The moon remembers her name
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ne realized she had return
rically. Noit. The moon hung low and swollen, smeared with a violent red as though an unseen blade had wounded the heavens themselves. Ancient magic, d
s marrow before he s
eeth of monsters. His shirt was unbuttoned, the silk snapping like a whip in the rising wind. Below him, London was a sprawling grid of golden veins-headlights, neon signs
dge of a storm: rain slicking hot asphalt, the metalli
h the smog and the sweat
erfume or the simple smell of skin. It was the scent of a soul he had cataloged in every corner of his mind. Moonl
d the seven hundred years of iron-clad restrai
his knuckles turning white as
hundre
ithered away into ash. He had watched kingdoms rise and crumble into dust; he had seen the invention of the steam engine and the birth of the internet,
asn't just stirring
She's here
. It was half-mad with a longing that had fermented into something feral. Adrian's heart stuttered-noto-ceiling glass doors, laught
people basking in the reflected glow of his wealth. Models with hollow eyes, heiresses with practiced smiles, and "influencers" whose entire
. Carefully chosen, hi
y at the way his eyes reflected gold instead of brown when the moon grew heavy, or that his pul
They were the white noise he used to drow
n, dar
with arsenic. He didn't need
, a creature who had haunted the peripheries of his life for longer than he cared to admit. She was dressed in a gown o
shoulder. Her touch was elegant, possessive, and entirely unwelcome. "The board i
elene," Adrian said, his voice a lo
sensitive to the shifts in the atmosphere-she knew the laws of the univ
throat was tight with the effort of n
o his neck. "Is it the eclipse? Or have you finally realize
a request. The air around him began
, but she knew the look on his face. She had seen it before, centuries ago, and every time it ended the same way. She with
the party, leaving hi
ixed on the city as memories cl
i
turned the sky into a black shroud. He remembered the smell of burning thatch and the way the
aking in
the universe demanded for a lov
far too old for her young face. He felt her weight in his arms as sh
ng at his leather sleeve. Her lips had been blue with cold, tho
howling in a grief that could level mountains. "I always do," he had promised,
smoke and ruin. A promi
now. The scent of winter jasmine inte
in a library. It would take years of careful observation to be sure. But this? This was a strike of lightning through his very s
ibrated in
. Adrian stared at the screen for a long moment, his hand trembling. He w
message from a number
at the British Museum. The mark i
rld st
so brief that even an immortal might
shards down seventy floors to the pavement below. Somewhere in the distance, a car alarm began to wail. Inside the
dn't hear
ndings. Seven graves, scattered
n eye could track. The women screamed as he passed, a literal rush of wind overturning marble side tabl
ors overridden by the biometric bypass he'd built into
melled of oil and expensive rubber. He ignored the
a helmet. He
ff the concrete walls like a challenge to the gods. He tore
. Traffic parted instinctively before him; it was as if the city itself recognized the apex predator moving through i
use
ey were vaults for things that were meant to be forgotten. Of course, she would be
k had r
reborn with her in every life-was the tether between the
air changed. He smelled it
stagnant water and graveyard dirt. Someone else was watchin
Russell Street entrance. The neoclassical columns loomed stark and white against the bleeding red moon. Police ligh
umans. Too
rees, moving with the silence of a ghost. His
saw
lights of the ambulance bay. The paramedics were working
Ash
lastered to her forehead by the rain. She looked smaller than she had in the 1920s. Younger. Fragile in all the ways that made his ch
ering thing. Adrian felt the rhythm o
dic shouted over the rain. "Her B
eath her skin. None of them noticed the way the shadows seemed to
ian
escent sigil shimmered. It was silver-edged with a violent, bruised re
his soul to hers. Pain lanced through him-sharp,
e yo
rical but its hunger real. Mine. Po hard his nails drew blood from his palms. "Not yet. We c
ay the cost of rushing this. In the 1700s, he had claimed her too soon, and the shock of his world h
ad ended in a grave. Fi
her eyes defiant even as the smoke filled her lungs. He saw her as the scholar in the 20s, f
was the most powerful being in the city, and
edge of his sensory perimeter
, his head snapp
t, partially hidden by the fog, was a figure. A woman
le
ight dress fluttering in the wind, a cruel, knowing smile on her lips. She didn
e psychic link they shared, echoing in his mind like a funeral bell
e could be across the street in a heartbeat. He could
ng in the air, "and I will show you why the wo
you should be worried about. The Order of the Eclipse has already smel
ulance and vanished into a cloud of rav
his bike, the roar of the engine drownin
as already plotting. And in the center of the storm was a girl who just wa
r. This time, he would burn the wor
chilled his blood. If the curse was older than th
tal gates just as th
ena Ashcroft, the dream was just begin