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Southern Potions




  Southern Potions

  Sweet Tea Witch Mysteries Book Nine

  Amy Boyles

  LADYBUGBOOKS LLC

  Contents

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  1. ONE

  2. TWO

  3. THREE

  4. FOUR

  5. FIVE

  6. SIX

  7. SEVEN

  8. EIGHT

  9. NINE

  10. TEN

  11. ELEVEN

  12. TWELVE

  13. THIRTEEN

  14. FOURTEEN

  15. FIFTEEN

  16. SIXTEEN

  17. SEVENTEEN

  18. EIGHTEEN

  19. NINETEEN

  20. TWENTY

  21. TWENTY-ONE

  22. TWENTY-TWO

  23. TWENTY-THREE

  24. TWENTY-FOUR

  25. TWENTY-FIVE

  THANK Y’ALL!

  Also by Amy Boyles

  About the Author

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  ONE

  It was the day after Christmas. The day after the wishing tree had told me my wish was granted, the day after Ellis Mobley had tried to kill me and the day after my cousins’ fathers had appeared out of thin air and met them.

  Y’all, it had not been a good night.

  Mainly because Amelia and Cordelia did not agree on whether their fathers’ arrival into town had been a good idea or a bad one.

  I was pretty much in there with them.

  “Pepper, how’s your potion-making kit treating you?”

  The four of us—me, Amelia, Cordelia and my grandmother, Betty—sat at breakfast. A bowl heaping with pineapples, grapes and apples squatted in front of me, but I stared longingly at Betty’s biscuits and gravy. All the eating I’d done over the holidays presented in my body as a bloated stomach, bloated face and tightened zipper flies. Those sneaky pounds had apparently attached themselves to me, hence the fruit salad breakfast.

  I stabbed a pineapple. “The potion kit is going okay. I only just opened it yesterday. Not sure if I’m going to be ready to enter this contest y’all have in Magnolia Cove.”

  Amelia’s eyes flared. “Of course you’ll join. Everyone does. Well, everyone who can make a decent potion. That’s all of us, of course. Plus the whole town attends the finals.” Her gaze drifted to Cordelia. “I’m sure our dads will be there.”

  Cordelia’s hands fisted. Her voice tightened like a guitar string ready to snap. “I don’t care if our dads will be there.”

  “You should,” Amelia said smartly. “They’re our dads.”

  Fumes nearly plumed from Cordelia’s ears. “Amelia, when are you going to get it in your head that they didn’t want anything to do with us? Not one thing. If they’d wanted to be with us, they would’ve stuck around. They would’ve stayed. But they didn’t. They left.”

  “They wanted to be here,” Amelia argued, “but our moms wouldn’t let them.”

  Cordelia looked like she wanted to launch herself across the table. “Why are you listening to our moms? They’re chaos witches. They’re barely responsible human beings.”

  “They’re sort of responsible,” Amelia whimpered. “Sort of.”

  Cordelia stabbed her fork into the table. “I’m not going to argue this with you. You can have all the contact you want with your dad and uncle, but I’m not interested. They’ve had over twenty years to be a part of our lives. Why wait until now?”

  “Maybe you had to wish for them.” All eyes turned to me. And let me just say they weren’t necessarily friendly eyes. I hitched a shoulder. “What? I’m just saying maybe you had to wish for them. With. The. Hat.”

  I added that because here’s the deal—my cousins’ fathers are half genie, as in grant-your-wishes genies. Isn’t that cool? I thought it was, but the reason why Mint and Licky, my witch aunts, were no longer with the men was because the wishing abilities had gone haywire when Amelia and Cordelia were little.

  Things had gotten so bad that Mint and Licky had left their husbands and wouldn’t let the men near their daughters in case more bad wishing stuff happened.

  As it was, so far Amelia and Cordelia couldn’t grant wishes. At least not yet. That was probably for the best.

