I enter the hotel suite and stretch slowly. The ending of one year is
always a dangerous time to be a magician. I’ve spent the last
twelve hours working small magics non-stop. A few whispers to the
world here, nudging needs and desires there. Helping people make it
through the night. Some years it is easier, others it is far harder.
Magicians in cities tend to just barricade themselves at home and
hide this time of year, the need around them too much for their magic
to answer.
A wandering magician can’t do that as easily. So I do what I can,
push my magic as wide and far as I dare in the town. I’m worn out
and tired in a good way as I pour myself a drink Charlie put in the
fridge that is full of vitamins, minerals and a host of other things.
It tastes far better than the name implies, and I’m halfway done
when Jay opens the door and comes bouncing inside.
He’s holding a bag in one hand and offers up a huge, beaming grin
at seeing me. “Honcho, I got fireworks,” he says proudly.
I don’t choke on my drink. I consider the bag carefully. Small,
paper, and what is inside feels like seeds to my magic. But this is
Jay I am dealing with, and when an eleven year old boy from Outside
the universe tells you he has fireworks... I pause, now wide-awake
and not the last bit tired from the previous few hours.
“Fireworks?”
“Uh-huh! I bought then in a shop, with money!” Jay adds happily.
I know better than to ask what else he might have tried to buy some
with. “May I see them?”
Jay hands me the bag and I dump seeds into the kitchen table. Study
them. Then Jay. “Ah. Jay. These are just seeds.”
“Huh?”
“Someone sold you a bag a seeds.”
“But but who would lie to a Jay?” he demands.
I – ah. People tend to try and help you, when you ask them for
things.”
“Of course! They’re being jaysome too.”
“Of course they are. But selling a kid fireworks on New Years Eve
isn’t allowed in a lot of places. So rather than say no, you were
tricked.”
Jay stares at the beans, then at me. I catch his arm before he can
vanish.
“Sometimes it is safer to trick a Jay than say no to you, yes?”
He lets ou a huge sigh. “I don’t see why, since they were going
to be fancy fireworks!”
“Charlie is having a nap in her room. You can ask her about them,
and I’ll find some fireworks. Deal?”
Jay nods, and vanishes. I can hear him informing Charlie that a nap
interferes with adventures, and Charlie throw something at his head.
Which means Jay is distracted at least.
I slip out the door with the bag, asking where it came from and
finding myself at one of those small corner shops that exist
partially because some street corners rely on having shops. The shop
has closed, but I can feel someone inside and head in.
An old woman is finishing sweeping up behind a counter and eyes me
balefully. “The door was closed.”
“Doors aren’t closed to a wandering magician.” I hold up the
bag. “You sold this to a boy earlier tonight.”
She sighs, setting the broom aside. “I wasn’t about to sell real
fireworks. He was just – eager. They’re a kind of jumping bean I
enspelled to glow a little when fire touches them. I figured it would
be enough.”
“I am afraid not, at least not for Jay.” I don’t tell her that
the enspelling didn’t work. I have that much kindness in me always.
Crimson flares in the depths of her eyes, and her shadow lengthens
for a moment. “I have heard of that one.”
“Not enough, if you thought he’d be okay with being tricked.” I
smile. “We could use fireworks in the sky tonight, if you are
willing?”
“I am very old, magician.”
“I know. But Jay is very young, and disappointing him might be
unwise.”
“Even for a magician, that was a masterpiece of understatement.”
She lets out a deeper sigh. “I will do what I can.”
“Thank you.”
“Magician.” I stop, halfway to the door. “Did he tell you about
me?”
“No. I am certain he knew you were a dragon, but it never occurred
to Jay that a dragon running a corner store would be strange. I am
not about to ask.”
“You think I am that dangerous?” Her voice deepens a little. I
hear scraping against wood.
“I think it would be rude.”
The dragon’s laugh follows me outside, warm and delighted.
Charlie is awake and in the kitchen when I return to the motel suite.
It is cutting it close to midnight, and I tell Jay to head to the
roof and watch fireworks. Charlie looks at me wordless, her mouth a
thin line.
“Sorry. I needed Jay kept busy. He’s getting fireworks.”
“He told me about the bag. I assume the seeds would lead to a
giant bean stalk?”
“No. Just sparkles and a little light when they catch fire. And
jumping. Nothing Jay would consider fireworks, and I thought it might
be safer if he didn’t head back and lecture someone about lying to
a Jay. Or demanding fireworks they might not have.”
Charlie looks at me. “But they have fireworks?”
I grin, gesturing, and she heads up to the roof as well. I bring a
drink of my own, and hot chocolate for Jay. Distant fireworks are
already starting, time counting down in a low rumble. Above us there
is movement. A cloud that isn’t a cloud. Fire that turns into
explosions of light and noise as the dragon roars over the entire
town.
Almost no one will hear it. Almost no one will understand. But those
who do will have a different story to tell come morning, and a new
year with a hint of old mystery to join the happiness.
Jay whoops and cheers and the dragon fades away slowly from the sky
in a dazzling display of pyrotechnics I doubt she had known she had
in her any longer.
I suspect her new year will be happier than she had thought it would
be, even if it is not the year of the dragon.
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