is all I have, and I cannot lose him. If the Clave learned of my mother’s doings —”
“I know,” Lucie said, trying for a calming tone. “I understand that no one can know Jesse is here, that you’re hiding him because if the Nephilim found his body, they’d destroy it. But he must be hidden, protected? The Enclave didn’t find him when they searched the grounds here—”
“Mama kept Jesse’s coffin in her bedroom, and the Enclave did not enter there,” said Grace in a near-whisper. “I moved him, after she became ill. I couldn’t bear to go in there. And I couldn’t bear for him to have to wake there every sunset.”
“That’s awful—” Lucie began, then she gave a cry of surprise as Jesse reappeared. Grace, clearly more used to Jesse’s ghostly comings and goings, looked unruffled.
“Did you find him?” Lucie asked immediately. “Did you see James?”
Jesse hesitated. “I did not see him, but I did see Matthew and Cordelia. James was—missing.”
“That’s all? James was missing?” Lucie demanded. “Matthew and Cordelia would not leave him.”
“I think he left them, if he even chose to go,” said Jesse slowly. “There were… remnants of dark magic there.”
Lucie’s stomach clenched. “We must get to them. Now.”
“You could take our trap, as I suggested,” Grace said, though Lucie noticed she did not offer to come with her.
“No. Thank you, but—” Lucie turned to Jesse. “Please, can you take me with you? The way you travel?”
Jesse was taken aback. “The way ghosts travel?” he said. “I’ve no idea if it would work, Lucie. I’ve never brought anyone with me.”
Lucie put her hand out. Jesse was standing close to her, and she could rest her palm upon his chest. He was solid, his skin soft where her fingers brushed against his collarbone. But there was no heartbeat beneath her hand.
She looked into his eyes. He might never forgive her for this, she knew, but she had no choice.
“Jesse Blackthorn,” she said. “I command you to bring me with you to my brother. Take me to Highgate Cemetery.”
He stiffened. “Lucie. No.”
Grace took a step toward them, looking puzzled. She began to reach out her hand toward Jesse.
“I command it,” Lucie said fiercely. With a look of fury on his face, Jesse pulled her into his arms, and the ground disappeared beneath her feet.
20 LESS THAN GODS
Desperate revenge, and battle dangerous
To less than gods. On the other side up rose
Belial, in act more graceful and humane.
A fairer person lost not Heaven; he seemed
For dignity composed, and high exploit.
—John Milton, Paradise Lost
“The rope is still slack,” Matthew said, after some interminable amount of time had gone by in the graveyard. He was very pale; Cordelia was worried about him. James’s passage into the other world seemed to be sapping his strength.
Cordelia had come as close to the archway as she could. She’d thought perhaps she could glimpse James through it, but she saw only a view of dead ground and broken trees, and a red moon rising.
“What if something’s happened to him?” Matthew asked.
“You told James to yank on the rope if he needed to get out,” said Cordelia. “He knows what to do.” She glanced down; she could see where his faint footprints led up to the archway and abruptly vanished. She reached out to touch the space below the arch, experimentally—maybe there was a weak spot in the barrier?
There was not. It was as unyielding as granite. Through it, she could see individual grains of sand stirred by the wind of another world. It seemed so close.
There was a crack as the rope pulled taut. Cordelia whirled as Matthew shouted out, the rope whiplashing forward, yanking him off his feet. He hit the ground hard on his back, struggling as he was dragged toward the archway.
He scrabbled at the earth, trying to slow his progress, his clothes catching and ripping on roots protruding from the ground. He slammed into the archway, hard, just before the rope went slack—he rolled away, groaning, as Cordelia ran toward him, unsheathing Cortana.
She dropped to her knees beside Matthew. There was dirt and blood in his hair. She caught at the rope, raising her blade.
“No,” Matthew rasped. “James—”
He didn’t want her to cut the connection to James, she knew. But being repeatedly slammed into the barrier between this world and the next would kill Matthew. Cordelia knew that, too; even if Matthew didn’t care, she did.
She brought Cortana down, cutting the rope around Matthew’s waist. Matthew rolled onto his stomach, struggling to