And what kind of power flowed through Glorianna Belladonna that she could change the physical world simply by asking it to change?
“Ephemera, hear me,” Glorianna had said.
Caitlin stood beside her, trying not to look at the burned husk of the cottage that had been her family’s home. In front of them, the rust-colored sand had swallowed even more of the meadow.
“This sand does not belong here,” Glorianna said. “This landscape is not welcome here.”
Listen to her, Caitlin thought as fiercely as she could. Please, listen to her.
A quiver along her skin, as if the air had asked a question. Glorianna watched her, waiting.
Feeling self-conscious and foolish, Caitlin stared at the sand and said, “This is my place. The sand that comes from that dark…landscape…does not belong here. It is not welcome here. I do not want that sand to touch what is mine.”
Something rippled through the land, then flowed through her, making her feel as if she were being lifted up to ride a wave in the sea. And then she watched the land change right before her eyes, and within moments, bare earth replaced the sand.
Filled with a blend of delight and disbelief, along with a helping of fear, Caitlin laughed nervously. “Isn’t Ephemera going to fill in the bare spots?”
“Yes,” Glorianna said. “The meadow will reseed itself, as it does every year.”
“That wasn’t what I meant.”
“I know. But there is a difference between being playful and being careless with what you ask of the world.”
“This garden is loved,” Glorianna said, brushing her fingers over the stones.
“I tend it as best I can,” Caitlin said, pleased that she sounded modest—and puzzled that Glorianna could tell what she’d done to the garden when they hadn’t gotten inside yet.
“You repaired the mortar?” Glorianna asked.
“What?” Now that it was pointed out, she could see signs of recent work.
“Maybe Lee’s ability to impose one landscape over another isn’t unique after all,” Glorianna said. Then she smiled at Caitlin. “The garden doesn’t actually exist on this hill. It’s here because you need it to be. But it is grounded somewhere else—and it is loved there, Caitlin.”
“Then…it’s not mine?” It hurt to consider it. The garden had been her friend most of her life.
“Of course it’s yours. It wouldn’t be here if it didn’t resonate with you.”
“Then what are you saying?”
Something in the air between them. Something in Glorianna’s eyes. Compassion? Knowledge? Caitlin couldn’t put a name to it, but she understood with unshakable certainty that whatever happened in the next minute would change her life—and would change the world.
“I think you should find out where this garden is rooted. Where you’re rooted. It isn’t here, Caitlin Marie. I’m not even sure this is one of your landscapes. This village and the surrounding land should be one of the pieces of the world that is in your keeping, but something isn’t right here. And I don’t think this is really home.”
“No,” Caitlin whispered. “It’s not. We never quite fit in Raven’s Hill.” A different place where the other girls wouldn’t see her as a sorceress and the boys wouldn’t think of her as the new village whore? “How do I find this place?”
“Let’s take a look inside the garden.”
Michael was the only person who had seen her garden—and Michael hadn’t understood. This was different, exciting, strange, terrifying.
“At this time of year, it’s not at its best,” Caitlin said, twisting her fingers as Glorianna studied each bed.
“No, it’s not,” Glorianna said absently. “You’ll have to work on that. You want balance reflected through the seasons, just as you want a balance between the currents of Light and Dark. This.” She stopped in front of a stone. “This came from the White Isle.”
Caitlin gaped for a moment. “How can you tell?”
“I can feel the island’s resonance in the stone.” Glorianna studied the stone a moment longer, then looked at Caitlin. “Why did you put it here in the garden?”
Flustered, Caitlin felt her face burn. “My aunt Brighid used to tell me about the White Isle and about Lighthaven, which is the heart of the island. For a while she thought I might be accepted into training there, but…”
“You don’t belong to Lighthaven,” Glorianna said with such careless certainty it took a long moment before Caitlin felt the pain of that statement. Then Glorianna looked at her and she had the same light-headed feeling that the world was changing right under her feet. “Lighthaven may hold the Light, and it may provide you with a place to rest and renew the spirit, but I think you’ll find the heart of the White Isle in a different place.”
