Sorority, spells and sparks – A story that takes us back to the magical turn of the century.
Tanit never imagined her dream trip to Europe with her best friend would end in heartbreak—and a broken friendship. Now stranded and alone in Vienna, she has no plan, direction, or one to turn to. That is, until she crosses paths with Evanora: an enigmatic girl with wild eyes, a Tarot deck, and a motorhome she shares with a talking parrot named Quartz and a mysterious boy named Ariel.
When Evanora impulsively invites her on a spontaneous road trip across Europe, Tanit thinks it’s madness. But, determined to reclaim her spark and prove she can embrace the unknown, she says yes. What she doesn’t expect is to discover that Evanora is a real witch—or that she herself holds a hidden power waiting to be awakened. As Evanora becomes her magical mentor and Ariel stirs something deeper in her heart, Tanit begins a journey that will test not only her courage, but her sense of who she really is.
But magic always comes with a price, and both of her new companions are harbouring secrets—secrets that could shatter the fragile bonds they’re building… or prove deadly.
It is not always easy to recognise magic when it crosses your path.
When you have grown up ‘with your feet on the ground’, nailed to the ground by thousands of fearful hands that have made you believe that the only security is in what you know, it is impossible to believe in it.
Close your eyes and try to remember: have you ever had the feeling that someone was watching you, but when you turned around there was no one there? have you ever dreamt of someone from your past and they reappeared soon after? have you ever had a premonition so intense that you felt it cling to your gut? how many times have you had déjà vu or called something a ‘coincidence’ just because you had no better word for it?
Have you ever felt that something was speaking to you, as it did to me with my grandfather’s coin in Vienna and in that park in Denmark?
Intuition is the language of magic, but no one teaches us to understand it.
Nobody teaches us to believe.