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And if there was a little dust on the banister, that only added to the charm.
"I got to pick out my own bed," Jessie was telling her. "And once everything settles down I can pick out wallpaper if I want to. That's where Daddy sleeps." She pointed to the right, and Ana had a glimpse of a big bed under a jade-colored quilt-sans pillows-a handsome old chest of drawers with a missing pull, and a few stray feathers.
"He has his own bathroom in there, too, with a big tub that has jets and a shower that's all gla.s.s and has water coming out of both sides. I get to use the one out here, and it has two sinks and this little thing that isn't a toilet but looks like one."
"A bidet?"
"I guess so. Daddy says it's fancy and mostly for ladies. This is my room."
It was a little girl's fantasy, one provided by a man who obviously understood that childhood was all too short and very precious. All pink and white, the canopy bed sat in the center, a focal point surrounded by shelves of dolls and books and bright toys, a snowy dresser with a curvy mirror, and a child-sized desk littered with colored paper and crayons.
On the walls were lovely framed ill.u.s.trations from fairy tales.
Cinderella rushing down the steps of a silvery castle, a single gla.s.s slipper left behind. Rapunzel, her golden hair spilling out of a high tower window while she looked longingly down at her prince. The sly, endearing elf from one of Boone's books, and-a complete surprise to Ana-one of her aunt's prized ill.u.s.trations.
"This is from The Golden Ball."
"The lady who wrote it sent it to Daddy for me when I was just little.
Next to Daddy's I like her stories best."
"I had no idea," Ana murmured. As far as she'd known, her aunt had never parted with one of her drawings except to family.
"Daddy did the elf," Jessie pointed out. "All the rest my mother did."
"They're beautiful." Not just skillful, Ana thought, and perhaps not as clever as Boone's elf or as elegant as her aunt's drawing, but lovely, and as true to the spirit of a fairy tale as magic itself.
She drew them just for me, when I was a baby. Nana said Daddy should put them away so they wouldn't make me sad. But they don't. I like to look at them."
"You're very lucky to have something so beautiful to remember her by."
Jessie rubbed her sleepy eyes and struggled to hold back a yawn. "I have dolls, too, but I don't play with them much. My grandmothers like to give them to me, but I like the stuffed walrus my daddy got me better.
Do you like my room?"
"It's lovely, Jessie."
"I can see the water, and your yard, from the windows." She tucked back the billowing sheer curtains to show off her view. "And that's Daisy's bed, but she likes to sleep with me." Jessie pointed out the wicker dog bed, with its pink cushion.
"Maybe you'd like to lie down until Daisy comes back."
"Maybe." Jessie sent Ana a doubtful look. "But I'm not really tired. Do you know any stories?"
"I could probably think of one." She picked Jessie up to sit her on the bed. "What kind would you like?"
"A magic one."
"The very best kind." She thought for a moment, then smiled. "Ireland is an old country," she began, slipping an arm around the girl. "And it's filled with secret places, dark hills and green fields, water so blue it hurts the eyes to stare at it for long. There's been magic there for so many centuries, and it's still a safe place for faeries and elves and witches."
"Good witches or bad ones?"
"Both, but there's always been more good than bad, not only in witches, but in everything."
"Good witches are pretty," Jessie said, stroking a hand down Ana's arm.
"That's how you know. Is this a story about a good witch?"
"It is indeed. A very good and very beautiful witch. And a very good and very handsome one, too."
"Men aren't witches," Jessie informed her, giggling. "They're wizards."
"Who's telling the story?" Ana kissed the top of Jessie's head. "Now, one day, not so many years ago, a beautiful young witch traveled with her two sisters to visit their old grandfather. He was a very powerful witch-wizard-but had grown cranky and bored in his old age. Not far from the manor where he lived was a castle. And there lived three brothers. They were triplets, and very powerful wizards, as well. For as long as anyone could remember, the old wizard and the family of the three brothers had carried on a feud. No one remembered the why of it any longer, but the feud ran on, as they tend to do. So the families spoke not a word to each other for an entire generation."
