Love’s Misfiring Magic - Heather Silvio - E-Book

Love’s Misfiring Magic E-Book

Heather Silvio

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Beschreibung

Shelly Newsome believes that her ex-boyfriend made a mistake breaking up with her. As a witch, she could just nudge him back in the right direction. All she needs is to cast the proper spells. Which she isn’t very good at. Thank goodness Shelly’s best friend is one of the most skilled spellcasters in Wildcrest.


Dr. Benjamin Wright has loved Shelly since high school. When her boyfriend dumps her, Ben is finally ready to expose his heart. Until she asks for his help crafting the perfect spells to win that ex back. After he agrees, he makes an impulsive decision to tweak the first spell to misfire. He hopes this will buy him time to show Shelly they belong together; however, some spells are not meant to be messed with.


Will Ben’s impetuous decision provide an unexpected way out of the friend zone, or lead Shelly to reject him forever?


Read the story of their bumpy road to happily ever after in the first book in the small town, friends to more, sweet paranormal romance series, Wildcrest Witches.

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Seitenzahl: 139

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2022

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Love’s Misfiring Magic

Wildcrest Witches

Book 1

Heather Silvio

Panther Books

Contents

Books by Heather Silvio

About This Book

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Epilogue

Thank you!

About the Author

Books by Heather Silvio

PARANORMAL TALENT AGENCY

(ALSO IN LARGE PRINT)

Lights, Camera, Action (Episode One)

Reset to One (Episode Two)

That’s a Wrap (Episode Three)

An Unexpected Sequel (Episode Four)

Jumping the Shark (Episode Five)

The Season Finale (Episode Six)

COLLECTIONS

Paranormal Talent Agency Episodes 1-3 Collection

Paranormal Talent Agency Episodes 4-6 Collection

Paranormal Talent Agency Episodes 1-6 Collection

DOCTOR DANGER MYSTERIES

Hazard in Hawaii

Spirits in Savannah

NON-SERIES FICTION

Not Quite Famous: A Romantic Comedy of an Actress on the Edge

Beyond the Abyss: Tales of the Supernatural

Courting Death

NONFICTION

Special Snowflake Syndrome: The Unrecognized Personality Disorder Destroying the World

Happiness by the Numbers: 9 Steps to Authentic Happiness

Stress Disorders: A Healing Path for PTSD

About This Book

A bumbling witch discovers sometimes friends can become more after her best friend sabotages the spells intended to win back her ex-boyfriend.

This is the first book in the sweet paranormal romance trilogy, Wildcrest Witches, from the author of the Paranormal Talent Agency.

ChapterOne

Shelly

Shelly Newsome’s goal tonight had been to win back her ex-boyfriend, not send him to the emergency room. Yet, there they were. At least the six-story sprawling Wildcrest Hospital complex was state-of-the-art. That was thanks to Mia Fynn filming her movie about witches here. When it became one of the highest-grossing films of all time, map-dot-sized Wildcrest experienced a boom in tourism. The fact that the town, located in the wilds of Nevada, actually provided a safe haven for supernatural beings met the definition of exquisite irony in Shelly’s book.

If only the doctor would stop looking like he was trying not to laugh. He avoided making eye contact, no doubt because that would push him over the comical edge. Shelly sighed. Of course, Dr. Benjamin Wright was her best friend, so she supposed it was only natural.

“I don’t know what happened,” Shelly said, pacing a circle on the bland linoleum between two rows of plastic chairs, trying not to let the beige walls close in. “It wasn’t a complicated spell, I didn’t think.” Her history with spell-making was by no means stellar. But she meant what she said to Ben. “I’m not sure what went wrong.” Anxiety zinged through her, the taste of bile in the back of her mouth. “You’re sure he’s going to be all right? The way that he grabbed his throat, struggled to breathe.” She suddenly had a hard time catching her breath.

“Breathe, Shelly.”

