"Zack, you know I'm no good at that kind of thing. You are. "
"I've got the wrong equipment to be Nell's girlfriend, Rip. Just. . . just see if you can spend some time with her. Go out on the boat, or go shopping or. . . " He gestured vaguely. "Paint each other's toenails. "
"Excuse me?"
"Give me a break. I don't know what you people do in your mysterious caves when men aren't around. "
"We have pillow fights in our underwear. "
He brightened because she wanted him to. "Really? I was afraid that was a myth. So, be a friend, okay?"
"Are you starting to get a thing for her?"
"Yeah. So?"
"So, I guess I'll be a friend. "
***
Nell walked into the Coven at precisely five. It was not, as she'd feared, a dark, eerie place, but rather cozy. The light was faintly blue and added a soft tint to the white flowers in the center of each table.
The tables themselves were round, with deep chairs and small sofas circling them. At the glossy bar the glasses sparkled. Nell had no more than chosen a table when a young waitress in trim, unrelieved black set a silver bowl of mixed snacks in front of her.
"Can I get you a drink?"
"I'm waiting for someone. Maybe just a mineral water for now. Thanks. "
The only other patrons were a couple poring over an Island Tours brochure while they sipped white wines and nibbled from a cheese plate. The music was low, and very like what Mia tended to play in the bookstore. Nell tried to relax in her chair, wishing she'd brought a book.
Ten minutes later, Mia breezed in, the long skirt swirling around her long legs. She carried a book, and lifted her free hand in a wave toward the bar. "A glass of Cabernet, Betsy. "
"First glass is on Carl Macey. " Betsy shot Mia a wink. "He gave me orders. "
"Tell him I enjoyed it. " She sat down across from Nell. "Did you drive over?"
"No, I walked. "
"Do you drink alcoholic beverages?"
"Now and then. "
"Have one now. What's your pleasure?"
"The Cabernet'll be fine. Thanks. "
"Two, Betsy. Damn, I love these things. " She began to pick through the snack bowl. "Especially the little cheese ones that look like Chinese symbols. So, I brought you a book. A gift. " Mia nudged the book toward Nell. "I thought you'd like to read about where you've chosen to live. "
"Yes, I've been meaning to. The Three Sisters: Lege
nds and Lore," she said, reading the cover. "Thank you. "
"You're settling in now, getting your feet under you. I should tell you first that I couldn't be happier with your work. "
"I'm glad to hear it. I love working at the cafe, the store. I couldn't have tailor-made a job I'd like more. "
"Oh, you're Nell. " Catching the comment as she served the wine, Betsy beamed. "You're always gone when I get to the caf6. I try to zip in before I open the bar. Great cookies. "
"Thanks. "
"You hear from Jane, Mia?"
"Just today. Tim got his audition, and they're hopeful. They're paying the rent by working at a bakery in Chelsea. "
"I hope they're happy. "
"So do I. "
"I'll leave you two alone. Let me know if you need anything. "
"So. " Mia lifted her glass, tapped it to Nell's. "Slainte. "
"I'm sorry?"
"A Gaelic toast. Cheers. " Mia brought the glass to her lips, watching Nell over the rim. "What do you know about witches?"
"Which sort? Like Elizabeth Montgomery on Bewitched or the ones who wear crystals and burn candles and sell little bottles of love potion?"
Mia laughed, crossed her legs. "Actually, I wasn't thinking of Hollywood or pseudo-Wiccans. "
"I didn't mean to be insulting. I know there are people who take the matter very seriously. A kind of religion. That should be respected. "
"Even if they are kooks," Mia said with a hint of a smile.
"No. You're not a kook. I understand. . . Well, you mentioned it that first day, then your conversation with Ripley yesterday. "
"Good. Then we've established that I'm a witch. " Mia sipped again. "You're a sweet one, Nell. There you are, trying very hard to discuss this intelligently, soberly, when you're thinking I'm-let's say-eccentric. We'll table that for the moment and go back in history so I can lay some groundwork for you. You know of the witch trials in Salem. "
"Sure. A few hysterical young girls, fanatical Puritans. Mob mentality. Burn the witch. "
"Hang," Mia corrected. "Nineteen people-all innocents-were hanged in 1692. One was pressed to death when he refused to declare himself innocent or guilty. Others died in prison. There have been witchhunts throughout time. Here, in Europe, in every corner of the world. Even when most stopped believing, or admitting to a belief, in witchcraft, there were hunts. Nazism, McCarthyism, the KKK, and so on. Nothing more than fanatics, with power, pushing their own agendas and finding enough weak minds to do the dirty work. "
And don't, Mia thought, taking a breath, get me started. "But today we're concerned with one microcosm of history. "
She leaned back, tapped a finger lightly on the book. "The Puritans came here, searching, they said, for religious freedom. Of course, many of them were only looking for a place to force their beliefs and their fears on others. And in Salem, they persecuted and murdered blindly, so blindly that not one of the nineteen souls they took was the soul of a witch. "
"Prejudice and fear are never clear-sighted. "
"Well said. There were three among them. Women who'd chosen this place to live their lives and live their craft. Powerful women who had helped the sick and the sorry. They knew, these three, that they could no longer stay where they would, sooner or later, be accused and condemned. So the Isle of Three Sisters was created. "
"Created?"
"It's said that they met in secret and cast a spell. And part of the land was torn away from the mainland. We're living on what they took from that time and that place. A sanctuary. A haven. Isn't that what you came for, Nell?"
"I came for work. "
"And found it. They were known as Air and Earth and Fire. For some years they lived quietly and at peace. And alone. It was loneliness that weakened them. The one known as Air wished for love. "
"We all do," Nell said quietly.