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    Nicholas Flamel 1 - The Alchemyst sotinf-1

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      pointed nose; sharply defined chin; lips so thin they were almost

      nonexistent. Her pupils were the color of butter. She was wearing a long,

      simple gown made of a shimmering material that moved gently in a wind that

      didn't seem to touch anything around her. As it shifted, rainbow colors ran

      down its length, like oil on water. She wore no jewelry, though Sophie

      noticed that each of her short blunt fingernails was painted a different

      color.

      doesn't look a day over ten thousand years old, Scatty muttered.

      Be nice, Flamel reminded her.

      Who is it? Sophie asked again, staring hard at the woman. Although she

      looked human, there was something different, something otherworldly about

      her. It showed in the way she stood absolutely still and in the arrogant tilt

      of her head.

      This, Nicholas Flamel'said, a note of genuine awe in his voice, is the

      Elder known as Hekate. He pronounced the name slowly, HEH-ca-tay.

      The Goddess with Three Faces, Scatty added bitterly.

      CHAPTER FOURTEEN

      S tay in the car, Nicholas Flamel directed, opening the door and stepping

      outside onto the short-cropped grass.

      Scatty folded her arms over her chest and glared out through the cracked

      windshield. Fine by me.

      Flamel ignored her jibe and slammed the door before she could say anything

      else. Taking a deep breath, he attempted to compose himself as he stepped

      toward the tall, elegant woman surrounded by the tall leafless trunks of

      sequoia trees.

      The undergrowth rustled and one of the enormous Torc Allta appeared directly

      in front of the Alchemyst, its massive head level with his chest. Flamel

      stopped and bowed to the creature, greeting it in a language that had not

      been designed for human tongues. Abruptly, the boars were everywhere, ten of

      them, eyes bright and intelligent, the coarse red hair on their backs and

      shoulders bristling in the late-afternoon light, long strings of ropey saliva

      dribbling from their ornately carved tusks.

      Flamel took care to bow to each one in turn. I did not think there were any

      of the Torc Allta clan left in the Americas, he said to no one in

      particular, dropping back into English.

      Hekate'smiled, the merest movement of her lips. Ah, Nicholas, you of all

      people should know that when we are gone, when the Elder Race is no more,

      when even the humani have gone from this earth, then the Allta clans will

      reclaim it for themselves. Remember, this world belonged to the Were clans

      first. Hekate'spoke in a deep, almost masculine voice, touched with an

      accent that had all the hissing sibilants of Greece and the liquid consonants

      of Persia.

      Nicholas bowed again. I understand that the clans are strong in Europe the

      Torc Madra particularly, and I hear that there are Torc Tiogar in India

      again, and two new clans of Torc Leon in Africa. All thanks to you.

      Hekate'smiled, her teeth tiny and straight in her mouth. The clans still

      worship me as a goddess. I do what I can for them. The unseen, unfelt wind

      touched her robe, swirling it around her body, so that it ran with green and

      gold threads. But I doubt you have come all this way to talk to me about my

      children.

      I have not. Flamel glanced back at the battered and scarred SUV. Josh and

      Sophie were staring intently at him, eyes wide in wonder, while Scathach s

      face was just visible in the backseat. She had her eyes closed and was

      pretending to be asleep. Flamel knew the Warrior had no need of sleep. I

      want to thank you for the Ghost Wind you sent us.

      Now it was Hekate's turn to bow. Her right hand moved and opened, revealing a

      tiny cell phone cupped in her palm. Such useful devices. I can remember a

      time when we entrusted our messages to the winds or trained birds. Seems like

      only yesterday, she added. I am glad the ruse was successful.

      Unfortunately, you have probably revealed your ultimate destination to the

      Morrigan and Dee. They will know who sent the Ghost Wind, and I am sure they

      are aware that I have an enclave here.

      I know that. And I apologize for drawing them down on you.

      Hekate'shrugged, a slight movement of her shoulders that sent a rainbow of

      light down her robe. Dee fears me. He will bluster and posture, threaten me,

      possibly even try a few minor spells and incantations, but he will not move

      against me. Not alone not even with the Morrigan s assistance. He would need

      at least two or more of the Dark Elders to stand against me and even then he

      would not be assured of success.

      But he is arrogant. And now he has the Codex.

      But not all of it, you said on the phone.

      No, not all of it. Nicholas Flamel drew the two pages from under his

      T-shirt and went to hand them to Hekate. But the woman abruptly backed away,

      throwing up her hand to shield her eyes, a sound like hissing steam bubbling

      from her lips. In an instant the boars were around Flamel, crowding him,

      mouths open, tusks huge and deadly against his skin.

      Sophie drew breath to scream and Josh shouted and then Scathach was out of

      the SUV, an arrow notched to her bow, leveled at Hekate. Call them off, she

      shouted.

      The Torc Allta didn't even glance in her direction.

      Hekate deliberately turned her back on Flamel and folded her arms, then she

      glanced over her shoulder at Scathach, who immediately pulled the bowstring

      taut. You think that can harm me? the goddess laughed.

