Or several of them. Have you given thought to the young man?â
âHeâs no Fallen,â Selene said.
âHe said he was born abroad.â Emmanuelleâs face was thoughtful. âWho knows what this might mean? There were other creatures in Annam, and other rules of magicâbefore the French came over and brought the word of God to those benighted shores.â Her voice was lightly ironic. Emmanuelle manifested as an African woman. Most people mistook her for a Senegalese, though they couldnât place her in a precise ethnic group.
âI donât know anything about Annam,â Selene said. They had people there, of course; got the occasional shipment of silk and rubber, but she hadnât had any reason to focus her attention on the colonies. Travel after the war was slow, expensiveâboats to Asia almost inexistent, and communications difficult and infrequent. Heavens, it had taken them ten years and an armed battalion to get back Calixta, and sheâd only been stuck in London. Asia might have been another world entirely.
âIndochina,â Emmanuelle said, distractedly. âOnce called Viet Nam. Annam is just one of the five regions, but everyone calls them Annamites anyway. Not that most French can make a difference between an Annamite and a Cochinchinese. He might just be one of the witches trained by French schools, you know.â
Witches, even Annamite ones, shouldnât have been able to stop her magic. Perhaps younger, more remote areas retained a vitality that old, bloated cities like Paris never could recapture. Selene sighed. Either way, she would find out more about Philippe and his magic; and how best to use him for the good of the House.
THREE
BURIED DARKNESS
IT was a hard spell to untangle.
Back in his rooms, Philippe had sought traces of what Selene had done to him. He found, without too much troubleâFallen magic was never subtle or hidden, especially not House magicâthe magic that Selene had woven.
It stretched around his neck, an invisible collar that trailed around his entire body before earthing itself into the floor of the Houseâa tangled labyrinth of ten thousand threads, each of which burned like living fire when he tried to touch them. When at long last he managed to get hold of one of them, heedless of the pain it caused him, it was only to discover that it went straight into the heart of the tangle, where he lost it.
He tried severing the threads closer to the ground, to burn them with the little fire in the House, to dry them out with metal. Each time, he felt the pain of his own spell reflected back at him; until, shaking, he had to stop and suck in burning breaths, waiting for the agony to pass him by; and the threads merely re-formed, seconds after he had burned them.
Demons take Selene, she was thorough, and powerful. But then again, what had he expected of a Fallen; of one of the ruling elite of the city?
He lay on the bed, shaking, and stared at the ceiling until the wooden carvings seemed to dissolve into blurry water. He might not escape this time. He was her prisoner until her goodwill ran out; her victim after that. She had made it clear she would kill him for what heâd done in the Galeries Lafayette. It was . . . frightening, a prospect for which he had no name; as if he were back in the regiment during the war, prodded and poked until he ran with the rest under mortar fire, under a hail of bullets, in the midst of spells that could drain the breath out of him.
Heâd survived
that
; but it had been sheer luck, and nothing else. Heaven no longer looked upon him with favor, as he knew all too well. He was not Fallen, but he might as well be; exiled from the Imperial Court of Immortals, and unable to speak with his own kind; his kin long since dead, the only remnants of his blood descendants who worshipped at a distant altar.
He might not survive this. But did it matter? There was no way forward,