โIย SEE YOUโVE FIGURED it out, Miss Scrivener,โ Ashcroft said, his cultured voice uncanny on Hydeโs scarred lips. โQuite honestly, Iโm surprised it took you so long. After all, youโve met the Book of Eyes.โ
The Boob of Zyes.
At once, the missing pieces snapped into place. When Elisabeth had battled the Male1ct in Summershall, it had taunted her with the truth of who had killed the Director. Irena herself had described the spells it contained: magic that allowed sorcerers to reach into peopleโs minds, read their thoughts, and even control them. How had the Book of Eyes known the saboteurโs identity? The answer was simpleโit had encountered him before. Given his status, Ashcroft would have been one of the rare few trusted to study such a dangerous grimoire.
To carry out his plans, he hadnโt needed to work with an accomplice, or even leave the comfort of his manor.
โYouโve been possessing the Directors,โ she said numbly. โYouโve been forcing them to perform the sabotage with their own hands.โ
โBeg pardon?โ Ashcroft leaned closer to the bars and frowned, rubbing Hydeโs ear. โYou know, I can barely hear what youโre saying. Quite inconvenient, really. But no matter. I wonโt have to wear this body for long.โ Spinning the key ring jauntily on his 1nger, he turned and strolled deeper into the vault.
Blood roared in Elisabethโs ears. Nothing felt real. She took in the vault as though she were dreaming: an immense natural cavern, the walls glittering with pyrite. Towering angel statues stood vigil along the walls, carved from obsidian, streams of molten iron pouring from their cupped hands to the Aoor below. A circular channel conducted the liquid metal around the
roomโs circumference like a moat. Ashcroft stepped Hydeโs body over a narrow black stone bridge, the edges of his coat wavering from the heat distortion. His movements were oddly clumsy, and once he even jerked sideways, barely regaining his footing before he pitched over the edge.
โHyde is still in there,โ Elisabeth reali>ed in shock. โHeโs battling for control.โ And then she thought,ย This is mhat ha99ened to Ivena.
Without warning, a blast of emerald 1re exploded past her, singeing the tips of her ears. It funneled through the grille and twisted after Ashcroft like a cyclone. But as it neared him, it 1>>led out in a shower of green sparks.
Nathaniel dropped his arm and swore. โToo much iron.โ
Moving in awful 1ts and jerks, Ashcroft Aicked a residual ember from Hydeโs fur. โI know what youโre thinking, Miss Scrivener,โ he said without turning. He had succeeded in crossing the bridge. โYouโre wondering what it was like for dear, beautiful Irena when I entered her mind and forced her to betray everything that she loved. Foor womanโshe never suspected anything. I cast the spell on her years ago in the reading room at Summershall. When youโre the Chancellor of Magic, itโs no trouble arranging a private meeting with a Director. My magic lived inside her for nearly a decade, waiting for me to activate it.โ
Elisabeth sucked in a breath. As though it had happened yesterday, she recalled the choking smell of aetherial combustion that clung to the reading roomโs armchair: the permanent residue of some old, powerful spell. Distantly, she was aware of Nathaniel steadying her.
โIrena struggled, too, of course. She was strong-willed, just like you. She was there with me the entire time, all the way to the vault, up until the very moment the Book of Eyes struck her down.โ
A sound escaped Elisabeth, something between a scream and a sob. Ashcroft wasnโt paying attention. He had nearly reached the middle of the room.
A trio of massive obsidian columns dominated the vaultโs center, stretching unbroken to the ceiling. A crossed key and quill had been carved into the Aoor between them. Ashcroft stepped on the symbol as he approached, raising Hydeโs torch. โMagni1cent, is it not?โ
At 1rst she wasnโt certain what he was referring to. Then light Aooded the nearest column. Vapors swirled inside the translucent stone, wreathing a
shape that hung suspended in chains. As though agitated by Hydeโs proximity, the mist began to boil, and lightning Aashed within its depths. Each Aicker illuminated a grimoireโs cover, bound in glossy black scales edged with silver. The cover inAated and deAated steadily, as though the grimoire were breathing.
The columns werenโt meant to hold up the ceiling. Instead, they contained Class Tens.
โThe Librum Draconum,โ Ashcroft said, a hint of true awe softening his voice. โCreated using the hide of a Lindwurmโthe last dragon in Austermeer, hunted to extinction in the fourteenth century. The spells inside can summon cataclysmic storms and earthquakes, invoke natural disasters on a world-altering scaleย โ
He moved on to the next column, bringing the torch close. He released a wistful sigh. Within the chains hungโnothing. Noย there was something
there, reAective and shifting, mirrorlike, its surface Aowing like water. Trying to focus on it made Elisabethโs head hurt.
โThe Oraculis,โ Ashcroft murmured. โFrovenance unknown. Its spells allow one to see the future, or so the theories suggest, but everyone whoโs read it has immediately taken their own life. A shame. I dearly would have liked to study it.โ
He approached the third case. Through the translucent obsidian, the torch revealed the slick, pulsing skin of a beating heart. It clung to the grimoireโs cover like some hideous growth, its veins wrapped around the leather, sealing the pages shut. The veins bulged rhythmically, as though pumping bloodโbut the green glow that animated them was pure sorcery, the magic of House Thorn. Necromancy, keeping the long-dead heart alive.
