** Today on Dark Faerie Tales read Elizabeth Miles’ take on the Little Mermaid and you could win Fury! **
Careful what you wish for? How many times have we heard that? Well poor Oscar is about to learn the lesson first hand …
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Lily Ivory is a natural witch who was run out of her small West Texas hometown at a young age, then traveled the world until she found a safe place to land: in San Francisco’s Haight Ashbury neighborhood, where she opened a vintage clothing shop. Lily’s companion, Oscar, is not a typical witch’s familiar – for one thing, he’s an ancient creature that shape shifts into a potbellied pig when around normal human beings.
Fool’s Gold
There was a Satyr on my sofa.
I squeezed my eyes shut. . Maybe I was seeing things. I hadn’t had coffee yet.
When I opened them, he was still there, fast asleep. Brown hairy haunches; powerful, muscular chest; scraggly beard and upside-down “V” eyebrows. Satyrs are more mischievous than devilish, and though they can be trouble indeed, I have a soft spot for their high spirits. Still, fond as I was of the woodspeople , some of the gamier ones –the centaurs and satyrs—were best encountered in their natural setting. Not to be harsh, but they tend toward the smelly.
I sniffed: my small parlor smelled like it was inhabited by a pack of inebriated, wet dogs. This was one drunken Satyr.
“Oscar!” I called. I was pretty sure my ersatz witch’s familiar had a hand in this. My apartment, and the vintage clothing store downstairs, were protected by a spell. Woodfolk—or regular folk, for that matter—couldn’t just wander in and fall asleep as they pleased.
Oscar tumbled out of his nest of blankets above the refrigerator. Half goblin, half gargoyle, he was covered in grey scales, and at full height reached my belly button. When he was around outsiders, Oscar shape-shifted into a miniature potbellied pig… a subterfuge only slight less difficult to explain than a half-gargoyle. Other witches have cats, dogs, or even frogs as familiars. I have Oscar.
“Mistress! You scared me!”
“Who’s that?” (credit)
“Who?” he asked, blinking his bottle-green eyes in an attempt to convey innocence.
“On the couch, Oscar.”
“Looks like a satyr, Mistress. A member of the woodfolk fam—”
“I know what satyrs are, Oscar.”
“Then why’d’ya ask?”
Sometimes my familiar reminded me of an adolescent. “Don’t play games, Oscar. Who is he?”
“Silenus.”
“…And?” I waited for him to continue, but the normally garrulous fellow was silent. I tried a different tact. “Where did he come from?”
“I found him.”
Correction: sometimes my familiar reminded me of an eight-year-old. “Where did you find him?”
“In Golden Gate Park,” Oscar replied, his tone suggesting this should have been perfectly obvious.
“Why did you bring him here?”
“I didn’t know what else to do! He drank too much and fell asleep in the park, right out in the open! The tourists would have seen him, Mistress!”
My irritation, fueled in no small part by early-morning caffeine deprivation, receded as I realized Oscar had done the only thing he could think of: he brought Silenus here, to safety, where the sight of a satyr sleeping off a night of overindulgence might arouse annoyance, but not fear or violence.
Like many magical beings, Oscar was good at hiding his true self. So was I. Until recently I had worked hard at staying in the closet, metaphysically speaking. But now that I was finding a home, and a community, in San Francisco’s Haight Ashbury neighborhood, I was trying hard to be honest with the world and with myself: I’m a witch. It’s not my fault. I was born this way.
But a satyr? He couldn’t walk around without being noticed, not even in the quirky --sometimes freaky-- Haight.
“I already called Dionysus,” said Oscar as he leapt down from his perch and started scrounging in the refrigerator. “Oooh, leftover Chinese! Can I have it?”
“Of course,” I said. “What do you mean, you called Dionysus?”
“You don’t know him? Goes by Bacchus sometimes. Good guy, real life of the party. Hey! We should have him over!”
“You’re talking about the god of wine?”
“Mmmffhsklj” Oscar replied, his muzzle full of kung pao chicken.
“How do you know him?”
“Met him ages ago. Anyway, Silenus is his, well, sort of like his stepfather? Kind of. Point is, he’ll come get Silenus, no worries. Dionysus even grants wishes…maybe he’ll give me a reward!”
I’ve never understood the little guy’s avarice. Oscar pays no rent and doesn’t wear clothes. I supply him with food and the blankets for his nest. I provide him with pretty much anything he could want…and yet he still wants more.
