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Chapter no 27

Sorcery of Thorns

THE REMAINDER OF the night passed in a blur. First there was the disorienting brightness of the palace, followed by the startled faces of the guests Elisabeth encountered in the halls. After that she recalled shouting, a Aurry of action. A physician was summoned. Someone inquired after the wound on Elisabethโ€™s hand, but she claimed that the blood was Nathanielโ€™s, which got everyone outside in a hurry. The next thing she knew, she stood in the rose garden as two men carried Nathanielโ€™s limp body into a carriage.

His condition was serious. She could tell that much by the physicianโ€™s urgency, the cries that rang out for help. She tried to go to him, but hands held her back. They needed to know what had happened.ย The Chancellov, she said, and no one believed her. Not until a man called from the top of the pavilion and held up Ashcroftโ€™s sword, the gryphon on its pommel unmistakable in the moonlight.

Fandemonium. Lord Kicklighterโ€™s booming voice cut through the din. A guest helped her toward the carriageโ€”and how strange everyoneโ€™s 1nery looked, marked here and there with smears of Nathanielโ€™s blood. Her own gown had been ruined beyond repair. Silas would not be pleased about that; they had spent an entire day together shopping, and he had patiently sat through several 1ttings, during which Elisabeth had had to stand very still, so that the seamstress did not stick her with pins. She could clearly picture his look of disapproval.

Then she remembered that Silas had been run through with a sword, and was gone.

She rode inside the carriage with Nathaniel and the physician. The wheels jostled over uneven ground, and once, Nathaniel groaned. Sweat beaded his forehead, but his hand felt free>ing cold. She didnโ€™t remember taking hold of

it. The physician was busy applying pressure to Nathanielโ€™s chest. He glanced once at her injured palm, then at her face, and said nothing.

They pulled up outside Nathanielโ€™s house, where a crowd had gathered. Half of the ballroom appeared to have followed them to Hemlock Fark, now mixed with reporters and sorcerers wearing their nightclothes. Lights bla>ed in the homes all the way down the street, their windows Aung open, people leaning out. Elisabeth barely noticed the commotion, because none of it was a fraction as strange as what was happening to Nathanielโ€™s house.

All of the gargoyles had come to life. They prowled along the rooAine and coiled themselves, snarling, around the corbels. The thorn bushes that grew in the unkempt gardens surrounding the house had stretched to tall, impenetrable hedges, rattling menacingly at anyone who drew near the iron fence. Dark clouds boiled overhead.

โ€œThe wards have activated,โ€ the physician told her. โ€œThe house recogni>es that its heir is in danger, and will do anything to protect him from further harm. The difficulty is, thereโ€™s no one else of his bloodline who can safely let us through. Miss Scrivener, does Nathaniel trust you?โ€

She watched the men lift Nathaniel from the carriage. In order to reach his wounds, the physician had removed his shirt. His skin, where it wasnโ€™t covered in blood, was as white as paper. His head lolled, and one of his arms dangled loose. His black hair fell like a spill of ink around his ashen faceโ€” black, without a hint of silver. The wrongness of it left her da>ed.

โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ she said. โ€œYes. I think so.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s unconventional, but we havenโ€™t much time. Try approaching the house. If anything threatens you, retreat quickly. Iโ€™d rather not end up with two patients tonight.โ€

The hubbub quieted as Elisabeth stepped forward. Faces watched anxiously from the crowd. She recogni>ed one of them as one of the girls who had gossiped about her in Ashcroftโ€™s conservatory, who looked stricken now, clutching a friendโ€™s hand.

During the carriage ride, Elisabeth hadnโ€™t let go of Demonslayer. It shone at her side as she crossed the threshold of the open gate, toward the thorn bushes, their crooked boughs looming above her. Instantly, their rattling ceased. A whisper ran through the hedge. Then the branches retreated,

creating a path to the front door. One gargoyle sank down, and then another, lowering their heads like retainers welcoming the return of their queen.

Silence prevailed. She walked up the path and ascended the steps. When she reached for the doorknob, the bolt clicked on its own, and the door swung open without a touch.

