Witches of Three_Seraphina

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Authors: Temple Hogan

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BOOK: Witches of Three_Seraphina
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Table of Contents

Title Page

Witches of Three: Seraphina Copyright © 2014 Temple Hogan

Book Description

Dedication

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

About the Author

Also Available from Resplendence Publishing

www.resplendencepublishing.com

Witches of Three: Seraphina

A
Witches of Three
Story

By Temple Hogan

Resplendence Publishing
R·>♦<·P
www.resplendencepublishing.com
Gems of Romantic Fiction

Witches of Three: Seraphina
Copyright © 2014 Temple Hogan
Edited by Delaney Sullivan and Jason Huffman

Cover Art by Les Byerley

Published by Resplendence Publishing, LLC
1093 A1A Beach Blvd, #146
St. Augustine, FL 32080

Electronic format ISBN: 978-1-60735-785-8

Warning: All rights reserved. The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to 5 years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000.

Electronic Release: June 2014

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and occurrences are a product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, places or occurrences, is purely coincidental.

Seraphina Spencer is the youngest of three sisters who just happen to be witches. Unlike her sisters, Sera tries her best to be normal and not use her powers until the day a handsome stranger shows up in her kitchen to fix her plumbing.

Jack Trent is an FBI agent who’s been on the trail of a slick conman who’s bilked millions of dollars from investors. A trace on a phone has led him to Sera Spencer whom Jack is convinced is either Mannie Somner’s girlfriend or his daughter. Only problem is, she’s either innocent of any knowledge of Somner’s crimes or she’s a great actress. Either way, Jack’s in trouble since he’s falling for her. And oh, yeah, she thinks she’s a witch and Jack is an Incubus.

This book is dedicated to all the great writers in our Grand Rapids Region Writers Group. Their dedication and hard work is an inspiration to any writer. Their willingness to share information, be it research or market information, is generous beyond belief, but most of all I love them for their laughter, sharp wits and amazing imaginations. If you’re a writer, the best person you can have for a friend is another writer. They understand!

Also to my terrific editor and my fantastic husband who’s the best hero I know!

 

Chapter One

 

 

 

Sera felt left out. Something she often experienced when she was around her two older sisters. Although they looked like triplets with their slim bodies, blue eyes and long blonde hair, and people said they were beautiful, especially Mums. But how could you trust a mother about such things? Mothers were always prejudiced in favor of their children, and Mums was fiercely so.

“Hey, grump puss, what are you moping about now?” Her sister, Charlotte, laughed, bumping her arm for emphasis.

Sera’s margarita sloshed over her fingers, and she licked at them, forcing a smile to show she was part of the threesome. But somehow, she knew she wasn’t.

Charlie had just gotten married two hours before to a handsome, sexy man who made her blush every time he looked at her. Charlie’s bridesmaids had been Sera and Philomena, or Phil as she was called by all, accompanied by her strapping, super guy, Beck, who she’d married the year before. Now the sisters lolled in patio chairs on the veranda of the country club where the reception was being held, their full, tulle skirts glittering in the moonlight. They’d sneaked off in their wedding finery to have a drink on their own and talk. Giggle was more like it, Sera thought sourly. Both women were positively giddy, and why not? They were in love and loved back and experiencing breath-stealing sex and sharing all their happiness with the world.

It wasn’t that Sera begrudged them their joy, but she wanted some too.

Charlie raised her head and looked at Sera sharply. Oh no. She’d forgotten Charlie could read minds and both sisters practiced their witchcraft with unbridled enthusiasm. Not Sera! Mums had told them as little girls they must not, and Sera being the good one and the smallest and Mums’ favorite had striven not to. Oh, she had once or twice so she knew she hadn’t lost the touch, but she’d felt so much guilt afterwards that she’d vowed never again.

“Poor, Sera,” Charlie said with real sympathy. “Phil, she hasn’t got anyone at all. We have to do something about that.”

“No!” Sera said quickly. “Don’t meddle in my life!” The words were spoken rather more stridently than Sera had intended so she softened her tone and smiled weakly. “You two have your own lives to worry about, don’t bother with me.” Did that sound mealy-mouthed or what? She tried again. “I’m sure one day, my own prince will come along and I’ll be as happy as you two are."

“Baby, there aren’t any princes who are going to come riding in on a white charger. Just regular, ordinary guys—well, not so ordinary,” Charlie amended and beamed shamelessly. “But you have to go out and look for them.”

“Yeah,” Phil chimed in.

“Beck fell on your front porch,” Sera said, attempting to tease her way out of her sister’s good intentions.

“Well, yes, he did,” Phil said laughing, “but I was out there looking for a long time.”

“I’m not interested in going that route,” Sera said, then realized she might have hurt Phil’s feelings. “Sorry, that came out the wrong way.”

Phil leaned over and kissed her on the cheek. “Oh, Pet, you’re always so serious.” She took a sip of her margarita and leaned closer so her eyes stared directly into her sister’s. “Tell me, how many men have you dated? Never mind that, let’s get down to the real issue. How many men have you bedded?”

Sera blushed to the roots of her hair. Oh, no. She didn’t have a chance. Phil and Charlie would ferret out her deepest secret. Charlie leaned close as well and stared into Sera’s eyes.

“My god, she’s a virgin!” Charlie exclaimed. “Well, no wonder she’s so uptight and dresses like a Sunday School teacher, never mind the tight-assed way she walks.”

“Cool it, Charlie,” Phil snapped. “She doesn’t need your over-the-top comments. She’s scared!”

“I am not!” Sera denied.

