Page 61 of House of Furies

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“Just a few today,” he added, handing across a collection of folded and sealed packets. “Please send along me apologies to the master, young miss; the rains this week kept me from my usual route. Down t’Malton there’s all but a lake now formed in the south road.”

“I will tell him,” I said, hugging the messages to my chest. He touched his thumb to his forehead and grasped the saddle, pulling himself back up. Something prickled in the back of my mind. Messages. Rains.

I hadn’t gone to the house earlier because my contacts in Derridon sent a note to me at Coldthistle. It was about your mother...

That lying bastard.

“One moment,” I said, putting out a hand to stall him. He twisted in the saddle, regarding me with bright blue eyes. “Doyou carry the messages from Derridon, too?”

“That I do, young miss.”

“And are there other messengers that might have come through?” I asked, trying to keep my tone light and unsuspicious.

“I doubt that greatly,” he said with a chuckle. “I’m the one knows this route best. Takes me all along the Derwent. Not much need of other riders, Derridon being as small as it is. ’Sides, I know all the men and boys that be riding this road, and the rains kept ’em all holed up in Malton this ha’week.”

“Thank you,” I said with a cooling smile. “You’ve been most helpful.”

He touched his thumb to his forehead again and clucked his tongue, the horse hopping forward and carrying him off, a spray of dirt and pebbles flying up in his wake.

No riders. No messengers. I knew now what to ask Lee even if it would hurt him terribly.

Chapter Thirty-Four

Seeking the Black Elbion

Many smarter than I have wondered at the miracle of creation, at the possibility of something appearing from nothing. In a similar vein I have wondered at the origin of the Black Elbion, a book that predates all known manuscripts and scrolls, yet I myself have seen crude depictions of it in caves scattered across Europe and Africa. In Asia. In the Americas. Beings that have not yet discovered the true nature of writing record it on their walls—a square with an eye, and a crisscross through that eye. I have seen it in France, in Belgium, in Egypt, Florence, the Levant...

But the mysterious how of it remains. How can this single image, an image of a book, appear again and again? Naturally, historians shrug this off as a coincidence. The symbol could mean anything. Yet I know it to be the Black Elbion. I have seen the real book. I have felt its insidious power.

The book calls to men. Its inky tendrils of sin wrap around the heart and do not let go. It speaks of power but at great cost.

I saw it first in a desert. It was luck or fate that drew me there, for I was intending to track rumors of a djinn sighted outside of Baghdad city, a diabolically tedious and ultimately futile search. Instead, I met a traveler going west, a woman swathed all in black. She went on foot through the desert, though the heat and the winds bothered her not at all. At first I thought her blind or delirious, her veiled form passing by us and into the great sea of sand, but then she stopped and turned, saw our tents, and approached. She would only meet with me and waved my guides away. In her arms she carried an immense square object wrapped in fur.

When she had taken some water, she revealed the book to me in that tent. I remember the sounds of the winds screaming against the canvas, a sudden sirocco surrounding the camp, as if the desert itself wished to shield the world from the book’s unveiling. Her eyes glowed gold as she took in my reaction.

“This was pulled from the bottom of the sea before Jesus walked with his apostles,” she told me. Her English was delicately accented and she must have hailed from the surroundinglands. “The Janissaries are in pursuit. I must get it to safety. Will you help, strange one?”

I looked into her eyes and then at the red crossed eye staring up at me from the book. Here it was. Its power was unmistakable and so was hers. I did not know if I would ever see the Elbion again if I took it and its carrier out of the desert, but of course I would have to try.

“Will you go west with us?” I asked her.

She nodded, grinned, and began covering the book again. The winds died down. “We will go west. The Black Elbion wills it.”

Rare Myths and Legends: The Collected Findings of H. I. Morningside, page 301

Mary stood at the deep white basin in the kitchen squeezing out her apron. She grumbled under her breath, cursing a little louder whenever Poppy’s shrieking laughs traveled into the room.

“Goodness, they’re a handful,” I said, standing in the doorway between the foyer and her. She nodded absently and pushed a strand of wet hair out of her face.

“Aye, and I’m late with Rawleigh Brimble’s luncheon. He’s to take all his meals in his rooms today and I still lookhalf-drowned. There’s just so much to do. Mrs. Haylam needs me to see to at least four rooms for new guests arriving next week. Some of those floors and windows haven’t been washed in years.”

And thank God for that.

“Don’t trouble yourself, Mary, I can do it,” I offered, sweeping over to the table and hefting the tray. “It’s the least I can do after your heroics.”

She watched me over her shoulder, wringing out the clean white linen of her apron with a smirk. “Mm-hm. Are we sure this isn’t because you want to see the handsome young man and soothe his tender heart?”

“Mary, that’s outrageous.” But I was already out the door, and whatever she called after me was lost to the door swinging shut. Faintly, I heard Poppy giggling her way into the kitchen behind me and her hound barking excitedly.