      The arrow was dipped in the blood of a Titan, Scathach said quietly, her

      voice carrying on the still air. One of your parents, if I remember

      correctly? And one of the few ways left to slay you, I do believe.

      The twins watched as the Elder s eyes turned cold and became, for a split

      second, gold mirrors, reflecting the scene before her. Put the pages away,

      Hekate commanded the Alchemyst.

      Flamel immediately tucked the two pages back under his T-shirt. The older

      woman muttered a word and the Torc Allta stepped back from the Alchemyst and

      trotted into the undergrowth, where they immediately disappeared, though

      everyone knew they were still there. Hekate then turned to face Flamel again.

      They would not have harmed you without a command from me.

      I m sure, Nicholas said shakily. He glanced down at his jeans and boots.

      They were covered with dribbles and strings of white Torc Allta saliva, which

      he was sure was going to leave a stain.

      Do not produce the Codex or any portion of it in my presence nor in the

      presence of any being of the Elder Race. We have an aversion to it, she

      said, choosing the word carefully.

      It doesn't affect me, Scathach said, loosening her bow.

      You are not one of the First Generation of the Elder Race, Hekate reminded

      her. Like the Morrigan, you are of the Next Generation. But I was there when

      Abraham the Mage set down the first words of power in the Book. I saw him

      trap the Magic of First Working, the oldest magic, in its sheets.

      I apologize, Flamel'said quickly. I did not know.

      There is no reason you should have known. Hekate'smiled, but there was

      nothing humorous in it. That eldritch magic is so strong that most of my

      people cannot even bear
    to look upon the letters. Those who came after the

      original Elder Race, though still of our blood and here she gestured toward

      Scathach can look upon the Codex, though even they cannot touch it. The ape

      descendents the humani can. It was Abraham s ultimate joke. He married one of

      the first humani, and I believe he wanted to ensure that only his children

      could handle the book.

      We re the ape descendents, Josh said, his voice unconsciously dropping to

      little more than a whisper.

      The humani the human race, Sophie said, then fell silent as Flamel

      continued talking.

      Is that why the Book was given into my keeping?

      You are not the first of the humani to to care for the Codex, Hekate'said

      carefully. It should never have been created in the first place, she

      snapped, threads of red and green running like live wires on her robe. I

      advocated that every single page should be separated from the others and

      dropped into the nearest volcano, and Abraham along with it.

      Why wasn't it destroyed? Nicholas asked.

      Because Abraham had the gift of Sight. He could actually see the curling

      strands of time, and he prophesied that there would come a day when the Codex

      and all the knowledge it contained would be needed.

      Scatty stepped away from the SUV and approached Flamel. She was still holding

      the bow loosely by her side, and she noted how Hekate's butter-colored eyes

      watched her closely.

      The Book of the Mage was always assigned a guardian, Scathach explained to

      Flamel. Some, history recalls as the greatest heroes of myth, while others

      were less well known, like yourself, and a few remained completely

      anonymous.

      And if I a human was chosen to caretake this precious Codex, because your

      people cannot even look upon it, much less touch it, then it is obvious that

      another human must have been chosen to find it, Flamel'said. Dee.

      Hekate nodded. A dangerous enemy, Dr. John Dee.

      Flamel nodded. He could feel the cool, dry pages against his skin beneath his

      T-shirt. Although he had possessed the Codex for more than half a millennium,

      he knew he had barely even begun to scratch the surface of its secrets. He

      still had no real idea just how old it was. He kept pushing the date of its

      creation back further and further. When the Book first came to him in the

      fourteenth century, he believed it to be five hundred years old. Later, when

      he started to do his research, he thought it might be eight hundred years

      old, then a thousand years, then two thousand years old. A century ago, in

      light of the new discoveries coming out of the tombs of Egypt, he had

      reassessed the age of the Book at five thousand years. And now, here was

      Hekate, who was ten thousand and more years old, saying she had been around

      when the mysterious Abraham the Mage had composed the Book. But if the Elder

      Race the gods of mythology and legend could neither handle nor look upon the

      book, then what was Abraham, its creator? Was he of the Elder Race, a humani

      or something else, one of the many other mythical races that walked the earth

      in those first days?

      Why are you here? Hekate asked. I knew the Codex had been taken as soon as

      it left your presence, but I cannot help you recover it.

      I have come to you for another reason, Flamel continued, stepping away from

      the car and lowering his voice, forcing Hekate to lean close to listen to

      him. When Dee attacked me, stole the Book and snatched Perry, two humani

      came to our aid. A young man and his sister. He paused and then added,

      Twins.

      Twins? she said, her voice as flat and expressionless as her face.

      Twins. Look at them: tell me what you see.

      Hekate's eyes flickered toward the car. A boy and a girl, dressed in the

      T-shirts and denim that are the shabby uniform of this age. That is all I

      see.

      Look closer, Flamel'said. And remember the prophecy, he added.

      I know the prophecy. Do not presume to teach me my own history! Hekate's

      eyes flared and, for an instant, changed color, becoming dark and ugly.

