Never Been Witched - Never Been Witched Part 4
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Never Been Witched Part 4

"You want these things floating around me?" he asked. "Here's the deal. Let me in the house, and I'll bring the clothes with me."

"You tried to throw me out first." True, she came to get away from him, but that was a moot point.

"I apologize," he said, so close he made her jump, and scream, and step on his hand by accident.

Prepared, he'd pulled away, giving her an evil, teeth-chattering grin, retribution written all over it. He was pulling himself along the edge of the dock, coming closer and closer to her.

"Get my clothes!" she snapped.

"Lock that door, and you can't have them."

"Damn. Witch's promise."

"Is a damn witch's promise as good as a hot witch's promise?"

"Yes, damn it-slam it. My clothes are going out with the tide. Please, Morgan, get them."

"A deal with a sorceress, or so she claims. One of my former teachers just turned over in his grave." Morgan hooted and went fishing for clothes.

At least he was in good spirits, stronger, too, probably because his cracked head and sore balls were numb with cold.

"I'll throw your things on the dock," he said. "Leave them. I'll get them when I get out. No need for both of us to freeze to death. One of us should be able to function."

She went in the lighthouse to get a blanket for him, and when she saw her second cart, she was happy that he hadn't grabbed the cart with her art supplies and portfolio. True, some of her clothes would be lost or ruined, but most would be fine. Salt-stiff, wrinkled, and scratchy as nettle shirts, but nothing a good washing or dry cleaning couldn't fix.

Good Goddess, her magick supplies. They were packed beneath the blanket. She would have lost them, too, if he'd taken the wrong cart. She needed them to find her psychic path and-barn door closed too late-throw her attraction to Morgan in the sea.

She guessed she'd already done that by throwing him in the sea.

Why hadn't he gone to Scotland as planned?

Wait. Why had she gotten a vision of the lighthouse when it was practically Morgan's? He'd been coming here for years. Did the universe want them together? Where were the ghosts she'd seen? She looked for them as she went back outside.

She wanted to ask if he'd ever seen them, but he hated ghost talk, because, according to him, ghosts didn't exist. Then again, neither did witches.

Outside, he was climbing the ladder up the cement foundation that jutted into the sea and kept the land beneath the lighthouse from floating away. The ladder led to the boat shed.

Morgan came out the back door, dripping icicles.

Destiny wrapped her blanket around him and eyed her wet clothes strewn about the dock. "I don't suppose we have a clothesline out here somewhere?"

He went back into the shed and came out with a wheelbarrow, which he filled with her clothes. "There's rope in the lighthouse. I'll string you a clothesline at the base of the light tower steps, between the stair rails and lantern hooks."

"We have to hang them tonight," she said, "so they don't get moldy, or so stiff and wrinkled they'll stand on their own. I'm gonna look and smell like a slimy stinkhorn in those things."

He looked her up and down. "You know my answer to that."

She huffed. "Go home?"

"No. Go naked."

She raised her chin. "Care for another swim?"

He gave her a full-bodied shiver and pushed the wheelbarrow of wet clothes to the house. "I'll leave these in the tower, put on dry clothes, and be back to help you hang them." He stopped in the kitchen while she got the mop from the corner. "Do you know how to make tea?"

She patted the cast-iron monster dominating the kitchen. "On a stove out of Cabin and Wagon Train Magazine? Surely you jest."

"I've been using it for years. It's ready for morning coffee. Strike a match, and touch it to the kindling in here." He opened a door and pointed. "This is the firebox." He took an empty, blue enamelware coffeepot from the stove's top shelf where it sat beside an old aluminum coffeepot. A warming shelf, she surmised.

"Fill this with water. Heat it. Pour it in a mug. Find a teabag. Think you can do that?"

Part of her wanted to hit him with the damned pot that he used as a kettle. But the absurdly attracted part of her wanted to warm him, in a very big way.

She yanked it from his icy hand. "Call me Annie freaking Oakley."