“It doesn’t hurt, quite the opposite, in fact. It’s…it’s…” Charlie paused, searching for a word. “It’s divine. It’s something once you’ve done it, you can’t live without it.” A look of speculation crossed her feature. “You have masturbated, haven’t you? I mean if you’ve masturbated, then you kind of know how real sex feels except it’s so much better with a guy.”

Sera’s face flamed. Again! And she leaped to her feet. Phil jumped up and put an arm around her shoulders.

“Don’t let Charlie upset you. You know how she is. She has Nick now, and she thinks the rest of the world should be so lucky. I kind of feel that way too now that I have Beck in my life, and we just want that for you, not just the sex, but sex is the first priority. If you aren’t compatible with someone physically, things will never work out. Sit down and let’s talk.” Phil pushed Sera into the chair.

“Now then,” she said to Charlie. “What are we going to do about this?”

They sat thinking, and Sera thought about using her witchcraft to zap herself away, far away, from her impossible sisters.

“I know,” Charlie said, snapping her fingers.

She really was lovely, Sera thought, in her bridal gown with her long, blonde hair tumbling about her shoulders. For that matter, Phil looked spectacular in the softest, pale-pink bridesmaid’s dress. Sera couldn’t say the same for herself. She hated pink. She looked like a boiled turnip, a pink boiled turnip to be exact, but she hadn’t objected when the color was chosen. Now she sat thinking about what she might have said to her sisters. I hate pink. I don’t want to wear it. I look horrible in it.

“What?” Phil asked impatiently, her tone sharp enough to break through Sara’s reverie.

“We’ll get her an Incubus!” Charlie exclaimed. Now she had everyone’s attention, especially Sera’s.

“You mean Succubus?” she asked faintly. “Even if I’m a virgin, I know I don’t bend that way.”

“Not a Succubus, you goose,” Phil said lovingly. “A Succubus lies with men, an Incubus makes love to women.” She looked back at Charlie.

“I don’t know,” she said, “I’ve heard Incubi are hard to manage.”

“What’s to manage? We want one to come make love to our Sera and teach her everything about sex. She’s a virgin for god’s sake, and we have to take drastic measures. And all of the above is what they do.”

“I don’t want to take drastic measures,” Sera said, feeling her alarm mount.

“Yes, but some are pretty unsavory characters,” Phil said over Sera so no one heard her. “I’ve heard they suck the life right out of their victims.”

“Oh, no, thank you, but I’m not interested,” Sera tried again, speaking softly as was her habit.

“Ordinary people, possibly, depends on the Incubus, but Sera isn’t ordinary,” Charlie said loudly with great enthusiasm. “She’s a witch. Besides, we could take away certain powers of our Incubus, so he couldn’t do that.”

“Are you sure?” Phil asked.

“Of course,” Charlie stated with such certainty, Sera grew even more uncertain.

“I’m not interested.”

“It would be perfect,” Phil said. “If we could make it work.”

“And we can,” Charlie said.

She sat upright with the moonlight spangling her wedding gown and streaking her graceful shoulders and hair with gold. She looked like a princess, Sera thought, but she was always so adamant about such things and having been the subject of her older sisters’ experiments many times before, Sera knew she had to stop this right now. She leaped to her feet and raised her voice.

“I won’t do it,” she said loudly.

Her sisters swiveled their heads and looked at her in astonishment for at least a minute. Long enough for Sera’s chest to begin to tighten from the breath she held.

“I won’t do it,” she repeated again in a small voice.

“Oh, baby.” Both sisters came to her side, putting their arms around her and coddling her as they had when she’d been little. How many difficult or even potentially dangerous situations had they gotten her into over the years? Not again!

“I won’t,” she said, pulling away from their cloying embraces and facing them with an outthrust chin.

“Isn’t she adorable?” Phil said lovingly.

“So sweet, so innocent,” Charlie said. They advanced with all the affection of older sisters for a younger, much loved sibling. “You’ll be the better for it. I would love to think that tonight when Nick and I are consummating our marriage vows and Phil and Beck are making a baby, you’ll be discovering what sex with a man is about.”

“But you’re not suggesting a man. You want to give me an Incubus!” Sera was overcome with anger and disbelief. She shook a finger at them. “Don’t you dare! Stay out of my life. I mean it.” She whirled and ran back inside the large hall.

“Hey, Sera, I was searching for you,” said a tall man with blond hair and kind, gray eyes. “I have a margarita for you. I know how much you love them.”

Harry Reynolds, the library director, could have been a heartthrob for some fortunate woman, but not for Sera. Somehow, things just didn’t click with him, and she often wondered why. Since he seemed a perfect representative of the male gender, she assumed the problem lay with her. Now he held out a cocktail, his eyes glinting appreciatively behind his glasses.

“Hey, did I tell you, you look gorgeous tonight?” he asked in his quiet manner. He smiled and pushed his glasses up on his nose when she took the margarita from him.

“Here’s to better days,” she said and drank the margarita down without pause.

Harry gaped at her in surprise. “You-you’ll get brain freeze that way,” he said helplessly while she continued to drain the glass.

When it was empty, she handed it back and smiled at him. “My brain can handle it.”

“W-would you like another one?” he asked tentatively.

“Yes, I would.”

She glanced in the direction of the bar. The waiters had removed all the china and silverware and shoved extra chairs and tables out of the way to enlarge the dance floor. The band had returned from its break and now began a set of lively, rhythmic music that brought couples hurrying to the cleared area.

“Never mind the margarita, dance with me, Harry,” she said.

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