Family Magic - Chloe Price (i have read the book txt) 📗
- Author: Chloe Price
Book online «Family Magic - Chloe Price (i have read the book txt) 📗». Author Chloe Price
“Oops,” Alison Morgan, a perfect blonde, blue-eyed cheerleader in designer everything, smirked at her friends when I made the mistake of eye contact. “Sorry.”
I ducked my head again to hide the flush of embarrassment, rushing inside to avoid any further humiliation. Alison was notorious for starting mild and ending up with her target of choice in helpless tears, so I didn’t want to give her the chance to work her own particular brand of magic.
I was in such a hurry to escape I ended up plowing full-tilt into a dark blue football jacket. The victim turned and I found myself staring in horror at Brad Peters, Senior, football hero and all around perfect yummy chunk of teenage girl’s dream.
I tried to apologize but Brad, dreamy Brad, smiled at me like he really meant it. I knew what it felt like to melt. He had the most amazing green eyes, clear and light, almost transparent. The skin around them crinkled a little. His wavy blonde hair perfectly framed his tanned, square-jawed face. I tried not to stare at the adorable cleft in his chin for too long, right at my eye level, but gazing into his eyes was much too dangerous and I had to choose my battles.
Speaking of which, while I stammered and stuttered and tried not to totally fall to pieces, Alison and her cronies appeared around us. I mentally screamed at myself for being such a stupid idiot while Alison put a possessive hand on Brad’s arm and gave me her sweetest smile, a sure sign she decided to attack with all barrels blazing. Why did she have to be dating him? Why?
I braced myself for the onslaught.
“You need to be more careful, Syd,” Alison said, voice absolutely dripping sugar. “We’re starting to worry about you.”
The other cheerleaders laughed. The temperature in the hall rose rapidly.
No wait, that was just me.
“Sorry,” I said, making an attempt to escape. Alison’s friends blocked my exit route.
“Are you okay, Brad?” Alison stroked his white leather sleeve, pouting so hard her lip-gloss buckled.
“I’m fine, really. Are you okay, Syd?” Brad seemed seriously concerned.
At any other moment I would have given an arm and most of both legs to have Brad Peters care one iota about me, but his timing was terrible.
I prayed for a pit to open up and swallow me.
“I’m fine,” I said. “Sorry again.”
“Don’t worry about it,” Brad said. “I was in your way.”
I stared at him.
“A bunch of us are getting together after school,” he went on. “At the diner. Want to come?”
Was my hearing defective? Was I delusional? Dreaming? Head injury from the impact? Surely, he hadn’t meant to invite me to hang out with him and the pops.
I think Alison was more shocked than me. She recovered quicker, though.
“Yes, Syd,” she said, anger flashing in her eyes. “Why don’t you join us?”
Um, let’s see. Complete and utter social suicide or loneliness? I totally took the hint.
“Thanks,” I said. “But I can’t.”
“Mommy won’t let you?” Alison asked in a baby voice. Her friends giggled. Brad frowned at her.
“Maybe next time,” he said to me. “We go pretty much every day.”
I sought out an escape route that failed to appear. Why did he have to do this to me there, then? My face burned.
“Yeah,” I stammered and stuttered over my words, “s-s-ure. Maybe.”
“Aw, too bad,” Alison offered me a tight grin. “Next time, then.”
“I guess,” I whispered, staring at the floor so hard I was sure a pit would open any second.
“Leave it, Alison,” Brad said. I almost dropped from the shock. The girls gasped.
Alison stared at him in utter disbelief before barely composing herself. She turned her attention back to me and gave me a smile that didn’t reach anywhere above her lips.
“Whatever you want, Brad.” She turned to her girls and started to walk away. I felt the tension drain from my shoulders. Alison paused, turned back and shot me a glare that would have melted glass. “I’ll see you later, Syd.”
She and her cronies flounced off. I watched the cheerleaders leave, their faces clearly showing their disappointment, knowing they hoped to see a show. I clenched my teeth and for the first time didn’t care about being popular or fitting in. The demon in me would have happily given them the show they looked for, but not to their benefit, oh no.
I shook my head, realizing how little I cared anymore. This wasn’t working, so time for a new game plan. To my disbelief, Brad Peters still stood there watching me.
“Show’s over,” I snapped. “Or hadn’t you noticed?”
Brad’s eyes widened. He looked genuinely hurt. “Syd, I’m sorry, I—“
The expression on my face shut him up.
“Your girlfriend is waiting,” I snapped.
I stomped off, leaving him gaping after me. I felt like I was in control at last. I was done being a target, for my mother, for the Alison Morgan’s of the world. They wanted a battle? They’d get one, Sydlynn Hayle style.
