My Fictional Cure for Pesky Tasks….
I hate drying my hair. I also don’t like raking leaves or doing dishes. So when I created the world of the Mayflower Mages, I addressed those little nuisances of everyday life. In Enchanter’s Echo, as well as the first book, Syphon’s Song, mages can take care of all kinds of task with a flick of their vibes. It’s an envious ability. I’d love to have a few of these spells at my fingertips. Here are my top ten favorites:
10. The Deflection Spell.
It takes a special kind of mage to do this one—specifically, a deflector mage. They can push away most anything…power, air, explosions, water from wet hair. Yes, this is the hair dryer spell. But how useful would this be when you have to clean out a stinky fridge? Just deflect the stink!
9. The All-Purpose Destruction Spell.
Again, the average mage is out of luck here because only a certain type of mage can destroy. But this is the guy you want with you when you take your dog for a walk. If your pup has to…you know…do his thing, no need for a doggie bag. With a quick zap of mage vibes, the poop is annihilated.
8. The Dirty Dishes Spell
This is a variation on the destruction spell. It needs a little perfecting as is used in Enchanter’s Echo, but it’s got a lot of potential. Edmund Rallis, the hero, can destroy dirty dishes. I’m sure with a little practice he could destroy only the dirt on them instead of destroying the entire dish.
7. Healing Spells—all variations
This should probably go at number one since it’s so essential to life, but I feel like it’s such a given that it’s just taking up space on my list. Curing life-threatening illnesses? But of course! That’s why I’ll put it at lucky number seven.
6. See-Me-Not Charm
Charms are expensive, and this one is more expensive than most. It’s not for everyday use or even for the average mage. Cast its single-use spell and you’ll turn invisible…if you were a mage, that is. Think of the people you could spy on.
5. The Standard Heating Spell
Almost all mages can cast heating spells to keep themselves warm in the winter. If a mage can’t do this, he/she is considered to be very weak…not how you want to be classified in the Republic of Mage Territories, where mages rule and the powerless obey. But I’m sure if you and I were mages, we’d be super strong. Think of the savings on your heating bill!
4. The Standard Cooling Spell
Naturally, this is the heating spell’s counterpart. Goodbye, sweaty summers! Soak up the sun without worrying about your clothes getting unsightly marks or your hair flattening with perspiration. Have a favorite sweater that you want to wear all year round? Go ahead! Flaunt that mage power!
3. Clothe Charm
Truly one of my favorites. Again, charms are expensive, so it’s much cheaper to buy extra outfits than one of these, but you can’t beat their convenience. For instance, it’s impossible to keep a little black dress, heels, and jewelry in your pocket or, say, in your glove compartment. But you can easily fit multiple charms in either spot. Long day at work and no time to get ready for your hot date? Cast this charm and poof! Sexy and ready…just be sure to spare a few of your vibes to touch up your hair and make-up.
2. Calling Charms Bracelet…a necessary accessory for every stylish female mage.
Do you have a charm bracelet among your jewelry collection? Imagine if each one of those charms was programmed with mage vibes to “call” an individual. Perhaps you might have a heart-shaped charm programmed to contact your lover or a pizza charm programmed to call up your favorite pizza delivery mage. Calling charms are the mage version of a cell phone. (Male mages use calling cards that they keep in their pockets, which are not nearly as durable as the calling charms.) I confess, I find these calling charm bracelets utterly…yes…charming.
And now…drumroll, please! The number one spell in the Mayflower Mages series is…
1. The Gravitation Spell
Actually, I don’t think any of the mages in either book has used this spell yet. I guess my characters must not be as lazy as I am. As I type this, I’m sitting on the couch under the warmest blanket in America. I need my cell phone, but it’s on the kitchen counter. As the dog doesn’t fetch and my children aren’t awake, I’m going to have to get up. I’m really dreading this. It’s cold out there. (My heating spells are on the blink.) Maybe if I dig deep and concentrate really haaaarrrrd…. Nope. Nothing.
(Hey, Apple/Samsung/Blackberry, how about a Gravitation Spell app in the next upgrade?)
