“I have brought one of them with me, sir. Antigone Smith is seated across from you.”
The old man sat up quickly, easily, and turned suddenly sharp, pale-blue eyes on Antigone. The blankets fell onto his lap.
“Miss Smith,” he said, taking in her skin, her hair, her hands. She was wrapped in a damp leather jacket, and she still felt undressed.
“My father was an evil man, Miss Smith. My brother Edwin — Phoenix by his own naming — is an evil man. Do you hold them against me?”
Antigone glanced at Rupert for help. Hard creases were set into his dark face. His eyes were on the Brendan.
“Should I?” Antigone asked.
“No,” the Brendan said. “But if you are alive tomorrow, perhaps you will. Where is the tooth, Miss Smith? The shard of the serpent’s fang, left to you by William Skelton, the thief and liar.”
“I don’t know where the tooth is,” Antigone said. “My brother is missing. We should be looking for him. He has it.”
The old man sniffed and ran a bony hand through his long, thin hair. His eyes drifted out of focus. “You are now searching for two brothers. And I dearly wish never to see mine again. But wishing is useless. He is coming, Miss Smith. Tonight. Your time at Ashtown will be short. This Estate nears its end.”
Rupert stood, his fists and jaws clenching. The Brendan sighed. “Wait a moment, Greeves. Do not rush off to war so quickly. There is something she should see.”
He pointed behind his couch to a half-opened door. “Inside.”
Antigone followed Rupert across the room to the door. She glanced back at the boy. His arms were still crossed. His lips were tight.
The door opened into a dim, strange-smelling room. A large bed was crowned with a tangle of rumpled sheets. Bowls of burned-down incense sticks lined a shelf on the headboard in front of small, tarnished metal images.
In front of a closet, Antigone’s movie screen had been set up. Her projector sat propped on a stack of books on a small table, positioned and ready. Her two cameras sat in their open cases beside it.
“What’s going on?” Antigone jumped forward. “How did these get here? Someone fixed the lenses. They’d melted.” She looked at her half-molten projector. “There’s no reel. There’s nothing to play.”
Rupert flipped the switch, and the empty spools began to turn. Light beamed through the air and danced on the screen.
Dan was driving. The wipers were beating silently.
“That’s my movie,” Antigone said. “Where’s it coming from? How is this happening?”
“The lens,” Rupert said. “He’s trapped it all in the lens.”
Antigone crouched to examine her projector. Rupert pulled her back to her feet.
The images jumped.
Dan was lying on a bed. His eyes were closed, his legs and chest were bare. He was thin. Pale. Underfed.
Antigone bit her lip and covered her mouth with her hand. “What’s he—”
Dan changed. His shoulders grew. His chest and arms and legs thickened. His legs lengthened in jerks between frames. His hair grew long, and then black, and then blond again. Shaved patches appeared on his scalp. Wires dotted his body and then disappeared. His ribs sprouted a regiment of small muscles. And suddenly, bruises appeared across his body, a bloody laceration above his eyebrow, and a bite mark on his neck. His lips were split, and his left eye was swollen shut. His right eye was open but staring into nothing.
“Is he alive?” Antigone asked. She grabbed Rupert’s arm. “What happened? Is he alive?”
Rupert was as stiff and motionless as a statue.
The image jumped. It was one of Antigone’s movies again. Cyrus smiling beside his mother’s hospital bed. Antigone smiling, brushing her mother’s hair, kissing her head.
“No,” Antigone said. She shook her head, looking away. But she had to look back.
Her mother was in a different room, and it wasn’t the hospital. Sunlight poured through the window. Curtains were blowing.
Antigone’s whole body clenched. Rupert’s big arm hardened in her hand.
A tall, thin man with thick black hair stepped in front of the camera. He was wearing a brilliant white suit beneath a dingy and battered lab coat. He looked like the Brendan but much younger. And longer — stretched. He stepped forward and his face filled the frame. Antigone wanted to duck or dive away from his pale eyes.
“The cloak,” Rupert said quietly. “Nolan was right.”
The image on the screen shook. The projector’s lens was vibrating. Somehow, someway, he was speaking. His mouth wasn’t moving.
“Smiths,” the man said slowly. “I seem to have what is yours, and I believe you have what is mine. But I see no reason for us to quarrel. I’m sure some — friendly — arrangement can be reached to avoid the extremely unpleasant. As for you, my brother Brendan, there can be no arrangement.”
Phoenix moved out of the frame.
Antigone’s mother had vanished from the bed behind him. A dead blackbird lay on her pillow with wings spread. And then the image jumped to old black-and-white film. Two cowboys pulled guns and fired. German tanks rolled through Paris.
The screen went white, flickered, and then jumped to the beginning. Dan in the car.
Rupert clicked the projector off and walked out of the room. Antigone hurried behind him.
“Miss Smith,” the Brendan said quietly. “No one can blame you. Give him the tooth. Save your family if you can. The rest of us may be beyond saving. Greeves, dissolve the Estate immediately. Scatter the members. Go. Leave Phoenix an empty Ashtown. I will wait for execution alone.”
Rupert stepped around in front of the Brendan, his chest swelling. He jerked off the old man’s blanket and hurled it against the window. Jaw clenching, hands flexing, he looked down at the feeble shape, and his lip curled. “You betray the people beneath you. You betray the people who lived before you. You betray the world the Order serves.” His eyes were razors. “Graves will be opened. The Burials will be emptied. A millennium’s imprisoned curses will walk free. How long until the nations are on their knees?” He shook his head. “I would rather be the first to die than survive and murder others with my cowardice.”
The Brendan’s eyes sparked, but the spark died quickly. The old man drooped back into his couch. His eyes found the ceiling.
Greeves looked at the boy. His eyes were wide, his arms uncrossed.
“Come with us now, Oliver, or not at all.”
Turning, Rupert strode across the room. The boy, Oliver, jumped to follow him.
Antigone stepped slowly in front of the Brendan. Her body was shaking. Her veins were pumping fear, not blood.
“You’re just going to give up? Can’t you stop him?” she asked. “Can’t you do anything at all?”
“Once upon a time,” the old man said quietly. “But no longer. Lie low and the lightning may overlook you. Phoenix will stumble in the end.”
Antigone could hardly stand. Blinking, with images of her brother and mother swirling in her head, she made her way to the elevator.
As they descended, she sniffed, fighting nausea. Oliver moved into the far corner.
Rupert stared at the ceiling. When they reached the bottom, he spoke. “Neither of you will mention him. You will say nothing of his nonsense.”
He slid the panel open and Antigone stumbled into the hall. Oliver stepped out beside her. With a single angry jerk, Rupert ripped down the elevator’s ceiling and reached up into the cables. A long pin came free and rattled to the floor. He stepped out into the hall.
A moment later, the brass cage groaned, slipped, and plummeted. The three of them watched the cables racing, unspooling in the empty shaft.
When the crash came, Greeves slid the panel closed and turned away.
“Oliver,” he said. “We have much to prepare, and we must find Mr. Rhodes and Mr. Sterling.”