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Synopsis
Wedding bells are ready to ring in Heartwood Hollow… maybe.
When a bride-to-be asks me for help with her haunted “something old,” I’m is thrust into a bitter family dispute. The key to solving the decades-old mystery behind it is helping the trapped ghost. If only she could remember who killed her.
The more I dig, the more it becomes evident that not everyone is happy about the upcoming union. There are those who don’t want the truth revealed, and they aren’t afraid to go after my bakery to keep it hidden.
With my livelihood threatened, the couple’s impending nuptials on the rocks, and a possible murderer on the loose, I must decide if I can be a baker and a witch or if it’s time to hang up one of my hats.
Weddings and Witchcraft is the third full novel in the Mixing Up Magic series. It is best enjoyed after reading Scones and Spells.
Release date: May 14, 2020
Publisher: Paisley Press Books
Print pages: 324
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Weddings and Witchcraft
Rosie Pease
Chapter 1
Early summer in Heartwood Hollow was one of my favorite times of the year. Everything was in bloom, the weather was finally warm day and night, and the kids were out of school. This, in addition to the influx of tourists, made Main Street a much busier place than it was at other times. I loved it.
However, it also proved problematic when trying to figure out where to hold meetings in town for paranormal residents who didn’t want everyone to know what they were.
For the first meeting, we’d met at Leafs and Grounds in the back room. Gary, a dryad, let us use the space because he could ensure some privacy from his customers there thanks to a heavy curtain he used to block off the space during open mic nights. Although we’d picked a slow night and there were no incidents with non-paranormal customers, not everyone had felt comfortable in the small, shared space.
When he heard about our predicament, Lily’s human boyfriend, John Singer, offered the use of his business. Situated off Main Street, once Singer Furniture was closed for the day, the location was private, and there was no need to come up with an excuse for why we were booking a place.
John’s business would make for a good temporary location, but we’d have to find a real meeting space eventually. I’d already been thinking about the town’s need for an event space for receptions and showers, but the PSG meetings cemented the need all the more.
Steph let out a happy sigh as we walked out of the Singer Furniture showroom with Lily, Alex, and Chelsea. “That was a great turnout.”
Lily turned away from us to lock the door. “It really was,” she said when she faced our direction once more. “It was good to see more than the dryads this time.”
Chelsea furrowed her brow. “Hey, I was there last month. But I was, what, one of three who couldn’t turn into a tree, Joanie and my mom included. I’m glad I convinced some more of my family to come.”
Steph nodded. “The wording of the ad was better this time too. I had more time to think about what I wanted to write.”
Lily hmmed her agreement. “I thought it was clever.”
We reached the parking lot and stopped at Steph’s car to say our goodbyes to her and Alex. Lily’s car was next. Then Chelsea’s.
Chelsea opened the driver’s side door of her car. “I’ll see you at the party this weekend, right?” She asked in her light lilting accent.
“I’ll be there to drop off the cake.”
Chelsea slid into her seat. “Great. See you then.”
Chelsea moved a few things on the table so I could put down the boxes of cookies, cake pops, and brownies I was carrying.
We said a quick hello, then I hurried back out the door of her parents’ house. I still had to get the cake for Chelsea’s niece out of my station wagon.
“Joanie, this looks amazing. Annabel is going to love it,” Chelsea said when I returned.
“I’m so glad, but I have to admit I was surprised she was going with a mermaid theme since your wedding is coming up soon and is similarly themed.”
“Well, they are a little different. Ours is more mature than the cartoony depictions that you’ll see here, but Annabel has been obsessed since learning that she’s a merrow.”
“A merrow? That’s like a mermaid, right? Can you tell me what the difference is?” I’d recently learned that Heartwood Hollow was home to more than just the several ghosts who lived there, and me, a reluctant witch who could see them all. It all started with learning that dryads, tree people, were real, but it didn’t end there. Fairies, naiads, trolls—all of them were real, and many lived in town. I was beginning to wonder how many actual humans we had here after the attendance at the second paranormal support group meeting had doubled the size of the first one. And I knew there were still more. Many who had told me they were paranormal in the days surrounding the Love a Tree Day Festival had yet to come to a meeting.
“Yes, very similar, although we have ties to Ireland, and mermaids do not.”
“And that would explain the accent your family has.”
