Page 49 of A Spot of Tea and Sorcery: Vol. 2

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“Not possible,” Nigel said shortly. “Because she’s dead.”

Fabian sat back, swirling his drink. He watched how the olive bobbed in the little martini maelstrom. “I don’t like that word,” he mused. “Dead.It sounds so veryfinal.Like there’s nothing more of her in existence.” He looked up, caught Nigel’s eye. “We both know that isn’t the truth.”

Nigel did not answer. He began to wish he’d not sent away that absinthe Fabian had ordered for him.

“All she really needs,” his brother continued musingly, “is a fresh host. That’s it! And, of course, someone who knows where exactly she . . . is.”

“She’s in hell.”

“You know better than that. I know better than that. Why pretend like we’re both idiots when we’re not?”

“Youarean idiot if you imagine she’s anywhere else.”

“But she is, isn’t she?” Fabian lifted a finger from his glass, pointing at Nigel. “I know you. You shut her away somewhere, yes. You cut her off from this world. But you . . .” He grinned slowly, an awful expression on his stolen face. “Youlovedher. You loved her to distraction. That heart of yours—that tenderlittle heart—was still her plaything, even at the very end. You didn’t banish her soul to hell, Nigey old boy. You banished her to the Dire Dimensions. Which means . . .” He leaned back comfortably and took a sip of martini. “Which means she can be brought back.”

Nigel forced his clenched fists to relax. “Her body was completely dematerialized in the altercation,” he said. “I saw to that. Whatever is left of her, it cannot return to this world.”

“Not in that body, no.” Fabian shrugged, then lifted an eyebrow. “Youdoknow what she was experimenting with at the end there, don’t you?”

Nigel set his jaw. It felt like it had turned to granite.

“It’s why the Thorpewillows were all carted away,” his brother continued. “To make certain no one ever got it into their heads to experiment with any of those old spells of hers. They’re all gone. Dead, perhaps. Banished, maybe. But gone.”

“And that’s just as well, isn’t it?” Nigel sat back in his seat and delicately blotted his mouth with a napkin. “There will always be idiotic sorcerers in this world who think they want to restore the Dark Days of Glory. Best simply to rid them of temptation.”

Fabian smiled. “How about dessert?” Before Nigel could respond, he lifted a hand, summoning a waiter. He ordered something, but Nigel scarcely heard him. His ears were too full of the thunderous sound of his own pulse. He drank the last few gulps of his tea, which had become quite tepid. This Twiglings brand . . . it simply didn’t hold a candle to Luna’s blends. Definitelynothis True Love Tea.

Fabian, his order made, settled back in his seat once more, folding Ebenezar Prodigimus’s hands across Ebenezar Prodigimus’s stomach. “You know,” he said musingly, “you’re not at all the man you used to be, are you?”

“I should hope not,” Nigel muttered.

“I envied you,” Fabian continued. “When you got the summons to Nocturnus . . . ah! It felt as though everything I’d striven for all my life was suddenly stripped from me and placed in your hands. Then to watch you rise and rise as you did, until your name was on the lips of all magic-users in Plym. The consort of the Shadowbane Lady!The Grimshade Lord,they called you.” A malicious chuckle rumbled in his throat. “Not a bad title for a Dark Sorcerer, eh? I would have been proud had I not hated you so much.”

Nigel looked his brother in the eye without flinching. It wasn’t a shock to hear him speak of his hatred. They’d always hated each other, at least as much as they ever loved each other. “You were the lucky one, Fabian,” he said. “You don’t know how lucky you were.”

“No. I don’t.” Fabian grimaced. “Perhaps if I knew, I could be grateful. As it is . . .”

“Trust me. You don’t want to know what it was like.”

The waiter arrived just then and set a single dessert plate down between them. Chocolate cake layered with mousses, ganache, fruit, cream, and topped with a little candied, gold leaf crown. A true miracle of holiday decadence. The sight of it turned Nigel’s stomach.

“Did they ever mark you, Fabian?” he asked, tearing his gaze from the dessert to look at his brother’s enchantment-swathed face again.

“With the heptagram?” Fabian briefly rolled back his cuff, revealing the unmarked wrist of Ebenezer Prodigimus. “Sure. Just a little one. Why do you think I’m wearing old Ebenezer’s fine self around town? Can’t go around with one of those things on display, not in this world.”

“You know it’s not illegal to be marked. Just illegal to hide the mark.” Nigel’s brow lowered. “You’re skirting a dangerous edge, brother.”

Fabian took up his fork and stabbed a large bite of cake. He chewed slowly but, judging by the expression on his borrowed features, didn’t seem to enjoy it all that much. “All right, Nigey,” he said as he swallowed, “spill the beans. Garden is somewhere in that shop of yours, isn’t it.”

Nigel narrowed his eyes. “Who wants to know?”

“Well, I do, don’t I? I’ve got a right. It was Dad’s Great Work. I’m as much his son as you ever were. It’s my inheritance, same as yours.”

“Dad entrusted Garden to me. With his dying breath.”

“So you say. Have you any witnesses?”

“Debbie.”