I’d love to know…if you could choose one spell to rid your life of an onerous task, which would you choose?
__________________________________
Photo by www.surianiphoto.com |
A native of Ohio, Anise long ago moved south, armed with boxes of romance novels and degrees in chemistry and library science. Creating chemistry on the page between two lovers proved to be a lot more fun than working with test tubes in a lab or searching patent databases. She refocused on writing.
Her stories revolve around heroines who dare to stand up to society’s expectations and be true to themselves and heroes with plenty of savvy to fall in love with such brave women.
Anise lives in Atlanta with her two children and a fluffy dog that has an amazing ability to find dirty socks.
For information on future releases and giveaways, sign up for her newsletter
Find Anise and her books
__________________________________
Enchanter's Echo
Mayflower Mages #2
Amazon BN Kobo iTunes
Aurora Firenze lives a quiet life hiding in a junkyard. Her repair shop is the last hope for gadgets and gizmos before they get tossed onto the trash towers. Fortunately, Aurora can fix almost anything, including mages, though repairing people with metal enchantments is highly illegal.
Edmund Rallis, heir to the Rallis senate seat, has spent months hunting down his errant enchantress. He’ll play every game he knows to win her back and entice her to share the secrets she hides. But he’s inadvertently put her on the frontlines of a new game, one with an opponent who’s determined to destroy Rallis Territory and drive the Republic toward war. If the new enemy isn’t stopped in time, Edmund will lose his enchantress again—and this time there won’t be another chance.
Excerpt:
The keep-out spell awoke at her approach. The enchanted mesh of vines and branches that blocked the entrance to Rallis Territory’s forbidden forest vibrated in welcome as its creator returned. Aurora Firenze cast her vibes along the perimeter of her spell, testing and prodding. Its strength resonated back. It was as strong as it had been six months ago when she’d created it and hid her secrets within the forest’s depths. She let go of a relieved breath, but it didn’t cure her tension.
Her nerves were strung tight, as if she’d spent hours placating customers in her repair shop. But the day had been quiet. She’d even made decent progress—fixing a curling iron with a too-hot heating spell and a stapler that had a bad habit of chasing the boss around the conference table. Yet a restlessness itched at her skin with an unpleasant persistence. She’d closed up early and headed out for the short walk to the forest. Within its heart, she’d find the peace to wash away this unease.
She sent another stream of vibes into the keep-out spell. A discreet doorway formed. With a quick glance around the barren field and the junkyard behind her, she stepped beneath her illegal spell.
As she brushed against the branches, a faint thump sounded at her feet—the soft crash of a pinecone or a weak branch falling to the ground. A normal forest noise. She flinched anyway. Her glitter puffed around her in an anxious cloud as her mage energy escaped her control. It was the fifth time today. Enchantresses did not make good criminals. She should probably let the other three in existence know, in case they were considering lives of crime. Those blasted sparkly clouds would blow their covers wide open.
She lifted her foot to continue into the small forest that was tucked inside the territory’s capital city, but stopped. A proper lawbreaker should investigate mysterious noises outside her lair. She turned and scanned the ground for the culprit. A gold coin glinted in the crisp weeds. That wasn’t normal. She reached to pick it up, scanning the field and the junkyard beyond with a twitchy gaze. Empty. She was alone.
Behind her, the forest shuttered closed, nearly catching her in its fortress wall. She jumped forward with a surprised lurch at the swat of vines and twigs. A basic rule of illegal enchantments: get out of the way or risk being incorporated into the spell.
Ignoring the sting of the swat, she stared at the coin. It was tarnished at the edges, a used-up charm. See-me-not was embossed on its golden surface. She jerked her head up. A man stood ten paces away. He was tall, broad...beyond familiar.
“Edmund,” she whispered. A shiver tiptoed across her shoulders like kisses, soft lips that hid a sharp bite. Her nerves stretched thinner yet, trapped in a battle between memories of lovers’ frolics and the promise of a dark fate that had just materialized from thin air.
Behind her, the forest’s trees rustled with the wind, a warning to retreat, one she dare not heed. Not until she knew why he’d finally come searching for her. She hadn’t thought he’d ever come back.
