shuddered. "I didn't know myself. Until I saw Tabitha." She
raised her eyes again and looked at Lyle's sister. "Do you know how
pretty you are?" she asked the tall blonde. "I never did, not really,
not until just now." Her voice rasped in her throat.
Realization struck the three others nearly simultaneously. Lyle was
thunderstruck, his mouth dropping open and his look now mirroring
Melissa's distress. Tabitha looked worried and intrigued all at once.
Her eyes shone with curiosity. Lorinda was furious but controlled, like
a panther that has set its eyes on its prey. She placed a finger under
her daughter's chin and forced her to meet her gaze.
"Melissa, are you telling me that you feel...attracted to Tabitha, but
not Lyle?"
Melissa nodded, tears rolling down her cheeks. "I tried to deny it when
Lyle kissed me but when I saw Tabitha I knew. Mom, that bitch turned me
into a lesbian!"
Lyle staggered, bumping into Tabitha. He was torn, wanting to go to his
fianc? but knowing that his touch would not be welcome.
Lorinda looked at him sternly but not unkindly. "Pull yourself together,
young man."
Lyle bit his lip and nodded. "But how could she do this? She was cut off
from her magic. Even if she used a charm, Melissa has all kinds of
protections set up on this apartment. If she had somehow broken through
them Melissa would have known."
Lorinda nodded. "You're right." She took a slow look around the room, as
did Tabitha and Melissa. "Melissa, your wards are all in place. No spell
could have gotten through here."
"Maybe she cast something on you at the mall?" wondered Tabitha.
"Something that took a while to take effect?"
Lyle shook his head as Lorinda began to examine Melissa, running her
hands through the air around her daughter. "I don't think so. She didn't
have time to do anything before Melissa shut her down."
Lorinda frowned. She patted her daughter on the cheek and walked over to
Lyle, where she repeated her examination. "Neither of you have any
active spells on you, or any traces of recent magic other than the
spells Melissa cast earlier today."
Tabitha was mirrored her frown. "So how could she do it without magic?
Maybe she slipped something into your drink."
Melissa blinked away her tears and shook her head. "No, she never got
that close to the table. Besides we didn't drink anything else after she
arrived."
The four of them debated for several more minutes while getting no
closer to a solution. Finally Lorinda held up her hand. "We need to all
get back to the hall so that the coven can discuss this. Lyle, bring
whatever scrying tools you have available. I believe we'll have need of
them."
**********************************************
The coven's meeting place was a bit unconventional for magical
gatherings. Faced with a need to have a place where they could conduct
their meetings without raising suspicions from their fellow residents of
Bardstown, the witches and warlocks had pooled their funds and purchased
a small old church on the outskirts of town. They called it Heritage
Hall and rented the place for weddings, bar mitzvahs, and so on. They
even catered some of the events which basically paid for the building's
maintenance and other expenses. In times of trouble, any planned events
were cancelled and the hall was put to its real purpose.
As the four arrived, there were over a dozen witches and warlocks
bustling about. Wards were being refreshed by the women while the men
were removing floor panels from the center of the main hall to reveal a
flat expanse of a smooth black material emblazoned with a silver
pentagram. The central figure was surrounded by a circular border that
was heavily engraved with various runes.
Jennifer Mansford smiled with relief as she saw her son. Unlike Lorinda,
Jennifer was not adverse to using a little magic to enhance her
appearance. She looked like a slightly more mature version of Tabitha
despite being older than Lorinda. She finished reweaving a ward around
the hall's rear entrance and a moment later was at his side. As Lorinda
called for everyone's attention, she said, "I'm so glad you're here and
safe. Is it true what they said about Amy? She's a witch somehow?"
Lyle nodded. He was about to say more but Lorinda had begun to speak.
She informed the gathered magic users about Lyle's previous relationship
with the mortal girl, her appearance at the caf?, and her improbable new
powers. She paused and glanced at Melissa, who ducked her head as
Lorinda gingerly informed them of the change in her daughter's
orientation.
"That's impossible," said one older lady. "None of it makes any sense. A
mortal who can do magic and a witch's mind altered without magic? You
said she had a bunch of jewelry, and at least one piece was a charm that
let her escape. What if she didn't really have any power of her own?
Melissa, honey, I have to ask this. Are you sure you didn't just...you
know, change on your own?"
Lorinda looked as though she might slap the other woman, but Melissa
placed her hand on her mother's. "It's ok, Mom. Someone was bound to
ask." She took a breath and regarded the other woman. "I can understand
your skepticism. I have heard of people who realize they're gay, even
people older than me. But not in mid-kiss, not between one heartbeat and
the next. It was like someone threw a switch - one moment I was enjoying
Lyle's, um, attention and the next I wasn't."
