The Serpent's Curse by Lisa Maxwell (literature books to read txt) š
- Author: Lisa Maxwell
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The stone in the cuff on Estaās arm felt somehow heavier than ever. Unlike the stones Seshat had made in her attempt to preserve the heart of magicāobjects that she created willingly from her own powerāthe Orderās artifacts drew their power from the affinities of Mageus that Newton had sacrificed in his attempt to control the Book.
From what Harte had witnessed, the lives of other innocent Mageus had been taken more recently to recharge the stones. Heād described for her the bodies of the missing Mageus heād found in the Mysterium. Theyād each been suspended in a web of dark, unnatural magic. All to preserve the Brink and the Orderās power.
The origin of the Orderās artifacts wasnāt news to Esta. Someone had died, and because of that lost life, she could use the stone to slip through time. That was a fact. Every time Esta used the Key, she used that stolen power. Another fact. Sheād tried to ignore those facts for a long time now. Sheād told herself that she was using the stones for an honorable purpose, but standing there amid the swirling eddies of magicānatural and corrupt, hot and cold power alikeāEsta wondered if sheād been conning herself all along. What did it mean that she was still willing to use power that wasnāt rightfully hers? How did that make her any different from Thoth?
āItās not the same thing,ā Harte whispered, easily guessing the direction of Estaās thoughts. Her surprise must have shown, because he slid his palm against hers, tangling their fingers in a moment of stolen comfort.
She didnāt even pretend to deny that he was right. āHow is my using Ishtarās Key any different?ā
āI donāt know,ā he admitted. āMaybe itās not, but the world isnāt black or white, good or evil. Ever since the day you came back for me, every choice youāve madeāright or wrongāhas been because you believed it would help in some way.ā
āNot always. Not in St. Louisā¦ā
āIn St. Louis you made mistakes. We both did. Weāre trying to right those now.ā He squeezed her hand gently. āItās all we can do.ā
āI donāt know if thatās enough.ā Esta started to pull her hand away. She didnāt deserve his comfort or his understanding.
But Harte caught her hand again and laid a kiss on her palm. āNo one is blameless, Esta. Even saints had their sins. It isnāt possible to live a perfect life, and even if you could, it wouldnāt be very interesting.ā He released her hand then, and when he spoke again, his words came slowly. āYou make mistakes. You learn. We all do. Sometimes it takes a little bad to cause an enormous amount of good. Dolph Saunders understood that. Would you blame him for the life he chose? For the sins he committed?ā
Esta thought about the father she hadnāt really known. She wasnāt sure what to do with the goodness heād shown to her and to the people in the Bowery, or with the terrible things heād done as wellāespecially what heād done to her mother. Finally, she shook her head. āI honestly donāt know.ā
āThatās fair enough,ā Harte said. āBut itās like you told me back on the traināitās not your fault. Having the cuff, using it. You didnāt create any of this. All you can do is figure out how you want to live in it.ā
He was right. The stone in her cuff had been made through the worst possible means. The mistakes sheād made in St. Louis had been terrible. But Esta wasnāt walking away from her responsibilities. Not now. Not ever.
āMaybe youāre right,ā she admitted. āBut look at all of this, Harte. These are Mageus buying and selling power that isnāt theirs to trade. How is this any different from what the Order does? Itās all the sameāpeople forgetting that the affinities we hold inside of us arenāt separate from who we are. Maybe I didnāt create any of this, but itāll be my fault if I allow it to remain.ā
Harteās mouth curved a little, and his eyes held promises that she wasnāt sure he could keep. āThen by all means, let me be the one to help you tear the whole damn thing to the ground.ā
THE NITEMARKET
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North didnāt realize heād lost Harte and Esta until Everett tapped on his arm.
āYour friends are still back there,ā his son said, giving North a look that reminded him of Maggie in its directness. And its impatience.
He knew Everett was itching to know more about the two strangers theyād picked up at the Green Mill, but the Nitemarket wasnāt the time or the place to explain thingsāespecially not to speak the name of the Thief. She was still something of a legend both loved and hated, depending on who you were talking to.
Since he didnāt want to draw any more attention to their group than they already might have attracted, North retraced his steps rather than shouting for the two to pick up the pace. They were about twenty yards back, their heads close together as they spoke in voices too low for him to hear. Whatever they were talking about, their expressions were too serious for his liking.
āYou two coming or what?ā
Esta seemed startled by the interruption, but in a blink her expression transformed itself from surprise to her usual calm composure. She gave him a look so blandly disinterested that if North hadnāt known better, he never would have thought sheād been lagging behind the group to start with. The problem was, he did know better.
Finally moving again, the four made their way deeper into the
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