Ten
Eve looked across the table at Rory, who
looked back at her with a rueful expression.
“I should go first this time,” she said to Eve.
“I’m the one responsible for everything that happened.” She turned
to Grand. “I guess I should start by telling you that I heard you
and Eve talking last night. I didn’t mean to listen in . . .” She
hesitated, shrugged. “But I didn’t stop either. I’m sorry,
Grand.”
“And what did you hear us say?”
“Pretty much everything, I think. About the
talisman and the goddess and how there’s magic in our blood.
Ancient magic, and maybe divine. I know I heard about something
divine.” Her tone grew more excited and her words came faster. “And
about how if a man’s heart is true, the crystals in the hourglass
will turn red when he touches it. Is that true, Grand?”
Grand drew a deep breath and held it as she glanced
in Eve’s direction.
She was waiting for a sign from Eve as to how to
proceed. They’d made a bargain and Grand had honored it to the best
of her ability. And she would continue to do so if that’s what Eve
wanted. Even though she didn’t agree with it, she would bow to
Eve’s demand for secrecy in the interest of holding together the
family she had left, the family she loved.
But Eve no longer wanted complicity from Grand; she
wanted her help.
“It’s okay, Grand,” Eve told her, sounding quite
calm and confident despite having no flaming idea if anything was
okay or ever would be okay again. All she could do was plod ahead
and hope for the best. “Secrets are one thing, lies are another.
Rory is nearly an adult and she deserves the truth.”
Happily convinced, Grand exhaled slowly and nodded.
“Yes, Rory dear, everything you heard me tell your aunt last night
is true. You are an enchantress by birth, as am I, and Eve.”
“And my mother?”
“Oh God! Chloe.” Eve groaned. “I’ll have to call
her later and fill her in. On everything.”
“Don’t worry,” advised Rory. “She won’t be as
surprised as you might think. She’s had her suspicions just like I
have. We’ve talked about it.”
Eve angled her head. “You have?”
“Sure. Mostly me.” She tucked her hair behind her
ear, her green eyes intent. “I had no idea it was anything this
huge, but I’ve known there was something special about Grand since
I was ten.”
“Oh dear,” Grand said with a small, uneasy smile.
“I did try to be . . . discreet.”
“Oh, you were,” Rory assured her, grinning. “I was
just sneaky for my age.”
“What happened when you were ten?” Eve asked.
“I was outside playing with some of my friends and
we ran out of juice. I brought the pitcher in to get more and Grand
said she would take care of it. On my way out I hung around the
back door and I saw Grand refill it by just touching the rim. I was
blown away.”
Grand closed her eyes and reached for her
tea.
“I was dying to know how you did it,” Rory told
her, “but I knew it was supposed to be a secret, something I
shouldn’t talk about. After that I paid a lot more attention and I
saw all kinds of other amazing stuff.”
Eve could easily imagine the amazing stuff she was
referring to because she’d seen it herself growing up. “And you
told your mom about what you saw?”
She nodded. “Not until a long time afterwards. But
yeah, I finally told her. I told her I thought Grand was some kind
of magician, that she could sweep the floor or make things
disappear or change the color of the paint on the wall by just
waving her hand or saying a few weird words.”
“Not weird, darling, Irish. What you heard is the
old tongue.”
“Can you teach it to me?”
The gleam in Rory’s eyes told Eve that Irish wasn’t
the only thing her niece was hoping to learn from Grand.
“Of course,” Grand assured her, then thought again
and slid a cautious glance toward Eve. “Well, maybe. We’ll have to
see.”
“What did your mother say when you told her?” Eve
was beginning to suspect that the person most in the dark around
there had been her. Oh, sweet irony.
“She said I was probably right, but that it was up
to Grand to tell us if she wanted us to know about it. And she
said—” She stopped abruptly and turned her attention to lining her
teaspoon up with her saucer.
“What else did she say, Rory?”
