âCall me crazy, but I know the murderer . . . But I don't know who he is.'
âHuh? What does that mean?' Bryce asked.
We were standing in his front yard. I'd headed straight to his house from the beach and blurted it out.
âI did a divination and the ocean revealed to me that I know the murderer â and that it's a man. But not who.' I'd cast wet socks and shoes aside. I spread my toes out in a ray of sunshine that had managed to break through the mist waiting for Bryce's reaction.
There were a few moments of silence before he said, âMaybe the twins can use their psychic prowess to help work out who this guy is.' He nudged my toe with his foot. âYou have pretty feet,' he said.
Ummm, what?!
, How was I supposed to respond? An awkward silence between us grew. My mind raced. I was not going to be defensive and say something stupid! He was paying me a compliment â all I had to do was say . . .
âThanks, Bryce.'
Still, sometimes he said the weirdest things.
I noticed the sun was getting low in the sky. âBryce, I have to go. I promised my mother I wouldn't be home late.' I gathered my things. âSee you at school tomorrow â and you're right, it would be good to talk to the twins.'
I left him sitting there on the grass and made my way home, feeling rather proud of myself. I hadn't bitten off his head when he'd paid me a compliment. We were friends, and now we were both behaving like it.
That night at dinner my mother and I discussed what I wanted to do for my sweet sixteenth.
âMum, I don't want to do anything full-on,' I said.
âBut wouldn't you like to have a party with your friends, Vania? It's a special day.'
âI'm happy not to have a houseful of teenagers,' my father snorted.
âOh, Keith,' my mother said, patting him on the shoulder.
âThanks, Mum, but I really don't want to do anything big â it's just another birthday.'
âWhat about a family brunch at the Big Yellow House? Would you like that at least, honey? We could go on Saturday morning. I know the big day is Friday, but it doesn't hurt to celebrate your sixteenth all weekend,' my mother said.
In that moment I realised just how much I really did love her. Just the three of us at my favourite local restaurant sounded really appealing, actually. The best thing about the Big Yellow House was the huge patio with sweeping views of the sea. In good weather it offered the best view in town. And its three-egg omelette with goat's cheese and basil was pretty great, too. To top it off, there were rumours that the place was haunted.
âThat sounds great, Mum.'
I thought about what could make my birthday possibly even better. âMaybe I can invite a couple of friends? Bryce andâ'
âAbsolutely!' my mother jumped in.
I was about to add
and Amelia, Alyssa and Dean
, but my dad stopped me in my tracks.
âIs he your boyfriend?' he asked, looking at me sternly.
âNo! We're just good friends.'
My father gave me another penetrating stare and then shrugged, going back to his steak. âYou could do worse than him â his parents own half of Summerland,' he said. I didn't reply; instead I smiled at my mother, who nodded and smiled back. I supposed it wasn't surprising to hear that Bryce's family owned half the town â he'd told me that time in school that he was descended from one of the original families who'd come here back in the eighteen hundreds, after all. But I'd never thought about this, and he obviously didn't make a big deal about it. We'd only ever talked about his ghostly Spiritualist heritage, which I was sure my father wouldn't enjoy hearing about.
I decided to drop the whole idea of inviting Bryce or any of my friends to brunch â I would see my coven on my actual birthday at school anyway. I didn't want my dad saying anything embarrassing as we all sat around a table together.
On Monday morning I was at the drinking fountain when Cassidy Walters skipped up to me.
âHey, Vania, is it your birthday this Friday?' she said.
I blinked hard and nearly choked on my mouthful of water. I was still getting used to being considered cool by people like Cassidy, who suddenly wanted to be friends with me. But I was keeping my distance â just like enchanted love, I didn't quite trust enchanted friendship.
âAre you having a party?' Cassidy asked.
âI'm not sure. I don't want to make a big deal about it,' I said.
âWe could have a fire down on the beach for you.'
Was she suggesting that she would organise a party for me? This was truly more surreal than any magic spell. And actually it sounded like a fun idea.
âOkay, that sounds cool.' Magical friendship or not, a chance to go to a real party? This was not something I wanted to turn down.
âLeave it to me.' She smiled and squeezed my arm, hard, before turning away, her short skirt swishing over her perfect legs. In that moment envy crept up in me, but I shrugged it off â envying her was pointless, and I wasn't going to let myself do it.
I felt a surge of confidence as Amelia and Alyssa came over to me. âWhat did she say?'
âShe's putting on a party for me for my birthday.'
âWell, we're putting on a séance for you.' Alyssa squeezed my arm right where Cassidy had, but this time it didn't hurt.
Friday, my actual birthday, was a good day at school. There were no horrible run-ins with Mr Barrow â in fact, I didn't see him at all â and I got a good grade on an English lit paper that I hadn't been expecting to do so well on. But all day I couldn't wait for night to come.
Now it had arrived and the Purple Raven glowed with the light of a hundred scented candles. It looked like an enchanted fairy realm, and I stood in the centre of it, dressed in decidedly un-fairylike black jeans, red Converses and a black T-shirt. Well, there was a silver-glitter unicorn on the T-shirt, but that was supposed to be ironic.
