Worlds collide in this thrilling sequel to the epic, imaginative, acclaimed fantasy Ink, Iron, and Glass.
In an alternate 19th-century Italy, Elsa has an incredible gift: She can craft new worlds with precise lines of script written in books. But political extremists have stolen the most dangerous book ever scribed — one that can rewrite the Earth itself.
Now Elsa must track down the friend who betrayed her and recover the book before its destructive power is unleashed. Can she handle the secrets she’ll uncover along the way — including the ones hiding in her own heart?
Release date:
February 19, 2019
Publisher:
Imprint
Print pages:
384
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STUDY AS IF YOU WERE GOING TO LIVE FOREVER; LIVE AS IF YOU WERE GOING TO DIE TOMORROW.
—Maria Mitchell
PISA, KINGDOM OF SARDINIA—1891
Elsa flipped through the pages of Advanced Alternate Physics by Joseph Fourier, desperate for inspiration. The quiet inside Casa della Pazzia’s octagonal library felt oppressive, three stories of bookshelves staring down at her failure in silent reproof.
Could she apply integral transforms to scriptology? The science of creating new worlds with lines of script in a book usually came so easily to her; Elsa loved the subtlety and precision of syntax, combined with the endless applications. She had created a laboratory world with stockrooms that never depleted, and even a book that linked one location on Earth to another for instantaneous travel. But the particular worldbook she most needed at the moment was refusing to function.
Elsa set aside the Fourier and opened the worldbook again, its pages vibrating softly against her fingertips like the shiver of a butterfly. It was a map world she’d created to serve as a locating device for people here on Earth, and there was someone she needed to find: a thief. A traitor. A lying liar who lies, as Faraz once called him.
Faraz’s words had seemed like a harmless joke among friends at the time. Not anymore.
Elsa took up her fountain pen and set to work adding new lines of text to modify the book’s tracking property. Worldbooks were not confined by the physics of Earth, and it was difficult to predict how their unique physical properties would function. She was out on the edge of known science, trying to solve a problem no one had ever seen before—a thrilling prospect, if only the safety of the whole planet weren’t teetering on the brink with her.
In the center of the library a black hole irised open, a corridor through the fabric of reality connecting Earth to a scribed world, and out of the darkness stepped Porzia Pisano. As the portal closed behind her, Porzia arched one dark eyebrow. “You altered the worldbook. While I was still inside. You do know that’s dangerous, don’t you?”
Elsa blinked. “My mother does it all the time with Veldana.” Veldana was her home, and the only scribed world in existence with a native population.
Porzia managed an even more skeptical expression, which was a feat in and of itself. “Mm, yes, and as we’ve established, Jumi’s judgment is always flawless.”
Elsa’s instinct was to jump to her mother’s defense, but the truth was Jumi had started this whole mess when she scribed the most dangerous object in existence—a book with the power to edit the real world. Whoever controlled the editbook could permanently alter anything they wished on Earth, up to and including the complete destruction of the planet. The editbook was supposed to protect Veldana from European interference; instead, it became the focus of a power struggle, one that had nearly cost Jumi her life and her world. And if Elsa failed to steal it back, there was no limit to the havoc the editbook could inflict.
Elsa exhaled her tenseness and leaned her head back. The gasolier hanging from the center of the domed ceiling dazzled her eyes and cast intricate shadows. “Did I at least change something inside the world? At this point, I’ll take any kind of improvement to the tracking process as a victory.”
“You turned the sky red—which I have to say looks very ominous—but no, the tracking property was unaffected.” Porzia pulled out a chair and flopped down with an uncharacteristic lack of decorum, her full skirts puffing like a thrown pillow. She tossed her handheld portal device on the table, its brass casing clattering against the wood.
“So still no fix on Leo’s location, then.”
Porzia, who was a talented scriptologist in her own right, reached for the worldbook and dragged it closer to scowl at the text. She flipped through the pages, glowering as if she could make the world do what she wanted by intimidation alone. “We’ve expanded the tracking map to function globally; we’ve been through every line of script looking for optimizations. It’s no use.”
Elsa nodded, trying not to let her frustration show. A week had passed since Leo stole the editbook and rejoined his father and his brother, Aris. Despite all her efforts, Elsa wasn’t so much as an inch closer to recovering the editbook—or to confronting Leo.
No, better not to think about him. The memory of his betrayal felt like fragments of glass grinding together somewhere behind her sternum.
Elsa made herself focus on recovering the editbook. “So either they’re hiding off-world, or Aris figured out a surprisingly effective way to block the tracking map.”
Porzia sighed. “Looks that way.”
“First he designs a way to detect portals, now he’s blocking our tracker,” Elsa grumbled. “Does this guy have a clone? How does he work so fast?”
“I suppose it doesn’t hurt being a polymath,” Porzia said.
“Wait—what?” Elsa sat up straighter. “Aris is a polymath?”
Porzia gave her a confused look. “You didn’t know…?” Elsa got the sense she was trying hard not to say, Leo didn’t tell you? Another secret withheld from her; another shard of glass sliding between her ribs.
Elsa shook her head. “Signora Pisano told me I was the only living polymath.” Most pazzerellones, people with the madness for science, specialized in one of the three disciplines—mechanics, alchemy, or scriptology—but Elsa could perform all three.
“When Mamma said that, she thought Aris was dead,” Porzia pointed out.
“Oh. Right.” Certain moments of Leo’s behavior toward Elsa suddenly made more sense—the odd flashes of jealousy and insecurity. “What about Garibaldi?” she asked. Ricciotti Garibaldi was the father of Leo and Aris, and the madness often ran in families. He had two pazzerellones for sons; their scientific impulses must have come from somewhere.