Chapter Six.

CAST-IRON stoves, salacious thoughts, and Popsicle hunks did not a romantic scene make, Destiny told herself. "You're turning a nice shade of blue," she said as the puddle he stood in got bigger. "In a minute, you'll match your balls. Go change. One cup of hot hemlock tea coming up."

He looked back at her, raised a finger, shook his head, and left the kitchen. She took a pail, mopped his saltwater trail from the kitchen into the tower-amazing place-through the parlor, along the floor around the beautiful old Persian rug-he respected antiques-and up the stairs to the top.

No way was she gonna mop in on him naked. She left the mop and bucket so he could take it from there after he was dressed.

Twenty minutes later, his teeth still chattering, Morgan looked pretty dumb in layered sweats, hoods up and tied tight, no two pieces the same color. "You look like a tall, color-blind elf."

Gloves on, teeth chattering worse than ever-a delayed reaction, she supposed-he could barely hold his mug.

"If you catch pneumonia, I'll never forgive you," Destiny said. She bit the inside of her cheek and set the door-mat on the floor near the firebox, so he could sit near its warmth. She put another blanket from her cart around him and took off his gloves so he could warm his hands on his mug. Caramello came in and curled up in his lap, yowling as if commiserating with him.

She petted her cat on Morgan's lap. "Night swims in October are a little out of your league, I take it?"

He shivered so hard, he jarred Caramello, and she ended up on the floor, but she climbed right back up. "I think she's trying to keep me warm."

Destiny scratched Caramello behind her ears, her hand knuckle-deep in the silky caramel-and-marshmallow-swirl coat. "Not that you deserve this, Cara," Destiny said. "Scratching Morgan the way you did."

In response, Caramello licked her nose and purred louder.

"Good girl." Destiny poured herself a cup of tea, took out a bag of bakery-fresh chocolate chip cookies, gave Morgan one, and sat on the floor beside him. She sipped her tea and found the silence comfortable between them. When she shivered, he scooted over to share his blankets with her, changing the dynamics and making conversation imperative. "So why have you been coming here since you were a kid? You and your parents take separate vacations?"

He shrugged. "If you met them, you'd understand why that would have been preferable. Suffice it to say that I was on my own at an early age. Why did you come here instead of going to Scotland or staying in Salem, for that matter?"

"I had a psychic vision of the lighthouse, okay? I believe that I have to be here to find my psychic path." She elbowed him. "Okay, so you're not big on trust. It doesn't matter. We both wanted to be here, and we are."

Morgan shook his head and unzipped one of his hoodies. "We both wanted to be alone, and we're not, at least until the water taxi comes on Wednesday."

She offered him another cookie. "I'm here for two weeks. Are you thinking you'll leave on that taxi? Why Wednesday?"

"You're gonna think this is lame, because in a way it is, but I call my parents every Wednesday afternoon. Since Paxton Island still doesn't have phone lines or cell phone access, I go into Salem to call. My parents and I don't get along, but they're old and they're mine, so I check on them."

"You don't get along, but you call?"

He shrugged. "You only get one set of parents."

"I wouldn't know. I never had a set."

Morgan gazed earnestly into her eyes. "I'm sorry."

Something shifted in the time-space continuum. "Why? It's not your fault about my parents."

"No. I'm sorry I tried to make you leave. You're right, I have a problem with trust. But around you, it's myself I don't trust." As if he'd said too much, he set down his mug, stood, and pulled a wad of rope from his jacket pocket. "Come on, let's get your clothes hung so we can shut the lights on the longest day in Paxton Lighthouse history."

They walked through the same small connecting room from the house to the tower that Destiny had mopped. Morgan called the connecting room the keeper's room. The wide base of the tower made it possible to hang clotheslines in a kind of spiderweb effect, from the stair rails to the lantern hooks and back again, all around.