"And yet no sign of a spell, no trace of magic at all is on you."
Melissa simply nodded. Her mother gripped her hand and said, "That's why
the next step has to be tracking this Amanda person. We need to know
what she's been up to and where she is. Lyle has tried but she must have
erected wards to protect against his vision. I propose that we lend our
strength to him. No single witch should be able to defeat our combined
strength!"
The others nodded in agreement, even the skeptical ones. There was
little further discussion. Something strange had happened to one of
their number and they needed to know what it was. The coven members
assembled in small groups at each point of the pentagram. Lyle moved to
the center and looked around a bit nervously. He had seen this sort of
thing a few times but had never been the focal point of the coven's
power.
"Relax," said his mother from the point to his left. "Just start scrying
as you normally would. We will lend our power to yours."
Lyle nodded and knelt down, his mirror before him. He stared intently
into its depths and concentrated on Amanda. After a moment he shook his
head. "Nothing, not even a trace. I think her powers must be active
again."
"Try earlier in the day," suggested Lorinda.
Lyle nodded. After a moment, a misty image formed in the mirror. Lyle
made a lifting motion with his hands and the image was projected in the
air above him so that everyone could see. "I have something but she's
definitely trying to block it."
"Alright, everyone, let's do this," said Jennifer. Each of the five
groups joined hands. Some bowed their heads, others looked heavenward. A
pale glow surrounded the points of the pentagram, a glow that brightened
as it traced the silver-engraved symbol until Lyle was surrounded by
radiance.
The young man shuddered as the combined power of the coven poured into
him, then through him, into the scrying spell he had crafted. It was
exhilarating but also frightening. Rather than controlling the flow of
power he felt like he was riding its wild currents like a raft on a
river. He gathered himself and focused on the spell, seeking to break
through.
At long last the misty image floating above him began to clarify until
they could all see...
**********************************************
In the vision, Amanda sat on a chair before a window. A tripod stood
before her and atop the tripod was a large pair of binoculars. "Ha!
There you are, you son of a bitch," she said, her voice a bit tinny but
recognizable.
Her triumphant expression faded quickly. "Look at them, making out like
teenagers. That's disgusting," she muttered. She watched a little
longer, growing more and more vexed. Finally she sat back from the
binoculars and began to pace. As she did, the vision revealed more and
more of the room. It appeared to be a typical hotel room, with a plain
bed and an air condition/heating unit below the window she had been
peering through.
**********************************************
"Binoculars," muttered Melissa, standing by her mother. "All my
protective spells and wards defeated by freaking binoculars." Her mother
hushed her as Amy began talking to herself in the vision.
**********************************************
"That bitch. When I figure out what she did I'll teach her to steal
what's mine." She sat up and concentrated, her fingers reaching out
around her like a blind woman seeking her way. "Damn it! What did she
do?"
Amanda's eyes flew open. "Of course," she said. "What was I thinking?"
She crossed the room to open a dresser and rummaged deep in its top
drawer. Her fingers reached up to retrieve a ring taped to the underside
of the dresser's top. She stripped off the piece of tape and jammed the
ring on her finger, rubbing the large ruby that was its only decoration
quite insistently.
"Yes mistress, how may I help you?" wondered a calm masculine voice
behind her. The vision's view widened to reveal a swarthy but otherwise
nondescript man wearing a short white tunic trimmed with purple.
"There you are, you worthless Genie."
"Djinn," corrected the man with a tired look on his face.
"Whatever. You told me I would be the strongest witch alive, you liar!"
**********************************************
"Impossible!" sputtered Lorinda. Now it was Melissa's turn to hush her
mother as the vision continued.
**********************************************
The djinn did not flinch at the rising screech in her voice. "I have
told no lie, mistress. I did precisely as you wished. You have more
magical power than any other witch alive in the world today."
"Oh yeah? Then how could she do this to me?" Amanda waved her impotent
hands in the air.
"Perhaps it would help if you enlightened me. Who did what, Mistress?"
"That slut that Lyle is seeing. She's a witch, too. She did something
and now I can't even feel the magic anymore. If it weren't for the
charms I made I'd probably be dead right now."
"Ah," said the djinn. His eyes glinted as he looked more closely at her.
After a moment he nodded thoughtfully. "She has cast a spell that blocks
you from accessing your new abilities, mistress. It is excellent work,
quite well done."
"I'm so glad you approve," she growled. "But it proves my point - you
lied, she must be stronger than me."
"She is not stronger, mistress. She is, however, more experienced and
certainly well trained. You did not have any protective measures in
place to stop such an attack, something she must have realized."
Amanda glared at the djinn. "Oh, I see. So you played with words - you
made me strong but didn't give me the knowledge I need to use my
strength."
