“I’m Katie Lightfoot,” I said, trying to keep the words brisk and reassuring—and utterly failing. Something was wrong, very wrong, and a big part of me didn’t want to know what. The other part warred between curiosity and fear.
I’d expected her face to show relief when I identified myself, but instead her determination seemed to die a little. When she stumbled again, Jaida took her other arm. Lucy held the door open as we helped her inside the Honeybee, supporting her between us. Bianca and Cookie looked on wide-eyed as Mimsey bustled out of the kitchen with a glass of water.
She thrust it at the newcomer. “Poor darling. That heat is a bear, isn’t it? Here. Drink this down, and you’ll feel better.”
Mimsey, I realized, had not heard the young woman’s impassioned pleas for yours truly.
“Come sit down.” I guided her toward one of the blue-and-chrome chairs by the nearest table; Jaida followed my lead. Mungo scurried under a nearby table, out of the way but available if needed.
Mimsey’s eyes narrowed as she took in the stranger’s slack jaw and frightened gaze.
“Sit down,” I repeated in a soothing tone. “And tell me why you’re looking for me.”
She sank onto the seat. Her head turned, and she blinked up at me from beneath a thin fringe of dishwater-blond bangs. Slowly, she pulled her arm away from where Jaida still held it and reached her quivering hand toward my face. Her icy fingertips touched my cheek, and I barely managed not to flinch away. So cold, despite the fine sheen of perspiration that covered her freckled nose and cheeks.
“. . . Said to come to you if I ever needed help,” she said, so low I couldn’t hear all the words.
I leaned closer. “Who? Help with what?”
“My uncle said,” she murmured. Her head wobbled on her neck, and her eyelids fluttered for a moment before she seemed to right herself with an effort. She snagged me again with those eyes the color of faded denim.
“Honey, what’s your name?” I asked, reaching for the water Mimsey had brought over.
Her eyes rolled back, and she sagged in the chair. Lucy drew in a sharp breath as Jaida and I both reached for her. Together we got our shoulders under her arms and lifted her, no mean feat for Jaida, who still wore pumps with three-and-a-half-inch heels. Our guest was a featherweight, and we managed to get her to the sofa in the reading area. Bianca lifted her feet onto the cushion and removed her sandals while a worried-looking Lucy placed a pillow under her head.
Cookie watched it all with hands on her hips, then nodded decisively and announced, “I’ll call 911.” She reached for her oversized hobo bag and fished out her cell. None of us argued.
“Who is she?” Mimsey asked, sparing me a glance between feeling the newcomer’s forehead with the back of her hand and checking her pulse.
“I have no idea.”
“But she knows you,” Jaida said.
I lifted my palms in bewilderment. “I’ve never met her. She said her uncle sent her.” Who could she be talking about? Mentally, I ran through a roster of our regular customers, recent acquaintances, friends—anyone who might have sent this young woman to find me. To seek me out for help. Not a soul came to mind.
Behind us, Cookie murmured into her phone.
“Her heartbeat is dangerously slow,” Mimsey said, forehead wrinkling.
I heard the sound of Cookie snapping her bag closed, and turned as she retrieved the glass of water Mimsey had set on the bistro table. She marched into the reading area and, without a word, tossed the contents in the unconscious woman’s face.
“Cookie!” Lucy cried as my own mouth dropped open.
The woman on the sofa coughed, then whooped in a great breath and coughed again. Her eyes remained closed, and her breathing, though deeper, was still ragged. Mimsey grabbed her wrist, feeling for her pulse again.
“Gone,” our guest muttered. The cords in her neck stood out with the effort of speaking. Her hair, now drenched, stuck to her face in thin streaks.
I lowered my face toward hers. “What’s gone?” I asked.
Her eyes flew open, transfixing me. “Katie.” It wasn’t a question.
I put my hand on her bony shoulder. “Yes, it’s Katie.”
She stared at me. Blinked twice. “It’s gone. The gree gree.” She grated out the last sentence in a rough whisper, and her eyelids did a little dance before closing again. “You must find it.”
I leaned down and put my ear right by her lips.
“Savannah . . . voodoo queen . . . can tell you,” she breathed before her head rocked gently to the side. She let out a long sigh.
