For reasons Ingrid didn’t understand, she couldn’t find her own or Freya’s name recorded in any of the documents or history books. There was nothing about the Beauchamp girls who had been hanged on Gallows Hill. The fact that they were not in any records was puzzling yet heartening. Maybe it meant that the past had already been altered somehow? And that Freya was safe?
The burning field of wheat and her sister in the middle of it…
Ingrid grabbed another book and read, pushing past a wave of weariness. There were three facts about the history of Salem that were of great interest to Ingrid. One, that the Reverend Parris was instrumental to the Salem witch hunt, spurring it on and fanning the flames; two, that Thomas Putnam and his clan filed the most accusations against witches with the court; and three, that Joseph Putnam, Thomas’s younger brother, was one of the few Salem residents to speak out against the witch hunts. The brothers had been fighting over their inheritance, Ingrid knew, with Thomas feeling as if he had been cheated out of his. Ingrid always suspected Salem had been about more than just witchcraft.
The phone rang again, startling Ingrid. She picked it up.
“Hey,” said Matt, “just calling to say good night. I’m heading to bed unless you want me to pick you up.”
Ingrid didn’t answer.
“That’s what I thought.” Matt yawned.
“I’m sorry.”
“Don’t be,” he said.
She wanted to tell him she loved him, but somehow his silence made saying those words too daunting.
“Night, Ingrid.”
“Night,” she said, then hung up. She stared at the phone for a moment, feeling a pang, then plunged her nose in yet another book.
chapter eight
Brother Time
Sunlight pierced the curtains, falling over the C of Joanna’s body beneath the duvet, illuminating the strand of silver hair that fell over her lips. She woke with a start and blew at the lock of hair and pressed her eyelids shut again. She did not want to wake up, not yet. This wasn’t the way to greet the day, so full of anxiety and dread.
Joanna had gotten her beloved son back, only to have her youngest daughter ripped away from her, tugged back through the passages of time, a noose at her neck. Freya… beautiful, free-spirited Freya, back in the dark ages. Puritans. There was a word for those people but Joanna would not use it. She was comforted by Freddie’s assurance that he believed Freya was alive and well for now—he would feel it if his twin were dead, he had told her.
Still, she was a mess.
Her body ached from using her magic to break the passages open but it was no use. The passages of time were sealed. Baking couldn’t even help her out of her funk: her pies came out sunken and burned. She had so little magic left in her fingertips she couldn’t even restore them to their rightful plumpness. During the day, Joanna could barely eat, and in the evenings, she’d taken to ordering from Hung Sung Lo’s for the family, the mediocre North Hampton Chinese take-out place.
At least she wasn’t alone. She snaked a hand between the sheets, reaching for reassurance, warmth, comfort, to pull his body into the curl of hers and make the feelings go away. But the spot beside her was empty, cold.
“Good morning, gorgeous!” boomed a voice at the bedroom door.
Joanna sighed with relief. She sat up and saw her husband in the doorway, already dressed in jeans and a bright cotton plaid shirt. He was clean-shaven, his silver-and-black hair standing a tad awry. “Hello, darling!” she cried.
Norman was holding a breakfast tray, beaming at her. She saw a small vase holding a rosebud, a stack of croissants and muffins, butter, jam, orange juice, and a cup of coffee, the steam highlighted by the morning light. The creases in his forehead and cheeks had turned into grooves. They were both aging as their powers diminished and they worried about Freya. Despite it all, Norman kept up a good front. He made a valiant effort to cheer up Joanna when needed. She couldn’t help but beam back at her man, feeling a teenage crush all over again, a surge of blushing bliss.
He walked toward her.
“Don’t you look handsome this morning.” She smiled.
He dismissed the comment with a scoff. That was also what she found so attractive about him—he had no clue just how handsome he was, even if he was rumpled and worn out, like an older, more weathered James Bond.
He sat on the edge of the bed, handing her the tray. The curve of his neck caught her eye. She could take a bite of him right there instead of eating this divine breakfast he had brought her. She was grateful that they had decided to give this another go.
They were trying. Actually, they weren’t.
That was the thrill of it—they didn’t have to try. There was nothing to fix; it was easy and tender. This kind of love, the love-of-one’s-life kind of love, was the only cushion for pain during a crisis such as this one. Joanna propped the tray on her legs, still smiling admiringly at Norman. If it weren’t for Freya gone, she would have thought, Magic be damned. I am happy to live as a mortal, with my husband.
“You are one to speak, old girl! In this morning light, you look as stunning as the day we first met on that beach, even though you claim to feel…”
“Like crap?” finished Joanna.
“Yeah, I didn’t want to ruin the moment.” He frowned, then reached and squeezed her hand, and they kissed.
“What a lovely breakfast, fit for a queen!” she said, when they pulled away. She looked at the offerings. “Where did you get all this?”
Norman cleared his throat. “An idea struck me last night, and I didn’t get much sleep. I was down in your office working, and I went to the bakery when it opened.”
Joanna grabbed a blueberry muffin and sniffed it. It was still warm, freshly baked, and to her surprise, its scent jump-started her appetite. She bit into the warm, buttery, crumbly moistness. “Mmm.”
“I thought that might give you a lift since you haven’t had time to bake.”
“So thoughtful!” She couldn’t get enough of the muffin.
Norman told her of his plan. His brother Arthur had popped into his head in the middle of the night. Arthur Beauchamp worked with the Wolves of Memory, the historical keepers of the passages of time.
“How is dear old Art?”
“I don’t know. I haven’t heard from him in ages. But I did find him online.” He told her Arthur was still teaching at Case Western in Ohio. Yet when Norman had tried calling his line this morning, the phone rang and rang. No voice mail. Then he couldn’t get through to anyone at the university, and for nearly an hour had struggled to find his way out of an endless labyrinthine loop of voice-activated options.