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Triplet Witch Trilogy #2

Gone with the Witch

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In order to save a helpless child, beautiful bad girl and psychic siren Storm Cartwright sets a seductive trap for Aiden McCloud, a gorgeous antiques restorer who is the only one who can help her, that backfires when the magic of love interferes with her plans. Original.

294 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published May 1, 2008

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1252 people want to read

About the author

Annette Blair

43 books1,006 followers
Annette Blair's romantic comedies owe their beginnings to a root canal and a reluctant trip to Salem Massachusetts. Though she had once proclaimed she'd never write a contemporary, she stumbled into the serendipitous role of Accidental Witch Writer on that trip. Funny how she managed to eat her words even with an aching jaw. Magic or destiny; Annette's Bewitching Romantic Comedies became her first National Bestsellers.

Her August '07 release, SEX AND THE PSYCHIC WITCH, the first in her Triplet Witch Trilogy, hit the #1 bestselling spot for contemporary romance-humorous on Barnes & Noble. It also hit B & N's overall bestseller lists for mass market and fiction mass market and #7 for romance mass market, topping Nielsen BookScan and Borders Bestseller lists as well.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 73 reviews
Profile Image for Cally.
115 reviews
April 30, 2013
I thought the writing of the book was alright, but the choice of words wasn't something that I enjoyed. I grew out of using boner long ago and the constant references to dragon games grew rather tiring very quickly. Some parts of the book where amusing but I don't think it was anything I'd want to read again, especially when you got to the end.

He was in love with her, had started turning a windmill into a home for them and then he married another woman. No phone call, no heads up or anything like that for the woman he'd been playing "dragon games" with while looking for a crying child. It became even more frustrating because the marriage was no necessary, he could have been put on the birth certificate, they could have stopped at the notarized note. It was just a wrench to toss in at the last moment to keep it from ending.

It wasn't a *bad* book, but it did leave me feeling extremely meh about it in the end.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for meghann.
1,056 reviews1 follower
April 29, 2014
Haha this book had me laughing all the way through. Storm is definitely my favorite of the three sisters so far. The endings of these books are a bit cheesy for my taste, but the journey there is great. There was less use of the phrase "man brain" in book two, which is always a plus. And dragons will forever make me laugh. I'm not sure if I'll enjoy book three as much as the two main characters were just kind of meh in the first two books. We shall see.
Profile Image for Bookworm.
420 reviews25 followers
November 10, 2024
Storm Cartwright is one of triplet sisters, who happen to be witches. Storm is the gothic one, she has blue hair, a tongue ring, and wears combat boots. The other sisters are Harmony and Destiny and they have a half sister, Vickie.

This book was funny and romantic for the most part. With expressions like 'Withering witch balls'...how can you not smile...lol

The one thing I didn't like was that the story became a little hard to believe around page 200. All of a sudden it felt like there was so much going on, and some things unbelievably came together and worked themselves out too conveniently. The story started off really well, and it was hard to put down, but then I found myself shaking my head in disbelief as the story took a turn, almost towards being for lack of a better word, 'corny'. Once this passed however, I did enjoy the way the author wrapped it all up in the end. So don't let my 3 rating deter you if you're thinking of reading this one.
Profile Image for Gypsie Holley.
Author 5 books24 followers
September 28, 2008
By the end of the 4th chapter I had tears streaming down my face from laughing so hard for 4 straight chapters! It eased up but what a fantastic write. I just loved Storm and Aiden. Their chemestry was erotic and breathtaking. I felt the whirlwind of this book and I didn't put it down til done! This family just keeps getting bigger, hopefully that means we will be reading of these witches for a long time!


