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Excerpts
From The Novel
PROLOGUE
WEST-CENTRAL
ITALY
SPRING
EQUINOX, 465 B.C.E.
LADY
stood alone in an emerald glade high above Etruria's gentle
hills. She held the year's first roses in honor of the peace-loving
Goddess she'd been pledged to serve since birth.
Invaders
were close. Already across the valley, long lines of warriors
now snaked up the slopes of her own Sacred Mountain. Her younger
brother hid near the edge of the woods, his mind calling out:
Wanassa . . .
Wanassa,the
age-old ritual title from which Lady's name derived. She lifted
her face above the fragile cloud of roses, turned toward the
call, prickly stems biting her short, sturdy arms. The breeze
whipped loose strands of coppery curls against her cheeks as
she scanned the woods, searching, then meeting the boy's gaze,
asking her silent question: The Sacred Kestos?
The boy's
response: Buried. Safe. But the people . . . scared.
She frowned,
bit down hard on her chapped, lower lip. Lead them far from
here. Hurry! Don't return to the Gardens until the warriors
tire of pillaging, until the mountain is peaceful again.
The boy's
resignation came like a moan: Lady, we love you.
She watched
him disappear into the woods, worry for her people gnawing at
her mind. A messenger brought the warrior king's proclamations
at dawn. The clan's Wanassawould preside at Sacred Mountain
no more. The king would be priest. The people must submit to
his will. If their priestess surrendered herself, those she
loved would suffer less, the women and girls would not be raped.
Lady was here to enjoin the king's pledge.
Her clan
had known desperate times before, when they'd sailed to this
land from their island home far to the east. The people here
welcomed the clan, gave honor to the Goddess they served, even
took part in Her most sacred celebration each May Eve. This
was the clan's home now, this sanctuary almost as hallowed as
the one they'd been forced to leave before coming here and the
one before that on the vast alluvial plain where their first
Wanassawas born so long ago. Lady's mother had told her
all this and more, as had her mother's mother and hers, as well.
Only once had the chain of transmission been broken, only once
after this would it be broken again.
The virgin
forest above the glade was dense, but below farmers had thinned
the trees, and Lady could see clearly. The soldiers climbed
two abreast now. Closer, only minutes away. Their march bruised
fields freshly plowed but not yet sown. They hauled a battering
ram they wouldn't need. Lady's mountain had no fortress at its
crown, only a small outdoor shrine, a simple, holy place consecrated
to the Lover of Mortals.
Of the
shrine's hidden altar Lady dared not even think with the warriors
so near. Its hallowed outer temenosshe'd secured only
an hour before. She'd sealed off the vortex above the raised
ritual dais and pushed the waiting mound of stones, the shrine's
sole planned defense, from the rocky cliff above. They smashed
down and covered the dais, tumbled over into the sacred spring,
crushing ferns and moss, the lilies that seemed always to dance
in the basin below.
The heart
of the mountain had seemed to quake. Lady's own heart felt dashed
by each stone. The memory made her reel, yet to leave the temenos
intact to be defiled by strangers was unthinkable, a calamity
no Wanassawould ever allow. And these warriors would
have defiled it. She sensed their rage, their determination
already. She took a deep breath, locked her knees against their
trembling, braced herself for the worst.
The daughter
in her womb would die with her, but the long-treasured Sacred
Kestos was safe, its powers undiluted. Her brother, the only
male child in a dozen generations, could not carry the legacy
forward, but his seed would bear the gifts of the Goddess until
Lady, reborn, could reestablish the sacred lineage. With the
legacy suspended, the people would know less beauty, less grace
for a time-a generation, two at the most-but the Mysteries would
be restored here again, for they were eternal.
The battering
ram rumbled and creaked as it lurched over the crest of the
hill. It lumbered into the glade, warriors swarming around it.
Their cries were gruff, their language guttural and harsh. They
pointed at her. Their faces were fierce, contemptuous, but their
bravado could not mask their terror of her and the Goddess they
knew she served.
The warriors
formed a circle and stomped rhythmically, exorcising their fear.
Their sweat reeked of terror. One thick-browed warrior ripped
boldly at Lady's gown, his frothy spit marking her bared shoulder.
Another, wild-eyed, tore the roses from her arms. Pale petals
splashed the grass, pearly surrogates for tears Lady wouldn't
let herself shed.
