At first I liked this fluffy fairy tale romance. It was funny and cute, I thought it had potential. A man is looking to hire a woman "Personal Assistant No computer skills necessary. Must be willing to travel, so no family attachments. Must be young, healthy, interested. Starting salary $100,000 a year, plus medical, dental. Apply in person..."
In the real world that is some mighty suspicious ad. But with the salary and benefits, in the reality we live in of low salaries, part time positions and no benefits, you would still get a lot of applicants as did the ad in this book.
Fine, here comes Darci, and I just loved Darci.
Here she comes in her cheap black suit, skirt held up with a safety pin. It itches because "her Aunt Thelma had washed Darci's only suit in soap powder she'd bought on sale, then had taken it out of the washer before the rinse cycle began. "Saves money that way," Aunt Thelma had said.
And this, "I want you to have a good, solid breakfast," Aunt Thelma had said as she handed Darci a Pop-Tart and a plastic cup full of warm Pepsi. Fruit's better for you than those cereals your mother gives you. And you need caffeine and sugar and something warm inside you when you go job huntin'," she'd said kindly.
Darci is sure she will get the job because of her True Persuasion, which means she thinks about something real hard to make it happen.
The man doing the hiring is a wealthy man named Adam. He would not have hired Darci, unimpressed with "the little Kentucky hillbilly" but the psychic he hired to help him find the right person for the job says Darci is the one.
Lo and behold, Darci is hired and she is so excited! But what is the job? Adam doesn't want to tell her but Darci follows him everywhere, won't be quiet, and makes friends with everyone in the town they have come to work in. And she eats and eats and eats.
She finds out they are hunting out a witches coven. Well, bring it on! Dangerous Darci and her man Adam are going to figure it all out and bring that coven down.
Eventually the dialogue becomes a little lame and the story develops some plot holes. The humor in the book, the strong point, was not enough to overcome the problems.