himself to you, to Iona, even Connor now and then, but when Fin and I go out, he avoids us. We’ll keep at it,” Branna decided. “He won’t be able to resist trying to bully or taunt for long.”
“He doesn’t have long, and that’s my way of thinking.” Meara drew the cork. “It’s good we’re getting together, all of us, so regular like this. You never know when another idea might spark.”
Oh, I’ve an idea for you, Branna thought, but only smiled. “You’d be right. But let’s put that aside for now. Tell me how your mother’s doing.”
“Happier than I ever thought she could be. And don’t you know she’s started taking piano lessons from a woman at the church? All the time on her hands, she tells me, and she can put it to use with the lessons, as she’s always wanted to play. As if she didn’t have a world of time before she moved in with Maureen, and—”
Meara held up both hands as if calling herself to a halt. “No, I’ll say nothing negative about it. She’s there, not here, happy not unhappy and flustered, and Maureen herself tells me it’s lovely to have her.”
“Nothing but good news there then.”
“Well, she’s marking some of the world of time she now has by sending me a lorry-load of suggestions for the wedding. Photos of gowns that would make me look like a giant princess wearing a wedding cake, and require so much tulle and lace there’d be none left in the whole of Mayo. Here.” Meara reached in her pocket, pulled out her phone. “Have a look at her last vision for me.”
Branna studied once Meara had scrolled to the image, a dress with an enormous skirt fashioned of stacked layers of tulle, and that decked with lace and beads and ribbons.
“I’d say you’re a fortunate woman to be able to choose your own wedding dress.”
“I am, and she’ll be disappointed when she’s learned I’ve something more like this in mind.”
She scrolled to another picture of a fluid column, simple and unadorned.
“It’s lovely, just lovely, and couldn’t be more Meara Quinn. Worn with a little tiara, I’d see, as you’re not the flowers-in-the-hair as Iona is. Just that touch of fancy and sparkle. She won’t be disappointed when she sees you.”
“A tiara . . . that might suit me, and would give her a bit of the princess she wants.”
“You could find three—any of which you’d be happy to wear. Send her pictures, let her choose for you.”
Meara picked up her wine. “You’re a canny one.”
“Oh, that I am.”
As Boyle and Iona came in, Branna hoped Meara would think canny a compliment when she’d laid out the choice.
She waited while Meara passed out wine, while Fin and Connor came in, then asked everyone to sit around the table as there was something to discuss.
“Did something happen today?” Meara asked.
“Not today. You could say it happened a little while ago, and I’ve been working it out since.” Straight and direct, Branna reminded herself. “I’ve told you all the words I spoke on the day Fin and I completed the second poison,” she began.
And when she finished with, “It can be done, and the four of us are willing. But the choice of it is for you,” there was a long, stunned silence.
Boyle broke it. “You’re having us on.”
“We’re not.” Iona rubbed a hand over his. “We think we can do it, but it’s a big decision for you and for Meara.”
“Are you saying you can make witches out of me and Boyle, if only we agree to it?”
“Not exactly that. I believe seeds of power are in us all,” Branna continued. “In some, they sprout more than in others. The instincts, the feelings, the sensation of having done something before, of having been somewhere before. What we’d give would feed those seeds.”
“Like manure?” Boyle said. “As it sounds like a barrow-load of it.”
“You’d be the same people.” Connor spread his hands. “The same people but with some traces of magicks that could be nurtured and honed.”
“If you think to add protection for us—”
“There’s the benefit of that.” Fin interrupted Boyle in calm tones. “But the purpose is as Branna said. The balance, the interpretation of the prophecy.”
“I need to walk around with this.” Boyle did just that, rising and pacing. “You want to give us something we lack.”
“To my mind, you lack nothing. Nothing,” Branna repeated. “And to my mind, this was always meant. Always meant, just not seen