The River of No Return by Bee Ridgway (best novels of all time txt) 📕
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- Author: Bee Ridgway
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Everyone around the table went very still.
Ah. Nick tipped his chair back onto its hind legs.
Saatçi reached over and tapped Nick’s shoulder. “The chair!” he whispered in tortured tones.
“Sorry.” Nick righted himself.
Penture waited, with a frown for Saatçi, until all was quiet again. “A story has traveled up and down the river in recent weeks,” he said, “among those few who have seen the future. The rumor is this. There is something, somewhere—an object, of some description—that can save us from the disaster that is coming toward us, closer with every passing day. Something that magnifies our talent, perhaps, or something that can alter time mechanically. We do not know. Is it big or small? Is it from the future—from beyond the Pale itself? Some advanced technology? Or is it from the past? The more credulous think that it has magical powers. Others believe that it is from outer space, or that a nuclear accident has mutated something already known. Still others are sure that it is God’s work: the salvation of humankind from Armageddon.”
“What do you think it is?”
Penture allowed a small, pinched little smile to touch his lips. “I do not even allow myself to believe that it exists. Our talent has never relied upon objects. It is located in our emotions, in our connection to the feelings of other human beings down through time. But this much is clear. If it exists at all, the recent escalation in Ofan activity suggests that they might have it in their possession, or they know where it is and are working to retrieve it. Perhaps the object is in fact to blame for what has happened to the future. Perhaps it is something terrible, not something good. But if there is such a thing, the Guild must have it. We must not let the Ofan learn its powers. We must either find it before the Ofan do, or if they have it already, we must get it back from them.”
“And you think Alva might have this thing, this . . .”
“People are calling it simply ‘the Talisman.’ And if there is any Ofan up and down the river who knows what and where the Talisman is, that Ofan is Alva Blomgren.”
CHAPTER THIRTY
The next morning after a cup of coffee and a bite of toast, Julia curled up in a winged armchair in the library, trying to untangle a snarl of embroidery thread for Clare. Instead, she found herself blinking dreamily at the fire. She hadn’t slept after returning to bed, or at least not until she’d heard Blackdown and Count Lebedev return, soon after dawn. Then she had awoken again only an hour later, from a confused dream that fled the moment she tried to recall it. So she had risen, rung for the maid, dressed in her diurnal black gown, and taken her hussif down to the library . . . but now the armchair was so comfortable, and the fire in the big fireplace so cheerful. She nodded off into a delicious slumber.
Delicious except for that annoying sound . . . Julia opened her eyes, just as something white flew past her chair into the fire.
She leapt to her feet with a gasp, sending the little workbag and the thread tumbling to the floor, and spun to face the room.
“Holy . . . !”
It was Blackdown, and he was staring at her as if she were a ghost.
Julia looked at his shocked face, and then at what he was wearing, and she collapsed back into her chair, laughing.
“Oh, for God’s sake.” He came forward with a sheaf of papers in his hand, bending to scoop up what she’d dropped. He slumped down into the chair that was pulled up in front of the fire beside hers. “You scared the hell out of me. I didn’t see you there. What are you doing?”
Julia wiped her eyes. “I was untangling that snarl for your sister.”
Blackdown looked at the thread and then the hussif. He held the pouch up with a grin, displaying the sloppy J.P. picked out in irregular Berlin work. “Was this made by your own fair paw?”
“No, most certainly not—I could not set a stitch to save my life. Bella made it for me when she was twelve.”
“Why even carry it, then? Just to appear a lady?”
Julia rolled her eyes and held her hands up, and he tossed it to her, along with the threads.
She caught them, and stuffed the now more tangled mess down in among the few little treasures she carried in her hussif instead of sewing notions. “I carry a few keepsakes in here. A memento of my grandfather; it’s a stone insect, actually. And a funny twisty ring—nothing but a fairing—the only thing I have that was my mother’s.” She tied the ribbon around the hussif, glanced at Nick, and started laughing once more. “But at least I am trying to make myself useful as well as ornamental. What are you doing? No—answer me this. What are you wearing? You look like an enormous maypole.”
Lord Blackdown looked down at his brilliant red robes banded with three broad stripes of ermine and gold. “I know. Isn’t it hideous? They were my sainted father’s, and his father’s before that. The old buzzards at Ede and Ravenscroft had them in storage. It seems they knew I was coming back.” He jerked his thumb, gesturing behind him to the table. “There’s the hat. And the stick.”
Julia twisted in her chair and looked at his accessories. “Oh, dear.”
“Yes.” He slumped further down and frowned at the fire.
“So you are going to take the oath?”
“How did you know?”
“It’s all over London, apparently.”
“Oh, God.” He pushed a hand into his hair. “I can’t tell you how unhappy that makes me.”
“Why do it, if you find it such a burden? Most lords don’t darken the door. My grandfather
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