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Authors: Nora [Roberts Nora] Roberts

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“It’s a trick,” he said—blubbered. “A trick.” He backed up, staring at the jeweled crown in his hands while a giggle escaped through his terrible grin. “It’ll disappear.”

Sapperstein nodded to Lorenzo, who removed the tiara. “You have the right to remain silent,” he began,

slipping on the cuffs while Sapperstein emptied the safe of jewels.

“I’m going to be president.” Spittle flew as Sam raged. “Eight more years, I only need eight more years.”

“Oh, I think you’re going to get more than that,” Luke murmured. He snapped his fingers and offered Roxanne the rose that appeared between them. “Alacazam, Rox.”

“Yeah.” She pressed her face to his chest to hide a mile-wide grin. “But what are we going to do for an encore?”

35

Fall in New Orleans was warm and bright and blissfully dry. The days grew shorter, but night after night the sunsets were a spectacular symphony of color and hue that seared the throat and dazzled the eye.

Max died during one of those brilliant light shows, in his own bed, with a ruby-red sun as his final curtain.

His family was with him, and as LeClerc said over one of the innumerable cups of coffee consumed during that night, it was the best way to die.

Roxanne had to be content with that, and with the fact that Luke had placed the philosophers’ stone in their father’s frail hand so that he slipped from one world to the next holding it.

It wasn’t a brilliant gem or a glittery jewel. The stone was a simple gray rock, worn smooth by time and questing fingers. In size, it had fit neatly into the cup of her palm, resting there as it had rested in other palms in other centuries.

If it had held power, she hadn’t felt it. She hoped Max had.

They buried it with him on a bright November morning, with a blue sky overhead and a faint breeze rustling in the wild grass that sprang up between the raised tombs of the city he’d loved. There was perfume on the air, and the strains of Chopin stroked from a dozen violins.

Max would have detested black crape and organ music.

Hundreds had crowded into the cemetery, people he’d touched somehow during his life. Young magicians eager to make their marks, old ones whose hands and eyes were failing them even as Max’s mind had failed him. Someone released a dozen white doves that fluttered and cooed overhead, giving the illusion of angels come to bear Max’s soul away.

Roxanne found the gesture incredibly lovely.

Max’s farewell performance, as he would have expected, was a class act.

Over the next few days, Roxanne drifted, never quite able to break free of the drag of grief. Her father had been the single most important influence in her life. While he had been ill, she’d had no choice but to take charge of the family. But as long as he’d been there in body, she’d had the illusion—again illusion—of having him.

She wished she could have shared their latest triumph with him. The headlines still shouted the scandal of Samuel Wyatt, former senatorial candidate, now indicted for grand larceny, among a variety of lesser

charges.

They’d found other evidence in his Maryland home. A small device that resembled something between a remote control unit and a calculator, a fine set of burglar’s tools in stainless steel polished to a gleam, a glass cutter, a motorized crossbow that propelled a grappling hook, a single gold cuff link, etched with the initials SW, and most damning, a diary, painstakingly detailing thefts committed over a span of fifteen years.

It had taken Jake a month to complete it, forging Sam’s hand. But it had been a job well done.

Swiss accounts, in excess of a quarter of a million, had been unearthed. Luke considered it an investment that had already paid off—in spades.

Roxanne had been prepared to feel sympathy for Justine, but was amused when she read that Sam’s devoted wife, cleared of all implication, had already filed for divorce and was living in a chalet in the Swiss Alps.

As for Sam, he no longer insisted he wanted to be president. He claimed he was president. The psychiatrists continued their deliberate tests while Sam ran his private government from a padded cell.

It was, Roxanne supposed, a kind of justice.

But that was behind her. The corner it had taken her five years to turn was at her back. A dozen long paths spread out before her, and she simply didn’t know which she wanted to take.

“It’s getting chilly out here.” In the shadowy dusk, Lily crossed the courtyard to where Roxanne sat on the iron bench watching the fountain. “You should have a jacket.”

“I’m fine.” To show company was welcome, she held up a hand, slipping an arm around Lily’s shoulder when the older woman joined her on the bench. “I love this spot. I can’t remember a time when I haven’t been able to feel better after sitting here.”

“Some places are magic.” Lily glanced up to the window of the room she’d shared with Max for so many years. “This one’s always been magic for me.”

