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WITCHES KNOT

WITCHES KNOT

Author: : danely
Genre: Fantasy
Lee Charvez is a witch in a family where all of the women are born with inherent gifts of power. She is a witch dreamer, she has the ability to walk in dreams and the subconscious and to work magic there. There is only one Charvez witch dreamer each generation and she's the strongest in generations. She meets the man of her dreams, literally, when she bumps into Aidan Bell outside their apartment building in New Orleans. He's a three-hundred-year-old vampire with the face of a wicked angel, and he has no problem with claiming her as his own. As if that isn't miraculous enough there's another man, a powerful wizard, Alex Carter, who makes their partnership into a triad. Problem is, there's no time to sit back and enjoy her newfound loves because there's a demon out to destroy the source of her powers, and her entire family in the bargain.

Chapter 1 ONE

Amelia Charvez sat in the window seat of her New Orleans apartment and looked out over the courtyard below. The sounds of the water gurgling in the fountain floated up on the wind. She breathed deeply and took a sip of the red wine that her sister Emily had brought by earlier in the day.

"Lee, come in here and tell me what you think of this sauce," Em called out to her from the kitchen.

Lee stood up and sauntered into the kitchen and tasted the sauce for the redfish her sister was making them for dinner. "More garlic and black pepper, I think," she murmured.

"What's going on with you?" Em asked as she tossed in another clove of garlic and ground some pepper over the pan. "You seem distracted."

"I am. There's something up, something on the wind. I've been dreaming a lot."

"The tall, golden-haired man again?"

"Yeah." Lee shivered at the mention of the man who'd been haunting her dreams for the last two months straight.

"You need to have a reading. This sauce is gonna have to simmer for another half an hour anyway, go down to the shop and have Tante Lou give you one. Go on. I've never seen you so distracted before."

Lee started to argue but shrugged her shoulders, giving in to her sister's suggestion.

"Why not?" She put on her sandals and ran her fingers through her hair to try to tame the curly mass. "I'll be back," she called out as she walked out and down the steps into the lushly appointed courtyard. She breathed deeply of the sweet greenery and pushed through the black iron gate that led out to the street.

Lee walked from her apartment on the edge of the quarter the several blocks until she emerged into the heart of the French Quarter, with its music and magic in the air. She walked two more blocks to her grandmother's shop and went inside, feeling calmer immediately as the scent of incense hit her nose and the familiar surroundings came into view.

"Sugar! I knew you was coming in! You need a reading, yeah?" her Tante Lou called out as Lee walked through the black velvet curtains that separated the shop from where her aunt held readings in the back.

"You must be psychic," Lee joked and grinned at her aunt and dropped a kiss to her cheek. She sat down on the small loveseat, tucking her feet beneath her bottom. Tante Lou took her hand and ran her thumbs over the palm gently, soothing her.

"You been dreaming, yeah?" she asked, eyes closed. "Sug, you are facing some big changes. A man, golden-haired and powerful, he comes. He is part of you." Lou was quiet for a bit, breathing slowly. Lee waited patiently for her aunt to continue. "But that does not complete the circuit."

She opened her eyes and looked at Lee. "Lee, honey, this man, he is nothing to fear. But you do have some powerful things to face, some of them dark, very dark. I can't see a whole lot, watch yourself. Practice. You have a lot of power, you simply need to hone it, to use it. You know we've been feeling some rather disturbing energy lately. The energy your grandmere and I have been feeling is dark and cold. Threatening. You'll need to watch out."

Lee knew this, she'd had her dreams and also some conversations with her grandmere about it. New Orleans was a hotbed of magic, which made it a great place for her to be but it was a dangerous thing as well. There was so much old and powerful magic there, just waiting to be tapped into, it often attracted those who were less than responsible with it.

"So to cap up, I'm gonna meet a guy who is my other half and that's good, but there is some supernatural shit coming down the pike?" Lee asked bluntly.

"Not your other half exactly." Tante Lou hesitated, reaching for the proper words.

"He is part of you, you are part of him and you are meant to be with each other. But there's more, I can't say what. It is good though. The other, yes, bad doodoo."

