The Iron Thorn

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by Caitlin Kittredge


  All I had left was my Weird, but I was not bowed. I had Dean, and Cal. I had my wits, and I still had my mind.

  I could stay away from the cities. I could find a way to stave off the iron madness, and I could get the witch’s alphabet back.

  I would find my father and the truth.

  As the first sliver of hope in a very long time slid back into view, every light in Graystone went out.

  Bethina screamed, and her tea mug shattered on the library hearth.

  “Stay calm!” Dean shouted. “Find Aoife.”

  “She’s there,” said Cal, his eyes like lanterns in the full dark. “By the window.”

  Outside, a blue flash lit the garden for just a moment, a streak of heat lightning in the coldest part of the year.

  My shoulder twinged and my Weird rubbed against new magic in the room. In the blue, witchly light I saw three figures: two short and one tall, two crook-backed and elfin-faced and one with shaggy black hair, a tattered tweed blazer and a face that mimicked my own.

  My heart twitched, stopping my breath for just a moment before I flew to the tallest figure and threw my arms around him. “Conrad!”

  “Hey, little sister,” he whispered. “I’m home.”

  I pressed my face into him, memorizing his warmth and his scent, the bony rib cage I thought I’d never embrace again. “I thought you were dead. He told me you were dead.” Even after Tremaine had admitted he’d lied, I’d thought I’d never see Conrad again.

  “I know,” Conrad said. “I know you did, and I’m sorry.”

  “How did you … where have you …” My questions tumbled over one another, tangled and fell.

  “All I can say at this moment is that we have to leave,” Conrad told me. “The Winter Folk are coming for all four of you—their scouts are in the garden.”

  Another flash of lightning, another glimpse of the creatures skittering through the shadows. They were taller than nightjars now. Paler. With more teeth. Folk.

  “Where can we possibly go?” I asked Conrad.

  “There’s one place where they can never find us,” Conrad said. “The Land of Mists.”

  “No,” Dean said instantly. “That’s bad business.”

  “You don’t get a choice, Erlkin.” One of the two figures hunched behind Conrad spoke. It was little more than a shadow, its silver teeth the only solid thing. Bethina’s shadow-people who’d come for Conrad. “The Wytch King commands it. You and the daughter and the ghoul and the mortal. To the Mists, now.”

  “Aoife, please,” Conrad said. “I know I don’t deserve your trust after what happened but I’ve changed. I’ve healed. The madness doesn’t follow us into the Mists, and once you’re away from the cities and the worst of the iron. We can stay sane if we stay out of the Iron Land.”

  Cal lifted his head, flaring his nostrils. “I smell silver and hawthorn trees. Cold blue blood.”

  “That’s Tremaine and his Winter men,” Conrad said. “We’re out of time.” He snapped his fingers at the Erlkin behind him. “We have to go back to the Mists. Now.”

  In the reflection on the window glass, a black shape grew and gathered, until our reflected images became a bottomless door, a swirling vortex in the flat of the windowpane.

  “Come with me,” Conrad said. “I promise, everything will be explained.”

  “In Lovecraft,” I said. “In Ravenhouse. I saw our father.”

  “Impossible,” Conrad said. “Archibald’s been missing for months.”

  “I saw him,” I insisted. “He got me out of there.”

  “Aoife,” Dean said as glass shattered and gears shrieked in the bowels of the house. The traps whirred to life against an overwhelming attack. “We should go with him, much as I hate to say it.”

  I looked from Conrad to Dean, to Cal and Bethina, who clutched his sleeve.

  “All right,” I told Conrad. “But only for now. You better believe you’re going to explain this to me when we’re safe.”

  “Say it,” Conrad said. “Or the gate doesn’t work. Say that you trust me.” He held out his hand, but I grabbed Dean’s instead.

  “I trust you, Conrad.” I still did, in spite of everything. My brother was still my brother, and when he’d asked for my help those weeks ago he hadn’t lied to me.

  Conrad turned his eyes on Dean. “And how about you, halfkin?”

  Dean’s lip pulled back to show his teeth. “Only because I don’t got a choice, friend.”

  “Anywhere has to be better than here right now,” Cal agreed. “C’mon, Bethina.”

  “You have nothing to fear,” Conrad said. “Not from me. Fear the events you’ve set in motion, and the ripples from this world to the worlds beyond.” He held out his hand to the doorway. “Aoife. You first.”

  I shook my head, still holding on to Dean. “We go together.”

  “Together,” Dean agreed. “Or not at all.”

  “Fine!” Conrad snapped. “Whatever you like, just go.”

  He sounded more like my brother then, and a little of my trepidation vanished.