“You shouldn’t have to be rewarded, Oscar. You did the right thing in bringing him to safety, and knowing that should be sufficient payment. I’m proud of you.”
He shrugged and poked at the carton of fried rice. “Anyway, prob’ly he’ll be gone by lunchtime.”
“All right,” I said with a sigh. As I poured myself a cup of coffee I glanced at the now snoring creature on my couch. Good thing my vintage clothing store, Aunt Cora’s Closet, was closed today. “Listen, I have to run over to Chinatown for supplies this morning, which means I’m leaving Silenus in your hands. Don’t let him drink anymore, understood?”
“Not even water?”
“I meant alcohol, as you very well know.” Is there a witchy military school somewhere that accepts smart-alecky familiars? “He can drink water.”
“He’ll be hungry when he wakes up.”
“Make him some pancakes or a bowl of cereal, then get him out of here. Just make sure no one sees you. Are we clear on that?”
Oscar nodded vigorously, spewing a few grains of rice on the tiled kitchen floor.
I left, trusting him to take care of it.
I should have stayed.
***
I returned several hours later to find Oscar sitting amidst a pile of golden objects: a telephone, a book, a chair. Something that looked a lot like Oscar’s favorite fleece blanket now gleamed yellow in the afternoon sun, hard and stiff.
I froze, trying to attune my witchy sensibilities to sense the aura of anyone lingering. I detected nothing.
“What’s going on, Oscar?” I demanded.
“Mistress! It’s awesome! Check this out!”
He reached out one gnarled, oversized hand and touched the base of a lamp. It turned to gold.
Oscar hooted in glee, grabbed a Newsweek magazine, and watched it turn gold. He dropped it with a thud, reaching for the coffee table.
“Stop!” I yelled. “Hells bells. What have you done?”
“I got my wish, Mistress! Dionysus came by for Silenus. I told you he would offer me a wish for rescuing his friend, sort of his stepfather.”
“And you asked for…”
“For all I touch to turn to gold!”
“Oh, Oscar…”
“Look at this! Gold everywhere! We’ve got plenty of bread now, Mistress, I tell ya.” He cackled. “Speaking of bread…I only had four pancakes for breakfast. Is it lunchtime?”
As he walked into the kitchen, the floor turned to gold under his claws. He reached the refrigerator and tried to open it, but it too, immediately became gold. Wrenching open the refrigerator door, he reached for the glass bottle of milk, whose contents became liquid gold.
Oscar looked at me, crestfallen. “What the…?” He grabbed for a cookie. By the time it got to his mouth, he was biting down on metal . “Gak!”
“Oscar, how many times have I told you: be careful what you wish for?”
“Mistress!” he kept touching things: the cabinets, jars of jam, a bowl of fruit. One by one they transformed into that precious metal. “Save me! I’m hungry!”
“If everything you touch turns to gold, Oscar, how do you expect to eat?”
Clearly this had not crossed his goblin’s mind. He stared at me, big eyes imploring, verging on panic.
“All right, now, hang on to your britches. Just stand still and don’t touch anything else. Let’s call Dionysus.”
“Mistress, we can’t!”
“Why not?”
“He took Silenus to a rehab center up the coast. Don’t know where. He doesn’t have a cell phone! I’m so hungry!”
“Let me try.” I peeled a banana and held it to his mouth, but the moment it touched his tongue the fruit turned to solid gold.
“ I’m going to starve!” Oscar wailed. Never had I seen him in such a state. I reached out to hug him but at the last second pulled back, mindful of not turning myself into a golden statue. “I’m going to waste away and die!”
“I won’t let you starve. I’ll find a way to fix this.”
“ I’m cursed!” Oscar ricocheted around the room, screeching at the top of his lungs.
“Oscar! Stop that this instant! I command you!” To my surprise, my words registered. Oscar collapsed on the golden floor in a hiccoughing, scaly grey lump. “I’m going to fix it,” I said with a confidence I didn’t feel. “You’ll see. Have I ever failed you?”
“No, Mistress.”
“Right, then. Why don’t you just…” My mind cast about for some way to keep my familiar amused while I figured out what to do next. “…just watch your DVD of Gremlins, and I’ll try to figure this out. Okay?”
“’kay.” Oscar trudged into the living room. I dragged over the already gold chair, set it in front of the television, inserted the DVD, and started it playing. “Now, sit there and for the love of the goddess, don’t touch anything.”
