Assassin of Truths (Library Jumpers #3)

Merl’s weary face popped on the screen. “Whoever receives this video, know that Kayla Bagley is a guard for Asile. I enlisted her to spy on Conemar. To become a turncoat, so to speak. She is to receive complete immunity from any crime committed while in my service. May Agnes guide you…in your duties and in removing this threat on ours and the human world.” A loud boom went off somewhere off screen.

He glanced behind him. “We’re under attack. Kayla, you must go. Use the secret passage.” The video was still playing as he handed her the phone.

“Your Highness, come with me,” she pleaded. The images of his office were jumpy as she moved.

“No,” he said. “They know I’m in here, and will assume I had a secret escape. I can’t risk them finding you. You must get back to Branford. Besides, I won’t leave my people.” I could barely see what he was doing with the screen jerking all over the place. He tugged on the side of a portrait of Taurin, the Seventh Wizard, and it opened like a door. The video stopped and Kayla’s legs froze on the screen.

The words clogging my throat wouldn’t come out. I gave her back the phone and turned away from everyone. Facing the brick wall, I tried to gather my emotions. Merl. It was right before he died. He could have saved himself. Instead, he felt saving Kayla was more important than his own life.

I turned back around and found Kayla’s gaze. “Why were you hiding down here?”

“I overheard Conemar order Odil to take some of Couve’s guards and search the Shelter for Sabine,” Kayla said.

“How come they didn’t find you in the hiding place?” I asked.

“Because my husband had it built,” Sabine said. “He only told me and his most trusted son, Bastien, about its existence. Never had he put such faith in Odil.” There was regret in her eyes at the mention of her older son’s name.

I found Bastien’s gaze. “I need to get to the library. My first duty is to Royston. But you have to get everyone here to a safe place.”

“I won’t let you go by yourself,” he said.

“They need someone more powerful than guards to protect them, Bastien,” I said. “They need a wizard. You couldn’t go all the way with me, anyway, just to the first library. We don’t have time to argue. I need to go now.”

“All right,” he said. Though his head was nodding his agreement, his eyes were protesting. “Where should I take them?”

“To the New York Public Library,” I said. “Jump with them at the same time the Mystiks make the library hop diversion. Go to the lowest level and then to the north wall. At the bottom is a tiny starburst. Push on it and a door will open. Follow the tunnel. It will lead you to Saint Patrick’s Cathedral. Your entry will alert Father Peter, and he will meet you.”

“Right. Father Peter. Got it.”

“Okay, we have to hurry. I’ll go with you to the library, make sure you get through before I leave.”

Their concerned faces touched my heart. Though I was afraid to go alone, I knew it was the only way to ensure that Pop and the others were safe. Guards were great fighters, but they would be no match for a wizard.

I stormed up the stairs, the clomping of boots shaking the steps behind me as the others followed. They couldn’t see the fear in my eyes or the tears gathering in them. I had to be strong.

Bastien needed to go with them. It was the only way. I wanted to tell him every secret in my heart. Tell him how I felt the spark between us the first time we met. Tell him I forgave him and that I was scared to lose him.

But there wasn’t time.

We never had enough time.



I’d chosen the George Peabody Library in Baltimore because it was large enough to hide Gian’s book containing the entry into the uninhabited coven where the Tetrad’s prison was located. And I didn’t want anyone discovering it while we were gone.

The stark room contained five stories of galleries behind ornamental cast-iron banisters. Walls rose dramatically up to a skylight of several glass panels with metal crisscrossing inside, framed with white painted wood. The huge open room was like an atrium for books.

There was a small movement in the shadows on the floor. I whirled on my heel, searching the library, but there was nothing there.

“Stop freaking yourself out,” I said. “It was just a trick of the light.”

Placing my bag down, I stood on the black-and-white tiled floor and watched the gateway book, listening to the sound of silence. The cool air swirling inside the library brushed the back of my neck and kissed my cheeks. I turned my wrist over and checked the time on Carrig’s watch.

It was just turning two in London.

Anytime now.

The pages of the gateway book flipped, and I backed up.

“Accendere il fuoco,” I said, creating a fire globe on my palm.

Royston flew out of the gateway book, that cocky grin on his face. His light brown hair had been cut, and soft waves brushed his jawline; he’d also shaven. He towered over me with his wide shoulders and long, muscular torso.

It took me by surprise when he snatched me up in a hug. “Milady is well?”

I wiggled out of his arms. “I’m good.”

He intently watched me before nodding, his eyes on my cheek. “You were hurt.”

“It’s nothing. I’m much better now.” I picked up my bag with Gian’s My Magnificent Journeys inside. The gateway book lifted and flew off to wherever it belonged. “We need to get going.”

“Aren’t we meeting the others?” he asked, following me across the tiled floor.

I turned to face him. “I didn’t want anyone else to know. They have no idea what I have planned for us. We need to end things. It’s getting bad.”

“What about the mission?”

“It’s finished,” I said. “You’re out of Asile. So are the others. Now we have another one to complete.”

He lowered his head, nodding. “I will do whatever you wish.”

“We’re going to destroy the Tetrad on our own.”

He lifted his hazel eyes to mine, his stare boring into me. “Then that is what we will do. I only wished to make my farewells. Can you deliver them for me?”

“Yes, of course.” I swallowed. The resolve on his face, the knowing that he only had a little time left to live, threatened to break me. “I’m so sorry.”

“You did nothing but be my friend.”

There was something noble about Royston. He would give his life to save two worlds full of strangers, not even people from his own time. What did he owe us? Nothing. Athela had made him our sacrificial lamb, and we didn’t deserve his offering.

“I am your friend, Royston,” I said. “I won’t leave your side. You won’t be alone.”

“Thank you, Gianna.” Grabbing the back of my neck, his massive biceps flexing, he pulled me closer and kissed the top of my head. “I have complete faith in you.”

He released me, and I took a few steps back from him. “What do you want me to say to the others?”

“Thank Cadby for his service. Tell him he was cherished as a father. Deidre, I cared deeply for her and wished we could have had more time together. The others, thank them for making me feel as if I belonged to a family for the first time in a long while. I shall miss our times in the hideout.”

“I will,” came out so quiet, I wasn’t sure he’d heard me.

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