Without old-fashioned clothespins, Destiny draped her wet things over the ropes. Morgan watched for a minute and pitched in. "Thanks," she said.

"It's the least I can do." He shrugged. "I threw them in."

"I untied the boat."

"You what!"

"Stop yelling! I didn't want to go. No boat, no go."

He got a rather incredulous look on his face. "You wanted to stay here with me?"

"Well, I wanted to stay here. We can be alone with our thoughts, do our own thing, take separate walks, and eat our own food. Sure, we'll be forced to talk, sometimes."

"Right. Sometimes." He turned back to her wet things. "You brought enough clothes for a month."

"Who are you to talk? You're wearing enough clothes for a month. Half of what I brought is gone. Good thing I doubled up."

"I'm sorry. I thought I was putting them in the boat, not the ocean. You know that, right?"

"I guess."

"Thanks for the high opinion." Morgan went to hang clothes on the opposite side of the tower's circular stairs.

Hanging her salty underwear, she caught movement out of the corner of her eye: the ghosts sitting on the fifth stair up, watching her.

Centennial Man nodded.

"I saw your picture in the house," Destiny said. "You were the lighthouse keeper, weren't you? Your uniform reminds me of a train conductor's, especially the hat."

"I was the last keeper," he said. "The woman beside me in the picture is my wife, Ida. She's buried here on the island, but I'm not."

"Is that why you're still here?"

"I did want to be buried with her, but I think there might be something more to my being here. I'm guessing the angel knows, but she's not talking. Not to me, anyway."

Destiny looked from the keeper to the child. "Is this your little girl?"

"I never had children," he said with a heavy sadness. "My name's Horace."

"And my name is Meggie," the little girl said. "I'm here with my brother. He needs to remember."

"Hello, Meggie, I'm Destiny. Is Horace your brother, then?"

Meggie denied that with a shake of her head, pigtails swinging.

"Destiny?" Morgan called. "What did you say? I can barely hear you from here." He ducked under a clothesline and caught a pair of her panties in the face. "Yellow," he said, straightening them. "Your underwear seems to call my name."

Meggie giggled, but Destiny could tell that Morgan hadn't heard. The way the child looked at Morgan, with that half smile, one side up, like his, really made Destiny wonder. She turned to her unexpected housemate. "You've been staying here on and off since you were sixteen, and you never met one ghost?"

He raised his hands and let them fall to his sides. "Do you and your sisters do nothing but chase ghosts?"

"We don't chase them; they find us. Besides, these ghosts aren't negative like the ones at Paxton castle were."

"These? You think there are ghosts here?" He scratched his earlobe. "You ever think of writing for the Sci Fi Channel?"

"These ghosts are friendly. Meggie is only a child."

"Meggie?" Morgan paled, a tic suddenly pulsing in his cheek. He put distance between them as if by instinct. "Who told you?"

"Who could have told me?" She had no idea what they were talking about, but drawing him out might help.

He fisted his hands and considered her question. "No one. No one knows," he said, almost to himself.

"There you go. Maybe . . . I'm psychic. Maybe I can see ghosts." Destiny hated how hearing Meggie's name had about stabbed Morgan in the heart.

"What?" Morgan asked. "Do I talk in my sleep? You came upstairs before your ritual, didn't you?"

"If that's what you prefer to believe, sure," Destiny said. "You were talking in your sleep. You said Meggie and schnoodle."

Morgan looked sharply up at her, but he failed to comment on her perception.

She'd bet that Meggie had been the child who wanted the schnoodle. Meggie, the ghost child, watched the two of them now, her anguish mirroring Morgan's. Soul-deep pain. Longing. A lifetime's worth.

She wouldn't push for more answers. She couldn't hurt either of them by trying, not tonight. "I think we're done here," Destiny said, wiping her wet hands on her jeans.

Morgan gave a clipped nod, mouth grim. "I've had enough melodrama for one night."

Destiny watched the angel close Meggie in the grotto of her embrace.