Stunned, I rocked back on my heels, studying the young woman’s face. “She’s unconscious.”
Mimsey patted her hand. “But her heart rate is up. I think the shock of that cold water may have actually helped.”
I wanted to check for identification, but couldn’t bring myself to invade the pockets of her cotton shorts.
“What did she say?” Cookie’s voice was harsh.
Voodoo queen.
I looked up at her. “Something about a gree gree.”
The blood drained from her face, leaving her olive complexion pasty and her lips pale pink.
“Cookie?” I rose to my feet. “What’s the matter? Do you know what that is?”
She rubbed her forehead with a shaking hand.
“She has no pulse!” Mimsey said, pulling my attention back to the cryptic stranger on the sofa. She slapped the woman’s cheek, not so gently.
There was no response.
“Here, let me,” Bianca said. She elbowed her way past us and straddled the woman on the sofa, placing the heels of her palms on her chest. As she began compressions, we moved away to give her more space. My own heart beat hard and fast.
The sound of sirens whined through the windows, growing louder and louder until flashing lights out on Broughton Street painted the amber walls and high ceiling of the bakery in emergency tones.
I turned to wave them in, but stopped cold when I saw my aunt. Lucy had backed against the front wall and had both hands over her mouth as she watched Bianca work. Shocked compassion shone from her eyes before they filled with tears that spilled over and ran in twin runnels down her cheeks. I ran to the door and opened it, gesturing to the first responders, and then hurried to her side. As uniforms filled the room, I wrapped my arms around her. She held on tight, and I felt her shoulders hitch in silent sobs.
Poor Lucy. I’d had, what? Five close encounters with death in the past sixteen months? I’d also had more than one close call myself. But even though Lucy knew of my involvement with murder cases, she’d never actually seen any of the victims.
At least this time it isn’t murder.
A dragonfly drifted in through the propped-open door. It flew around the bakery, pausing for a moment near Mungo, who was still hunkered out of the way under a table, and then zoomed up to my eye level. It hovered so close, I could see the dark veins in its iridescent lavender wings, the big round eyes that never blinked.
Then it suddenly left the way it had come in.
My heart sank. Dragonflies were my totem. They served as a kind of metaphysical tap on my shoulder, telling me to pay special attention. And I had a pretty good idea why this one had been so insistent.
Okay, maybe this is murder. Attempted murder, that is. Because whoever she is, she’s still alive.
“Try to think positive thoughts,” I murmured into Lucy’s ear, as much to hear the words out loud as to comfort her.
One of the paramedics took over from Bianca. I recognized him as Joe Nix, a friend and coworker of Declan’s.
Lucy nodded against my shoulder, sniffed once, and took a step back as she wiped her eyes with an air of determination. “Of course, honey. You’re so very right. Intention. We must unite in our good intentions for her.” She reached down and clasped my hand in her right hand and held out the other one to Mimsey. The older witch took it and held out her hand to Cookie. Still visibly shaking, Cookie took it. One by one, we all joined together, Bianca grasping my fingers to complete the circle. Without a word we stood and watched as they loaded the young woman onto a gurney, sending her our combined healing energy.
A mask still covered her face, and an earnest EMT hurried alongside the moving gurney, pumping oxygen into her lungs with a handheld ventilator. I allowed a flicker of hope as they approached the spellbook club. Together, we moved aside, and they rushed through the door and out to the waiting ambulance.
Joe saw me, and recognition flashed in his eyes. After the woman was safely ensconced in the back of the van, he returned. Jaida pulled the door closed after him, muting the blare of the siren starting up as the ambulance drove away and shutting out the curiosity of the small crowd that had gathered on the sidewalk. In moments it was utterly quiet in the bakery; a silence made all the deeper by the suddenness with which the commotion had stopped.
I broke it. “Is she going to be okay?”
Joe shook head. “I’m sorry, Katie. I just don’t know.”
Mimsey’s hand went to her chest. Cookie turned away.
“Try not to worry,” Joe said. “They’ll keep working on her, and Candler Hospital isn’t far.” He ran his hand through his blond buzz cut. “It would help if we knew what we’re treating. What happened?”
