“Show-off,” Iona muttered.
“It’s in you as much as me. Slide the rain away from you.”
She liked the feel of the fire snapping through her, from her, but drew it back. And used the frustration and annoyance that helped her call it to nudge, to slide, to open.
An inch, then two—and she saw it, felt it. It was just water. Like the water in the bowl. Thrilled, she pushed, and pushed hard enough to have that streaming rain leap away, gather. And splat with some force against Branna’s borders.
“I didn’t mean to— I mean I wasn’t trying to splash you. Exactly.”
“It wouldn’t have hurt your feelings if you’d managed to,” Branna said easily. “So well done as well there. You’ll work on subtlety, and finesse—and absolute control—but you managed it, and that’s a start.”
Iona blinked, swiped at her wet face, and saw she’d opened a narrow but effective swath of dry. No pretty pale gold sunlight in her little corner, but no rain either.
“Woo to the hoo!”
“Don’t lose it. Don’t spread it. It’s only for you.”
“The rest of the county would probably appreciate some dry, but I get it. Stop rain here, maybe cause a flood there.”
“We can’t know, so we don’t risk it. Move with it,” Branna demonstrated, walking in a wide circle, always within the dry.
On her attempt, the edges of Iona’s circle turned soggy, but she kept control.
“Well done. As it’s Ireland, you’ll have no lack of rain to practice on as we go, but well done for today. We’ll go inside, have a go at a simple potion.”
As Branna headed back toward the workshop, Iona struggled to keep up—and maintain her dry area. “I could help on the bottling and packaging of your stock, for your shop. I’d like to help somewhere,” she continued. “You do almost all the cooking, and you’re spending a lot of your time—Connor, too—teaching me. I’m pretty good at following directions.”
“You are.”
Branna had always preferred the solitude of her workshop. It was one matter to hire clerks and such for the shop in Cong, to have them deal with customers, shipping, and so on. But her workshop was her quiet place. Usually.
And still, she thought, the lessons, and the need for them, did cut into her time.
“It would be a help,” she decided. “We’ll see about it.”
Branna stepped into the workshop, and Iona nipped in behind her dripping on the floor.
“I was about to leave you a note,” Meara said from behind the work counter. “The both of you.”
“Now you’ll have some tea, and a visit. I’ve missed seeing you. Iona, don’t track up the floor.”
“Easy for you to say. You’re dry, I’m soaked. I must look like a wet cat.”
“More a drowned one,” Meara commented.
Branna walked straight to the kettle. “Do a glamour.”
Saying nothing, Iona glanced at Meara.
“Meara knows all there’s to know, and likely more besides. Fix yourself up.”
“I’m no good at glamours. I told you I tried one once, and it was a disaster.”
“Sure it’s why it’s called practice. For usual, it’s my thinking glamours or drying your clothes instead of changing them is lazy and vain, but for now, it’s good practice. If you end up with warts or boils, I’ll fix it for you.” With a wicked smile, Branna glanced back. “Eventually.”
“You did one for me, do you remember, Branna, when we were fifteen, I think, and I desperately wanted to go blond, as Seamus Lattimer, my heart’s desire at that time, preferred them.”
At home, Meara took off her jacket, hung it on a peg, unwrapped her scarf to do the same, then her cap. “I was about to do the deed—had the hair product I’d saved two weeks to buy, and Branna came along, did the glamour, and changed it for me.”
Considering, Iona studied Meara. “I can’t picture you as a blonde, not with your coloring.”
“It was a rare disaster. I looked as if I’d developed the jaundice.”
“And you were too stubborn to admit it,” Branna reminded her.
“Oh, I was, so I lived with it near to a week before I begged her to turn it back. Do you remember what you said to me?”
“Something about changing for yourself was one matter, changing for a man was weak and foolish.”
“Wise, even so young,” Meara said with her bawdy laugh. “And Seamus spent his time snogging with Catherine Kelly, as blond as a daffodil. But I lived through the disappointment.”
“A lesson learned, of some sort,” Branna said. “But in this case, we’re considering it practice. Fix yourself up there, Iona, and we’ll have some tea.”
“Okay. Here goes.” She released a breath, sincerely hoping she didn’t set herself on fire as she concentrated on her jacket, sweater, and jeans first.
Steam puffed, but no flames snapped. She began to feel her toes thaw out, her skin warm, and, smiling, ran a hand over the dry sleeve of her jacket.
“It worked.”
“Think of the time I’d save on laundry if I had a trick like that,” Meara commented.
Grinning, Iona ran a hand over her wet, dripping hair, turned it to a sunny, dry cap. On a quick laugh, she covered her face with her hands, closed her eyes briefly. When she lowered them, her face glowed, the color of her lips deepened to a rosy pink, her eyelashes darkened, lengthened.
