her? And how was he to know when she finally came after him?
He grew sick with fear, his own gift turning in upon itself.
He had to take some kind of action.
Pulling his gaze from the cell, he walked back through the guard room and down a short corridor to a secret passage that led to the stairwell going up.
Unable to rest his mind, he had been poring over one idea after the next regarding how to keep track of Eleisha’s location. As he could not yet bring himself to leave Cliffbracken, he had few options, and none of them appealed to him.
But the same one continued to resurface in his mind. He’d flatly refused to even entertain the idea the first time it occurred to him, and he pushed it away. But every time it came back, he considered it a few moments longer . . . until one night, two weeks after returning here, he had used his cell phone and Visa card to order several newspapers from America.
Moving up the enclosed stairwell, he stopped on the first landing and then emerged onto the main floor of the manor, stepping out into the study.
The furniture, books, and shelves were covered in dust.
He still engaged a few servants to care for the place, but he’d ordered them to stay out of this room.
He’d gone too far into preparations for any prying eyes.
Reluctantly, he walked over to the round oak table, where his father had once consumed afternoon tea while dealing with the house accounts.
But at night, his mother had used this same table for different purposes.
Julian tightened his lips in distaste.
She and a few of her bored female acquaintances had become fascinated with magical arts and contact with the dead. In the span of a few years, they spent a small fortune on books and charlatans who claimed to be mediums.
However, as with most things, his mother lost interest in this pursuit, and her number of séances grew fewer and fewer. When Lord William began to lose his memory, Lady Katherine stopped inviting guests altogether.
But the occult books still remained here in the study.
A few that had provided him with general guidance were stacked upon the table.
Lives of the Necromancers: Or, an Account of the Most Eminent Persons in Successive Ages, Who Have Claimed for Themselves, or to Whom Has Been Imputed by Others, the Exercise of Magical Power by William Godwin.
Along with Dialogues of the Dead by George, First Baron Lyt telton.
But two books lay open. The smaller book—written in German—had given him more specific instructions regarding what he needed to do:
Geister Auffordern by Gottbert Drechsler.
The larger had proven most useful. It was so old that he could not find a publication date, and the cover was worn so thin, some of the letters weren’t clear. He couldn’t make out the complete title, but the words resembled Medius Excessum Universum. The Latin text inside was easier to read, and the book proved to be a startling treatise on the fates of souls trapped between worlds.
Three fat candles stood beside the books, and a new thermometer lay above them.
He hated all this . . . foolishness, as it reminded him too much of unnatural powers such as telepathy.
He remembered despising his mother for attempting to fill her life with such empty trifles. Of course she had never succeeded in summoning a ghost. She had no true connection to the dead, and she wasn’t capable of understanding much of the material she’d read—especially the German.
But he did.
From what he had gleaned, only potential “summoners” with a connection to the dead could successfully call a spirit from the other side. In some accounts, this had included a person who had died briefly and been brought back to life. Another account in Drechsler’s book involved a summoner who had been born with a kind of supernatural sense that allowed her to connect with those who had passed over. People like her were rare.
But Julian believed that he also possessed a connection. He was one of the living dead.
The last object on the table was a copy of the Seattle Times lying open to expose the obituaries.
He’d been scanning various papers, ignoring the numerous mundane deaths by car accident or cancer or heart disease, occasionally stopping upon a murder victim, but then passing the entry by.
Finally, three nights ago, he’d come upon a brief article—rather than a standard obituary—that made him pause longer.
Sixteen-year-old Mary Jordane of Bellevue, Washington, met a tragic death Tuesday night