Stunned, she stood aside to let the physician pass. He hurried up the path, giving instructions to the men carrying Nathaniel, his 1ngers on Nathanielโ€™s pulse. A bespectacled young woman hurried alongside them, laden with bags and cases. Behind them, the branches closed back in, weaving together like threads on a loom, blocking out the crowd. The last thing Elisabeth saw before the thorns knit shut was a reporter ga>ing back at her. Wonder transformed his features, and his pencil had fallen to the ground, forgotten.

She followed the procession upstairs, unable to take her eyes from Nathanielโ€™s unconscious face. There wasnโ€™t room for her in his bedroom, so she stood outside, Aattening herself against the wall every time the physicianโ€™s assistant passed with an ewer of water or an armful of blood-soaked linens.

No one said anything, but it was clear that Elisabeth was getting in the way. Numbly, she drifted back downstairs. She took oP Nathanielโ€™s coat and hung it on the coatrack. She noticed a few droplets of blood on the foyerโ€™s Aoor and used her gown to wipe them up, since its ivory silk was already ruined. Afterward she sat on the bottom step, her head bu>>ing with white noise. Dimly, from upstairs, she heard the scuAe of feet accompanied by a tense exchange of voices. The grandfather clock ticked in time with the beating of her heart.

As of this moment, Ashcroft was ruined. Everything would come out in the morning papers. The entire world would know him for who he truly was. But this didnโ€™t feel like a victory. Not with Silas lost, and Nathaniel bleeding upstairs. Not with Ashcroft still at large.

Noโ€”the 1ght wasnโ€™t over yet. It would be foolish to imagine otherwise. She sat for a moment longer, considering this, and then she rose and walked with purpose into Nathanielโ€™s study, where she sei>ed the magnifying device from his desk, Aung it to the ground, and smashed it beneath her heel. She proceeded to the next room, where she found another mirror and tore it from the wall. She didnโ€™t stop there. A path of destruction marked her progress around the house. Glass cracked, shattered, exploded across carpets, bounced

in glinting fragments down the furniture. No mirror was safe. She took Demonslayerโ€™s hilt to the one in the parlor, where she had spent so many hours studying grimoires, and watched her reAection splinter, then go tumbling to the Aoor. When she was 1nished downstairs, she made her way upward, leaving a trail of shards along the hallways.

It seemed as though she should feel something, but she did not. Her injured hand didnโ€™t hurt, even as blood ran freely down Demonslayerโ€™s pommel. The mirrors in their cumbersome frames yielded to her without ePort. It was as though she were made of light and air, barely tethered to the physical world, at once unstoppable and in danger of coming apart, burning up, Aoating away.

At last, she reached her bedroom. She picked up the scrying mirror. She tried to explain what had happened to Katrien, who asked her a number of questions she couldnโ€™t answer, because at some point, words had stopped making sense. When they were 1nished talking, Elisabeth wrapped the mirror in a pillowcase and dropped it down the laundry chute. Ashcroft wouldnโ€™t be able to spy on her from there. Then she set about making the rest of the room safe, in the only way she knew how.

An incalculable amount of time later, she came back to herself, Demonslayer clenched in her good hand, surrounded by broken wood and glass. She thought,ย Silas isnโ€™t going to libe this.ย Then she thought,ย I mill hel9 him clean it u9.

The grief, when it came, struck her like a punch to the gut. She doubled over and sank to the Aoor, her breath coming in strangled gasps. She was not made of air or light. She was weakly, devastatingly human, and she did feel pain, more than she could bear. Silas was gone. She didnโ€™t know what Nathaniel was going to do, or how she was going to tell him, or whether she could endure the look on his face when she did. She didnโ€™t know if Nathaniel would wake again at all.

She wept until the world softened and blurred around her, and at last she knew nothing more.

โ€ข โ€ข โ€ข

When she next opened her swollen eyes, it was to the sight of an unfamiliar woman sitting on a chair in the corner. Afternoon light shone through the

curtains. Elisabeth looked down at herself in bed, easily managed because she had been propped up on the pillows. A bandage swathed her injured hand. Demonslayer lay atop the covers on her other side, her 1ngers still clenched around the grip.

