The love potion was her sisterâs idea. Jean was into all those hippy, new age things: crystals for healing, wearing clothing made of hemp, spells, tarot cards. Sheâd commiserated with Bella about her marriage issues over a cup of herbal tea on her front porch and brought it up innocuously, as though it was completely typical suggestion. The jangle of the wind chimes in the background only served to complete the ethereal, nonsensical mood.
âAre you sure, Jean? That seems a little out there. Iâd been thinking of something like couples therapy.â She tapped her pastel pink nails absently against the coffee cup, suppressing an eye roll.
âThose shrinks couldnât tell your crown chakra from your heart chakra,â Jean snorted derisively. Bella chuckled along, not willing to admit she didnât know what the hell her sister was talking about. âTrust me, this is your best way forward, short of catching a leprechaun and forcing him to grant you a wish.
âThat was a joke, if you couldnât tell. Iâm not crazy.âÂ
Bella chuckled along good-naturedly. Honestly, with Jean there were times she genuinely couldnât distinguish the jokes from the sober-but-crazy-assertions, so she appreciated the clarification.
âCome on, Iâll bet I have everything you need in my pantry. Letâs do this!â Jeanâs enthusiasm was infectious, and Bella felt the corners of her mouth tugging up into a smile. As they stood, Bella pulled her sister into a tight, quick hug. She was engulfed in the smell of hibiscus and sage.
âThanks, Jeanie. I needed this.âÂ
âAnytime little sis. Anytime.âÂ
After a quick detour to Jeanâs bedroom to get her spell book, they paged through it in the kitchen. Bella thought to herself that it looked oddly modern, not at all like the leather bound tome she had imagined something like that to be. âWhereâd you find this anyway?âÂ
âAmazon, duh. Whereâd you think Iâd get it from?â Jean elbowed Bella in the ribs with a wicked smile. âTroll under a bridge? Atlantis? The tooth fairy?âÂ
Some of the pages were dog eared and had Jeanâs crabbed, spidery handwriting filling up the margins. Health spells, family spells, spells to increase your wealth.Â
âHere we go,â Jean said, flattening the spine of the book open to the right page. Brushing a lock on wavy brown hair behind her ears, Bella noted the dirt encrusted under her nails. Jean practically lived in her garden, when she wasn't at her day job. Cracking her knuckles, Jean assumed what Bella had come to think of over the years as her âgame faceâ. âOne love potion, coming right up.â
The kitchen table soon bore the fruit of their labours: rosemary, thyme, nutmeg, mint leaves, honey, black tea, lemon leaves, a bottle of spring water. Turning over the mason jar of tea leaves, Bella thought to herself that this felt more like cooking than witchcraft. Ducking into the mud room, Jean came pack with some gardening shears.Â
âCâmon Bella, we still need to get the last ingredient. Rose petals.âÂ
âYou know this will never work, right?â Bella said, poking Jean teasingly. Jean took a swipe at her, wielding the shears like a sword.Â
âWhatâs the point of doing this then? Youâll ruin the positive energy, or set a bad intention! Then it wonât do anything.â Jean gestured dramatically at her herbs, as though they held the secrets of the universe. For all Bella knew, maybe it did. âYouâll never know if you donât try.âÂ
âBut how will it work?â Bella sighed.
âMagic,â Jean winked. âObviously.â
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Jean would have helped her brew the actual potion, but it wasnât the right time. The instructions had been ridiculously specific. Brew during a waxing moon, but it also had to be a Friday, and during the light of the moon. Preparing her potion, she realized she still wasnât completely sure when Chad had fallen out of love with her. There were no talks of divorce, no hum of discontent. He still told her he loved her every day. But something had shifted. It was the little things.Â
Instead of kissing her goodnight, Chad would mutter an âI love youâ and be snoring within minutes. Occasionally, heâd drift before she had the chance to say âI love youâ back.Â
On their first date, theyâd skipped dinner and let the chicken burn in the oven. The fire alarm had interrupted them, and theyâd had to rush out half dressed to drag the ruins of their dinner out of a smoking oven, laughing and swearing. By contrast, now their meals were always ready at six. They ate dinners promptly, and quietly.Â
Heâd stopped listening to her. Oh, he still pantomimed listening, and said his âhmms,â and âoh reallyâs?â at appropriate times. But his heart had gone out of it. She could sense his relief when she got to the end of a story about work, the lines of his face relaxing, his attention switching gratefully back to his phone. She ended up evading him when he asked how work was, replying with monosyllabic answers that did not invite additional queries. It was too exhausting to see his impatience, his boredom.Â
If he was going to be standoffish, she could be too. It didnât make her feel better. There was no flush of victory in her pettiness, only a deepening gyre of miscommunication.Â
The whistling of the copper kettle brought her back, and she lifted it to swish around the contents. The smell was pleasant, sweet and floral. There was no glow, no sparkle, nothing at all to indicate this was anything more than a regular old cup of tea. Still, she went through the motions and poured the tea into a cup. The one with the roses. Adding a spoonful of honey to it, she wrapped her hands around it, absorbing the comforting warmth. The doubt came again. How were some herbs, tea, and flower petals supposed to make Chad fall back in love with her?