She inhaled, held to a four count, exhaled. Repeated. Ignored the scent of noxious hospital disinfectant that threatened to overwhelm her nasal passages. Ignored the buzzing of her cellphone in her pocket. She knew it was her mother calling. Again. “Thanks. I’ve never seen someone turn that shade of purple.” The blood drained from her face. “I could have killed him.”

“You didn’t.” Ben leaned in and lowered his voice. “I knew he’d be okay when they brought him in. You never had anything to worry about.”

“Thank the Goddess.” She breathed a sigh of relief. All witches’ magic had specific inclinations that typically surfaced during puberty. Ben’s ability was to sense the physical health of others – both good and bad – and intuitively know what they needed, whether traditional or magical intervention. So, if he said Ethan was never in any real danger, Shelly believed him. If only she could get a grasp on her own magical aptitude.

Ben’s cellphone buzzed and he raised his eyebrows at her when he saw the caller.

Of course, her mother was calling Ben. Shelly gave a small shake of her head. She’d call her mother back when everything felt more settled.

“I guess what they say isn’t true, that a way to a man’s heart is through his stomach,” Ben said, and now he outright laughed, the sound bouncing around the small, thankfully empty, waiting area. Shelly refrained from reading him the riot act. When you’ve known someone your entire life – and were best friends since he took the blame for a minor car accident in high school even though it was your fault – you cut them a little slack. A little.

“Gee, thanks. That’s very supportive.” She collapsed into one of the green plastic waiting room chairs, dropped her head into her hands. “What if I’d seriously hurt him?” She mumbled through her fingers.

“Look at me,” Ben said. She didn’t. “Shelly Newsome, look at me right now. Please.”

Shelly raised her head, her hazel eyes meeting his brown ones. “At least you said please.”

“Tell me what happened.”

Horror filled her as tears flowed. Ben’s smirk fell and he pulled Shelly into a hug. She leaned into the embrace, her hands clutching at his familiar scrubs. Warmth enveloped her. He held her until the tears slowed then stopped. “Ethan broke up with me this morning,” she muttered into Ben’s shoulder. “He says he’s moving out at the end of the month. In five days.”

Ben pushed Shelly to arm’s length, eyes wide in shock. “He broke up with you? Why didn’t you tell me sooner? And why were you baking him a magical dinner if he’s leaving in five days?”

She broke eye contact. “This morning, I thought… I thought he was going to propose,” she whispered.

“Oh, Shelly.”

“Yeah, yeah, I know.”

“Didn’t you tell me you thought something was missing?” Ben asked, confusion clear on his face. He ran a hand through his short brown hair.

A flush crept up Shelly’s neck. “Let me explain.” She fiddled with the bottom of her t-shirt, rubbing the soft cotton fabric. “I thought what was missing was me hiding the witch side of myself from him.”

Prior to Witches in the Wild filming there years ago, the supernatural beings in town mostly kept that quiet. Once the movie shot to success, they could live openly to a certain extent because the normals and the tourists thought they were playing up the movie angle for tourist dollars. That wasn’t entirely wrong, of course, but the tongue-in-cheek approach had masked the truth. And, then once the Las Vegas city council officially recognized the existence of supernaturals last year, even more beings decided to live openly. Shelly had chosen not to share her witch nature with Ethan in part because she didn’t identify as a witch. Why would she when she couldn’t cast basic spells?

“I thought that when he proposed,” Shelly continued, “the promise of taking our relationship to the next level would give me the prompt to tell him the truth.”

“Why did you think he was going to propose?”

She tilted her head back, long black hair hitting the seat bottom. “He said he had something important to talk to me about.” She shrugged. “After five years together, what else could it be?”

“He broke up with you instead.”

“Yep.”

“Now I’m even more confused. If he broke up with you this morning, why would you be making him—” He stopped with a shake of his head.

He knew her too well.

“You were trying to win him back.” He grimaced when she nodded. “But why?”

“He’s the one.”

“Even though there’s no spark?”

“Yes.” Shelly picked at her cuticles. “It’s a slow-build relationship.”

Ben snorted.

“All right, I get it. Five years is a long time to build.”

