Read The Magician (The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel #2) Online
Authors: Michael Scott
“Who is it?” Josh asked, reaching for his laptop. The first-class carriages had a wireless network.
“Gilgamesh the King.”
End of Book Two
The Catacombs of Paris that Sophie and Josh explore really exist, as does the extraordinary sewer system, which comes, as Machiavelli observes, complete with street signs. Although Paris receives millions of visitors a year, many are unaware of the vast network of tunnels below the city.
Officially, they are called
les carri res de Paris,
the quarries of Paris, but they are commonly called the catacombs, and they are one of the wonders of the city. The sights the twins encounter in the catacombs the walls of bones, the spectacular arrangements of skulls are open to the public. They date to the eighteenth century, when all the bodies and bones in the overflowing Cimeti re des Innocents were exhumed and transported to the limestone tunnels and caverns. More bodies from other cemeteries followed, and it is now estimated that there are as many as seven million bodies in this bizarre graveyard. No one knows who created the extraordinary and artistic arrangements of bones; perhaps a workman wanted to fashion a monument to the dead who would no longer have tombstones to mark their graves. The walls, made entirely of human bones, many inset with a pattern of skulls, are suitably eerie and, in some cases, have been lit for dramatic effect.
The Romans were probably the first to quarry limestone from the ground to build what would become Lutetia, the earliest Roman settlement on the Ile de la Cite. Where Notre Dame Cathedral now stands, there was once a monument to the Roman god Jupiter. From about the tenth century onward, limestone was extensively mined from the quarries to create the city walls and to build Notre Dame and the original Louvre palace. The catacombs have long been used for storage by smugglers and have provided shelter for many homeless. More recently, both the German army and the French Resistance had bases in the tunnels during World War II. In this century, illegal art galleries and even a movie theater have been found deep underground by the cataflics, the police unit who patrol underground.
Officially, the catacombs are called the Ossuary of Denfert Rochereau, and the entrance is directly across from the Denfert Rochereau Metro station. Only a small section is open to the public; the tunnels are treacherous, narrow, and prone to flooding and are riddled with potholes and wells.
And are the ideal hiding place for a Sleeping God.
The list grows ever longer, but
The Magician
would not have happened without the support of so many people
Krista Marino, Beverly Horowitz, Jocelyn Lange and Christine Labov at Delacorte Press, without whose help, patience, perseverance
Barry Krost at BKM and Frank Weimann at the Literary Group, for continued support and advice
A particular mention must go to:
Libby Lavella, who gave Perenelle a voice
Sarah Baczewski, who gives the best notes
Jeromy Robert, who created the image
Michael Carroll, who reads it first and last
And finally there are:
Claudette, Brooks, Robin, Mitch, Chris, Elaine, David, Judith, Trista, Cappy, Andrea, Ron and, of course, Ahmet, for everything else!
Now, I know I’ve forgotten someone.
An authority on mythology and folklore, Michael Scott is one of Ireland’s most successful authors. A master of fantasy, science fiction, horror, and folklore, he has been hailed by the
Irish Times
as the King of Fantasy in these isles. He lives and writes in Dublin, where he is at work on the third book in The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel series
The Sorceress.
Visit him at
www.dillonscott.com