“Merton is the one who wrote those articles, goading you,” Elsie went on. She needed to relay as much information as she could, as quickly as possible, given Raven’s obvious lack of patience. They
Raven spat something that sounded like a curse, but it was too garbled to determine which one he’d chosen. “First she tried to buy me; then she tried to goad me, threaten my acquaintances.” He paused, and when he spoke again, his voice was strained. “So many of them are books now. Never thought she’d go for Alma.” He cleared his throat. “I had to put an end to it.”
That’s why he had finally come, then. Why he had tracked down Elsie. Turner and the others, they were people he knew. Merton had forced him out of hiding in the cruelest way possible. “Why does she want you so badly?” Elsie tried.
He snorted, or so Elsie thought he did. “Why does anyone
“Please,” Bacchus said. “We’re trying to find her. To stop the madness.”
“But we don’t understand
“And why should I trust you?” Raven’s voice was like chipping mortar. “You’re goading me just as she has. You’ll use me, too.”
“I’m a
“But the others.”
Elsie glanced over her shoulder. Bacchus nodded. Emmeline just stared at Raven openmouthed, like he truly was a ghost. “We’ve no spiritual aspectors here,” she said. “I’m with Master Bacchus Kelsey of the Physical Atheneum and our maid. My employer is Cuthbert Ogden, also of the Physical Atheneum.” He clearly didn’t trust them, and it wasn’t likely to win them any favor that Ogden was an unregistered rational aspector.
“How do you know that matters if—”
“It’s a spell, isn’t it?” Elsie interrupted. “That’s what she wants from you.”
Raven hesitated. “Do you want me to be impressed?”
“I want you to be my ally.” Her anger was rising. “Do you think you’re the only one who’s suffered?”
He was silent a moment.
Elsie pushed, “Don’t you want it to end, too?”
He let out a loud sigh. “You are a pestering woman.”
Bacchus said, “Come here in person if you don’t believe us. Cast a truthseeking spell.”
“I’m not so foolish.” He paused. “I know Miss Camden was truthful in Juniper Down.”
Emmeline chirped, “Then y-you’ll help us?”
The projection groaned. Shifted slightly to the right, slightly to the left. Either the magic was wavering or Raven was struggling to stand still. “It’s a contagion spell.”
Elsie furrowed her brow. “What?”
“A contagion spell. I discovered it.”
Bacchus shook his head. “Spells cannot be discovered. They have been set in stone since their creation.”
“Don’t talk to me like I’m a fool, boy,” Raven snapped. “Spells are like any form of knowledge—they can be forgotten. Who knows how much magic died with our ancestors, swallowed by history? I found evidence of it twenty years ago.” He paused, then added, “If you’re churchgoers, I expect you’re familiar with the mass-blessing spell.”
Indeed, Elsie
“I found evidence that there was once a spell that acted similarly, but with health. Something that might cure a pandemic. A journal from the time of the Black Death. I devoted my life to researching it. To finding old works, retranslating them, putting the missing pieces together. And I found my answer. But it surprised me.
“The spell is not specifically a cure—rather, it’s a master contagion spell. Like a plague. A spell of exponential growth that doesn’t stop after thirty heads. Only the very strongest aspectors could hope to cast such a thing.”
Which meant Quinn Raven was one of them. “Go on,” she whispered, then cleared her throat. “Go on.”
“That’s it. It takes something and multiplies it
“Ideals?” Elsie repeated.
“That’s what I said, isn’t it?” The sharpness of his tone pierced the room.