"Mistress, please, do not be angry. I did do as you asked. I cannot
embellish wishes; I am bound to grant them as they are worded."
"Fine, whatever. At least tell me how I undo this."
"You do not, at least not by yourself."
"What?"
"You have no access to magic, and you have not made a charm that would
serve to undo this spell. You will simply have to wait for it to wear
off."
The new witch looked relieved. "It will wear off then? When?"
The djinn spread his hands. "I am not a warlock, just a humble djinn. I
can only venture to say that it should be gone within an hour."
Amanda sighed and ran a hand through her thick red hair. "Can't you get
rid of it?"
"Of course mistress, if you wish me to."
"Oh no, I'm not going to waste a wish if this is going to take care of
itself." She paused. "Damn it, though, I have to be ready. I'm sure that
little bitch Melanie or whatever her name is has contacted her coven. I
can't fight off anyone like this." She looked back at the djinn. "How
long until they find me?"
"I am not a -"
"Yeah, yeah. Whatever. Guess!"
The djinn bowed. "Mistress, you have crafted a charm against your former
lover's scrying abilities," he said, nodding at the necklace she wore.
"It will not protect you forever but should last at least for a few
hours."
"Perfect. So by the time they find me I'll have my powers back and I
don't need to use a wish on that. Fine, now I know what I want for my
second wish."
"Yes, Mistress?"
"I want you to give me what you should have with my first wish. I wish I
had all the knowledge and experience necessary to use my powers!"
"Granted," said the djinn.
For a moment, a pearlescent glow surrounded the black-clad witch. She
blinked and then laughed. "Wonderful!" she said. "Oh I cannot wait till
that wench's spell goes away. The things I can do..." She paused and
frowned. "Damn it. No!"
"Mistress, is something amiss?"
"Yes, damn it. I know what I can do now, which means I know what that
bimbo and her coven can do. Shit! I can't possibly fight their combined
powers. It will be all I can do to hide from them. I'll have to start
running as soon as I get my powers back and even then they might catch
me."
"You do have a final wish, Mistress. Perhaps I could help you escape?"
She glared at him. "No thanks, so far your wishes haven't exactly been a
roaring success." She turned her spiteful gaze at the binoculars by the
window. "Damn it, all I wanted was a little revenge. I wanted him to
suffer like I have. Is that so much to ask?" After a moment she smiled.
"Hmm. One wish left, right?" The djinn acknowledged her with a slight
bow. "I may not be able to use my own powers, Lyle, but I think I will
make you go through the kind of rejection I have. Genie, I wish Marissa
did not love him anymore."
The djinn managed to look even wearier as he bowed once more. "Mistress,
I must remind you that I cannot interfere in certain things. True love
is one of those matters where my powers are quite useless." He paused
reflectively.. "And I believe that Marissa is not her name."
Amanda waved off the last remark and grimaced. "True love? Those two?
Hmph. What good are you then? I want her to reject him, to make him feel
like I felt." A sudden thought occurred to her. "Can you change
someone's sexual orientation?"
"Yes mistress. Lust and love are two entirely different things,
something your race seems to forget."
"Perfect," she said. "That's absolutely perfect. I know exactly what I
want to wish for. I wish that Melanie - Marissa - damn it, whoever it is
that he's kissing would permanently become a complete and total man-
hating lesbian!"
"Granted, mistress, and farewell." With those words, the djinn and the
ruby ring on Amanda's finger vanished. She blinked in surprise but then
eagerly peered through the binoculars. After a few moments she laughed
wickedly. "Perfect! If I can't have him, neither can you, you lesbo!"
She stepped back and looked around the room. "Now I'd better run!"
**********************************************
The image faded and Lyle sat back on his heels, exhausted. The pale glow
that had surrounded him was gone as well. Most of the coven members
looked as tired as he did, and several of them took a seat also.
"That stupid little bitch," he muttered. With sudden strength his rose
to his feet. "That stupid little bitch," he repeated more loudly. "I'm
gonna kill her!" he shouted, before collapsing back to the floor.
Melissa was quickly at his side. She put a tentative arm around his
shoulder. Lyle groaned at the stiff way she held him, like a sister
rather than a lover.
"Be calm," advised Lorinda as she, Jennifer and Tabitha joined them. "I
understand why you're angry but it does not do us any good. Jennifer,
did we really see a djinn?"
"I believe we did. I never thought they were real, but it certainly
explains an awful lot."
"I don't understand," said Melissa. "OK, so genies exist. Why would
their magic be able to do this to me without leaving a trace or breaking
my wards?"
"Because they don't use magic, dear," said her mother. "They actually
change the nature of reality."