He prowled forward. “Hello, princess.” Though his words might have held some affection, nothing of the lover she’d once known appeared in his countenance. He lifted his left hand to reveal a glowing ball of mage vibes in his palm. His blue eyes reflected the tiny flashes of energy, and his power snapped in the air like a miniature electrical storm. The heir to the most powerful territory in the Republic had quite a steam of anger built up.
Dark hair waved across his forehead, and little curls peeked out at the edges of his neck. Though the wind buffeted and pushed at Aurora, winter’s boldness didn’t dare touch Edmund, not his hair, nor his dark gray suit or scarlet tie.
The hard slope of his nose matched the sharp lines of his jaw and cheekbones. When he smiled, he was deadly handsome. At the moment, he was simply deadly.
“Aurora.” He cast her name through the air and a piece of her soul tumbled away, as if it might dash toward him and cling like a forlorn, discarded lover. But he hadn’t discarded her....
“You stand accused of melding earthen metals to human flesh with an enchantment.”
Her heart thumped once, hard and loud, and then took off with a sprint, drenching her veins from head to toe with lightning sharp fright.
Goddess, he’d found out. How?
Even as she thought it, he revealed the answer. The glow faded from his ball of energy to reveal a small metal sphere. Her racing heart shriveled at the sight, pulling the rest of her organs with it, as if they thought to hide, seeking a chance to slip past this disaster unnoticed and, perhaps, survive. She shifted her feet on the ground, unable to resist the fear pumping through her core. Run, her gut whispered. She couldn’t afford to listen... not with the evidence sitting in his hand.
The sphere was heavier than it looked. She knew that. After all, she’d made it...and thought it long gone. He closed his fingers around it, capturing her fate within his fist.
“How’d you get that?” Her fast words shot out, hustling forward before fear, creeping up her legs with tingles and pricks, stole her voice.
“You ought to be down on your knees thanking me for confiscating it.” His voice was sharp and cutting. He sounded like a stranger, his jokes and teasing wit long gone.
“What did you do? Sneak into the junkyard and pluck his eye from his skull? Has it been hiding under your pillow for six months?” Not at all where she’d thought it was. Betrayal jolted through her. “Hardly actions befitting the heir of the mighty Rallis realm.” Her voice wavered.
“You have no idea what I’ve done.”
The keep-out spell awoke at her approach. The enchanted mesh of vines and branches that blocked the entrance to Rallis Territory’s forbidden forest vibrated in welcome as its creator returned. Aurora Firenze cast her vibes along the perimeter of her spell, testing and prodding. Its strength resonated back. It was as strong as it had been six months ago when she’d created it and hid her secrets within the forest’s depths. She let go of a relieved breath, but it didn’t cure her tension.
Her nerves were strung tight, as if she’d spent hours placating customers in her repair shop. But the day had been quiet. She’d even made decent progress—fixing a curling iron with a too-hot heating spell and a stapler that had a bad habit of chasing the boss around the conference table. Yet a restlessness itched at her skin with an unpleasant persistence. She’d closed up early and headed out for the short walk to the forest. Within its heart, she’d find the peace to wash away this unease.
She sent another stream of vibes into the keep-out spell. A discreet doorway formed. With a quick glance around the barren field and the junkyard behind her, she stepped beneath her illegal spell.
As she brushed against the branches, a faint thump sounded at her feet—the soft crash of a pinecone or a weak branch falling to the ground. A normal forest noise. She flinched anyway. Her glitter puffed around her in an anxious cloud as her mage energy escaped her control. It was the fifth time today. Enchantresses did not make good criminals. She should probably let the other three in existence know, in case they were considering lives of crime. Those blasted sparkly clouds would blow their covers wide open.
She lifted her foot to continue into the small forest that was tucked inside the territory’s capital city, but stopped. A proper lawbreaker should investigate mysterious noises outside her lair. She turned and scanned the ground for the culprit. A gold coin glinted in the crisp weeds. That wasn’t normal. She reached to pick it up, scanning the field and the junkyard beyond with a twitchy gaze. Empty. She was alone.
