Read Must Be Magic Online

Authors: Patricia Rice

Must Be Magic (31 page)

“I think I prefer your bog,” Aidan said dryly. “I'll fix the thatch in return.”

“Would you?” Leila asked eagerly. “We're planning on that becoming my distillery, but it will be some time before I have flowers to distill.”

Satisfied that he'd finally found a way to repay their odd relation for returning Griffith to him, Dunstan returned his attention to the matter at hand—surviving this public ceremony so he had the right to sweep Leila off to the house Drogo had given him at Ives, and the bed he now called his own.

“I think it is high time we suffer through the charade so we can go on to more important matters,” he whispered in Leila's ear, planting a possessive palm over the place where his daughter grew. He was rather looking forward to the challenge of raising the only known Ives female.

“If you were not such a wonderful agronomist, I'd think you should take up the position of diplomat, my dear,” Leila taunted.

Howling with laughter at the insult, Dunstan dragged her toward their waiting audience.

He might never take to society's ways, but he knew he could count on his wife to correct his faults and foibles. It just might take a lifetime to cure him.

He could live with that.

Read on for an excerpt from the next book in the Magic series

The Trouble with Magic

Coming August 2012
From Sourcebooks Casablanca

Spring 1754

“I
saw
him. Percy was there when his mother died, no matter what anyone claims,” Felicity muttered fiercely, clinging to the rail of the family yacht as the ship lurched and slid into a trough between rough waves. Swaddled in a cloak, a scarf, and thick gloves, Lady Felicity stared into the April squall. She'd never seen the sea before. The salt spray stung her cheeks, and cautiously she licked her lips to taste the droplets gathering there. It even tasted of salt.

She ought to be afraid of the wild waves and the crack of lightning, but those were things she couldn't touch, so they had no power over her. Or she over them. At any other time she would have exulted in this new experience. Instead, dread of things she had set in motion churned her stomach. Beneath the dread shimmered a sliver of hope that her efforts would not be in vain.

The incident with Sir Percy had been her breaking point. Even her father had agreed that a relaxing journey to visit her sister in Northumberland might settle her nerves. Leila and her husband were staying at his family's estate in Wystan. As much as she wanted to see them and the new baby, it was the proximity to Scotland that drew her on. Felicity prayed she could find some way to escape her family's solicitude and reach Edinburgh and the one frail hope of ever having a normal life.

She
must
reach Edinburgh. A lifetime of pain and loneliness, denied even the simplest of human pleasures, would be unbearable.
Was
unbearable. She had broken her Papa's heart when she'd refused Sir Percy's proposal of marriage. And terrified herself.

“Quit saying that you saw Percy,” Christina said. “If he really did murder his mother, he might murder you, too. How do you know he doesn't have spies following us?”

Exhausted by the constant tension and turmoil of touching strangers these past few days, Felicity still managed to cast her sister a look of incredulity. “Spies? Why in the name of the goddess would he do that? Nobody believes me. His servants swear his mother's death was an accident, that he wasn't at home the day she died. His steward swears they were together in London that day. I'm just an hysteric afraid of marriage.”

“Well, you did become hysterical, and you
are
afraid of marriage,” Christina said with equanimity. “That doesn't mean you aren't right, and if you are, you have made him very nervous.”

“I have made
everyone
very nervous.” Wrapping her mantle tighter, Felicity watched a seagull scream across the leaden sky.

“Come inside, Felicity,” Christina urged. “The wind is increasing and will blow you off your feet.”

Her sister was scarcely two years her elder, yet ages older in terms of experience and courage. Christina sheltered Felicity from life's buffets much as the rest of their family did, but Christina did it with impatience. With a shrug acknowledging her sister's concern, Felicity returned her spectacles to her nose and descended the companionway into the cabin below.

“The captain does not think we'll reach Northumberland today,” Felicity said. Entering their private cubbyhole, she picked up her much-beloved and slightly bedraggled doll from the bunk, and gingerly occupied the bed's edge. Her doll exuded the joy of a long-ago Christmas and the memory of all the happy hours of play in the hands of her innocent sisters. It provided a balance against the cabin's dismal vibrations. “Leila and Dunstan will be worried if we're late.”

“Perhaps Dunstan will tire of waiting for us in port and go home.”

Christina said this with such glee that Felicity couldn't prevent a smile. “He's an Ives. He's more likely to set the Navy searching for us. I think Ives have gained the reputation of causing Malcolm disasters simply because they are such interfering creatures. They cannot leave well enough alone.”

Christina laughed. “If
anyone
knew what we intend, they'd interfere.” Sitting cross-legged on the bunk in an unladylike billow of skirts and panniers, she propped her shoulders against the wall. “This will be great fun, once we find some means of escaping interfering relations. I've never been to Edinburgh.”

“I cannot see how we will go now,” Felicity replied. Her dread roiled higher at the thought of such a reckless escapade. She was not an adventurer by nature. Only desperation drove her to this scheme.

“It will be marvelous fun,” Christina reassured her. “We will see the sights and meet new people. It's a pity we cannot find you a husband while we're at it, one more to your liking than the stuffy ones Father prefers. Sir Percy would never have suited.”