โAh. The Chronicles of the Dead.โ Ashcroft tapped on the case, and smiled pensively when the heart spasmed in response. โThose who try to open it instantly succumb to its magic. Except for you, Nathaniel. This book is yours. It calls out to you, no doubt. How would you like to meet your ancestorโs work?โ
โDonโt,โ Nathaniel croaked. He gripped the bars, his 1ngers bled white. Elisabethโs senses came Aooding back on a tide of fury. โIt wonโt work!โ
she shouted through the portcullis. โYou wonโt be able to control the
Archon! Itโs going to tear the world apart. When you summon it, youโll be the 1rst to die!โ
Ashcroft paused, peering at them, a hand cupped behind his ear. โI confess Iโve never been any good at reading lips,โ he said 1nally. He gave a rueful laugh. โYouโre asking me to stop, arenโt you? Ah, Miss Scrivener, you do not understand. You cannot understand. This is the purpose handed down to me by my father, and his father before him, stretching back three hundred years. I am part of something far greater than myself.โ He tilted his head back, ga>ing up at the column. โWith the Archonโs power at my disposal, humanity will be transformed. No more sickness, or poverty, or war. It will be a marvelโa glorious era in which all is possible, and every dream made realย โ
He trailed oP. Emotion shimmered in his eyes. Even wearing Hydeโs form, something of Ashcroftโs natural light and magnetism shone through.
He veally belieues mhat heโs saying, Elisabeth thought, horri1ed. In his heart of hearts, he viewed himself not as the villain, but as the hero.
Ashcroft cleared his throat. โLetโs see.โ He paced in a circle, inspecting the Collegium sigil on the Aoor. โCornelius faced somewhat of a problem with this libraryโs construction. How does one free a grimoire from an iron-1lled vault several hundred feet beneath a mountain? Fortunately, the Collegiumโs own technology provided the solution.โ
He moved to draw Hydeโs sword from its sheath, and stopped abruptly. Hydeโs hand had clamped around the hilt, muscles bulging with resistance. His face purpled as the two minds fought for control. Hope 1lled Elisabethโs chest like a breath in the midst of drowning.
โThe iron must be weakening Ashcroftโs spell.โ She turned to Nathaniel, who was white as a sheet, staring at the Chronicles. She didnโt think he would hear her if she spoke to him. Instead, she asked Silas, โIs there any way for you to get inside?โ
Silas stood several paces back, a ghost in the darkness of the passageway. He stepped forward, reaching for the portcullis. Alarm clamored through her, but his hand stopped a hairsbreadth from touching the thick bands of reinforced iron.
โI fear not,โ he said. โThis gate was designed to prevent beings such as I from entering. Even if I could, I would not be at my full strength inside the
vault.โ
No wonder Silas had been hanging back. In the infernal red glow of the molten iron, he looked washed out, almost ill.
A ring of metal against stone yanked her attention back to Ashcroft. He had managed to free Hydeโs sword, though in doing so he had lurched forward, nearly dropping the weapon. As she watched in dismay, he dragged the blade, scraping, until it stood vertically above the Collegium sigil, his weight bearing down upon it. And then, like a key 1tting into a lock, the swordโs point slid inside a hidden mechanism in the sigil. Sweating and trembling with ePort, Ashcroft twisted it to the right.
For a moment, nothing happened. Then a clank echoed through the cavern. The Aoor shook, gears churning unseen as the Great Libraryโs machinery awakened. A jagged crack raced across the ceiling. On the far side of the vault, one of the giant obsidian angels began to turn, not by sorcery but by the will of the cogs, its face motionless and serene. The stream of molten iron cascading from its hands slowed to a drip. Angled sideways, it created a blockage in the channel, and the moat slowly drained away at its feet.
In the place where the angel had once stood, a passageway now yawned. But Elisabeth had eyes only for the ceiling, where the crack had snaked across the cavern and split the rock above the portcullis. When she sei>ed the bars and shook them, she felt a slight give.
Ashcroft was bent over now, Hydeโs face writhing grotesquely. He staggered to the Chroniclesโ pillar and caught himself against it with a hand that clenched repeatedly into a 1st. Using the other hand, he unsteadily raised his Directorโs key toward a slot in the column.
There was still time. Ashcroft missed once, twice, the key glancing from the stone. Elisabeth threw herself against the portcullis. Metal groaned as it pushed outward an inch on one side, the grille Aexing against her shoulder.
With his lips peeled back from his teeth, Ashcroft at last forced the key into place. When he turned it, a panel slid open. Green-tinted mist Aowed out of it, pouring down, lapping over Hydeโs boots.
Thum9-thum9. Thum9-thum9. Thum9-thum9. The convulsions of the dead, ancient heart 1lled the cavern, thudding inside Elisabethโs bones. The stench nearly brought her to her knees. It was like standing at the entrance to
a crypt, breathing in rot and stone and ancient magic, the smell of skulls crawling with beetles, of moss speckling crumbled tombs.
The portcullis screeched as she wedged her shoulder into the gap, using the passageโs wall as leverage. But she was too late.
Too late to stop Ashcroft as he reached inside, and plunged his 1ngers into the beating heart.