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Once I'd undone the perimeter and locking spells and opened the door, Victoria barreled past and strode into the living room, not bothering to remove her shoes. That was a bad sign. Rules of Coven etiquette-which bore a disquieting resemblance to those by Emily Post, circa 1950-dictated that one always removed one's shoes at the door, as a courtesy to the housekeeper. Walking in with your shoes on treaded the border of insult. Fortunately, Therese and Margaret did take off their orthopedic slip-ons, so I knew the situation wasn't critical.
"We need to talk," Victoria said.
"Would you like some tea first?" I said. "I should have fresh m.u.f.fins, too, if Savannah hasn't finished them."
"We aren't here to eat, Paige," Victoria said from the living room.
"Tea, then?"
"No."
Turning down baked goods was d.a.m.ning enough, but to refuse a hot beverage? Almost unheard of in the annals of Coven history.
"How could you have kept this from us?" Victoria said as I joined them in the living room. "A custody battle is bad enough. A legal custody battle. But-"
"It's not a legal custody battle," Savannah said, slipping around the corner. "Taking custody means kidnapping, like breaking in at midnight and dragging me away kicking and screaming. That kind of custody battle."
Victoria turned to me. "What is she talking about?"
"Savannah? How about you take your aunt downstairs and show her your artwork."
"No."
"Savannah, please. We have to talk."
"So? It's about my life, isn't it?"
"See?" Victoria turned to Therese and Margaret, and waved a hand at Savannah and me. "This is the problem. The girl has no respect for Paige."
"The girl has a name," I said.
"Don't interrupt. You aren't ready for this, Paige. I said so right from the start. We should never have let you take her. You're too young and she's too-"
"We are fine," I said, teeth gritted so hard they hurt.
"Wanna see my art, Aunt Maggie?" Savannah asked. "My teacher says I have real talent. Come see." She bounced off, wearing a "good-girl" grin that looked as painful as my clenched teeth.
"Come on, Aunt Maggie," Savannah called back, her voice a high-pitched singsong. "I'll show you my cartoons."
"No!" I yelled after her as Margaret followed. "The oils, please. The oils."
Somehow I doubted Margaret would see the humor in Savannah's dark cartoons. They'd probably give the Elder a heart attack. Just what I needed.
Once they were gone, Victoria turned on me. "You should have told us about this."
"I just got the notice yesterday after we spoke on the phone. I didn't take it seriously, so I didn't want to upset you. Then, when I met with them this morning, I realized it was was serious, and I was just about to call Margaret-" serious, and I was just about to call Margaret-"
"I'm sure you were."
"Now, Victoria," Therese murmured.
"Do you know what they're threatening to do?" Victoria continued. "Expose you. Expose us. They're alleging you're an unfit guardian because you're a practicing witch."
"So are thousands of mothers in this country," I said. "It's called Wicca and it's a recognized religious choice."
"That's not what we are, Paige. Don't confuse the issue."
"I'm not. Every person who reads that custody challenge will jump to the conclusion that by 'witch' they mean 'Wiccan.' "
"I don't care what they'll conclude. I care about protecting the Coven. I will not allow you to risk exposing us-"
"That's it! Of course. Now I get it. That's That's why Leah's accusing me of witchcraft. Not because she thinks it'll win the lawsuit. She wants to scare us. A witch's worst fear is exposure. She's preying on that weakness. Exploiting it. She threatens us with exposure, and you'll force me to relinquish Savannah." why Leah's accusing me of witchcraft. Not because she thinks it'll win the lawsuit. She wants to scare us. A witch's worst fear is exposure. She's preying on that weakness. Exploiting it. She threatens us with exposure, and you'll force me to relinquish Savannah."
"A small price to pay-"
"But we can't let her win. If this ruse succeeds, they'll use it again. Every time a supernatural wants something from the Coven, they'll pull the same scam."
Victoria hesitated.
I hurried on. "Give me three days. After that, I promise you won't hear anything more about witches in EastFalls."
After a moment, Victoria gave a curt nod. "Three days."
"There's just one other thing. And I'm telling you, not because I believe it, but because I don't want you to hear it from someone else. They say Savannah's father is a sorcerer."
"Wouldn't surprise me. There is definitely something wrong with the girl."
"There is nothing-" I began, then cut myself short. "But it's not possible, is it? For a witch and a sorcerer to have a child?"
"How should I know?" Victoria said.
As Victoria snapped at me, I thought of my mother, how she would have responded. No matter how many questions I asked, or how silly they seemed, she always found the time to answer, or to find an answer. I stifled the sharp pang of grief and pushed on.
"Have you ever heard heard of it happening?" I asked. of it happening?" I asked.
"Of course not. Coven witches would never do such a thing. But I'd believe it of Eve Levine. You remember Eve, Therese. She'd do such a thing simply because it was was unnatural." unnatural."
"What does Savannah say?" Therese asked.
"She has no idea who her father is. I haven't mentioned the paternity suit. She thinks Leah's the one suing for custody."
"Good," Victoria said. "Let's keep it that way. I don't want anyone in the Coven knowing of this. I won't have them thinking we allowed a witch with sorcerer blood to join our Coven. You'll mention none of this to anyone. I don't want to frighten them into thinking a sorcerer could come to EastFalls."
"A sorcerer? In town?" Therese fairly squeaked with terror.
Victoria's eyes narrowed. "He isn't in town already, is he?"
"As far as I know, Kristof Nast is still in Los Angeles," I said, deciding not to complicate the matter by mentioning Sandford. "I'll take care of the witch accusation, and the custody challenge."
Therese nodded. "You need to handle it properly, dear. Get a lawyer. The Carys are good."
