Tag Archives: Fantasy

Quote from Book Two; Amber Shadows and the Crystal Locket

Chapter One

(Illustration)

Alluring Danger

M

onday morning every cauldron alarm clock in the Shadows’ household flashed twelve o’clock. The storm brewing since midnight whipped branches viciously against rooftops and power lines, sending several garbage cans rolling around yards and down the streets.

Several feet away, on the border of Magian countryside and Downtown Magia, a rooted pinecone fir tree snapped in half and fell against the main power lines. Instantaneously power outage darkened every window and street lamp, as if a Dark Magic spell covered the Magians with a mysterious, velvety black cloak.

As the town slept, a svelte silhouette cloaked in blackish-red, dragon hide lurked just outside the youngest Shadows’ bedroom window. Fingernails of various dragon designs carved into the paint-chipped siding, leaving deep gashes in its weathered wood. As the silhouette moved closer to gaze in through a narrow slit in the curtain panels, the wind sifted through her long, black locks. She stood motionless, watching Amber toss and turn as she called out incoherent names in her sleep.

The woman’s lips curled in hatred as her fingers twiddled in a spherical motion, magically forcing the towel in the opening of Amber’s window to fall inward. Just as the woman was on the verge of vaporizing into a thin, serpent-shaped coil of vapors, the wind viciously shifted. She tilted her head backward to peruse the sky. The heavens stirred furiously, blanketing the entire neighborhood with threatening cloud formations. Thunder boomed magnificently throughout the inky-black sky as rain plopped here and there, and then suddenly, a crack of lighting struck the ground just inches away from where the woman stood, as if to warn her.

Startled by her near death experience the woman transformed into a black and red snake, with a spiked dragon tail and glittering birthmark on its head. Lightning struck again nearly setting her tail on fire as she slithered back into the Wood at full speed, down into a bubbling hole leading to what those living in the Bewitched Forest would call, the Dark Magic Realm.

Rain continuously poured in sheets as lightning struck the earth near Amber’s room three times, waking her from what felt like a heart pounding nightmare. Above the Shadows house lightning cracked as it formed an angel outline, etching it into the clouds. With eyes open wide, yet not totally aware of her surroundings, Amber covered her head and slid underneath her bed, her breathing erratic. She’d never truly been afraid of lightning before, but it was so close above her part of the house she feared it was going to strike the roof and set the house on fire.

Moments later all was silent and the rain stopped instantaneously. Amber peered out from under her bed and noticed a brilliant light beaming through the crack in the curtains. Curiosity overwhelmed her fears as she slowly crawled out from under her bed and stepped toward the window. Staring up into the seven heavens, her fears were replaced by peacefulness and her breathing suddenly shifted into normal, slow breaths. Amber couldn’t help but think that the angel resembled Jocelyn’s face (her late, great-great grandmother).

It must be a warning, thought Amber. Something just happened . . . something Jocelyn wanted me to know about . . . . She looked out into the backyard and saw nothing except wet grass and swaying woods. Plops of rain began hitting her window pane again. Amber glanced upward hoping the angel would remain long enough for her to commune with her inner intuition, but the angel vanished before her eyes, leaving stormy billows in its place.

If something hasn’t already happened it’s about to, thought Amber. She sat down befuddled by the angel and its meaning; then suddenly remembered how she’d witnessed something horrifying in her dreams . . . something that may be linked to the etched angel in the clouds.

Grasping at the covers, Amber struggled to see through the blackness engulfing her surroundings as she shivered from the unexplainable, cold draft invading the room. Being a bit preoccupied with the sign from heaven, she hadn’t thought to check and see if the towel was tucked in the hole of the window, and shivered for several moments before snapping out of her thoughts.

Amber leaned over and twisted the light switch to her lamp twice but it would not turn on. She then gazed down and noticed the alarm clock flashing 12:00. Another power failure, she thought. Sighing, she pulled out a box of matches. As she struck the match, Amber noticed rain spattering on her bedside table and on the edge of the pillar candle. She pulled the candle towards the edge closest to her and got to her feet. Rubbing her arms for warmth, she headed toward the window to see if the towel was not properly tucked in the hole.

That’s strange, thought Amber, where is the towel? She picked up the candle and looked on the floor to see if it had fallen out from the force of the wind. Nearly missing sight of it, Amber noticed something red sticking out from behind her bedside table. She pulled it out after some difficulty only to find it was an envelope with gold ribbon. Amber was about to open the envelope when the room temperature suddenly dropped. Although anxious to read its contents, she couldn’t handle the cold a moment longer. She set the candle down and searched for the towel.