Brenda was dressed entirely in silver, her hair tied up in a shimmering scarf and her caftan made of diaphanous chiffon. She looked majestic as she swanned around, her hands fluttering as she lit a candle here and adjusted a velvet tablecloth there. The twins, with their long red hair and matching green-and-black-striped, long-sleeved T-shirts and black miniskirts, looked for all the world like archetypal witches â all they needed were pointed hats to seal the deal. Dean looked good, dressed up in a black shirt and blue jeans. Then in walked Bryce, hot as always, in jeans and a black T-shirt with a black vest over the top, the flickering candlelight making his green eyes sparkle.
âCool T-shirt, Vania,' Bryce said, laughing.
I curbed my urge to take this the wrong way and snap at him. All I had to do was say . . .
âThanks, Bryce.' And smile.
âThis is sweet â a Sweet Sixteen Séance! My great-grandmother told me she would come along tonight as long as her bridge game finished in time.'
âShe plays bridge between the worlds?' Brenda asked incredulously.
âYes, and she gambles on it, too.' He chuckled and walked over to me handing me, the bag he'd been carrying. âHappy Birthday, Vania.'
âThanks.' I put the bag on a table with my other gifts. I felt really special. This was actually the first birthday I could remember that I had spent with proper friends. And it was my sixteenth. And it was a séance â I was overflowing with anticipation.
As her gift to me, Brenda had made a magnificent three-tiered concoction of chocolate and vanilla covered in frothy lemon icing, with sixteen silver candles on top. We all gathered around the table and Brenda handed me a long black velvet pouch with something heavy inside â another present! I loosened the drawstring and withdrew a silver candle snuffer with a beautiful mother-of-pearl-handle.
âIt's amazing. Thank you, Brenda!' I said.
âBirthday candles should never be blown out,' she informed me.
There were packets of matches on the table, and Brenda and my coven set about lighting the candles together.
âEveryone join hands,' Brenda commanded.
I placed the snuffer in front of me on the table as we stood in a circle. I could feel that familiar magical buzz starting.
âMay birthday blessings be bestowed upon you, Vania,' said the twins.
âAnd may this year of your life be even better than the last,' said Dean. I smiled. The past year had already been the best of my life, thanks to coming here and making my new friends.
âAnd may all your wishes come true,' said Bryce, looking at me intensely.
âBlessed be, Vania,' said Brenda. âYou can now make your wishes and seal them by capturing the flame.'
âCan I make a wish per candle?' I asked Brenda.
âCertainly!'
As I snuffed each candle I tried to focus on a specific wish. I resisted the urge to wish for Bryce â I didn't want enchanted love, I had learned that didn't work. So I wished for world peace, an end to hunger, and an end to global warming. And then I ran out of ideas. Spell-casting rules included not interfering with another's free will, so I couldn't wish that everyone in the world was vegetarian. And I couldn't even wish that Mr Barrow would stop being mean to me.
I stood there holding the snuffer.
âAny more wishes?' Alyssa was already eyeing off the cake.
Yes, there was one: I wished to be strong enough to stand up to Mr Barrow, or anyone who would do me harm. I carefully snuffed out the central candle with the brightest flame. And then I rapidly snuffed the rest of the candles, without wishing for anything else. I was satisfied.
Brenda and the twins sliced enormous pieces of cake onto plates and presented them to Dean, Bryce and me, the birthday girl. Now it was time for presents, and I scored. The twins had bought me a deck of tarot cards, which I was super excited about. You couldn't buy tarot cards yourself, you have to be given them, and I'd been hoping someone would get me a deck.
âDon't hate us, but we read your mind so we'd know what to get you,' Alyssa said. âDefinitely one of the perks of being psychic â no risk of re-gifting.'
The cards were beautiful. The backs had intricate patterns of leaves and flowers in a kaleidoscope of colours. They were so new and shiny that when I attempted to shuffle them they flew everywhere.
âGosh! How many cards are there?' I said as I attempted to slide them all back towards me across the floor.
âSeventy-two,' Amelia informed me.
No one else helped me to gather the cards because apparently, as the twins informed me, until I had consecrated them in my name it was bad luck for anyone else to touch them. Once I'd collected them all, I counted them carefully to be sure.
Dean had made me a charm bag containing different herbs he'd gathered locally and dried himself. I squished the lacy purple fabric between my fingers and released a woodsy scent. There was desert sage, I could tell, and something else, possibly sweetgrass.
âIt's a secret recipe I've been working on.' Dean grinned. âIt's a blend that should help you focus your magical powers.'
I opened the top of the pouch. âI can feel crystal in here, too.'
âYup, clear quartz. I actually chipped it off a rock myself.'
âPacks a punch,' Brenda murmured. âUse with care.'
If there was one present that had me a bit confused it was Bryce's. The bag was huge, but when I put my hand in I had to feel around through tons of shredded glittery paper and bits of tinsel.
âI'm sorry,' he said as I fished around without finding anything. âThe lady at the store said they'd run out of small bags.'
Finally my hand closed over a small black box. It looked like it might contain something expensive.
âOpen it!' the twins urged.
I carefully removed the lid. Lying on black silk, suspended on a glistening chain, was a single silver star with an arrow.
It was beautiful.