Copyright
Small Town Witch
Kristen S. Walker
Copyright © 2013 Kristen S. Walker
Cover Illustration: Kristen S. Walker
Edited by Charlee M. Redman
ISBN: 9781301046171
All rights reserved.
© Kristen S. Walker and kristenwalker.net
Other Stories
Fae of Calaveras
Small Town Witch
Witch Hunt
Witch Gate
“Witch Test” - a prequel short story
“Midsummer Knight” - a prequel short story
“A Midwinter Night’s Dream” - short story between books 1 and 2
The Voyage of the Miscreation
Episode 1: The Voyage Begins
Episode 2: The Trouble with Fangfrogs
Episode 3: The Sunken Forest
Episode 4: Monster Menagerie
Episode 5: The Feathersnake Hunt (coming November 2014)
Episode 6: Dragon Slayer (coming December 2014)
Season 1: Episodes 1-6 (coming December 2014)
Wyld Magic
Book 1: A Flight of Marewings
Book 2: The Warrior Duchess (coming 2015)
Tales of Wyld Magic
“Together We Will Fly”
“The Hedge Witch”
Wyld Magic in a Flash: Five Short Tales of Wyld Magic
For updates about future releases, join my mailing list.
Dedication
For Luke and Debby:
this story would not be written without you
I wrinkled my nose up as I walked in through the back door and saw the latest harvest from the garden. The kitchen was crowded with too many different smells, spicy and woody and sharp all mixed together. Freshly-cut herbs were piled on the table and counters. In the middle was my mother, Rosmerta, tying together bundles with twine so she could hang them up to dry.
“Whew, it stinks.” I opened the window, letting in a fresh breeze. “Do you have to do all of that in here?”
“Why not?” Mom pointed to a pile. “Some of this is for the kitchen.”
I picked up a piece of something and smelled it. It made me think of Italian food. “What’s this one for?”
“That’s basil,” she said in a sarcastic tone. “I was thinking of making fresh pesto sauce for dinner tonight. Would you rather have pasta or pizza?”
I rolled my eyes. I knew my family could afford to get take-out once in a while, and in the twenty-first century not all frozen dinners were disgusting, but she always insisted on making home-cooked meals for us every night. I didn’t have that kind of patience for cooking. “Yes, but what kind of magical use does it have?”
Mom sighed. As a witch, so she used all of these plants in her spells, and she tried to teach me how to use witchcraft, too. She looked at me. “You’re supposed to remember these things, Rosamunde.”
“I could just write it all down to help me remember.” I put down the basil and picked up a sprig of lavender. “Or maybe I’d remember it better if you taught me the spells that I would actually use them in.”
“I only teach you as much as you’re ready for,” she said for the hundredth time.
I rolled my eyes. “Yeah, you keep saying that, but when am I ever going to be ready for anything? I’m probably one of the most responsible sixteen-year-olds ever. I get okay grades in school, I don’t get in trouble, I’ve never even scratched your car while driving, I always call to let you know where I am, and I come home on time.”
“Don’t make a mess,” Mom said sharply.
I looked down at my hands and realized that I’d been picking apart the lavender piece by piece while I talked. I swept the bits into a little pile and looked up at her. “Well?”
“Well, are you practicing all of your exercises like I taught you? You need discipline to learn magic.”
She meant the deep-breathing exercises and meditations. They were so boring that they often put me to sleep. “Yeah, um, sometimes, when I get the chance. But I’ve been doing the same things for years. Other than flying on my broom, you hardly ever let me do anything.”
Mom raised her eyebrows at me. “When you demonstrate discipline, then I’ll trust you to do more. If you don’t like the way that I teach witchcraft, you can learn sorcery at your school.” She turned her back on me. “I’m not going to argue with you, Rosamunde.”
I opened my mouth to protest that sorcery was completely different from witchcraft, and did she really want her daughter to stop following in her footsteps? Glaring at my mom was hard, because even at sixteen I was still shorter than her. Since I’m only five-foot-four, most people were taller than me, but Mom was also really good at looking intimidating. She pulled herself up straight and loomed over me in a way that made me feel like I was five years old again.
I was interrupted by something insistent bumping into my leg. I looked down and saw a small black cat’s head. “Oh, hi, Menolly,” I cooed. I bent over so that I could scratch behind her ears. “I didn’t see you there. All the stinky plants didn’t chase you out of the room?”
Menolly sat back on her hind paws and arched her back so that her head lifted under my hand. She blinked her round, yellow eyes at me and then turned her head to rub her chin on my hand. I continued to pet her, and soon I managed to coax out a purr.
Mom cleared her throat loudly. I looked up at her, blinked, and then remembered that we’d been having an argument.
“I’m sorry, Mom,” I said. I went over and put my arm around her. “I think you should make potato gnocchi with the pesto sauce for dinner. That was really good last time.”
Mom nodded. “I’ll see if I have any potatoes. Don’t you have a test to study for tomorrow?”