Behind her, the forest shuttered closed, nearly catching her in its fortress wall. She jumped forward with a surprised lurch at the swat of vines and twigs. A basic rule of illegal enchantments: get out of the way or risk being incorporated into the spell.
Ignoring the sting of the swat, she stared at the coin. It was tarnished at the edges, a used-up charm. See-me-not was embossed on its golden surface. She jerked her head up. A man stood ten paces away. He was tall, broad...beyond familiar.
“Edmund,” she whispered. A shiver tiptoed across her shoulders like kisses, soft lips that hid a sharp bite. Her nerves stretched thinner yet, trapped in a battle between memories of lovers’ frolics and the promise of a dark fate that had just materialized from thin air.
Behind her, the forest’s trees rustled with the wind, a warning to retreat, one she dare not heed. Not until she knew why he’d finally come searching for her. She hadn’t thought he’d ever come back.
He prowled forward. “Hello, princess.” Though his words might have held some affection, nothing of the lover she’d once known appeared in his countenance. He lifted his left hand to reveal a glowing ball of mage vibes in his palm. His blue eyes reflected the tiny flashes of energy, and his power snapped in the air like a miniature electrical storm. The heir to the most powerful territory in the Republic had quite a steam of anger built up.
Dark hair waved across his forehead, and little curls peeked out at the edges of his neck. Though the wind buffeted and pushed at Aurora, winter’s boldness didn’t dare touch Edmund, not his hair, nor his dark gray suit or scarlet tie.
The hard slope of his nose matched the sharp lines of his jaw and cheekbones. When he smiled, he was deadly handsome. At the moment, he was simply deadly.
“Aurora.” He cast her name through the air and a piece of her soul tumbled away, as if it might dash toward him and cling like a forlorn, discarded lover. But he hadn’t discarded her....
“You stand accused of melding earthen metals to human flesh with an enchantment.”
Her heart thumped once, hard and loud, and then took off with a sprint, drenching her veins from head to toe with lightning sharp fright.
Goddess, he’d found out. How?
Even as she thought it, he revealed the answer. The glow faded from his ball of energy to reveal a small metal sphere. Her racing heart shriveled at the sight, pulling the rest of her organs with it, as if they thought to hide, seeking a chance to slip past this disaster unnoticed and, perhaps, survive. She shifted her feet on the ground, unable to resist the fear pumping through her core. Run, her gut whispered. She couldn’t afford to listen... not with the evidence sitting in his hand.
The sphere was heavier than it looked. She knew that. After all, she’d made it...and thought it long gone. He closed his fingers around it, capturing her fate within his fist.
“How’d you get that?” Her fast words shot out, hustling forward before fear, creeping up her legs with tingles and pricks, stole her voice.
“You ought to be down on your knees thanking me for confiscating it.” His voice was sharp and cutting. He sounded like a stranger, his jokes and teasing wit long gone.
“What did you do? Sneak into the junkyard and pluck his eye from his skull? Has it been hiding under your pillow for six months?” Not at all where she’d thought it was. Betrayal jolted through her. “Hardly actions befitting the heir of the mighty Rallis realm.” Her voice wavered.
“You have no idea what I’ve done.”
__________________________________
Tour Wide
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Thank you so much for having me on your blog! I'm off to get ready for work. (I have to go dry my hair, gosh darn it! Oh for some mage vibes!) But I'll definitely be peeking in here to see if there are any magic spell ideas.
ReplyDeletelol, thanks for visiting Anise! Oh to not have to dry my own hair anymore. I am so with you there.
Deletethx u so much for hosting..
ReplyDeletei do enjoythe book's blurbs :)
I agree. Always fun to scout out new books!
DeleteHi all, I'd take the healing spell. There are a lot of things I would love to do like learn to drive a motorcycle and I'll need that spell for when I wipe-out.
ReplyDeleteI love your planning ahead, Alexis! But I do wish you good health on all your adventures so you don't need those healing spells!
Deletea teleportation spell cause I loathe driving. Your books sounds good. Thanks for the giveaway
ReplyDelete