Wild Knight (Midnight Empire: The Tower #1)(38)
Adelaide and Garrison were the other two head librarians. Adelaide was a witch and Garrison was a wizard. They had special dispensation to use magic but only in connection with their roles as librarians. Adelaide could conjure a spell to find the right passage in a book, but she’d be in deep trouble if she used the same spell to find a sweet clementine at the market.
“The book doesn’t leave this room,” Pedro reminded me.
“I wouldn’t dream of it.”
I carried the book to one of the long tables and sat at the end. There was no one else at the table, which suited me fine. I disliked reading in public, preferring to be tucked under a cozy blanket in my flat, but sometimes it couldn’t be helped.
I flipped to the index out of habit, but it wasn’t the best starting point when all I had was a picture written in blood. I’d have to do this the hard way, by paging through and hunting for any symbols that looked like the one on the prince’s arm.
The prince.
I seemed to have a visceral reaction to him, even when it was only a thought. He’d sensed it too, which was probably why he insisted on torturing me with his presence. I’d heard many stories about him, all of which involved his deadly demeanor and none of which involved his sexy banter.
Sexy banter? Did I seriously just link sexy banter to the Lord of Shadows? To the vampire who killed five wizards earlier without breaking a sweat? I could have killed them, of course, but I was trying not to. Death was a last resort for me, whereas vampires like Prince Callan were only alive because of death.
“Have you heard of a stone that grants immortality to vampires?” I whispered, not wanting to be overheard. Just because someone wasn’t within view didn’t mean they couldn’t hear us. Vampires in particular had excellent hearing.
Pedro pressed his lips together. “No, but it sounds compelling.”
I smiled. “It does, doesn’t it?”
Pedro clasped his hands in front of him. “You know, London. you’ve become one of my favorite patrons.”
“Don’t let the secret get out.” I didn’t want anyone to know me too well. The better people knew you, the more expectations they had of you. I didn’t have room in my life for the weight of anyone else’s expectations. My burden was more than enough.
“While I’m reading this one, I’d also like to see any books you have on ancient metals.”
His brow creased. “Ancient metals? That’s a new one.”
“Technically it’s an old one. Tells you right there in the name.”
He cracked a smile. Pedro was easily amused, which was one of the reasons I found him so agreeable. One time I brought a red and black winged creature with six legs straight into the library and threw it on the counter to ask what it was. Pedro didn’t bat a single one of those thick lashes. He simply walked to the stacks, consulted a book, and informed me that I’d stumbled across a rare flying spider. He also told me they preyed on birds, which was a helpful detail considering my feathered companions. I made sure to deliver the creature to the opposite end of the city before I returned home.
“Can you describe the metal?”
“I can do you one better.” Although I’d left the sample with Lann, I still had the photo. I showed it to Pedro. “A blacksmith friend of mine thinks it might be Damascus steel.”
He stared at the image, transfixed. “Yes, I can see that.” He swallowed hard. “That cocoon is empty, yes?”
“Yes,” I lied. No sense in tormenting the librarian. I needed his mind sharp. Although he’d handled everything I’d ever thrown at him so far, there was always a first time.
“I’ve never seen anything like it. The patina alone…so shiny.” His fingers brushed the image on the screen. “I’ll have to think on this one. We can check the metallurgy section, but I suspect we won’t find it there.”
“Why not?”
He frowned. “Because I don’t think this is a metal that science recognizes. It’s believed to be mythical the way alchemy was once viewed as mythical by humans.”
That news was unexpected. “So we should look in the mythology section instead of ancient history?”
“We can start in one, although we might still end up in the other. Mythology and ancient history sometimes intersect.”
After settling down at a table with a pile of books, I paged through the thick book, flipping back and forth to the index. There were several pages with ‘five’ as a keyword.
“Anything else I can help you with today?” Pedro asked.
I glimpsed a sun symbol on one of the pages that slid past my fingertips. “What do you think it was like?”
He blinked his thick eyelashes. “Pardon?”
I motioned to the ceiling. “Sunlight. Daytime. Solar power.”
Pedro’s face grew wistful. “When I was a boy, I would beg my abuela to tell me stories of a world drenched in sunshine. She was an artist and she would paint picture after picture of a sunlit world. Everything she painted was bathed in a golden light.” A dreamy sigh escaped him. “She was a vivid storyteller too. I would sit at her feet while she painted and she would tell me stories of a world before vampires. The world before the Eternal Night.”
It was hard to imagine a world without vampires. They’d always been here, of course, but it was only after the Great Eruption that they felt emboldened enough to emerge from the shadows. Battle after battle was fought—first the war where the vampires claimed the land and then the battles between vampires as they fought for dominance. House Lewis emerged the victor in the United Kingdom. House August in New York in the Americas. House Wu in Asia. House Hailu in Africa. House Saputra in Australasia.