Ana shifted Jessie to her lap, stroking the child's hair as she told the story. She was smiling to herself, unaware that she'd lapsed into her native brogue.
"But the young witch was headstrong, as well as beautiful. And her curiosity was great. And on a fine day in high summer, she slipped out of the manor house and walked through the fields and the meadows toward the castle of her grandfather's enemy. Along the way was a pond, and she paused there to dangle her bare feet in the water and study the castle in the distance. And while she sat, with her feet wet and her hair down around her shoulders, a frog plopped up on the bank and spoke to her.
"Fair lady,' he said, 'why do you wander on my land?'
"Well, the young witch was not at all surprised to hear a frog speak.
After all, she knew too much of magic, and she sensed a trick. 'Your land?' she said. 'Frogs have only the water, and the marsh. I walk where I choose.'
"But your feet are in my water. So you must pay a forfeit.'
"So she laughed and told him that she owed a common frog nothing at all.
"Well, needless to say, the frog was puzzled by her att.i.tude. After all , it wasn't every day he plopped down and spoke to a beautiful woman, and he had expected at least a shriek or some fearful respect. He was quite fond of playing tricks, and was sorely disappointed that this one wasn't working as he'd hoped. He explained that he was no ordinary frog, and if she didn't agree to pay the forfeit he would have to punish her. And what forfeit did he expect? His answer was a kiss, which was no more and no less than she had expected, for as I said, she was young, but not foolish.
"She said that she doubted very much if he would turn into a handsome prince if she did so, and that she would save her kisses.
Now the frog was very frustrated, and he plied more magic, whistling up the wind, shaking the leaves in the trees, but she merely yawned at this. At the end of his tether, the frog jumped right into her lap and began to berate her. To teach him a lesson for his forwardness, she plucked him up and tossed him into the water. When he surfaced, he wasn't a frog at all, but a young man, quite wet and furious to have had his joke turned on him. After he swam to sh.o.r.e, they stood on the bank and shouted at each other, threatening spells and curses, sending lightning walking the sky, and shooting the air with thunder. Though she threatened him with the hounds of h.e.l.l and worse, he said he would have his forfeit regardless, for it was his land, his water, and his right. So he kissed her soundly.
"And it took only that to turn the heat in her heart to warmth, and the fury in his breast to love. For even witches can fall under that most powerful of spells. There and then they pledged to each other, marrying within the month right there on the banks on the pond. And they were happy, then and after, with lives full of love. Still, every year, on a day in high summer, though she is no longer young, she goes to the pond, dangles her feet and waits for an indignant frog to join her."
Ana lifted the sleeping girl. She had told the end of the story only for herself-or so she thought. But as she drew back the cover, Boone's hand closed over hers.
"That was a pretty good story for an amateur. Must be the Irish."
"It's an old family one," she said, thinking how often she had heard how her mother and father had met.
He expertly unlaced his daughter's shoes. "Be careful. I might steal it from you."
As he tucked the covers around Jessie, Daisy took a running leap and landed on the foot of the bed. "Did you enjoy your walk?"
"After I stopped feeling guilty for leaving you with the dishes-which took about ninety seconds." He brushed Jessie's hair from her brow and bent to kiss her good-night. "One of the most enviable things about childhood is being able to drop off to sleep like that."
"Are you still having trouble?"
"I've got a lot on my mind." Taking Ana's hand, he drew her out of the room, leaving the door open, as he always did. "A lot of it's you, but there are a few other things."
"Honest, but not flattering." She paused at the top of the stairs.
"Seriously, Boone, I could give you something-" She flushed and chuckled when she saw the light come into his eyes. "A very mild, very safe herbal remedy."
"I'd rather have s.e.x."
Shaking her head, she continued downstairs. "You don't take me seriously."