Reading with Rasta: Izzy Hoffman is Not a Witch

Reading with Rasta: Izzy Hoffman is Not a Witch

The Writers Triangle
The Writers Triangle
Reading with Rasta: Izzy Hoffman is Not a Witch
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Izzy Hoffman is Not a Witch by Alyssa Alessi prologue.

Every morning I wake from the same dream. Honestly,  it’s more like a nightmare. I walk up to a ridiculously large  brass-framed mirror, its dirty gold trim holding golden  vines wrapped around its curves. Faces belonging to  chubby baby angels are carved in its crevices. I’m hesitant  to look at first, but then I jump in front of it like I know  what’s coming and want to get it over with. I do know  what’s coming. My reflection is the same every time. A  woman with long straggly black hair and a gaunt face  stares back at me. She has no eyes, yet she looks straight  into my soul. Her head moves from side to side. My chest  aches with each crook of her neck. She wants to pull me  in, I know she does. Her bony fingers scratch at the sides  of the glass. I open my mouth to scream, but the shriek  comes from her unhinged jaw instead of mine. I always  wake in a puddle of sweat, then get up to brush my teeth.  This has been on repeat for five years, until today. Today is  my twelfth birthday and as a gift, this woman smiled and  punched through the glass. 

Chapter 1 

As the glass shatters, my eyes pop open. My bedroom  door swings forward so hard it bounces off the door stop.  “Happy birthday to ya! Happy birthday to ya!” The  birthday parade around my room is in full effect. I smile,  because even though I’m too old for this, my parents  look hilarious. 

“Thanks guys,” I giggle while I sit up to hug my mom.  “You’re looking a little sweaty honey; do you want me  to open up a window in here?” My dad kisses my cheek,  his coarse beard stubble scratching my skin. He opens a  window to let the cool October breeze rush in. I’m not  sweating because I’m hot, I’m sweating because Bony Witch  broke through the glass and changed the dream that has  been the same for as long as I can remember. I will never  admit to my parents that I’m still having these dreams, or  the fact I named her. I used to cry out at night, but checking  

the closets and turning on lights became useless.  “Izzy? Are you ok?” mom asks. A navy-blue wizard  hat stands tall on her head, and a black boa drapes snake like around her neck. Her outfit says silly, but her face  says I’m worried about my strange child. I hate when my mom  looks at me like that. Her left eyebrow all raised and her  big brown eyes burning holes in my skin. It’s like she has  some sort of mom superpower that detects when I’m  even just a little uncomfortable. 

“What? Yeah, I’m fine,” I lie. “Maybe… I’m getting a  little old for the birthday parade, you know?” I search their  faces for any hint of them not believing me.  

My parents exchange a look. I feel bad once I say it out  loud, but it was that or bring up my dream.  

“Pfft, you are never too old for a birthday parade, but  we can tone it down a bit next year if you’d like,” my  mom compromises. 

“Speak for yourself Loretta! I’m still wearing my cloak  next year!” dad jokes, while swinging the cape in front of  his face like a vampire would. He opens his mouth wide  every time he laughs, showing off his perfect bright teeth  against his smooth dark skin.  

“I’m not too old for the pancakes, though,” I laugh  giving them a sly smirk. 

“Mm Hmm…” my mom smiles and gets up from my  bed, tossing all the fluffy blankets behind her. Dad looks out the window at the growing crowd and  says, “Alright birthday girl, we have a shop to open so let’s  get them pancakes before it gets too late,” in a tone too  serious for his outfit.

To my dad it’s just a shop, but to my mom and I, it’s home.  My dad always teases “you girls should just set up sleeping  bags down there and I’ll see you in the morning!” Dark Alley  Books has been our family bookshop for generations. From  the outside, it’s a large brick building with glass windows  showcasing jack-o-lanterns and string lights year-round.  Like most buildings on our side street, it holds a shop on  the bottom level and a home on the second. Next to our  olive-green door there is a plaque that reads “J YOUNG  1641”. J Young is my ancestor from my mom’s side. All I  know is he built this building, and for almost four hundred  years, my family has sold books out of it. We don’t just sell  books anymore, we also sell t-shirts that say “Witch City”  with a silhouette of a witch flying on a broom across the  chest. Mugs, hats, socks, and other boring things that have  nothing to do with books also sit on our shelves. It isn’t just  Dark Alley Books that sells these. The corner store, literally  named The Cornah Store, sells the same crap. The hardware  store, the pharmacy—everywhere you turn you’ll see the  witch logo. We sell things for the tourists. Every October  our little town of Marblehead (aka nowhere even remotely  cool, New England) gets flooded with tourists. 

Since today is October first, there will be a line down the  block for every store on our downtown street. It’s like this  is the only area tourists bother to check out. Do they not  know about the arcade on the other side of town? Or the  view from the cliff at Dead Horse Beach? They don’t care, they just want souvenirs with a picture of a witch on it, to  show everyone they came here. To show they visited the  famous “witch city.” The town that celebrates Halloween  like no other. 

My predictions were correct. I step onto the cobblestone  and immediately a woman in an elaborate witch costume  yells “Hey kid! You open?” 

“No.” I scoff with zero enthusiasm.  

My parents love the customers because “They are what’s  keeping us alive Izzy! Without them we’d just have a family  library!” And? I’d be good with that. The corner in the back  could be for just me. The nook in the back of the shop is  my sanctuary, and I don’t like when customers touch my  stuff. There is a table set up with dozens of bowls filled with  all different types of crystals. Each one is unique, varying  in color, size, and texture. And they are supposed to have  healing powers. We sell books on crystals, so I know that  Rose Quarts is for love, Tourmaline is for protection, and  Amethyst for healing… supposedly. I don’t believe any of it,  but I still love touching them all. I feel like when everyone  else comes in and touches them, it ruins how they feel for  me. It’s stupid, but they are mine. 

I’m thinking about my crystals and watching my reflection  in the windows as I walk by each store. I love watching my  waist-length hair blow behind me as I walk and catching  when my lip gloss shines in the sun against my mocha  complexion. There is something about storefront window reflections that make you look way cooler than you do in  real life. I can hear my mom’s voice in my head, “You’re  daydreaming again Izzy…” and smash! I collide with a man  and fall to the ground. I hit my head so hard on the brick  that I must be asleep because Bony Witch is all I see. She  paces back and forth in the mirror. The concerned look  on her face sending a hint of fear to my gut. She is biting  her claw-like nails and grabbing her own face. Suddenly she  stops. She catches me watching her and dashes full speed  towards the mirror.  

I wake up on the ground to an elderly woman with her  hand out to help me up.  

“Sweetie, are you hurt? That man just knocked you down  and kept going! People these days, rude as ever, I tell you!”  “Yeah, thanks” I say a bit confused. My head is killing  me, and the slight dizziness is throwing me off. I see the man  who I collided with and feel a chill crawl from my fingertips  up my arms. He is tall and thin, with his calf-length black  leather coat blowing behind him as he tries to flee the scene.  The old lady is still going on about how back in her day  gentlemen did the right thing, but I’m focused on catching  up with that guy. I’m not sure what I’m going to say when I  do but I want to get a better look at least. 

“I know, right? So rude! Thanks again!” I yell to the lady  as I start to run. He turns the corner on Derby St. but by the  time I get there the street is completely crowded, and he’s  gone. I lost him.