"Wait a minute," said Lyle. "Isn't that what magic is?"
"No, no. Magic is imposing one's will on reality through the power of
your mind, spells, potions, or items like your mirror. Thus we can
perform feats like flying or healing or viewing things far away. A djinn
is more elemental than that. They can actually twist the fabric of
reality; change the nature of it to match their master's desires."
"So magic cannot help us?" wondered Melissa.
"I did not say that. Their powers, though, are not magical and so your
wards could not prevent her wish."
"Fine, fine. So how do we undo it?"
The two mothers looked at each other and then back at their children.
"You don't," said Lorinda. "Only another wish can undo a wish. And we
don't have the ring."
"OK, I'll scry for it," said Lyle. "I got a good look at it-what?"
His mother was shaking her head. "You cannot find a djinn, according to
the legends. It finds you."
"So what do we do?" demanded Lyle. "We have to do something. Damn it
we're supposed to be married, right here, in two months!"
Everyone fell silent at Lyle's outburst, everyone but Melissa who began
to cry, long despairing sobs echoing in the depths of the Coven's hall.
**********************************************
Lyle loved his mother but hated the fact that she was seldom wrong. He
sighed in frustration and sat back on his couch. On the coffee table
before him were a variety of implements that included his trusty mirror,
a cracked crystal ball, several books (some of them in languages he only
partly understood), and crumpled papers with drawings of the djinn's
ring.
None of it had helped. He had been at it for over a week and so far
managed to trace the ring back to when Amy found it. She had been
shopping at one of those cheap kiosks in the mall, adding more junk to
her jewelry collection, when she spied the ring in a bin marked as
"Three For $5". The gleam of real gold among the cheap fakes was clear
to her, so without a second thought she scooped it up along with two
random fake ones, paid off the clerk, and skipped gleefully away.
He had scrolled backwards in time, watching the bin as clerks filled it
and customers plucked rings from it. He could never spot the ring until
the moment that Amy found it. His mother must be right. The ring and its
magical cargo appeared in the bin specifically when and where Amy would
find it.
Why? What cosmic agency would give Amy magical powers, and allow her to
screw up his life so thoroughly?
The phone rang, a light melody that told him it was Melissa calling. He
groaned. She had been on an emotional roller coaster lately and he
wondered which side of the hill she would be on this day. He picked up
the phone and pressed Talk. "Hi honey, how are you?"
"Lyle, are you coming over today?" She sounded teary but otherwise
alright.
"Um, sure, of course."
"You forgot didn't you? We have to talk to the caterer."
"I didn't forget but that's tomorrow -" he glanced at his watch. "Oh.
It's today."
Melissa sighed in his ear. "Have you slept at all?"
"Some. I think."
"Honey, I'm glad you're trying so hard to fix this. You're going to burn
yourself out though. Take a break and get over here -- by two."
"OK, OK. I'll take a shower and be on my way."
"I love you, Lyle," she said softly.
"I love you too," he said and pressed the End button on his phone. He
pressed the receiver against his head and moaned, then got himself
moving and into the shower.
**********************************************
The meeting with the caterer was vexing for Melissa. She sat next to
Lyle on the couch and pretended to listen as the matronly woman went
over her plans for the reception dinner. Melissa was glad her mother was
sitting in on the meeting as well because she simply could not
concentrate on menus and seating charts. Lyle's presence would not allow
it.
Normally being distracted by him would be a sweet kind of torture. She
remembered how she loved to press against him, feeling the firm muscles
of his hips and thigh against her curves. The warmth of his body, the
musky male scent of him, even the rumbly sound of his voice so near
could instill thoughts in her that would make her mother blush. She
would return the favor by wiggling against him slightly or brushing his
hand with hers, seeing if she could distract him as thoroughly as he did
her. It was a wonderful little game that often led to very passionate
encounters.
Not today. Today they sat several inches apart, their posture as stiff
as a soldier standing at attention, seldom even glancing at each other.
She yearned to show him that she still loved him, but she could not
bring herself to touch him. She looked sideways at him. His body seemed
too large, imposing, and definitely too hairy.
She sighed, too loudly. The caterer and her mother were both staring at
her.
"I take it you don't like Chicken Marsala?" asked the caterer.
"No. I mean yes, that's fine. In fact, the menu is perfect." She stood
and extended her hand to the startled woman. "Thank you so much for
coming."
The caterer rose hesitantly and took Melissa's hand. "Well, you're,
welcome." She looked over to Lorinda. "I'll call you?"
Lorinda matched Melissa's bright smile with one of her own and stood as
well. Lyle followed suit uncertainly. "Yes, that will be fine. I'm sure
we can take care of the remaining details on the phone."
