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    Nicholas Flamel 1 - The Alchemyst sotinf-1

    Page 24
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      hours later when she made your auras visible. I give you my word that

      everything I ve done has been for your protection.

      Josh started to shake his head; he wasn't sure he believed Flamel. He opened

      his mouth to ask a question, but Scatty put her hand on his shoulder before

      he could speak. Let me just say this, she said, her voice low and serious,

      her Celtic accent suddenly pronounced. I ve known Nicholas Flamel for a very

      long time. America was barely even colonized when we first met. He is many

      things dangerous and devious, cunning and deadly, a good friend and an

      implacable enemy but he comes from an age when a man s word was indeed

      precious. If he gives you his word that he s done all this for your

      protection, then I am suggesting that you believe him.

      Josh eased on the brake and the car slowed as it rounded a corner. Finally,

      he nodded and let out his breath in a deep sigh. I believe you, he said

      aloud. But somewhere in the back of his mind, he kept hearing Hekate's last

      words to him Nicholas Flamel never tells anyone everything and he had the

      distinct impression that the Alchemyst still wasn't telling everything he

      knew.

      Suddenly, Nicholas tapped Josh s arm. Here stop here.

      Why, what s wrong? Scatty demanded, reaching for her swords.

      Josh signaled and pulled the Hummer off the road to where a roadside diner

      sign had flickered into life.

      Nothing s wrong. Flamel grinned. Just time for some breakfast.

      Great. I m famished, Scatty said. I could eat a horse. If I weren t a

      vegetarian and liked horse, of course.

      And you weren t a vampire, Josh thought, but kept his mouth shut.

      Sophie woke up while Scatty and Flamel were in the diner ordering breakfast

      to go. One moment she was asleep, the next she sat bolt upright in the

      backseat. Josh jumped and was unable to prevent a little startled cry from

      escaping his lips.

      He swiveled around in the driver s seat, kneeling up to lean over the back.

      Sophie? he asked cautiously. He was terrified that something strange and

      ancient would look through his sister s eyes again.

      You don't want to know what I was dreaming about, Sophie said, stretching

      her arms wide and arching her back. Her neck cracked as she rotated it. Ow.

      I ache everywhere.

      How do you feel? Well, it sounded like his sister.

      Like I m coming down with flu. She looked around. Where are we? Whose car

      is this?

      Josh grinned, teeth white in the shadows. We stole it from Dee. We re

      somewhere on the road out of Mill Valley, heading back into San Francisco, I

      think.

      What happened what happened back there? Sophie asked.

      Josh s smile broadened into a wide grin. You saved us, with your newly

      Awakened powers. You were incredible: you had a silver whip energy thing, and

      every time it touched one of the cats or birds, it changed them back into

      their real forms. He trailed off as she started to shake her head. You

      don't remember anything?

      A little. I could hear Perenelle talking to me, telling me what to do. I

      could actually feel her pouring her aura into me, she said in awe. I could

      hear her. I could even see her, sort of. She suddenly drew in a deep,

      shuddering breath. Then they came for her. That'sall I can remember.

      Who did?

      The faceless men. Lots of faceless men. I watched them drag her away.

      What do you mean, faceless men?

      Sophie s eyes were wide and terrified. They had no faces.

      Like masks?

      No, Josh, not masks. Their faces were smooth no eyes, no nose, no mouth,

      just smooth skin.

      The image that formed in his head was deeply disturbing, and he deliberately

      changed the subject. Do you feel different? He chose the word carefully.

      Sophie took a moment to consider. What was wrong with Josh, why was he so

      concerned? Different? How?

      Do you remember Hekate Awakening your powers?

      I do.

      What did it feel like? he asked hesitantly.

      For a moment Sophie s eyes flickered with cold silver light. It was as if

      someone had flipped a switch in my head, Josh. I felt alive. For the first

      time in my life I felt alive.

      Josh felt a sudden inexplicable pang of jealousy. From the corner of his eye,

      he spotted Flamel and Scatty leaving the diner, arms piled high with bags.

      And how do you feel now?

      Hungry, she said. Extremely hungry.

      They ate in silence: breakfast burritos, eggs, sausage, grits and rolls,

      washed down with soda. Scatty had fruit and water.

      Josh finally wiped his mouth with a napkin and brushed bread crumbs off his

      jeans. It was the first proper meal he d had since lunchtime the day before.

      I feel human again. He glanced sideways at Scatty. No offense.

      None taken, Scatty assured him. Believe me I ve never wanted to be human,

      though there are, I believe, some advantages, she added enigmatically.

      Nicholas bundled up the remains of their breakfast and shoved them into a

      paper bag. Then he leaned forward and tapped the screen of the satellite

      navigation system set into the dashboard. Do you know how this works?

      Josh shook his head. In theory, I guess. We put in a destination and it

      tells us the best way to get there. I ve never used one before, though. My

      dad s car hasn t got one, he added. Richard Newman drove a five-year-old

      Volvo station wagon.

      If you looked at it, could you make it work? Flamel persisted.

