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The Accidental Witch

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by Jessica Penot




  Published Internationally by Lachesis Publishing Inc.

  Rockland, Ontario, Canada

  Copyright © 2013 Jessica Penot

  Exclusive cover © 2013 Laura Givens

  Inside artwork © 2013 Giovanna Lagana

  All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written consent of the publisher, Lachesis Publishing Inc., is an infringement of the copyright law.

  A catalogue record for the print format of this title is available from the National Library of Canada

  ISBN 978-1-927555-34-7

  A catalogue record for the Ebook is available

  from the National Library of Canada

  Ebooks are available for purchase from

  www.lachesispublishing.com

  ISBN 978-1-927555-35-4

  Editor: Joanna D’Angelo

  Copyeditor: Giovanna Lagana

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any person or persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I would like to thank my agent, Sharon Belcastro, and my editor, Joana D’Angelo for their help in making The Accidental Witch possible. Their support in this endeavour has been invaluable. I would also like to thank the authors of two wonderful books, Spells for the Solitary Witch by Eileen Holland and Encyclopedia of 5000 Spells by Judika Illes. These books helped me create a world of spells for Phaedra.

  ALSO AVAILABLE

  CIRCE

  THE ACCIDENTAL WITCH

  CHAPTER 1

  A WHITE CANDLE LOVE SPELL

  It is amazing how the most world-changing days can seem entirely mundane to begin with. Friday the 13th seemed no different than any other day to me. I woke up late, as always, and rushed to get dressed and make it to the car with my usual box of animal crackers and diet cola. I pulled my shoes on as I backed out of the driveway and ate while I drove to work.

  I was late to work, but just early enough to not be noticed as late. The small hospital where I worked was a blip in a vast nowhere and the small psychiatric floor I worked on was a blip in a blip. I was a blip within a blip within a blip, making me practically nothing. I could’ve died in my sleep and the world would barely belch. I liked to think that I was good at what I did. I liked to think that even though I was a nothing, I made a difference in the patients’ lives. I was one of those deluded people that believed in saving the world one person at a time. I guess I still am. Certainly, I was one of the few people that actually cared about the patients. The management didn’t care that I cared. Management was too busy trying to balance the books and keep the floor profitable to care what the staff did with the patients. I could take all the patients outside and have them moo like cows and management wouldn’t care as long as I billed it as a recreational therapy group and got the proper reimbursement.

  “Hey, Phaedra,” Millie said as I walked onto the locked portion of the floor. My keys jingled against my chest as I walked towards the nursing station. I was one of five therapists that covered the psychiatric floor. I never really saw the other five therapists because the hospital was too cheap to ever have more than one therapist working at a time, but I knew the other therapists existed somewhere out there in the same kind of way you know an atom exists without ever seeing it.

  I smiled as I approached Millie. I was used to smiling when I didn’t mean it. That is what being a therapist is. It is putting your own feelings aside so that other people can find happiness. At least, that is what it is supposed to be. That is what I wanted it to be.

  “Hey, girl,” I said. “How’s it lookin’ today?”

  “All bullshit as always,” Millie said in her thick southern drawl.

  Millie was one of those people who wasn’t happy unless she was complaining about something.

  “Sorry about that,” I said with a small smirk. “What’s going on?”

  “We have Kara Watson again,” Millie whined. “I swear if they admit that girl one more time, I’ll kill her myself. She’s just doin’ this for attention and she ain’t right for our floor.”

  “What’s she doing for attention?” I asked

  “She’s in there bangin’ her head on the wall and expecting me to care,” Millie said. “She shouldn’t be here.”

  I couldn’t figure out who Millie thought would be right for the floor. It was like she didn’t really realize that the psychiatric floor was where crazy people were supposed to be. She thought that all the crazies that came and went through our doors acted out just to annoy her. All their suicide attempts and hallucinations were an elaborate ploy just to make her day shitty or get something from her. Although, I couldn’t imagine what anyone would want from Millie.

