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Unlocking the Spell

E. D. Baker



  Contents

  Map

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Acknowledgments

  Also by E. D. Baker

  This book is dedicated to Ellie, my sounding board;

  to Kim, my research assistant; to Kevin, who is

  smarter than the average bear; to my fans for

  their support and enthusiasm; and to Victoria

  for her guidance and insight.

  Map

  Chapter 1

  “Is there anyone else?” Annie asked Horace, the gray-haired guard who was admitting petitioners to the room.

  “Just one more, Your Highness,” he replied. “A merchant named Bartley from Cobble on the Green.”

  Annie nodded. Most of the people who had come to see her that day had been merchants wanting to know if their gold was real. “How many visitors have I had altogether?”

  “Two the first day, five yesterday, and twelve today. That would be nineteen, Your Highness. Word is spreading, so I imagine there will be even more tomorrow.”

  “I still can’t believe this is happening,” Annie said. “After all those years when most people didn’t want me near them, they’re coming from across the kingdom to ask for my touch. Who would have thought so many people would want magic removed so they could see what was really there?”

  Annie glanced toward the window. All she wanted to do was go horseback riding along the river with Liam, but she’d told her parents she would meet with her petitioners before doing anything else. Of course, she had said that on the first day when only two had shown up. If she’d known there would be so many, she would have been tempted to refuse to see them at all—except she knew that she would have seen them no matter what. After all, Annie couldn’t blame them for wanting to see the truth behind magic.

  Shortly after Annie’s birth, a fairy godmother had given her a special magic gift—no other magic could ever touch her. It wasn’t long before her parents realized that with the gift came a special curse—anyone who touched her, or was near her for long, lost whatever magic they might have. It would come back once they were apart, of course, but in the meantime, those made beautiful and talented through magic became plain and ordinary. It was a truth not many wanted to face.

  Annie turned toward the door when Horace opened it, admitting a short man with a rounded figure and a full head of graying hair. A pretty young woman with light brown ringlets and soft curves stood beside the middle-aged man. When the man bent low in a well-practiced bow, the young woman curtsied.

  “Yes, Master Bartley?” Annie said with a sigh.

  “Your Highness!” said the man, straightening up. “I know you’re busy, but I won’t impose on you for too much of your time. I just want to know one small thing. This is my betrothed, Ardith. We’re getting married in a fortnight and I need to see if she’s naturally this pretty or if magic made her this way.”

  “Bartley!” said the young woman. “You said she’d invited us here to give you a medal.”

  “Hush, Ardith!” Bartley told her, darting her an angry glance. “Not in front of the princess!” Turning back to Annie, he shrugged, saying, “She would have refused to come if I’d told her the truth. You see, I wouldn’t have thought to bring her to see you if I hadn’t seen a portrait of her grandmother. She was an ugly old hag, and I want to know if Ardith is going to give me ugly children.”

  “What an awful thing to say!” his betrothed said, her voice rising.

  “Hold out your hand, Ardith,” said Bartley, reaching for her.

  Ardith snatched her hand away and stuck it behind her back. “I will not!”

  As the couple engaged in a silent struggle, Annie glanced toward the window again when someone in the courtyard dropped a crate. Men shouted, and Annie wished she could peek out the window at the workers unloading newly arrived spinning wheels. But the way things were going, she could be stuck in that chair until nightfall, unless…

  Annie slipped from her chair and approached the arguing couple. When she placed her hand on Ardith’s shoulder, the young woman stopped fending off her future husband and stared at Annie in dismay. Bartley studied Ardith, his mouth set in a grim line, and didn’t notice when Annie placed her other hand on his shoulder.

  It took only a few moments for the changes to begin. Although Ardith’s face stayed as pretty as when she’d first walked in, her body lost its curves and became bony and angular. At the same time, the hair on Master Bartley’s head disappeared, leaving his scalp pink and shiny, while tufts of hair sprouted from his ears and his eyebrows grew straggly on either side of his suddenly large, hooked nose. When he opened his mouth, his teeth were as uneven as a willow-wand fence after a big storm.

  “Huh!” Bartley said, looking Ardith up and down. “Well, at least you didn’t turn ugly. You’ll do, I suppose.”

  Ardith gasped and her eyes grew wide. “But you won’t do at all! You accused me of improving my appearance through magic when you did the same thing yourself. And then to put me through this…” Her breath caught with a hitch as she turned and ran from the room.

  “Ardith!” Bartley called as he followed her out the door.

  “He didn’t even say thank you,” Annie said, and broke into a grin. “Horace,” she added, turning to the guard. “That’s enough for today. If anyone else shows up, tell them to come back tomorrow.”

  “Of course, Your Highness,” he said, and grinned back at her.

  Annie was hurrying to the stable, hoping to meet Liam there, when she ran into a group of minor nobles come to pay their respects to the king of Treecrest. For years visitors had been turned away for fear that they might sneak spinning wheels into the castle in order to put everyone inside to sleep. Now that Annie’s sister, Gwendolyn, had woken from the spell and spindles could no longer hurt her, King Halbert had lost no time importing the wheels by the hundreds. The kingdom was once again facing prosperity, and visitors from other kingdoms were flocking to the castle, hoping to earn favor with the king.

