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Authors: Isobel Bird

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BOOK: Ring of Light
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“The one and only,” said the woman in the chair as she stood up. “Surprised?”

Kate darted forward and hugged her aunt tightly, all the while laughing with delight. She couldn't believe it—her favorite aunt was standing in her backyard.

“I told you I picked up something you would like,” Kyle said teasingly.

Kate turned to Tyler, who was standing in the doorway silently watching the goings-on. “This is my Aunt Netty,” she said happily.

“I got that part,” Tyler quipped. He stepped forward and shook the woman's hand. “I'm Tyler,” he told her.

Aunt Netty raised an eyebrow and turned to her niece. “Not bad at all,” she said. “I see you inherited the Rampling women's good taste in men.”

She turned back to Tyler and smiled. “Don't take me too seriously,” she said. “I'm just teasing.”

“No problem,” Tyler responded. “I happen to think Kate has pretty good taste in men myself.”

Everyone laughed at his joke. Kate, who still hadn't let go of her aunt's hand, was looking at her closely. “You cut your hair,” she said. “It used to hang down past your shoulders.”

Aunt Netty shook her head. She was wearing a straw hat, and her hair barely touched her shoulders. “I didn't like all of that hair hanging in my face,” she said. “Do you like the new look? I think it's kind of Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's.”

“Sure,” Kate answered. “Now, tell me how long you're here for. I suppose it's just for the weekend, right?”

“That's the best part of the surprise,” her aunt said. “I'm here for a longer visit this time.”

Kate couldn't believe her good luck. Not only was her favorite aunt there, she was going to stay for a while. “A week?” she asked hopefully.

“At least,” said her aunt. “It depends on how things go with the project I'm working on.”

“This is so great,” Kate exclaimed. “What better way to spend the Fourth of July than with my favorite people?”

“How about
eating
with your favorite people?” her father suggested as he came out with a platter piled high with hot dogs and headed for the grill. “I think your mother could use a hand bringing the rest of that food out here.”

“Let's go make ourselves useful,” Aunt Netty suggested to Kate.

“You just sit down, Netty,” Mr. Morgan said. “The kids can help Teresa.”

Aunt Netty groaned and made a face at Kate's father. “Whatever you say, Joe,” she said, and sank back into the lawn chair.

Kate went back into the kitchen, taking Tyler with her. Inside, she loaded him up with things to carry, all the while talking about her aunt.

“She's my mom's little sister,” she informed him as she handed him a big bowl of chips. “She's really funny, and she's a photographer. She's always going somewhere different to shoot for magazines. Wait until you see her stuff. She must be here on some kind of assignment.”

“She seems really nice,” Tyler said, trying to juggle all the things Kate was handing him.

“You can make more than one trip, you know,” her mother said.

“Sorry,” said Kate, realizing that she'd overloaded her boyfriend and taking back the napkins she'd tried to squeeze under his arm. “I'm just so excited about Aunt Netty being here.”

They went back outside, where Tyler helped Kate arrange things on the picnic table. When everything was ready, the whole family gathered around and began loading up their plates. Mr. Morgan stood by the grill, turning hot dogs and handing them out when they were done. Before long everyone was sitting in lawn chairs, happily eating and enjoying the beautiful sunny afternoon.

“This sure beats cafeteria food,” Kyle said as he dug into his second piece of lasagna. “I think the university should hire you to cater for us, Mom.”

“Your mother has enough business here to keep her working overtime,” Mr. Morgan commented. “Don't give her any ideas. We hardly see her as it is.”

“This really is amazing, Mrs. Morgan,” Tyler said as he nibbled on an ear of corn. “I can't wait to try some of that cake.”

“Do you want some potato salad, Aunt Netty?” Kate asked, glancing at her aunt's plate. “You haven't eaten very much.”

“Thanks, sweetie,” Aunt Netty replied. “I'm all set. It's all delicious, but like Tyler I'm trying to save room for that cake.”

“That just means there's more for me,” Kate said, getting up to refill her plate.

“So, Tyler, tell me about yourself,” said Kate's aunt when Kate returned and settled back into her seat beside her boyfriend. “Where did you and Kate meet?”

Kate felt herself tense up a little as she waited for Tyler to answer. The truth was that they had met through a Wicca study group she was part of that was run by some members of the coven to which Tyler and his mother belonged. But Kate's family didn't know anything about her interest in witchcraft, and she wasn't ready for them to know about it yet. They were rather conservative. She knew they wouldn't understand what Wicca was all about, and she wasn't sure she was ready to explain it to them. Although she hated keeping secrets from her family, she knew that this was one thing she had to keep under wraps, at least for the time being.

Tyler, on the other hand, had been raised in Wicca. Apart from his father, who was divorced from Tyler's mother and didn't share her views on the Craft, everyone in his life was familiar with Wicca and understood his involvement in it. While Kate wished that she could be open about what she was doing, the fact was that she had to attend the study group in secret. Although this hadn't really been a problem so far, now that she was dating Tyler and had introduced him to her family, the issue was something she thought about more and more. But a Fourth of July picnic was not the place to be giving them that kind of news.

Fortunately, she and Tyler had agreed on an answer to the question they knew was bound to be asked at some point. “We met in a bookstore,” Tyler told Aunt Netty.

While technically this wasn't true—they had first met at a ritual for the Spring Equinox—the Wicca study group
was
held at Crones' Circle, a bookstore, and Kate and Tyler
did
meet there every week, so it wasn't entirely a lie.

“A bookstore?” Aunt Netty said. “How romantic. I didn't think there were any men left who read books.”

“Hey,” Kyle exclaimed. “We're not all dumb, you know.”