  Amelia twirled her fingers, and food shuffled around her plate. “At some point, Cord, you’re going to want to know your dad.”

  Cordelia shrugged. “Maybe. Maybe not. Either way I’ll survive, Am.” Cordelia imitated the way Amelia had shortened her name. Amelia glared at her, and Cordelia smiled. “After all, I’ve lived this long without knowing them.”

  “Well it doesn’t matter to me,” Amelia said. “I’m still going to know my dad.”

  “Be careful,” Betty said.

  All gazes flicked to my grandmother, who sat quietly eating biscuits and gravy. There must be an age where you no longer care about what you eat. When one square of chocolate doesn’t make you worry that your hips will explode, like it does to me now.

  Boy, would I really like to hit that age. Okay, maybe not that age but that attitude.

  Yes, I will take the attitude.

  Amelia’s voice rose in angst. “Why would you say that? Tell me to be careful around my father? It’s not like he’s an ax murderer.”

  Betty’s mouth twisted into a frown. “I’m only telling you to be careful. Just be careful. Don’t think about it too much. Just do it.”

  Amelia glared at Betty. “You mean something by that.”

  “I don’t mean anything.”

  “I refuse to believe that.” Quiet settled over the room. Amelia didn’t let it permeate too long. “Anyway, have y’all heard? It looks like the great potion master Saltz Swift is coming to judge the contest.”

  “Wonderful,” Cordelia said.

  “Let me roll out the red carpet,” Betty added.

  Did I sense a tinge of dislike? “What is it? What’s wrong with Saltz Swift?”

  “Only that he thinks he’s God’s gift to potion making,” Cordelia said.

  “He is a potion master,” Amelia argued.

  “Which would be fine except he walks around wearing flowing white shirts and black leather pants.” Cordelia dropped her fork and swiped a napkin across her lips. “If his hair wasn’t short and slicked back, I’d swear he was the lead singer in an eighties hair band.”

  “Well anyway, Saltz is coming. And you know who else is?” Amelia said.

  “Who?” Cordelia said, bored.

  “Shelly Seay.”

  Betty’s knife clattered to her plate. “Shelly Seay is coming here? To town? I haven’t seen her since she lost her job at the school.”

  I frowned. “What school?”

  My question went ignored.

  Amelia smiled, obviously proud that she had one-upped Betty on her knowledge. “I heard it from the post office. She sent all her belongings ahead by witch mail. Didn’t even bother to bring them with her.”

  Betty jumped from the table and ran to the door. She shut the blinds and locked all the doors.

  I bolted from my chair. Why were we were suddenly in a state of panic? “What’s wrong with Shelly Seay? Is she going to destroy the town? Spell us all? What is it?”

  Cordelia rushed to the kitchen. She returned and started clearing plates. “Shelly Seay is a sorceress.”

  “It’s only rumored,” Amelia said.

  Cordelia rolled her eyes. Clearly this was more than rumor. “Right. Okay. Well, it’s
rumored that Shelly is a sorceress. She doesn’t always attend the potion-making contest, but when she does, it’s believed she pokes around town, asking folks what they’re doing. Then she steals the best potion from its maker, tweaks it and wins the contest for herself. If you want to have a fighting chance, the best thing to do is avoid her. At all costs.”

  I watched as Betty lifted her shotgun, placed her back against the wall and peeked out the blinds.

  I shook my head. “I take it that’s why we’re acting like we’re not here. So that Shelly the Sorceress doesn’t appear out of nowhere and steal whatever ideas we’re working on. By the way, y’all, I have no idea what I’m doing for a potion.”

  Amelia’s face split into a wide smile. “Last year Cordelia made one that bestowed a person with the ability to make smart, sarcastic remarks for exactly thirty minutes.”

  Amelia clapped with glee. “And I made one that allowed the user to be able to talk to the most boring person ever. I mean, if you were at a New Year’s Eve party and got stuck with a dud, this was the potion for you.”