Damn. I was late for class. Chapter Six
I guess I must have made it obvious I wasn’t in the mood for bullying. Despite Alison’s parting remark, a typical fair warning of nastiness to come, I made it through the day in peace and quiet. In fact, unlike most days when I normally had to force my way through the crowd in the cafeteria to get a milk or the push of kids to reach my locker, the way seemed to part before me in a rippling wave of retreating humanity. I’m not sure if they didn’t want to have any contact with me in case I turned contagious and would bring Alison’s wrath down on them too, or if I radiated ‘don’t mess with me.’
Probably a little bit of both.
I finally toned back my new badass aura when two freshmen ran away from me with tears in their eyes. Talk about going from one extreme to another. I had to be oozing magic to raise a response like that. Time to pull the reins back and get myself under control. But if the past couple of days taught me anything, I knew I wasn’t getting anywhere doing the same thing over and over again. Time for a new plan, even if it meant flushing any chance I ever had to belong.
I headed home that afternoon feeling better about myself than I had in a long time, even looking kind of forward to talking to Mom, much to my own amazement. I couldn’t believe I was even considering having a frank discussion with my mother. She wasn’t going to get it anyway. We would devolve into another huge fight where she would cry and I would end up disappearing behind my slamming bedroom door.
Still, with new optimism blooming and hoping to survive the next ten minutes, I walked into the kitchen to the smell of homemade chocolate chip cookies.
Allow me to explain. My mother, Miriam Hayle, powerful witch and coven leader, could not bake. In fact, as a rule and a whole, we tried to stop her at the first sign of blossoming domesticity. Her brief and often disastrous forays into all things homey were notorious for ending in tragedy, shed blood and a bucket of tears.
Not always hers.
So these perfect lumps of divine smelling sugary sweetness could not possibly have come from the hands of my mother.
I checked around for a telltale paper bag or plastic container explaining the appearance of fresh baked anything in my house. I stood over the cooling rack when Mom came in the kitchen and caught me drooling. She looked adorable in her clean, crisp black apron with ‘Witch in the Kitch’ written across it in florescent green.
We watched each other, silent, uncomfortable. It was pretty clear she was hiding something from me and didn’t know how to share. Decision made, she smiled.
“Sydlynn, honey, I’m glad you’re home.” Mom took a step forward into the kitchen, still smiling.
I smiled tentatively back. Maybe this would be easier than I thought.
“Hi, Mom,” I said.
Mom glanced down at the tray of cooling cookies and laughed.
“Surprised?” She said.
I nodded.
She went to the cupboard and took out a plate. A spatula emerged from the drawer below it. She started serving cookies onto the waiting dish.
“I wasn’t sure at first,” she said, “but they seemed to turn out okay in the end.” She held up the plate to me, a hopeful, wistful expression on her face. “Cookie?”
That cookie could have tasted like crap and it wouldn’t have mattered. I loved my mother so much right then I would have eaten it wriggling or still on fire if I had to. She tried for me. I took a cookie and sniffed in its warm goodness before taking a bite. I almost dropped it, eyes going wide.
Mom looked distressed. “Tell me I didn’t just poison you!” She reached for the cookie.
I held it away and laughed, amazed. “Mom!” I said. “It’s delicious!”
She laughed herself, a little shaky, and tried one too. “So it is,” she said. “Well what do you know?”
We happily munched our cookies, smiling at each other, as if the sugar we shared melted the rift between us.
“Thanks, Mom,” I said, swallowing the last bite. “That was awesome.”
“You’re welcome,” she blushed and I knew how hard she was trying. It made me want to try harder too. Maybe there was hope for us after all.
“Another?” She offered the plate. I couldn’t say no.
“Seriously, Mom, I’m proud of you,” I said as I studied the cookie for the best place to take the first bite.
“Finally,” she said.
“Yeah, well, practice makes perfect, right?” I filled my mouth and grinned at her.
“You have no idea,” she giggled. I don’t think I ever heard my mother giggle.
“What do you mean?” I went for a glass and to the fridge for milk as she helped herself to another.
“These cookies came with a pretty big price tag,” she said.
I set the milk on the counter beside her to share.
“Don’t tell me you bought them,” I crossed my arms over my chest, still grinning.
“No, Syd, I made these cookies with my own two hands,” she assured me.
“No magic?” I asked.
“No magic,” she said.
“So where’s the price tag?” I took a long drink and handed her the glass. She polished off her cookie and the rest of the milk, eyes twinkling over the rim as she finished it in a couple of gulps. She licked off her mustache and winked at me.
“The sweat of my brow,” she said.
I went to the closet where we kept the trash with the empty milk carton. “Uh-huh. Erica helped this time?”
Her eyes widened as I opened the door. She half reached for me before the sparkle returned.
“What?” I asked, turning to dump the carton.
As soon as I did, I started to laugh.
The large silver can overflowed with horribly disfigured and charred cookies, empty bags of sugar, flour and cartons of eggs and milk. From the appearance of the trash, she made cookies all day and went through hell and back to get it right.
Now I really loved my mother. I turned back to her and grabbed her in the biggest hug, wondering why I had ever been mad at her. My mom, my amazing
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