Lee laughed and kissed her aunt's cheek and got up and went back out front. She greeted her cousin, grabbing a pack of spring rain incense and some tea and dropping money on the counter, and headed home.

* * * * *

After dinner with her sister, Lee sat in her window seat and stared out into the night. This dark power on the horizon posed a big threat to them all and she knew she had a responsibility to deal with it. Her power didn't come for free, she knew that as an inherent witch, she had a duty to use her gifts to protect those who needed them. Problem was, she knew what she had to do and it entailed swallowing her pride and calling her mother and restarting the training she'd set aside years before. It wasn't like she'd totally rejected her power, she did small magics from time to time, she knew she had the raw power. She needed help in using it effectively. Sighing resignedly, she picked up the phone and called home.

"Maman?"

"I've been waiting for you to call, cher. Tomorrow, eleven o'clock. Come out to the house, we will start. Lock your doors. Je t'aime," her mother said, sounding imperious, and hung up.

Lee looked at the phone and with a wry smile, hung up and checked the locks and went to bed. Her mother was a no-nonsense woman and a very no-nonsense witch. The women in the Charvez family were born with magical gifts. Some, like Tante Lou and her grandmere, could read the future. Some, like her sister Emily and her cousin, could read people, their intentions, their wants, hopes, dreams. And the most powerful and rare of all were the witch dreamers.

A witch dreamer was able to work magic both awake and in her dreams. They also had a touch of clairvoyance, could see snatches of future events occurring as waking dreams or while unconscious. The witch dreamer could dream walk, she could project herself into the subconscious of others and work her magic there. There were only three living witch dreamers, it was an exceptionally rare gift. It seemed to be singular to the Charvez women-Lee, her mother and her great-aunt Elise-just one woman a generation.

Lee had accepted that but hadn't done a whole lot to hone her power. Against her family's wishes she'd gone off to college at Tulane, refusing to believe that she had only one path for her life. As conciliation to the family, she'd planned to go to graduate school, to get her MBA so she could help run the shop, but she'd gotten distracted. Distracted by art, something she never thought she'd have the talent for. But now, two years later, she'd built up a steady customer base and two shops on Royal Street had her paintings in the front windows. It was a good living, enough to pay her rent and allow for a nest egg, and she could still do her part in the running of the shop.

* * * * *

Lee thought about all of this on her way over to her parents' home. Thought about her responsibility, the legacy of the Charvez magic. And she realized that she had a lot to learn, a lot to be taught and she felt a twinge of guilt for waiting so long to truly figure that out.

Still, all of that worry fell away when she caught sight of the house. The house on First Street was the house Lee grew up in, the place she and her siblings were born. Before that, her grandparents had lived there. It generally passed down from oldest daughter to oldest daughter and would be hers someday but she had no plans to kick her parents out, she quite enjoyed the privacy of her two-bedroom apartment in the French Quarter. She loved her mother but it was easier to love her from a bit of a distance.

She breathed deeply and took in the heady smells of New Orleans in the early summer. It was hot and moist and burgeoning with the heady, fecund scent of flowers and trees, grass and dirt. Nature was tangible, it hung in the air. As always, there was the underlying scent of power and death from Lafayette Cemetery just a few blocks away. No place on earth smelled as heavenly, as magical and heady, as New Orleans did.

Lee parked in the driveway and walked around the back and in through the kitchen. She called out a greeting and kissed Georgie, the woman who managed the household and had since before Lee was born. Georgie was a cook, a maid, a social planner and a member of the family. She murmured her greetings to Lee and stuffed a plum into her hand. "Eat it, girl, you getting too skinny."

Lee smiled wryly and bit into the juicy plum and her eyes slid shut at the pleasure of the sweet juice bursting over her tongue and sliding down her throat. "Oh good lord, this is so good."

"Off my tree. Stop by before you go, I'll make sure you get a few jars of my jam and one of the tarts I made this morning."

"You are too good to me," Lee said with a grin.

"Your mama is in the front room. She's waiting for you."