  “I’ll go check on her,” I said with a smile.

  I walked down the hall to room 101A where Kara Watson sat on her small white bed sobbing and slamming her head against the wall. Large tears bubbled down her plump cheeks and puddled on her bosom. Kara was more than plump. She was fat in that way that made other fat people look thin. The fat kind of rolled off her like dough.

  “Hey, Ms. Kara,” I said as I pulled up a chair. “What’s goin’ on?”

  “I don’t want to be alive,” she wept.

  “But you were doing so well,” I said.

  “There’s no reason for me to be alive. Why can’t you people just let me die?”

  “You know we can’t do that,” I said.

  “I got nothing to live for,” she said.

  “You have yourself to live for,” I said. And that was a lot. A whole lot.

  “Well, that ain’t much,” she snapped.

  “Your little ones wouldn’t want you to give up like this,” I whispered.

  “I know,” she said. “I just miss them.”

  “You still have a son and a husband and they need you,” I said. “You can’t give up. You have to keep fighting for them.”

  “I’m so glad you’re here,” Kara said. “Nurse Ratchet is on a rampage this morning.”

  I laughed. Kara always called Millie “Nurse Ratchet”. The patients hated a few of the nurses, but they hated Millie most of all. Many of the other nurses were curt and blunt and assumed the patients were all lying losers, but they did their job with professionalism. Millie, on the other hand, snarled at patients when they asked for any kind of help. She sat behind her desk typing notes and making the patients’ lives a living hell. I had no power to do anything about Millie, so I made my peace. Management didn’t care. They would have staffed the Devil himself if he was good at billing and paperwork. I had once asked my supervisor what to do when the patients complained about the nurses. She told me to nod and smile. That was our official policy—don’t complain, just nod and smile.

  “Yeah,” I said. “Sorry about that. I noticed she was in a bad mood.”

  “Does she have good moods?”

  “No,” I said. “Listen, Kara, do me a favor, would you?”

  Kara nodded and turned away from the wall. She looked at me with eyes bluer than the ocean. When I looked in her eyes, I could see through the fat and self-abuse to the woman underneath. I could see her as she used to be. I had seen the pictures. Before her twin daughters died, Kara had been lovely, and slim, and athletic, but years of depression had eroded that as surely as a river carves out a canyon.

  “Make a list for me. Make a list of all the good things in life. Make a list of everything that’s even a little bit good.”

  Kara nodded.

  “I’ll see you in group? I
t starts in ten minutes.”

  Kara nodded again.

  I walked back out to the nurses’ station and looked through the charts. I checked to see which paperwork I needed to do and which patients needed individual sessions. It was going to be a long day. Bob had worked the weekend and he didn’t like to work with patients. He liked to sit behind the desk with the nurses and shoot the shit. Bob was a licensed counselor, but I couldn’t imagine why he’d gone into it. He seemed about as concerned about the patients as Millie. I hated working after him. It was like doing two days work in one day.

  The floor was full. Every bed was taken. They always were. There weren’t enough psychiatric hospitals in Alabama, let alone rural Alabama. Mostly, unless your family was willing to commit you, you would slip through the cracks. The people on our floor, despite its flaws, were the lucky few. Suicide is the eighth leading cause of death in Alabama. Those on our floor were the few that someone cared enough about to save or who were just lucky enough to attempt suicide on a day when we had beds open.

  The morning support group was a crap shoot. It was one of those things that can sometimes reach people in such a profound way that it almost seems divine and can sometimes piss people off in such a horrible way that you just have to dodge the obscenities being flung in your general direction. The moment I walked into the group room, I could tell it was going to be a crap-dodging day. All our regulars were there. The regulars are the ones with the good insurance that the psychiatrists will directly admit because they have good insurance, or the ones that spend so much time driving the ER doctors crazy that the ER doctors force the psychiatrists to admit them under penalty of death. Ironically, these lucky few, the regulars that get help more than they deserve when others get no help, are usually the whiniest, most complaining, miserable people that can climb up out of the crazy bin.