Bring a human lawyer into this mess? Not likely-wait, maybe that wasn't so crazy after all. It gave me an idea. I steered the conference to an end.
Chapter 5.
The Beauty of Science Once the front door had closed behind the Elders, I cast fresh lock and perimeter spells, then grabbed the phone book. Savannah walked in.
"It's a real custody battle, isn't it?" she said, taking a seat on the sofa.
"I thought you knew that."
"When you said Leah wanted custody, I figured you meant she wanted you to just hand me over."
"It doesn't matter. They don't have a case-"
"So Leah has a lawyer and everything? What is he? A sorcerer, I bet."
"Yes, but there's no need to worry."
"Oh, I'm not scared of any sorcerer. Or any lawyer. You know, we should get one."
"I was just about to call Mr. Cary."
"I meant a sorcerer sorcerer lawyer. They're really good at it. All the best sorcerers are lawyers. Well, until they get older and become politicians. That's what my mom always said." lawyer. They're really good at it. All the best sorcerers are lawyers. Well, until they get older and become politicians. That's what my mom always said."
Here was the perfect opening for a query that might help answer the question of Savannah's paternity, something like "Did your mother, uh, know a lot of sorcerers?" Of course I didn't ask. I never asked anything about Eve. If Savannah wanted to tell me, she would.
"Witches don't work with sorcerers," I said.
"Oh, please. That's for Coven witches. A real witch works with anyone who can help her. A sorcerer lawyer could help, as long as we picked carefully. Most of them are real jerks-they won't have anything to do with witches-but Mom knew a few who'd take a case like this, if you paid them enough."
"I'm not hiring a sorcerer. I'm getting a human lawyer."
"Are you serious? Don't be stupid, Paige. You can't-"
"Why can't I? They won't be expecting it. If I get a human lawyer, Leah will need to handle this case by the books. The human human law books. No secret meetings discussing sorcerers and Cabals-" law books. No secret meetings discussing sorcerers and Cabals-"
"What about the Cabals?"
"I'm just saying, they can't talk about that kind of thing in front of a human lawyer. If they want to play by human laws, let them. I'll play right along."
She frowned, and leaned back into the sofa cushions. "That might not be such a stupid idea after all."
"Glad you approve."
Friday morning started off feeling very familiar. Like the day before, I decided to keep Savannah home from school, picked up her a.s.signments, took her to Abby's, then returned to the Carys' law office for another ten o'clock meeting.
This time my meeting was with Grant Cary, Jr. Yes, I chose Grant junior. Despite my misgivings about the guy's moral compa.s.s, he was a good lawyer. He knew me. . . well, not as well as he'd like, but well enough. When I spoke to him on the phone yesterday, he seemed interested in the case and we'd arranged to meet at ten. I'd set up a conference with Leah and Sandford for eleven.
I'd been sitting in Cary's office for twenty minutes, gazing out the oversized window behind his desk while he read through my papers. So far everything had gone well. Other than a lingering look at my b.o.o.bs when I walked in, he hadn't done anything untoward. I'd probably been too harsh on the guy. I seemed to attract a lot of Cary-types-forty-something married guys who see me, if not as a gorgeous blonde who'd look great on their arm, as a young woman who might enjoy and appreciate the attention of an older man.
From what I'd seen of Grantham Cary II, he likely hit on every younger woman he met. You know the type. All-American boy of 1975, the town's brightest star, every girl in town wetting her pants if he so much as looked at her. Fast-forward to 2001. His weekly golf game no longer keeps his love handles in check, he's recently resorted to a slight comb-over to cover that growing bald spot, he squints to avoid wearing the bifocals he hides in his desk drawer, and he spends his days in an office filled with decades-old sports trophies. Still a good-looking guy, but these days more likely to be coveted for his bank account than his biceps.
"Well," Cary said, returning the last sheet to the stack. "This certainly is unusual."
"I-I can explain," I said. I could?
"Let me guess," Cary said. "You're not really a witch and this is simply a ploy to gain custody of Savannah by dredging up an uncomfortable element of EastFalls's past and playing on the historical paranoia of this particular region of New England."
"Uh, yes," I said. "Something like that."
Cary laughed. "Don't worry, Paige. It's a very transparent scheme obviously dreamed up by folks who don't know much about modern-day Ma.s.sachusetts. You say this man, Kristof Nast, has no proof that he's Savannah's father? But I a.s.sume he's willing to submit to a DNA test?"
"DNA?".
"We can't just take his say-so on the matter."
Of course they couldn't. This was a human court, which played by human rules. A court that wouldn't understand why Kristof Nast couldn't submit DNA. Any supernatural knew that we couldn't risk having humans study our DNA, but to a human judge, it was evidence so easily given that to refuse would be tantamount to an admission of fraud.
"He won't give DNA," I said.
Cary's brows shot up. "Are you sure about that?"
"Absolutely," I said, breaking into a grin. "Is that good?"
Cary leaned back in his chair and laughed. "That's better than good. It's wonderful, Paige. If Sandford's client refuses to submit DNA, he has no case. I'll see to it."
"Thank you."
"Don't thank me yet," he said. "You haven't seen my bill."
He laughed loudly, as if unaware this was a very old joke, but I was in the mood to be generous, so I laughed along. We spent the next thirty minutes discussing the case. Then we wrapped it up and prepared for the meeting with Leah and Sandford. I hadn't told them Cary was representing me. They thought they were coming for a private conference with me.
I do love surprises.
I was sitting in the meeting room, alone, when Lacey ushered in Sandford and Leah on the dot of eleven o'clock. Cary had agreed to wait a few minutes before joining us.