After the flustered caterer had taken her leave, Lorinda turned to her
daughter. "Care to explain that?"
Melissa blushed and blinked away sudden tears. "I'm sorry Mother I just
can't stand this. I'm trying to carry on but it's so hard."
Lyle put his arm around her. "Melissa, don't worry. You know my mom and
the rest of the coven are working on this."
She wanted so badly to melt into his arms as she normally would. His
comforting arm was a forceful reminder of the problem, though, and she
could not stand it. She stiffened in his gentle hold.
Lyle felt her tension and dropped his arm to his side. He stepped away
from the two women, looking out the window and watching the caterer
drive away. "This is insane," he announced to no one in particular.
"Lyle?" wondered Melissa.
He turned back to them, and they both gasped at the sight of tears on
his cheeks. "I can't do this. I thought I could but I can't. Melissa, I
love you more than anything. I want to spend the rest of my life with
you. How can I do that though, if you can't even stand my touch? If I'm
repulsive to you?"
"Lyle, of course you're not repulsive. When you're near me though, all I
can think about is that I should be attracted to you. I'm just not
though and that gets me confused." She crossed the room and took his
hand in hers. "I love you, Lyle. We just have to hold on and wait for a
cure."
He looked down at their joined hands and then into her eyes.
"Maybe...maybe we should postpone the wedding. Not forever, just until
they find a cure."
"No!" yelped Melissa. "Damn it, no! I am going to marry you, Lyle
Mansford. That bitch took her best shot but she's not going to win. We.
Are. Getting. Married."
Lyle looked to Lorinda for help but she just spread her hands. "Sorry,
Lyle, I know that look in her eyes all too well."
Lyle gave a sad smile. "She is kind of cute when she gets this way,
isn't she?"
"Hey!" protested Melissa.
"He's right, dear," said her mother.
"It's not fair - now you're teaming up on me."
Lyle hugged her very briefly and lightly. "Just teasing, sweetheart.
Keep being stubborn - I think we're going to need it."
**********************************************
Weeks slowly passed as preparations continued for the wedding. There was
a constant undertone of tension, though, as the coven sought to find a
cure for Melissa. Jennifer and several of the older witches and warlocks
spent long days and nights poring over old tomes and questioning anyone
and everyone they could think of who might know of a cure. Melissa and
Lyle were smart enough to leave them alone, but after another fruitless
day Jennifer knew it was time to have a talk with her son.
She corralled her husband as soon as he got home from work and the two
soon arrived at Lyle's apartment complex. Nick was quiet and not for the
first time Jennifer found herself wondering what was going on behind
those blue-gray eyes. Lyle had inherited those eyes and much more. The
two were so very similar, something she knew they would both deny. Their
other sons were like Nick as well, but Lyle was definitely a chip off
the old block. She sighed and her husband wordlessly put an arm around
her. Too soon the elevator ride was over and they were at Lyle's door.
Nick knocked and they heard a vague "Come in" from inside.
Lyle was hunched over his coffee table. Several new implements had
appeared on the table. A silver pentagram inlaid in a block of ebony lay
under his mirror. At one end of the table a stack of books leaned
precariously against the crystal ball, which was now not just cracked
but seemed to have partly melted. A pack of Tarot cards had partially
spilled off of the other end of the table, and there was a small pile of
what she suspected were chicken bones atop the remaining stack.
"Lyle?" prompted Nick.
He looked blearily up at her, dark circles under his eyes. "Oh, hi Mom,
Dad."
Jennifer shook her head. "Hi yourself. When is the last time you slept?"
Lyle chuckled and looked at his father. "She always did get right to the
point."
"When?" insisted Jennifer.
"I don't know...I think some this morning."
She sat next to her son. "Lyle, you need to stop this. It's pretty clear
that you are not going to be able to find that djinn. Even one with your
gifted sight cannot track him."
"I know," he said quietly. "I gave up on that days ago."
"Then what are you trying to do?"
"Well I tried just finding any djinn. That didn't work any better. Then
I remembered that there was a kind of...I don't know, ripple of some
kind when he granted Amy's wishes. I tried looking for that."
Nick sat in a chair near the table. "Son, I may not know much about
magic but I thought you needed something specific to look for. That
sounds kind of vague."
Lyle nodded. "Don't sell yourself short; you're absolutely right. It's
like looking for what caused a wave on a lake when the ship is already
out of view." He shrugged. "So what brings you guys here?"
Jennifer sighed and looked at her husband, then back to her son. "Lyle,
we have not had much better luck. We have learned a lot in the last
week, though.
"Djinn are not truly of our world. Like angels and demons, they exist
primarily on another plane of existence. The old stories about them
being trapped in oil lamps or jewels or rings are just that, stories.
