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"Fairy tales," Boone agreed, accepting the wand before running a finger over a bronze cast of a snarling wolf. "Or the occult. A fine line between the two. Your last movie chilled my blood even when it made me laugh."
Nash grinned. "The humor in horror."
"n.o.body does it better." He glanced over at his daughter. She was staring at a miniature silver castle surrounded by a moat of rainbow gla.s.s, her eyes huge, her hands behind her back. "I'll never get out of here empty-handed."
"She's beautiful," Nash said, wondering, as he often did, about the children that would be his before much longer.
"Looks like her mother." He saw the question and the concern in his friend's eyes. "Grief pa.s.ses, Nash, whether you want it to or not. Alice was a wonderful part of my life, and she gave me the best thing in it. I'm grateful for every moment I had with her." He set the wand down. "Now I'd like to know how you-the world's most determined bachelor-came to be married and expecting twins."
"Research." Nash grinned and rocked back on his heels. "I wanted to get out of L.A., and keep within commuting distance. I'd only been here a short time when I needed to do some research on a script. I walked in here, and there she was."
There was more, of course. A great deal more. But it wasn't Nash's place to tell Boone about the Donovan legacy. Not even if Boone would have believed him.
"When you decide to take the plunge, you take it big."
"You, too. Indiana's a long way from here."
"I didn't want to be able to commute," Boone said with a grimace. "My parents, Alice's parents. Jessie and I were becoming their life's work.
And I wanted a change, for both of us."
"Next door to Ana, huh?" Nash narrowed his eyes. "The redwood place, with all the gla.s.s and decks?"
"That's the one."
"Good choice." He glanced toward Jessie again. She'd wandered around the shop and had worked her way back to the little castle. She hadn't once asked for it, and that made the naked desire in her eyes all the more effective. "If you don't buy her that, I will."
When Ana came out to restock a few shelves for Morgana, she saw not only the silver castle being rung up on the counter, but the wand, a three- foot sculpture of a winged faerie she'd had her eye on herself, a crystal sun-catcher in the shape of a unicorn, a pewter wizard holding a many- faceted ball, and a baseball-sized geode.
"We're weak," Boone said with a quick, sheepish grin as Ana lifted a brow. "No willpower."
"But excellent taste." She ran a fingertip over the faerie wings. "Lovely, isn't she?"
"One of the best I've seen. I figured I'd put her in my office for inspiration."
"Good idea." She bent over a compartment containing tumbling stones.
"Malachite, for clear thinking." Her fingers walked through the smooth stones, testing, rejecting, selecting. "Sodalite to relieve mental confusion, moonstone for sensitivity. Amethyst, of course, for intuition."
"Of course."
She ignored him. "A crystal for all-around good things." Tilting her head, she studied him. "Jessie says you're trying to quit smoking."
He shrugged. "I'm cutting down."
She handed him the crystal. "Keep it in your pocket. Tumbling stones are on the house." When she turned away with her colorful bottles, he picked up the crystal and rubbed it with his fingers.
It couldn't hurt.
He didn't believe in magic crystals or stone power-though he did think they had plot possibilities. Boone also had to admit they looked kind of nice in the little bowl on his desk. Atmosphere, he thought, like the geode he'd bought to use as a paperweight.
All in all, the afternoon had had several benefits. He and Jessie had enjoyed themselves thoroughly, riding the carousel at the Emporium, playing video games, just walking down Cannery Row and Fisherman's Wharf. Running into Anastasia had been a plus, he mused as he toyed with the creamy moonstone. And seeing Nash again, discovering that they lived in the same area, was gold.
He'd been missing male companions.h.i.+p. Funny, he hadn't realized it, as busy as his life had been over the past few months, with planning the move, executing the move, adjusting to the move. And Nash, though their friends.h.i.+p had primarily been through correspondence over the years, was exactly the kind of companion Boone preferred. Easygoing, loyal, imaginative.
It would be a kick to be able to pa.s.s on a few fatherly hints to Nash once his twins were born.
Oh, yeah, he reflected as he held up the moonstone, watching it gleam in the bright wash of moonlight through his office window, it certainly was a small and fascinating world.
One of his oldest friends, married to the cousin of the woman next door.
It would certainly be hard for Anastasia to avoid him now.
And, no matter what she said, that was exactly what she'd been doing.
He had a very strong feeling-and he couldn't help being a bit smug about it-that he was making the fair maiden nervous.
He'd nearly forgotten what it was like to approach a woman who reacted with faint blushes, confused eyes and rapid pulses. Most of the women he'd escorted over the past couple of years had been sleek and sophisticated-and safe, he added with a little shrug. He'd enjoyed their companions.h.i.+p, and he'd never lost his basic enjoyment of female company. But there'd been no tug, no mystery, no illusion.
He supposed he was still the kind of man attracted to the old-fas.h.i.+oned type. The roses-and-moonlight type, he thought with a half laugh. Then he saw her, and the laugh caught in his throat.
Down in her garden, walking, almost gliding through the silvery light, with the gray cat slipping in and out of the shadows. Her hair loose, sprinkling gold dust down her back and over the sheer shoulders of a pale blue robe. She carried a basket, and he thought he could hear her singing as she cut flowers and slipped them into it.
She was singing an old chant that had been pa.s.sed down generation to generation. It was well past midnight, and Ana thought herself alone and un.o.bserved. The first night of the full moon in autumn was the time to harvest, just as the first night of the full moon in spring was the time to sow. She had already cast the circle, purifying the area.
She laid the flowers and herbs in the basket as gently as children.
There was magic in her eyes. In her blood.
"Under the moon, through shadow and light, these blooms I chose by touch, by sight. Spells to weave to ease and free. As I will, so mote it be."
She plucked betony and heliotrope, dug mandrake root and selected tansy and balsam. Blood roses for strength, and sage for wisdom. The basket grew heavy and fragrant.
"Tonight to reap, tomorrow to sow. To take only that which I've caused to grow. Remembering always what is begun. To serve, to aid, an it harm none."
As the charm was cast, she lowered her face to the blooms, drawing in the ripe melody of the fragrance.
"I wondered if you were real."
Her head came up quickly, and she saw him, hardly more than a shadow by the hedge. Then he stepped through, into her garden, and became a man.
The heart that had leapt to her throat gradually settled again. "You startled me."
"I'm sorry." It must be the moonlight, he thought, that made her look so- enchanting. "I was working late, and I looked out and saw you. It seemed late to be picking flowers."
"There's a lot of moonlight." She smiled. He had seen nothing it wasn't safe for him to see. "I would think you'd know that anything picked under the full moon is charmed."
He returned the smile. "Got any rampion?"
The reference to Rapunzel made her laugh. "As a matter of fact, I do.
No magic garden is complete without it. I'll pot some for you, if you like."
"I rarely say no to magic." The breeze fluttered her hair. Giving in to the moment, he reached out, took a handful. He watched the smile in her eyes fade. What replaced it had his blood singing.
"You should go in. Jessie's alone."