I took a deep breath. “No idea. She showed up here and then collapsed. We got her to the sofa, and Mimsey here checked her pulse, which was quite slow. Cookie threw a glass of water in her face, and that seemed to bring her around until just before you got here, when her heartbeat stopped and Bianca started CPR.”
His head jerked to Cookie when I mentioned the water, and she looked at the floor. A ghost of a smile crossed his face before he looked back at me. “What else can you tell me? Who is she? How can I get in touch with her family?”
I rubbed my hand over my face, feeling defeated. “I was going to ask you that,” I said. “You didn’t find any identification?”
He shook his head. “Not even a library card.”
I sighed. “I’ve never seen her before.”
“Well, if you think of anything else that might be helpful, give the hospital a call,” Joe said.
I agreed, and he went outside to the fire truck waiting for him down the block.
We looked around at each other, stunned out of the easy camaraderie of the spellbook-club meeting. Mungo trotted to me, and I bent and picked him up. Honeybee came out from the corner where she’d been hiding and rubbed against my aunt’s ankle. She picked up the cat and buried her nose in the orange fur of her neck. Heckle glided down to Mimsey’s shoulder and tucked his head near her shoulder. She reached up to stroke his bright feathers. No doubt the others would have liked the comfort of their own familiars right then—Jaida’s Great Dane, Anubis, and Puck, the ferret who’d found Bianca recently. The only one of us who didn’t have a familiar was Cookie.
Cookie, in the reading area, quietly gathered her things to go.
I marched over to her. “Tell me.”
Her head jerked up, but she didn’t say anything. Her color had returned and she was no longer shaking. But there was something in her eyes. Sadness? Resignation? I couldn’t tell.
“Gree gree,” I said, trying to keep my voice gentle, even though I knew by asking I was starting something I might not be able to stop. “You know what that means.”
She held my gaze for a long moment, then nodded. “Gris gris,” she repeated, and her slight accent highlighted the word’s French origin. “G-r-i-s. It’s a talisman, of sorts.” She took a deep breath. “A voodoo talisman of power.”
My hand flew to the silver ring I wore on a chain around my neck under my workaday T-shirt. In my short stint as a witch I’d already learned a bit about the power a talisman could hold. Mungo nudged my hand with his wet nose. He knew a bit about power, too. “What does it do?” I asked.
One shoulder rose and fell. “It depends.”
I paused, then plunged on. “Our visitor said something about a voodoo queen.”
She looked away but didn’t say anything.
“Any ideas?” I urged.
By now the others had crowded close to listen. Cookie still wouldn’t meet my eyes, obviously eager to end the conversation.
But I couldn’t let her, not yet.
“Please, Cookie. This poor woman comes banging on our door, asking for me, says her uncle sent her, and then babbles something about a voodoo queen and some lost talisman I’m supposed to find. I have no idea who this uncle might be, only that he may be involved with voodoo somehow. Or not.”
Finally, she glanced my way. “So that’s what she told you,” she said, her tone speculative.
“Yes, and not much of anything else. So, what do you think?” My frustration leaked out around the words. I really wanted her advice.
She leveled a cool green gaze at me and picked up her bag. “I think I no longer practice the religion of my childhood. I think I don’t engage in voodoo in any form.”
“But—”
Cookie held up her hand. “I think you need to take your questions to someone else.”
Lucy put her hand on my arm, and my next words died in my throat.
The door opened, and a strikingly handsome man entered. “Ready to go?” Oscar asked his new wife, glancing around at the rest of us with an expression that turned from mildly friendly to downright perplexed. “Or am I breaking up the party?” He looked at his watch. “You said—”
“You’re right on time.” Cookie turned a dazzling smile on him. “There was a bit of excitement, which we’re all recovering from. I’ll tell you about it on the way home.” Without meeting anyone’s eyes, she hooked her arm through his, and they moved toward the exit.
“Bye!” Bianca called. The rest of us remained silent.
Cookie’s hand rose in a gesture of farewell, but she didn’t look back at us as they left.
I stared after her. “Well!” I said.
Lucy squeezed my arm once before letting go. “You know Cookie had some difficult times in Haiti. And you know her father’s death was related to him being a voodoo priest.”