Reluctantly she met Eve’s gaze. “She said talking
about it would make you sad and we didn’t want to do that.”
Emotion welled up inside Eve. She rubbed the
outside corner of one eye and waited until she felt able to speak
in a steady voice. “Your mother is a lot smarter than she sometimes
gets credit for being. It was always me, not Grand, who wanted to
keep this a secret from you and your mother. I did it because I
thought it was the only way to keep you safe from harm. And all the
while you were keeping a secret of your own so I wouldn’t be
hurt.”
“What matters is that all of you were acting out of
love,” declared Grand, reaching for their hands and giving both a
quick squeeze. “And you did splendidly. In all these years no one
did get hurt. But now things have changed.”
“I’ll say. We’ve been kaleidoscoped.” Seeing their
quizzical looks, Rory pantomimed looking into a kaleidoscope and
turning it. “One little turn changes everything.”
“It does indeed,” Grand agreed. “I’m afraid you’re
right, Eve. The time for secrets has passed.”
Rory clapped her hands in excitement. “Good.
Because I’m dying to hear more . . . to hear everything.”
“And you shall,” said Grand. “After you
finish telling me about today.”
Rory sighed and raised her hand level with her
shoulder, elbow bent, palm flat. “Guilty. Again. Today was all my
fault; I took off after school without letting anyone know I had
plans. I meant to, but . . . I guess I was sort of
distracted.”
“And then I panicked and went tearing out of here
to look for her in such a hurry I didn’t think to leave a note
either,” Eve said.
“Well, that explains why it looked like a whirlwind
had passed through here,” Grand remarked. “I walked in and saw your
purse upended, cupboard doors left open, and the garage door
too.”
“I forgot to close the garage door?” Eve shook her
head. “I must have been even more frantic than I’d realized. I’m
sorry we worried you, Grand.”
“Oh, I wasn’t worried,” Grand countered.
Eve and Rory exchanged a look as Grand calmly and
unhurriedly took a sip of tea.
Eve’s eyes narrowed. “You did notice that the
pendant was also missing?”
“And also my fault,” Rory blurted before Grand had
time to speak. “I took it.”
“Yes. I know,” Grand said.
Rory scrunched her brow. “You know? How?”
“Because I set the wards, of course. Any competent
mage can set a simple protection ward. Creating something more
layered and multifunctional is a far greater challenge. And, if I
may say so, something of a specialty of mine. Some have even called
it an art. As soon as I saw the wards in tatters and the talisman
gone, I knew it was with you. I also know that Eve found you—and
the talisman—by scrying.” She turned and looked directly at Eve.
“That can’t have been easy for you.”
“I managed,” Eve said, not really surprised by the
revelations.
“And splendidly, I’ve no doubt of that. But of
course, I have never doubted you, or your abilities.” She held
Eve’s gaze just long enough to make sure her meaning was
understood, and then leaned back in her chair, arms folded. “That
much I know. What I don’t know, Rory, is why you took
it.”
Eve listened as Rory told Grand what she’d done
with the talisman and what she’d hoped to accomplish, eagerly
explaining her scientific reasoning.
When she was through, Grand peered at her from
beneath sharply arched brows. “With a boy you hardly know?” She
shook her head. “Silly child. Did you really think to improve on
the work of a goddess?”
Rory appeared startled by the question.
“The talisman was a gift,” explained Grand,
“bestowed for a very specific reason, so that a T’airna woman could
be sure the man she loved was true of heart. The man she
loved. It was never intended to weed out the runts of the
litter or to be used like one of those foolish contraptions people
strut along the beach with in hopes of finding lost coins and
trinkets in the sand.”
“Metal detectors,” Rory supplied, no longer
smiling.
“Yes. Those. The talisman is meant to sanction what
the heart knows. Not to do the work every woman must do for
herself. Love is never simple or tidy or easy. You’re meant to get
your hands dirty and your heart bruised, and yes, maybe even
broken, along the way. You’re meant to earn it, so that when it
finally comes you’ll understand what a prize you have and treasure
it.”