Lee winked at Georgie and walked through after tossing the plum pit into the trash and wiping off her hands and chin. The house was cool and calm as she walked through to the front room where she saw her mother sitting in a wingback chair near the windows overlooking the front lawn and garden.

She bent and kissed her mother's cheeks and flopped on the floor at her feet and rested her head on her mother's knees. Her relationship with her mother had always been complicated. Marie Charvez was a powerful woman, a powerful witch, and she knew that her daughter was as well. She took a great deal of pride from the fact that she'd birthed a witch dreamer with so much potential and she'd pushed Lee hard for most of her young life. So hard that at times Lee felt more like a project than a daughter. Things had come to a head when Lee had decided to go off to college rather than pursue her training. She and her mother hadn't spoken for nearly six months and it had been the most difficult time of her life. Slowly, with the steadfast urging of her father and Tante Elise, she and her mother had come back together with a better understanding of each other. Years later, Lee felt that the time spent apart and then struggling to meet each other as mother and daughter had made them closer than they would have been had she stayed and been obedient to her mother's master plan.

"Good morning, Maman."

"Good morning, cher. You look lovely today. The humidity is making your hair curl up even more than it usually does. You look wild and tousled," her mother said quietly, with amusement in her voice. She sat up, her tone turning businesslike. "You will come to me, each day at eleven. We have a lot of work to do. I feel something in the air. I've been dreaming a lot. Something powerful is..." she broke off, trying to define what she meant.

"Surging. No, surfacing," Lee said hesitantly, searching for the right words to describe what she'd been feeling.

"Yes. As always, there are currents of power here. We all recognize each other, the white path is stronger than the dark one but we keep to our places and behave, it is the order of things. Lately, the dark, it is rising, yes, surfacing is a good enough word. You must work to harness your power. I've spent a lot of energy over the last ten years, shielding you from things. I cannot any longer. Your power is like a spotlight, Lee, it is blinding, it attracts the eye. You are the strongest of us in generations but you must learn to handle it, to wield it. I fear that you will have to."

Lee felt a frisson of fear but a certainty that her mother was right. "Okay. I'll be here."

"Let's get started. You know rudimentary spells, the basics. What I want to do is show you how to unleash your power, to slowly let out the reins and then harness it and reel it back in. It's a lot like making you play scales, yes? Necessary. You need to feel your power under your hands, you need to feel it so you can learn to manipulate it, how to control it, how to unleash it."

Her mother pulled the curtains closed and lit some incense. "You know it isn't necessary to do all of this, your power is there without ritual, but it's nice to give a bit of respect to it when you can," she said in her rich melodic tones. "I want you to draw a circle of protection around us, always use one if you have the time. When your power has been dormant for so long and you unleash it you will attract some-how do you say?-onlookers. Most are harmless but never forget where you are, cher." Her mother handed her the pouch of sand and watched while Lee said the words and drew a circle around them. Lee felt the hair on her arms raise and a chill run down her spine as she closed it and her mother looked at her, eyebrows raised.

Lee sat down cross-legged before her mother and listened carefully to her instructions. She exhaled slowly and sank into herself, pulling away the shields she normally had up between her power and her daily life. She reached down and connected with her power, with the earth, and felt it surge up, her soul would be the conduit. An electric hum filled her ears and subsided as she let the power roll over her, through her. She reached down and grasped the energy and pulled it out of herself. It flooded out, wave after wave until she felt as if she were floating in it. She opened her eyes and saw her mother's face, eyes wide, and realized she was floating in it. She was about half a foot off the ground.

"Cast yourself out, Lee, I want you to sense what's going on around you. Leave this house on your power."

Lee let go of her metaphysical self and it poured out through the house, where she saw Georgie in the kitchen, humming, wearing an amulet of protection, then out of the house and through the neighborhood. She touched some other spots of power, nothing overwhelming. Minor psychics, though many of them probably didn't even know it. She edged around the cemetery and saw more clearly the things she felt as she passed through normally. There were dark spots, someone was practicing some dark magic, there were light spots there too. The place was a city of the dead but it was also a place of power.