โ€œDr. Godfrey and I couldnโ€™t pry it from you, even after you fell asleep.โ€

Elisabeth looked back at the woman. She wasnโ€™t unfamiliar, after all. She was the physicianโ€™s assistant, thin and bespectacled, wearing a starched white pinafore. Dried blood streaked the front, but its presence didnโ€™t seem to bother her.

โ€œMy name is Beatrice,โ€ she said. โ€œIโ€™m the one whoโ€™s been tending to you.โ€

Elisabethโ€™s heart skipped. She couldnโ€™t take her ga>e from the stained pinafore. โ€œIs Nathanielโ€”?โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s doing well. At least, as well as can be expected. Drink this.โ€ She brought a glass of water to Elisabethโ€™s lips and watched her swallow some of it before she went on, speaking calmly, as if for her this was a perfectly ordinary morning, no diPerent than a conversation over breakfast. โ€œMagister Thorn lost a great deal of blood, but Dr. Godfrey is con1dent he will recover. Sorcerers can survive remarkable injuries with the help of their household wards. Even so, he shouldnโ€™t get out of bed until his chest has begun to heal.โ€ Relief crashed over Elisabeth. She shoved herself upright, then fro>e, biting back a groan. Every inch of her body hurt. Even her bones ached.

โ€œThereโ€™s a mirror in his room,โ€ she said. โ€œI mustโ€”โ€

Beatrice laid a hand on her shoulder. โ€œDr. Godfrey and I have already seen to it.โ€ She added, more gently, โ€œYou told us what you had been doing last night, when we found you here on the Aoor. You donโ€™t remember that?โ€

Elisabeth didnโ€™t, and she preferred not to imagine the state in which theyโ€™d discovered her, but she was grateful they had taken her seriously. She looked down, gritting her teeth against her bodyโ€™s protests. โ€œMay I see Nathaniel?โ€ she asked.

โ€œIf youโ€™d like, though he wonโ€™t wake for hours yet. When he does, he may not be quite himself. Heโ€™s been given laudanum for the pain.โ€

She helped Elisabeth into a dressing gown and walked her down the hall. Elisabeth wasnโ€™t sure she could have managed the journey on her own. While she tottered along like an old woman, Beatrice told her how lucky she was not to have broken anything. โ€œMost people would have, after taking such hard

blows.โ€ And then she looked askance at Demonslayer, still clutched in Elisabethโ€™s hand.

When they reached Nathanielโ€™s doorway, she could only stare. Nathaniel looked marooned in the broad expanse of his four-poster bed, with its carved pillars and dark brocade hangings. His face was turned to the side, and the angle of the sunlight cut across his sharp cheekbone, making a sculpture of his features. Beneath the open collar of his nightshirt, bandages wrapped his chest.

Somehow, it didnโ€™t feel right to see him this way. His breathing was so shallow that his chest barely rose and fell. His face was still: his brow smooth, his mouth slack. Blue shadows tinted the skin beneath his eyes. It seemed as though he would break if she touched him, as though he had transformed into a substance other than Aesh and blood, as fragile as porcelain.

Beatrice assisted her into the armchair pulled up near him and turned to go. She paused at the doorway, her bedside manner parting slightly, like a curtain, to reveal a hint of wariness underneath. โ€œIs it true Magister Thorn has no human servants?โ€ she asked. โ€œOnly a demon?โ€

โ€œYes, but thereโ€™s no need to be afraid. Silasโ€”thatโ€™s his nameโ€”he isnโ€™t here any longer. Even if he were, he wouldnโ€™tโ€”โ€ Elisabeth fought for words, gripped by an overpowering need to explain, to make Beatrice understand. It felt unacceptable that no one else knew who Silas was and what he had done. She 1nished with difficulty, โ€œHe sacri1ced himself to save Nathanielโ€™s life.โ€

Beatrice frowned, gave a slight nod, and left, unmoved by the revelation.ย She thinbs he acted undev Rathanielโ€™s ovdevs. And as simply as that, Elisabeth reali>ed no one would ever appreciate Silasโ€™s 1nal act. It was not a story that anyone would believe. He had vanished from the world like mist, leaving nothing behind except rumors: the dreadful creature that had served House Thorn.

The injustice of it overwhelmed her, stung her eyes like needles. For a long time she sat in silence, her head bowed, blinking back tears.

