Chapter 27 #2

“I heard you fall. I was in the kitchen. I reached the stairs in four seconds. You were on the third step with your hand pressed to your side and your forehead against the riser. Your eyes were open, but you did not respond when I called your name from the landing.”

He had not heard her.

“When did I respond?”

“When I touched you.”

The tremor lasted another six minutes. When it subsided in his hands, she noted it.

When his breathing found a sustainable rhythm, she noted that.

When his pupils contracted to match the ambient light—a detail she checked by tilting his chin toward the window—she studied the reaction and released him.

She stood. Her palm left his arm, and the beacon surged in her absence, the sustained tone climbing past its pre-intervention register.

“I’ll get water,” she said. “And something for your hand.”

Her footsteps climbed the remaining stairs. The kitchen door shifted in its frame as she passed through, and the sound faded, and the stairs held only him.

The beacon reclaimed every inch of ground it had surrendered.

Within thirty seconds the sustained tone had climbed past the register it held before Delphine reached him and settled into a pitch that vibrated his molars.

The pressure returned behind his eyes—not at the intensity of the seizure but present, insistent, pressing against the interior of his skull with a patience the first spike had lacked.

The spike had been violence. This was occupation.

Bastien sat against the wall with his legs extended across the treads and his hands in his lap, palms upward. The burned right palm throbbed in the ambient air. The left hand shook with a fine vibration he could not arrest. He watched his own fingers and could not will them still.

Control had left him.

He turned the recognition over the way he turned evidence—examined each surface, tested each edge.

Control had defined him since the fall. Control over his body.

Control over the residual celestial energy his flesh still carried.

Control over the longing for and the grief of watching women who shared the same soul die in different centuries and different clothes.

He had governed what he was through will for hundreds of years, and the curse had outlasted that will on a staircase that smelled of turpentine.

His hands shook. He pressed them against his thighs, and the vibration traveled through the muscle and into the bone and continued.

Without Delphine’s palm against him, the mark operated freely.

It drew from him with a steady pull that had found its own capacity and would not hesitate to reach it.

The celestial residue—the light that had survived the fall, the remnant of what he had been before gravity claimed him—fed the cage’s architecture.

He could feel the conversion happening: warmth leaving his center and traveling outward through the nodes, reaching the murder sites where the dead had become anchors, completing circuits that the architect had spent decades constructing.

He was fuel. The beacon had been a tracker, then a transmitter, and now it functioned as an extraction device. The cage would take from the source until the source gave out.

The live oak moved against the window above. The light through the glass had shifted, the amber deepening toward the copper that preceded dusk. A mockingbird called from the branches—two notes, repeated, holding its position through nightfall.

He had governed Charlotte and Delia’s deaths and the decades between by applying control to grief.

He had contained the celestial energy that should have torn his mortal form apart by applying control to the body that housed it.

He had navigated factions and maintained neutrality in a city that rewarded alignment and punished independence by applying control to every impulse that would have drawn him into one camp or another.

The curse had not needed to overpower any of it. The curse had outlasted all of it. The beacon drew and drew, and the reserves were not inexhaustible, and the discipline that held the structure together required the same energy the curse now redirected toward its own design.

He accepted the fact the way he had accepted the mark’s first appearance—without negotiation, without the reflexive rejection that would have consumed energy he did not possess.

The cage would complete. And Bastien Durand, who had maintained the shape of himself through two centuries of loss, did not have the reserves to stop what the architect had set in motion.

The tremor in his left hand worsened. His fingers curled against his thigh, and he could not straighten them.

The kitchen faucet ran above him. Delphine moved through the rooms beyond the landing, and the cabinet door opened and closed, and the tap shut off, and then her footsteps returned toward the stairs.

He would not be able to hide this from her.

The seizure and its aftermath had stripped the capacity for concealment alongside everything else the curse had taken.

She would return, and she would look at him, and she would see a man whose hands would not stop shaking, whose spine required a wall, whose body had crossed a threshold it could not recross.

She would see that the investigation they had built together now moved on a timeline his body might not survive.