      Humani? Impossible. Striding past Flamel, she peered into the interior of

      the car, looking first at Sophie, and then at Josh.

      The twins noticed simultaneously that the pupils of her eyes were long and

      narrow, like a cat s, and that behind the thin line of her lips, her teeth

      were pointed, like tiny needles.

      Silver and gold, Hekate whispered abruptly, glancing at the Alchemyst, her

      accent thickening, small pointed tongue darting at her thin lips. She turned

      back to the twins. Step out of the vehicle.

      They looked at Flamel, and when he nodded, both climbed out. Sophie went

      around the car to stand next to her brother.

      Hekate reached out first toward Sophie, who hesitated momentarily before she

      stretched out her hand. The goddess took Sophie s left palm in her right hand

      and turned it over, then she reached for Josh s hand. He placed his hand in

      hers without hesitation, trying to act nonchalant, as if stretching out to

      touch a ten-thousand-year-old goddess were something he did every day. He

      thought her skin felt surprisingly rough and coarse.

      Hekate'spoke a single word in a language that predated the arrival of the

      earliest human civilization.

      Oranges, Josh whispered, suddenly smelling and then tasting the fruit.

      No, it s ice cream, Sophie said, freshly churned vanilla ice cream. She

      turned to look at her brother and discovered that he was staring at her in

      wonder.

      A silver glow had appeared around Sophie. Like a thin second skin, it hovered

      just above the surface of her flesh, winking in and out of existence. When

      she blinked, her eyes turned to flat reflective mirrors.

      The glow that covered Josh was a warm golden hue. It was concentrated mainly

      around his head and hands, throbbing and pulsing in sync with his heartbeat.

      The irises of his eyes were like golden coins.

      But although the twins could see the glow that hovered around each other and

      their own bodies, they felt no different. There were only the smells in the

      air oranges and vanilla ice cream.

      Without a word, Hekate pulled away from the twins, and immediately the glow

      faded. Striding back to Flamel, she caught him by the arm and moved him

      farther down the path, out of earshot of the twins and Scatty.

      Do you have any idea what that was all about? Sophie asked the Warrior.

      There was a distinct tremble in her voice, and she could still taste vanilla

      ice cream in her mouth and smell it on the air.

      The goddess was checking your auras, Scathach said.

      That was the golden glow around Josh? Sophie asked, looking at her brother.

      Yours was silver, Josh said immediately.

      Scathach picked up a flat pebble and tossed it into the bushes. It hit

      something solid, which immediately lumbered away through the undergrowth.

      Most auras are a mixture of colors. Very, very, very few people have pure

      colors.

      Like ours? Sophie asked.

      Like yours, Scatty said glumly. Last person I knew to have a pure silver

      aura was the woman you know as Joan of Arc.

      What about the gold aura? Josh said.

      Even ra
    rer, Scatty said. The last person I can recall having that color

      was She frowned, remembering. The boy king, Tutankhamen.

      Was that why he was buried with so much gold?

      One of the reasons, Scathach agreed.

      don't tell me you knew King Tut, Josh teased.

      Never met him, Scathach said, though I did train dear Joan and fought by

      her side at Orl ans. I told her not to go to Paris, she added very softly,

      pain in her eyes.

      My aura is rarer than yours, Josh deliberately teased his sister to break

      the somber mood. He looked at the Warrior Maid. But what exactly does it

      mean to have pure-colored auras?

      When Scathach turned to look at him, her face was expressionless. It means

      you have extraordinary powers. All of the great magicians and sorcerers of

      the past, the heroic leaders, the inspired artists, have had pure-color or

      single-color auras.

      The twins looked at one another, suddenly uncertain. This was just a little

      too weird, and there was something in Scathach s lack of expression that was

      frightening. Sophie s eyes suddenly widened in shock. I just realized that

      both of those people, Joan of Arc and Tutankhamen, died young.

      Very young, Josh said, sobering, recalling his history. They both died

      when they were nineteen.

      Yes, they did, didn't they? Scathach agreed, turning away to look at

      Nicholas Flamel and the Goddess with Three Faces.

      Humani, Hekate'snarled. Humani with silver and gold auras. She sounded

      both puzzled and angry.

      It has happened before, Flamel'said mildly.

      You think I don't know that?

      They were standing at the edge of a bubbling brook that cut through the trees

      and fed into an octagonal pond dappled with white water lilies. Huge red and

      albino koi moved through the perfectly clear water.

      I ve never come across the two auras together, and never in twins. They

      possess enormous untapped power, Flamel'said urgently. Do I have to remind

      you of the Codex? The two that are one and the one that is all the very

      first prophecy Abraham speaks of.

      I know the prophecy, Hekate'snapped, her dress now shot through with red

      and black veins. I was there when the old fool made it.

      Flamel was about to ask a question, but kept his mouth shut.

      He was never wrong either, Hekate muttered. He knew that Danu Talis would

      sink beneath the waves and that our world would end.

     


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