“It does. And why there’s a lot of green in my wedding too, not just the blues you’d expect in an underwater celebration.”
“Wait, it’s not actually underwater, is it? I’ll need to rethink everything if—”
Chelsea burst into laughter. “No, no. But it will feel like it in the hall we rented down in Snowhaven. Have you seen it?”
I nodded. Since Heartwood Hollow didn’t have its own event hall, I was familiar with the city’s various event spaces.
“I’ve been several times. Never once is it the same.”
A child’s squeal from behind us interrupted our conversation. “I love it!”
The young girl wearing a long bright-red wig and a fish tail over her party dress came running up to me. “Thank you, thank you, thank you!”
Her friends soon followed, all admiring the cake. Some reached out for the purple and teal starfish-shaped cookies Lily had cut out and decorated earlier that morning.
Chelsea called out over the giggling, “Not yet, girls, we haven’t even had our lunch yet!”
Annabel ran from the room into the kitchen and out the back door. “Follow me!”
All but one of her friends did.
“Hi, Joanie!”
I looked down to see Ivy smiling up at me, decked out in a long blond wig, a pink fish tail over her khaki shorts, floral top, and a fake shell bra over that.
“Hey, Ivy! Are you having fun?”
She nodded big and slow. “But I’m really looking forward to the cookies.”
“I bet. Okay, go have fun. You don’t want to miss out on any of the games they have going on.” That sent her off after her friends.
“Bye, Joanie!” she chirped over her shoulder.
Chelsea turned to me. “You are staying, aren’t you? My family would love to have you here. Mom’s taken a liking to you through her interactions with you in the PSG.”
I let out a slight chuckle. “Yes, I am. I’m doubling as Ivy’s adult to save Ken from all of this. Sam and Sarah are running the shop this afternoon, so I have a few hours to hang out with you all.”
“Oh good, because I want to talk to you after about something. It’s wedding related.”
“Is everything okay? It’s nothing with the cake, right?
“Oh, no. no. The cake is perfect.”
“Okay, good. There’s still some time to change things. If you need to, just let me know. You’re still a few weeks away until the big day.”
She smiled. “Thanks, Joanie, but no, that won’t be necessary.”
Chelsea’s mom, Pam, clapped her hands to get everyone’s attention in the living room and kitchen. “Lunch is ready in the backyard. Please come join us.”
A small group of women got up and passed Chelsea, giving her what I’d call major side-eye. If I knew who they were or had even seen them before, I would have assumed the look was for me. Four plus years in Heartwood Hollow and many in town thought I was a witch.
Of course, I’d recently admitted that to myself and anyone else going to the PSG meetings that I actually was a witch. I was still getting used to the knowledge that I could put spells into my baked goods and had been doing it all along without realizing it. Good luck muffins for test takers at the high school, cookies for confidence before job interviews, motion sickness scones for pregnancy symptoms. I could do all of that and more.
Somehow, my being a witch still left me as an oddity within the paranormal community. I was the only witch, the only one who could see ghosts, and the only matchmaker in the town. No one else could do any one of those things, let alone all three together. No one I knew of, anyway.
I turned back to Chelsea, half of one of my first matched couples that I’d made upon coming to Heartwood Hollow over four years ago. The ladies had nearly made it halfway through the kitchen, so I felt safe asking, “Who are they?”
She sighed hard. “Some of David’s extended family.”
“They didn’t seem very happy to see you.”
“Probably because they aren’t. They don’t like me very much.”
That surprised me. “Don’t like you? How could anyone not like you?”
She shrugged. “Well, perhaps they would if they gave me a chance, but they won’t because I’m a merrow.”
“How do they even know if they aren’t from here?”
“They used to be. All of them. They grew up with my great-aunt, who they had been friends with until she broke up with their brother. They blame her for his death, though I have no idea why. From what I heard, he wasn’t even here when it happened.” Chelsea shrugged. “Then she was killed two days after his funeral.”
I placed my hand to my chest. “Oh my goodness, I’m so sorry.”
She shrugged, but I knew it bothered her. “It happened decades ago, but from the stories I’ve heard, I think I would have loved her.”
“I’m sure you would have.” Chelsea was one of the kindest and most accepting people in Heartwood Hollow. I was so glad to see her show up at the first PSG meeting. It was part of what made her and David go so well together. He was affable and caring, especially toward animals.
