
- 352 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
The author of The Hunger delivers a “daring, soaring, and ultimately gut-wrenching” (The New York Times) conclusion to her critically acclaimed Taker Trilogy, bringing Lanore McIlvrae to a final encounter with Adair, her powerful nemesis.
Dismayed by Adair’s otherworldly powers and afraid of his passionate temper, Lanore has run from him across time, even imprisoning him behind a wall for two centuries to save Jonathan, her eternal love. But instead of punishing her for her betrayal, Adair declared his love for Lanore once more and set her free.
Now, Lanore has tracked Adair to his mystical island home to ask for one last favor. The Queen of the Underworld is keeping Jonathan as her consort, and Lanore wants Adair to send her to the hereafter so that she may beg for his release. Will she honor her promise to return to Adair? Or is her true intention to be reunited with Jonathan at any cost?
Dismayed by Adair’s otherworldly powers and afraid of his passionate temper, Lanore has run from him across time, even imprisoning him behind a wall for two centuries to save Jonathan, her eternal love. But instead of punishing her for her betrayal, Adair declared his love for Lanore once more and set her free.
Now, Lanore has tracked Adair to his mystical island home to ask for one last favor. The Queen of the Underworld is keeping Jonathan as her consort, and Lanore wants Adair to send her to the hereafter so that she may beg for his release. Will she honor her promise to return to Adair? Or is her true intention to be reunited with Jonathan at any cost?
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Yes, you can access The Descent by Alma Katsu in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literature General. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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ONE

The sunlight glinting off the Mediterranean that afternoon was bright enough to blind, and the boat bounced hard off the waves like a broken-down carnival ride. Iād come halfway around the world to find someone who was very important to me, and I wouldnāt let a little rough weather keep me from finishing my journey. I squinted against the headwind to the horizon, trying to will a rocky shoreline to appear out of nowhere.
āIs it much farther?ā I asked the captain.
āSignorina, until I met you this morning, I never knew this island even existed, and I have lived on Sardegna my entire life.ā He was in his fifties if he was a day. āWe must wait until we get to the coordinates, and then we will see what we shall see.ā
My stomach floated unsteadily, due to nerves and not the waves. I had to trust that the island would be where it was supposed to be. Iād seen strange things in my lifetimeāmy long lifetimeāmany of them stranger than the sudden appearance of an island that heretofore had not existed. That would be a relatively minor miracle, on the scale of such things, considering Iād already lived over two hundred years and was destined to live forever. But I was a mere babe compared to the man I was going to see, Adair, the man who had given meāor burdened me, depending on your point of viewāwith eternal life. His age was inestimable. He couldāve been a thousand years old, or older. Heād given differing stories every time we met, including the occasion of our last parting four years ago. Had he been a student of medicine in medieval times, devoted to science and caught in the thrall of alchemy, intent on discovering new worlds? Or was he a heartless manipulator of lives and souls, a man without a conscience who was interested only in extending his life for the pursuit of pleasure? I didnāt think Iād gotten the truth yet.
We had a tangled history, Adair and I. He had been my lover and my teacher, master to my slave. We had literally been prisoner to each other. Somewhere along the way he fell in love with me, but I was too afraid to love him in return. Afraid of his unexplainable powers, and his furious temper. Afraid of what I knew he was capable of and afraid to learn he was already guilty of committing far worse. I ran away to follow a safer path with a man I could understand. I always knew, however, that my path would one day lead back to Adair.
Which is how I came to be in a small fishing boat, far off the Italian coast. I wrapped my sweater more tightly around my shoulders and rode along with the shipās rocking, and closed my eyes for a momentās rest from the glare. I had shown up at the harbor in Olbia looking to hire a boat to take me to an island everyone said didnāt exist. āName your price,ā I said when Iād gotten tired of being ridiculed. Of the boat owners who were suddenly interested, he seemed the kindest.
āHave you been to this area before? Corsica, perhaps?ā he asked, trying either to make small talk or to figure out what I expected to find at this empty spot in the Mediterranean Sea.
āNever,ā I answered. The wind tossed my blond curls into my face.
āAnd your friend?ā He meant Adair. Whether he was my friend or not, I didnāt know. Weād parted on good terms, but he could be mercurial. There was no telling what mood heād be in the next time we met.
āI think heās lived here for a few years,ā I answered.
Even though it appeared that Iād piqued the captainās interest, there was nothing more to say, and so the captain busied himself with the GPS and the shipās controls, and I went back to staring over the water. We had cleared La Maddalena Island and now faced open sea.
Before long, a black speck appeared on the horizon. āSanta Maria,ā the captain muttered under his breath as he checked the GPS again. āI tell you, signorina, I sail through this area every day and I have never seen thatāāhe pointed at the landmass, growing in size as we approachedāābefore in my life.ā
As we got closer, the island took shape, forming a square rock that jutted up out of the sea like a pedestal. Waves crashed against it on all sides. From the distance, there didnāt appear to be a house on the island, nor any people.