My place. The yearning that swept through her was so fierce, she felt as if she could ride that sensation to another place. Another life.
“No no no,” Glorianna snapped, grabbing her and giving her a hard shake. “You haven’t been trained yet to take the step between here and there. And since none of us knows where this garden actually stands, we’d have no way to find you.”
Grounded. Jammed back into her skin. Shoved back into this village that deadened her heart.
“You should have let me go,” Caitlin whispered.
“Not yet,” Glorianna whispered back. Then she stepped away and said briskly, “Let’s take a look at the rest.”
“Not much left of it, is there?” Lee said, shielding his eyes as he studied the remains of the cottage.
“No, not much left,” Michael said. The winter clothes he’d be needing soon. The books he’d carefully selected and scrimped to buy so that he could share them with Aunt Brighid and Caitlin. The little treasures he’d accumulated over the years and couldn’t carry with him. All gone. His life, his boyhood, all burned away.
Nothing left of me here, he thought. Nothing left for me here. Except, hopefully, my father’s legacy.
Stepping around broken, burned timbers, Michael looked up at the one corner that still appeared to be fairly intact. But even if they hadn’t been touched by the fire itself, would the books have survived?
Only one way to find out.
“If we can steady a ladder up to that spot, I think I can get what I’m looking for,” Michael said.
“We can set a ladder up there right enough,” Nathan said, “but it won’t take much to have the rest of this place coming down on us.”
“It will hold long enough,” Michael said softly, pouring every drop of his luck-bringing into those words. A dark tune playing here. The same tune he’d heard during the years he’d lived in the cottage, with only a sprinkle of bright notes coming from Nathan. Just like always.
Lee met his eyes for a moment, then helped Nathan and Kenneday find the most solid spot for the ladder.
Oh, the wood was weak and trembled under his feet when he eased his way across what was left of the attic. A board cracked ominously as he pulled the box out of its special cupboard. Carrying the whole box would add too much weight to his own—and the image of Rory Calhoun impaled on stone suddenly filled his mind. Two boys were saved by the death of another. He didn’t want to repeat that particular tune by saving the books but dying in the process.
“Lee,” he called. “Come up the ladder so I can hand these over to you.” He opened the box and took the books out one at a time, stretching as far as he could and moving as little as possible to pass the books to Lee who, in turn, handed them down to Nathan and Kenneday.
“Careful,” Lee said as Michael finally eased his way back to the ladder.
Wood creaked and groaned as Michael started down. The wood supporting the top of the ladder suddenly broke, and he might have fallen among all the broken timbers if Lee and Nathan hadn’t been holding the ladder steady.
“Go,” Lee said, looking at Nathan. Kenneday was already outside, his arms full of books.
Nathan shook his head. “He said it would hold until we were
safely away, so it will hold.”
As soon as Michael had both feet on the floor, Nathan took one end of the ladder and Lee took the other. He followed them out, and as he cleared what had been the threshold of the front door, the cottage gave out a sound of creaking, wailing, agonized groaning.
Lady’s mercy, Michael thought as the rest of the roof and attic flooring that had supported the box of books came crashing down.
“I told you it would hold long enough,” Nathan said to Lee. Then he looked at Michael. “What comes next?”
Michael shook his head and watched the two women walking toward them. Glorianna looked upset. Caitlin looked dazed, like she’d tumbled into a tree while running flat out. “I think what comes next is up to them.”
“Aunt Brighid,” Caitlin said, lightly brushing her fingers over her aunt’s hand. “Auntie, it’s me. Caitlin Marie.”
Not so bad, the doctor had said. The cuts and burns had not been significant, and Brighid was a strong woman.
It looked bad enough to her.