Best Quotes from the book:

"Your allergy reeks of commitment phobia." ---Storm
"My aftershave is called Independence." ---Aiden

"You think I'm electric?" ---Storm
"No, I think you're a fruit." ---Aiden

Profile Image for Andrea.
920 reviews66 followers
November 26, 2009
This is the second book in The Triplet Witch Trilogy. I really wasn't too fond of the first book, Sex and the Psychic so I was hoping this one would be better. And it was. Not a lot better, but I enjoyed it more. The writing didn't seem as annoying to me. And I liked the characters in this story more. But I still felt like elements of the plot were just thrown into the story. I mean, these elements would have worked if more background had been built up. I have the third book in the series, Never Been Witched, to read next and hopefully it will be the best of the three.
Profile Image for Jenn.
1,463 reviews25 followers
March 3, 2012

***NOTE MY REVIEWS OFTEN CONTAIN SPOILERS***

Storm Cartwright has been hearing a baby crying since the moment she met Aiden McCloud at her soon to be brother in law’s once haunted castle. She’s sure it’s her psychic powers telling her that he has a child out there someplace who needs him. He’s sure that she’s nuts. He won’t deny that she’s sexy, and after seeing her help exorcise a ghost he can’t deny that she’s a witch but that doesn’t mean she isn’t certifiably insane. When Aiden won’t listen she enlists the help of her sisters to force him to go on a road trip to search for the baby and when that doesn’t work she seduces him into bed, handcuffs him there then kidnaps him in his motor coach to force him to go. What follows is a hilarious cross country adventure as she searches for the child psychically calling to her and saves a few other children in need along the way. She doesn’t count on find a child from her own family who needs her or the mother who walked away from her at birth. She also doesn’t count on the steamy sexual attraction between her and Aiden stealing more than just kisses. Can she protect her heart while she saves the child he doesn’t even believe he has?

Don’t get me wrong I liked this book as much as I liked the others, maybe more so. However, things were a lot less clear in this book especially when it came to the foreplay and sex scenes which were numerous to say the least. There was a scene in which she sheathed him in a condom and I could have sworn intercourse occurred but then a few chapters later she was seeing his penis and its artistic tattoo for the first time. And other longer scenes where I could have sworn they had intercourse but two or three pages later it saying that foreplay had only just begun and when it came to the sex scenes I kind of felt like my head was whirling and I’d reread the scene multiple times and it still seemed liked they’d had sex before they did and were contradicting what just occurred. Some of the scenes in this book just didn’t have the same clarity Blair’s other works have. So I give this one a lower rating not because I enjoyed the story less, but because some of the writing was incredibly confusing. Outside the sex scenes and foreplay scenes which I will again mention were numerous to the point the book relies a lot on sex to sell the love story, the work and plot is very clear but in the midst of them I felt like my head was spinning to the point that I’d kind of zone out reading them. And as always Blair characters achieved their happy place a lot easier than the rest of the world to the point it’s difficult to believe. The book is a close third like the rest of Blair’s work and probably falls under the category of light hearted paranormal romance. She did give both story lines equal importance as with the last one, but as the paranormal plot is a psychic female lead cosmically tasked with saving children there weren’t many scenes or any that I can think of that needed the sort of dangerous scare factor that Blair failed to create in the first novel in this trilogy. Since she didn’t have those types of scenes the secondary plot came across better because she could maintain her lighthearted humorous voice while accurately telling the paranormal story included here. Another thing I didn’t like about this novel is while as a reader I may enjoy psychoanalyzing the characters presented to me I don’t want to listen to the characters constantly psychoanalyzing each other or constantly providing detailed explanation of symbols, stones and other witchy things. I like to read about the spark of witchcraft scenes, but I don’t like my fiction to have text book like lectures. The psychoanalyzing especially makes me wonder if Blair questions the intelligence of her readers as if they can’t figure out the characters flaws without those flaws being spelled out for them. And even though the characters are the ones doing the telling, it’s almost as if she wanted to do more telling than showing so that she could get back to the confusing sex scenes. While the story idea was excellent, the clarity in the writing in this book compared to her other works is lacking and I believe she relies too much on sex to sell her story in this novel. Also when she mentions past characters she changes her facts. In The Accidental Witch Melody Seabright donated a lot of money to the Keep Me Foundations, all of the money her father sent to her basically was signed over to that charity. After her father conforms through meeting and falling for Logan’s mother he then founds the Seabright Foundation, or maybe it was the Melody Seabright Foundation, I can’t remember exactly. While that foundation does offer support to her original cause the Keep Me Foundation it is a separate foundation which also lends support to the boys’ orphanage we learn about in Kira and Jason’s story My Favorite Witch. In this story when Melody is brought up she owns the Keep Me Foundation and unless she somehow purchased a foundation since her novel which should have been mentioned someplace then Blair changed her facts and hasn’t kept good track of her own stories. Also in The Scot The Witch and The Wardrobe I don’t remember any mention that Vickie is pregnant before Rory proposes but when Vickie and Rory make an appearance here for Harmony and King’s wedding Storm makes a big deal about Rory knocking Vickie up before he proposes to her. It actually makes it sound as if he proposed because she was pregnant which had nothing to do with why he proposed to her. So, obviously those things kind of bugged me because if you haven’t noticed I’m stickler for consistency especially within a series. I probably notice it more than other readers because for the most part I buy series novels after the entire series has been released and read them all in one shot. I am not a fan of the cliffhanger ending and because I know a lot of writers like to employ this tactic I avoid the discontent by making sure I have the next installment already in my possession to read before I begin reading. Obviously there are exceptions to the rule, but that’s my norm with books in a series or trilogy. But back to the topic at hand, the story is fairly well written but as I mentioned doesn’t have the clarity of Blair’s other work. However the secondary plot is better written than the secondary plots in her other novels if that makes any sense. She also brings an empowered female sex toys and all with a tortured male as is kind of becoming her trademark based on what I’ve read of her works. The humor is definitely there in full force and then some; I think this might be the funniest book I’ve read by her. I mean it’s hard to top handcuffing a guy in his own motor coach, kidnapping him and then ending up in a tabloid in which they’re referred to as the nymphomaniac and the sex slave because of it. The man has a dragon tattooed on his member for goodness sake, it’s kind of hard to take something like that seriously. I think it would be impossible for this book not to have been hilarious with a female lead like Storm.