As she flowed outward she felt a tugging. Lee focused on it but it felt sticky like a spider web. Alarmed, she circled back and headed back into herself, reining her power back in. As she did she felt a presence, someone was watching her. Some thing was watching her. It chilled her. She felt like someone was taking her measure, examining her. Instinctively, she lashed out at it and sent it reeling. She came back to herself and saw her mother's worried face.

"What was that?" Lee asked in a whisper.

Her mother held up a hand to silence her. Her lips were moving. She was working a spell. A dark shadow fell over the house. Lee's hands joined with her mother's and she lent her mother power. She felt her mother pull it into herself and felt it build as she continued with the words. Lee could feel the presence of something truly evil, dark and malevolent. Its manifestation was like oil, sticky and toxic. She sent more power to her mother and at the same time lashed out at the encroaching presence like a whip. She felt her power strike the dark power and only just kept herself from recoiling in repulsion as her power touched the darkness. But it was enough and the malevolence receded. Moments later her mother's eyes opened and she looked at Lee, worried. "We held it off." This time was the unspoken end of the sentence.

"What was it?"

"I've felt a lot of black magic in my life, but I haven't felt anything remotely like this since I was very young and my Tante Elise was training me. It knows you now, it knows me. I'm going to call Tante Elise and have her help you ward your apartment and reward the shop and this house. We must be vigilant, and, Lee, you must continue to train because I fear you will have to deal with this, whatever it is."

Her mother looked toward the door where just down the hall they could hear Georgie working and she looked back to Lee. "Perhaps we shouldn't train here. Georgie's amulet might work for run-of-the-mill dark magic but what I felt earlier, I was glad to be in the circle. We can't count on the source of this power to obey the rules about innocents."

Lee shuddered at the idea of their friend being harmed. "You're right. We can train in the shop. It would be better anyway to have that many powerful women close at hand."

They worked on some protection spells for another few hours and enjoyed some tea and gossip in the kitchen. Lee felt a bit better armed when she got up to leave. "I need to go. Tante Elise is meeting me at my apartment in a bit to help with the wards. I'll see you at the shop tomorrow." Lee bent to kiss her mother and Georgie and left them both, still sitting at the table, drinking sweet tea.

* * * * *

Her Tante Elise was waiting for her, sitting on the stone bench in the courtyard. She was looking down at the wool in her hands, knitting like a fiend, her still-dark hair held back in the neat bun she habitually wore at the back of her head. The birds had clustered close by. It had been like that for as long as Lee could remember. Tante Elise called to the wild things wherever she went. Birds, butterflies, dogs, cats, whatever was around.

Chapter 2 TWO

Smiling, Lee went to the older woman and hugged her, kissing her cheeks. She unlocked the door, but before she could step inside Tante Elise held out a hand to stop her, shaking her head. "Feel it, cher. Go in first and feel it, make sure there are no dark spots, yes?"

Lee nodded and quickly let down her shielding. She sent her power into her apartment, rolling it through the rooms, feeling for any traps or problems. She discovered a small dark spot and, puzzled, she turned to her great-aunt who nodded and said, "Get rid of it."

Lee reached out with her power and grabbed that dark spot. She surrounded it with light, balled it up and it dissipated. She felt Tante Elise's power come in behind her and sweep through. The apartment felt better, cleaner. She came back to herself and Tante Elise nodded and they went inside, closing the door behind them.

"What was that?" Lee asked.

"Something dark has been here, not very long because it was just a small spot. You got rid of it, I can't feel anything else. You did well."

"Something evil was in my apartment?" She was creeped out. Lee pulled out a chair for her great-aunt to sit in.

Tante Elise looked at Lee critically. "I can see that we've waited long enough to talk to you about all of the things you need to know," she said nodding decisively. "Lee, I fear that you have never really been impressed with just how powerful you are. Oh, sure you know you are a witch dreamer and therefore have power, but you don't understand the depth of it.

"Your grandmere and I wanted you to have a bit of time to find your way back to us, to accept who you are and she was right of course, that if pressed you would have balked and now that you are accepting, you are growing by lengths. Think of your power, of all power, like lights in the dark. They attract attention, bugs and other things wish to cluster 'round. The light brightens the way through the darkness. It's warm, inviting. But there are darker things out there than the feeble little dark magic practitioners who wish to hurl curses and illness, these darker things feed on the light, on the power that others have. The more power, the more attractive."