      Maybe, Josh said doubtfully.

      Of course he can. Josh is a genius with computers, Sophie said proudly from

      the backseat.

      This is hardly a computer, her twin muttered, leaning forward and hitting

      the On button. The large square screen flickered to life, and an incredibly

      patronizing voice warned them about typing addresses into the system while

      driving, then instructed Josh to hit the OK button, acknowledging that he d

      heard and understood the warning. The screen blinked and immediately showed

      the position of the Hummer on an unnamed backroad. Mount Tamalpais appeared

      as a little triangle at the top of the screen, and arrows pointed south to

      San Francisco. The little track that led to Hekate's Shadowrealm wasn't

      shown.

      We need to go south, Flamel continued.

      Josh experimented with the buttons until he got the main menu. Okay. I need

      an address.

      Put in the post office at the corner of Signal Street and Ojai Avenue in

      Ojai.

      In the backseat, Scatty stirred. Oh, not Ojai. Please tell me we re not

      going there.

      Flamel twisted in his seat. Perenelle told me to go south.

      L.A. is south, Mexico is south, even Chile is south of here. There are lots

      of nice places that lie to the south .

      Perenelle told me to take the children to the Witch, Flamel'said patiently.

      And the Witch is in Ojai.

      Sophie and Josh looked quickly at each other, but said nothing.

      Scatty sat back and sighed dramatically. Would it make a difference if I

      told you I didn't want to go?

      None at all.

      Sophie crouched between the seats to stare at the little screen. How long

      will it take? How far away are we? she wondered ou
    t loud.

      It s going to take most of the day, Josh said, leaning forward to squint at

      the screen. Where his hair brushed his sister s, a tiny spark crackled

      between them. We need to get to Highway One. We go across the Richmond

      Bridge His fingers traced the colored lines. Then to I-580, which

      eventually turns into I-5. He blinked in surprise. We stay on that for over

      two hundred and seventy miles. He hit another button, which calculated some

      totals. The entire trip is just over four hundred miles, and will take at

      least six and a half hours. Before today, the farthest I ve ever driven is

      about ten miles!

      Well, this will be great practice for you, then, the Alchemyst said with a

      smile.

      Sophie looked from Flamel to Scatty. Who is this Witch we re going to see?

      Flamel'snapped his seat belt into place. We re going to see the Witch of

      Endor.

      Josh turned the key in the ignition and started the car. He glanced in the

      rearview mirror at Scatty. Someone else you've fought with? he asked.

      Scathach grimaced. Worse than that, she muttered. She s my grandmother.

      CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

      T he Shadowrealm was breaking down.

      In the west, the clouds had vanished and huge patches of the sky had already

      disappeared, leaving only the blinking stars and the overlarge moon in the

      black sky. One by one the stars were winking out of existence, and the moon

      was beginning to fray at the edges.

      We don't have much time, the Morrigan said, watching the sky.

      Dee, who was crouching on the ground, gathering as many icy fragments of

      Hekate as he could find, thought he could hear a note of fear in the

      Morrigan s voice. We have time, he said evenly.

      We Can't afford to be here when the Shadowrealm disappears, she continued,

      looking down at him, her face expressionless. But he knew by the way she

      hugged the cloak of crow feathers about her shoulders that she was nervous.

      What would happen? Dee wondered aloud. He d never seen the Crow Goddess

      like this before, and he took pleasure in her discomfiture.

      The Morrigan raised her head to look at the encroaching darkness, her black

      eyes reflecting the tiny spots of stars. Why, we d disappear also. Sucked

      away into the nothingness, she added softly, watching the mountains in the

      distance turn to something like dust. The dust then spiraled up into the

      black sky and vanished. A true death, the Morrigan murmured.

      Dee was crouched among the melting remains of the Yggdrasill, while all

      around him Hekate's elegant and beautiful world was turning to dust and

      blowing away on invisible winds. The goddess had created her Shadowrealm out

      of nothingness, and now, without her presence to hold it together, it was

      returning to that once more. The mountains had vanished, blown away like

      grains of sand, whole swathes of the forest were slowly fading and blinking

      out of existence like lights being turned off and the overlarge moon hanging

      low in the sky was losing shape and definition. Already it was nothing more

      than a featureless ball. In the east, the rising sun was a golden orb of

      light and the sky was still blue.

      The Crow Goddess turned to her aunt. How long before it all disappears? she

      asked.

      Bastet growled and shrugged her broad shoulders. Who knows? Even I have

      never witnessed the death of an entire Shadowrealm. Minutes perhaps

      That'sall I need. Dee laid the sword Excalibur on the ground. The smoothly

      polished stone blade reflected the blackness creeping in from the west. Dee

      found three of the largest chunks of ice that had once been Hekate and placed

      them on the blade.

      The Morrigan and Bastet leaned over his shoulders and stared at the sword,

      their reflections rippling and distorted. What is so important that you must

      do it here? Bastet asked.

      This was Hekate's home, Dee replied. And here, right here, at the place of

      her death, the connection to her will be strongest.