  I laughed. “Those are hilarious.”

  “That’s the point,” Betty said. “It’s complete nonsense fun to start the year off with a bang. Most folks in the regular world take this day so seriously—go to the gym, lose fifty pounds. Not us. We have fun.”

  “But not Shelly,” Cordelia said. “She takes it seriously. It’s best not to run any risks when it comes to her. Make silly potions—nothing she’s going to steal.”

  “But I don’t understand. If she steals the potion, why doesn’t the person it was taken from say anything? Accuse her.”

  Cordelia hitched her brows. “Because they forget.”

  “Sorcery,” Amelia said in a spooky voice.

  I rolled my eyes. “Okay. Whatever. I don’t even know what potion I’m making, so I doubt she’d be interested in me.”

  But that was a lie. I totally had an idea for a potion; it’s just, until I knew how to make it, I wasn’t going to be spouting off about it. You know, there was no reason for people to get excited, especially if I failed miserably.

  But maybe the grand potion maker, this Saltz guy, could help me. Since he was a grand potion guy, he had to know something about potions.

  “Anyway, the best thing to do is avoid the sorceress.” Betty took her place in the rocker, shotgun strapped across her knees. “There’s no reason to keep her out of town, but she’s no good. There’s no doubt about that.”

  Three hard raps sounded from the door.

  “Who is it?” Betty shouted.

  “Shelly Seay,” came the reply.

  My cousins gasped. Now Amelia, I can totally see her freaking out, but to watch Cordelia have that scared response made me nervous. She never overreacted. Which meant Shelly Seay must be pretty freaking awful.

  “Hide,” Amelia shouted.

  “I know you’re in there,” Shelly said from the other side of the door. “I need to speak to the Craple women.”

  “We’re busy,” Betty said.

  “I insist,” Shelly said. “As a witch I insist you open the door and speak with me.”

  “You can’t just do that,” Amelia said. She whipped her head at Betty. “She can’t just do that, can she?”

  Betty nodded curtly. “She can. Shelly can invoke witch courtesy and demand we speak to her.” She lowered her voice. “But only if she invokes it.”

  Shelly pounded. “I invoke witch courtesy that you open this door right now.”

  The three of us exchanged a frightened look. “Well,” I said, “seems there’s no other choice.”

  TWO

  A few minutes later we were having tea with Shelly Seay. She was tall, almost six feet, and wore patterned clothing that reminded me of a reptile. Bright red lipstick glimmered on her lips.

  “She probably killed the crocodile herself,” Amelia whispered in my ear.

  Shelly’s dark eyes flashed to my cousin, who quickly zipped her mouth. The sorceress’s flowing dark crimson hair hung to her waist. She had high cheekbones, sharp eyes and fashion that looked made-to-order.

  She was fabulous, even if she was a sorceress.

  “So, how are the Craple women?” Shelly purred.

  “Great,” Betty said tentatively. “To what do we owe this honor of having you at tea?”

  Shelly smiled. It wasn’t kind, but it also wasn’t unkind. A sort of smile that made you think someone had an extra card up their sleeve—an ace that would transform a situation on a dime.

  “You know I always arrive this time of year in preparation for the potion contest.”

  Betty shoved her corncob pipe in her mouth. “Well you do have to see who you’re going to steal from.”

  Whoa. Betty had no fear.

  Not me. I had mountains of fear. You should’ve seen Shelly—tall and foreboding. There was definitely something powerful if not sinister about her.

  But Shelly smirked at Betty’s comment. “Funny. No. I’m not here to steal anything. I have a winning potion. One that will knock the socks off Magnolia Cove.”

  Betty hitched a brow. “What’re you telling us for? Aren’t you afraid we’ll steal it?”

  “No, quite the opposite. I need a volunteer to prove what I’ve done.”

  “And what is that?” Betty said.

