The Untold Story (Invisible Library, 8) - Softcover

Buch 8 von 8: The Invisible Library

Cogman, Genevieve

 
9781984804808: The Untold Story (Invisible Library, 8)

Inhaltsangabe

“Clever, creepy, elaborate world building and snarky, sexy-smart characters!”—N. K. Jemisin, author of The Fifth Season

In this thrilling historical fantasy, time-traveling Librarian spy Irene will need to delve deep into a tangled web of loyalty and power to keep her friends safe.

Irene is trying to learn the truth about Alberich-and the possibility that he's her father. But when the Library orders her to kill him, and then Alberich himself offers to sign a truce, she has to discover why he originally betrayed the Library.

With her allies endangered and her strongest loyalties under threat, she'll have to trace his past across multiple worlds and into the depths of mythology and folklore, to find the truth at the heart of the Library, and why the Library was first created. 

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Genevieve Cogman is a freelance author, who has written for several role-playing game companies. She currently works for the National Health Service in England as a clinical classifications specialist. She is the author of The Invisible Library, The Masked City, The Burning Page, and The Lost Plot.

Auszug. © Genehmigter Nachdruck. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

PE 1

 

The snow hissed against the windows, flakes visible in the harsh spotlights which ringed the building. Irene could dimly make out the well-groomed gardens outside and the faint outline of the ornamental lake-and beyond that the guard outposts, the high walls, and everything necessary to keep this manor house and estate private and undisturbed. The trail of darkness across the white lawn-fresh blood, left behind by the corpse which had been dragged across it-was rapidly being covered by the snow.

 

She couldn't see the Siberian dire wolves, but she'd been assured they were out there. To be honest, she wasn't even sure that dire wolves were or could be Siberian, but as the saying went, Don't contradict an autocrat on his own territory unless you have either a very good reason or a very secure escape route.

 

At this precise moment she didn't have either of those. While the mansion did have a library, it was one of the few rooms she was strictly forbidden from entering. A logical precaution-after all, they knew she was a Librarian, and she could use a smaller library in any of the alternate worlds, like this one, to enter the secret interdimensional Library that was her home. A place that was, at the moment, very far away.

 

Suppressing a sigh, she turned away from the window and wandered back toward the fireplace. Newspapers were available-foreign ones like the Times or the Observer, Le Monde or the Wall Street Journal, as well as Russian ones-and she could always do the crosswords or read about the current state of the world while she waited for the master of the house.

 

Irene wasn't a prisoner-but she wasn't exactly a guest, either. She was an intermediary who'd been summoned to do a job, and while that secured her a safe-conduct, it also meant that her personal wishes weren't priorities. It wasn't so much the enforced inactivity or even the dangers of the locale that were driving her up the wall: it was the constant circling of her mind around the possibility that most of her life had been a lie.

 

She'd found out that Alberich, oldest and most dangerous traitor to the Library, might be her father. She'd come back from her latest mission desperate to know more, with urgent questions for all the senior Librarians, who must have been covering it up. She'd sent messages to her parents-the ones who'd raised her, whom she considered her real parents-to ask what they knew. But she'd barely had enough time to get her most recent injuries bandaged when she'd been sent on this solo job, well before any answers could reach her. Words such as desperately urgent and vitally important had been used; she hadn't been quite ready to disregard her orders and refuse to go.

 

Her friends had understood that. Kai-ex-apprentice, dragon prince, friend, and lover-had promised to find out anything he could. In the meantime, she was stuck on this mission with no way of leaving, and no way to answer the questions which overshadowed her entire life.

 

To add insult to injury, it wasn't even a mission to collect a book-her usual sort of mission as a Librarian was acquiring a unique book (legally or not) from a particular world. The Library's collection of stories allowed it to maintain the balance between all the alternate worlds; Irene wasn't entirely clear how it worked, but it demonstrably did. This, on the other hand, was a matter of politics, something on which she'd been spending far too much time recently. Something which the Library itself seemed to be far too involved in of late . . .

 

The door swung open, and she hastily modified her expression to one of mild curiosity, looking up from the newspaper to see who it was.

 

The elderly lady who entered was almost the complete opposite of the large man who held the door for her. He was muscled and blonde, with bulk that even a well-cut suit couldn't hide; she was petite with waved white hair and wore an artfully rustic outfit which Irene identified as genuine silks and velvets. Irene suspected that the two did have one thing in common, the same thing as everyone in the house. Crime.

 

The man nodded to Irene as she rose politely from her chair. His name was Ernst, and while she wouldn't have said she knew him well, she was sure that she could trust him. He was one of the henchmen of the Fae master who owned this dacha-this Russian country estate and second home-and he was responsible for Irene's visit. "Sorry you've had to wait," he said in Russian. "The boss is busy."

 

"These things happen," Irene replied in the same language. "I understand he's a very busy man." After all, being an archetypal crime boss who coordinated activities across multiple worlds was the sort of thing which occupied a person's time.

 

Ernst shrugged. "Only two executions so far today. Traitors never put him in a good mood."

 

The woman's eyes narrowed as she considered Irene, taking in her neat but only modestly expensive clothing, her tidily cut short hair, and her generally sober appearance. A good trouser suit was acceptable in many parts of the twentieth or twenty-first centuries: easy to pack and very convenient for running away in. "Ah. An independent? Or are you representing an organization?" She tilted her head to look up at Ernst. "I wasn't told about her."

 

"Madam, you know the boss doesn't like me telling anyone about anything," Ernst said. "It's not in the job description."

 

"The Observer crossword is still available," Irene said helpfully. "Or do you prefer sudoku?" However harmless the woman looked, she must be as dangerous as everyone else in this house.

 

"I'd prefer conversation. But I don't think I'm going to get it."

 

"There will be drinks after supper for those who are still alive," Ernst rumbled cheerfully. "In the meantime, the boss has time for Miss Winters now."

 

"Then I won't keep him waiting," Irene said, following him out of the room.

 

The house itself was two things: expensive and defensible. It was as if someone had gone to an architect and said, Give me something that looks like pre-Revolution French royalty's worst excesses, but laid out strategically so my private guards can fill any intruders so full of lead that they could be used for church roofing. Ernst and Irene passed several loitering pairs of guards on their way, all of them on the alert. It made Irene rather glad she wasn't trying to steal any books from here.

 

"The boss is not in the best of moods," Ernst said quietly, as they approached a heavy wooden door flanked by two alert-looking guards. "Mind your manners, Librarian girl, and don't expect any decisions tonight."

 

"I'm touched by your concern," Irene said, only half joking.

 

"Concern, bah. I was the one who advised in favor of your visit. I do not want to be in trouble because of it."

 

"Enlightened self-interest is one of my favorite motivations. I can work with that."

 

"Good. I was afraid you were still sulking because you couldn't bring dragon boy with you." The invitation here had been for Irene alone, with specific instructions that no other "assistants, bodyguards, assassins, handmaids, secretaries, bedwarmers, experts, or other supernumeraries" were permitted.

 

"I'm not the one who's sulking," Irene said. "He was. He's sure I'll get into trouble without him."

 

"Bah. From what I have seen of you both, I have no doubt he will get into just as much trouble without you."

 

"That's not exactly reassuring, Ernst."

 

"Reassuring is not my job. Brutal practicality is. I would say that you...

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ISBN 10:  1529000637 ISBN 13:  9781529000634
Verlag: Pan, 2021
Softcover