“I’m already on my way up to my room.” I turned and left the kitchen.
The next morning, I repeated a familiar ritual: waiting for my sister to finish getting ready. I drummed my fingers on the banister and looked at the clock. We should have already left for school by now. “Akasha, we’re going to be late!” I called up the stairs. “Get your butt in the car now!”
The bathroom door opened and Akasha came out, head down and a scowl on her face. She was dressed in her school uniform, but her hair was still hanging down in messy curls. “I haven’t done my braids yet.”
“You can do it on the way. We have to go now.” I folded my arms and glared at her. She couldn’t use the hair excuse with me. I had the same long, thick curly hair and I knew enough to get up early so that I had time to braid it up properly before school.
“Okay, you don’t have to yell at me.” Akasha picked up her bag and started coming down the stairs.
“I wouldn’t yell at you if you were ready on time. I’m the one driving you to school now, so that means I’m the one who has to be responsible for you. And today you’re setting new records for being slow.”
Mom came out of the kitchen and gave us a hard look. “Rosamunde, you don’t need to be that harsh with your little sister.”
I whirled to face her. “But she—”
“No arguing.” Mom put her arm around Akasha and kissed her on the forehead. “And you need to listen to your sister when she reminds you that it’s time to go. Hurry along now, girls, but don’t fight.”
I rolled my eyes, but bit my tongue and waited while Akasha put on her shoes. When she finally had everything, I rushed to the garage. I didn’t know what Akasha’s problem was today, but I didn’t want to get in trouble for being late to school.
I was already backing the car out of the driveway when she turned to me with big, tear-filled eyes. “Rosie, I don’t want to go.”
The old, childish nickname annoyed me. My friends called me “Rosa” now. I s
topped the car and shot her a look. “You never want to skip school. Are you sick?”
My sister screwed up her face and looked at the floor. “Well, no, I feel fine—”
I started the car again.
“No, wait!” she said. “Can’t I just take a day off?”
“I can’t play hooky with you today. It’s my first social studies test, and I actually studied for it.” I looked up at the house. “Do you want to ask Mom to stay with you?”
Akasha shook her head. “No, I don’t want to bother her. Let’s just go.”
“Okay.” I left the driveway.
Akasha turned and looked out the passenger window as we drove, still brooding. As my annoyance wore off, I began to wonder what was bothering her.
“Why don’t you want to go to school today? Is something going to happen?”
“No. I just don’t feel like it,” she said without turning around.
“That doesn’t sound like you.”
She said nothing. I thought about the past few weeks since school had started, and realized that Akasha had sounded less like herself for a while. She’d been sullen like this before, and she didn’t talk about her classes or teachers at all. I’d just been too busy to pay attention.
Time to be the big sister. “Look,” I said, “everyone has a hard time adjusting to a new school. The work is harder in seventh grade and at a private school, but you knew that. I had problems when I started at Crowther too, remember? You just need to give it more time. Try to make some friends.”
Akasha shook her head. “Sarah’s parents pulled her out. She’s already switched to St. Teresa’s.”
St. Teresa’s was another local private school—an all-girls Catholic school, with Bible readings and everything. It was a good school, but they’d never accept a witch as a student, or even a witch’s daughter.
I tried to remember the girl and failed. “Who’s Sarah?”
“She was the only other human in my class.”
Despite our town’s reputation, humans were still the majority over magikin. Out of four thousand people, less than a quarter of our neighbors had any magical family trees, but that was still more than the normal ten percent. Many of the humans also practiced magic. Mom and I were the only witches, but there were lots of sorcerers and most people knew how to do a few easy spells.
In the public schools, like Madrone Elementary where Akasha and I both went when we were younger, most of the students were human. Crowther Private Academy, the combination junior and senior high school where I’d been for four years and Akasha just started, was exceptional because it was small, only letting in twelve students each year, and most of the students—and teachers—were magikin. There were only five humans in my class, and all of us studied magic of one kind or another. Apparently Akasha’s class had even less, but that shouldn’t have made a difference.
I gave Akasha a pointed look. “You had plenty of magikin friends in elementary school.”
She pouted. “That’s different.”
“How is it different? All of a sudden you have to start sticking with your own kind?”
She shrugged and turned away. “They’re the ones who want to stick with their own kind. I don’t belong at this school.”
I sighed. “No one feels like they belong in middle school. If they’re forming faeriekin cliques or whatever, it’s because they feel just as insecure as you do. You have to open up to them first if you want to make friends.”
“You wouldn’t understand. All of the faeriekin love you.”
I stopped the car at an intersection and threw my hands up in the air. “That’s because I make an effort! I talk to them, I hang out with them after school, I go to their parties and hang out at their Court. It doesn’t take magic to make friends, just being friendly.”
Akasha started crying again. She rubbed her face. “It’s not that easy for me. And even for you, your best friend is still a human like you. You’re just sucking up to the faeriekin because of the pact, but they’re not really your friends. Don’t you feel like they can’t really understand you?”