Bonding
her unborn child's consciousness with her own, she turned her
attention inward, beyond this too-brief life and far from Hieron
Oros, her beloved Sacred Mountain. Silently, she prayed: Mother,
receive us swiftly!
[ Top ]
ONE
WEST-CENTRAL
CALIFORNIA
SPRING
EQUINOX, 2000 A.D.
JULIA
Giardani
reached the Berkeley Rose Garden at dusk. She always loved the
walk from her hillside condo to her father's house, especially
loved the view from here, even tonight, with worry driving her
every step.
She paused
at the top of the steep, terraced park and juggled her armful
of books. A scattering of smoking chimneys across the hills
gave a peppery bite to the air. Fanning out beyond the Garden
and bordered by the slate-blue mirror of the Bay and the distant
purple hills of Marin was Berkeley's north side, crowded, yet
charming as ever. Too much so for her taste these days, but
her father still loved it.
Her father.
He always seemed to know just when she'd arrive. There he was
now at the edge of the trees, ambling up the ramp in her direction.
He showed no sign of the haunted look that lately had caused
her such concern. Still handsome and energetic in his late seventies,
he seemed especially chipper this evening. When he reached up
and waved, she could tell he was smiling, already turning on
the charm to get back in her good graces.
The rascal.
His word, but it fit him to a tee, especially lately. He'd shocked
her silly two days ago with sudden revelations of old family
skeletons. Secret religious traditions--ancient, Pagan ones.
And some kind of legacy--her rightful inheritance, he'd called
it.
Then he'd
clammed up, refused to say another word or answer even one of
her questions since. He hadn't returned her calls either, he'd
finally explained this morning, because he was still trying
to organize his thoughts. Well, she planned to help him. Tonight.
Thus the books, which his silence had forced her to buy at a
local bookshop other than his, a Bay Area fixture for over thirty
years. She wrinkled her nose at the books, an odd assortment
of Jungian psychology and early Greek religion-everything she'd
found on ancient Goddesses.
"Such
a face," her father teased, coming up beside her. "You look
as if you're holding a nest of vipers." He reached for the books,
raised a bushy eyebrow at the trendy store's bookmark sticking
out of the largest. He tapped the only hardcover with his knuckles.
"At these prices, it's a good thing you nabbed at least one
decent title. The rest are useless."
"You could
have told me what to read yourself."
He gave
her a tired grin, tucked the books under one arm and started
down toward his house. "I truly wish I could have. I already
told you that, Lady."
Bristling
at the old nickname, trying to ignore the distress in his voice,
she fell in behind him and hurried to catch up. "Darnit, Dad,
you promised to stop calling me that years ago, but lately-"
"Look, you might as well face it. You will always be Lady to
me." Meaning he'd always consider her his little girl, too,
she supposed. His deep-set, green eyes sparkled as they hadn't
in days. He reached out and ruffled her hair as if she were
twelve instead of twenty-eight.
"Better
watch out. There are worse things I could call you."
"Sure,
like witch!"
Arriving
at his backyard gate, he gave her the exasperated parent look
she'd rarely seen since she'd grown up. "There's nothing shameful
about being called a witch." He rested his hand on the gate,
above which dangled an old brass plate inscribed with their
family name in a flowery script. "Especially when it's true."
"True
for Julian 'Tony' Giardani." Scowling, she put her hands on
her hips. "You've called yourself a witch for as long as I can
remember, you've taught me to respect your Goddess, but you've
never tried to push your witch stuff onto me before."
Until recently,
he'd never been one for mood swings either, had always seemed
steady as a rock. Except for the first year or two after her
mother's death, long ago, Julia had rarely seen him down--let
alone anxious and vulnerable like this. His eyes looked troubled
again, his normally robust complexion much too pale. "I knew
the witch element of the family's story would hit you like a
bomb." The lines in his face seemed deeper than they had only
moments before. "I've wanted to tell you what I've managed to
learn about this for years, but couldn't, and I'm not sure what
will help you most right now."
She'd never
seen him indecisive before, either. It chilled her to the bone.
"Is this so-called legacy material, Dad, or just some quaint
family customs?"
"The legacy's
important, Julia, there's nothing quaint about it. It's genetic,
apparently lays dormant until triggered from within." He stared
at her in that intense, assessing way he'd developed only lately,
then opened the gate and walked under the rose arbor. "As the
last female in the Giardani line, the family gifts and their
age-old responsibility have finally passed to you."
Frowning,
Julia followed him. "Earlier you said you've noticed some change
in me. Is that why you were finally able to tell me about this?"
