that man not to come after me when he thinks no one is looking.â
This time, Jax gave up the task without argument. Doubtless he too thought Teo might ambush them. âWe must leave.â
âI canât. Not until Szabo says I may.â
âNo, I mean
leave.
Go to England, to Scotland and Yvaineâs tower. Szabo has no power there.â
Leave Transylvania? Leave her cottage and . . . âI canât.â
âWhy not?â Jax sounded at his witâs end. âYour friends will understand. We can replace Whateverââ
Amanusa shook her head, swallowing down the churning in her stomach. âItâs notâI havenât got any friends. Not true ones. Iââ
âWhat?â he snapped. âWhat could possibly be more important than your life?â
âJustice.â
The word seemed to echo in the forest, against the mountain walls beyond the trees. It sent Crow fluttering up from his pecking at the ground to land in a tree. He cawed a question.
âOr maybe revenge. I donât know.â Amanusa pulled Jaxâs shirt from the water before she scrubbed a hole through it. She poured the emotion crashing through her into the effort of wringing it dry. âThese people hurt me. They
owe
me. I wonât leave until I collect what they owe. I swore it, Jax. I will have justice for the wrongs theyâve done me.â
She looked up at him, standing tall and stalwart above her on the bank and called his eyes to her by the force of her will. âTeach me this magic, Jax. Teach me justice. Tonight.â
Slowly he nodded, holding her gaze. âIf you wish it of me, I will. But know this. It is a powerful magic, one that requires great strength of will to control.â
âDo you believe I have the strength?â
âYes,â he said. âIf you have the will to use it.â
âI have it.â She did. She truly did not want revenge, but justice. She understood the difference. She wouldnât let old grief get in the way.
âThen I will teach you.â
âTonight,â Amanusa said. âIn case Yvaine needs to speak.â
Â
T HE GLORIES OF Paris opened up before the pearly, mist-shrouded glow of the dawning sun, spreading a sumptuous feast before the eyes of any awake at this hour to see. The working people of the city, those not already hard at their labors, paused for a breath to see what the city offered up. Others, stumbling home after a nightâs sinning, knew only that the sky lightened, and scurried like roaches for the darkness.
A few, who had been striving all night for answersto seemingly unsolvable puzzles, welcomed the dawnâs light as a possible end to their struggle. The battle was far from won, but weary warriors deservedârequiredâa little rest before they could rise again to fight on.
A quartet of these paladins paused on the doorstep of the anonymous building around the corner from the Bourse to take in the skyâs pastel glow.
âGet what rest you can, gentlemen.â The senior of the party settled his top hat in place on his balding head and passed a hand over the luxuriant mustachios decorating his face, smoothing any stray hairs back into place. âWeâll go hard at it again this afternoon.â
âYou lads may be going hard at it,â the neat, slender man said as he began a glide down the steps of the building. âI, however, do not intend to waste my first visit to Paris in not seeing Paris. I will be . . . in Paris.â He flourished his walking stick as he bowed.
âYou canât, Grey,â the older man protested. âYouâre magister of the English conjurers. We need you at the meeting.â
âWhyever for?â Grey waited while the others descended to join him in the street.
âTo represent the conjurers!â
âRelax, Billy.â The stocky man in the bowler hat, whose expensive suit strained across
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