I stared at her with my mouth open. “How could you say that? Lindsey is just—” I stopped and shook my head. “All of my friends are good friends, and I’m not sucking up to anyone. And it wouldn’t hurt for you to at least get to know them before your test. Your thirteenth birthday is going to come up faster than you think.”
Akasha looked up and glared at me. “Would you and Mom just stop giving me such a hard time about the test? Ugh! I’m not even sure that I want to become a witch like you two!”
I snorted. “Don’t be stupid.” I turned away and started driving again. “Of course you want to be a witch. And you’ll make plenty of friends at school. You just started, give it some time.”
Akasha turned her head away and looked out the window. “I don’t think that we should fight about it any more.”
I gripped the wheel tighter and didn’t say anything. I was trying to help her, not fight with her, and she wasn’t listening. Well, yelling about it wasn’t going to help anything. I just kept driving.
Crowther was chaotic first thing in the morning. There was always a long line of cars full of parents waiting to drop off their kids around the front of the old ranch mansion that had been converted into the school. The small paved parking lot was already full, reserved for staff. Students who brought their own cars had to drive around to the gravel lot on the far side of the new wing and walk back.
The yard was a stream of students, all clad in the black-and-white uniform. Seeing them from a distance made me think of those nature documentaries where the deep-voiced narrator points out that in a herd of zebras, all of the animals look the same, so that predators can't pick out an individual. It was the same way at school: there were naga tails and pookha ears here and there, but they all blended together as just another group of teens.
In the middle of this, a pale yellow horse came walking out of the trees, picking up her feet and raising her tail. On her back were two tall faeriekin, a boy and a girl. They were both blond and beautiful, but the girl looked that much more ethereal than the boy: finer features, pointed ears, perfect skin. They were Glen and Ashleigh, two of my classmates and friends. I waved to them as they rode by on their way to the stable.
At the front door, every student had to pass through the wards. Crowther had magitek locks which that keyed to recognize every student and staff member and keep out anyone who didn’t belong. A little bit of magic was needed to use the doors, so the first thing that anyone learned how to do was operate them.
But today, I realized that Akasha wouldn’t touch the doors herself. She waited for someone else to come along and open the door, and then grabbed it before it could swing closed again.
She held the door open and looked at me. “Are you coming?”
“Just a minute.” I took the door out of her hand and pushed it shut. “Open it.”
Akasha looked at the ground. “I thought that you didn’t want to be late for your test.”
“Yeah, I just want to see you open the door.”
Another group of girls came up behind us. One of them started to reach for the door. “Wait,” I said, putting out my hand again to stop her. “Let my sister get it.”
Akasha looked up and glared at me again.
The other girls looked at each other and smirked. They brushed past us and opened the door.
Before I could stop her, Akasha rushed to follow the other girls inside.
I shook my head, but let her run off to her own classroom. I had to hurry, but the worry that my sister was developing an aversion to magic lingered in the back of my mind.
I made it through the test and the classes after. My friends and I caught up on gossip in between the lessons. It wasn’t until lunch that I remembered my earlier conversation with Akasha. Then I found myself thinking over the things that she’d said and wondering what could really be going on.
I was eating in the dining hall wit
h Lindsey, who had been my best friend since we started at Crowther. We sat together at one end of a long wood table. Some of the furniture at Crowther was part of the estate: polished wooden tables, carved chairs, fine lace curtains on the panoramic windows.
I thought maybe Lindsey would be able to help me understand my sister’s problem, because she was a human, too. I asked her, “Do you think that it’s hard for us, being some of the only humans in our class?”
Lindsey swallowed a bite of her sandwich and shrugged. “Not really.”
“What about the first year?”
She paused. “I guess it took some getting used to. This school is different than the one I went to before.” She looked at me and smiled. “You were always nice to me, Rosa. We hung out so much that first year that I barely even missed my friends at my old school.”
I ducked my head and blushed. “Yeah, well, I didn’t have any friends here, either. It helped having someone else to talk to.”
Lindsey nodded. “I was so shy back then, do you remember? Even though Julie is super nice, I was too nervous to speak up in class or talk to anyone else. If I didn’t have you, I don’t know what I would have done. And look at me now!” She grinned.
I laughed. Now it was hard to imagine Lindsey being quiet and shy, but she used to follow me everywhere. “Do you remember how we used to braid each other’s hair every day before class?”
Lindsey tossed back her brunette hair, which she wore in a short bob. “Yes, I remember. And you still wear your hair up in a braid. You should let me style it sometime.”
I started to reach out and touch her hair, but I stopped myself. I clenched my hand and put it back under the table. “I liked you better with long hair.”
Lindsey caught the movement and looked away from me. She cleared her throat. “Why—why did you bring that up, anyways? About being human?”
“I had a weird talk with my sister this morning. She didn’t want to come to school.”
Lindsey raised her eyebrows in surprise. “Akasha never wants to skip school. Was it just a bad case of the Mondays?”