The Serpent's Curse by Lisa Maxwell (read an ebook week .TXT) đź“•
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- Author: Lisa Maxwell
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A single word floated through his mind—plague.
Before the wave of panic that thought brought with it could overwhelm him, Harte realized suddenly that he wasn’t alone. He could hear breathing close by that didn’t belong to him. It was either the biggest rat he’d ever seen—and there had been plenty of those in New York—or… He rolled over to his other side and found a small face framed by a cap of close-cropped dark-blond hair sitting on the floor next to him. Curious and too-familiar gray eyes sat above a button nose. They widened, and the child scrambled to his feet when he saw Harte looking at him.
It was the same child who had been with Harte’s father. My brother. All thoughts of sickness were replaced with the strange and unsettling realization that he was not completely without connections in the world. Whether he would claim them, though, was a different matter altogether.
With some effort, Harte rocked himself upright. As he tried to make the room stop spinning—and tried to keep from heaving up the contents of his stomach—the boy backed up a little more. The child didn’t shout or call for anyone, though. His eyes were still curious, but also wary now.
As he sat up, Harte realized his head felt a bit clearer. His ankle still itched and burned, and now when he scratched at it with his toe, the bites there ached sharply. It wasn’t the first time he’d dealt with vermin, though, and he knew there was little he could do until the irritation ran its course. Still, they hurt more than most bites he’d had before—his entire leg ached—and he hoped that they hadn’t become infected. Or maybe he hoped that they were infected, since that would be a lot easier to deal with than the plague that had quarantined Chinatown.
Seshat remained quiet, still withdrawn and far away, but Harte knew she was watching… and waiting. He wasn’t sure how much time had passed since he’d last awoken. There were no windows in the cellar, so he couldn’t even tell what time of day it was. It could have been the next morning or days later. Esta might already have found the dagger. She might be traveling back toward the bridge, or she might have already arrived. Maybe she was waiting there for him, wondering if he had deserted her again. If she thought he’d truly betrayed her, she might not wait long.
No… she would wait, because he had her cuff.
Or, he’d had it. Harte needed to get it back, which meant that he needed to get out of that dank basement, even if he’d rather curl up and go to sleep.
Harte’s arms were still tied behind him, and his shoulders ached from being in that position for so long. With the small boy’s eyes upon him, he tested the ropes again and found they hadn’t been secured any better than they had been before. It wouldn’t be hard to free himself, but the boy posed a problem. With the child there, Harte would have a witness to his escape. Possibly, the kid might even sound an alarm if Harte tried to leave.
“Where am I?” he asked the boy as he considered his options.
The boy didn’t respond. He just stared at Harte without any indication that he’d understood.
“Do you speak English?” Harte asked, searching his brother’s face for some indication that the child comprehended. “Can you understand me?”
The boy’s brows drew together a little, but still he didn’t respond. He just kept staring.
It was possible that the boy didn’t know English. His father had spoken something that sounded like German to him before. It was likely that his brother had no idea what Harte was saying. At least he hadn’t yet made any move to alert someone that Harte had awoken.
“Can you tell me where I am?” he asked the boy, trying again. “Is this your father’s store?”
Nothing.
Harte tested the ropes again. They’d grown a bit looser from his earlier movements, and he could be out of them without much trouble. He needed to get out of them—and out of that cellar. He felt sore and tired and, well, he felt outright sick. But he pushed the thoughts of plague out of his mind. He had a feeling that the longer he stayed trapped in that dank cellar, the less chance he’d have of escaping successfully. Besides, he’d worked through illnesses before. He’d survived New York winters on the street; he would survive this as well. He had to. He had a promise to keep. But first he needed to get free.
“Would you like to see a magic trick?” Harte asked, trying to stop shivering long enough to give the boy a conspiratorial smile.
The boy’s expression shifted then, a slight widening of the eyes. A spark of interest warred with the caution and curiosity that were already there.
He understands, Harte realized, grateful for this small mercy.
“I bet you would like to see a magic trick,” he told the child, brushing away any misgiving he might have had about using the boy. “I’m a magician, you know. Did your father tell you that?”
The boy didn’t speak, but he shook his head ever so slightly. His small, bright eyes burned with interest.
“I’m a rather famous one, actually.” Harte was already working the ropes on his wrists, making small, refined movements that would have been imperceptible to the boy. “Have you ever seen a magician?”
“Magic is an a-a-bomb-bli-nation,” the boy said, parsing out the difficult word slowly and carefully. His small voice was clear as a bell and uninflected with any emotion at all. The words came like they were something he’d memorized without understanding the meaning.
“Abomination,” Harte said softly, not missing the way the boy flinched at the gentle correction. He’d heard the echo of his father’s intonation in the boy’s voice, and he understood what that
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