Sighing, she closed her eyes and took a slow breath.Â
âBy light of moon waxing brew this tea to make Chad desire me.â
Raising the cup, she took a tentative sip. It wasnât as bad as sheâd thought. In fact, it tasted a lot like Jean's teas.
âGoddess of love, hear now my plea. Let Chad desire me.â Draining the cup, she set it down hard on the table, like a grizzled alcoholic after a stiff drink. âSo mote it be.â
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She waited a week, as the spell instructed, before brewing Chadâs batch of the love potion. The spell hadnât specified whether it had to be during night or not, so sheâd done it after dinner. Pouring twin cups of tea, she set Chadâs cup in front of him on the coffee table.Â
Once heâd taken a drink, she bit her lip and reached for the remote. Turning the television off, she swivelled in her seat to look at Chad. âDo you remember when we first met?â
âOf course,â he said, bemused. âIt was in that little diner you used to work at, where you had to wear that red apron.â His eyes crinkled at the memory.
âYou used to come, every day. But it wasn't like a regular situation though. You would try something new every day, like it was some cover story to explain the repeat visits.â She smiled at that. âBlueberry pie at first, then onion rings, then you got all the way down to those things on the menu that no one really likes. Couldnât tell you even now why we sold them.âÂ
âLike the green bean casserole,â Chad shuddered, in mock horror. âI still hate green beans to this day.âÂ
âThen one day, you ran out of new things to try.â By now, the back and forth had taken on a familiar rhythm. This was a story theyâd told new acquaintances when asked how theyâd met.Â
âI still remember you asking me what Iâd do now,â Chad said. In the faint light, he seemed to transform back into that kid in his early twenties.Â
âYou said the cheesiest line, about getting something off menu,â Bella giggled, slipping her hand into his.Â
âWell it worked, didnât it?âÂ
âI wish we could go back to those days,â Bella said. âEverything seemed so much easier.âÂ
Chad leaned in to kiss her on the forehead. âMaybe it isnât the same. But isnât that okay? Sure, we donât act like twenty year olds. But I love you so much more now. Youâre my best friend. My soul mate. Every cheesy line in the book to describe a happy marriage? Thatâs us, babe.âÂ
Shifting to rest her head on his shoulder, she frowned. âIf thatâs the case, why does it feel like we never talk anymore? I talk about work, and you glaze over.âÂ
âOkay, you canât blame me for that Bella. It isnât like you work for NASA or something, youâre in data entry. It isnât exactly front page news.âÂ
âHey!â Bella protested, punching Chadâs arm. âData entry is such an interesting job. Iâm serious!â Her voice raised over Chadâs laughter, indignant.Â
âHonestly babe, I thought we were doing okay. Better than okay. If you thought we were having problems, why didnât you just tell me about it sooner?âÂ
âI donât know,â she admitted. âMaybe I thought that talking about it would make it real.â
Pulling Bella into a tight embrace, Chad kissed her. âI couldnât love you more. Iâm sorry if it didnât show.âÂ
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Later, as she and Chad cleaned up their dinner dishes, she wondered if it had been the love potion that had prompted their reconciliation. Dumping the tea dregs into the garbage, the rose petals caught her eye, gleaming in comparison to the used coffee grounds and yogourt containers. Maybe it had been magic.Â
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29 comments
I love the subtle humor in this piece. The relationship between the sisters is very believable and their teasing made me smile. Love the ending too. The main ingredient of magic is belief is one of my favorite themes. One spot I noticed: âSo mote it be.â - did you mean 'might' or 'may' ? Such a cute story and a relatable romance. Nice job!
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Hey Michael, thanks for the feedback! Glad you liked the story. For the 'mote', that's actually spelled how it's supposed to be. A bit of witchy lingo right there, even if it sounds out of place. Thanks again for reading and commenting :)
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Everyone needs a Jean in their lives. A very cool character, and I wondered because of the skilful dialogue how much of the stuff she said she actually believed versus how much was just a persona. Really enjoyable, light and warm, and the dialogue, especially between the sisters, felt very natural.
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I agree! Thanks for the comment, I was definitely going for something light this week.
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A funny, sweet story that I enjoyed very much. It's also well-written, so I don't have much in the way of critique, except for two things. 1. Usually a separate line of dialogue indicates a change in the speaker, but I think Jean was still speaking here?: "âThat was a joke, if you couldnât tell. Iâm not crazy.â If so, then you could tag that line with, "Jean continued" or "added Jean" 2. You could omit "to herself" whenever you say "Bella thought..." as we can infer that if Bella is thinking, it's going to be to herself. :) If you get...
