For Claudette, of course

iamque opus exegi

I am legend.

Death has no claim over me, illness cannot touch me. Look at me now and it

would be hard to put an age upon me, and yet I was born in the Year of Our

Lord 1330, more than six hundred and seventy years ago.

I have been many things in my time: a physician and a cook, a bookseller and

a soldier, a teacher of languages and chemistry, both an officer of the law

and a thief.

But before all these I was an alchemyst. I was the Alchemyst.

I was acknowledged as the greatest Alchemyst of all, sought after by kings

and princes, by emperors and even the Pope himself. I could turn ordinary

metal into gold, I could change common stones into precious jewels. More than

this: I discovered the secret of Life Eternal hidden deep in a book of

ancient magic.

Now my wife, Perenelle, has been kidnapped and the book stolen.

Without the book, she and I will age. Within the full cycle of the moon, we

will wither and die. And if we die, then the evil we have so long fought

against will triumph. The Elder Race will reclaim this Earth again, and they

will wipe humanity from the face of this planet.

But I will not go down without a fight.

For I am the immortal Nicholas Flamel.

From the Day Booke of Nicholas Flamel, Alchemyst

Writ this day, Thursday, 31st May, in

San Francisco, my adopted city

THURSDAY,

31st May

CHAPTER ONE

OK answer me this: why would anyone want to wear an overcoat in San

Francisco in the middle of summer? Sophie Newman pressed her fingers against

the Bluetooth earpiece as she spoke.

On the other side of the continent, her fashion-conscious friend Elle

inquired matter-of-factly, What sort of coat?

Wiping her hands on the cloth tucked into her apron strings, Sophie moved out

from behind the counter of the empty coffee shop and stepped up to the

window, watching men emerge from the car across the street. Heavy black wool

overcoats. They re even wearing black gloves and hats. And sunglasses. She

pressed her face against the glass. Even for this city, That'sjust a little

too weird.

Maybe they re undertakers? Elle suggested, her voice popping and clicking

on the cell phone. Sophie could hear something loud and dismal playing in the

background Lacrimosa maybe, or Amorphis. Elle had never quite got over her

Goth phase.

Maybe, Sophie answered, sounding unconvinced. She d been chatting on the

phone with her friend when, a few moments earlier, she d spotted the

unusual-looking car. It was long and sleek and looked as if it belonged in an

old black-and-white movie. As it drove past the window, sunlight reflected

off the blacked-out windows, briefly illuminating the interior of the coffee

shop in warm yellow-gold light, blinding Sophie. Blinking away the black

spots dancing before her eyes, she watched as the car turned at the bottom of

the hill and slowly returned. Without signaling, it pulled over directly in

front of The Small Book Shop, right across the street.

Maybe they re Mafia, Elle suggested dramatically. My dad knows someone in

the Mafia. But he drives a Prius, she added.

This is most definitely not a Prius, Sophie said, looking again at the car

and the two large men standing on the street bundled up in their heavy

overcoats, gloves and hats, their eyes hidden behind overlarge sunglasses.

Maybe they re just cold, Elle suggested. doesn't it get cool in San

Francisco?

Sophie Newman glanced at the clock and thermometer on the wall over the

counter behind her. It s two-fifteen here and eighty-one degrees, she said.

Trust me, they re not cold. They must be dying. Wait, she said,

interrupting herself, something s happening.

The rear door opened and another man, even larger than the first two, climbed

stiffly out of the car. As he closed the door, sunlight briefly touched his

face and Sophie caught a glimpse of pale, unhealthy-looking gray-white skin.

She adjusted the volume on the earpiece. OK. You should see what just

climbed out of the car. A huge guy with gray skin. Gray. That might explain

it; maybe they have some type of skin condition.

I saw a National Geographic documentary about people who Can't go out in the

sun , Elle began, but Sophie was no longer listening to her.

 

A fourth figure stepped out of the car.

He was a small, rather dapper-looking man, dressed in a neat charcoal-gray

three-piece suit that looked vaguely old-fashioned but that she could tell

had been tailor-made for him. His iron gray hair was pulled back from an

angular face into a tight ponytail, while a neat triangular beard, mostly

black but flecked with gray, concealed his mouth and chin. He moved away from

the car and stepped under the striped awning that covered the trays of books

outside the shop. When he picked up a brightly colored paperback and turned

it over in his hands, Sophie noticed that he was wearing gray gloves. A pearl

button at the wrist winked in the light.

They re going into the bookshop, she said into her earpiece.

Is Josh still working there? Elle immediately asked.

Sophie ignored the sudden interest in her friend s voice. The fact that her

best friend liked her twin brother was just a little too weird. Yeah. I m

going to call him to see what s up. I'll call you right back. She hung up,

pulled out the earpiece and absently rubbed her hot ear as she stared,

fascinated, at the small man. There was something about him something odd.

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