“So why did you invite them if they don’t like you?”
“They’re all invited to the wedding. They’re his family.
Mom was hoping to make this kind of like a peace offering or a warming-up session.” The door banged shut, and Chelsea looked toward it. “We should head outside, but let’s talk
when the party is over, okay?”
I nodded and followed her to the backyard.
Two hours later, the party was winding down. We’d had a lovely spread of finger sandwiches and tea, provided by Libby from Riverview Inn. The kids had played mermaids in the pool, run around, and then gorged themselves on sea-salt caramel cookies, brownies, and a birthday cake fit for a mermaid princess. Upon eating the cookies, Chelsea’s dad, Anthony, told me to add them to the order for the wedding. They’d become additional favors for all the guests.
Parents were starting to leave with their kids when Ken arrived to pick up Ivy.
“Thank you,” he said with a quick kiss on the cheek. We’d been a strong unit since coming together to help the north woods and the dryads who had once called it home.
Knowing he’d not want to hang around with all the moms who probably still called him “hot doc”—I doubted he’d ever lose the nickname despite not being a doctor—I’d offered to hang out at the party to keep an eye on Ivy. She’d come a long way from the girl who had been so nervous about her first sleepover that she’d made herself sick and couldn’t go. She had lots of friends, and now that it was summer, she was always at someone’s house or sleeping over somewhere on the weekend.
He looked at me with a hopeful expression. “Are you coming with us?”
“I’ll meet up with you in a bit. I’m going to check in at the bakery, but I’ll see you both tonight.”
“Sounds good.” He kissed me again before turning to his daughter several feet away. “Ready, kiddo?”
“Okay, Daddy.” She skipped over to him after waving bye to Annabel and a few other kids who hadn’t left yet. “Bye, Joanie!”
Turning around, I caught sight of Chelsea. She made eye contact with me and ticked her head up to the back door.
Chapter 2
Inside the house, Chelsea presented me with a tiara. The sides were lined with pearls and spiraled shells except for the teeth at each end that stuck into one’s hair to secure it in place. The central decorative portion was encrusted with scallop shells, sea stars, and small jewels. At the center was a sand dollar from which three tube-like things were attached to the back, poking out from the top.
“Oh, this is lovely,” I said as I admired the piece. I pointed to the tube-like things. “What are these?”
“Those are sea urchin quills, bleached in the sun. This particular kind would normally be a dark-brown color.”
I gently ran my finger over one of them and down to the sand dollar. That’s all it took for me to figure out why Chelsea had wished to speak with me.
“It’s haunted by my great-aunt,” she continued, confirming what I already knew. “The one I mentioned earlier. Is there anything you can do? I would love to wear this for the wedding, but I don’t think I want her in there when I do. What if some of his family can sense her? I don’t want anything to go wrong that day, and if they didn’t like her then, I don’t want it to affect now.”
I knew all too well how a haunted object affected the present. This was the third time I’d come across something like this in as many months. This was becoming a pattern and a much bigger issue than I had previously thought.
“How could you tell it was haunted?”
“Oh, I can’t, but that’s what I’ve been told. Ever since my great-aunt died, it has a way of turning up for family events, so Mom wasn’t surprised when it made an appearance the day I went shopping for my wedding dress.” She sighed dreamily. “And it goes so perfectly with the dress I found, and I didn’t even see the tiara until after I’d picked it out. Don’t you see? It was meant to be.”
Chelsea placed her hand on the ornate tiara, firmly pressing it into my hands, which were already holding it. Her anxiety about the situation was almost palpable.
“Do you think you can help?” she asked. “Please say yes. You’re the only one who I think can. Is there a witchy spell you can cast or something?” She bit her lower lip as she looked at me, her eyebrows pinched with concern.
I smiled at her as the tiara’s energy coursed through me. That was a new sensation. “I will do my best.” From her comment about casting a witchy spell, I assumed she hadn’t heard that I’d done this twice already. And although there had been two meetings of the paranormal support group already, I hadn’t revealed my abilities included seeing ghosts. One thing at a time.
She clasped her hands together. “Thank you so much. You have no idea what this means to me.”
At that moment, David walked through the front door. His face lit up upon seeing Chelsea.
“Excuse me.” She rushed over to him and then threw her arms around him.