Grabbing my huge Bulfinch’s Mythology off the bookshelf, I retreated to the kitchen and looked up the story of King Midas. According to the myth –which was actual history, of course, but most folks now assumed was metaphorical-- Midas was relieved of the curse by crying into the river Pactolus, which was famous in the ancient world as a source of gold.
Well. That was no help. Assuming the water cure would work again, Pactolus was in Turkey; how on earth would I get Oscar to Turkey?
But it did give me an idea. I never finished high school and wasn’t much good at things like math, or chemistry… but I flipped through my Book of Shadows, trying to find an arcane section I remembered stumbling across years ago. On alchemy.
***
“Ready?”
“Yes, Mistress.”
I had enchanted a tarp so it would remain pliable, then bundled my familiar into my purple work van, taking care that none of his skin touched anything. He moaned and groused the entire way to Fort Point, at the base of the Golden Gate Bridge.
Now we stood on a rocky point of land where the wild Pacific Ocean met the serene San Francisco Bay, generating powerful currents. In the distance, a foghorn blew, sounding mournful above the rumble of cars high above, crossing the bridge.
“When I tell you, wade into the water,” I said. “But not until I tell you.”
I began chanting. The ancient alchemists sought to discover the unity of all matter, and thus to convert matter from one form to another, a process they called transmutation. Turning lead into gold had been the quest of the ancients, and though their attempts now seem silly, they were closer than they knew to achieving their goal.
All they lacked was sufficient power.
As I chanted the wind began to gust, waves crashing ferociously on the shore. The lights of the city winked as a wall of fog blotted out the moonlight and cocooned us in a misty embrace. I continued working my spell, invoking my ancestors; calling upon the generations of witches before me until the screaming of the elements grew so loud they drowned out the sounds of humans and their creations. I felt the pressure build, and fought against the fear that I might not be able to control the forces I was unleashing.
“Now, Oscar! Now!”
As Oscar waded into the churning water a deafening crash split the air. The sea began to glow, radiating from my familiar in concentric circles, each ring swelling and expanding farther into the dark waters until at last the glow began to dissipate and the rings disappeared. The wind and waves died down, and the fog lifted. Once more we could make out the rumble of cars overhead.
“Am I cured?” Oscar asked through chattering teeth.
“Let’s try it,” I said, and handed him a banana. He stuffed it in his mouth, peel and all, and chewed.
“Good?”
He swallowed and nodded. “Thank you for saving me, Mistress,” he said, looking somewhat chastened.
“Anytime.” I gave him a squeeze. Oscar wasn’t the easiest familiar in the world, but I don’t know what I would do without him. “Shall we pick up some Chinese food for dinner on the way home?”
“Kung pao’s my favorite!”
As we turned to leave, we both noticed the sand twinkling in the moonlight.
“Mistress? Is that gold? We’re rich!”
I scooped up a handful of wet sand to inspect the tiny golden speckles.
“Fool’s gold, Oscar. It’s only fool’s gold.”
#
"The golden touch is no blessing," cried Midas. He went to the river and wept. The sand of that river turned as yellow as "fool's gold" for it is there, they say, that King Midas washed away the curse of the golden touch with his own tears
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Juliet would like to offer a signed copy Hexes and Hemlines to one lucky viewer!
Lily gets called away from her vintage clothing store to give police a witch's take on how the leader of a rationalist society could be murdered, surrounded by superstitions he discredited.
Evidence points to dark witchcraft. Lily's determined to use magic of her own to find the murderer, before everyone's luck runs out.
Purchase: Amazon | Book Depository
Interested in winning this book?
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This giveaway is open to US only
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To enter, just leave a comment letting me know you favorite line of the story.
You can to earn an extra entry (1) by spreading the word, please provide link in a second comment
Tweet: #FantasticFables Read @JulietBlackwell 's version of Midas Touch | Win Hexes & Hemlines http://www.tyngasreviews.com/2011/07/ffmidas-touch-by-juliet-blackwell.html #giveaway PLZ RT
Ends September 7th, 2011.
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Under the pseudonym ofHailey Lind, Juliet penned the Art Lover's Mystery Series with her sister Carolyn, about an ex-art forger trying to go straight by working as a muralist and faux finisher in San Francisco. The first of these,Feint of Art, was nominated for an Agatha Award;Shooting Gallery and Brush with Death were both IMBA bestsellers, and Arsenic and Old Paint is now available from Perseverance Press.