Fabric rustled. Beside her, Nathaniel had stirred. She held her breath as his eyelashes Auttered, even though his movements appeared less a conscious ePort to wake than a reaction to a dream. Impulsively, she reached over to brush a lock of hair from his forehead. The strands slid through her 1ngers,

softer than silk. She had so little to give him, but at least she could let him know that he wasnโ€™t alone.

Nathanielโ€™s eyes cracked open, bright and unfocused. โ€œSilas?โ€ he whispered.

Elisabethโ€™s heart crumpled. She 1nished tucking his hair behind his ear, and then she took his hand. She watched him slip, reassured, back to sleep.

The loss of his demonic mark told her that heโ€™d gained back the two decades of life he had bargained to Silas. Yet it was impossible to be glad for him. She knew that given the choice, he would trade the years away again in a heartbeat to have Silas back.

Hours passed. Beatrice came and went, bringing a cold lunch scavenged from the kitchen. Afterward, Dr. Godfrey changed Nathanielโ€™s bandages. Elisabeth sat gripping the chairโ€™s armrests as the stained cloth peeled away to reveal four jagged lines carved diagonally across Nathanielโ€™s chest. They stretched from the bottom of his ribs on one side to his collarbone on the other, clamped together with sutures. She forced herself not to look away, remembering the sweep of Ashcroftโ€™s claws, the blank look on Nathanielโ€™s face as he stumbled backward. She could tell that the wounds would leave 1erce and permanent scars.

When Dr. Godfrey 1nished reapplying the bandages, he placed his palm on Nathanielโ€™s forehead and frowned.

โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong?โ€ she blurted out.

โ€œHeโ€™s developing a fever. Thatโ€™s common with injuries of this nature. Wound fevers can be dangerous, but in his case, the wards should protect him from any serious harm.โ€ He paused. โ€œMagister Thorn? Can you hear us?โ€

Weakly, from the bed, Nathaniel had coughed. Elisabeth balanced on the edge of her seat, every muscle tensed. Soon Nathanielโ€™s eyes drifted open, the pale clear gray of quart>. He regarded her in silence, studying her face as though he had never seen it before, or as though he feared he had forgotten it while he slept. Finally he said, โ€œYou stayed with me.โ€ His voice was barely a sigh, a breath.

She nodded. Tears 1lled her eyes. She swallowed, but the words came out anyway, unstoppable. โ€œIโ€™m sorry. This is all my fault. It was my idea to confront Ashcroft at the ball. Without me, none of this would have happened.โ€

A wrinkle appeared between his eyebrows. At 1rst she thought he was having trouble remembering. Then he said, โ€œNo. The scrying mirror . . . you couldnโ€™t have known.โ€ He paused, collecting his strength. Even breathing seemed to hurt. โ€œAshcroft. Did you catch him?โ€

Tearfully, she shook her head. She didnโ€™t want to tell him the rest, but she had to. โ€œSilasโ€”โ€ Her voice sounded high, odd, unlike itself. Her throat closed up. She couldnโ€™t 1nish.

The wrinkle deepened in confusion. She saw the moment he began to understand. His ga>e didnโ€™t leave her face, but he went very still.

Silverware chimed in the hallway. Beatrice. She had gone downstairs to make tea.

Nathaniel went alert. Before Elisabeth could stop him, he heaved himself upright. He instantly went gray with pain and listed to one side, catching himself on his elbow, but he didnโ€™t make a sound. He stared at the door with such intensity, waiting, that when Beatrice came into view and saw him, she fro>e.

โ€œIf youโ€™d like to sit up,โ€ Dr. Godfrey said, โ€œweโ€™ll arrange the pillows for you. You mustnโ€™t strain yourself so soon.โ€

Nathaniel didnโ€™t seem to hear him. A sense of impending doom hollowed Elisabethโ€™s stomach. Beatrice was holding the same silver tray that Silas always used. Nathanielโ€™s eyes were stark, wild, almost unseeing.

โ€œGet out,โ€ he said quietly.

Beatrice and Dr. Godfrey traded a look. โ€œBoth of you. Get out.โ€

Beatrice came forward and set the tray on the nightstand, then stepped back, her hands folded against her pinafore. She had the manner of someone accustomed to dealing with difficult patients. But she didnโ€™t know that to Nathaniel, what she had done was unforgivable.