Lee went to grab something cool to drink for her and Tante Elise sighed and nodded in appreciation when Lee set a cool glass of tea before her and set the air conditioner and ceiling fans. "Charvez women are strong, you know this. Be they healers or seers or readers or, like you and me and your maman, witch dreamers. We have always been an attraction to the less than wholesome things in this world. Mainly we have been left alone because we are so powerful, especially as a unit. But this time is different. While our power as a family is important, your power as a witch dreamer is the key here."

Lee looked at her with surprise but Tante Elise held her hand up to command silence and continued.

"Cher, from the moment you were born, I knew you were the most powerful witch our family has seen since my great-grandmother was a child. Seven generations ago was the last time we saw power such as yours. I felt you today, I expect all who have any kind of power felt you today. You unfurled the total extent of your power for the first time ever and you rode it. But even before you released it, when it was shielded and bottled up, it was still there. Your mother has done her best to screen you from onlookers, but it can't be totally hidden."

Tante Elise exhaled slowly. "I fear that something truly dark, something truly malevolent, is out there in New Orleans right now. It is only awakening but it knows you, it knows us and you must train to meet and vanquish it. I know, it sounds melodramatic but there it is. With power comes responsibility. The Charvez women have served to protect the innocents for generations and that's our job, your job."

"Our job? So I'm like the chosen one or something?" Lee responded glibly. Tante Elise laughed and patted her arm. "You aren't quite as fashionable. But in a way, yes. You won't fight vampires every night and face the end of the world at the end of every May, but we have a pact of sorts, a compact, which charges us with the protection of innocents here in the area. It was made a very long time ago to protect ourselves, to protect our neighbors from evil. It's worked."

"A pact? With who? What about? How come I didn't know about this?"

"I expect that your maman felt that it wasn't time yet. Each witch dreamer is told when she is able to take up the mantle of power from the last. Your maman was in her late twenties when I judged her ready."

Lee was reeling from all that she was hearing.

Tante Elise took a drink of her tea and continued. "You know of course that the Charvez women are all born with gifts. It has been this way for generations. In 1773

Annalisa Charvez was a witch-" Tante Elise shrugged her shoulders, "-not unusual, of course, for us. She was a healer. She delivered the babies, healed toothaches, made tinctures and tonics for the locals. The locals trusted her to protect their health.

"She was coming back to her house after being out at a shack in the middle of the swamps for two days delivering a baby. She stumbled upon a being of light under attack from a being of darkness. Annalisa intervened, and using her powers combined with those of the other creature, they conquered the creature of the dark, a demon lord, and saved the angel.

"When the angel gained the upper hand with the demon it created the Compact. Until the extinction of the Charvez line, each generation of girl children would be born with gifts to protect the people of whatever area they inhabited. One of those girl children per generation, and only one of them, would be their chief protector, a witch who could wield her magic in both waking hours and while asleep. The demon did not wish to agree but it was trapped, and the angel used that to force an accord and the Compact was born."

Tante Elise reached out and grasped both of Lee's hands. "You are the protector of this generation, Lee. It is your job, your sworn obligation to use your power to defend the innocents here in New Orleans. It is a heavy mantle to carry but I have faith in you, Lee. I have faith in your strength, your loyalty and your power. You will beat whatever this is. And it has to be you. A witch dreamer was the first to defeat the demon, it has to be the same now."

Lee stared at her great-aunt, dumbfounded and a bit awestruck. "So uh, I'm like a superhero? Do I quit my day job and superhero full time now?"

Tante Elise laughed. "Your life won't change for the most part. You'll continue to paint and to work at the shop and to be the vibrant woman you are, you'll just have another facet, that's all."

"Another facet?" She'd run from it for a long time, the truth was that the afternoon had left her feeling energized, powerful. Unfurling her power felt right. "So what do I have to do?"

"Nothing special really. You just keep working with me and your maman. I think having all of us work together would be a good thing. Your maman said you fed her power this afternoon?"

