The Library (The Librarian of Alexandria Book 1) Casey White (classic books for 13 year olds txt) š
- Author: Casey White
Book online Ā«The Library (The Librarian of Alexandria Book 1) Casey White (classic books for 13 year olds txt) šĀ». Author Casey White
If he was wrong, then Olivia was a snake. But sheād be a snake inside the Library, where he could watch her every move. Where Alexandria herself could kibosh anything she might attempt. And, well, it was Alexandria. What would Olivia do? Try and kill him? He snorted, earning a sidelong glance from Leon. He was at his very strongest inside the Library. Itād be a foolās errand to attack him there.
Should Olivia be trying anything, heād have the easiest time spotting it there. And then he could just kick her out. He wasnāt out anything. He nodded, smiling to himself.
So be it. Sheād get her day inside their walls.
Leon glanced up at him as he turned in his seat, stowing the papers back into a pocket of his coat and rejoining the conversation, but didnāt say anything. Owl nodded. āWeāre good,ā he murmured, quiet enough he wouldnāt disturb the others, and Leon returned the nod.
His mind was made up. From there, itād be up to Olivia.
Jamesā and Mayaās chatter filled the quiet of the Library, smoothing over his worry just a little as the night carried on.
- Chapter Thirty-Two -
Dead grass crunched under his feet.
Daniel walked up the field, his eyes on the ground. He wasnāt entirely alone. Here and there, he could spot other people dotting the landscape. A couple, here and there. An old man, all the way down on the end. None of them gave him a second look - and so he didnāt disturb them, either.
They were all here for the same reason. Some privacy was the least he could offer. Swallowing hard, he lifted his face.
And let his gaze sweep over the rows of headstones.
Sheād lived near here. Heād been sure of that for a long time. It was the only answer that made sense, unless he was to believe sheād have driven around the country looking for a hapless little boy to whisk away into Alexandria. He might be angry with his predecessor, but...
The memories he had of the black-masked woman were warm. His recollections were foggy, blurred by centuries until only fragments remained, but sheād...sheād helped him. Looked after him. He could remember her laughter, even amid the haze.
Someone like that...he couldnāt believe sheād have planned everything out to that extent. Which meant that heād been a final, convenient choice. And that meant that after sheād died...He sighed, licking his lips and coming to a stop.
Sheād be here. Somewhere.
āWish theyād been more specific,ā Daniel mumbled, looking down to the note heād made before leaving the house. Heād found the article easily enough. It wasnāt hard, once he had her name and the motivation to look. He was the Librarian, after all. Her obituary had been...brief. Sparse. But among the little it had contained, heād found the name of the cemetery sheād been buried in. That was all he had to go on. He ground his teeth together, reading one headstone after another. He couldnāt very well ask anyone, after all. He wasnāt family. Sheād died when he was a kid. Itād look weird - and if anyone else knew she existed, the absolute last thing he needed was a story lingering about some weird twenty-something guy asking after her grave.
No. Heād do this the hard way, even if it took him hours. Daniel shoved his hands into his pockets, trudging farther into the cemetery.
Row after row slipped past, filled with lovely markers that were very much not what he needed. The sun beat down from overhead, bright and hot despite the autumn chill beginning to settle over the region. Jaw clamped shut, he kept walking, until-
Until he passed a marker, all the way in the back corner of the cemetery, with a name on it that brought him up short.
A leaden weight sank in his chest. Heād...part of him had hoped he wouldnāt find it here. That the whole thing had been a false lead, a bit of fiction. Itād be easier if he could brush everything off as just a fast-fading dream and keep moving forward.
But it was here. She was here.
Trees pushed in around the edges of the field around the plot, scraggly and unkempt this far back into the cemetery. The lonely grave was no better. Dead leaves lay scattered across it, pockmarked by weeds. Daniel sighed, crouching down beside it.
Sheād been married. The obituary had said that, too. Once upon a time, sheād had people who cared about her.
But her grave was alone, no partner alongside her. Maybe sheād simply gone first, he reasoned. Maybe somewhere out there, a Mr. Morris clung to life, ancient and wrinkled.
Looking at the disheveled grave, though, he knew that no one had been here in years.
He leaned forward, gritting his teeth, and started to work. If heād have known, heād have brought a rake. Heād have brought gloves, or sturdy shoes, or anything that might have helped him. He didnāt. But the job needed doing anyway.
Weeds crumpled under his hand as he grabbed one after another. The leaves, he mashed up in his fist, dumping them back into the woods. It didnāt look...it didnāt look good, but little by little, her grave returned to āpassableā.
When heād done all he could, Daniel flopped down onto the grass, folding his legs up. He stared at the ground, his thoughts in turmoil.
Finally, he lifted his eyes to the marker.
Jeanās name stared back at him - just her name, and her dates. It didnāt tell him a damn thing about who she was, or what sheād liked, or why sheād let things get to the point she had to settle for a random boy she stole from his family instead of a proper apprentice.
But
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