Beautiful Redemption

Beautiful Redemption by Kami García, Margaret Stohl Page B

Book: Beautiful Redemption by Kami García, Margaret Stohl Read Free Book Online
Authors: Kami García, Margaret Stohl
Tags: Fantasy, Juvenile Fiction
Ads: Link
page was gone.
    He nodded. “Yes. But first you have to get to the book.”
    “You mean from the Far Keep? The Keepers had it with them when they came for my Aunt Marian.”
    “That’s right.” He looked at me, startled. I guess he hadn’t expected me to know anything about
The Caster Chronicles
.
    “So what are we doing sitting around here talking? Let’s get on with it.” I was halfway out of my chair before I realized Obidias wasn’t moving.
    “And you think you’ll just walk in there and take the page?” he asked. “It’s not that easy.”
    “Who’s going to stop me? A bunch of Keepers? What do I have to lose?” I tried not to think about how terrifying they had seemed when they came for Marian.
    Obidias pulled the hood off his hand, and the snakes hissed and struck one another. “Do you know who did this to me? A ‘bunch of Keepers’ who caught me trying to steal my page from the
Chronicles
.”
    “Lord have mercy,” Aunt Prue said, fanning herself with her handkerchief.
    For a second, I didn’t know if I believed him. But I recognized the emotion playing out on his face, because I was feeling it myself.
    Fear.
    “Keepers did that to you?”
    He nodded. “Angelus and Adriel. On one of their more generous days.” I wondered if Adriel was the big one who had shown up in the archive with Angelus and the albino woman. They were the three strangest-looking people I’d seen in the Caster world. At least until today.
    I looked at Obidias and his snakes.
    “Like I said, what can they do to me now? I’m already dead.” I tried to smile, even though it wasn’t funny. It was the opposite of funny.
    Obidias held out his hand, the snakes jerking and stretching as they tried to reach me. “There are things worse than death, Ethan. Things that are darker than the Dark Casters. I should know. If you are caught, the Keepers will never let you leave the library at the Far Keep. You will be their scribe and their slave, forced to rewrite the futures of innocent Casters… and Mortal Waywards who are Bound to them.”
    “Waywards are supposed to be pretty rare. How many can there be to write about?” I had never met another one, and I’d met Vexes and Incubuses and more kinds of Casters than I ever wanted to.
    Obidias leaned forward in his chair, cloaking his cruelly deformed hand once again. “Perhaps they aren’t as rare as you think. Maybe they just don’t live long enough for the Casters to find them.”
    There was an undeniable truth in his words that I couldn’t explain. I guess there was some part of me that knew a lie would have sounded different. Another part knew I’d always been in danger, one way or another—with or without Lena.
    Whether I was meant to jump off a water tower or not.
    Either way, the fear in his voice should’ve been proof enough.
    “Okay. So I won’t get caught.”
    Aunt Prue’s face was filled with concern. “Maybe this isn’t the best idea. We should go on back ta my house and thinkon it. Talk ta your mamma about it. She’s waitin’ on us, I reckon.”
    I squeezed her hand. “Don’t worry, Aunt Prue. I know a way in. There’s a
Temporis Porta
in an old tunnel beneath Wate’s Landing. I can get in and out before the Keepers ever realize I was there.”
    If I could walk through walls in the Mortal realm, I was pretty sure I could step through the
Temporis Porta
, too.
    Obidias broke the end off a thick cigar. His hand was shaking as he lit the match and held it up. He took a few puffs, until it glowed a steady orange. “You can’t enter the library at the Far Keep through the Mortal realm. You have to enter through the seam.” He delivered the news as calmly as if he was giving me directions to the local Stop & Steal, to pick up some milk.
    “You mean the Great Barrier?” It seemed like a strange place for a door to the Far Keep’s inner sanctum. “I can handle it. I did it once, and I can do it again.”
    “What you’ve done is nothing compared to

Similar Books

Play It Safe

Kristen Ashley

Private Pleasures

Vanessa Devereaux

Mourning Lincoln

Martha Hodes

Perfect Lies

Kiersten White

The River's Gift

Mercedes Lackey

Grand Change

William Andrews

B00C1JURMO EBOK

Juliette Kilda

JustPressPlay

M.A. Ellis