A Great and Terrible Beauty (Gemma Doyle #1)(64)
He growls at me. “I am Rakshana.”
I laugh. “Ah, yes—the great and mysterious Rakshana. The powerful brotherhood who feel threatened by things they cannot understand and have to hide themselves behind a boy.” The word hits him as if I had spit. “You’re not a man. You’re their lackey. I don’t care about you, or your brother, or your ridiculous organization. From now on, I shall do exactly as I wish and you cannot stop me. Do not follow. Do not watch. Do not even attempt to contact me or you’ll be sorry indeed. Do you understand?”
Kartik stands, rubbing his wounded hand. He’s too shocked to say anything. For the first time, he’s utterly silent. And that’s how I leave him.
Mademoiselle LeFarge never does reprimand us. She sits silently the whole ride back, her eyes closed, a sad smile on her face. But in her fingers is the inspector’s calling card. Between the jostling of the carriage and the long evening, everyone has fallen into a twilight sleep. Everyone except me.
I’m on fire with what I’ve seen tonight. Everything in Mary Dowd’s diary is the truth. The realms are real, and my mother is there, waiting for me. Kartik’s warnings are nothing to me now. I don’t know what I’ll find through that door of light, and truthfully, I’m a little afraid to find out. The one thing I do know for certain is that I can no longer ignore whatever power this is inside me. The time has come.
My hand is on Felicity’s shoulder, shaking her gently awake.
“Wh-what is it? Are we back?” she says, rubbing her eyes.
“No, not yet,” I whisper. “I need to call a meeting of the Order.”
“Yes, lovely,” she says drowsily, closing her eyes again. “Tomorrow, then.”
“No, it’s important. Tonight. We must meet tonight.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
I AM NOT SUPPOSED TO USE MY POWERS. I AM NOT supposed to go willingly into a vision. The realms have been closed for twenty years, since whatever happened with Mary and Sarah changed it all. But if I don’t travel that path, I’ll never see my mother again. I’ll never know anything. In the pit of my stomach, where intentions bloom into decisions, I know I’m ready to start down that uncertain road.
This is what swirls through my head as I sit in the darkened cave with the others. It’s sticky and wet. The night’s rain has done nothing to cool the air. In fact, it has only made the lingering heat stale and unbearable.
Felicity reads the latest installment from Mary’s diary, but I can’t take in much of it. My secret is coming out tonight, and every part of me is taut with waiting.
Felicity closes the diary. “All right, then, what’s all this about?”
“Yes,” Pippa says sullenly. “Why couldn’t this wait till tomorrow?”
“Because it couldn’t,” I say. My nerves crackle. Every sound is amplified in my ears. “What if I told you the Order was real? That the realms are real?” I take a deep breath. “And that I know how to get there?”
Pippa rolls her eyes. “You pulled me out into this horrible muddy night for a joke?”
Ann snorts and nods at Pippa, showing her solidarity with her new best friend. Felicity catches my eye. She can tell that something has changed.
“I don’t think Gemma is joking,” she says quietly.
“I have a secret,” I say at last. “There’s something I need to tell you.”
I don’t spare any of it—my mother’s murder; my visions; what happened when I held Sally Carny’s hand and ended up in the misty woods; the temple and my mother’s voice. The only part I hold back is about Kartik. I’m not ready to share that yet.
When I’ve finished, they look at me as if I am insane. Or wonderful. I’m not entirely sure. And now I understand that truth casts a spell of its own, one I’m not sure how to hold on to, though I’m desperate to try.
“You have to take us,” Felicity says.
“I’m not certain what we’ll find there. I’m not certain of anything, not anymore,” I answer.
Felicity holds out her hand. “I’m willing to risk it.”
I catch sight of a symbol I’ve never noticed before at the very bottom of a cave wall. It’s partially defaced, but some of it is still visible. A woman and a swan. At first glance, it seems as if she’s being attacked by the great white bird, but on closer inspection, it seems as if the woman and the swan are joined together as one. A great mythical creature. A woman prepared to fly, even if she has to lose her legs to do it.
I grab Felicity’s outstretched hand. Her fingers laced in mine are strong.
“Let’s go,” I say.
We light candles, place them in the center of our circle and crowd around their light, holding hands.
“What do we do now?” Felicity asks. The candlelight throws her shadow, tall and thin as a spire, on the wall.
“I’ve only been able to control it the one time, when I tried to get back tonight,” I say in warning. I don’t want to disappoint them. What if I’m unable to do it again and they think I’ve made up all of it?
Pippa is the first to be afraid. “Sounds a bit dodgy to me. Perhaps we shouldn’t attempt this.” No one answers her. “Don’t you agree, Ann?”