Eve felt a sudden lump in her throat. A good lump,
a happy lump, a lump of dreamy anticipation. And looking across the
table at the way Rory was biting her lip, she suspected there was a
similar lump in her throat. Grand was good. In a handful of minutes
and a handful of words, she said all the things Rory needed to hear
about love, about its price and its possibilities. She said the
things Eve wished she’d had the wisdom to say. She had—to use
Rory’s word—kaleidoscoped both of them.
Hours later, they said their good nights and went
off to their own beds, with plenty to think about until sleep
claimed them.
Eve carried her leather tote to her room out of
habit; she wouldn’t be doing any of the prep work she’d brought
home from the office. When she dropped the tote on her bed, a flash
of red caught her eye and she remembered the single rose she’d
impulsively held on to after asking a newsroom intern to distribute
the other hundred and seventy-nine to anyone who wanted them.
The damp napkin she’d wrapped around the stem had
dried and the rose was wilted, the edges of the velvety petals dark
and beginning to shrivel. It was clearly beyond rescue, but she
fetched a glass of water to put it in anyway, and placed the glass
where she could see it from her bed. And smiled as she turned out
the light.
On the other side of the house, with the connecting
door closed and locked, Grand moved aside shoe boxes and hatboxes
and boxes containing her out-of-season clothing in order to reach
the farthest corner of her bedroom closet. She took out the
tapestry valise tucked away there and carried it to her bed. The
once bright colors—gold and burgundy and evergreen—had long since
given way to their muted shadow selves, and at the bottom edges and
along the zipper, where the threads were worn away, there was no
color left at all.
It didn’t matter. To Brigid T’airna’s eye, it
looked the same as it had decades earlier when she stepped off the
ship that had carried her and all her worldly belongings across the
ocean. A good many of those belongings—and all the ones that
mattered most to her—had been in that bag and the bag had never
been out of her sight.
Among them was a pair of rose bushes, which had
been carefully dug up, by her own hand and in the dark of night,
from the grand estate where her beloved Liam had been
groundskeeper. She’d pruned them so they fit in the bottom of the
valise, and tended them as devotedly as a mother bird tends the
eggs in her nest, through storms and sickness, all the way from
Ireland to America. Aside from her memories, the roses and her
unborn child were all she had left of the only man she’d ever
loved, and she was determined to see to it both thrived in their
new home.
And for a time they both had. Her darling Diana was
gone now, and the roses were lost to her as well. But beneath the
silver hair and wrinkled skin she was as feisty as the day she set
sail, and as determined to see to it that what mattered most to her
would endure. The old valise still held one thing of great import.
It was like no other in existence, in fact. And it had been years
since she’d looked upon it.
Now she found the pocket cleverly concealed between
the tapestry and the inside lining and removed a scroll tied with a
black silk cord, and then she oh-so-carefully unrolled the fragile
parchment and began to read.
She had definitely made the right choice.
Hazard hadn’t said where they would be dining, and
she hadn’t wanted to call him to ask, so deciding what to wear had
been a toss-up right down to the last minute. Should she play it
safe with black slacks and a silk blouse that would blend in
anywhere? Or go with the gold silk jersey dress that had definitely
not been designed for a woman looking to get lost in the crowd? It
was the kind of seriously head-turning, jaw-dropping dress meant to
command a man’s full attention. Which explained why it was hanging
in Chloe’s closet and not her own.
The color was the deep rich gold of old Roman
coins; the fit was snug and it had a deep V-neckline both front and
back. And if they ended up at a pizza joint, she would look utterly
ridiculous in it.
But if they didn’t, if Hazard had something fancier
in mind, something with candlelight and starched linen, then she
would get to see his head turn and his jaw drop, and Eve found that
prospect appealed to her far more than it should.