  “Good morning,” I said cheerfully to the group. I scanned the group quickly. Wayne Braselton was there. He was one of the regulars. Everyone knew everything about him. His wife had killed herself last year and his son had shot himself in the head a few days later. It is a strange coincidence that oftentimes the floor seems filled with the same types of people at the same time. Looking over the room, at least five of the people there had someone die on them in the last three years. Last week the group had been all rape or incest survivors and the week before, they’d been all Iraq war veterans. It came in waves and I never understood why, but in my heart, I believed it was fate.

  “What are you doing back here, Wayne?” I asked directly.

  Wayne just started sobbing. Big fat tears rolled down his face. “I just want to die now,” he said. “Why can’t I die?”

  “Did you try to kill yourself again?” I asked.

  “I took all my clonazepam,” he wailed. “I should be dead. Why aren’t I dead?”

  Kara leaned over and put a hand on Wayne’s shoulder. “It gets easier,” Kara whispered.

  “Really?” Wayne sobbed.

  “Yeah,” Kara said.

  “Wayne,” I said. “It’s not your time to die. I think you know that. You can’t change things, so you have to accept them. You have to accept them and work to make today a better day. So what goal can you set to make today a better day?”

  “I don’t know,” Wayne said.

  “What do you like doing, Wayne?” I asked.

  “I like to play cards,” Wayne said.

  “What do you think, Kara? Can you help Wayne accomplish his goal of playing cards today?”

  Kara nodded enthusiastically.

  “I just miss them,” Wayne said. “Every day I miss them.”

  “I know you do, sweetie, but you know how you feel right now?” I said.

  “Yeah,” he said.

  “Do you want to make your daughter feel like you feel now? Do you want to leave her all alone?”

  “No, I can’t do that,” he said firmly.

  “Then you gotta get it together and accept that they are gone. You gotta play cards with Kara here today and keep your mind on the positive. Focus on everything good you got left in your life.”

  Wayne nodded and I wrote a few notes before I looked at the next person in the circle. It was Brenda Belhaven’s turn to talk. Morning group is supposed to be a time for patients to set daily goals and discuss their feelings, but as soon as Brenda Belhaven launched off into an unfortunate tirade, I knew there was gonna be no therapy for her.

  “Ya’ll need to let us smoke,” she began. Shit. Brenda had been on the floor fourteen times and she kept coming back, so she obviously liked it. But all she ever did was yell about the no smoking policy.

  “And let me tell you that nighttime nurse, Shaquella, is an evil bitch from Hell. I couldn’t sleep last night and I told her I was going to lose it if she didn’t call the doctor and get me something and she said she was gonna call the police on me if I didn’t go back to bed, so I had to sit up all night long in that damn bed. I haven’t slept in four days and that bitch won’t do a damn thing to help me …”

  I cut her off. That’s my job. “What coping skills can you use to deal with this situation?” I asked.

  “I can kick her ass,” Brenda said.

  “And will that get you what you want?” I asked.

  “No. But it sure will feel good.” The group laughed.

  “Will it be worth it?”

  “Hell no!” Brenda said.

  “So what positive coping skills can you use to make this work to your advantage?”

  The group went on in this manner. Sorrow and complaints lay at my feet like so many discarded socks. It was going to be a long day. I snuck into my office after group and took three ibuprofen. I put my head in my hands. There were three patients waiting for me in the ER and we had no beds. That meant I had to try to find someplace to stick them or try to sucker them into signing a no harm agreement, so we wouldn’t be liable if they offed themselves. I took a deep breath and sucked down a little more diet cola. The animal crackers had mixed with the pop in my stomach to form a kind of cement. I felt sick, but that was an everyday thing. I should probably eat better.