Amber managed to reach further behind her bedside table after a bit of difficulty and grabbed hold of what she thought was the towel, but when she looked at it, it was nothing more than a small square of singed material. Someone was here . . . trying to get in, thought Amber, someone using Dark Magic by the looks of it. After all this time, someone had finally attempted to cause her and possibly her family harm. She pulled out an old pair of sweats and was about to stuff them into the window, when a creaking noise from the hallway drew her attention to the bedroom door left slightly ajar.

Amber swallowed hard. Perhaps it was her imagination working overtime, but the longer she stared at the door, the more her imagination tricked her into believing someone was slowly pushing their way into the room.

She blew out the candle and slipped back in bed, pulling the covers up over her head. Grasping her crystal locket, she prayed that whoever it was would change their mind and go away. Lying still, she inhaled and exhaled long breaths, lip synching, “It’s only my imagination . . . it’s only my imagination . . . the house is just settling . . . yeah . . . yeah that’s it . . . that has to be it . . . it’s just settling . . .

After several moments had passed and it had become quite clear that no one had entered the room, Amber sat up and pulled the covers from her head. She wiped her forehead with her nightdress sleeve as she sat staring at the door thinking, I must have been hallucinating . . . the door hasn’t budged.

In fact, as Amber looked around she couldn’t help noticing that everything was as still as can be. The only sounds breaking the silence of the room was the expansion and retraction of the heating pipes, the rain pattering against the window, and the ticking of the grandfather clock in the hallway just a few feet away from her bedroom door.

Amber re-lit the candle and glanced around. The room appeared ominous, what with the antique dresser, rickety desk, and chair sitting idle in the flickering candlelight. The spindles at the foot of her bed cast silhouettes on the wall, stretching from halfway up the closet doors to the ceiling in an eerie fashion.

“My imagination should get an award for being overactive,” she muttered. As Amber sat staring into the surrounding darkness, it suddenly struck her why she was getting so freaked out. She remembered in vivid detail what woke her in the first place.

Amber got to her feet and lifted her top mattress. Hidden away with the Legends, Spells, and Enchantment Book was the Emerald Wand of Chrysalis. With a few White Magic words she removed the shield protecting it and tip toed about the house, placing seven protection charms on every window and the front and back doors. There, that out to hold whoever it was out for a while, she thought. Amber was about to tuck into bed when she remembered the red envelope.

She began ripping at the corners of the envelope, hoping to find a message from her late, great-great grandmother Jocelyn, but after several attempts of actually ripping it open and it resealing itself, she gave up. “Must be a protective spell . . .” Amber muttered in befuddlement.

As tired as she was, her curiosity propelled her into thumbing through the Legends, Spells and Enchantment Book twice, but none of spells she tried worked and neither did any of the spells she recited while using the Emerald Wand of Chrysalis.

“Must be some type of Dark Magic unknown to the book,” Amber said under her breath, thoroughly frustrated. She tucked the red envelope inside the book for safe keeping until she could figure out how to open it. Then she tucked the book back under her top mattress and placed the Emerald wand inside her pillow case, her grip firmly on its handle. She needed to salvage what few hours of sleep she had left. Soon, her family would be busying the hallway in their daily morning rush to ready themselves for a new day at school or work, without any knowledge of what happened during the night.

Less than an hour later, Amber was still awake and staring out the window from where she lay. She could not block out the flashes of a deformed, half-dead figure, and several serpent guards with scaly blackish-green skin and feelers on top their heads chasing her in her nightmare, nor could she forget about the angel etched in the clouds and how much she reminded her of Jocelyn. And it certainly did not help to know the attempt of someone breaking into the house justified her reasons of worrying all summer. Now that something finally happened, Amber found herself more concerned about what she was going to do about it, and who, pray tell was it?

It was at that precise moment something long lying at the foot of the bed in the shadows moved. Startled out of her thoughts, Amber huddled up in the upper corner of her bed; fearing it was a snake. Slowly she opened her eyes and outstretched her arm to pick up the candle and relight it. There at the foot of her bed in tousled blankets lay an undisturbed feline; stretched out, purring and pawing at the air, his wizards’ crest birthmark glistening in the darkness. Taking a deep breath, she lowered the candle and placed it back on the bedside table relieved to find she was over reacting. “It was only Zappy stirring about . . . .”