  A man dressed in a fur-trimmed cloak despite the pleasant weather looked up as Annie tried to wend her way through the group blocking the stable door. “You, girl, fetch us drinks. Can’t you see that we’re parched from our travels?”

  “Annie, there you are!” Gwendolyn’s musical voice called from the center of the group. “I’ve been looking all over for you.”

  Annie wasn’t sure which was worse—having a stranger mistake her for a serving girl, or having her sister find her. She thought briefly about running away from both, but that would be cowardly. Even so… Annie groaned when she spotted Gwendolyn coming toward her and realized that she’d hesitated too long.

  “Lord Abernathy, you must meet my sister, Princess Annabelle,” Gwendolyn said, directing the man in the fur trimmed cloak toward Annie.

  “Your sister…,” he said, his Adam’s apple bouncing in his throat when he swallowed hard. “I do apologize, Your Highness. The sun must have been in my eyes.”

  “I understand,” said Annie, even as she tried to edge away from Gwendolyn.

  Annie wasn’t surprised that the man hadn’t known she was a princess; unlike the princesses made beautiful through magic, she was as normal as the day she was born. Gwendolyn was the most beaut
iful princess in all the kingdoms with her buttercup-yellow hair and violet eyes, but Annie’s hair was sun-bleached blond, her eyes were ordinary brown, and, after spending so much time in the sun while looking for a prince to kiss her sister, she now had more than her fair share of freckles.

  As much as Annie found her sister’s perfection irritating, it was even more galling that Gwendolyn had suddenly become nicer and more caring than she ever used to be. Before she pricked her finger on the spindle of a spinning wheel and fell asleep, Gwennie wouldn’t have noticed the way the nobleman had slighted her sister. But after Annie worked so hard to break the curse, her family’s attitude had changed as if they knew how much they owed her and how much she really loved them. They no longer treated her like a poor relative and actually acted as if they liked her, a development that never failed to surprise Annie. It also reminded her how badly they’d behaved toward her before.

  For most of Annie’s life, Gwendolyn had kept her distance from her sister, not wanting her fairy-given beauty to fade. But now that Gwennie was in love with an enchanted prince who’d been turned into a bear, she no longer seemed to care about her own appearance as much as she had before. She even sought Annie out at times, wanting her sister to touch the bear prince and lessen the magic of the enchantment so his human side could show through. Gwennie never seemed to notice that Prince Beldegard looked like a strange half-human monster when he was partway changed. His appearance didn’t bother Annie, but she was so tired of sitting around with her hand on a not-quite-human-looking man who was kissing her sister that she’d begun to look back with a certain fondness on the days that she’d been shunned.

  She was remembering how it used to be before so much had changed when Lord Abernathy cleared his throat and said, “If this is your sister, then she’s…”

  When he stepped back with a sudden look of panic in his eyes, Annie saw that he was aware of her reputation; this was the princess whose touch made magic fade. Not everyone had changed their minds about being around Annie.

  “If you’ll excuse us,” Gwendolyn told Lord Abernathy. Nodding to his traveling companions, she ushered Annie around the side of the stable to a place they could be alone. “I have to talk to you,” she said. “The woodsmen are back without seeing any sign of the awful dwarf who turned my Beldegard into a bear. Mother and Father promised that we would help him, but we can’t do anything unless we find that dwarf.”

  “Yes, I know,” Annie said.

  “And you know I can’t marry him until the spell is broken.”

  “Uh-huh,” said Annie.

  “Then you must know that you have to help us! Beldegard and I love each other, but we can’t go on this way! Every time I want to kiss him, or hold his hand, or gaze into his human eyes, I have to run all over the castle looking for you so you can sit with us, holding my prince’s other hand so he can be his human self.”

  “Believe me, I know that, too,” said Annie.

  “You brought Beldegard to me, so you’re responsible for this. I know you did it to wake me and save the kingdom, but I never would have known that he was my one true love if you hadn’t introduced us. Surely you must feel some sort of obligation to help us?”

  “What you don’t seem to remember is that I came home less than a week ago from traipsing all over the countryside looking for princes to kiss you, hoping you would wake up and our lives could get back to normal. The last thing I want to do is go looking for someone else! I want to enjoy just being here with everyone awake and talking, instead of lying there looking like they’re dead!”

  “I know how dreadful it must have been for you,” Gwendolyn said, looking so concerned that Annie felt a twinge of guilt, “but won’t you please reconsider?”

  “I’ll think about it,” Annie grumbled, and walked off, trying not to picture the tears that she had seen pooling in her sister’s eyes. She thought about suggesting that Beldegard and Gwennie go without her, but she knew that the bear prince had been fruitlessly searching for the dwarf for years and Gwennie was too used to being pampered to be of much help. The best person to go would be someone who wouldn’t mind stomping though the woods and whom the dwarf couldn’t change with his magic. Even Annie had to admit that only one person fit that description: Annie herself.

