The Serpent's Curse by Lisa Maxwell (literature books to read txt) š
- Author: Lisa Maxwell
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āWhat about it?ā he said with a frown.
Northās watch didnāt tell time; it changed it. In St. Louis, theyād used his watch to try to undo the damage theyād done. It had all been too little and too late, but it didnāt have to be too late now.
āUse it,ā Esta told North. āTake us forward, once this has all cleared out.ā
āThatās not how the watch works.ā His mouth pressed itself into a flat line. āWeāre on a moving train. Even if we werenāt, I canāt go farther ahead than Iāve already been. I wouldnāt know where I might land.ā
āYou canāt see where youāll end up when you use that thing?ā Esta asked. It was a limit that Ishtarās Key didnāt have. When Esta slipped through time with the cuff, she could see where she was going. She could find the right moment in the layers of years, like picking out a single word on the page of a book.
For a second Esta considered leaving, like sheād intended to before sheād seen the riders. Maybe Northās watch couldnāt save them, but there wasnāt anything stopping Esta from pulling the seconds slow and slipping away. Maybe if she wasnāt with them, North and Maggie would have a fighting chance. After all, Jack had only seen her and Harte in St. Louis. Without the necklace, there would be no proof that the two Antistasi had been involved in anything at all. Maybe without her they would be okay. But āmaybeā wasnāt enough for Esta to bet on.
If they had been seen together on the train, North and Maggie would still be targets. Esta couldnāt walk away. She owed them too muchāfor standing against Ruth, for being willing to leave the Antistasi, for trying to help save the ball from Ruthās serum, and maybe most of all for saving Harte when Esta had been pulled under by Seshatās terrible power, helpless to do anything at all.
If North couldnāt use his watch, there was only one way Esta could see to get out of the mess they were in. It meant breaking the rule that she lived by.
Never show them what you are. Never show them what you can do.
Professor Lachlanās words came back to Esta then, unwanted and unwelcome but true just the same. She hadnāt even shown the truth of her affinity to Harte until that day on the bridge, when it had been a choice between revealing what she could do or letting a bullet take his life. There wasnāt any bullet speeding toward them this timeānot literallyābut the danger was every bit as real.
The memory of the shadow sheād seen moments before rose, but Esta pushed it aside. It was only nerves or exhaustion. Nothing more. Seshatās power was in Harte, and Harte wasnāt there.
Esta straightened her shoulders. āI can get us out,ā she told them. She only hoped they would all live long enough for her to regret what she was about to do.
THE COLD WITHIN
1904āA Train Heading West
Harte Darrigan leaned his head against the frame of the trainās window and watched the continent pass by. He took every bit of it ināthe long sweep of boundless plains that eventually climbed into mountainous terrain and then finally leveled itself out in the west. Once, he would have betrayed anyone and given up anything to have this view. Now, he knew that whatever possibility those wide-open spaces might hold, they were not for him. Maybe they never had been.
The bench seat beneath him was hard and nothing like the comfort of the Pullman berth heād woken in the night before. Harte had been shaken from the soundness of sleep by the terrible dream heād been having. In it, heād been standing over a pit of vipers. Heād started to back away but had stopped short when heād noticed something trapped within the writhing snakes: an arm. Then heād realized the arm was Estaās. He hadnāt thought or hesitated. Heād jumped into the pit with only one thought in his mindāto save herābut the snakes had quickly wrapped around him and began to pull him under as well.
When he woke, it had taken Harte a moment to realize that it wasnāt a serpent wrapped around him but Estaās arms. Even once he understood that he was safeāthat she was safeāhis heart had continued to race. It was only as he focused on Estaāthe warmth of her arms, the closeness of her face tucked into the crook of his neckāthat Harte had started to breathe again. Esta had smelled lightly of sweat and the smoke from Maggieās devices, but beneath the grime of what theyād been through was an essence that was so undeniably her. For a moment Harte had simply lain there, willing away the vividness of the dream, but the second heād started to truly relax into Estaās warmth, Seshat had lurched, rattling at the thin boundary that kept the ancient goddess from overtaking him completely.
Maybe he should have thrown himself from the speeding train and ended the danger Seshat posed right then and there, but Harte knew he couldnāt, not yet. Not as long as the artifacts were out there, unprotected in the world, where Nibsy might retrieve them, and especially not when Jack Grew had the Book. Or rather, Harte remembered, the thing that lived inside Jack had it. Thoth. The very being that had trapped Seshat thousands of years ago in an attempt to take magic for himself was inside Jack now, pulling his strings in ways that Harte didnāt yet understand.
It was Harteās own fault that the Book had ended up in Jackās handsāin Thothās handsāand it was his responsibility to fix that mistake. But the danger Seshat posed to Esta
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