Porzia cocked her head to the side. “Um … alchemist, I guess. Leo never talked much about his father’s work.”
Elsa frowned. Garibaldi was obsessed with unifying the four states of Italy into a single country. As far as she could tell, everything he did—faking his own death, going into hiding, stealing the editbook—was done in the service of that cause. It seemed to Elsa that he treated Aris more like a soldier than a son. If Garibaldi had expected Leo to be a polymath like his brother, and left him behind in Venezia because he wasn’t …
Against her better judgment, she felt a pang of sympathy for Leo, but it shifted quickly into anger. “How could Leo go back to that horrible man? Garibaldi abandoned him, and we’re the ones who cared. I even thought Leo and I were—” Elsa cut herself off before she could voice the words. When she was young, Jumi had told her, They call it “falling” in love in some Earth languages. To fall, as one falls into a trap.
Porzia looked at Elsa steadily, a kind of grim resignation visible in the set of her mouth. “Garibaldi is still his father—you can’t break the ties of blood. We were naive to assume he wouldn’t turn against us.”
The door creaked behind Elsa, and she glanced back as Faraz entered the library with Skandar riding on his shoulder. Faraz was tall, dark, and awkward; Skandar was all tentacles, with a pair of wings and one giant wet eye in the middle. Since Leo left, Faraz had taken to carrying Skandar, his alchemical masterpiece, everywhere with him. (Except the dining hall, which Porzia had declared absolutely off-limits for tentacle monsters.) Faraz was one of the orphaned pazzerellones raised at Casa della Pazzia; Elsa worried that, given his history, this latest abandonment was like a blow to a tender, unhealed wound.
“Hi, you two,” Elsa said.
Faraz made a poor attempt at a smile. Skandar, however, raised a few tentacles cheerfully, pleased to see her. Elsa held out an arm as Faraz approached, allowing the beast to crawl from Faraz’s shoulder onto hers. She’d grown accustomed to the feel of suckers clinging to the back of her neck, though Porzia wrinkled her nose just at the sight of the transfer.
“Sorry I’m late,” Faraz said.
Porzia muttered, “Not that it matters.”
“Actually, I’ve had a thought.” He pulled out a chair and sat. “So far, we’ve only tried targeting the tracking map with Leo’s possessions in order to track Leo. Right?”
Elsa nodded. “True.”
“Well … what if the block—whatever it is that’s blocking us—only applies to Leo? For example, if they’d scribed a prison worldbook to keep him in.”
“Interesting,” Elsa said. Privately, she found it impossible to share Faraz’s faith in Leo—that he had been tricked and was being held against his will—but his idea still had merit. “We might be able to track Aris or Garibaldi, instead of Leo.”
Porzia said, “Except for the slight problem that the only possession we had of Garibaldi’s was the pocket watch, which Leo took with him. We have nothing to target the map with.”
For the first time in days, Elsa felt a spark of hope. “No, but we know someone else who might: Signora Scarpa.”
Porzia rubbed her temples. “For heaven’s sake, Elsa. We ought to be working with the Order, not the Carbonari.” The Order of Archimedes was the secret society of pazzerellones that Porzia’s family were members of; the Carbonari were revolutionaries fighting for an Italy free of foreign rule. The two groups had an occasionally tense agreement to keep out of each other’s way.
“The Order?” Faraz looked genuinely shocked at the suggestion. “They only care about retrieving the editbook, so it won’t threaten their precious political neutrality.”
Elsa saw anger and frustration in the set of Porzia’s jaw, portending an argument as surely as storm clouds promised rain. Elsa quickly said, “Yes, but we’re not going to let anyone else take the lead on this. We’ll be the ones to find the editbook. And, if he needs it … rescue Leo, too.” She didn’t believe her own words, but she knew this was what Faraz wanted to hear.
He nodded. “We’ll have to plan our approach carefully, if we want to rescue Leo and retrieve the editbook before Garibaldi knows what hit him.”
Porzia snapped, “I can’t do it any longer. What is wrong with you, Faraz? He left us! He’s gone! He’s not coming back.”
“How can you say that?” Faraz stared at her, aghast. “It doesn’t make any sense! We were his family, for seven years, and he just up and turns on us with no warning? There must be something else going on.”
Porzia stood, slammed the tracking worldbook closed, and snatched it up angrily. “Wake up, Faraz! He had a choice to make: us or them. And he chose. It’s that simple.”
She whirled around, knocking over her chair in her haste to leave. She slammed the library door as she went. On Elsa’s shoulder Skandar shivered with distress, and she put a hand up to soothe the beast. Elsa herself was too stunned at Porzia’s outburst to know how to respond. That sharp, constant pain in her chest—the pain of betrayal—certainly agreed with Porzia, but she knew Faraz clung to hope like a lifeline.
“Don’t listen to her,” Faraz said, sounding shaken. “She’s only distraught. She’s trying to make sense of this as best she can.”
“Right,” Elsa said. It did not escape her that, perhaps, Porzia was not the only one at a loss.
He stared at the closed door through which Porzia had left them. “She’s wrong—blood and family aren’t the same thing. We’re Leo’s family, not them.”
“I know.” Elsa squeezed his arm reassuringly, but then felt guilty for encouraging him. What if Porzia was right, and Faraz was simply weaving an elaborate self-deception to soften the blow of Leo’s absence? The doubt ate away at her like rot in the heart of a tree, and Elsa wondered if she’d ever be sound again.