"Well, she was working a spell, I let some of my power flow to her."

"Did she tell you how?"

"No, I just touched her and sent it to her." She shrugged. Tante Elise eyed her shrewdly. "Not very many witches can do that, you know, it's difficult to control. If you can do it so effortlessly, I think that we will be very powerful indeed." She stood and motioned around the apartment. "First things first. You must always sweep your apartment before you enter as I showed you earlier. It's basic security, you never know what is lying in wait for you, yes?"

Lee nodded. "Of course. I feel stupid for not thinking of it before."

Tante Elise let that go with a small smirk. "Let's get to work then, shall we?"

They spent the two hours warding her apartment and then walked over to the shop to redo the wards there. Lee took over at four to do her shift as well. At closing time she locked up and stood out front with her sister and cousins. The older women were all upstairs watching Jeopardy! . She and her cousins decided that they'd all go to dinner and dancing, the day was lovely and the night was sultry. It called for some serious fun.

Chapter 3 THREE

As Lee got dressed she couldn't keep her eyes off her new purchase hanging on the wall in her bedroom. Earlier in the day, she'd gone in to one of the shops on Royal where her paintings were on commission and had spent three hundred dollars because a painting had pulled at her. There was something incredibly compelling about it, it spoke to her, drew her in. She placed it in her bedroom, across from the bed so that she could look at it as she was going to sleep.

It was very modern, an explosion of color and emotion, something she wouldn't normally have liked much less spent that kind of money on, but she knew she couldn't have left the shop without it. After she'd changed into a flirty sundress and some sandals, she pulled her heavy hair back to the nape of her neck with a silver clip, careful to not catch the amulet that her mother had given her on her tenth birthday. She reached up to trace the stylized circle of three bent sevens wrought from silver that hung between her breasts. It was special. According to her mother, Annalisa Charvez, one of her foremothers had worn it. Of course now that she knew the whole story about the Compact and Annalisa's part in it, it felt even more special to her.

On the way out to her car, she pulled a sprig of jasmine off a bush and tucked it into her hair and breathed the night air into her lungs.

Walking around the corner to the garage, she had been watching the color of the night sky deepening and the stars beginning to wink, and in not paying attention, slammed into someone.

"I'm sorry, I was looking up at the sky," she said in apology and looked up into the face of her victim.

He smiled down at her and she blinked up at him several times. "The color, when it goes from dusky blue to the deeper blue of night," he said, his voice smooth and thick, like honey. It rolled over her skin and sang to her very DNA. Everything in her life seemed to click into place, the moment was meant to be, fated. She was face to face with her partner, her heart. She was unafraid, excited.

It was him, the man from her dreams. He was tall, with a mane of golden hair, his eyes were chocolate brown, or at least that's what they looked like by the light of the streetlamp. "I'm Aidan, Aidan Bell. I just moved here from Chicago."

She cleared her throat, willing her voice to come back. Heat coursed over her body and moisture pooled, the man did things to her. "Uh, Amelia Charvez, Lee. Your name sounds familiar." It tickled the back of her brain until she remembered the painting she'd bought earlier that day. "Oh wait, do you paint? I bought one of your paintings today."

He smiled and her heart thudded so hard against her chest she was afraid he'd be able to hear it. "Yes, that's me. Your work is at Lenora's gallery too, right? Beautiful. I'm honored you like my work." He could hear her heart pounding in her chest and felt satisfied that she was as affected by this meeting as he was.

"I love it. It's very bold, vivid." No wonder it had called to her, it was an extension of his soul.

He stared at her for a moment and she felt his power run along her skin. He was more than human, she could feel it. Tentatively, she sent her own power back at him and caressed him with it. He gasped and looked at her, eyes widened.

"This is going to sound weird, but can I take you to dinner tonight? I've only just moved to town and I don't know very many people," he said, unable to stop himself from reaching out to touch a tendril of her hair that had escaped the clip. That little touch sent heat coursing through her body. When she found her voice she was proud that it didn't sound breathy. "Well, actually, I have plans to go to dinner and go dancing to some live music with some of my family. Would you like to join us?"

