Dark Heart of Magic Page 82

I stopped for a moment, staring at the fist-size ruby that was the dragon’s evil eye. I shivered again. No matter how many times I snuck in here, I never got used to looking at this particular dragon—or having it stare right back at me. Or perhaps it was what was behind the carving that worried me so much.

But I forced my unease aside, stepped forward, and pressed on the ruby, which sank into the stone. A second later, the wall slid back, revealing a large, secret room—one that was filled with weapons.

An overhead light clicked on in the room, revealing the black-blade swords, daggers, and more that lined the shelves covering the three walls. Each weapon was on a peg by itself and carefully labeled, with codes like TT29, CC2, and RM55—for all the tree trolls, copper crushers, and rockmunks that Victor had trapped and killed.

Black blades were made out of bloodiron, a special metal that grew blacker with every drop of blood that fell on it. Bloodiron could also absorb, store, and transfer magic from one person or monster to another. Victor had used these weapons to rip the monsters’ magic right out of them so he could use their Talents for his own evil plan to destroy the other Families. I could feel the creatures’ power pulsing through the blades, each one proof of Victor’s cruelty and his delight in senseless slaughter. The cold burn of magic made me sick to my stomach.

“Let’s move,” I whispered. “I don’t want to be in here one second longer than necessary.”

Devon and Felix put their duffel bags on the floor and unzipped them, revealing the swords, daggers, and other weapons inside. They grabbed the weapons and handed them to me and Deah, and the two of us switched out the real black blades with the fakes.

We’d been coming here and doing this same thing every night for the last two weeks, slowly exchanging the magic-filled weapons for ordinary ones. We’d removed most of the black blades, but not all of them. I hated leaving a single sword here for Victor to use, but he had a lot of Talents, and I was betting that he could sense magic the same way I could. So we had to leave some of the real weapons here or he would realize what we’d done. Still, I made sure that we only left the blades that pulsed weakly with magic. I wasn’t leaving Victor with any more power than I had to.

It only took us five minutes to switch out the last of the weapons, although it seemed much longer than that. By the time we were done, Devon and Felix were both sweating beneath their long, black cloaks. Deah was too, despite her T-shirt and shorts. I wasn’t sweating, but my stomach churned and churned at the cold chill of all the magic in the air.

Devon and Felix zipped up the duffel bags with the real black blades and slung them over their shoulders. I pressed the dragon’s ruby eye again, and the wall slid back into place, hiding the secret room from sight.

“Well, I guess this is it,” I said, trying to make my voice light. “No more late-night trips to raid Victor’s secret weapons stash.”

Nobody moved or spoke for a moment.

I looked at Deah. “Thank you again for helping us.”

She nodded, but she stared at the floor instead of at me. Betraying her Family and her father was no easy thing, no matter how evil Victor might be.

I glanced at Devon and Felix, who both nodded. We’d discussed this for several days now, and it was finally time to ask Deah to do one more thing.

“Come with us,” I said.

Deah’s head snapped up, and she stared at me with wide eyes. “What?”

“You heard me. Come with us. Go pack a bag, get Seleste, and come with us. Right now.”

She stared at me, and my soulsight kicked in, letting me feel all of her emotions. Electric shock. Sharp worry. Stomach-churning fear. For a moment, warm happiness mixed in with the other feelings, but it was quickly smothered by cold sorrow. I knew what her answer was going to be before she even opened her mouth.

She shook her head, her golden ponytail slapping against her shoulders. “I can’t do that. You know I can’t.”

Felix stepped forward and grabbed her hand. “Please, Deah,” he said. “You’re not like the other Draconis. You don’t belong here.”

“But I am a Draconi.” She looked at me for a second. “At least, part of me is. But that doesn’t matter. I can’t go with you. My dad would flip out if he realized that Mom and I were gone. And you all know what he would do if he found that we’d defected to the Sinclair Family.”

We all grimaced. Victor would attack the Sinclairs with every guard he had in order to get back Deah and her mom. Deah’s mimic magic and Seleste’s visions were Talents that he didn’t have and would never let slip through his fingers.

But Felix cared too much about Deah to give up so easily. “Please,” he repeated. “Just come with us. We can figure the rest out later. Let’s just get you and your mom out of here while we still have a chance.”

Deah stared at him, and I saw and felt all the warm love she had for him. She bit her lip and shifted on her feet, as if she was actually considering changing her mind and coming with us—

One of the knobs creaked, and the doors rattled in their frames.

We all froze.

Someone was trying to get into the office.

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