They sat in silence for a few minutes, listening to the splash and tinkle of the fountain. The shadows lengthened and became the dark.

“Don’t miss him too much, honey.” Lily knew she’d put it badly, wished she had Max’s flair for words.

“He wouldn’t want you to hurt for too long.”

“I know. I was afraid at first if I let it stop hurting it meant I’d stopped loving him. But I know that’s wrong. I was sitting here, remembering the day we all left for D.C.” She tilted her head, resting it on Lily’s shoulder. “He was in his chair, looking out of the French doors. Just looking out. He wanted to go, Lily. I knew it. I felt it. He needed to go.”

She laughed, a low genuine sound Lily hadn’t heard in too many days. “But he was stubborn,” Roxanne continued. “Leave it to Max to die on Halloween. Like Houdini.” Her arm tightened around Lily’s shoulders. “I swear he must have planned it. And I was thinking now that if there’s a heaven for magicians, he’s there, doing pocket tricks with Robert-Houdin, trying to outdo the Herrmanns and conjuring with Harry Kellar. Oh, he’d like that, wouldn’t he, Lily?”

“Yes.” Damp-eyed but smiling, Lily shifted into a hug. “And he’d fight tooth and nail for top billing.”

“Appearing tonight and for eternity, Maximillian Nouvelle, Conjurer Extraordinaire.” Laughing again, she kissed both of Lily’s cheeks. “I’m not hurting anymore. I’ll always miss him, but it doesn’t hurt.”

“Then I’m going to say something else.” She cupped Roxanne’s face in her hands. “Make your own.

You’ve always been good at that, Roxy, always bold and strong and smart. Don’t stop now.”

“I don’t know what you mean.”

Lily heard a door open and looked over her shoulder to see Luke under the pool of light by the kitchen door. “Make your own,” Lily repeated and rose. “I’m going inside to put my two cents’ worth in on those wallpaper samples Alice is mooning over. I swear that girl’ll pick nothing but pastels and flowers if someone doesn’t give her a goose.”

“You’re just the one to do it.”

“You come in if you get cold,” Lily ordered.

“I will.”

Lily passed Luke on the courtyard. “And if you can’t keep her warm,” she said under her breath, “I wash my hands of you.”

Luke sat on the bench, drew Roxanne close and kissed her until her bones went limp.

With her head tilted back on his arm she opened her eyes again. “What was that for?”

“Just following orders. But this one’s for me.” He kissed her again, lingering over it. With a satisfied sigh, he sat back, stretched out his long legs and crossed them at the ankles. “Nice night, huh?”

“Mmm. Moon’s coming up. How many times did Nate con you into reading
Green Eggs and Ham?”

“Enough so I can recite it by memory. Who the hell wants to eat green eggs anyway? It’s disgusting.”

“You miss the not so subtle metaphor, Callahan. It’s about not judging things by their appearance, and testing new ground.”

“Really? Funny, I’ve been thinking about testing new ground.” But he wanted to be sure it was the time.

The first silver fingers of moonlight slipped out of the sky as he turned his head to study her. “How are you, Rox?”

“I’m good.” She felt his eyes on her, that old, familiar intensity. “I’m good, Luke,” she repeated and smiled at him. “I know I couldn’t keep him forever, no matter how much magic I tucked up my sleeve. It helps, knowing you loved him as much as I did. And maybe, in some strange way, the five years you were gone gave me the time to concentrate so closely on him when he needed me most. He hung on until you came back, and I could go on without him.”

“Fate?”

“Life’s a good enough word. Things are changing now.” She huddled closer, not because she was cold.

Because it felt right. “Mouse and Alice will be moving out before too long. And doesn’t it fit neatly now that they’re starting their own family you just happen to have a house that’s perfect for them up for sale?”

“With a nice third-floor apartment, suitable for a bachelor. Now Jake can drive them crazy.”

“You know you love him.”

“Love’s a strong word, Rox.” But he smiled. “What I feel for Jake is more of a mild tolerance punctuated with periods of extreme annoyance.”

“Lily’s going to work on finding him a wife.”

“She hides that sadistic streak so well. At least he’s useful backstage.” Because he enjoyed it, and it was a handy misdirection, Luke picked up her hand to toy with her fingers. “You know, Rox, I’ve been thinking about the act.”