Those items are really summoning devices that call the djinn to our
plane."
"If it's just a summoning device, then why must they grant wishes?"
Jennifer spread her fingers. "There are several theories. One is that it
some great wizard bound the djinn to serve humanity ages and ages ago.
I'm kind of skeptical about that one - it doesn't seem likely that one
man could bind a whole race. Another theory is that this is a form or
punishment or perhaps a rite of passage for them. Like Hercules they
must perform some number of tasks to be freed from servitude. I like
that one because it explains some their behavior in different stories."
Jennifer paused, her look growing pensive. "There are more disturbing
notions as well. There are those who believe that the djinn serve Chaos,
sewing confusion and discord in the orderly flow of the universe. That
would explain their seemingly random appearances and their reputation
for misinterpreting wishes. A similar theory holds that they actually
serve Order and that the things their masters wish for are necessary to
right old wrongs or prevent future ones."
Lyle sighed. "Ok, their motivation isn't all that important. How do we
undo Amy's wish?"
Jennifer took her son's hand and said gently, "It is as we feared. You
can only undo it with another wish. Our magic would either not work or
further complicate the situation. I'm sorry son, but there's nothing we
can do."
Lyle stared numbly at his mother. "You're giving up?" he finally
mumbled.
"Of course not, dear. We have just...changed directions you might say.
We're turning our attention to books with stories of the djinn, as well
as looking for people who may have encountered one. We're hoping that we
can find something that will lead us to one, even if it is not the one
that Amy had."
"That's awfully thin, Mom," he said, withdrawing his hand from hers.
Nick bristled at the edge in Lyle's voice. "Lyle, I know you're unhappy
but you should show some gratitude. Your mother and the others have been
working just as hard as you."
"I'm sorry," Lyle said.
Nick acknowledged the apology with a nod. "There is something else that
needs to be said." Jennifer started to speak. Nick held up his hand and
surprisingly she quieted herself. "No one else seems willing to say it
so I guess it is up to me. Son, you're both young. I know you love each
other but you have to admit that there's a good chance that you can
never be together as man and wife."
"Lots of fish in the sea, right?" snapped Lyle. "I knew this speech was
coming, Dad."
Surprisingly his father chuckled. "I know; I'm about as subtle as a
heart attack." His smile faded. "Can you tell me there's no truth in
that speech though? The fact of the matter is that there are other women
in the world that you could have a normal life with. There's something
else to think about too. Is it fair to Melissa to trap her in a
relationship where she cannot be intimate with her partner? She deserves
a chance to share her life with someone who is compatible, doesn't she?"
Lyle stared at his feet for a long moment. "I'm your son, Dad. I've been
thinking the same thing." He looked up and met his father's gaze. "I
just keep thinking about how rare it is to find two people who truly
love each other. You and Mom are so very lucky. I don't want to give
that up on the off chance that I might find someone like her again." He
shrugged. "Besides, she would kill me. I tried to get her to at least
delay for a while, give Mom and the others a chance to find a cure. She
wouldn't hear of it. There is just no reasoning with her."
Nick shook his head. The two men looked at each other and smirked.
"Women," they said in unison.
Jennifer glared at both of her men but bit her tongue. At least they
were smiling, she told herself.
**********************************************
Long after his parents had left, Lyle sat on his couch staring off into
space. Occasionally he would tinker with the various paraphernalia
scattered across his coffee table but without any real purpose.
He knew he had to do something to make the situation right. He could not
imagine a wedding night with him and Melissa in separate beds. He also
knew that it would break her heart if he demanded that they postpone, or
even worse, cancel the wedding.
It was past midnight when the idea first occurred to him. He snorted at
what he was thinking and told himself that he definitely needed sleep if
his mind was going to offer up such an insane solution.
Lyle stood, stretched, and headed to the bathroom to get ready for bed.
He stared at his reflection as he brushed his teeth, the damnable idea
still churning in his head. He spat and rinsed. "Get to bed," he told
his reflection. "You're driving yourself crazy."
Sleep helped his mood and definitely his appearance. He had a full day
of inspections lined up which he thought was a good thing. Some hard
work and sunshine would help his mood and get his mind off of things for
a while.
It worked, mostly. Climbing around on roofs and nosing into dark corners
took concentration that kept him busy all morning long, as did writing
his reports and talking to customers and real estate agents. He had a
long debate about the condition of a home's roof with one selling agent
that would normally have frustrated him but today he enjoyed the
argument with relish. The agent finally agreed that the thirty year old
roof might possibly be in some need of repair. Lyle was vaguely
disappointed that he had capitulated so easily.
