"Witch In The House" - читать интересную книгу автора (McKnight Jenna)

WITCH IN THE HOUSE
Jenna McKnight

Chapter 1

L ike a lemon drop on speed, the maid of honor darted across the front of the
church, her yellow toe-length dress rustling with every step. The guests’ heads
swiveled in unison as they tracked her agitated progress through the opposite
archway, after which they turned to each other and resumed whispering. Not calm,
smiling, happy-to-see-these-two-finally-going-to-tie-the-knot wedding speak,
either.
Mason Kincaid, the groom, handled it like a pro; ten minutes earlier, he’d
retreated to the choir loft in the back of the church. Only his best man knew
where he was, and that was because he’d followed him. Something about doing his
job.
Mason was standing shoulder to shoulder with Anthony now, feet spread
comfortably, hands in the trouser pockets of his tux, watching another lemon
drop rustle across the nave below.
“There goes another one,” he remarked.
Organ music played softly in the background, as if it were quite normal for
bridesmaids and groomsmen to buzz back and forth across the church before the
ceremony, half of them chattering on their cell phones, the other half comparing
notes while frantically waiting for call backs.
“Yellow dresses, black tuxes,” Anthony mused over the swarm of activity. “Looks
like a hornet’s nest, my friend.”
“Please. Don’t say that in front of Brenda.” Mason raised his arm,
absentmindedly lifting his sleeve and pronating in one smooth motion.
“I think you can get tennis elbow from that,” Anthony said.
“From what?”
“Checking your watch every thirty seconds. What? Don’t tell me you thought Miss
Terminally Late would be on time once in her life.”
“Yes,” Mason said, nodding with absolute certainty, turning the bezel on his
watch, as if doing so would somehow make Brenda more aware of the time. “We
discussed it at the rehearsal last night.”
“Uh-huh.”
“And in the car on the way to dinner.” Mason felt the need to substantiate his
statement because Anthony was shaking his head with a look that said, You poor
sap. “On the way home, too. She swore she wouldn’t be late.”
He never knew whether to worry about Brenda when she wasn’t on time or wring her
neck when she finally arrived, but constant repetition had dulled the tendency
to worry. Except this time she’d promised. She’d never promised before.
All her friends were here. All she’d talked about for weeks was “her day.” She
loved fresh bouquets, candlelight, and ribbon. Her apartment had turned into a
veritable testing lab for all three in her quest to mix the right sizes, right
widths, right textures, blah blah blah. More than once, Mason jolted awake
thinking he was the star attraction at a funeral.
It wouldn’t have been so bad if Brenda had consoled him, but forty-two long,
lonnng days ago she’d gotten the crazy idea that “waiting until our wedding
night” would somehow make it more special. This, after five years together.
He had to hand it to her, though. Every female guest—and several of the