The characters were as always well developed and while we see appearances from other characters like King, Morgan, Rory, Harmony, Destiny, Vickie, Reggie and Jake they mostly have cameos in this novel since the novel doesn’t take place in Salem as the previous novels did. This leaves the novel open to focus on Storm and Aiden as well as introduce and develop a few other secondary characters. Unlike in The Scot, The Witch and the Wardrobe, Blair manages in this novel to keep separate and believable identities for the reoccurring characters during their appearances which I liked. There were a few secondary characters that weren’t well developed like Marvelanne, Storm’s mother which I think was done intentionally so that readers weren’t in any way inclined to feel sympathy for her and Claudette, the mother of Aiden’s child who almost needed to be saint like to fulfill her role. However most of the previous and new secondary characters like Ginny, Pepper and Becky popped off the page as well developed individuals. The leading characters in this novel however I felt really shined. I’ve liked Storm’s character since I was introduced to her in The Scot, The Witch and The Wardrobe. In that book she was the only one of the triplets that stood apart as her own character because she was the snarky bitchy goth triplet. However she also came across to me even in that novel as the most protective, caring and intuitive of the triplets as well. It was clear that her behavior was her shell to protect her from emotions she obviously felt too much of. When she received her own story in this novel my thoughts on her character from previous novels were brought to the surface and we’re brought into the mind of a multifaceted character with tons of insecurities and safety walls, but a heart of gold and lots of witchy power. I loved the flaws in this character; she’s so real I could see her as if she were sitting in my living room with me as I read. Aiden had his own layers and insecurities that made him a wonderful partner for a lead as I guess you’d say rocky and layered as Storm. An adequate partner for this character couldn’t be anything less than riveting to read about or the story would have been a disappointment. I think that Storm and Aiden might be Blair’s deepest and best developed characters yet, however I still resent the constant psychoanalyzing conversation where she out right points out the obvious emotional scars of the characters. Blair needs to trust that her readers are intelligent enough to see what she’s showing them instead of having the characters tell the reader what the writer wants them to see about the characters.