Like any job, though, his had times where he was not busy and whenever
he was idle his thoughts would return to Melissa, Amy, and the upcoming
wedding. Lunch was the worst of all. Normally it was a favorite part of
his day. He would park his truck somewhere in the shade, break out his
lunch, and listen to an old CD or two. It was the only time he really
had for music anymore so he seldom skipped his little ritual.
Today he had parked at one of his regular spots, a strip mall parking
lot on a hill with a great view of one the Bardstown parks below. He
rolled down the windows and turned on the stereo. He had some blues
loaded into the truck's player, a compilation of some of his favorites.
He leaned back as Robert Johnson began to sing:
I got a kindhearted woman
do anything in this world for me
I got a kindhearted woman
do anything in this world for me
But these evil-hearted women
man, they will not let me be
Lyle shook his head. "Maybe this was a mistake." The bluesman sang on:
I love my baby
my baby don't love me
I love my baby, ooh
my baby don't love me
But I really love that woman
can't stand to leave her be[i]
Lyle groaned and switched the stereo off. "Definitely a mistake. What
the hell was I thinking?"
Lyle stared at the park's trees in the sudden silence and tried to eat
his sandwich. He knew there was a nice little pond in the park and he
amused himself trying to catch glimpses of the water through the trees.
That occupied him for all of about a minute before he turned the stereo
back on, this time tuning the radio to one of the local talk stations.
He was hoping that listening to some conversation might distract him but
he found it very difficult to pay attention today.
Finally he could not take it anymore and wolfed down the rest of his
lunch. Lyle fired up the truck's engine and headed out early to his next
inspection assignment, a new home in a subdivision that was still mostly
under construction. As he drove in he was glad to see that the site
foreman, a formidable blonde that everyone called 'JJ', was in early as
well. She was standing near her trailer talking to a couple that looked
to him like prospective home owners.
He waved and she interrupted her conversation long enough to yell, "Hi
Lyle, the place is unlocked. You can go ahead and get started." He
nodded and drove on, getting only a little lost in the curving roads and
courts that were so popular in new subdivisions before he found the
place. It was a large two-story affair much like the others that were
being built all around it. The landscaping was not yet done but
otherwise the place looked ready for people to move in.
He parked in the house's newly poured driveway and stepped out, spending
long moments looking at the place with a vague smile on his face.
Finally he told himself, "Come on Lyle, time to get busy. Lots to do
today."
He comforted himself with the knowledge that the new home was empty of
furniture, and therefore would be easy to get around. He also knew that
JJ's crew did good work, which meant the write-up would be pretty short.
He grabbed his ladder off the back of his truck and was soon clambering
over the high roof, finally able to get his mind off of things again.
He was done with his inspection and was back in his truck working on the
report when JJ's golf cart pulled up and the tall blonde stepped out.
She was dressed, as always, in typical work clothes: a thick flannel
shirt over a pale pink t-shirt; jeans; and heavy boots. "Hey, Lyle.
Sorry about that, those people just couldn't seem to wrap their head
around the fact that we couldn't build them something by the end of the
month."
"No problem, JJ. I'm pretty much wrapped up here."
"How'd we do?" she wondered.
"Just fine. I found a few minor things."
"Huh. You always do."
Lyle laughed. "It's not so bad. There's some loose roofing on the south
side near the peak, just needs some nails. The drainage out back is a
little questionable. Oh, here is one you won't like. The specs called
for leaded glass above the front door."
JJ looked over her shoulder at the clear glass transom above the
entryway and growled. "Damn it, I am going to fire those idiots, I swear
I am. I'll look at my work order but I guarantee it will say leaded
glass on it."
Lyle had to smile at her tirade. "Sub-contractors?"
"Yeah, this is a big job so my guys are mostly handling the primary
construction. The finish work is mainly going to sub-contractors. We try
to keep an eye on them but..." She sighed and ran her hand through her
bobbed blonde hair. "Alright, we'll get it taken care of." She quickly
recovered her usual grin and asked, "So, think she'll like it?"
Lyle looked up at the house with a small smile. "I hope so. It's a big
surprise - she's expecting to move into my apartment."
"Oh really? So you think she may be disappointed because she didn't have
a say in it?"
Lyle nodded. "That's why I bought on a contract that I can get out of if
I need to. If she really hates it we can do something else."
JJ looked mock-offended. "How could she hate it? This is a great
house...well, other than the screwed up window." They both laughed.
"Don't sweat it, Lyle, I think she'll love it."
"I hope so. Thanks for all your work on this -- you guys are the best."
JJ smiled. "Thanks, Lyle. I've worked hard to get a good reputation
around here."
"No problem," he said, and then hesitated. "Is it...harder for you than
it would be for a man to do that?"