Juliet's Witchcraft Mystery series, about a witch who finally finds a place to fit in when she opens a vintage clothes shop on Haight Street in San Francisco, allows Juliet to indulge yet another interest—the world of witchcraft and the supernatural. Ever since her favorite aunt taught her about reading cards and tea leaves, Juliet has been fascinated with seers, conjurers, and covens from many different cultures and historic traditions. As an anthropologist, the author studied and taught about systems of spirituality, magic, and medicine throughout the world, especially in Latin America. Halloween is by far her favorite holiday.
More books by Juliet Blackwell
LOL! Great story! Definitely whetted my appetite for this series!
ReplyDeleteFavorite line(s) "I left, trusting him to take care of it.
I should have stayed."
Thanks for the giveaway!
efender1@gmail.com
Great story - fave line:
ReplyDelete“Right, then. Why don’t you just…” My mind cast about for some way to keep my familiar amused while I figured out what to do next. “…just watch your DVD of Gremlins, and I’ll try to figure this out. Okay?”
Good reading ~ Escape by Fiction :)
“He took Silenus to a rehab center up the coast. Don’t know where. He doesn’t have a cell phone! I’m so hungry!”
ReplyDeleteThis would have to be my favorite!
jasmyn9[at]hotmail[dot]com
I should have stayed.
ReplyDeleteI have a feeling that sums up their relationship at lot. Sounds like a great read.
scrtsbpal at yahoo dot ocm
Fools Gold Oscar It's only Fools Gold.
ReplyDeletesgiden at verizon.net
How cute. Fav line: “Fool’s gold, Oscar. It’s only fool’s gold.” Seems he doesn't learn very fast :).
ReplyDeleteTweeted: http://twitter.com/#!/Jovial_1/status/103129424135847936
vsloboda(at)gmail(dot)com
“You don’t know him? Goes by Bacchus sometimes. Good guy, real life of the party. Hey! We should have him over!”
ReplyDeleteLOL poor Oscar glad he was cured, loved this fable.
vampiremistress2010(at)gmail(dot)com
“Fool’s gold, Oscar. It’s only fool’s gold.”
ReplyDeletesab5723 at hotmail dot com
My favorite part was “ I’m going to starve!” Oscar wailed. Never had I seen him in such a state. I reached out to hug him but at the last second pulled back, mindful of not turning myself into a golden statue. “I’m going to waste away and die!”
ReplyDeleterachaelmccully@yahoo.com
My favorite line is "Save me! I’m hungry!" I know just how he feels :)
ReplyDeletemljfoland AT hotmail DOT com
Oh, and I also tweeted! http://twitter.com/#!/Rogue237/status/103264624673173504
ReplyDeleteMy favorite line was "Hells bells. What have you done?"
ReplyDeletetruebloodfan AT rock.com
Tweeted: http://twitter.com/#!/Vamper_Fan/status/103282884156203009
ReplyDeletetruebloodfan AT rock.com
“Shall we pick up some Chinese food for dinner on the way home?”
ReplyDeleteIt felt like things were getting back to normal, that's why I liked that line. It was a great story, I enjoyed it.
Barbed1951 at aol dot com
I absolutely adore this series and I would love to win a copy of this book. Oscar is great. Favorite lines:
ReplyDelete"There was a Satyr on my sofa.
I squeezed my eyes shut. Maybe I was seeing things. I hadn’t had coffee yet."
jen at delux dot com
This ia a cute series, I'd call it a paranormal cozy.
ReplyDeleteacm05atjuno.com
My favorite line is "Kung Pao's my favorite". It was a great twist on the fable. This story always reminds me of when the Smurfs did it, but it was Smurfette who turned everything into smurfberries ;). This book looks great.
ReplyDeleteeckstein99@comcast.net
My favorite line is: Is there a witchy military school somewhere that accepts smart-alecky familiars?
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a really great, fun book, and I would love to read it! Thanks so much for the chance to win a copy:)
jwitt33 at live dot com
"Good guy, real life of the party" What a casual way to describe Dionysis! I'm reading this book now, and I love this series. I was born and lived many years in SF, so it feels really close to home. Plus, when I remember the people I knew when I lived on Haight ST.... Thanks, Juliet, for such wonderful stories! ;)
ReplyDeleteMy favorite line-
ReplyDeleteI sniffed: my small parlor smelled like it was inhabited by a pack of inebriated, wet dogs. This was one drunken Satyr.
