City of Dark Magic (36 page)

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Authors: Magnus Flyte

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Romance

BOOK: City of Dark Magic
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FIFTY-FIVE

“I
magine a mansion with a secret room—the perfect setting for a mystery. Now imagine that the room is vastly bigger than the mansion itself—and contains more mansions
.

A dirge was playing, and soft Latin chanting floated on the air.

The voice was so familiar. . . . When Sarah opened her eyes, the first thing she saw was an apple-cheeked woman in a white wimple.
Great,
she thought,
I’m back in the Middle Ages
.

A man she couldn’t see was speaking Latin.
“Aperi Domine os meum ad benedicendum nomen sanctum tuum.”

Nico was sitting cross-legged on the end of her bed reading a newspaper. Or was it Jepp? It wasn’t clear to Sarah if this was a vision, a dream, or . . . something worse.

“ ‘That would make the mystery pretty bizarre. But it’s very much like a story that many scientists are beginning to tell about the universe. In what amounts to a real-life episode of
The Twilight Zone
, physicists have realized that nature may be concealing extra dimensions—not of sight or sound, but of space itself.’ ”

Sarah looked around. She was in a whitewashed high-ceilinged room with a large window that looked out over trees. She could see telephone poles and electric streetlights, which was somewhat reassuring. She felt, well,
hungover
.

“Where am I?” she tried to ask, but only a croak came out. Nico/Jepp looked up and smiled at her.

“She speaks!” he said.

Wimple Woman held a glass of water to her lips and she drank.
That’s odd,
she thought.
Am I drinking water from the Middle Ages or is she holding water from now?
Thinking made her brain hurt.

“Pater noster, qui es in cælis, sanctificetur nomen tuum. Adveniat regnum tuum. Fiat voluntas tua, sicut in caelo et in terra
 . . .
,”
intoned a male voice.

She shook her head a little to clear the cobwebs, which made it feel like her brain was rattling inside her skull.

“What is that sound?” Sarah asked as the Latin chanting resumed.

“Ave, Maria, gratia plena; Dominus tecum . . .”

Wimple reached up and turned a dial and the chanting stopped abruptly.

“What time is it?” Sarah asked.

“Noon,” said Nico. “How do you feel?”

“I’ve been asleep all day?” Sarah said. “I have to get back. The museum opening . . .”

“You’ve been asleep all
week
,” said Nico. “And I’m not sure you’re ready to get up now. Why don’t you just lie there and I’ll read to you about dark matter. Did you know that according to current calculations, dark matter and energy account for ninety-six percent of the universe, while atomic matter accounts for only four percent?”

Sarah just looked at him. Trying to remember. Why did that sound so familiar?

Wimple spoke. “You were in a partial coma,” she said. “It was quite serious. We’d like to do some more tests now that you’re awake.” She looked into Sarah’s eyes and felt her pulse. “I’ll get the doctor.”

Sarah realized that Wimple was some kind of nurse. A time-traveling nurse who came with her own Latin sound track? Was that going to involve bloodletting and leeches?

Wimple left the room and Nico picked up the newspaper again. “ ‘If so, the known universe may be just one of many “mansions” residing in the secret room—space’s hidden dimensions.’ ” Sarah saw it was the
Dallas Morning News
. “ ‘It’s just really frighteningly weird,’ says cosmologist Rocky Kolb. ‘It strikingly flies in the face of everything we thought was true.’ ”

“Wait a second,” Sarah interrupted. “Did you say I was asleep for a
week
?”

“We had to feed you intravenously. Now rest. Don’t you just love all this talk of dark matter? When Tycho talked about it, they called him a heretic, but now it’s science.”

“Tycho knew about dark matter?”

“And black holes and parallel universes. Sure. But we called them ‘hell portals.’” Nico read something about gravitational lensing and branes, but Sarah was not paying attention. She had slept for an entire week? How was that possible?

“Jesus,” she said, sitting up and swinging her legs over the side of the bed. “What day is it?”

“Saturday,” said Nico, looking up from the paper.

“Saturday? The museum opening is
TONIGHT
?!”

Sarah leapt out of bed, and almost fell over. Wobbly was an understatement. “Where are my clothes?”

Nico pointed to a pair of jeans and a T-shirt on the side table. Sarah noticed flowers, beautiful flowers. Vases and vases of them.

“Max,” said Nico.

Sarah disappeared into the bathroom to get dressed. Max. The marchesa. Charlotte Yates. She splashed cold water on her face. Her tongue fel>TONIGHt like steel wool, but she emerged from the bathroom feeling somewhat steadier.

“Welcome back, milady,” Nico said with a bow.

“Cut the crap. What happened?”

“You passed out in Žižkov and Max had you brought here.”

“Where’s here?”

“Sisters of Mercy Hospital. Three blocks from the castle. It’s privately run, so Max was able to secure you your own room, which under the circumstances seemed preferable.”

“Am I okay?”

“Do you feel okay?” he asked cautiously.

“I don’t know. I’m hearing Latin. Was Wimple Woman really here or not?”

Nico laughed. “The hospital is run by nuns. That is Sister Berta. And—” He flicked a switch and the Latin resumed. “There’s a live feed from the mass next door.”

“Of course there is,” Sarah sighed.

“I have been a bit worried,” the little man said. “As you have learned from my current condition . . . Tycho’s formulae were not always accurate. And he did hold to his theory that the sun revolved around the earth. But,” he tapped the paper, “it seems like he nailed the whole hell portal thing.” Sarah looked at a clock on the wall.

“Is it really noon? I have to get out of here. What’s happening with the opening?”