He nodded over her shoulder at me as I gave him a small wave before turning to give them some privacy.
At that moment, Pam walked inside carrying a few trays of food.
“Can I help with the cleanup?” I asked.
“Oh sure, sure. That would be lovely. And you’re just the person to tell me how to best wrap all this up so it’s still good tomorrow.” Pam set the trays down on the kitchen counter. Then she glanced down and saw the tiara in my hand. “She got you to agree to help, I take it?”
“She did. I’ll do what I can.” Then I sent Pam off for some plastic containers.
“Thank you for that,” David said from behind me. “Anything to help the day go by smoother with my family.”
Pam returned with several containers, so I set the tiara down on the table and began gathering up the remaining cookies. David stepped forward to help.
“Are they all against you two marrying one another?”
“Not all of them. My parents have come around over the years, my grandma too, but everyone else? They’re doing
what they can to break us up.”
“Why? Chelsea’s great.”
“I agree. I’m sure she’s told you that they don’t approve of her being a merrow.”
Pam handed me a container, now matched to a lid that was underneath it.
I placed the cookies into it. “Well, she can hardly change what she is. She told me about her great-aunt too.”
“Yes, there is that, which I think most of this stems from. We’re all from the sea. We’re supposed to get along, but ever since the incident, most of my family think mermaids of all kinds are bad. But merrows are the worst.”
“Of the sea? You mean you’re a . . . merman?” He hadn’t come to either of the paranormal support group meetings.
He laughed, throwing his head back. “No, I’m not. I’m a selkie.”
“That’s the seal, right?”
“Yes. Can’t you tell?” He poked at the non-existent pudge of his stomach. “I’m a seal when I wear my skin in the water.” Chelsea handed him a slice of cake from one of the trays. “Leftovers. You have to try it.”
“And if you keep feeding me like this, I really will be a seal on dry land,” he joked as he dipped his fork into the cake.
Conversation paused as David took a bite, Chelsea seeming anxious to see his reaction.
“Oh, wow,” he said. “Can we add this to our flavors? How had we missed this before?”
“I certainly can.” I passed another container, this time of cake pops, to Pam. “You only chose two out of your three flavors.”
David shoved another forkful of cake into his mouth. “So good.”
Pam waved me over to the remaining section of cake, and I showed her how to use plastic wrap draped on top and pressed into the cut portion to keep it fresh.
“Genius!” she said. “I’ve been leaving the cut ends exposed for years under there. Thank you for everything today. For this and for helping Chelsea. It means so much to her.”
“It’s no problem, really, and I’m sure it will be a big help to your mom, too, when it’s all over. I hope you don’t mind, but could I stop by sometime to learn more about your aunt and see some photos?”
“Absolutely. Mom will have most of them. She’s already left, but I’ll give her a call later and get back to you.”
“Perfect.”
Chapter 3
I pushed open the front door to Suncraft Bakery and stepped inside. My business for over four years, I’d rarely used the front door, usually opting to come in through the kitchen, especially first thing in the morning when I arrived with my team to do the baking for the day. I stood at the entrance, taking the sight of the bakery in.
The yellow interior with pink and purple decorations was cheery, and I’d recently added a few new elements to the shop —a couple of tables and chairs for customers to stay and eat. In addition, they could bring their own drinks here to enjoy with their treats. Most came with to-go cups from the coffee shop. Although I could boil water and make tea, nothing I could do would be able to compete with what they made over at Leafs and Grounds. They were the masters at all the fancy beverages. Even if I was good at making those sorts of drinks, I wouldn’t want to step on Gary’s toes. But maybe I could talk to Libby about offering tea here on occasion. Once I attended one of her teas at the inn again first, that is.
Sam looked up from the pastry cabinet where he was consolidating the unsold items onto a single tray so the rest could be washed and made ready for tomorrow’s baked goods. “Hi, Joanie. How was the party?”
“It was good, thanks.”
Before I could say anything else, Sarah stepped in from the kitchen, a broom and dustpan in hand, ready for the endof-day cleaning routine. “You didn’t need to come in. We’ve got this.” Her confident smile assured me of this fact.
“I know, but I wanted to say hi and to thank you both again for covering for me this afternoon. Besides, I had to return the cake stand.” I held up the tote bag in my hand, then turned back to Sam. “A lot of the little girls loved the graham cracker sand you applied to the bottom layer and mixed in with the icing between layers.”