Having had enough of a sleepless night, Amber slipped into her robe and tucked the Emerald wand in her pocket. With the wand at her side, she figured she would be perfectly safe to catch a breath of fresh air while she wrote in her diary. She gathered her writing tools and steadied the candle in a firm grip as she softly tip-toed through the house, out the back door, and gently closed the screen door behind her. Settling on the back porch swing, she noticed the rain was now softer and steady. Amber released the invisibility charm and thumbed through her diary, counting the number of entries she had written. The entry she was about to pen would make the seventh entry to date.

*****

You simply must buy the first book to find out what happened! I refuse to spoil it for those who are still reading the first book or who have yet to purchase it. Until then, I’m sorry to say, this is only a teaser excerpt from Book Two in the Amber Shadows series.

Have a bewitching read.

*****

Wendy Willett

The Familiar

Frederick, an artist, attempts to escape the memory of his wife’s tragic death by moving to the mountain village of Halo. There he transforms a century old barn into a gallery and studio. He resumes painting, only now, all of the female images he creates are in the likeness of his departed wife. One rendering having an overwhelming resemblance to her is of a half-human lioness.

He pays little attention to stories of slaughtered animals and livestock, until on a hot summer night, while sleeping outside on the front stoop, he awakens to find himself face to face with the beast of his painting, and he soon discovers the tie binding them together is far stronger than mere paint and canvas.

Introduction

‘The Familiar’ is a variation of the beauty and the beast theme. The characters created for this story are designed to awaken the reader to the similarities in otherwise unrelated events we sometimes encounter on our life journey. One such occurrence took place in my youth.

Even from my earliest memories, my father had always been sickly. He had a friend whose hair was snow white, and I remember him saying on several occasions that he hoped his hair would turn the same color before he passed on. His hope was never realized.

On September 1, 1963, nineteen days before his birthday, my father passed away after a long struggle with cancer and heart disease. I was eleven years old and devastated. In late November, my mother encountered a person that bred Chihuahua’s. Looking over a recent litter, it was love at first sight, and managing to scrape together the money, several weeks later she bought one. The puppy she chose, we discovered, was born pure white on September nineteenth, my father’s birthday, and for many years thereafter, served as her protector and loyal companion.

Reincarnation or coincidence? On whatever side of the discussion one finds oneself, it is difficult to ignore the relationships between some of the episodes of the human experience. Such is the inspiration behind this story. In addition to being a variation of the beauty and the beast theme, ‘The Familiar’ is an experiment in role reversal, for in this story, beauty is the beast.Regards,
H. J. Courtright

The Loft

Rays of dawn scatter and diffuse through a prevailing shroud of humidity as the sun breaks free of the horizon. Shadows soft and undefined obscure contours of the modest skyline as another day flush with oppressive summer heat is borne unto the isolated streets of Halo.