Then Brighid stirred, opened her eyes. “Caitlin?” Her hand shook as she raised it to touch Caitlin’s face. “Caitlin Marie? I saw you disappear. I saw…”
“I know,” Caitlin said hurriedly. “I know. But I found a way back. Michael, too. He’s here. See?” She half turned in the chair by the bed and looked up at her brother.
“Aunt Brighid,” Michael said.
“You came,” Brighid said. “You got my message?”
“Yes,” he replied.
Currents of power suddenly flowed through the room as the third person moved to a position at the end of the bed where she would be clearly visible.
Caitlin watched, helpless to understand what was happening while Brighid and Glorianna stared at each other.
“I am Belladonna.”
Brighid sucked in a breath and coughed it out, a rasping sound. “You’re a sorceress like Caitlin, aren’t you?”
“I’m a Landscaper, like Caitlin,” Glorianna replied. “We are the bedrock that protects Ephemera from the human heart.”
“Lady of Light,” Brighid whispered. “You…could show her who she’s meant to be?”
“I can show her.”
“There’s nothing for her here.”
Grief filled Glorianna’s eyes, and Caitlin wondered again what the woman had seen in her garden that had caused such distress.
“No,” Glorianna said, “there’s nothing for her here.”
“I’m sitting in the room,” Caitlin said, guilt that she had done something wrong making her testy. “And I’m old enough to do some deciding for myself.”
Glorianna’s eyes never left Brighid’s, but she smiled. “Then we’ll let your auntie get some rest while we discuss those decisions.”
That didn’t sound like she was going to be the one doing much deciding, but at least she’d have her say.
“I’ll be back a little later,” Caitlin said, smiling at her aunt. As she rose, she saw the undiluted sadness in Michael’s eyes before he made an effort to hide his feelings.
She held on until they were in the hallway outside her aunt’s room before the feelings spewed out. “I don’t want her here. There’s a syrupy meanness in that room. They’re taking care of her right enough, but they’re glad she’s hurt. It’s her punishment for taking care of me and Michael all these years.” She glared at her brother. “You know that’s what they’re thinking.”
“Caitlin,” Michael said.
She wanted to shout, wanted to scream out the anger, but she kept her voice low. “You’ve been gone, Michael. These past twelve years, you’ve been gone. And you only stayed four years after Mother died. Then you were off having your adventures.”
“I was off trying to earn enough money to take care of the three of us,” Michael said heatedly, but he, too, kept his voice down.
“Let’s go to one of the rooms we’ve taken before continuing this discussion,” Glorianna said.
“There’s nothing more to discuss,” Caitlin snapped.
“Caitlin.”
She didn’t respond to Glorianna. She was too stunned by the way Michael suddenly paled.
“What did we do to the world?” he whispered.
“Somewhere around this village, a fine crop of rocks has sprung up,” Glorianna replied after a moment.
“What?” Caitlin asked, wondering why Michael looked ready to faint while Glorianna looked sympathetic but amused.
“Anger makes stone,” Glorianna said. “Something you can’t afford to forget. Now, would you like the rest of this to be discussed in private or would you rather go down to the parlor and put on a show so the people downstairs who are trying to eavesdrop won’t have to strain their ears?”
“What does sass make?” Caitlin muttered.
“Tart fruit.”
She wasn’t sure if Glorianna was teasing or not. Based on his expression, Michael wasn’t sure either, but the answer had brought some color back to his face. So she let herself be herded into one of the rooms they had rented while Michael knocked on the door of the other to fetch Lee.
Once the four of them were seated, Caitlin plucked up her courage to have her say. “Aunt Brighid doesn’t belong here. Michael has been on his own for a time now, and I’m old enough to make my own way. Besides, we’re going to have to start over in one place or another, and I don’t want it to be here.”
“Ah, Caitie,” Michael groaned. “Why did you never say things were so hard here?”
“It was all we had.”
He closed his eyes as if her words had hurt him.
“A piece at a time,” Glorianna said. “What do you want for your aunt?”
“She’s a Lady of Light,” Caitlin replied. “She should go back to the White Isle. I don’t think she’ll ever really heal if she stays here.”