The mockingbird called again.

Delphine descended with a glass of water in one hand and a damp cloth in the other.

Her eyes found him before her feet reached the first stair—his position against the wall, the hands in his lap, the tremor that had not subsided in her absence.

She registered the full inventory in the seconds it took her to cross the landing.

Her jaw tightened. The tendon in her neck rose against the skin.

She sat on the stair above him, placed the glass between her knees, took his right hand, and pressed the damp cloth against the burned palm. The coolness cut through the throb. She held the compress in place and did not rush.

“The shaking is worse,” she said.

“Yes.”

“The mark?”

“Climbed back the moment you left.”

She placed his wrapped hand in his lap and moved the glass to the stair beside his hip. Then she settled her palm against his forearm.

The beacon dropped—lower than it had the first time, lower than the register it had held before the seizure began. Her palm met less resistance now. The pressure behind his eyes receded. The tremor in his left hand slowed, stuttered, and steadied to a vibration he could tolerate.

His right hand, wrapped in the damp cloth, rested against his thigh. Delphine placed her free hand over his left and pressed his fingers flat.

They sat while the stairs dimmed around them and the live oak threw its moving patterns across the wall. The mockingbird had gone quiet. Traffic on Esplanade had thinned to the interval between rush and evening, and the block held a stillness that the city rarely permitted.

“In the basement on Tchoupitoulas,” he said. “Your hand on my chest. The crime scene on North Prieur. Your hand on my arm. Tonight.” He looked at her palm. “Every time the curse escalates, your contact brings it down.”

“I know.”

“That should not be possible. The curse was designed by someone who understood my body—what it carries, how it functions. Maman’s wards affect the signal. Her preparations can dampen it. But your touch does what the wards cannot. It does not block the output. It changes the output’s character.”

Delphine’s fingers flexed against the mark.

“I am not going to theorize about why my hand on you affects the curse,” she said. “I am going to observe that it does. And I am going to use that observation the way I use every piece of evidence—practically.”

The corner of his mouth lifted. The expression hurt. Every muscle in his face had locked during the seizure, and they had not fully released.

“You are the most practical person I have ever known.”

“You have known people for two hundred years. The bar should be higher.”

He reached for her hand. His fingers closed around hers, and her hand tightened in his.

“I cannot do this without you.” The words arrived without preamble, without qualification, without the measured framing he applied to statements that carried risk.

“The curse is accelerating. The cage is completing. And the only counter I have found to what it does to me is you. Sitting on a staircase. Holding my hand.”

Delphine did not blink.

“Then you will not do it without me,” she said.

She leaned forward and pressed her lips to his forehead. The kiss lasted three seconds. Her mouth carried none of the hunger their kisses usually held—only steadiness, only the weight of a decision she would not revisit.

She pulled back.

“We need to eat,” she said. “And you need to drink that water. And then we need to call Maman and tell her the cage is moving faster than we thought.”

“In that order?”

“In that order.”

She rose and extended her hand. He took it. She braced herself against the banister and pulled, and he stood, and his legs held.

They climbed the remaining stairs together. Her shoulder pressed against his arm. The four-inch gap they had maintained through weeks of walking side by side had closed, and neither of them restored it.

The kitchen held the last of the light. The live oak filtered it across the table and the coffeepot and the corkboard on the far wall where eight faces watched from their positions around his name.

Delphine filled a second glass from the tap and brought it to him.

Their fingers overlapped on the ceramic, and the overlap lasted.

He drank. The water washed the burned mineral taste from his mouth and carried the coolness into his chest.

Delphine pulled her phone from her pocket and dialed. She held it between them so he could hear the ringing, the click when Maman answered, so the three of them occupied the same moment.

“It’s accelerating,” Delphine said. “We need you.”

Bastien stood in the kitchen with the glass in his hand and the beacon humming along his forearm and Delphine beside him, speaking into the phone with the authority of someone who had accepted a position she had not applied for and would not relinquish.

He placed his hand over hers on the counter.

Whatever came next, it came for both of them.

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