  Chapter 2

  Annie waited at the edge of the drawbridge as the last heavily loaded wagon crossed into the castle courtyard. She enjoyed the rumbling of the wheels as they rolled over the wooden boards, and the way the sound changed as they reached the stones of the courtyard itself. Annie had never been as conscious of sound as she was now. Being awake in a castle where everyone else was sleeping had made her appreciate the little things, like a child’s laughter, a dog’s bark, and voices rising and falling with the ebb and flow of conversation. Although silence had never bothered her before, too prolonged a silence now made her uneasy.

  Once the drawbridge was empty of everyone but a messenger on horseback and a few people on foot, Annie hurried across, anxious to talk to Liam. A hostler in the stable had told her that he’d seen Liam asleep under the tree on the other side of the road, but when she finally spotted him, he was sitting up, smiling as she crossed the dusty road to sit beside him.

  “There were too many people in the courtyard, so I came out here for some peace and quiet,” said Liam, taking her hand in his. “How was your morning?”

  “Long,” she replied with a grimace. “I’ve become popular with merchants who want to see if their gold is real. I feel sorry for some of them; they came with sacks of gold and left knowing that many of the coins were base metals that looked like gold because of magic.”

  “I wouldn’t feel too sorry for them if I were you,” said Liam. “The first thing those merchants will do is foist those coins off on someone else. Are you tired of seeing petitioners yet?”

  “Yes, but I’m more tired of sitting beside Gwennie and Beldegard every time they want to gaze into each other’s eyes and talk about how much they love each other. This morning they invited me to join them for breakfast just so they could make moon eyes while I gobbled my porridge. Do you still want to go for a horseback ride? There’s time before supper if we go now. We could ride down to the river and—”

  “I tell you, it’s her!” said a flower fairy as four of the little creatures flew down to hover just above Annie’s head.

  “Not again!” Annie groaned as the fairies flew so close that she almost went cross-eyed looking at them. Glancing from one to another, she wondered what they were waiting for.

  “Did you see that?” crowed a fairy wearing the feathery leaves of a fern. “She’s shifty eyed, just like they said.”

  “Who’s shifty eyed?” Annie said, leaning back so she could see them better.

  “You!” they all said at once.

  “We’ve come to challenge you to a contest of magic,” said a male fairy in a bluebell cap. “Our magic is stronger than anything you can do, and we are going to prove it.”

  “You might want to get out of the way,” Annie told Liam as all four fairies raised their magic wands. Keeping her eyes on the fairies, she waited until she heard Liam jump to his feet and step aside. “Go ahead, do your worst,” Annie said without even bothering to stand.

  In an instant, the fairies aimed their wands at her and fired. Sparkling lights shot from the wands, hit Annie with a shivery, bright sound, and rebounded back into the fairies’ faces. The fairy on the right began to spin in place until she was just a blur. The nose of the fairy beside her grew long and her feet turned into those of a duck. The skin of the fairy in the bluebell cap was suddenly covered with multicolored spots, but the fairy wearing fern leaves just got prettier with her shaggy hair curling softly around her face, her eyes getting larger, and her pudgy body becoming slender and curvy.

  When the fairy who was spinning stopped, she brushed the tangled hair out of her face and glanced from Annie to her friends. Spotting the fairy wearing ferns, she glared at her saying, “What spell did y
ou use, Fern? We were all supposed to do something awful to her! What kind of challenge is it if your magic would have made her prettier?”

  Fern shrugged and looked away.

  “She was hedging her bets, that’s what she was doing!” said the fairy in the bluebell cap. “She used a beauty spell in case it really did bounce back like everyone said it would.”

  “Well, why not?” said Fern. “Look at me, then look at you!” The fairy snorted and burst out laughing at the expressions on her friends’ faces.

  “You little traitor!” cried the fairy with the duck feet, and they all three took off after Fern, who sped away still laughing.

  “Has this been happening a lot?” Liam asked as he and Annie watched the tiny fairies skitter around flowers and trees until they disappeared from sight.

  “More than I care to remember,” said Annie. She sighed and rubbed her temples with her fingertips, trying to ease the headache that was forming. “The fairies can’t seem to believe that magic doesn’t work on me. I’m getting so tired of this. Ever since we came back, people have been hounding me for one thing or another. I’m almost tempted to do what Gwennie wants and take Beldegard to look for his dwarf just so I can get away from the favors and the challenges and the vile looks from people like Lord Abernathy.”

  “Who?” said Liam.

  Annie gave him a half smile and shook her head. “No one important.”

  “Let’s go for that ride now,” Liam said, taking Annie’s hand and pulling her to her feet. “A gallop along the river is just what you need.”

  Annie laughed as he pulled her close. He was just about to kiss her when someone gave a polite cough behind them. Startled, Annie turned around.

  An older woman with a red face and blade-thin nose was watching her from only a few feet away with a younger version of herself by her side. Before Annie could say anything, the woman swept her an abrupt curtsy, then pointed at one of the guards standing by the foot of the drawbridge. “That guard told me who you were. I know you weren’t going to see any more petitioners today, but I was sure you’d make an exception for us, seeing that we came from so far away. I’m Maeve, and this is my daughter, Becca.”