As she’d pondered her choices, every well-honed
instinct she possessed clamored for her to hang the dress back
where it belonged and play it safe. The lone voice daring her not
to was one she didn’t recognize; it was the unfamiliar voice of a
stranger within. A stranger who obviously didn’t know that Eve
Lockhart always played it safe. Except she wasn’t playing it
safe tonight, was she?
There was nothing safe about going off alone with a
man she knew hardly anything about. And what she did know she
didn’t trust. A man who didn’t play fair and who was dangerous in a
dozen ways she could name and no doubt some she couldn’t. And the
biggest threat of all might be the unprecedented and unpredictable
way she responded to him. The man could warm her blood and ruffle
her composure from ten floors away, for pity’s sake. Compared to
all that, rolling the dice on a dress didn’t seem like such a big
deal.
She knew she’d made the right choice as soon as she
opened the front door. Hazard looked first at her eyes, and then
his gaze began a long, slow slide over the gold dress and a body
that could only be described as curvy, all the way down to coppery
gold, four-inch heels glam enough to make Carrie Bradshaw drool. By
the time he’d made the journey back up, his cool gray eyes had
warmed considerably. And when he finally smiled, it was the
measured, unwilling smile of a man who couldn’t help himself.
He was dressed in an impeccably tailored black suit
over a smoke gray shirt and a tie the same color. The way his
clothes fit, the way he held himself, even the hint of arrogant
indifference in his expression, suggested he regularly achieved
such perfection with minimal effort.
And told Eve they were not going for pizza.
In a city known for its fine Italian restaurants,
Settimio’s was one of the finest. It was located on Federal Hill,
not on the area’s busy stretch of clubs and eating places, but
tucked away on a quiet side street where the only signage needed
was the brass letter S set in the sidewalk in front and another on
the black awning above the door of the century-old
brownstone.
The atmosphere inside was one of sophisticated
old-world charm. It was a description that also fit Hazard, Eve
thought as he held her chair for her to sit. He did it with the
same easy grace with which he’d helped her in and out of his car
and had lightly held her elbow as they climbed the stairs outside.
It wasn’t the first time a man had held her chair or opened a door
for her, and she couldn’t say precisely what the difference was
between the way Hazard did those things and the way every other man
she’d ever known did them, except to say that no other man had ever
made her feel so much like a pampered, protected princess. No other
man had ever made her feel delicate, as if she needed his
protection and merited his pampering.
It was silly, of course, something out of a fairy
tale or romance novel, and thoroughly contrary to the modern
concepts of equality she believed in. That didn’t make it one iota
less thrilling. And Eve decided that just for tonight she was going
to savor the feeling as passionately and free from guilt as she
intended to savor the Risotto alla Cosara and Pesto di
Salmone.
“I’m glad you chose Settimio’s,” she told him, as
the wine steward poured wine in his glass.
Hazard tasted it and nodded approval. “Have you
been here before?”
“Yes, but not often. This is definitely a
special-occasion kind of place.” She gazed around the room,
admiring the warm yellow walls, dark woods and maroon velvet
curtains. There were fresh-cut flowers in a crystal vase on each
table and a fire burning in the fireplace.
“It’s so beautiful in here,” she remarked.
“You’re so beautiful in here,” he told her,
his gaze serious and unwavering. “When you opened the door and I
saw you standing there, I thought you couldn’t be more beautiful.
But here, surrounded by all this color and candlelight . . .”
He was usually so eloquent, Eve was surprised to
see him grasping for the right words.
“It’s as if the room is a jewel box created just to
let you shine,” he said finally. “And you do.”
“Well, I . . . thank you,” she murmured, hoping her
dress wasn’t so snug he could see her heart pounding. “That’s a
lovely compliment.”
A lovely compliment? Good lord, it was the
most romantic thing any man had ever said to her and she was
melting inside. Then his mouth curved into that familiar, faintly
mocking smile. “But I am disappointed in one regard,” he
said.
A “but.” Of course there would have to be a
“but.”
“Oh really?” she countered, sucking in her stomach
and wondering if she had lipstick on her teeth. “What’s
that?”