  Dean and I stepped into the Mists as one, and blackness gripped me. Not the sick vertigo of Tremaine’s hexenring, but a vast and windy emptiness that seemed to stretch on forever. I saw visions of Lovecraft, burning and forsaken. I saw the lily field, trampled, and the glass coffins, shattered. I saw the stars and the eyes of the Great Old Ones, burning up space as they flew onward, infinite.

  I was falling toward a place made of smoke and shadow, a darkness I had only seen in nightmares, but Dean was with me and Cal, Bethina and Conrad were behind.

  I fell into the Mists, passing worlds beyond number as I did, while above me, the stars turned out of time, in a vast and darkening sky.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Writing a novel is oftentimes a solitary and maddening pursuit, and I’d like to thank everyone who’s aided or influenced me individually, but that would run on for pages, so I’ll try my best here: My mother, Pamela Kittredge, who gave me a love of books and who never minded that I only wanted to read the scary stuff. My amazing literary agent, Rachel Vater, who took the Iron Codex from an odd idea to full-blown, contracted series of novels. Krista Marino, my endlessly patient editor, and the entire team of copy editors, publicists, marketing staff and designers at Random House for their unending support of Aoife and her story. The book would never have been finished without the encouragement of my fellow authors and friends: Mark Henry, Richelle Mead, Kat Richardson and Tiffany Trent. Special thanks belong to Cherie Priest, Sara McDonald and Stacia Kane for the literal hours they endured of my assuring them the book would never be finished and that I was going to be forced to go join a shady circus to make ends meet, because I was just no good at this writing thing. They kept telling me I could finish, and I did. And I’m not cut out for circus life, anyway. Any number of fabulous fellow writers influenced this story with their work, but I owe particular thanks to Mike Mignola, Holly Black, Ed Brubaker, Warren Ellis and Joe Hill. Joe, I’m sorry I inadvertently stole the name of your city. Feel free to steal it back. Finally, I want to thank everyone who introduced me to the finer and funner aspects of the steampunk community in Seattle and beyond—it’s a brave new world, and I’m thrilled to be part of it, goggles, dirigibles and all.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  CAITLIN KITTREDGE is a history and horror movie enthusiast who writes novels wherein bad things usually happen to perfectly nice characters. But that’s all right—the ones who aren’t so nice have always been her favorites. Caitlin lives in western Massachusetts in a crumbling Victorian mansion with her two cats, her cameras, and several miles of books. When she’s not writing, she spends her time taking photos, concocting alternate histories, and trying new and alarming colors of hair dye. Caitlin is the author of two bestselling series for adults, Nocturne City and the Black London adventures. The Iron Thorn is her first book for young readers. You can visit her at caitlinkittredge.com.

  Table of Contents

  Cover Page


  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Contents

  Epigraph

  Map

  Chapter 1 - The Ashes of the World

  Chapter 2 - The School of Engines

  Chapter 3 - Heresy and Banishment

  Chapter 4 - The Secret in the Ink

  Chapter 5 - Nightfall

  Chapter 6 - Across the Night Bridge

  Chapter 7 - The Berkshire Belle

  Chapter 8 - The Shoggoth’s Dream

  Chapter 9 - Poison Blood

  Chapter 10 - Graystone

  Chapter 11 - A Clockwork Heart

  Chapter 12 - The Chambermaid’s Tale

  Chapter 13 - The Sinister Clock

  Chapter 14 - The Iron Bones

  Chapter 15 - The Forsaken Tomes

  Chapter 16 - The Witch’s Alphabet

  Chapter 17 - The Fiery Stars

  Chapter 18 - The Dark Place of Dreaming

  Chapter 19 - The Mist-Wrought Ring

  Chapter 20 - The Mysteries of Thorn

  Chapter 21 - The Lily Field

  Chapter 22 - The Lore of the Weird

  Chapter 23 - The Miskatonic Woods

  Chapter 24 - The Graveyard Below

  Chapter 25 - The Arcane Payment

  Chapter 26 - The Bottomless Room

  Chapter 27 - The Enchantment’s End

  Chapter 28 - The Cursebreaker

  Chapter 29 - The Flight of the Crow

  Chapter 30 - The Secret of the Steam

  Chapter 31 - An Audience with Draven

  Chapter 32 - The Proctor’s Truth

  Chapter 33 - Escape from Ravenhouse

  Chapter 34 - The City Under the World

  Chapter 35 - The Gift of the Ghouls

  Chapter 36 - In the Engineworks

  Chapter 37 - The Kindly Folk’s Bargain

  Chapter 38 - The Iron World

  Chapter 39 - The Fate of Graystone

  Chapter 40 - The Enemy of Thorn

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

 

 

 


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