He beamed and deservedly so. I was proud of him for the idea. Sam was working for me full time this summer, splitting his time between the bakery’s kitchen and shop. His time here was winding down, and I wanted him to get as much experience before he left. In a little over two months, he’d be at culinary school. I had no doubt he’d do well there.
“Thanks! I can’t take all the credit, though. I saw it on a TV show,” he admitted.
“But you applied it well and made your customers happy, so be proud of your accomplishments.” I crossed the room toward the kitchen door, practically trading places with Sarah as she walked toward the entrance to start sweeping.
Sam nodded, then placed another tray on top of the stack. He scooted down to consolidate the few cookies and cupcakes that were left in that case. All the scones were gone and likely had been since lunchtime. Even though I couldn’t sell the pineapple and bacon scones that I’d sold at the Love a Tree Day Festival, my other scones had become the most popular baked goods in the shop.
I entered the kitchen, letting the door swing closed behind me, as I pulled the cake stand out of the tote bag I’d been holding. I set it with the other things that needed to be washed in the sink, then stowed my bag in the closet before returning to the dishwasher to load up a rack to send through.
A few minutes later, Sarah stepped back in with the dustpan to empty. I stood at the sink, lathering the cake stand with suds, staring at the wall in front of me thinking about what Chelsea had asked me to do.
“Everything okay?” she asked me.
I glanced over at her and tilted my head in question.
“I’ve been in here twice already, and this is the first time you’ve noticed me. The floor’s done.”
Had I been that caught up in my thoughts that I’d tuned out everything around me?
“Thinking about one of my couples,” I replied.
“Uh-oh,” Sarah started. “It’s not Lily and John, or else we’d all know it, and it’s not Ashley and Rich. Everything is good between them from what I’ve heard. Ashley just moved in with him . . . although this would be the time when they’d have problems. It’s a totally different animal when you live together as you have to get used to new habits. Take Jill and me for example. We were best friends throughout school, but we almost killed each other a few months into living with one another. We have different ideas of what cleaning up after a meal entails, much of that thanks to you.” She gave me a pointed look.
That got a chuckle from me. “No, no. It’s nothing to do with them, but I’m glad to hear they’re doing well.” With school out for the summer, I didn’t see them as often as I had been.
She walked over to the trashcan and dumped the dustpan’s contents into it. She turned toward the closet where we kept the broom. “So who is it? Have you found a new match?” I shook my head. “It’s Chelsea and David.”
Sarah froze in her tracks, leg still in the air. She slowly put it down before cocking her head to the side as she looked at me. “But they’re already together. They’re getting married in a few weeks.”
“I know, but here we are. There’s some long-standing grudge between the older generations of their families.”
“Oh, I’ve heard about that.” As one of the town’s biggest gossips, I didn’t doubt that. “But there’s something more to it than that. It’s something witchy, isn’t it?”
I hadn’t told Sarah outright that I was a witch, but I’d stopped denying it when she brought the topic up, especially since the paranormal support group started. She’d long believed the rumors about me. Turns out she’d been right the whole time.
“Something like that.” I rinsed the cake stand and set it to the side. I’d put it away in the morning once it was dry.
She finally put the broom away. “Well, good luck.”
“This one shouldn’t be too bad. Although it involves an old murder.”
Sarah threw her hands up into the air, stopping me from saying that the case had been solved. “See? I told you. But that’s awful. Who?”
“Chelsea’s great-aunt.”
“Do you know who did it?”
“I didn’t want to ask at a kid’s birthday party,” I said, rinsing the sink clean, and Sarah nodded, “but I’m meeting with Sandra’s sister, Nancy, soon to talk a little more about her. I’m sure I’ll find out then if not before.”
Sarah walked over to me and put her hand on my back between my shoulders. “Well, solved or not, if I’ve learned anything with your last two couples, it’s never as easy as you think it’s going to be.” She reached under the sink I was standing at, then pulled out the glass cleaner. “I thought I wouldn’t have to tell you this after the knife incident, but be careful. This is serious stuff.”
“I will.”
Sam poked his head into the kitchen. “You get lost back here?”
“Coming!” Sarah scooted back out into the shop, and the door swung closed, leaving me alone with my thoughts once more.
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