“The bells. When you accepted my dinner invitation,
you said something about wearing bells, and that’s a sight I’ve
been looking forward to seeing all day.”
“And you would have,” she told him, grinning and
lifting her hair on one side to reveal a gold filigree earring
dangling tiny citrine crystals and even tinier round gold bells.
“If you’d looked closely enough.”
“Rest assured that I looked as closely as I dared,”
he murmured softly. “Just not at your ears.”
His smile deepened and his eyes darkened in a way
that was elegant and decadent at the same time. He lifted his hand
as if to touch the earring that had him transfixed and then seemed
to catch himself with it in midair and dropped it to his
side.
Eve took a quick sip of wine, feeling suddenly
warm. And flustered. Which was ridiculous. This wasn’t her first
date, for God’s sake. In fact, technically speaking, it might not
be a date at all. So there was candlelight, its effect intensified
by the strategically placed gilt-edged mirrors, and there was soft
music drifting from the baby grand piano in a distant corner, and
the whole place reeked of romance; that didn’t make it a date. Not
a real date anyway. Nothing about their situation was that
clear-cut.
It was possible Hazard routinely conducted business
this way, or maybe he decided to use romance to soften her up after
hearing what the security guard had to say about her love life . .
. or dearth thereof. That would make the butterfly ballet going on
in her stomach even more embarrassing.
She searched for something innocuous to say.
“I’ve never sat here before,” she told him,
referring to the small private alcove where they were seated next
to each other on a curved, green silk banquette. She patted the few
inches of cushion that separated them, wondering if she could sound
any more inane. “It’s comfy.”
Apparently she could. It’s comfy? An office
full of journalism awards and the best she could do was its
comfy?
“And private,” said Hazard. “I requested it because
I thought you would prefer our conversation not be
overheard.”
Now they were getting down to business.
“I would,” she confirmed, “assuming we’re going to
talk about what I think you want to talk about. The question is
should we hold off on discussing anything more contentious than the
weather and American Idol until after dinner, or get it over
with now so that I’m not sitting here dreading it the whole
time?”
“What makes you so sure that what I have to say is
something to be dreaded?” he challenged. “Perhaps it’s something
you should be eagerly anticipating.”
“Perhaps. But I don’t think so.” She sighed and
folded her arms in front of her. “Okay, let’s just get it over
with.”
He considered her somberly for a moment and then
shook his head. “No, I think I’ll wait until the wine and a good
meal put you in a more receptive mood.”
“In other words it’s so bad you want me tipsy and
half-asleep when I hear it. You might want to reconsider that
strategy; if your timing is off I could barrel right past tipsy and
half-asleep to belting out show tunes and passing out . . . to your
utter embarrassment.”
His eyes filled with amusement. “I’ll take my
chances that you don’t know that many show tunes . . . and if you
pass out, I’m sure I can find a way to revive you.”
The last few words were spoken slowly as he
gradually leaned closer to her. Exactly, Eve thought, the way the
prince had leaned over Sleeping Beauty in her glass casket, and
everyone knew how he’d resuscitated her. Hazard came close enough
for Eve to feel his warm breath on her cheek and notice the shadows
cast by his outrageously long eyelashes, and as his head lowered by
miniscule degrees, she was absolutely, dazedly certain he was going
to kiss her.
And then he didn’t.
Instead, he leaned back, reached for the menus and
handed her one, confusing her even more. Maybe that was his intent,
part of some new strategy, but somehow, when she saw his throat
muscles work as he swallowed hard, she didn’t think so.
They ordered, and she discovered Hazard wasn’t
kidding when he said serious conversation would have to wait until
after dinner. To her surprise, he proved to be a master of
entertaining, even fascinating, casual conversation. In spite of
the fact that he knew nothing about American Idol or pop
culture in general.
