Any Way You Want It. Kathy Love
then added, “and naughty.”
Maggie frowned at her friends. “Who are you two? And what have you done with my normal friends?”
“Oh, please, you always knew we were freaks. Just make your wish—before she realizes what a crappy offering you left her,” Erika said.
“Make the wish you want,” Jo said, shades of the sensible friend returning—sort of. She was still talking about the wish as if it was going to actually happen.
Maggie shook her head, amused and exasperated all at once. But then she closed her eyes and concentrated. She didn’t even know what she wanted for a wish. On the off chance it did work, what would she want?
Her thoughts drifted back to why she was here in New Orleans. She was trying desperately to forget the past six months. So what would help her do that?
“Wish for a gorgeous man and a hot, sexy fling,” Erika said, from close to Maggie’s right shoulder. Maggie’s eyes popped open and she shot her friend a shocked look.
“Erika!”
“It’s a good wish,” Erika said.
And Jo gave her a halfhearted shrug, as if she would like to deny it, but just couldn’t.
Did she really seem that much in need of a good roll in the hay? She decided she probably did. She made a face at her friends, then closed her eyes again, attempting to think of something more realistic, more obtainable. And not so…well, frankly, ridiculous.
But Erika’s suggestion kept popping back into her head like the repeating chorus of a pop song, irritating yet oddly compelling.
A hot fling. Yeah, like that was ever going to happen. To her.
She squeezed her eyes shut even tighter. What did she really want?
A strange, nebulous image of some man appeared in her head. Great, now that the idea had been planted, she was even getting images of the man she’d want to have a fling with. Yikes.
Ah, what the hell. It wasn’t like Marie Laveau’s spirit or whatever was going to rise from the grave and grant her wish anyway. And if by some miraculous twist of spiritual fate she should meet a gorgeous guy who wanted to have a hot, sexy fling—with her, which would never happen—it would certainly prove Marie Laveau was fine with lint-covered pecans. Or that she had quite a sense of humor.
Chapter 2
“I ate way too much,” Maggie groaned as she stepped out onto the sidewalk.
“I drank way too much,” Erika said and giggled. Maggie laughed too. They’d all had a bit too much to drink.
But this was vacation, Maggie thought, and if anyone deserved to get a little tipsy, she did.
The sun had set beyond the ornate, yet run-down buildings while they were in the restaurant. Now the side street was dim, all the bright colors of the day muted to varying shades of gray. But the air was still warm and heavy with humidity, and the shadows and hair-frizzing dampness didn’t dull the energy crackling in the air.
Maggie had sensed that energy as soon as she’d arrived there, that afternoon. She could admit it to herself now that she was feeling a little more…open, with the expensive chardonnay heating her blood. It was an energy that had nothing to do with the excitement of going on vacation for the first time in years, or being in a new city.
Oh, she’d definitely been excited about going on this trip. Getting away from her dull box of an apartment outside of Washington, D.C., was much needed, as was getting away from her job. She loved her job, but as her friends said, it was a job where she could hide away with her moldering sheet music and avoid life.
Yes, she was excited, but this was a different feeling from that one. This wasn’t an exhilaration inside her, it was more of an energy around her. As if the city had its own aura. Its own life. And she was now caught up in it, pulled right into its essence.
She chuckled to herself. Here she’d been finding it amusing that her friends were getting all mystical—she was doing the same thing. Of course, the wine might be helping her with that too. But whatever it was about New Orleans, she was glad to think about something other than her often very, very dull life. And Peter. That situation certainly hadn’t been dull, but it had been the kind of escapade she could have easily done without.
Ack! She wasn’t going to let him sneak into her thoughts—not even for a minute.
She was going to think about the wonderful vibe of the city. She stopped walking and took a deep breath.
As soon as she’d stepped out of the cab and set her feet on the gritty, cracked streets of the French Quarter, she’d felt something. A latent dynamism, a crackling hum in the air.
She giggled slightly under her breath. Okay, maybe the three glasses of wine had been a bad idea. It was making her thoughts rather out-there. She was getting as suddenly and strangely cosmic as her friends. But she did feel more alive here.
As if to accent her thoughts, Jo paused outside a small cafe, little more than a hole-in-the-wall.
“Listen to that,” she said, swaying to the lively zydeco drifting out onto the street. She began to dance as if it was the most normal thing in the world to break into a jig on the sidewalk; as if being here energized a person so much that they just had to dance.
Erika joined in, possessed by that same need, but Maggie could only sway along with them—she was too busy listening to the music. Music—with its own power, its own life force.
Maggie could hear the horns and the snare drums and the accordion. In her mind, she could see the notes dancing, skipping over the staffs like her friends danced across the cracks in the pavement.
Maggie smiled, closing her eyes, wanting to see the music more clearly.
“Come on,” Jo called, her voice shattering Maggie’s thoughts, sending the notes scattering. Maggie opened her eyes, having no idea how long she’d stood there absorbed in the song.
Her friends had moved on and were waiting at the intersection for her.
“I like that music,” Maggie said as she joined them.
“Is there any music you don’t like?” Erika asked.
“Not much,” Maggie said. “After all, music is my life.”
“But,” Jo said pointedly, “you are not here to think about your work. You can think about dancing. You can think about singing.”
“I did see a karaoke bar when we were riding into the Quarter,” Erika added.
“No karaoke,” Maggie insisted.
“You can even play music,” Jo said, continuing her train of thought.
“Where would I do that?” Maggie asked, but Jo was not going to be distracted.
“But you cannot think about music in the context of your work,” she said.
“That’s right. You are here to live a little. Not work.”
Maggie sighed. “I like my work.” Not to mention she hadn’t been thinking at all about the items she’d received in the mail just a day before she was to leave for this trip. Well, not until her friends mentioned work.
“I like my work too,” Jo said. “But I don’t intend to think about kids or grammar or reading comprehension. I want to dance.”
“Yeah, me too,” Erika agreed.
Maggie laughed, but she lingered behind, still hearing bits of the music. Still seeing the notes in her head. The way they would look written down. Some bits she couldn’t quite see. Having heard the song just this one time, and now from a distance, she couldn’t see it exactly. But she could make out most of it. Black and white notes dancing the different beats of zydeco across sheets of paper.
“Are