Mimsey pushed a piece of paper across the low coffee table, followed by a pen from her purse. Nodding, I pulled them toward me and began to draw. Art had never been my strong suit, but my memory of the tattoo was vivid and its design relatively simple. Soon I’d completed a depiction to the best of my ability. I glanced at Lucy, who had watched with great interest from her perch on the cushion beside me, turned the sheet around, and pushed it back across the table to Mimsey.
My aunt’s eyes were wide, her gaze glued to my representation of the wreath. It had three sets of two spokes emanating from its center to extend beyond the edges of the stylized leaves. Mimsey stared down at it without moving at all.
“Darlin’! I just have to show you the book I found in here the other day.” The voice was deep with Southern flavor.
I looked up to see two women in their mid-thirties with perfect blond-streaked hair and flawless makeup approaching the bookcase.
The speaker continued. “It’s exactly what you need to deal with that wolf you work for.”
Such interruptions were inevitable when your library was stocked by a coven of witches who had strong and unerring instincts for what volumes would help Honeybee customers. The result was a hodgepodge of strangely useful literature that ran the gamut from classical Jane Austen to Jon Kabat-Zinn’s meditation yoga.
Mimsey stood with alacrity, sweeping my drawing off the table and folding it in half. “Katie, may I talk with you in the office?”
My head swiveled toward the newcomers, but they appeared oblivious to the idea that they might have interrupted us or the notion that Mimsey was being rude. She wasn’t really, though. I was just used to the inordinate pleasure she usually took in assisting and witnessing how the library helped people.
“Sure,” I replied, and stood to follow her.
Lucy popped up, too, and we trouped to the register. I’d been too distracted by drawing the tattoo to notice that several more customers had entered the bakery, and now Ben was trying to ring people up in between making coffee drinks. Seeing his dilemma, Lucy retied her apron and hurried behind the counter to help. When I paused, Mimsey took my elbow and gently steered me toward the kitchen. Ben glanced up as we passed, eyebrows raised.
Cookie was slicing a batch of toffee-studded biscotti to go into the oven. She looked up as we made our way through to the office, curious, but she obviously had her hands full at the moment.
Mungo stood up on the small club chair from which he reigned whenever he was at the Honeybee, tail wagging furiously until he got a good look at Mimsey. He watched as she closed the door and sank into the swivel desk chair. He tipped his head to the side with an expression of expectation very similar to the one he donned when I cooked bacon at home.
I folded my arms, leaned one hip against the filing cabinet, and waved at the paper she held in her hand. “You recognize it, don’t you?”
She hesitated, then gave a slow nod.
“Why didn’t you tell the others?”
She wouldn’t meet my eyes.
I waited.
She unfolded the drawing of the tattoo and held it at arm’s length. At first I thought it was so she could focus better, but then I realized I’d never seen Mimsey wear glasses. Her nostrils flared slightly in distaste.
What on earth?
“Mimsey,” I urged.
After a long moment she leaned down and put the paper on the floor between us and looked up at me. “Yes. I’ve seen this sigil before. I wanted to be sure it was what I suspected before I said anything to the others.”
Mungo leaned forward on his paws, peering quizzically at the drawing.
“Sigil?”
She pressed her lips together. “The depiction of the wreath was lifted from the heraldic symbol of a wreath of oak leaves.”
I frowned. “Those don’t look like any kind of oak leaves to me.”
“That’s because they aren’t. Those leaves are from a holly tree. Ilex x attenuata is my guess.”
“Ilex…?”
“Nowadays we call it Savannah holly. Oh, now, don’t look so surprised. I’ve been a florist for decades, but I know about a lot more than tulips and roses, believe you me. And these sun spokes coming from the center? They reflect the ancient wheel of Taranis.”
“Okay, what the heck is a Taranis?”
“He’s the Celtic god of sun and thunder.”
“Both?”