“And you?” Glorianna asked.
“I want to find where my garden truly belongs. And I want to learn who I am. I want to learn to be Landscaper.”
“Aren’t you going to ask what I want?” Michael asked.
“No,” Glorianna replied quietly. “I feel your heart well enough.”
“So we go to the White Isle?” Lee asked.
“If you have a way of reaching it once we get there, I have a ship that can take us,” Michael said.
Glorianna nodded. “Then it’s settled.”
“Captain Kenneday and Nathan are having a meal downstairs,” Lee said. “I don’t know about the rest of you, but my stomach says it’s mealtime.”
Since there was nothing more to be done, Caitlin followed the rest of them down to the dining room.
Michael stripped down to his drawers, then slipped into bed and stared at the ceiling. “Tell me again why I’m sharing a room—and a bed—with you?”
Lee tucked his hands under his head and grinned. “Because we could only afford two rooms, and the beds being what they are, you cut up stiff about sharing one with your sister. And as much as I like her, I didn’t want to share a bed with Caitlin Marie either.”
“You’re damn right you wouldn’t be sharing a bed with her. No matter how grown-up she thinks she is, the girl is just eighteen and an innocent.”
Lee rolled over on his side and propped himself up on one elbow. “My sister is thirty-one and, in some ways, just as innocent.”
“Nooo,” Michael said, shaking his head in denial. “You aren’t telling me a woman as lovely as Glorianna has never been pleasured by a man.”
“I won’t tell you she’s never had sex, and I hope it gave her pleasure….”
“But?” Michael prodded when Lee seemed to sink into his own thoughts.
“None of them would have had enough heart to reach her island.”
Lee’s words filled him with hope and scared him right down to the bone. He wasn’t sure if he wanted to be Glorianna’s first love, but he kept thinking he wanted to be her lifetime’s love. Because he was certain she was his lifetime’s love.
If you do what
you must, you won’t have a lifetime with her.
Lee rolled onto his back. After a long moment of silence, he said, “So how old were you?”
“What?”
“If you’re thinking Caitlin is too young at eighteen, how old were you when you were initiated into the pleasures of sex?”
Recognizing Lee’s effort to lighten the mood, Michael said, “Are we talking brag or lie?”
Lee closed his eyes and smiled. “Whichever provides the best story.”
Chapter Twenty
“I’ve never seen a landscape do that,” Glorianna said. As Kenneday’s ship sailed closer to the White Isle, she watched the island fade like a mirage in the early-morning light.
“It’s not a comfort to hear you say that, Glorianna,” Michael scolded. “Couldn’t you tweak the truth a bit and say it doesn’t happen often?”
She pulled her scarf up to cover the bottom half of her face, both to hide her smile and to warm up skin that was chilled by the brisk sea air. Then she pushed the scarf back down long enough to say, “It doesn’t happen often.”
Michael looked at the now-empty sea beyond the bow of the ship, then looked back at her. “I’m thinking there’s not much sincerity in that answer.”
This time she laughed out loud. “Half the time I’m not sure if you’re teasing or really mean what you say. You’re a hard man to please, Magician.”
“Not so. I don’t ask for much, I’m grateful for what I’m given, and I’m willing to give a great deal in return.”
Glorianna looked away, glad for the cold air that soothed her suddenly burning cheeks. The man wasn’t talking about enjoying each other for a few nights of sex. And yet, there was always that bittersweet resonance in his words. “You barely know me.”
And she barely knew him.
The heart has no secrets, Glorianna Belladonna. Not even yours. That’s why he scares you. If you let him, he’ll slip into your life—and you’ll slip into his—as if you had always been there for each other. As if there had always been love’s shining light welcoming you home.
“I can hear the music in you,” Michael said quietly. “It’s a glorious song, as heartbreaking as it is beautiful, so full of sorrow and joy. A man could listen to that tune for a lifetime and not grow tired of it.”