"Yep.
Until I noticed that change, I was sworn to silence." His backyard
was large for this part of Berkeley, the landscaping old-fashioned
and lush, the craggy stone wall built by his own hands. He hesitated
on the patio, stared at the bench he'd later added in one corner.
"These last few weeks have been great, Lady, with you puttering
around here like old times."
There it
was again, that new telltale catch in his voice. It had opened
the well of her anxiety, forced her to face the fact he wouldn't
live forever. She'd curbed her independent streak, spent more
time with him, even asked his advice a few times. "I enjoyed
myself, too." Beneath the bench, the violets Julia planted the
month before had bloomed.
He glanced
down at the tiny purple flowers. "It's not the garden I've loved
watching blossom," he said gruffly. "It's you. I always knew
you would."
"Thanks."
The breeze blew a lock of his hair across his cheek. She tucked
it behind his ear. "I think."
"Trust
me." Still tense but clearly happy again, he led her indoors.
Delicious aromas hit her the instant she entered the kitchen.
Her stomach
growled.
He chuckled.
"We'd best have dinner before we talk."
"Not on
your life."
"I have
a few presents for you, first."
"You've
got to be joking."
"Honestly,
Kiddo." He gave her a look her Italian-born grandmother used
to say reminded her of folleti, those cute little sprites from
Tuscan fairy tales. He put on his glasses, raised an eyebrow
as he gave her outfit a penetrating gaze. "You really need those
presents."
She glanced
down at her soft, faded jeans, tugged at the hem of her baggy
and equally faded gold flannel shirt, an old favorite she'd
pulled on over a newer beige turtleneck. Her usual style. He
knew she worked with homeless kids and their struggling parents.
Dressing like a fashion plate was out of the question. "You've
never cared how I dressed before."
"I never
said anything before. There's a difference. Besides, you're
gonna need a new look. For your new life."
"New what?"
Her stomach tightened, and she all but choked.
"You heard
me."
"I don't
want a new life." She'd never fit in with her fast-track generation.
Building something that worked for her had not been easy.
"That's
what you say now, but believe me, a Giardani Heiress can't run
around Tuscany looking like a scruffy tomboy."
Heiress,
with a capital H. There was no mistaking that, or the challenge
in his eyes. Nudging his glasses down his nose, he glared at
her over their rim. There was no mistaking the Tuscany bit,
either. She stared into his eyes, her alarm changing to astonishment.
"Dream on, Dad. I can't drop everything here-the shelter, my
work with the kids-and head for Tuscany. I just can't do it."
"Maybe
you can't today, Lady Bug, but soon you must."
Lady Bug?
Another silly childhood nickname. He seemed to be dredging them
up from some fathomless pit of parental memory. He caught her
gaze and held it by the sheer power of his unabashed hopefulness.
How could
anyone so thoroughly lovable be so exasperating? She clamped
her mouth shut, bit down hard on her lower lip. "I promise you,
Julia, your legacy will become your greatest passion. It's immensely
valuable-for your life and for the world. You'll understand
later, but for now, just imagine a power passed down through
the women of our family for three thousand years-think how special
that is."
"If it's
so special, why haven't I known or felt something before?"
"I know
it doesn't make sense. All I can say is, my mother dropped the
ball, and now, as the Giardani Heiress, retrieving the legacy
and saving it for future generations falls on you."
The Giardani
Heiress. Beneath her resistance, Julia was fascinated, had been
since his first hints of this. "I'm ready to learn more, but
it all sounds so foreign-so bizarre-I'll need your help to sort
it out."
He looked
away. "I'm afraid I might not be around to help."
Her stomach
took a dive. "Why on earth would you say that?" She grabbed
his arm, searched his eyes. He seemed at war with himself, wouldn't
answer her, but the look on his face sent icy chills down her
spine. Squeezing his cold hand in both of her own, she had the
distinct impression he was withholding things to protect her,
that he knew men who would kill for what he knew. Power-hungry,
evil men. "Listen, Dad, if you're in some kind of danger, you
can forget about sending me away-to Tuscany or anywhere else."
"Fine.
Be stubborn, like the Taurus you are." Seeming undaunted, he
pulled his hand away and headed for the living room. "Stubborn
runs in the family and will serve you well . . ."
At the
doorway, he turned back and beamed her his most enigmatic smile,
his eyes dancing with mirth and mystery. "Just as long as you
change your mind by May Eve.
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