Overall the book was a hilarious and enjoyable read. I’d recommend it to readers of contemporary and paranormal romance who are looking for a humorous and lighthearted love story and who don’t mind stories with a little heat attached.
Profile Image for Skye.
1,844 reviews3 followers
February 17, 2020
Absolutely adore the idea of having triplets which each have a power in the past, present and future. For Storm, her knowledge and power in the present finally come into use in this story. And I loved it. The ability to track down and save children in danger is kind of amazing. And I love that although she’s completely wrapped up in the present, moments of her past are highlighted as she struggles to find her happily ever after.

Although I really adored this story, it did take me a little while to get into it. Unlike Sex and the Psychic Witch, this didn’t really jump off to an insanely quick start. Probably a little bit insane though… considering it starts with Storm kidnapping Aiden and taking him on an adventure that he is completely not expecting. Still, it didn’t sweep me up like the first book of this series. About six chapters in, it suddenly took off and I was swept away.

Both Aiden and Storm have weird little hang ups in this tale. Although I just found Aiden’s weird. I completely got where Storm was coming from with some of her reluctance. Aiden on the other hand, it felt like he just subscribed to the whole idea of commitment-phobe. Without actually having some serious history which led him to that. I may just be being a little judgy though…

I absolutely adored the ending of this story. Not only are Aiden and Storm close to her sisters (I can’t imagine the triplet being separated), but Storm has also found the children she wanted to rescue. Plus, there is this whole team of psychics who choose to give their time to the finding and rescuing of lost children… of all kinds.
Profile Image for Kristen.
2,547 reviews84 followers
December 24, 2017
I love Annette Blair's books. She effortlessly combines sweet and silly, with deep and lovely.

This series, like all Blair's books start out feeling like cotton-candy fiction - the story and the characters come across like fun and fluffy beach reads, and they are and do deliver that. These are fun and easy-to-read stories that entertain like crazy.

But every time I read one of Blair's stories, I realize about halfway through that there is depth, and and powerful emotion in the plot, and that the characters and the mountains they are always climbing are multi-faceted and intensive. The story always gives me both humour and heart in an Annette Blair book, and so while they may sound and start like fluff reads, they always leave me sighing in pleasure and sweetness by the end.

This book was no different. I loved Storm and Aiden, and I loved going on their long, convoluted and sometimes completely ridiculous journey to the inevitable happy ending. Annette Blair always surprises and enchants me and I look forward to reading many more of her wonderful stories!
Profile Image for Klizbet.
1,075 reviews79 followers
May 26, 2021
3.5 fluffy stars

I enjoyed this book, though it was far from perfect. Definitely not worth a reread.

There was a ton of sex in this book, almost too much...contrary-wise the sex scenes weren’t explicit or even written very well at all. Honestly, the steamy scenes felt like that were written by a 17-18 year old with little to no first hand experience.

The dialogue and the entire story felt like it was written by a teenager or for teenagers except, like I said before, there was a lot of sex. It’s thoroughly confusing. Also, the beginning of the book felt like we were dropped in the middle of the story in progress. This is supposed to be a standalone, but maybe if I had read the previous book then it wouldn’t feel that way?