My shoulders slumped. “Of course. I wasn’t trying to make her feel bad or bring up bad memories. It’s just—”
“We know, Katie,” Mimsey said, reaching for her purse. The energy in the room had definitely shifted.
Lucy went behind the espresso counter and retrieved a towel. She went to the sofa and began dabbing at the wet splotch left from the water Cookie had thrown in the woman’s face. I watched as Honeybee followed her, leaping up on the coffee table and weaving between the half-full wineglasses without so much as touching a single one. The others began to wonder out loud about our visitor while at the same time moving to the Honeybee library to help clean up.
“She seemed pretty determined to find you, Katie,” Jaida said.
I winced. “Determined. Desperate. Something. Lucy, have you ever seen her in the bakery before?”
My aunt looked up from her self-imposed task. “I’m sure I haven’t, and I have a good memory for faces.”
“You do,” Bianca agreed, pulling the keys to her Jaguar out of her alligator clutch. “Katie, how did she know to find you here?”
“Well, it’s not a secret that I spend a lot of time at work. Maybe the uncle who supposedly sent her is a Honeybee customer. But you’re right—I’m not usually here this late.” I frowned. “And I cannot, for the life of me, think of any of our regular customers who would fit the bill. It’s not like I advertise that I’m a witch.”
“Maybe the uncle isn’t a customer.” Lucy paused in wiping the top of the coffee table with a dish towel. She looked up at Mimsey. “Could he be one of the druids?”
I blinked. The spellbook club had a history with the Dragohs, a druid clan that had existed longer than Savannah had been a city.
Mimsey pursed her lips in thought. “It’s possible, I suppose.”
“I could check with Steve Dawes,” I said. He was Declan’s former rival and one of the Dragohs. We’d agreed to remain friends once I’d put the kibosh on romance, though that friendship came with a certain awkwardness. In fact, Steve’s joining the druid clan was one of the reasons I’d chosen Declan over him. The other, of course, was that I fell for Declan’s strength, gentleness, and humor. It also didn’t hurt that he was handsome as all get-out. That man had eyes so blue, a girl could drown in them.
Never mind Steve’s eyes, a deep, warm brown, accented by long eyelashes that—
Mungo broke in to my thoughts, wiggling in my arms to let me know he wanted me to set him down. Reluctantly, I complied. His little body felt solid and comforting in my arms.
Once on the floor, he ran under the table next to the entrance. As I watched, he nosed at something brown and rectangular tucked back against the wall. Curious, I approached and knelt down. He nosed the item toward me.
“Oh, my gosh,” I said.
Everyone’s head turned. Jaida, holding three empty wineglasses, paused on her way to the kitchen. “What is it?”
“Her purse,” I said, stretching out on hands and knees in order to reach it. Mungo nudged it right into my palm. “Good boy! Thank you.” I drew it out and straightened up.
Mungo wagged, You’re welcome.
Lucy came over to join the others who had gathered around. I opened the metal clasp and peered inside.
Our visitor wasn’t one of those women who kept everything including the kitchen sink in her bag. Unlike the ginormous tote bag I hauled around, which held everything from running clothes and a cell phone to my lunch and my dog, her purse was petite and had precise compartments. I was surprised there wasn’t a phone. Other than a wallet, the purse contained only a thin notebook, pen, comb, and pale pink lip gloss.
I took the wallet out between my thumb and forefinger. Everyone’s attention focused on the thin leather. I ducked my head and opened it. The stranger’s pale face gazed out from behind the clear plastic window. She looked healthy, even happy, with a slight smile and friendly eyes that did not reflect any of the fear I’d witnessed within the past hour.
I squinted at the writing by the picture, hard to read through the cloudy plastic. I could tell it was a New York driver’s license, but that was about it, so I removed the plastic card. My lips parted in surprise when I saw the name.
Lucy leaned over my shoulder. A moment later I heard her gasp.
“What is it?” Jaida asked, crowding close.
“Her name is Dawn.” Dazed, I raised my head and looked around at the ladies. “Dawn Taite.”
Mimsey’s eyes sparkled. “Taite, as in T-a-i-t-e?”
I nodded and tried to work up some saliva in my suddenly dry mouth. “What do you want to bet her uncle’s name is Franklin Taite?”
They exchanged glances, and I knew what they were thinking: Here we go again.