ward?
“What about voodoo?” I asked. “Its practitioners don’t cast spells?”
“No. They connect to the spiritual energy of the world, of each other. It is a religion—not a means of
And it hit me: his hatred of spells and necromancy extended far more deeply than mere disapproval of power.
“Marcus,” I breathed. “This is because of Marcus, isn’t it?”
Joseph drew back. For several seconds he didn’t answer. Then he turned away. “Yes. Yes, it is to do with Marcus. To learn that my best friend was . . . was not what he seemed. To learn that he had spent years fooling, not only me, but our teacher—the Voodoo Queen herself. And then, despite everything I did . . .” His voice cracked. “Despite everything I did,” he repeated, his fingers curling into fists, “Marcus still died . . . and then he
“But it isn’t your fault,” I interrupted. “You take all of Marcus’s deeds onto your own conscience, Joseph, but what he did—all his horrors are separate from you.”
He twisted back toward me, the bags beneath his eyes pronounced. “And do you do any differently, Eleanor? Have you forgiven yourself for what Elijah did?”
My lungs seized.
Joseph’s posture deflated. “Forgive me. If anyone can relate to my story, it is you. I . . . I should not bring up such things. I merely worry about you.” His eyes locked on mine, unblinking. “About this power of yours.”
“I told you. I am not casting spells.” My words were snipped. “My power comes
He held my gaze. “You are certain?”
He blinked once, slowly. “Then you will not, I hope, disagree with my request.”
I lifted an eyebrow.
“Would you consent to study with me?” he asked. “I can teach you to control your natural power.
To use it properly.”
Finally, I managed to make my head nod, a tiny, jerky movement.
“Good.” Joseph pulled back his shoulders. “Then let us begin with your first lesson: ignoring your powers.”
cracking yawn. Unnatural. Unhealthy.
That was when I noticed a large, gleaming bell hanging over the window. I pointed, so obviously trying to change the subject, and asked, “What’s that?”
I was shocked when Joseph actually followed my finger and answered. “That is our newest version of the Dead alarm.”
I licked my lips, trying to focus on what he’d said. “No telegraph system?” In Philadelphia, Daniel had rigged a system much like the fire department’s alarms. When the somber Dead alarm had sounded, a telegraph machine in the Spirit-Hunters’ lab had jumped to life, alerting them to the when and where of the latest Dead attack.
“A telegraph would be impractical here,” Joseph said. “The city is simply too big.” He dipped his head toward the bell. “When a new corpse is found, someone usually comes here seeking help.
However, we quickly learned that Le Meurice has certain . . .
“It is a wonder,” I said, hoping to ease my tension with sarcasm, “that the Hotel Le Meurice even let me in their door with such tight restrictions. But I am not surprised to hear that Daniel found a solution. He would.”
“A primitive solution, but one that works.” Joseph glanced at me, his head cocked. “You are sad that Daniel is not here?”
“
As one, Joseph and I lunged for the window. He threw open the lowest pane.
Down on the street, dressed in a black uniform and apron, was a gray-haired woman yanking the rope.
“
Chapter Eleven
It was a device that looked like a spinning wheel, but rather than wooden wheels for making thread, it had two glass wheels for making electricity. Joseph used the electricity to blast the Dead back to the spirit realm, and it was, I realized, the reason Joseph never needed self-power.
But it was also bulky and inefficient.
“Help me carry it,” Joseph ordered, crouching beside the device and dragging it out.
The machine was as high as my knees and twice as long. At the sight of it, annoyance blazed through me. As corrupt as Joseph might have insisted spells were, at least they did not need an enormous, heavy machine to produce.
I knelt and gripped the machine’s wooden base. With a grunt, we stood. Then, with Joseph moving backward and me following, we trudged as quickly as we could to the stairs and down.
By the first landing I was already gulping in air. “You really ought to keep this in the carriage. It’s too heavy to transport every time.”
“I proposed this,” Joseph panted, his gaze intent on the steps, “but Daniel threatened to quit if I put his precious machine in danger like that.”
“Danger?”
“He’s certain someone will steal it. Or break it.”
I scoffed—or tried to, but my breathing was too labored. “You would think it was his child.”
Joseph smiled weakly. “He invests all his heart in his creations, so in some ways I suppose it
Jie met us on the street. “I heard the bell ring from the restaurant and got a carriage ready. The woman is already inside.”
“
A red flush ignited on her cheeks. “Come on.” She guided us to the waiting black cab, and after shoving the influence machine on the floor, we all clambered in. The carriage rattled to a start, and as we traveled down the street and past the Place de la Concorde with its enormous gold-capped obelisk and fountains, Joseph tried to speak to the distraught maid. This proved especially difficult, though.
The woman babbled incoherently.
“Oh