He did, however, know a great deal about the
weather, and not simply in the usual hot-enough-for-you? sense. He
knew about the science and the mystery of it; he knew intriguing
things about the sun and the ocean and the planets. The breadth of
his interest and knowledge was impressive. Over appetizers and
salads and entrees, they discussed history and Shakespeare and
music. They debated books they’d both read. Eve found herself
calling on facts and theories she hadn’t thought about since she
was in college. It was exhilarating for her, and for him too, she
thought.
She was almost sorry when it was time for coffee
and dessert and joined him in ordering a brandy as well, happy to
linger a while longer. The evening had been perfect so far, the
best possibly-a-date she’d been on in . . . maybe ever. And she
really didn’t want it to end on a sour note. She decided to be
honest with him.
“Thank you for dinner,” she said. “It was wonderful
. . . this whole night has been wonderful and I want to keep it
that way. So before we get into a discussion of anything, I think I
should tell you that I still don’t want to sell the pendant.”
“Then you won’t be disappointed to learn that I’m
no longer interested in buying it.”
“You’re not?” she countered, surprised. And
skeptical.
“It’s true. You’ve made your position clear and I
respect it. I’m resigned to the fact that it’s not for sale at any
price, under any circumstances.”
“That’s very reasonable of you. And—I’m just going
to say it—very suspicious. Care to explain your sudden change of
heart? Only a few days ago you were desperate to get your hands on
it, and now you’re willing to walk away without a fuss.”
“I didn’t say I was walking away. Only that I’m no
longer interested in buying the pendant. It so happens I have a new
proposition for you.”
Intrigued, Eve leaned back against the tufted
cushion. “What sort of proposition?”
“It’s simple really. Instead of selling me the
pendant, I want you to lease it to me.”
“You want to lease a pendant? I thought only movie
stars did that.”
He seemed baffled.
“That was a joke. You know how stars borrow jewelry
to wear on the red carpet at awards shows?”
Still looking baffled, he said, “I’m not asking to
borrow it; my last monetary offer stands. The only difference is
that you retain full ownership.”
“In case you’ve forgotten, your last offer was to
pay me a hundred times my final bid.”
“That’s right. Cash. In advance.”
“You’re willing to pay that kind of money to rent a
piece of jewelry?”
“I think we both know it’s much more than a piece
of jewelry,” he admonished.
“It’s still an outrageous amount of money.”
“I’ve told you that money is immaterial to
me.”
True. He had. But Eve wasn’t sure she was buying
it. She’d interviewed some pretty wealthy people—CEOs, professional
athletes, scions of famous families—and although some played it
cooler than others, not one of them left her with the impression
that money was immaterial to them. In fact, money—or at least the
power and perks that came with it—appeared to matter very much to
all of them.
She studied Hazard’s face and swirled the brandy in
her glass, lazily, as if her mind wasn’t running in similar circles
trying to find the catch in his offer. Because she knew there had
to be one. She finally smiled.
“Okay, I think I get it. Tell me, Hazard, if I say
yes, exactly how long a lease would you be asking for . . . say,
oh, the rest of your natural life?”
“One day. Twenty-four consecutive hours of my
choosing. Though to be honest I expect to need only one hour, maybe
less.”
“Why? What could you possibly do with it—or get
from it—in an hour that’s worth that amount of money?”
“I’m not going to do anything to harm it or take
anything from it, if that’s what you’re worried about. I’ll have
papers drawn specifying my obligation to return the pendant to you
in precisely the same condition I receive it, along with any other
stipulations you require.”
“What are you up to, Hazard?”
“Nothing. The deal I’m proposing is exactly as I’ve
outlined it. You have my word.”
“For what that’s worth.”
“For what it’s worth,” he agreed.
She weighed it for a few seconds and shook her
head. “No. I’m not buying it. No one in his right mind would pay
that kind of money to rent a pendant for one day.”
“What about someone no longer in his right mind?”
His voice was low and hard, his eyes dark. “Someone who’s been the
victim of a curse that only the pendant can break? Someone like
me.”