Amid the solitude of the Green Mountains the lonely village has only ski resorts to sustain a precarious seasonal existence. Many residents, themselves seasonal, return only when conditions are prime to carry on with the business of winter trade. The rest hold fast to their homes having nowhere to run from torrid August heat that carves a valley into the soul as deep as by any frigid winter. The thirteenth day of this month will mark the founding of the village one hundred years past. The day will expire without a hint of remembrance, for nostalgia is dead, decimated by those who carry on, desecrated by each rusty nail, rotted beam, creaky floorboard, untended grave. No one remains who recalls tales of how street lamps, automobiles, and running water finally came to Halo. No one remains to recall tales of when the last corner stone was laid, when the last shingle was fixed in place, or when the last door was hung. No one remains to recall that the barn at the end of Main Street is the loyal sentinel of a forgotten age. Disturbed only by the occasional footsteps of curious children, it is largely forsaken, yet is the single most structure in Halo with the distinction of changing the least in one hundred years and the most in less than one. Frederick shudders, awakened by a sudden chill. His shirt, laden with perspiration, slowly peels from the rigid slats of the Adirondack chair as he leans forward. The leading edge of the seat stabs hard into the back of his knees and fierce tingling from lost circulation quickly mounts. As the feeling wanes, he rises to a throbbing, uncomfortable stance, and stretches the remaining stiffness from dormant muscles. Rubbing his forehead, he restores a measure of life into his drawn, weary features. Sweat old and new rolls onto his fingertips briefly freeing him from the discomfort destined to return with the heat of the new day. The jagged wound of his left forefinger, a cut inflicted by the rippled edge of a can of shredded beef opened last evening, stings from the salt of his perspiration. The pangs of morning hunger are severed by the vivid memory of the meager meal that lingers upon his lips as unsavory grease and steely taste of a fork. Gazing into the hazy sunrise, he sees the heaviness of sultry air already settling among the mountain peaks, and for the third day Halo will not be measured by the blessing of solitude, but, by the curse of oppressive heat. Besieged by the second evening thunderstorm in as many days, the village is again purified, as seen through the newness of pavement, sidewalks, and dull glow of a once dusty old Buick, though the deluge has failed in straining the persistent humid thickness from the air. Last evening, Halo was plunged into darkness as on other nights, in other storms, and he was again forbid a fan to stir and churn the fumes of paint and thinner. On such nights his hand is guided by soft candlelight, though the candles, pliable from insufferable heat, dwindle quickly to muted puddles with charred blackened stems. He cries in a silent lament at resuming work in a studio with no relief from idle sweltering air. He walks to the corner of the building nearest the forest where the ground falls away in a twenty-foot drop to a shifting base of shale and dirt. The debris of the slope tapers toward the forest in full sweeping reach of brush, bramble, and cellar door. Now, as on that first day, he feels the weight of a foreign gaze examining his moves. It feeds his fears and mocks his loneliness. It is a gaze which has no face, no name, and enslaves him within the most unsurmountable of all prisons, himself. He looks back across the front stoop and recalls the first time he set foot upon the sun bleached floorboards branded by nails brittle with rust. The aged boards are gone, replaced by new ones yet untainted by the scars of time. An overhang still shades the building’s entire front, and he recalls the delivery of the first vibrant shake to a supporting pillar, and how it awakened boards loosened by weather and rot. The mournful creak broke the stillness as a desperate plea for restoration that lived beyond when the light rain of debris finally settled. He recalls stepping to the carriage door and pondering over why a grand entrance for horse and carriage would be reduced to a ragged discard. Carefully, he squeezed through the narrow opening between the two large door panels held in precarious balance by tattered hinges. Inside, the remnant of a carriage lay as silent reminder to when dirt roads yielded beneath wooden wheels and nervous hooves. A rotted spoked wheel lay propped against the wall in abandoned harmony adjacent to dried strips of reins and artifacts of sickle and pitchfork. The heavy acrid scent of mouldy hay wafted down from the loft, the altar upon which the structure pleaded for rescue from the grasp of rot and disuse. A ladder served as sole link from where his gallery now stands to where the black widow once lived and hunted. He walks to the single glass door of the gallery standing between the large display windows that span the breadth of the building. As he passes through the main entrance, the doorbell tinkles, awakening the forest of painted canvases to the arrival of its creator. Crossing the threshold into his world, he beholds the morning light shining loudly onto the yellow-orange mirror of hardwood flooring. The luminance shouts throughout the wilderness of paintings that rest so prominently upon their display easels, dwarfed only by the simplicity of windowless side walls and the symmetry of art placed upon them. He takes pause in the grandeur of the gallery and how it seems to glow with inner light. At the right, along the north wall, is a polished wooden banister, handrail to the sweeping staircase connecting gallery to studio, where unfinished canvases and sketches faded by time, nonconforming to reason or structure, stand where they are cast. It is the studio where one dimensional white is transformed to hues of depth, form, and grace, where random thoughts unify, blend, and contort, where reality ends and all other things begin. However, of late, he has neglected his work in lieu of a project that will bring him neither fame nor money. Such as words or musical notes are composed for generations to ponder, delight and savor, he, as artist, bound to the curse of inspiration, has been driven to create a most wondrous thing. He stands in the doorway looking upward into the studio straining to see images upon the west wall with eyes that have weakened before their time. A blurry forest skyline is all to be seen from here, but, closing his eyes, he sees the clear lasting vision fixed firmly in his imagination, the story board of his mind and soul, the mural. The contrasts between light and dark, good and evil, reality and illusion are set deep within the fibers of the cedar panels. Two mountain peaks comprising the left background are sentinels that guard the horizon so no one may enter, so not even he may leave. They are insurmountable, unmoveable, unknowable, drowned by the endless tears of rain that strain through the darkened clouds of his loneliness and sorrow. A waterfall flows from where the peaks converge, falling as a sheer misty curtain, giving life to a flowering grassland that is the foundation of his utopia. Amid the void of sky between the mountains and murals edge, winged horses are suspended in a myriad of stances. They are guardians of his creative prowess. They are his endurance, his motivation, his only strength. Further right, a medieval castle looms high above a rocky shore where, in the tower window, a forsaken princess gazes across a savage sea of memories in wait for her shining prince, as he, Frederick, waits for one who can never return. Far below, perched atop the jagged rocks, a mermaid combs her hair in long sensuous strokes, and with each pass strains away his lasting peace. Briny surges churn and crash wetting her in tears of ocean spray, gathered droplets that conjure restless dreams of hate and hopelessness, only to be washed down the rocky face and consumed by the vengeful sea.