She cocked her head at him and for a moment Lyle thought he had really
offended her this time. She finally nodded and said, "Yes, it is. Oh I
don't think it's as bad as it was years ago, but I still deal with men
who doubt me or think they can pull a fast one on me just because I'm
female. I had to work a long time to get the trust of the company
president but fortunately he's a good guy. I think I would have had to
work just as hard if I were a man, that's just the way he is." She
laughed. "Want to know a secret?"
Lyle raised an eyebrow. "Um, sure...?"
"It's not a big secret. Anyone who went to school with me knows. I
didn't always go by JJ; I started doing that when I took up carpentry."
She paused then blushed slightly, something Lyle had never seen her do.
"My name is really Jasmine Joy - can you believe it? You cannot imagine
the teasing I put up with when I started working in construction...so I
switched to JJ."
"Oh my," said Lyle with a small laugh. JJ raised an eyebrow at him.
"It's a very pretty name," he said quickly. "I'm sorry you had to take
some grief over it."
"Hmph, don't try to flatter me. I know it sounds like a stripper's name.
You can see why I went with JJ though. And I definitely like my job so I
do what I have to do, you know?"
Lyle nodded. "Speaking of work..." He handed her the report for her
signature. They said their goodbyes and Lyle watched as she pulled away
in her cart, already on her cell phone to chew out her sub-contractors.
Lyle watched long after she was gone. Finally he got into the truck and
headed back to his apartment. It was time to take matters into his own
hands.
**********************************************
*Tabitha, I need you,* thought Lyle. *Tabitha?* He sighed when she did
not respond immediately and debated about calling her cell phone.
Technology might not be as fun or convenient as magic but it was
generally more reliable. Finally he felt a familiar feminine presence
touch his thoughts.
*Lyle? What's wrong? You sound very-*
*Can you come here please? I have a favor to ask,* interrupted Lyle.
Tabitha did not answer directly. Instead the space in the middle of
Lyle's living room suddenly darkened, and with a pop of displaced air
his sister appeared. "What's up, little brother?" she wondered. "Do you
have a lead on Amanda?"
Lyle waved a hand at his couch. "Sit, sit. No, I have no leads. I don't
think we're ever going to find her."
Tabitha sat, then raised an eyebrow at her brother. "So what is the
favor you mentioned?"
Lyle sat next to her. He paused, biting his lip, then very firmly said,
"I want you to transform me into a girl." He looked at his sister
expectantly. To his surprise she simply nodded.
"I wondered when you would come up with that. Have you talked to
Melissa?"
"You're not surprised? I just asked you to change my gender!"
Tabitha smirked. "Well, it's not like I haven't done that before, is
it?" To her delight, Lyle blushed. "Besides it is one of the few
solutions to your problem. Your fianc?e is a lesbian so obviously the
simplest way for you to be with her is to be female. Have you talked to
her about it?"
"Well, not exactly. But it is the only thing that makes sense. We cannot
reverse the wish, but we want to live our lives together. Is there
really a choice here?"
"Of course there is...but I'll bet Dad has already given you the 'plenty
of fish in the sea' speech right?" Lyle laughed and nodded. "And you and
she are both too stubborn to listen to that." He nodded again. "So you
arrive at the perfectly logical conclusion that you want to change one
of the most important aspects of your person in order to be with her -
but you haven't talked to her about it at all, have you?"
Lyle glared at her. "OK, so I haven't talked to her about it. She'll
tell me not to, that we will be fine, that we should just wait for the
coven to fix everything. But we won't be, damn it!" Lyle took a deep
breath and looked down. "I'm losing her, Tabitha. Day by day, every time
we cannot touch, every lost kiss, I'm losing her. Eventually one of us
will decide we cannot go on with it and I'll lose her completely. Tell
me I'm wrong!"
Tabitha reached out and took her brother's hand. "I'm sorry, Lyle, I
wish I could," she said in a small voice.
"As I see it I have three choices. I could tell her it's over now.
That's what the parents on both sides want. Melissa would be devastated
but maybe we could be 'just friends' some day. Or I could go ahead with
a doomed marriage, knowing all the while that eventually we'll split up
- but only after years of suffering in each other's presence." Lyle drew
a shuddering breath. "Neither of those is happening, ok? I love her too
much to be just friends or even worse to cause her to suffer. The only
solution that gives us any chance at happiness is for me to be a woman
too."
Tabitha took a deep breath. "Lyle, you're my brother. I'll do anything
you want me to, you know that. But I won't do this."
Lyle's eyes narrowed. "Why the hell not?"
Tabitha sighed and looked at her brother's big, masculine hand in hers,
noting the hard calluses created by his work. It would be so simple for
her to change it, make it slim and soft and feminine. She could sense
how much