"Are you sure they won't mind? I haven't been much of anywhere but the French Quarter. I did a walking tour of the Garden District the other day but not much else."

"I'm sure. Jacques-Imo is here in the French Quarter but Maple Leaf is out a bit more, not too far. I can give you a guided tour of the Garden District if you like, I grew up there. Where do you live, by the way?"

He pointed to her building. "Here. I moved into number four a few days ago. I have been in Lafayette for the last two days though, dealing with some business matters."

She looked back to the large mansion that had been made into apartments. "You live right above me," she said with a smile. She was totally drawn to this man, she felt safe with him in a way she'd never felt with anyone before.

"Oh? Well, it's nice to have such beautiful neighbors. I've only met Mrs. Ellis and while she and her yappy dog are nice enough, you are certainly more pleasant to look at."

She laughed and hit the garage door opener. "Shall we then?" She motioned to the car.

"Yes, let's." He squeezed himself into the car, navigating the narrow space between the door and the wall and she pulled back out.

She stopped four blocks away and picked up her sister, who cast an interested look at Aidan and got in the backseat.

"Emily Charvez, this is Aidan Bell, my new neighbor and a fellow painter. Aidan, this is my sister, Em."

Aidan smiled back at the willowy raven-haired woman. She watched him through big green eyes that sparked with intelligence and no small amount of curiosity. "Hi, Aidan," Em said with a sly smile and a discreetly raised eyebrow at her sister.

"Everyone is going to meet us at the restaurant."

"Okay," Lee said and guided the car to Oak Street, and after a few minutes of concentrating by both women, a spot only a block away opened up and Lee pulled in with a satisfied smile.

"Wow, the parking gods must be with you. What a great spot," Aidan said with satisfaction as he got out of the car.

"Yeah, something like that." Lee winked at her sister. They walked up to the front of the restaurant and saw that the usual crowd was gathering. The place was so good that it always had a long waitlist for a table. Luckily, as it went with parking spots, so it went with restaurants and a table was waiting for them. They got seated and ordered drinks and the others began to show up, all with interested glances at Aidan. Aidan was confused, curious and aroused. The woman beside him was the most alluring he'd ever met. He had no idea how to tell her he'd been dreaming of her for months or that he'd pulled up stakes in Chicago and headed south to New Orleans because his grandmother told him to pursue his dream woman. Half of him hadn't believed her, but there she was, and right underneath his nose. He felt a total connection to her, like she was right for him, made for him. He felt a strong power in her, just barely beneath her skin, but he had no idea of how to broach the subject with her. He mentally snorted when he thought of it. So, I'm a vampire, I've been having these dreams about you. I sense you and I are meant to be together. It seems like you are more than human, like me. What are you?

The table was filled with Lee's siblings and cousins. Aidan looked at them as they interacted with each other. There was a lot of general good cheer between them all, a sort of ease that one only finds in a large family very rarely. They clearly loved and respected each other. He'd been surprised to meet Lee's brothers Eric and Niall. Unlike the dark-haired Em, they had sandy blond hair but the younger one had the same fey features that Lee had.

"So, Aidan, what brings you to New Orleans?" Lee's twin brother, Eric, asked, bringing Aidan out of his thoughts.

Lee rolled her eyes.

Aidan laughed. There had been several pointed, personal questions since they'd arrived. "I wanted a change, I've been feeling a need to move, to get out of a rut. My painting can be done anywhere really. My grandmother, she's the matriarch of my family, she suggested New Orleans. I visited and fell in love." He shrugged.

"So is your family ruled by women too?" Eric asked with a chuckle.

"Well, by my grandmother really. Why? Is yours?"

Lee's brothers laughed. "That is an understatement."

Lee looked into his chocolate eyes. "The women in our family are all very powerful. Not that the men aren't, it's just different. All are successful, intelligent people who are loved and respected by the women in my family."

"You said the women are powerful. Powerful how?"