Imbedded within the foreground of the left are serpentine vines entwined in an eerie maze of light and dark. Deep in the forest of pine and oak, partially obscured in shadow, the figure of a lioness gazes outward with eyes that span the void between rendering and reality. The visage touches him with loneliness that severs his soul, contorts his heart with love and lust, and confines him within his prison of fear. He walks through the forest of finished works, ascends the stairway to the loft, and stands before the image of the lioness. Her countenance is of the untamed beast, her rendered stare, the eyes that he perceives to follow him as he leaves and enters the gallery. Her long flowing mane falls across her shoulders and along her womanly form arousing faraway memories of a time when virgin hearts merged to one, a time when his face lay gently upon a naked breast and the love shared with another caused creation to kneel at their feet. But this image, conceived as solace, causes only incurable loneliness, and stands as the reason he will never venture beyond the safety of his self-made boundaries. In the far left corner, a hunter is cast into the primeval existence of the hunt. With steady, unblinking eyes, he watches the lioness, waiting for the moment to bring forth his weapon in taking down the elusive quarry. He is the essence of the forest, his weathered countenance carved by the blade of the wild. Frederick turns away from his artful achievement to sip the remains of cold black coffee. The taste is stark, strong, forcing him to re-examine the work in a fresh gaze. Driven through purpose undefined, unknowable, he chooses to extract the visage of the lioness he has cast upon the cedar panel and render it to the canvas. Crossing the studio to consider the dimensions the portrait will take, he stands among frames stacked in lazy columns along the wall. The choice made, he returns to the easel to prime the canvas for the articulate stroke of the brush. Sitting upon the simple stool of wood, he contemplates, formulates in his mind how the first strokes will be, and by reflex switches on the light that hangs loosely overhead from the end an age stiffened cord. The studio washes in momentary brilliance and in the same instant he is thankful that sometime in the night, the electric was restored. Slave to his aspiration, he embarks upon the arduous journey of rendering a new image. Studying a vision of his subject in the forefront of his thoughts, the brush is dabbed into the primary colour of the palette, the stroke of silken hue is delivered onto the canvas, and in the same moment he is interrupted with the tinkle of the doorbell. The spell of inspiration dampened, he peers over the studio handrail. “Good morning, Rankin,” he called flatly, mildly aggravated by the intrusion. “Mornin’, Mr. Frederick,” Rankin replied, in the respectful way he addressed everyone, “hope I didn’t disturb ya.” “Nonsense, Rankin, come up,” Frederick assured the hunter, annoyed at the disruption, but gaining nothing in displaying displeasure at the kindhearted man. Rankin steps across the threshold into the gallery neatly propping his crossbow and quiver by the umbrella stand. As a doe to its fawn, he never strays far from the high-powered weapon fashioned from the leaf of an old buckboard spring and stock of an otherwise useless shotgun. It is his strength, his endurance, and arrows that issue forth are his blood. A legend to the locals, he is said to be capable of trailing his prey across barren land on a frigid wind blown night. By his own account he has spent a lifetime in the wilderness, adding credence to the belief that he and the forest are one. His red plaid hat and jacket are in sharp contrast to the pristine appearance of the gallery, and as he ascends the long sweeping stairway to the studio, Frederick ponders why the man, known also through his good deeds, is referred to only by his last name. In slow deliberate strides Rankin pauses upon the upper landing casting a surveying glance about the studio, then approaches the easel to where the artist is working. “Bin quite a time since last I bin here in the loft, Mr. Frederick. As I r’member, I was givin’ help floorin’ and railin’, didn’t know ya painted the west wall as such,” and catching sight of the lioness, he hesitates, bringing an uneasy pause to his manner. “What can I do for you, Rankin?” the artist asked, turning toward the hunter to address the abrupt stillness, giving little credence to the man’s fascination with the mural. He takes a mental assessment of bramble torn trousers, jacket, and hat, and the hunter’s deep set wrinkles to that of the painting, and silently admits to not yet having mastered imitating his power upon the canvas. “Mr. Frederick, some time now, I bin seein’ strange tracks,” the hunter began, as he continued to examine the mural. “Probably some animal that came down from the higher ups, it’s of no concern to me,” the artist replied, returning his attention to the palette and foundation coat upon the canvas, “anything the matter?” “Past spring, found a buck up passed Harper’s Glade, throat crushed, neck broke, heart ripped out. Every couple o’ weeks bin findin’ some such animal thet met the same fate. Mr. Johnny had a prize heffer killed t’other day. Wh’tever it is gotta bite ‘bout tha same as a man, ‘n I ‘magine ten times tha disposition to take down nigh unto ton o’ beef,” and the hunter withdraws his uneasy gaze from the mural. “I’m sure there’s a reasonable explanation.” “‘T only comes out at night. Bin trackin’ it nigh onto four months. I can tell tales that’d make people think I’m crazy, cuz wh’t’s out there ain’t like nothin’ nobody’s ever seen. Ain’t no hero, guess that makes me a fool. Ain’t like you ‘n most others that bin ‘ere only a handful o’ years. Well, kids and grandkids come back for a time, but anyhow, it’s summer now ‘n some nights ya sit out on yer stoop. Jest neighborly advice, need ta be careful is’ll.” His gaze returns to the mural. “Thanks, Rankin, but I really don’t think there is anything to worry about.” “Like I said, jest neighborly advice, ‘specially didn’t want that tore up heffer ta play on yer mind, means wh’tever it is has a taste for livestock, a man can be next.” “Real fine likeness of me, Mr. Frederick, makes a man proud to be in one o’ yer pitchers,” then withdrawing his gaze from the mural a second time, poses the question, “by the way, where ya git the idea fer that lion?” “I just had a few ideas I wanted to work on, and then the inspiration hit. I’m the fool. I spent three weeks working this mural when I should have been working the canvas. You know, things I can sell when the season starts up. What do you think?” “I best not say, Mr. Frederick, I best not say,” and with no further exchange, he descends the loft stairway, gathers his quiver and crossbow, and exits the gallery. Frederick delivers a thoughtful sigh as the hunter’s steps track to the edge of the stoop. Gazing upon the image of the lioness, he ponders why he first put the concept to the brush, and quickly pushing the thought away, directs his attention toward his new work.

