Born in Blood (The Sentinels #1)(52)
Ah. Callie got it.
No need to creep out the norms with doppelgangers that could change shape or necromancers who could control the dead.
They entered a long room that was lined with glass cases. The ceiling was curved and crisscrossed with bright lights, the floor was grated metal that allowed a cool breeze to flow through the air.
Callie managed to catch a glimpse of books and rolled parchments and pretty feminine diaries that were wrapped with ribbons.
There were also strange objects that she’d never seen before and never wanted to see again. She grimaced at the sight of a large crystal ball with what looked like a human eye staring directly at her and the strange hammer that violently smashed into the glass as they passed by.
Yeesh.
At the end of the room was an open space with a large metal table that was cluttered with several leather-bound books, maps, as well as a pile of letters that were yellowed from age.
As they approached the table, a slender girl rose to her feet, brushing her hands down the long black robe she wore. “Brandon,” the girl murmured, giving a low bow before glancing toward Callie and Fane.
The overhead light revealed she wasn’t as young as Callie had first thought. Maybe midtwenties instead of early teens, but there remained an air of fragility about her pale, perfect face that was dominated by a large pair of velvet brown eyes. Her hair was pulled into a long braid that fell to her waist, the silvery-blond color so pale it didn’t look real.
She looked like a fairy princess.
Until the brown gaze turned in Callie’s direction. There was an age-old wisdom in those eyes. As if she’d seen more in her twenty or so years of life than most people did in their entire existence.
“This is Myst,” Brandon introduced the girl. Myst. It suited her. “She’ll be here to assist you.”
“Thank you,” Fane murmured, moving to stand guard at the door as the monk left.
Callie moved forward, joining the scribe at the table.
Myst pulled a pair of white, protective gloves from a box and held them toward Callie. “I believe I have all the relative material gathered here.”
Callie wrinkled her nose at the daunting stack of books, letters, and what looked to be official reports.
It would take her hours, if not days, to search through the pile. Always assuming she happened to read Russian, French, and what she could only guess was Latin.
Which she could not.
“Have you read them all?” she asked the scribe.
“Of course.”
“Then maybe you can give us the Cliffs Notes.”
Myst blinked. “Cliffs Notes?”
“A condensed version,” Fane explained from the door.
“Oh, I see. Very well.” The girl gave a nod, her accent light, but definitely not Russian. Scandinavian? Perhaps. “The church records reveal that Lord Zakhar was born the youngest son of a minor nobleman in Kokorino. It was a small, remote village in what is now Siberia. He had two older brothers who both died before they reached the age of eighteen.”
“Cause?” Fane demanded.
“Both were found in the woods with their necks broken.” Myst absently put on the gloves in her hands, pulling one of the books toward her. “It was assumed that they were thrown from their horses.”
“At the same time?” Callie asked.
Myst checked her book. “No, five years apart.”
Callie lifted her brows. Okay, there might not have been a CSI team back then, but they weren’t stupid.
“And no one was suspicious?”
“Very suspicious, especially when there were claims of seeing the dead walking just before they took their falls.” Myst shrugged. “Of course, no one paid any attention to the gossip of mere serfs, not even the Shaman.”
Callie shivered. Zakhar had been able to raise the dead when he’d been so young?
She’d somehow thought that it was a power he’d honed over the centuries.
Which begged the question ... If he could raise the dead when he was a mere teenager, what could he do now?
The possibilities were terrifying.
“What about the parents?” she at last asked.
“The mother is never mentioned. The father, however, was found dead of what was called ‘a failure of the heart’ only minutes after he officially named Lord Zakhar his heir.”
Fane snorted. “Convenient.”
Myst turned to another book. “After a few months of mourning he traveled to Saint Petersburg to become a member of the royal court”
“He wasn’t married?” Callie abruptly asked, struck by the sudden horror the necromancer had created offspring.
One necromancer raising the dead was bad enough, thank you very much.
“No.” Myst pointed toward the stack of papers. “In fact the letters I’ve found mention several times he was loathed and feared by society.”
Callie resisted the urge to touch the crumbling letters. “Do they say why?”
“His eyes, for one thing.”
“What about them?”
“They were described as diamonds.”
Callie shot a glance toward Fane, her heart missing a beat at the memory of those cold, ruthless eyes.
“That’s him,” she breathed.
He gave a slow nod. “It seems so, but I don’t think we should jump to conclusions.”
Alexandra Ivy's Books
- What Are You Afraid Of? (The Agency #2)
- Alexandra Ivy
- Blood Assassin (The Sentinels #2)
- Sinful Rapture (The Rapture #2)
- First Rapture (The Rapture #1)
- My Lord Immortality (Immortal Rogues #3)
- My Lord Eternity (Immortal Rogues #2)
- My Lord Vampire (Immortal Rogues #1)
- Predatory (Immortal Guardians #3.5)
- When Darkness Ends (Guardians of Eternity #12)