“Think of it as yin and yang. It’s the solar cross, used by druids for centuries. The spokes represent the equinoxes and the solstices and two other sabbats—Beltane and Samhain. For the ones who are branded with that tattoo, the cross combines with the wheel to have an additional meaning.”
I stared down at my amateurish depiction, slightly smudged now from folding, lying on the floor of the Honeybee office. But I wasn’t really seeing it. I was thinking, Branded.
“Druids?” I drew the word out.
Mimsey sighed and nodded. Mungo barked low in his throat.
“Hush!” I whispered.
Chastised, he laid his head on his paws. I instantly felt guilty. After all, he was as surprised by Mimsey’s words as I was.
My attention returned to the older witch. I happened to know that she was seventy-eight years old, but she usually looked like she was in her early sixties, if that. Now she looked tired and drawn. If she’d used magic to enhance her appearance, the glamour had lifted. But somehow I didn’t really think the change in her appearance had anything to do with a spell gone awry.
“Mimsey?” I put all the gentleness I could muster into her name. “Are you all right?”
She took a deep breath and forced a smile. “Of course. I’m sorry, Katie. This is so very upsetting.”
“Oh, no.” I brought my hand to my mouth with a sense of dread. “I never thought—you didn’t know the victim, did you?”
She gave a little shrug. “I don’t know. Perhaps. I’m not sure who all of them are.”
I pushed away from the filing cabinet, scooped Mungo up, and sat down on his chair. “Who are you talking about?” I managed to keep the frustration out of my voice, though I was boiling with curiosity. “Druids?”
“Yes.”
“In Savannah?” My voice came out higher than I intended. I probably shouldn’t have been surprised, but, heck.
“Not only in Savannah, but of it. That sigil has been the symbol of a particular group of druids who have been practicing in this area since well before the British sent their prisoners to be tried in Savannah during the Revolutionary War.”
“Good heavens,” I breathed. “How old does that make them?”
Mimsey laughed, and the tension she emanated lifted slightly, as did a few years from her face. “The group has been around that long, but not the individuals in it.”
I reddened. “Oh.”
“But membership is strict, passed on from one member to the next for hundreds of years.”
Mungo leaned into me as I smoothed the fur along his back. “Tell me more,” I said.
She opened her mouth as if to speak, then closed it.
“What?” I asked.
“I really don’t know that much about them. Only that if one of the members died, there could be consequences. And if he died a violent death, as you say, well, then, darlin’, that’s a situation we should all stay far away from. That must be what my shew stone meant. That I should steer you clear of the situation.”
A frisson of fear ran through me at her words. Sensing it, Mungo snuggled closer.
“Or maybe you were supposed to tell me about the druids. Mimsey, how many times have you told me knowledge is power?”
She blinked. “I don’t think—”
I interrupted. “Wouldn’t it be better to fully understand the situation in order to avoid it?”
My words didn’t appear to make her happy, but after a few moments of consideration she nodded. “I suppose that’s one way to look at it. It’s not my decision to make for you. And after all, you were the one who found him. There could very well be some significance in that.” Worry creased her forehead.
Significance. But I understood what she hadn’t come right out and said. Months earlier, when I’d still been trying to come to terms with the fact that I was a bona fide witch—a legacy from my mother and father, it turned out—the spellbook club had suggested that I was what they called a catalyst. At first that simply seemed to mean that my participation, my very presence, augmented the coven’s spell work. But since then a few things we’d read suggested that being a catalyst might mean a bit more.
It could mean that I provided a spark in the metaphysical web that caused—or perhaps only allowed—things to, well, to happen.
“Forewarned is forearmed,” I said, tapping my arm above the wrist with a forced grin.
Mimsey rolled her eyes. So did Mungo.
Fine. I dropped my hand. “There must be something else you can tell me about this group of Savannah druids.”
Still she hesitated. Then in a soft voice she said, “I think if you really want to know more you should ask another friend of yours.”
I frowned. “Who? One of the other spellbook club members?”
Her eyes bored into mine, and she slowly shook her head. “No, not them. Steven Dawes.”