  I grabbed my clipboard and made my way down to the ER. I looked at the screen. Half the beds taken in the ER were psychiatric beds. I often found myself wondering what was wrong with the world. Why did everyone seem to want to die? People said it was the economy or tough times, but it just seemed like it was deeper than that. People in our little town were just getting sadder. Dismal wasn’t much, but it was my home and always had been and it broke my heart to see the people I’d grown up with giving up on life. Not everyone here was from Dismal. Beds were scarce and when there are no beds in their own towns, people go to where they think there might be beds, so oftentimes we had people from all over Alabama and parts of Tennessee, but that was even more depressing, because that meant the problem wasn’t just with Dismal.

  Dismal sounds like a terrible place to live. The name speaks of sorrow, but it wasn’t always like this. Once upon a time, Dismal was a tourist destination. People came from all around to see Dismal’s Gorge just a mile north of town. They came to see the largest canyon east of the Mississippi where the Dismalites lived, wrapped in a kind of supernatural infamy. At night, the canyon lights up with glowing creatures that line the canyon wall like stars. The Indians thought the Dismalites were like fairies that brought magic and good luck. In truth, they are the bioluminescent larval stage of a rare bug that only lives in Dismal’s Gorge. At one time, they brought Dismal fame and travelers, but no one cares about bioluminescent slugs anymore and Disneyland is much better than Alabama, so Dismal has slowly choked to death until it looked like its name, dismal.

  I sighed and leaned onto the nurses’ station’s desk.

  “Hey, girl,” I said and I winked at Diane.

  “Hey. How you doing?” Diane, the charge nurse, asked.

  “The usual,” I answered.

  “That bad?”

  I laughed. I’d known Diane forever. She and I had been frie
nds in high school. She was a tall, thin woman with high cheekbones and bright green eyes. Her skin was clear and white and her straight, black hair was cut short. She always wore bright red lipstick and scrubs with Halloween decorations on them. She wore the Halloween scrubs all year round. Even at Easter she’d be wearing cute little witch scrubs or black cat scrubs.

  “Your boyfriend’s here,” Diane whispered.

  “Would you shut up,” I said in a hiss.

  “Oh, please, like everyone here doesn’t know you would kill to go out with Dr. McHottie.”

  “His name is Dr. Becket, thank you very much, and everyone here does not know that.”

  “Fine,” Diane said as she rolled her eyes at me.

  At that moment, Dr. Becket stepped out of one of the ER rooms. Dr. Becket was perfect as far as I could tell. He was very tall and lean. He ran marathons and did triathlons and his build was sculpted into perfection by his religious physical regime. He had sandy blond hair that fell over his blue eyes, making them seem even bluer. His skin was dark from the sun and when he smiled, my heart skipped a beat. He wasn’t just beautiful. He was perfect in every way. He was nice when the other doctors were snarky. He cared about the patients. He was the medical director of the hospitalist group, which meant he made a pretty good living. He liked to read. He was born in Wales and moved to the States when he was a boy. He had the subtlest hint of a Welsh accent that just drove me crazy.

  Of course, every single woman in Dismal knew that Dr. Becket was perfect, and they swarmed him whenever he was around. They fluttered around him like groupies. They hung on his every word, perpetually hoping that they would become Mrs. Dr. McHottie. All the pretty blonde nurses lingered where he walked, hoping he would look their way.

  I had no hopes and I hated swarms, so I had no part in the other women’s behavior. I was realistic about myself. There was a time, in my early twenties, when I’d been slim enough to be moderately attractive. I certainly had managed to attract the biggest losers around and managed to marry one of them. I’d never been beautiful and after a horrible marriage and a terrible divorce, I’d let my butt sag and had given up my exercise routine for a routine of TV and Cheetos that seemed much less complicated. I also had no intentions of getting involved with any more men. I’d dated enough to know that I had no sense when it came to men and if I started dating again, I would surely end up with a serial killer or child rapist.

 

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