She rolled her power over his skin like a cool caress, rolled it through him, wrapped it around him. His eyes widened and fluttered closed for a moment and then locked with hers, and she felt his power. Where hers was cool, his was warm, sultry where hers was crisp. Lee's power smelled clean, earthy, sharp like pine trees and a mountain stream. Aidan's was like honey, velvet, it rolled over her arms and legs, across her neck. She realized at last, what exactly his energy, his otherness was.

"I see," she said in a whisper.

He knew she was powerful but still didn't know exactly why. He did see that she knew what he was and made a mental note to speak with her about it when they were alone. He was relieved to see that she didn't seem frightened or repulsed by what he was, although from what he could feel, with power like hers there was very little in the world that she had to be frightened of.

Everyone was staring and then went back to their conversations and happy oohs and aahs when the food came. Afterwards, feeling full and satisfied, they all drove over to the Maple Leaf, where things were just getting started. They grabbed a patio table, it being already ridiculously hot and crowded inside.

"Shall we?" Aidan asked, pointing at the couples dancing on the sidewalk.

"Sounds good," she said and he took her off with a flourish and they joined the dancing couples under the stars.

As they danced, Aidan saw that her sister was deep in conversation with her brothers. They were obviously talking about him as they looked over to where he and Lee were dancing several times.

"Your family's staring," Aidan said into her ear.

Lee looked over his shoulder and smiled at him. "They're just trying to figure out if you're a threat to me."

"What do you think?"

"I think you're safe, even if you do need to take blood to live," she said.

"So you guessed huh? How much do you know about vampires?"

"I don't know very much. There are some here, of course. There's a bit of everything in New Orleans." She shrugged. "Shifters, vampires, ghosts, demons, witches, you name it, it's here."

"And what are you?"

"I'm a witch, a witch dreamer to be exact." He looked confused and she explained further. "A witch dreamer is a witch with a touch of clairvoyance. We have vivid dreams, often of future events or of people who are going to come into our lives. We can walk in dreams, go into other people's dreams and their subconscious. We can wield magic in dreams as well as in waking hours."

"Have you been walking in my dreams?"

"No. Generally, it's not something we do without permission, barring a threat. It's considered an offensive act, unnecessarily aggressive. Sometimes though, the dreams

just happen and connect two people who are meant to be brought together for some reason. I have been dreaming of you for the last two months," she said, looking up at him.

They stared into each other's eyes for a long moment and she felt like he could see right down to her soul. She felt understood, not just in the sense of him being something more than simply human, but also like something inside of him recognized something inside of her. His hand was on her shoulder and his flesh against hers made her cells zing with life. She nearly felt giddy, being with him was so right, so good. Just having him touch her was deliriously wonderful. She'd never felt such a deep connection to anyone or anything in her life. This man was meant for her. The dreams were one thing, the reality was even better.

"I've been dreaming of you, too. I finally went to my grandmother over it, I was wondering if I was bespelled. She told me to come here."

"Oh, well, good," she said, a bit breathlessly.

"I can't believe I found you, that you are real." He touched her cheek with the back of his fingers and the electricity of the contact shot through her system.

"I'm glad you found me too, or that I found you. Whichever."

The rest of the evening passed in a haze for Lee, Aidan's very presence was soothing, relaxing. When everyone got up to go home Lee felt their regard for her and their curiosity about Aidan. Aidan stepped into the restroom and Em cornered her at the car.

"So? This is the dream man?" Em asked, her eyebrow raised. Lee nodded. "Yeah. It's..." She shrugged, unable to put into words how much it all was, what it meant.

"He's no threat to you. He loves you, that came through so clearly. You know I can't read you but you both feel right together." Em looked her sister over and nodded as if making up her mind.

Lee grinned and hugged her sister. "Thanks! I know that I felt it on my own, but it's nice to know that you've given him the thumbs-up. Makes me feel safer."

"He's safe. Different. I can't tell just what, but he would die before he hurt you."

Lee was always impressed by her sister's ability to read people so well and she trusted that ability without question. Em was a woman of few words, shy, but intensely loyal and intelligent and one of the most empathic witches alive. She dropped Em off at her apartment and they watched until she got safely inside and drove back to their building.

* * * * *

As they were walking around to the gates Lee felt it, the sickening shadow she'd felt earlier in the day.

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