Here is the premise of the story...Witch kidnaps guy friend from wedding in order to find missing baby, commence road trip and ensuing drama. Funny, flirty, enjoyable, if confusing read.
Profile Image for Elaine.
155 reviews1 follower
May 30, 2022
This one kind of starts slow but stick with it.
Profile Image for Sandy M.
669 reviews34 followers
August 1, 2011
I so enjoy Annette Blair’s books. They’re just plain old fun. They have some of the snappiest banter I’ve ever read. And they’re as sexy as hell. For those days you have no idea what you want to read, crack open one of Ms. Blair’s books and you’ll be smiling for days to come afterward.

And even start at the very beginning of Ms. Blair’s witch books. This is her second trilogy and even though the first three books, her Accidental Witch Trilogy, The Kitchen Witch, My Favorite Witch, and The Scot, the Witch and the Wardrobe, are not that closely related to this second set, there are some overlapping characters, but you just don’t want to miss all the fun to start with. When I finish one of these witch books, I always think there’s no way the author can top that in her next one. And she always proves me wrong. I actually like Gone with the Witch the best of the bunch so far. The sexual playing and tension starts right off the bat between Aiden and Storm, along with a great mystery brought on by the fact that Storm hears a baby crying whenever she’s near Aiden.

He refuses to believe this baby has anything to do with him, especially because he’s a wanderer, crisscrosses the country in his motor coach when he’s contracted for jobs as an antiques restorer. Storm, on the other hand, is sure to her bones that this child she hears is definitely his, and knowing that she won’t get any cooperation from Aiden, she devises a plan to abduct him in his own home on wheels so they can gallivant around the country to solve this mystery. Of course, it’s the quick and snappy repartee between them and the unexpected trouble they find along the way that makes for the aforementioned fun in this book.

Aiden and Storm are both such likable characters, and with all that sexual playin’ around in the beginning, I wanted them to get on with the deed and quit teasing me. But what fun would that be? It comes soon enough and it’s worth waiting the extra chapters for. They each have their own reasons for being independent loners, wanting and looking for love but afraid to really find it. But when everything is finally out in the open, when their lives take a decidedly huge left turn when they make discoveries they could never imagine, they find love, much more than they ever dreamed of. Ms. Blair even had me in tears a few times near the end of the story at the results and reactions of these discoveries.

Don’t wait for a rainy day to read Annette Blair’s books. Don’t even wait for those times when you need a distraction from life. Take that distraction now and enjoy yourself like you haven’t in a very long time. Give yourself over to the romance and the love you’ll find in the pages of her books. You’ll be hooked in no time at all.

See my complete review at http://www.goodbadandunread.com
Profile Image for Arminzerella.
3,746 reviews91 followers
April 11, 2009
Storm is a psychic witch, one of three sisters (triplets), and she’s recently started hearing the voices of crying babies – particularly when she’s around the very sexy and desirable Aiden McCloud. Aiden thinks she’s imagining things, so Storm kidnaps him (in his own RV) so that she can use him to track down the source of the crying. In the process, they fall in love and find a way to be together that doesn’t cramp their independent styles.

This is the sequel to Sex and the Psychic Witch, and there were some bumpy moments where past events are referred to and the reader is left to wonder if s/he missed something. Aiden and Storm obviously have a past together – a mostly unconsummated one – which is quickly rectified despite Aiden’s protests (he goes from abstinence to aggressor in just a few pages). His actual reasons for putting Storm off are more vanity-related than ex-girlfriend (which is what readers are left to assume) – he’s not broken up, he’s just been supremely stupid.

Nothing about this really worked for me – the romance, the witchery, the salvation of innocents. Aiden capitulates too quickly, the lovemaking is too spectacular and perfect (every time!), the “spells” Storm weaves are rather trite (plus, they rhyme), the constant references to Storm being “goth” are irritating, and Storm’s powers seem to manifest themselves conveniently (oh, by the way, she can also use telekinesis when she’s angry). While this had more details of witchcraft (particularly when Storm is gathering supplies) than some other witch-y romances, it still wasn’t completely believable.