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Thanks for the comment and positivity! I appreciate the critique as well, since I'm always trying to get better. For the dialogue, I think the key word is 'usually'. I'm like, 90% sure I can still have it the way I did, even if it looks a little strange, because I've seen things like that in other books. But who knows, I could be wrong. For the second point, you're absolutely write. Sometimes I fall into the trap of writing fluff sentiments that really don't need to be there. I'd love to check out your story! Will do :)
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Hi Courtney, I thought you showed such a promising talent for dialogue here! I just LOVED the spell/poem here and the description: âGoddess of love, hear now my plea. Let Chad desire me.â Draining the cup, she set it down hard on the table, like a grizzled alcoholic after a stiff drink. âSo mote it be.â The only bit of constructive criticism I have is this line: âAnytime little sister. Anytime.â For some reason, one of my biggest writing pet peeves is siblings calling each other "sister," "brother," etc. because I find it's unrealistic i...
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Hey, thanks for reading and for the great review/feedback lol. It definitely made me smile To be honest, you're right. I got in my head about whether it should be 'sis' or 'Sis' or some other spelling variation and I panicked and just put sister lol. I'll try to come up with something else, because I agree - it doesn't feel realistic. Maybe a 'bro' in an ironic way.
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That is totally fair - and like I said, it's a super small detail and a lot of authors/screenwriters also do that!
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i love this !!!
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Great story, lovely characterisation and intriguing plot. Super.
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I like that you made a normally sad and tragic (or cheesy) troupe and breathed new life into it and made it completely your own. It was uplifting, and it put a smile on my face. Your descriptions of things and senses also stood out as very well done to me. I look forward to your other works!:)
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Thanks so much for the positive comment! In the beginning, my idea was 100% cheesy, so I'm happy I was able to take a turn for something a little more original. Glad you liked the story!
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Fun story!! I really appreciate your descriptiveness. You set a very clear image of the scene that made me feel like I was a fly on the wall watching all of it happen.
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You are an excellent writer! I don't typically read any romance so I don't have a lot of reference but this was good. Really good. Made me want to go kiss my wife and talk about us. Please keep writing. Loved how you infused fantasy and romance. Loved the pace of the dialogue between Jean and Bella. I cracked up when we found that the spell book was from Amazon. Hilarious. I also loved how we do not really know if it was the potion or sitting down to talk about it.
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Thanks so much for your comment! It made my day :) I'm glad it had such an impact, especially if you're not into romance.
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I enjoyed this story, Courtney, and watching the sisters scheme how to save a marriage was fun. I loved the ambiguity at the end and the fact that whether or not the magic worked, it still gave her the courage to speak up. I liked the conversation you wrote for them. One thought I had was I saw a couple of big adverbs that are kindof hard to read. For example: âBella said, poking Jean teasinglyâ You could change it to Bella teased which is more succinct. Thatâs something one of my Reedsy email lessons taught me, haha! Anyways, just a thoug...
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Thanks for the comments and advice Holly! You're right, adverbs are lazy writing. I should have internalized that a little more after reading On Writing by King. I really appreciate you reading and taking the time to comment, and I might have to check out the reedsy lessons!
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I have to defend you there and say if youâre writing youâre not being lazy đ but the adverbs may be something to look out for to make sure theyâre not excessive. One of my hardest habits to break was using the same sentence structure over and over and often using the words that and just. I highly recommend the Reedsy email lessons. How was Kingâs book On Writing?
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True lol, I'll hold on to that. I feel like I've written more on Reedsy these past few months than I have in years, which is great. I really liked On Writing. It's pretty short, and Stephen King talks about his childhood, all the rejections he had, some helpful stuff about his own writing process. How do you get onto the email lessons? If you have a minute, if not I'm sure a bit of digging and looking around would give me the answer. No pressure lol.
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Cool, Iâll see if I can find that book at the library. If you go to the main Reedsy website and scroll down there is a link for free courses. Tons of options!
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And same for me, this contest inspires and motivates me to write, which leads to improvement!
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I was half hoping to find out if the potion worked or not, but I ended up loving your ambiguous ending much more! It feels like a really great way to tie up a light, interesting piece. The touch of angst in the middle, when Bella thinks her relationship is falling apart, balances with the urban magic so well. Also, I honestly want to be friends with Jean. I really loved this story, if you couldn't tell :)
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Thanks so much for the great feedback! I based Jean off of my college roommate - she was into tarot cards, and just a super positive, awesome person. Glad you enjoyed it, ending and all lol
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This is sweet :D
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An adorable tale. I liked the ending a lot, and though I don't really tend to read a lot of fantasy, I felt that this story was very digestible and easy to read. The dialogue was great and I enjoyed the characters. A very light story/read (which sometimes is just what we need). Great stuff!
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Thanks so much! I was trying to go for a bit of ambiguity: somewhere inbetween fantasy and real life. Glad you liked the story and thank you for reading :)
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Awwww this is such a sweet story. I like that it's left up to the reader if the love potion worked. The sister will definitely have a gloat. I enjoyed reading. Well done!
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Thanks so much :) I'm glad you liked it, and yes, I can imagine Jean cackling away smugly that it worked lol. Thanks for reading and leaving such a positive comment!
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