Aunt Netty patted her nephew's hand. “I know
you
aren't, honey,” she said. “But you have to admit that most of your fellow men generally aren't running around in bookstores.”

“Tyler reads a lot,” Kate said. “More than I do.”

“What about sports?” Aunt Netty asked. “Do you play any, Tyler?”

“Not really,” Tyler answered. “At least not any team ones. I'm afraid I'm not coordinated enough for that. But I like to run.”

Mr. Morgan made a muffled grunt, but he didn't say anything. Kate felt a twinge of resentment at his behavior. She knew he would have preferred it if Tyler were a jock. After all, her father did run a sporting goods store. He had liked the fact that Scott had been the captain of the football team. It had given the two of them something to talk about. But he and Tyler had less in common, and she knew that might make things a little harder for them.

“I think a smart guy is sexier than an athlete any day,” Aunt Netty said, catching Kate's eye and winking. “Muscles come and go, but a good mind is a rare thing.”

Kate giggled. Leave it to her aunt to always say exactly the right thing to lighten the moment.

“What about you, Aunt Netty?” she asked. “Any men in your life these days?”

“Oh, you know how it is,” Netty replied, waving her hand in the air. “They come and they go. I can't keep track of them all.”

“Kate,” her mother said. “Don't ask such personal questions.”

“It's okay, Teresa,” Netty said. “After all, I've been grilling the poor girl about
her
love life. She's entitled to one personal question. And the answer is no—I'm between significant others at the moment.”

Kate laughed again. Seeing her aunt there, smiling and having a good time, made her happy. It was a great way to celebrate the beginning of summer, and she was glad that Tyler could be there to enjoy it with her.

“How come Cooper and Annie didn't come?” her mother asked her. “Didn't you invite them?”

Suddenly a little of the happiness went out of Kate's afternoon. She cleared her throat. “I invited them,” she said. “But they both already had plans with their families.”

It was true—Annie and Cooper were both spending the Fourth with their families. At least Kate knew Annie was. She didn't really know what Cooper was doing, and she hadn't really invited her to the cookout. Even thinking about Cooper was hard right now after what had happened a few weeks before.

“Are these the two friends I've heard you talk about?” Aunt Netty asked.

Kate nodded. More than anything she would have liked her two best friends to meet her favorite aunt. But Cooper had decided to stop studying Wicca. Although Annie and Kate respected her decision, there was no denying that it had changed their friendship. Kate still didn't know exactly what had happened to Cooper on Midsummer Eve, when they all had been running around in the woods at the big ritual they'd attended, but whatever it was had turned Cooper off Wicca, maybe for good. Where before the three of them had talked almost constantly about witchcraft and their respective experiences with learning about it, now Cooper didn't talk to them at all, or at least she hadn't since they'd returned from the trip to the woods. At first Kate and Annie had wanted to give her some space to deal with whatever she was dealing with, assuming she would call them after a few days. But she hadn't, and they weren't sure where Cooper stood on the subject of Wicca—or their friendship.

“I'm sure you'll meet them while you're here,” Tyler said, and Kate shot him a look of thanks. Once again she had deflected a potentially difficult conversation with his help.

“I certainly hope so,” Aunt Netty said. “Any friends of Kate are sure to be interesting.”

The rest of the afternoon passed pleasantly, filled with more eating and then the dull routine of helping Mrs. Morgan clean everything up. Tyler helped Kate wash up, and then they returned to the backyard. As the sun set and the sky turned dark, Kate found herself looking forward excitedly to the centerpiece of the day's festivities—the fireworks.

A few minutes after night fell the first bright splash of color exploded across the sky, sending a rain of golden stars down toward them. Kate sat on the picnic table beside Tyler, watching happily as more and more rockets were sent whistling into the air, where they erupted in fountains of red, blue, and white. The echoes of their explosions filled her ears, and she oohed and aahed along with everyone else as the display of lights grew more and more elaborate.

Kate reached out and took Tyler's hand in hers, feeling his fingers close around her own. She leaned into him, feeling the warmth of him beside her, and she was filled with happiness. Despite what was happening with Cooper, she was excited about the summer that lay ahead. Things were working out in her life, and she had learned that she could handle whatever came her way.

Besides, she was going to get to spend some real quality time with her aunt. That alone was enough to make her whole summer. Added to everything else, it made her feel like the luckiest girl in the world.

She looked around for her aunt and was surprised to discover that she wasn't there. The chair she'd been sitting in was empty. Then she looked around and saw a figure standing in the kitchen, her outline silhouetted in the window.

“I'll be right back,” Kate whispered to Tyler, and slipped off the table.

She walked to the back door and went inside. Her aunt was leaning against the sink. She held a glass of water in her hand, and she had just put something into her mouth. She took a sip of water and threw her head back, swallowing. When she looked up and saw Kate there, she quickly put down the glass, picked up a small bottle from the counter, and tucked the bottle into her pocket.

“Hey there,” she said. “I didn't hear you come in.”

“I just wanted to tell you that you're missing the best part of the show,” Kate said.

“I was just coming out,” Aunt Netty said. “I just needed to take some aspirin.”

“Are you okay?” Kate asked, concerned. “You look a little tired.”

“I'm fine,” her aunt said. “I just have a headache from being in the sun so long. I'll be okay in a minute. Why don't we go back outside? I bet that boyfriend of yours is missing you.”

She put her arm around her niece. Then, suddenly, she hugged Kate tightly. “I'm so glad I get to see you again,” she said.

“Me, too,” Kate answered, hugging her aunt back.

Netty pulled away. “Now, let's go,” she said. “I don't want to miss another minute of this night.”

CHAPTER  2
BOOK: Ring of Light
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