Excerpt from second book in the series: Amber Shadows and the Crystal Locket

Foreword

“She’s living the life of an ordinary fourteen-year-old!” was not what many would say, or even think of saying in passing conversation about Amber Shadows. For you see she was an extraordinary White Magic witch-in-training. Flowing, dark red hair caressed her oval face, her eyes of emerald enchanted those curious about her, and one ruby stud earring in her left ear was never taken out while a chandelier earring dangled from her right. And while she often wondered what it would have been like to experience school dances or un-chaperoned parties, she remained exclusively interested in reading about the unknown and things that she could do magically by experimenting. Above all, journeying beyond her imagination to fantastical places while reading her treasured, fictional books was something she held close to heart.

It was Amber’s fondness for the written word that drove her to writing her unusual experiences in a leather-bound journal. And just as Jocelyn’s journals, this was no ordinary journal Amber kept: faerie wings of rich crimson and emerald hues adorned its front cover; silvery glitter etched her name on the back of the book in a medieval font, and inside were pages filled with sketches and her thoughts. There was only one thing that made this journal different from others (including Jocelyn’s) . . . the pages were enchanted with an invisibility charm.

As soon as Amber was done writing her entries, the ink would instantly dry and disappear upon her closing the book. Anyone trying to read her diary would find empty pages and be naïve to the fact that Amber placed an invisibility charm on its contents that only she could release and seal with a wave of her hand.

Unlike most other households, the Shadows family did not own a telephone and they watched very little television on a small, black and white T.V set.