“Everything is on schedule. Max finished your display himself according to your notes. The caterers and florists are at the palace now setting up.”

“My backpack,” said Sarah, her thoughts flying to the Beethoven letters.

Nico pointed to a chair in the corner.

“Did you look through it?”

“My dear,” said Nico with dignity. “Of course I did.”

Sarah heard sirens and looked out the window to see a huge motorcade going by.

“The senator from Virginia,” said Nico quietly.

Sarah felt a surge of anxiety. Charlotte Yates was here. Sarah had seen in the vision at Nela that Charlotte knew about the key. Did she somehow know where the Golden Fleece was hidden? And if Charlotte Yates and Marchesa Elisa were working together . . . between them they had killed Andy, Eleanor, and nearly herself.

Sarah shuddered. She’d have to be on her game tonight. Well, at least she was well-rested. A little weak and wobbly and, she realized,
starving
. But alive.

“What did you tell everyone?” Sarah asked.

“Food poisoning from some bad chicken you had in Old Town. Fortunately, everyone has been so occupied with preparing for the opening that your absence has caused less notice than it might have a few weeks ago.”

“Did you stay with me this whole time, Nico?”

He gave her a half-smile.

ace="
Sarah was somehow not surprised to be discharged from the hospital by Oksana, Nico’s wife, who made the filling out of forms and the signing of release papers a very smooth process.

“How is Bernard?” Sarah asked.

“I would say he is very repentant,” Nicolas smiled. “Would you not agree, my darling?”

“Will he tell the police that the marchesa killed Eleanor and tried to blackmail him into killing me?”

“I fear he is not the most reliable witness,” said Nico, staring at a distant spot on the ceiling. “He will be discharged from the hospital after the museum opening and sent home.”

Sarah was not sure she wanted to know why Bernard was not a reliable witness. Oksana looked quite capable of removing large parts of people’s brains, or bodies.

As Sarah and Nico passed through the main gate to the castle, hurrying back to the museum, she glanced up at the massive stone figures who had greeted her upon her arrival in Prague. The naked colossus she had dubbed the Sexy Stabber, with his sword poised over a wretch with bowed head, and the Mad Batter who was clubbing a man to death. She had had no idea that day what they actually portended, what violence she would witness in this century and previous ones. And it wasn’t over yet.

She had arrived in this very spot with Nico, and it had been Eleanor who rushed out to greet her. Sarah averted her eyes as she followed Nico through the arch into the second courtyard. She did not want to see the cage where poor Eleanor’s body had been stuffed.

As they passed out of the second courtyard, she glanced up at the spiky ornamentation of St. Vitus, a porcupine among churches. Nico must have seen it when it was half-finished. She turned to him. “What’s it like, to have been alive for so long?”

“Let’s cut through here,” said Nico, avoiding her gaze.

She blinked in the gloom as the door shut behind them. Tourists moved around the aisles, heads craned up to see the stained glass. Everyone murmured out of respect, and shuffled along the stone floor. Sarah could smell incense, suntan lotion, and body odor.

“If you’re not seeing ghosts in here, then you are cured,” said Nico.

Sarah looked around. No ghosts. And yet, her perception had been altered by the drug. Her consciousness had changed and it couldn’t be unchanged now. Nico had the formula for the drug. If they could find the necessary ingredients, they could in theory make more. With small doses, she could visit Beethoven anytime she liked. She could take the drug back to America and see her father. She could go anywhere, see anything.

I see only darkness ahead on the path you are choosing.

That’s what John Dee had said.

Max emerged from a carved wooden side door in the church, followed by a man in scarlet robes and several bodyguards. Max was wearing a gray suit that made him look exactly like his grandfather, a fedora under his arm. Her heart leapt and she longed to kiss him. But was that—?

It was. Marchesa Elisa, impressive in stiletto heels and a linen suit, appeared at Max’s side and took his arm.

“Miss Weston, I am glad to see you are better,” said Max. “We’ll need you to discuss the Music Room exhibit this evening with the patrons and our honored guests.” His tone was cold and formal, but his eyes were alive with things to say.

“Please let us know if you do not have suitable attire,” said the marchesa, looking Sarah up and down.

“Oh, and Sarah,” Max said. “There is a copy of
Atalanta Fugiens
from Nela that I have included in the music exhibition. Please make an appropriate card for it.”

The marchesa pulled Max firmly along with her, but Sarah caught Max’s meaningful quick glance.


Atalanta Fugiens
?” she said to Nico, when they had gone.

“It was published in 1617 by Michael Maier, an alchemist at Rudolf’s court. We rather liked him. It’s what you might call the first multimedia book ever. Fifty woodcuts, or emblems, each illustrating an aspect of alchemy, with an epigram and a discourse for each, plus a piece of music created from the mathematics of the symbols.”

“Alchemical music,” said Sarah.

“There are alchemical symbols everywhere in Prague.” Nico nodded. “I should give tours.” They were hurrying past the entrance to the crypt at the north end of the cathedral and the little man pointed to a symbol etched into the stone floor before it. Sarah stopped abruptly, bent down, and traced it with her finger. A triangle.

“The alchemical symbol for fire,” said Nico. “And Tycho’s favorite symbol. He used to leave it everywhere, as a warning. I have a tattoo of it, actually. If you’d care to . . .”

“Why did you draw that alchemical symbol on the ceiling of my apartment in Boston?” she asked, standing up again and rushing off, Nico in her wake. “John Dee’s symbol for everything. No more riddles, Jepp. Just tell me.”

“I don’t know,” the little man said simply. “Maybe it was a warning. Knowing everything can be very dangerous.”

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