hanging thick around them.
âThe love that drowned the Earth underwater and caused Noah to build the ark?â Isabelle asked, her voice flat. âThat sent us tumbling down to Earth?â
âI donât have answers,â Philippe said dryly. âA priest would probably tell you about atonement and forgiveness, but thatâs your religion, not mine.â Not quite true: the Buddha also preached forgiveness, but Philippe couldnât forgive. Not those who had torn him from Annam.
âI donât even know what your religion is,â Isabelle pointed out, carefully folding the paper. Philippe searched her face, but there was no hint of reproach or sarcasm, merely a statement of fact. Her calm was uncanny: how could she not feel the magic roiling in the air, the pressure against their lungs, the irrepressible urge to pick a weapon andâ? No. He was stronger than that.
âWhat was inside?â Isabelle asked.
It was a black stone disk, polished until he could see his distorted reflection in it; and it shimmered with the same power that was all around them. âAngel breath,â he said. âTrapped in a stone mirror.â And before he could think, he had reached out and touched the cold, shining surfaceâIsabelle cried out a warning, and then everything went dark.
He was in the House, but not in its ruins. Rich paintings and tapestries hung in the corridors, and the cathedral was whole, the graceful Gothic ribs arching into the vault; majestic and overwhelming, as it had always meant to be. Someone sat in the throne: a Fallen with pale blond hair that seemed to catch all the light streaming through the stained-glass windows. Unlike all the Fallen Philippe had seen before, this one had wingsânot his real ones, but a metal armature that supported sharp, golden feathers, spreading out behind him like a headdress. Across his lap was a double-handed sword, his hand loosely wrapped around his handle; the sense of coiled power was almost unbearable, a pressure to abase himself, to bow down to age and power. . . .
Morningstar. Lucifer. The Light Bringer, the Shining One, the First Fallen.
By his side were other Fallen, other humans. He caught a glimpse of Lady Selene, though her face was smoother, more childish than the one sheâd shown to him. Younger, he thought; but the words seemed very far away, moving as if through tar through his mind. And other, younger faces: Emmanuelle the archivist; Aragonâwho alone of everyone appeared unchanged, prim and unsmilingâtwo human warlocks holding breath-charged mirrors and watches; and a stern older woman wearing the mortar-and-pestle insignia of the alchemists, whose bag bulged with bottles of elixirs and boxes of charged artifacts.
And then Morningstarâs gaze, which had been trained on one of the stained-glass windows, turned; and fell on him.
The pale eyes transfixed him like a thrown spearâit wasnât so much the power contained within, as the rising interest; the slow focusing of a monstrous magic exclusively on him; on who he was; on who he could become, given enough time in which to utterly reshape him; and who wouldnât want to be reshaped by Morningstar, to be forged into one of his beloved weapons?
âCome here,â Morningstar said; and, like a puppet propelled by his maker, he walked up the stairs and stood in the shadow of the throne, shivering as the gaze unraveled him, picked apart his body until not even the bones remained. . . .
âPhilippe!â
He was back in the ruined cathedral, and Isabelle was shaking him. His hand had left the mirror; hung, limp, bloodless, by his side.
âPhilippe!â
He breathed in airâburning, painful air, but he had never been so glad for the irritation of the House on his skin. Everything seemed lighter, limned in starlight; and the oppressive anger and hatred seemed to have gone, as if the night wind had blown it away.
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