Her crime was simple. She had brought tea. She wasnโ€™t Silas. Calmly, she began, โ€œThe laudanum may make you feelโ€”โ€

Nathaniel surged out of bed, grabbed the tray, and Aung it against the wall. Everyone Ainched as the porcelain shattered, leaving a splash of tea dribbling down the wallpaper.

โ€œOUT!โ€ Nathaniel roared. โ€œGet out of my house!โ€

His voice echoed from every direction, magni1ed. The walls shook and groaned ominously; a trickle of plaster dust fell from the ceiling onto the bed. He stood panting in his nightshirt and pajama trousers, his eyes abla>e with feverish light.

โ€œCome along, Beatrice,โ€ Dr. Godfrey said, closing his leather case with a snap. He shot Nathaniel one last look as he ushered his assistant from the room. Footsteps creaked on the stairs. A moment later, the front door clicked shut.

Elisabeth glanced out the window. The sun hung low in the sky, winking redly through the thorn bushes. Their tangled branches unwound to let Dr. Godfrey and Beatrice pass, then laced back together again.

She turned back to Nathaniel, her mouth hanging open.

His rage had vanished, though not the febrile glitter in his eyes. โ€œCome on, Scrivener,โ€ he said brightly. โ€œWe must go at once. Do you mind if I lean on you?โ€

โ€œWait,โ€ she protested. โ€œYou arenโ€™t supposed to be out of bed.โ€

โ€œAh. That explains why my legs have stopped working.โ€ He gave Demonslayer an approving glance. โ€œGood, youโ€™ve come prepared.โ€

โ€œButโ€”โ€ As he slumped, she rushed to catch him before he struck the Aoor. He had gone so droopy that it required some ePort to arrange his arm over her shoulders. โ€œWhere are we going?โ€

He laughed as though she had asked a completely nonsensical question. โ€œWeโ€™re summoning Silas, of course. Weโ€™re getting him back.โ€

Her eyes widened. She hadnโ€™t known bringing Silas back was possible. But just like that, she knew where to take them without Nathaniel having to say it out loud. The forbidden room. The one behind the locked door.

It took them an eternity to make their way down the hall, pausing every time he sagged against her, blinking his way back to consciousness. Surely this wasnโ€™t a good idea. If she had any sense, she would turn around and put him back to bed. He couldnโ€™t frighten her oP like Beatrice and Dr. Godfrey; even if he could, he wouldnโ€™t be able to make it down the hallway by himself. But as soon as the thought occurred to her, her conscience revolted.

He would never forgive her for the betrayal. And she could not leave him alone, as he had been as a boy of twelve, with no one else in the world to depend on. Right now, she was the only person he had left.

When they reached the door, Nathaniel muttered an Enochian phrase under his breath and snapped his 1ngers. Nothing happened. He blinked, stared uncomprehendingly at the doorknob, and then swore. โ€œSilas is the one who keeps track of all the keys. Ordinarily I just . . .โ€ He snapped his 1ngers again, to no avail. His magic was gone. She saw in his face how much its absence shook him, as though he had put out his hand to steady himself and found nothing, only empty air. Now he didnโ€™t know what to do.

โ€œHold on.โ€ She raised Demonslayer and slammed its hilt against the doorknob. The 1rst blow dented the knob. The second sent it clattering to the Aoor.

Nathaniel began shaking. She looked at him in concern, only to discover he was laughing. โ€œScrivener,โ€ he said.

She frowned. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s justโ€”youโ€™re soโ€”โ€ He was laughing too hard to 1nish, gasping helplessly from the pain. He made a motion with his hand that suggested a hammer striking a nail.

โ€œI think youโ€™ve had too much laudanum,โ€ she said. She pushed open the unresisting door and drew him inside.

The stink of aetherial combustion almost choked her. As she looked around, the back of her neck prickled. The curtains were drawn, letting in only enough light for her to make out that the room appeared empty. A few small objects that she couldnโ€™t identify lay scattered across the center of the room, as though children had once lived there and left a few of their toys behind. For the 1rst time in weeks, she felt the imaginary presence of the houseโ€™s ghosts, of Nathanielโ€™s dead. Moving carefully, she lowered him to the Aoor and crossed the room to yank open the curtains.