There are *some* romances I can get into, but this just wasn’t one of them.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Julie (jjmachshev).
1,069 reviews292 followers
April 27, 2008
I really, really wanted to like this book. I've enjoyed the other books in Ms Blair's Witch series. But for whatever reason, "Gone With the Witch" was not an enjoyable read for me.

The book is written in first person...a very choppy first person. It was hard to keep track of scenes, conversations, and thoughts. There was an overabundance of magick in the book...from spells to coincidences to coma astral traveling. It was just too much for me.

Storm is a witch who's strongly attracted to Aiden. Aiden is an unbeliever. Whenever Storm is near Aiden she hears the sound of a baby crying. Storm is sure the baby is Aiden's, so she kidnaps him to go and find the child. There's plenty of sex, rescuing of children, fulfillment and loss of dreams...but, this book was still a hard read for me.
Profile Image for Bitten_by_Books.
625 reviews114 followers
December 5, 2008
Storm Cartwright is a psychic witch who reads present events. She met Aiden McCloud in the first of Ms. Blair’s Triplet Witch Trilogy, Sex and the Psychic Witch. She was then instantly attracted to him and that attraction starts Storm’s story off with a bang (pun intended).

Whenever Storm is near Aiden, she hears a crying baby and is convinced that the baby is his. She is determined to fulfill her psychic mandate to answer the child’s cry and will do whatever that takes, and Aiden is just as determined to hang on to his freedom...

For the entire review please go to the Best Paranormal & Urban Fantasy Review site on the web, Bitten By Books for the review of Gone With the Witch (Triplet Witch Trilogy, Book 2) in it's entirety. You won't be sorry.

Profile Image for Drea.
125 reviews
July 24, 2008
Just beginning to read this one. I like these books because they are an easy read, but I keep forgetting that this series is very sex-centered, so when I started this book I actually had an initial let down. Now, don't get me wrong, I don't mind some sex in a book, but I really dislike it or it's not my taste exactly if it's implied on almost every page. Yep that's me, the prude :-) I will keep reading though and just skim over the parts I don't think are totally necessary for the book - even though with this series, I should have known/remembered it would be there.

Ok, I did like this, the story line and the funness of it once I was able to find it through all the sex talk, innuendos and actually deed. And, I will more than likely read the third book in the series when it comes out as well.
Profile Image for Teagan.
Author 10 books7 followers
May 8, 2008
In the second book of the Sexy Witches in Salem series, Annette Blair has once again shown that her magical writing can do more than light up the pages with great characters. She makes them sizzle. I laughed and I cried and I even read a few pages to my husband. She can turn a story this way and that and still make the reader enjoy it as if they are hanging on for dear life on a roller coaster and loving every minute of it. This time the bad girl witch shows her abilities and it will take someone equally strong to bring them both to their knees. Kudos once again to Ms. Blair. May I be you when I grow up!
Profile Image for CharleeMoo.
140 reviews12 followers
November 21, 2010
This was another one of those books that I just happened to pick up, and totally miss that it was part of a series. That being said, I still don't think I missed much, Annette Blair did a recap, so I got the gist of it, and found it to be rather enjoyable.
It's starts out with Storm who can 'hear' babies whenever she is around Aiden. She is convinced that the child needs help, and the key to finding the child is through Aiden. So what does she do? Kidnaps him.
This story is quick paced and a laugh a minute. It does go deeper then a few good laughs though, there are a few parts that make you feel for each of the main characters.
I can't wait to read the other two books in this trilogy.
Profile Image for Diana.
1,746 reviews
July 19, 2008
Storm Cartwright, the triplet with the sense of the present, consistently hears a baby crying when she's near Aiden McCloud, one of King's friends. When he laughs her off, she kidnaps him and sets off the find the baby she believes is his.