Owing to the fact that the Shadows did not communicate by telephone, when it came time to send messages the Shadows family used Zappy, the family tabby. He was quite exceptional in that he could transpose into wizard form when need be, and could appear and disappear as he pleased by vapor. This ability made his journeys quite easy when Amber sent him with messages to Marianna Wentworth or Jasper Silverton; her two best friends since the age of five.

Amber, Marianna, and Jasper were as close as three mates could be and were now starting their eighth grade school year. From time to time, several classmates from Candlebury Junior High stared at them as they passed by and made obnoxious wisecracks to whoever was standing in listening range:

“Isn’t it strange how Shadows, Wentworth, and Silverton never attend school functions on the weekends?” a black haired boy with eyes of coal said sarcastically.

Others nodded, pointed, and laughed while the leader of the cheerleading group smirked in reply, “Yeah, they never go out of their way to initiate conversation or make friends either . . . strange is what they are; those three.”

Even though these rude comments happened nearly every day, they got under Jasper’s skin and made Marianna throw daggering glares and think nasty thoughts. Amber learned to brush them off by simply rolling her eyes. And although she grew tiresome of the same routine, she’d pull Jasper and Marianna along; reminding them for the umpteenth time, “Ignore them . . . what goes around comes around. Obviously they have nothing better to do with their time.”

Although this advice took several days for Marianna and Jasper to grasp and practice, they managed to grow thick skin and ignore their ill-mannered classmates, thinking of them as nothing more than sour, outdated milk. When it appeared no one could get a rise out of the three mates, those hanging around the school courtyard stopped staring and whispering unfound rumors.

As school progressed through September, all three mates kept their noses happily buried in some type of Advanced White Magic book (hidden by their text books of course). They ate and studied away from everyone else so that they could chat about anything unusual happening in the Magian world, and after dinner each night, they practiced their Magia Sessions homework: White Magic Spells and Healing Potions.

Of the three, Amber had an unbelievable quirk of craving and memorizing knowledge of magical spells right from the off, a curious nature to extensively study the unknown, and a raw talent for using her endowment of White Magic when needed without referencing her text books.

Excerpt from Amber Shadows and the Missing Wands

“Whosoever is in possession of thy book, read thy words carefully, take a second look…. Thou shall falter if thy heart is untrue….”Amber Shadows is your typical “Magia” White Magic teen until she discovers three books written by one of her extraordinary White Magic ancestors. Dangerous secrets of her family’s past are unlocked. Amber is driven by voices from antiquity to begin a dangerous quest along with her two best mates to rescue her missing family members, find two magical wands, and return home safe and sound. Can fourteen-year-old Amber and friends manage such a feat? You’ll have to read the book to find out! But prepare yourself . . . you will find yourself face to face with deadly Dark Magical beasts and dangerous obstacles as you journey along with Amber and friends.

P.S. Don’t say I didn’t warn you . . . .

Warning!
My dear children, in Magia there are two types of magic—Dark Magic and White Magic. I shall not preach as to which is which; it would be most insulting to your intelligence, and you would most likely put this book down out of boredom. That being said, I must point out the following about the story you are about to read. In Magia things are not always as they should be. Terrible things happen that are not of our choosing . . . things that sometimes befall us against our will, causing loss and suffering.
If you are expecting to read a story about a medieval princess, forced to marry a Dark wizard more than twice her age, or missionary knights setting off to fight and conquer a monstrous dragon guarding two stolen wands of power and glory, then you would be very much mistaken. Although these stories would be exciting to read, they must be left for another time.
It is a terrible thing to be at such a young age in ones’ life, when you find yourself utterly helpless, having your life placed in danger, and living through terrifying situations beyond anything you can possibly imagine. And it is a far worse thing to have to endure the wrath of Dark Magic entities, striving to take what doesn’t belong to them for the sole purpose of revenge, power, greed, and dare I say . . . immortality.
If you find you do not wish to read about the emotional trials and tribulations of a thirteen-year-old White Magic witch-in-training; one that is left in the care of her older sister and brother while her parents are off searching for her grandparents; one who, along with her two best friends, face numerous conjured up beasts and life threatening events managed by the Dark Magic hand of Lady Gondara, then might I suggest you properly place this book back upon the bookshelf, and leave its story for someone else.
As for those of you courageous enough to continue along with Amber and her friends on their magical journey, please keep the following in mind at all times: being born a White Magic witch or wizard is not all wishes granted, wand power, and magic spells to do our bidding as one might believe.