(\___/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
alterlisa AT yahoo DOT com
http://lisaslovesbooksofcourse.blogspot.com/
http://twitter.com/#!/alterlisa/status/103583420566867968
ReplyDelete(\___/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
alterlisa AT yahoo DOT com
http://lisaslovesbooksofcourse.blogspot.com/
"I should have stayed."
ReplyDeleteChllybrd(at)gmail.com
Oh I'd forgotten how much I love Oscar! lol cute!
ReplyDeletehighlandhussy[at]gmail[dot]com
"Fool's Gold Oscar, It's only fool's gold."
ReplyDeleteaudie@wickerness.com
Favorite line: "Alright, now hang on to your britches."
ReplyDeletetlabunski -at- gmail
tweeted
http://twitter.com/#!/Pabkins/status/104033237566885888
My fav line:
ReplyDelete“Stop!” I yelled. “Hells bells. What have you done?”
I practically peed I laughed so hard! I'M STILL LAUGHING!!! Ahhh good times... good times...
second fav line:
“Oooh, leftover Chinese! Can I have it?”
and third because I couldn't help it:
“Looks like a satyr, Mistress. A member of the woodfolk fam—”
“I know what satyrs are, Oscar.”
“Then why’d’ya ask?”
::wipes tears:: this was good stuff. can't wait to read more
This sounds like a great book. I love the excerpt! My favorite line was: The lights of the city winked as a wall of fog blotted out the moonlight and cocooned us in a misty embrace.
ReplyDeleteLadyVampire2u AT gmail DOT com
My tweet: http://twitter.com/#!/LadyVampire2u/status/104838761644429312
ReplyDeleteLadyVampire2u AT gmail DOT com
I tweeted: http://twitter.com/#!/Maria_Smith_76/status/104992055704563712
ReplyDeletemmafsmith at gmail dot com
Favorite line: “Fool’s gold, Oscar. It’s only fool’s gold.”
ReplyDeletemmafsmith at gmail dot com
I already have the book, so I don't need to enter the contest. Great story, Juliet, what fun! Thoroughly enjoyed it.
ReplyDelete"Other witches have cats, dogs, or even frogs as familiars. I have Oscar."
ReplyDeleteThis sums him up so well! lol :)
"Speaking of bread…I only had four pancakes for breakfast. Is it lunchtime?”
ReplyDeleteThis reminds me so much of my teenage son. No matter what is going on, he is hungry
cebaughman@gmail.com
"Speaking of bread…I only had four pancakes for breakfast. Is it lunchtime?”
ReplyDeletePersonally, I love it when there is a well developed comic-relief side kick in my books. My current favorite is the horny unicorn in A Brush of Darkness. But I'm starting to really like Oscar.
brittanynoelle at gmail dot com
Tweeted at http://twitter.com/#!/bookishbritt/status/107275866807083008
ReplyDeletebrittanynoelle at gmail dot com
Because I always like "Hell's Bells": “Stop!” I yelled. “Hells bells. What have you done?”
ReplyDeleteI really like this series and the pig on the cover makes it better and better. Perfect mix of paranormal and cozy!
tjotjoc at gmail dot com
This was my favorite line:
ReplyDeleteWhen he was around outsiders, Oscar shape-shifted into a miniature potbellied pig… a subterfuge only slight less difficult to explain than a half-gargoyle.
little lamb lst at yahoo dot com
Loved it! My favorite line is "the lights of the city winked as a wall of fog blotted out the moonlight and cocooned us in a misty embrace"
ReplyDeletePoisnivyred AT gmail.com
Hi Hailey i twitter thanks joannie jscddmj at aol dot com
ReplyDeletehttp://twitter.com/#!/joannie1956/status/110516056363237377
"For The Love of Goodness just sit there and DONT TOUCH anything" So funny. You know when you tell someone not to touch thats the first thing they do is touch. Thanks Joannie jscddmj[at]aol[dot]com
ReplyDeleteMy Favorite genre Mystery! with a twist of magic super like XD
ReplyDeleteGFC: kimyunalesca
kimyunalesca(at)yahoo(dot)com
Correction: sometimes my familiar reminded me of an eight-year-old. .. LOL enjoyed the lines surrounding this one and the heroine's thoughts. Enjoyed the whole story really - was and witty.
ReplyDeletepams00 @ aol.com
https://twitter.com/#!/pams00/status/111317539174354945
ReplyDeletepams00@ aol.com