  Shelly opened her purse and pulled out a glass-domed cheese plate. That probably wasn’t the official name for it. I’m sure it had some sort of witchcraft title that I was naive to.

  Anyway, inside sat a green toad. Its throat swelled as if it were about to croak.

  “What’s that?” Amelia said.

  “Not what, who?” Shelly countered.

  Betty rose. “What sort of black magic is this? We both know you can’t change a person into an animal without using the dark arts.” She pointed toward the door. “Leave. I don’t want the blood of innocents on my hands. Or in my home.”

  Shelly threw back her head and cackled. “The old always think something dark must be going on.”

  “Think?” Betty snapped. “How about, I know?”

  Shelly shook her finger. “You’re wrong. That’s the old way of crafting, Betty. That’s why for years we witches have stayed in the dark, focusing on the ancient methods, the old teachings. I’m trying to create something new. To bring witchcraft into the new millennia.”

  Betty pressed her finger onto the table. “This is dark magic—blood magic. There’s no taking this into the next millennia. What you’ve called upon by creating this abomination is evil.”

  Shelly’s lips coiled into a serpentine smile. “And what if I told you it wasn’t? What if I told you that this was simple potion making.” She fingered a tendril of hair from her eyes. “Well, maybe not so simple. But this was done with a potion, not by summoning demons or using blood magic. None of that.”

  Betty’s lower lip trembled. “I don’t believe you.”

  Shelly’s eyes flared with glee. “What if I could prove it?”

  Betty laughed. “How can you prove it?”

  Shelly pulled a vial from her purse. Inside was a swirling potion that appeared as if ripe citrus fruits, peel and all, had been juiced, mixed with crushed pearls and dropped into the bottle. It reminded me of liquid sunshine. I wondered if it tasted the same.

  “This is what I used to transform this man into a toad. It will also turn him back.”

  Betty scoffed. “And what’s a potion going to prove? There could be anything in there.”

  Shelly nodded. “There could be. Unless I made it in front of you.”

  “Why would you make it in front of us?” Amelia said. “We might steal the recipe.”

  Shelly tipped her head. “You might. You might not. It’s a risk I’m willing to take.”

  Betty pulled her corncob pipe from a pocket and lit the tobacco already packed inside. She blew a smoke square to the ceiling. “Why are you telling us this?”

  Shelly poked the air with one bloodred fingernail. “Because I need
the Craples. How about we work a little magic and I’ll tell you everything?”

  Betty opened her mouth, but Shelly cut her off. “Before you judge my potion, why don’t you watch it? See for yourself I’m telling the truth.”

  Betty scowled. “Fine. Show us.”

  Shelly whipped the dome from the toad. The amphibian sat motionless as she uncorked the vial and tipped it, solution aiming for the creature. A single drop of potion splashed on the toad’s back.

  The witch smiled. “You can also take it by mouth, but it’s hard to feed a toad.”

  Shelly placed the amphibian on the floor. Within seconds its back smoked. The fog thickened. Gray smoke filled my lungs. It tickled my throat. The four of us coughed. Not pretty, delicate throaty things. No, this was hacking, ugly coughs that you only do in the privacy of your bathroom.

  From behind the smoke wall I heard snaps and cracks that, honestly, made me want to vomit.

  As the fog cleared, I could easily make out something half toad/half human flopping on the floor. A few more seconds later and a young man sat beside Shelly.

  He was fully dressed, I’d like to add. Not sure where the clothing came from, but I was glad for it.

  “This is Bo,” Shelly said.

  Bo kissed her cheek. “So glad to be back, darling. As much as I enjoy a little change now and then, a toad is really a bit too much for me.”

  Betty’s gaze darted to Shelly. “That proves nothing. Just because you used a potion doesn’t prove blood wasn’t worked into the mixture.”

  Shelly squinted. “It proves a potion brought him back. There was no sacrifice involved. No bloodshed. Surely even you can see that?”