“What happened at dinner? I assume you weren’t trying a love spell.”

“Of course not!” All witches knew that love spells were verboten. Free will didn’t allow for that. But that didn’t mean they couldn’t nudge other directions. Her brow furrowed. “I was making vegetable lasagna, his favorite meal. I wanted to make sure that the positive feelings were as strong as possible, so I added saffron to ensure a good mood, plus included a magical enhancement. To boost it.”

Ben’s eyes twinkled. “That explains his symptoms.”

“I’m so glad,” she said with an eye roll.

“No need to be sarcastic.”

“Sorry. I know you’re trying to help.”

He thought for a moment. “Interesting that Ben had the exact opposite response. Sadness, irritability, asthma attack.”

Now Shelly gave him the side eye. “Uh huh, I get it.”

“I just find it interesting that your magical enhancement worked in the opposite direction,” he repeated with a shrug.

“Why can’t I be a better witch?” Shelly groused.

Ben half-smiled. “I don’t know. Maybe the Goddess was trying to tell you something.”

“That I shouldn’t cast spells,” she said, defeated.

Ben closed the space between them and opened his mouth to speak, but another voice overrode his.

“Shelly, honey. Is everything okay? Jenny from book club called to tell me she saw you in the ER.”

Ah, the beauty of the small town. Shelly stood to face the owner of the husky voice. “Hi, Mom.”

ChapterTwo

Ben

Ben’s jaw had snapped shut at the sound of Grace Newsome’s voice; she commanded whatever space she entered. After she passed the final row of chairs in the small room, he joined Shelly in embracing her mother, awed as always that someone’s mother could be so cool.

Not that Ben didn’t love his mother, but she was quieter and laser-focused on the family business, Wildcrest Witches International. Yep, their family business was running the coven’s corporate entity. Welcome to the 21st century of practicing witchcraft. They even considered taking the business public after Las Vegas passed their resolution, but thankfully, that impulse passed. His mother, the Chief Financial Officer, wasn’t a witch, but her facility with numbers was nearly magical.

“Shelly, Ben, I’m glad I found you both,” Grace said into Ben’s chest. She was short like her daughter, but rail thin where Shelly had curves that made a man want to— He slammed that line of thinking down and concentrated on the firebrand before them.

“Hi Grace, we’re fine, as you can see,” he assured her, worry lines clear on her face.

Grace shook her head, causing the halo of shoulder-length curly red hair to bounce around her face and her dangling earrings to jangle. “Thank the Goddess. When Jenny called, and neither of you answered your phones, it was all I could do to contain myself.” Her purple eyes filled with tears. When Ben was in high school, he’d assumed those were contacts, but no, her eyes were purple. Shelly explained that the color related to her mother’s magical inclination to recognize the happiness potential of others.

Shelly and Ben exchanged a guilty look. They’d both seen her mother’s calls, but the woman could be excitable, and they had wanted to make sure that Ethan was good first.

“I’m so sorry, Mom,” Shelly said, hugging her mother again. “But, Ben’s right. You can see we’re fine.” She swallowed. “Though Ethan is being treated.”

“Is he okay?” Grace asked, politely, as if discussing a stranger.

“He’s going to be perfectly fine,” Ben answered the question. “He’ll be released in about an hour.” Had Shelly told her they’d broken up? He’d always wondered what Grace thought of Shelly’s boyfriend – ex-boyfriend. She never seemed fond of him. Or maybe that was wishful thinking on his part.

“What happened?” Grace asked.

Shelly placed her hand on his upper arm. “I’ll explain it, Ben.” She stared at the ceiling for a moment. “Ethan reacted to a spell.”

“What did you do?” Grace managed to ask the question without sounding accusatory at all.

Shelly still reddened. “I was trying to increase his feelings of wellbeing.”

“Let me guess? It did the opposite.”

“How did you know?”

Shelly’s mother leaned into the green plastic chair next to her, fingers wrapping over the top. “When your magical abilities first manifested, that happened all the time.”

“Why don’t I remember that it did the opposite?”

