Marineaux had made no more wounds on his body.
“But,” Madame Marineaux continued, “how did you get in here from that passage?”
I turned my attention back to Madame Marineaux; she bustled to me as if we were merely meeting on the dance floor. Her little steps covered surprising ground, and she stood before me in only seconds. “And,” she said, “where is your dress? Who removed it?”
“We did,” Joseph croaked. “And with that amulet off her, your spell ceased.”
So the dress was how she had compelled me tonight. She had turned it into an amulet.
Madame Marineaux rolled her eyes. “You are bothering me, Monsieur Boyer. First Monsieur
Sheridan will not be quiet while I am sacrificing you, and now you will not stay silent.” A single fingernail clicked out, growing as long as a dagger. “I wish to speak to Mademoiselle Fitt in peace.”
She whirled around, flying for the stone table.
“Wait!” I screamed. “Madame Mari—Rakshasi!”
She paused, her skirts swishing forward. “You know my true essence?” She looked back at me, her eyes glowing yellow. “How?”
“I . . . I made a good guess.”
Her lips curved up. “You are like Claire. So feisty. So clever.” She twisted back to me, forgetting
Joseph completely. “Are you here to join me, then? To help free me from my master? He is a false master. A liar.”
She was close now. Close enough for me to see the streaks of blood around her mouth, the bits of flesh stuck in her claws.
I needed to draw her away so Oliver could sneak in. I retreated, strolling for the wall and aiming for the tunnel in the far right corner. Twenty steps to the wall, then twenty steps to the tunnel.
“A false master?” I asked, still moving as casually as I could.
“He tricked me.” Madame Marineaux’s lips puffed out in a pout—but almost immediately curled back, baring her fangs. “He killed her. His own mother. My Claire—he killed her! Then he broke
Claire’s bond and trapped me in an agreement.”
My mind raced to understand what she had just shared. She was an unbound demon, yet she still had some sort of master. So how?
“What sort of agreement?” I asked, continuing to walk.
“I must do as he wishes for as long as he wishes, and perhaps one day he will let me go home. . . .
Where are you going, Mademoiselle?” She frowned. “Stop walking. Now.”
I froze. The altar was forty paces away. That would have to be enough space. . . .
Oliver must have thought the same thing, for barely a breath passed before he crept into the cavern and darted for the stone table.
Madame Marineaux tensed as if hearing Oliver, but before she could turn around, I blurted, “Will he free you? Will your false master keep his promise?”
Her posture drooped. “I do not know. He is cruel. Nothing like his mother, my Claire. And he is strong—too strong for me. But you . . .” She reached out and stroked my cheek with her claw. “You and I, Mademoiselle Fitt—he could not beat the two of us. Not together.” She leaned in, inhaling deeply. “So much power. It radiates off you.”
I gulped, trying not to breathe. She stank of blood. Her breath, her claws—a metallic, keening stench.
She did not seem to notice my reaction. “Think,” she purred, “what we could do with your strength and my experience. Just imagine. ” Then her fingernail pierced my jaw. Only the slightest poke, but it broke the skin . . .
And the venom overwhelmed me.
It is Christmas, and I am in my family’s drawing room. There is snow falling outside the window, and a fire billows in the hearth. Father sits beside the fireplace, the Evening Bulletin in his hand, and
Elijah sits on the floor at his feet, a book upon his lap.
Elijah glances up at me and smiles. He looks not so different from when he died—older, stronger, and wider jawed. Yet his spectacles still slide down his nose, and his goofy grin is as I’ve always known it. He looks happy.
Father says something in his bass voice; it makes Elijah laugh. Then Father laughs too, and my heart swells.
A new laugh chimes in—Mama’s twitter—and I spin around just as she walks into the drawing room.
“Would you like mulled wine, Eleanor? Your friend was kind enough to bring us mulling spices.”
“My . . . my friend?” I step, confused, toward her. My dress rustles, and for the first time, I notice
I’m wearing a stunning blue taffeta with black trim. I smooth the bodice, gaping. But then Mama speaks, dragging me back to the moment.
“Yes, your friend Mr. Sheridan.” She glides to me and takes my hands in hers. “He said he has an old Irish recipe for mulling, and—”
“Did you say Mr. Sheridan?” I interrupt, my chest cinching. “Is he here?”
“Yes, dear. He only just arrived. Do not look so worried.” She winks at me and pulls away—Father is calling her. “You look as beautiful as ever,” she trills.