“I have something that is almost finished. A surprise.” He pulled me back into a walk, and we left the fountain behind. “What about you? What do you intend to research?”
Elijah was in Paris when he first learned of the creature, so there must be something.”
“Can you read French?”
My footsteps faltered. “No. I hadn’t even thought of that!”
His eyes bunched up and his lips pressed tight, as if he was trying to fight off a laugh, but at last he gave up. He slapped his thigh. “Well, I can’t read it either, Empress, so it looks like we won’t be gettin’ a whole lot done.”
My lungs swelled, yet I found I couldn’t breathe—was afraid to breathe. He had called me
Empress, and he had spoken completely like himself
“I reckon so.” Daniel gave me a rakish wink, and I almost melted right there on the cobblestones.
“Maybe we can figure out a few words,” I continued, trying—and failing—to hide the quaver in my voice. My heart was banging like a timpani. “For example, we know Elijah learned something in
“Good idea.” He nodded approvingly. “We can also cross-reference all mentions of
“Yes!” I squeezed his arm. “That’s perfect. Now if we only can make the librarians understand us.”
He doffed his hat playfully. “You just leave that to me, Empress.”
Moments later, we reached the library’s entrance on the other side. “This library is old,” Daniel said as we passed through an archway into a flower-filled courtyard. People milled about, lost in their books, their feet crackling on the gravel. “And as it ages, it keeps getting bigger and bigger. More space and more books.” He grinned and held open an enormous oak door for me. Beyond was a simple marble-floored hall with a winding staircase.
The moment I stepped inside, I eased out a breath I hadn’t even known was trapped. Being in a library was like a gentle balm. No matter the city, no matter the time, you always know what you’ll find. My home was halfway around the globe, yet here was something as familiar to me as myself.
The last time I had been in a library, Marcus had tried to kill me—but not even that could upset me now. I could forget about everything here. Let it fade into a meaningless whir in the back of my brain . . .
Daniel nodded to a dark wood door at my right. “This way, Empress.” He set his heel against the door and turned to face me. “Prepare to be amazed.” Then he rocked back, and the door creaked open.
My heart hitched. I gasped.
Spanning before me was row after row of desks. There was nothing to distract the devoted reader.
Gaping, I scuffed into the room and stared at the ceiling’s domes and circular skylights. Then I caught sight of the walls, and somehow my mouth fell open even farther. From floor to ceiling were shelves—three
“That’s not even the beginning,” Daniel whispered. “
“Sakes alive,” I breathed. “Where do we even begin?”
He flashed his eyebrows and tugged me over to the nearest desk. “You can start by organizin’ all your brother’s letters. I’ll find the reading material.” He pulled out a gold-upholstered chair, helped me sit, and then swept me an easy bow.
This time I
Daniel, and I was simply Eleanor.
I laid out all my letters, and soon enough, Daniel came marching back with a stack of books teetering in his arms. He eased them onto the desk. “We’ll start with these. The librarian’s going to bring us anything else he finds.”
Snagging the top book—
“And here’s
All I could manage was a nod. He was so close—so close that I could see the stubble he had missed shaving. Could see each muscle in his jaw.
But it was the smell of him that almost undid me. Metal and salt and everything he had always smelled of came rushing into my nose, and with it came the memories. Swirling. Intense.
My back to the lamppost. His hands cradling my face. His lips pressed fiercely to mine.
A low moan escaped my mouth.
Daniel flinched, his face jerking toward me.
I clamped a hand over my mouth.
His brow knit with concern. “Are you all right?”
I nodded frantically, my eyes nearly popping from my skull. “Hungry,” I said behind my hand.
“Sorry.”
“Well, we can eat after we finish this.” Grinning, he hooked his heel around the chair next to mine, drew it out, and plopped down.
I bowed over my book and avoided meeting his gaze. For several moments I could feel him watching me. It made me hot—miserably, boiling
I drew in a long, shaky breath, and when I finally had the courage to glance at Daniel, it was to find him fully focused on my letters.
“Your brother,” he drawled, “makes about as much sense to me as French politics.”
“It makes no sense to me either.”
“Who’s this Ollie fellow, d’you suppose?”
“Uh . . .” I bit the inside of my mouth. What could I say?
“Or Monsieur Girard in the last one?” Daniel went on, oblivious to my sudden panic. “Or this random hackney driver?”
I sank back in my chair. “I-I don’t know. Perhaps we should focus on the books first.” I grabbed up the letters and shoved them aside with far more force than necessary. But again, Daniel didn’t seem to notice. He simply shrugged, and in a matter of minutes we had sunk into a rhythm. Daniel scanned indexes, I marked pages, and the librarian—a soft-spoken Frenchman—continued to bring us book after book.
Minutes slid into hours, and after examining forty-seven different books and determining that only thirteen were useful, we came to the final text in our stack:
Daniel flipped to the index. “I don’t know what Napoleon would have to do with grimoires, but we might as well . . .” He trailed off.
“What?” I asked.
“It
“Here.” I tapped the middle paragraph and haltingly tried to translate. “‘Many Egyptians . . . thought Napoleon had a necromancer . . .’”
“‘But,’” Daniel said, following along, “‘there was never’—I don’t know what that word is.”
“Me neither, but look here.” My eye caught on a paragraph further down on the page—on a French phrase I knew well. “‘The soldier,’” I continued translating, “‘who was famous for . . . for discovering