‘So let me get this straight,’ said Olivier.
‘He almost never says that,’ Gabri assured Clara then turned back to the platter of shrimp Olivier was trying to get him to pass round. Gabri took one.
‘Easter isn’t a Christian holiday?’ said Olivier.
‘Well, it is,’ said Jeanne. The little, nondescript woman had somehow managed to dominate the room full of strong personalities. She sat bunched into a corner of the sofa, squeezed between the arm and Myrna, and all eyes were on her. ‘But the early church didn’t know for sure when Christ was crucified so it chose a date, one that would fit into the pagan calendar of rituals as well.’
‘Why would they want to do that?’ asked Clara.
‘The early church needed converts to survive. It was a dangerous and fragile time. In order to win over the pagans it adopted some of their feasts and rituals.’
‘Church incense is like the smudging we do,’ agreed Myrna. ‘When we light dried herbs to cleanse a place.’ She turned to Clara, who nodded. But it was a comforting ritual full of joy, not the somber swinging of the church censer, glum and vaguely threatening. She’d never seen the two as similar and wondered how the priests would feel about the comparison. Or the witches.
‘That’s right,’ said Jeanne. ‘Same with the festivals. We sometimes call Christmas Yuletide.’
‘In some of the carols anyway,’ said Gabri.
‘And we have the Yule log,’ Olivier pointed out.
‘Yule is the ancient word for the winter solstice. The longest night of the year. Around December twenty-first. It’s a pagan festival. So that’s where the early Christian church decided to put Christmas.’
‘So that a bunch of witches would celebrate? Come on,’ said Ruth with a snort. ‘Aren’t you making yourselves out to be more important than you are?’
‘Now, absolutely. The church hasn’t been interested in us for hundreds of years, except maybe as firewood, as you know.’
‘What do you mean? As I know?’
‘You’ve written about the old beliefs. Many times. It runs through your poems.’
‘You’re reading too much into them, Joan of Arc,’ said Ruth.
‘I was hanged for living alone,