She gave a sleepy sigh. “Think it’s ready to take on the road?”

“Yeah, it’s ready. But I was thinking about something closer to home.”

“Such as.”

“Such as this building for sale on the south edge of the Quarter. Good size. Needs a lot of work, but it has potential.”

“Possibilities? What kind?”

“The magic kind. The Nouvelle Magic Shop, New Orleans. A theater to break in new acts, to amaze the masses. Maybe with a little magic store tucked in it to sell tricks. A first-class operation.”

“A business.” Intrigued but wary, she eased back so that she could see his face. In it she saw barely restrained excitement. “You want to start a business?”

“Not just a business. A possibility. You and me, partners. We’d perform there, draw some of the big names and give a few new ones a shot. A carnival, Rox, but this one would stay in one place. It could be just as magical.”

“You’ve been giving this a lot of thought. Since when?”

“Since Nate. I want to be able to give him what Max gave me. A base.” To give the idea a chance to simmer, he lifted her fingers to his lips, kissing them one by one. “We’d still go on the road. That’s what we do. But we wouldn’t be traveling nine out of twelve months. He’ll be starting school full-time soon.”

“I know. I’ve thought of that. I was planning to cut back once he did. Work around his schedule.”

“If we did this, you wouldn’t have to cut back, and you’d accomplish the same thing.” He saw the interest light in her eyes and dove in for the kill. “There’s just one hitch.”

“There’s always a trap door. What is it?”

“You have to marry me.”

She couldn’t say she was surprised. It was more like a quick, powerful electric shock. “Excuse me?”

“You’re going to have to marry me. That’s it.”

“That’s it?” She would have laughed, but she didn’t think she had the strength for it. She did manage to gain her feet. “You’re telling me I have to marry you. As in ‘I do’ and ‘till death do us part’?”

“I’d ask you, but I figure you’d waste time weighing the odds. So I’m telling.”

Her chin came up. “And I’m telling you—”

“Hold it.” He held up a hand, standing so they’d be face to face. “I was going to ask you the night I came back from Sam’s with my pockets full of sapphires.”

That not only stopped her temper but muddled her head. “You were?”

“I had it pretty well planned. I was going to go for the romantic route. I even had a ring in my pocket.

But I had to hock it in Brazil.”

“In Brazil. I see.”

“What would you have done if I had asked you then?”

“I don’t know.” That was the pure, sterling truth. “We’d never talked about it. I guess I thought things would keep going the way they were going.”

“They didn’t.”

“No, they didn’t.” Baffled, she blew out a breath. “I would have thought about it. I would have thought about it hard.”

“And if I ask you now you’ll do the same thing. So I’m bypassing that. We’re getting married or the rest of the deal’s off.”

“You can’t bully me into marriage.”

“If bullying doesn’t work, I’ll seduce you.” He ran his hands up and down her arms, an old habit that still thrilled her. “And I’ll start by telling you I love you. That you’re the only woman I’ve ever loved. Ever will love.” Smooth as silk, he drew her close to let his lips play over hers. “I want to make promises to you, and for you to make them to me. I want more children with you. I want to be here when they grow inside you.”

“Oh, Luke.” If she hadn’t known better, she would have sworn she smelled orange blossoms. Marriage, she thought. It was so ordinary, so commonplace. So exciting. “Promise you’ll never, ever call me the little woman.”

“I’ll swear it in blood.”

“Okay.” She pressed a hand to her mouth, as if shocked the word had escaped. Then she laughed and

said it again. “Okay. You’re on.”

“No pulling back,” he warned, lifting her up to spin her in a circle.

“I never welch.”

“Then the next time we’re onstage, it’ll be introducing Callahan, and his beautiful wife, Roxanne Nouvelle.”

“Not on your life.” She punched his shoulder when he dropped her to the ground.

“All right. Just Callahan and Nouvelle.” He arched a brow. “It’s alphabetical, Rox.”

“Nouvelle and Callahan. I’m the one who taught you your first card trick, remember?”

“You never let me forget. Deal.” He shook her hand formally. “Nate’s going to have himself two legally married parents and a dog. What more could a kid want?”

“It’s so conventional, it’s scary.” She combed a hand through her hair. “And about that dog—”

“Jake’s out walking him. Don’t worry. Mike hasn’t chewed up anything worth talking about for an hour.

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