      Connection , Bastet growled, and then nodded. She suddenly knew what Dee

      was about to attempt: the darkest and most dangerous of all the dark arts.

      Necromancy, Dee whispered. I m going to talk to the dead goddess. She

      spent so many millennia here that it is part of her. I m wagering her

      consciousness remains active and attached to this place. He reached out and

      touched the handle of the sword. The black stone glowed yellow and the carved

      snakes around the hilt came briefly alive, hissing furiously, tongues

      flickering, before they solidified once again. As the ice melted, the liquid

      ran over the black stone, covering it in a thin oily sheen. Now we shall see

      what we shall see, he muttered.

      The water on the blade began to bubble and pop, sizzling and crackling. And a

      face appeared in each bubble: Hekate's face. It kept flickering through her

      three guises, only the eyes butter-colored and hateful remaining the same as

      she glared at him.

      Talk to me, Dee shouted, I command you. Why did Flamel come here?

      Hekate's voice was a bubbling, watery snap. To escape you.

      Tell me about the human children.

      The images that appeared on the sword blade were surprisingly detailed. They

      were all from Hekate's perspective. They showed Flamel arriving with the

      twins, showed the two children sitting, fearful and pale, in the battered and

      scratched car.

      Flamel believes they are the twins of legend mentioned in the Codex.

      The Morrigan and Bastet crowded closer, ignoring the rapidly encroaching

      nothingness. In the west, there were no longer any stars in the heavens, the

      moon was gone and huge portions of the sky had completely vanished, leaving

      just blackness in its wake.

      Are they? Dee demanded.

      The next image on the sword showed the twins auras flaring silver and gold.

      Moon and sun, Dee murmured. He didn't know whether to be horrified or

      elated. His suspicions were confirmed. From the first moment he d seen them

      together, he d started to wonder if the teens were, in fact, twins.

      Are these the twins foretold in legend? he demanded again.

      Bastet brought her massive head down next to Dee s. Her foot-long whiskers

      tickled his face, but he didn't risk brushing them away, not with her teeth

      so close. She smelled of wet cat and frankincense; Dee felt a sneeze building

      at the back of his nose. The Cat Goddess reached out for the blade, but Dee

      caught her hand in his. It was like grasping a lion s paw, and her retracted

      claws suddenly appeared dangerously close to his fingers. Please don't touch

      the blade; this is a delicate spell. There is time for perhaps one or two

      more questions, he added, nodding toward the western horizon, to where the

      edges of the earth were crumbling, blowing away like multicolored dust.

      Bastet glared at the black blade, her slit-pupiled eyes flaring. My sister

      has or should I say had a very special gift. She could Awaken powers in

      others. Ask her if she did that with these humani twins.

      Dee nodded in sudden understanding; he had been wondering why Flamel had

      brought the twins to this place. He remembered now: in the ancient world, it

      was believed Hekate had power over magic and spells. Did
    you Awaken the

      twins magical abilities? he asked.

      A single bubble popped. No.

      Dee rocked back on his heels, surprised. He had been expecting her to say

      yes. Had Flamel failed, then?

      Bastet growled. She s lying.

      She cannot, Dee said. She answers what we ask.

      I saw the girl with my own eyes, the Egyptian goddess growled. I saw her

      wield a whip of pure auric energy. I ve never seen such power in my life, not

      since the Elder Times.

      Dr. John Dee glanced at her sharply. You saw the girl but what of the boy?

      What was he doing?

      I did not notice him.

      Ha! Dee said triumphantly. He turned back to the sword.

      The Morrigan s cloak rustled warningly. Make this your last question,

      Doctor.

      The trio looked up to see that the utter blackness was almost upon them. Less

      than ten feet ahead of them, the world ended in nothingness. Dee turned back

      to the sword. Did you Awaken the girl?

      A bubble popped and the sword ran with images of Sophie rising off the

      ground, her aura blazing silver. Yes.

      And the boy?

      The sword showed Josh cowering in a corner of a darkened chamber. No.

      The Morrigan s clawlike hands gripped Dee s shoulders and jerked him to his

      feet. He caught his sword and shook the bubbling water droplets into the

      rapidly encroaching void.

      The mismatched trio towering Bastet, dark Morrigan and small human raced away

      as the world crumbled into nothingness behind them. The last remnants of

      their army the birdmen and cat-people remained, wandering aimlessly. When

      they saw their leaders fleeing, they turned to follow. Soon every creature

      was racing to the east, where the last of the Shadowrealm remained. Senuhet

      limped after Bastet, calling out her name, begging her to stop and help him.

      But the world dissolved too quickly. It swallowed birds and cats, it took the

      ancient trees and rare orchids, the magical creatures and the mythical

      monsters. It consumed the last of Hekate's magic.

      Then the void claimed the sun and the world went dark and was no more.

      CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

      T he Morrigan and Bastet burst through the tangled hedges, carrying John Dee

      between them. In the next instant the wall of foliage vanished and one of the

      many winding paths leading to Mount Tamalpais appeared. They stumbled, and

     


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