Felicity had thought bookish Sir Percy the ideal suitor—until she had seen murder in his touch. Half the reason for this journey was to hide her until her father could investigate her tale. She suspected the other half was his fear that this time her mind had taken leave of her senses, and a good long rest from the exigencies of London's social whirl was needed. Sir Percy was not at all the sort to make people think he could murder his mother.

“Well, Ewen Ives is still unmarried,” Felicity said in wry jest, offering the worst possible example of a suitor she could summon, as far from wealthy, respectable Sir Percy as could be imagined.

Christina laughed at the notion of Felicity with one of the men in their brother-in-law's tumultuous family. “You'd spend the rest of your life chasing after the lot of them, attempting to prevent them from wreaking the havoc and ruin you'd discover on every object they touched.”

“Well, it wouldn't be
boring.
” But boring was what she wanted—needed. Safe and boring, no unpleasant surprises, no jolts of pain or anguish or visions of death and destruction.

“Besides, Ewen possesses nothing for which Father could trade your dowry, and Father lives for haggling with suitors.” Christina giggled at the thought. “Although, you must admit, Ewen is the most handsome of the Ives. And charming, when he chooses to be. He would dangle you with all his other conquests like a watch fob on a chain.”

Felicity sighed. One of her favorite objects was a mechanical bouquet of porcelain roses that twirled to tinkling music. Ewen Ives had given it to her for her come-out last year. It held only his fascination with the motor without any deep, dark secrets attached. But handsome, charming men were not for dowdy, invisible girls like her. She had only briefly seen Ewen at a family gathering or two since then. Besides, her father would have a spasm of the heart if he knew she dreamed of an Ives. She loved her father and wished him to be happy with her choice.

The only way that would happen is if she found
A
Malcolm
Journal
of
Infusions
, which she needed to rid herself of this wretched gift—if it would do as promised.

First she must find the Lord Nesbitt in Edinburgh who had last owned the book—a century ago.

“More's the pity,” Felicity said, “but it's best if we avoid interfering Ives if we can, although how we can avoid Dunstan when we are supposed to be staying with him and Leila is beyond my comprehension.”

“We simply must convince Leila that we are grown-up enough to visit Edinburgh on our own,” Christina declared.

Since Leila had married Dunstan Ives last year, she had become so engrossed in her studies of perfumes and scents that she'd scarcely traveled to London. Felicity couldn't predict how Leila would react to her younger sisters' dangerous mission.

“Perhaps she will be so busy dandling her new baby on her knee that she will not notice if we don't arrive at all,” Christina suggested.

“She will more likely be pacing the dock with Dunstan. It's not as if I leave London with any frequency. Mama will have written her with lists and lists of instructions.” Felicity clenched her fingers anxiously. “It's a wonder Mama did not lock me in my room for my own safety or that Father did not banish me to the Outer Hebrides after I swooned at Sir Percy's feet.”


Percy
,” Christina muttered with disgust. “A milksop like that could not so much as murder a bank ledger. I think your gift has gone awry.”

Felicity hunched over her doll, hugging its familiar vibrations of love for comfort. “If I cannot be rid of this wretched gift, I shall never marry. I will grow old living in Papa's library.”

Christina bent forward to brush Felicity's hair out of her face in a gesture of sympathy. “I'm sorry. It's just so very hard to believe that a fop like Percy could be dangerous. But you're right. If you're forever seeing a suitor's mistress in his snuffbox or reading his lascivious ambitions in his touch, you'll never marry. Don't worry. We'll find your book.”

That was the ray of hope to which Felicity clung. She'd received too many unanticipated shocks upon touching seemingly innocent objects to ever be as courageous and trusting as Christina, but she was willing to brave more than stormy seas if at the end of the journey she could find the journal.

She knew her mother would be horrified if she was aware that Felicity was seeking the recipe that would rid her of her unwanted gift, but this latest incident had convinced her that she had no other choice if she wished to be normal and marry happily, as her family desired.

“I wish our great-grandfather had not been so spiteful as to sell off the Malcolm library,” Felicity said, mourning the loss of so much knowledge. “There could be all manner of wisdom in those books, lost on people who understand nothing of their content.”

“I cannot imagine why some Lord Nesbitt would buy a bunch of old journals.” Standing, Christina stretched restlessly in the confines of the tiny cabin. “Perhaps he burned them. Scots have weird notions of witchcraft.”

“It's not witchcraft,” Felicity said crossly. “It is wisdom learned from experience. If I can find the recipe, I can be normal like everyone else. I can live a full life. I can dance and marry and have babies.”

“If that isn't magic, what is?” Christina asked.

Buried beneath layers of protective clothing, untouched by any hand except her family's, Felicity peered upward at her sister with eyes glistening in wonder and anticipation.
Magic
was the world around her—the one she had never experienced.

The one she would never experience if she didn't find the journal.

About the Author

Patricia Rice was born in New York but learned to love the warmer Southeast. She is now California dreaming and working her way West by way of St. Louis. Improving houses and then moving is apparently her hobby. She is married with two grown children who also have settled in warmer climes. She would love you to stop by
www.patriciarice.com
to see what she's doing now or join her at Facebook at
www.facebook.com/PatriciaRiceBooks
and on Twitter at
www.twitter.com/Patricia_Rice

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