This was another strange book that seems like it's trying too hard, with weird dialogue and twists. Once again, the family grows exponentially, and Storm and Aiden, whose obstacles never seemed that real or dire, finally get together. But this just didn't feel as real as other books do.
Profile Image for Ann (Noumena12).
476 reviews14 followers
Read
June 13, 2008
Gone with the Witch is Annette Blair's second book in the Triplet Witch Trilogy. Storm Cartwright is the "bad" triplet with her goth looks and blue hair. Storm meets her match in Aiden McCloud, wandering biker. Together, they fulfill Storm's destiny...although it requires kidnapping, seduction, and magic.

Storm is my favorite triplet; her complexity of caring, facing her own issues, and her fight. Blair's characters make the story come to life: Pepper and Ginny are favorites. I'm looking forward to watching Pepper and Becky grow up in future stories.

Profile Image for Peggy O'Connell.
16 reviews3 followers
July 17, 2008
Gone With The Witch is filled with snappy, fast paced dialogue. The chemistry is fantastic and smoking hot.

I've loved reading Annette Blair's novels since she introduced the Witches series, and she just keeps getting better and better. Each new story that I read becomes my new favorite, and this is no exception.

This book had everything I love in a novel - I laughed until I had tears, there was wonderful sexual tension between Aiden and Storm, the characters were well-developed, and there was a great plot.
Profile Image for Laurie Garrison .
726 reviews174 followers
August 24, 2009
I dont think I have ever had so much fun with a book.. This is the second book of this series I have read.They both have been fun and sexy...
In this book your are laughing about Storm handcuffing Adrian to the bed and women taking pictures of him, then next your mad at the triplts mom, then your crying over Adiran finding his child and mother.. This is a great book.
I also love how Blair makes the cats so fun in these books.. This cat here loves to ride on the celing fan. They are crazy cats...
Profile Image for Faithann.
246 reviews23 followers
October 16, 2012
The second in the Triplet Witch trilogy, and it was just as entertaining as the first. This one is about the third triplet, Storm and Aiden. Both are rebels, with no desire to for commitments, or so they thought. Storm has always heard crying babies in her mind, but has never tried to find them. But every time she gets near Aiden, she not only hears a baby, but she smells baby powder and apricots. When Aiden refuses to go willingly with her to find this baby, she kidnaps him and that's when the wild ride begins.
664 reviews4 followers
May 3, 2016
Storm is a triplet and a witch. She just has one problem, she hears a baby crying whenever she is around Aiden. Aiden thinks storm is a gorgeous goth girl that won't stop talking baby nonsense. Storm is sure that she is hearing a child in need and Aiden just won't get with the program of helping her find the child. What is a girl to do? How about kidnapping him in his own RV and going on the road to find the child in question. Really enjoyed this book. There were parts you just had to laugh at and didn't want the book to end.
Profile Image for Christy.
50 reviews46 followers
December 4, 2008
I am addicted to and in love with Ms. Blair's Witches! This second book in the Triplet Witch trilogy is such a fun and romantic read. Filled with sexual tension and heat, witty dialogue and humor, Storm's and Aidan's story kept me reading from start to finish in just a few short hours. February can't come soon enough for me to read Destiny's and Morgan's tale ~ in fact, I've already pre-ordered it.
Profile Image for Michele.
440 reviews34 followers
March 28, 2009
When beautiful bad girl Storm Cartwright hears the sound of a baby crying every time she’s near Aiden McCloud, she turns on the charm. Because she’s sure it means a child is in need—and that the handsome antiques restorer is the key to finding it. And when she lures Aiden into her seductive trap and kidnaps him, something magical happens between them.

I really have enjoyed this series. Need to get my hands on the third book in the trilogy now.
Profile Image for Julie sims and books.
331 reviews15 followers
July 12, 2009
I lov love the book....its was awsome! Storm Cartwright is hot and very mysterous but she does have a sweet side and not just wild all the time. In the book she does get kinky at moments in the book with Adien and how this comes about....you'll have to read the story for yourself to find out. Not only that... Adien has surprizes happening for him as well in inspiring ways....check this book out! its a must read book...
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