“How do I look?”
“Ready to head to the pub and flirt with all the handsome men,” Meara told her.
“Really?” Delighted, Iona rushed to the mirror. “I look good! I really do.”
“Smoothly done, and with a bit of finesse as well. You’ve come along well.”
“Stick around,” Iona said to Meara. “She never says things like that to me.”
“So when I do, you know I mean them. I’ve shortbread biscuits, Meara, and the jasmine tea you’re fond of.”
“I won’t say no to either.” She made herself at home at the table, taking a moment to rub Kathel when he laid his big head in her lap. “The weather’s dampening our business, and they’re saying we’re in for more of the same tomorrow. Boyle’s arranged for classes from the school to come in, see the horses. We’ll give the young ones rides on leads around the ring.”
“That’s a good idea.”
“Oh, he has them, our Boyle does.” Meara smiled at Iona as she helped herself to a cookie. “And as for you, I had a thought for my sister’s birthday next month. Maureen. She lives down in Kerry, as she and her husband work there,” she added for Iona. “You know the sets you do—the soap, the candle, the lotion, and such—the special ones you make with that particular person’s traits and personality in mind.”
“I do. You’d like one done for Maureen?”
“I would, yes. She’s the oldest of us, as you know, and about to turn thirty-five. For some reason, she’s gone half mad over it, as if her youth is done and over, and she’s nothing but the miseries of age left to her.”
“Bless her, Maureen was always one for drama.”
“Oh, that she is. She married her Sean when she was just nineteen, so she’s had sixteen years of his plodding. He’s a sweet man under it,” she continued, “but a plodder for all that. She’s two teenagers driving her to the edge of insanity, or beyond it, and another coming up behind them. She’s taken to texting me, our other sister, or our ma all day and half the night to keep us abreast of her trials and tribulations. I’m thinking the gift, being it’s created for her, and it speaks to pampering and female things, might perk her up enough to have her leave off hounding me until I want to thrash her.”
“So it’s about you,” Branna said with a laugh.
“I’m saving her life, and that makes me a fine sister.”
“I’ll have it for you next week.”
“I always wanted a sister,” Iona mused.
“Would you like one of mine? Either of them’s up for the grabbing. I’ll keep my brothers, as they’re not gits most of the time.”
“Being an only child is lonely and you never get to bitch about your siblings.”
“I would miss the bitching,” Meara admitted. “It makes me feel so superior and smart.”
“I had imaginary siblings.”
Amused, Meara sat back with her tea. “Did you now? What did you call them?”
“Katie, Alice, and Brian. Katie was the oldest, and patient, smart, comforting. Alice was the baby, and always made us laugh. Brian and I were the closest in age. He was always getting into trouble, and I was always trying to get him out of it. Sometimes I could see them, as clear as I see you.”
“The power of your wishes,” Branna told her. Lonely child, she thought. So not tended, so not understood or cherished.
“I guess. I didn’t understand that kind of thing, not really, but they were more real to me, a lot of the time, than anyone else. Between them and horses, I kept pretty busy.”
She stopped, laughed. “Am I the only one who had imaginary people in her life?”
“Connor was more than enough for me.”
“He’s more than enough, indeed,” Meara echoed.
“And we both knew, Connor and I, much younger than you, what we were about.”
“And even with that, you both forged other really strong things. Your work here, the shop, his falconry—and his handy hands. And you, Meara. You’re not one of the owners, but you’re an essential element in the business.”
“I like to think so.”
“It’s clear you are. Both Boyle and Fin respect your skills and your opinion, and depend on both. I don’t think either of them give that sort of thing lightly. It’s what I want. To forge something, and to earn respect, to have people who matter know they can depend on me. Do either of you want more than that?”
“It’s good to have what you say,” Meara considered. “I wouldn’t mind a pot of money to go with it.”
“What would you do with it?”
“Well now, that’s a thought. I think first a fine house. Doesn’t need the fancy, just a good house, with a bit of land and a little barn so I could have my own horse or two.”
“No man?”
“For what?” Meara laughed. “For the keeping or for the fun?”
“Either or both.”
“I’d take the fun, there’s been a lack of that sort of amusement in my life in recent months. Keeping though, that’s not what I’m after. Men come and go,” she added as she settled back with her fragrant tea. “Except for sweet and plodding Sean, as far as I’ve seen. Best not to expect or want them to stay, then it’s less fraught.”
“But fraught means you’re living,” Iona said. “And I want one to keep, one who wants me just as much. I want wild, crazy love, the sort that never goes away. And kids—not just one—a dog, a horse, a house. A big, sloppy family. What about you?” she asked Branna.