Dust swirled amid the sunlight that Aooded in. Looking down, she jumped aside. An elaborate pentagram was carved into the Aoorboards beneath her feet, the grooves burnt black and caked with grime. Stains darkened the wood within and around itโ€”bloodstains, some of them so large she wondered whether they marked places where people had died. The objects she had glimpsed turned out to be half-melted candles, anchored in pools of their own wax at each of the pentagramโ€™s 1ve points. Two other items waited on the Aoor beside the circle. A matchbox and a dagger, the metal dulled by a patina of dust.

She remembered what Silas had said to her all those weeks ago.ย You mould not mish to see.ย This was where he had been brought into the mortal realm, not once in the distant past, but time and time again.

Nathaniel fumbled with the matchbox, his 1ngers trembling too violently to withdraw a match. Elisabeth tucked Demonslayer under her arm and took it from him. โ€œI want to help,โ€ she said. โ€œHow is this done?โ€

He looked up at her, so pale, the steeply angled light shining translucently through the thin fabric of his nightshirt, revealing the outline of his body beneath. He looked like a ghost himself. โ€œAre you certain?โ€

This was worse than using the scrying mirror. Worse even than stealing from the Royal Library. On the 1rst day of her apprenticeship, Elisabeth had vowed to protect the kingdom from demonic inAuences. If she participated in a summoning, and a rumor somehow got out, even a whisper of speculation, every Great Library would be closed to her. No warden would speak to her. She would become an outcast from the only world in which she had ever belonged.

But her oaths meant nothing if they asked her to forsake people she cared about in their greatest moment of need. If that was what being a warden required of her, then she wasnโ€™t meant to become one. She would have to decide for herself what was right and what was wrong.

Though she didnโ€™t speak, Nathaniel saw the answer written on her face. His hand curled into a 1st against the Aoor. She thought that he might attempt to dissuade her, but then he said, โ€œLight them in order, counterclockwise. Make sure you stay outside the circle. Donโ€™t cross the lines. Thatโ€™s important.โ€

Elisabeth clumsily struck a match with her bandaged hand and moved around the pentagram. As each candle Aared to life, it seemed to mark the immolation of something past and the beginning of something new. So many of her memories were characteri>ed by Aame. The gleam of candlelight on Demonslayerโ€™s garnets. Warden Finch, the ruddy glow of a torch playing across his face, asking her if she was consorting with demons. The Book of Eyes reduced to ashes on the wind.

As she shook out the 1nal match, she looked up to 1nd the dagger in Nathanielโ€™s hand. Before she could react, he drew it along his bared wrist, beside the scar that twisted up his forearm. Only a shallow cut, but the sight

of blood beading on his skin still made her heart skip with a Auttering anxiety she had never felt before on anyone elseโ€™s behalf. When he was 1nished, the dagger fell from his weakened grip.

โ€œStand back,โ€ he said. He pressed his wrist to the edge of the circle, leaving a red smear on the Aoorboards. When he spoke again, his voice echoed with ancient power. โ€œBy the blood of House Thorn, I summon you, Silariathas.โ€

Silaviathas. Silasโ€™s true name. It did not slither from her mind like the other Enochian words she had heard Nathaniel speak, but stuck fast, smoldering, as if branded by 1re onto the surface of her thoughts.

Outside, the sun sank behind the rooftops, plunging the room into shadow. A bree>e disturbed the stagnant air, snuffing out all 1ve of the candles simultaneously. The curtain rings chimed as the drapes stirred. And a 1gure appeared at the center of the pentagram.

He wore nothing but a white cloth draped loosely around his waist. In his nakedness he appeared not just slender, as she had thought of him before, but thin, almost gaunt. Shadows traced his ribs, the bones of his wrist, the sharp edges of his shoulder blades, a form elegant in its spareness, as if everything unnecessary had been pared away. His unbound hair hung in a straight and silvery cascade that fell past his shoulders, hiding his downcast face. Where the sword had entered him, his chest was smooth. He looked diPerent like thisโ€”more beautiful, more frightening. Less human than ever before.

He lifted his head and smiled. โ€œHello, Nathaniel.โ€

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