By Richard Pace
witches and cowboys are the same entity but just separated at night and day.
Could you kindly elaborate on that please
- Big Silly Hats
- Dangerous aura
- Wands | Guns
- Midnight | High Noon
- Robes | Ponchos
- Stockings with boots | Chaps with boots
- Magic Incantations | Yeehaws and slang
- Brews Potions | Brews Alcohol
- Rides brooms at night because horses are sleeping
- Rides horses at day because brooms are recharging
- Can’t swim
Moonshine is an alcoholic potion brewed by witches and cowboys; “Moon” to represent the Witching Hour, and “Shine” for sunny High Noons.
Rootin’, tootin’, toil n’ shootin’
Fire burn and cowboy bootin’
Eye of newt and spicy beans,
Toe of frog and denim jeans,
Whiskey, grits, n’ demon spittle
tossed into my iron griddle
With the tannin’ of our hides,
Somethin’ wicked this way rides
Witches on a railroad adventure 🚂🚃🚃🚃🚃☕
Witch by Daria Rashev
I like the concept of being a witch. Because it grows with you. You can look any way and be any age, and still be a witch. Unlike other jobs and titles for women, you don’t become some sad, old version of a thing upon getting older. You only get better at witchery, and thus that much scarier. There’s no place to go but up. Everything should be like that
So what happens if two people who have promised their firstborn to separate witches have a child together? Do they both just pop up in the nursery and have a custody battle?
I need a book about a little girl whose parents had promised their firstborn to different witches and the only way that both ends of the deal were fulfilled was for them to have joint custody of the child.
I love it!
And then the witches, forced to share a cottage while raising their joint stolen child, fall in love…
I’ll take ‘Things I Would Read the Hell Out of’ for $1000, Alex.