Grace’s fingernails tapped out a staccato beat on the chair back. “I have no idea.”

“Wait. Is that why you bound my magic until I graduated high school?” Shelly’s voice definitely sounded accusatory. “I thought it was because you wanted it to mature.” Now, she sounded sad. Ben’s heart ached for her.

“Can’t both of those things be true?” Grace asked with a tilt of her head.

Emotions played across Shelly’s face as she considered her mother’s question. Then the uncertainty cleared and her grin lit the room. Ben smiled automatically in response. Her ability to remain positive had always drawn him to her.

“Yeah, for sure,” Shelly agreed with her mother. “Guess it didn’t work as well as we’d hoped. Do you think it’ll mature by the time I’m thirty?”

Grace shrugged. “Darling, I have no idea.”

“Do you want to see Ethan?” Shelly asked.

“Of course,” she answered, though again Ben noted a lack of genuine interest. Hmm.

“Let me know when he’s ready to be discharged, so I can take him home,” Shelly said to Ben, her voice hitching on the final word. Grace’s eyes narrowed in response.

He assured Shelly he would, then watched the women exit the public side of the waiting area, weaving past the rows of empty chairs toward the automatic sliding glass doors. Grace’s flowing patchwork skirt swirled around her legs and Shelly’s jeans did wonderful things for her backside. Someone snickering behind him caught his attention. Ben turned to face the man standing in the doorway of the medical staff entrance.

“Can I help you, nurse?” Ben asked in his most condescending doctor voice. The owner of the snicker belly laughed.

“When are you going to tell Shelly you’ve got it bad for her?” Nick Moore asked, mischief in his dark blue eyes.

Ben sighed. “It’s complicated.”

“Dude, you’ve wanted her since high school. It’s time to uncomplicate it.”

“Yeah, and I’ve been in the Friend Zone since high school,” he reminded Nick.

“That’s entirely your fault. You had many opportunities.”

“Not hardly. She dated what’s-his-name, Will, all through high school, then moved away from Wildcrest to go to college,” Ben said, as though Nick, his best male friend, didn’t remember all of that. The supernatural support found in their tiny corner of Nevada meant that few left. Those who did invariably returned.

“Ancient history, my man,” Nick disagreed.

“And then she met Ethan senior year of college. I still can’t believe he agreed to move here with her when they graduated,” Ben said. “You’d think our small town was too small for the city slicker.”

“C’mon, Ben. Ethan’s not a bad guy. You know that,” Nick said.

Ben cringed. Nick was right. Just because Ethan had what Ben wanted – and threw it away. “This stays between us,” Ben said in a lower voice, “but Shelly told me Ethan broke up with her this morning.”

“Now’s your chance!”

“I started to, but then Grace arrived.”

“Fine. When you get Shelly alone again, now’s your chance.” He enunciated the repeated phrase.

Ben hesitated.

“What?” Nick asked in exasperation.

“You know what. What if I say something and lose the friendship?” The thought of not having Shelly in his life…

“What if you say something and she jumps into your arms?”

Ben lifted an eyebrow at the image of Shelly jumping into his arms. “I’m too tall for that,” he said with a chuckle.

“Joke all you want,” Nick said, then glanced back into the room behind him. Another nurse beckoned to him from near a blue privacy curtain inside one of the half-dozen glassed-off rooms. Nick clasped a hand on Ben’s shoulder. “Don’t blow this.”

ChapterThree

Shelly

“What’s going on, Shelly?” her mother asked when they stepped away from Ben. She stood with her hands on her hips, almost like a petulant child.

Shelly smiled. “What makes you think something is going on?” They had stopped outside the sliding door for Ethan’s triage room. Shelly reached to open it, and Grace placed her hand on her daughter’s.

“Shelly. Honey. You almost never use your magic. Yet you did tonight. What’s going on?”

At the repeated question, Shelly pulled her arm back from the door and hung her head. “Ethan broke up with me.” The dam broke. Shelly explained everything that had happened. When she finished, Grace pulled her into a tight hug.