The Serpent's Curse by Lisa Maxwell (literature books to read txt) š
- Author: Lisa Maxwell
Book online Ā«The Serpent's Curse by Lisa Maxwell (literature books to read txt) šĀ». Author Lisa Maxwell
He had untangled himself from Estaās arms, and as the train slowed, pulling into some unknown station, heād slipped the beaded bracelet onto Estaās wrist and touched her cheek softly, letting his affinity flare, just a little. Heād barely made contact when Seshat surged again, and it had taken everything Harte had to pull his magic back. His affinity had suddenly felt like something raw and untamed. Like something apart from himself that he could not completely control. Heād drawn back his hand, but not quickly enough. Esta had flinched in her sleep, pulling away from his touch.
Harte hadnāt dared to touch her again. Even though Seshat seemed to recede, he could sense her anger at being denied once more.
He shook off the memory as the train sped along and told himself that leaving Esta had been the only way to protect her. He told himself that it would be faster this way. He would retrieve the Dragonās Eye for her, and then heād meet her at the bridge. They would each find one of the missing stones, and then theyād find each other. Harte only hoped that Esta would come to understand, and that she wouldnāt kill him when she found him.
It wasnāt like she wouldnāt have a good reason. The weight of her cuff tucked into his inside jacket pocket felt far heavier than the small piece of jewelry should have, as though his guilt was adding to its burden. It was, perhaps, the worst of all his betrayals.
He still didnāt know why heād taken it. Or maybe he simply didnāt want to admit that he needed to know that she would come for himāeven if it was only in wrath and fury. Because he couldnāt bear to let her go, even if he would never deserve her.
Turning away from the window, Harte pulled his jacket around himself to ward off the chill. If there was any such thing as freedomāand he heartily doubted that there wasāhe knew now that it wasnāt in the landscape that passed outside the trainās windows. It was certainly nothing like the dream heād once had to get out of Manhattan.
Now he had a different goal.
It wasnāt a dream, exactly, because that wordāādreamāāwas for people who had a future in front of them, and Harte knew that he was already living on borrowed time.
Find the stones. Take back the Book. Save the girl. He repeated the words to himself like a mantra.
What makes you believe sheās yours to save? The womanās voice echoing in his mind was low and soft with a breathiness that made him think of torn paper.
Sheās not mine. She never would be. But that didnāt mean Harte wouldnāt do everything in his power to save her just the same.
Seshat had been quiet since Harte had left Esta on the other train, but she laughed now, long and with a mocking edge that didnāt seem quite sane. He pushed open the window, desperate for air as he tried to shove Seshat back into the cage of his own soul. It was July, but the mountain breeze coming in through the open window had a bite of coolness to it. Or perhaps the cold was within him, deep down in his bones, where heād never be able to shake it free.
A REVELATION
1904āTexas
Two years had passed since Jericho Northwood had been in Texas, but it might as well have been yesterday for how familiar the sun and heat felt on his face. North had barely managed to get out of the state with his life, and this time wasnāt turning out to be much different. Except now they had Esta. Northās own eyes told him that what was happeningāwhat Esta was doingāwas real. But there was a part of him still struggling to believe what he was seeing.
Everything had all happened so fast. One second, at Maggieās urgingāand against his better judgmentāNorth had taken Esta by the hand, like sheād wanted. The next second, it was like heād lost his hearing. It wasnāt simply quiet, though. Everything had gone completely silent, like his ears had plum stopped working. But the second North opened his mouth, he could hear himself talking, so heād known it wasnāt his ears. It was everything else.
āWhat theāā
āWe need to go,ā Esta said, her voice shaking a little as she cut off his question.
āAre you okay?ā Maggie asked Esta.
North could see why Maggie was concernedāeverything about Esta looked strung tight as a bow. Her jaw was clenched, she was holding her body like someone about to be slapped, and the color had all but drained from her face.
Esta gave a small nod. āIām fine,ā she said in a strained voice that didnāt sound fine at all. āBut we have to move.ā
Before North could argue, Maggie was already reaching for the door. When she opened it and they stepped out into the corridor, North couldnāt stop the curse that came out. āWhat did you do to him?ā
The porter was standing at a berth two doors down, his hand poised to knock. Frozen like a statue. The manās face was lined, and there were tired circles beneath his eyes from his all-night shift. His dark-brown skin shone with sweat from the heat of the corridor, but though he was looking right at them, he didnāt seem to be seeing them.
āI didnāt do anything to him,ā Esta explained through gritted teeth. āI slowed things down around him.ā
āTime,ā Maggie said, without even a bit of fear. She sounded more curious than surprised. āYou can manipulate time.ā
Estaās expression was still tight as she nodded. āWe have to keep moving.ā
As they passed the porter, Maggie took something from her pocket and tossed it at him. A moment later, a violet-colored haze began to swirl around the manās head.
āWhatās that?ā North asked. āSomething new?ā
āNew-ish. Itās a confounding solution,ā Maggie explained.
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