āWhere is the dock?ā the captain asked me, as though Iād know. āThere is no way to put you ashore if there is no dock.ā
āSail all the way around,ā I suggested. āPerhaps thereās something on the other side.ā
He brought his little boat around and we circled slowly. On the second side was another cliff, and on the third, a steep slope dropped precipitously to a stony and unwelcoming beach. On the fourth side, however, there was a tiny floating dock tethered to a rock outcropping, and a rickety set of sunburnt stairs leading to a stone house.
āCan you get close to the dock?ā I shouted into the captainās ear to be heard above the wind. He gave me an incredulous look, as though only a crazy person would consider climbing onto the floating platform.
āWould you like me to wait for you?ā he asked as I prepared to climb over the side of the boat. When I shook my head, he protested, āSignorina, I cannot leave you here! We donāt know if it is safe. The island could be desertedĀ .Ā .Ā .ā
āI have faith in myĀ .Ā .Ā . friend. Iāll be fine. Thank you, Captain,ā I said, and leapt onto the weatherworn wooden dock, which bucked against the waves. He looked absolutely apoplectic, his eyes bulging as I climbed the staircase, gripping the railing as I struggled against the wind. When I got to the top, I waved to him, signaling that he should go, and watched as his boat turned back the way we had come.
The island was exactly as it had appeared from the sea. It seemed carved from one lump of black stone that had emerged directly from the ocean floor. It had no vegetation except for a stand of scraggy pines and a bright chartreuse carpet of moss spread at their roots. A few goats ran by and seemed to regard me with an amused, knowing air before they scampered out of sight. They had long, silky coats of many colors and one had a frightening pair of twisted horns, wicked-looking enough to be worn by the devil.
I turned to the house, so ancient and solid that it seemed to have grown straight from the bedrock of the island. The house was a curious thing, its stone walls so sandblasted by weather that it was impossible to tell much about it, including when it mightāve been built, though it resembled a fortressāsmall and compact yet just as imposing. The front door was a big slab of wood that had been thoroughly dried and bleached by the sun. It had elaborate ironwork hinges and was decorated with iron studs in the Moorish style, and gave the impression that it could withstand anything, even a battering ram. I lifted the knocker and brought it down once, twice, three times.
When I heard nothing from the other side of the door, however, I started to wonder if maybe Iād made a mistake. What if the captain had misread his charts and left me on the wrong islandāwhat if Adair had moved back to civilization on the mainland by now? Iād tracked him down through a man named Pendleton whoād acted as Adairās servant until Adair chose to go into seclusion. While Pendleton wasnāt sure what had caused Adair to withdraw from the world, he gave me coordinates to the island, which he admitted was so small that it appeared on no maps. He warned me there was no easy way to get in touch with Adair, as he didnāt use email and didnāt seem to have a phone. I had no intention of alerting him to my arrival anywayāforce of habit made me wary of Adair still, but I also didnāt want to risk being put off or dissuaded from coming.
I knew Adair was somewhere in the area, though, because I felt his presence, the unceasing signal that connected him to each of the people heād gifted with eternal life. The presence felt like an electronic droning in my consciousness that wouldnāt stop. It would fall off when he was far awayāas it had the last four yearsāor grow stronger when he was close. This was the strongest it had been in a whileāand was competing with the butterflies in my stomach in anticipation of seeing him again.
I was distressed to hear that Adair was living by himself, particularly because it was such a remote location. Now that I saw the island, I was more worried still. The house looked as though it had no electricity or running water, not unlike where he mightāve lived in the eighteenth century. I wondered if this return to a way of life that was familiar to him could be a sign that he was overwhelmed by the present and couldnāt cope with the never-ending onslaught of the new. And for our kind, retreating into the past was never good.
I sought out Adair now after four years apart only because Iād been seized by an idea that I wanted to put into action, and I needed his help to make it work. I had no notion, however, if he still cared for me enough to help me, or if his love had dried up when it went unreciprocated.
I knocked again, louder. If worse came to worst, I could find a way into his house and wait for Adair to return. It seemed an arduous trip to make for nothing. Given my immortal condition, it wasnāt as though I needed anything to live on, food or water, or that I couldnāt deal with the cold (though there was split wood stacked against the side of the house and three chimneys, each with multiple lots, visible on the roof). If he didnāt return after a reasonable length of time, I had my cell phone and the harbormasterās number, though the captain had warned me that reception was nearly impossible to get this far off the coast. If I was lucky, however, I might be able to flag down a passing boatĀ .Ā .Ā .
The door flung back at that instant, and to my surprise, a thin woman with brassy blond hair stood before me. She was in her late twenties, I would guess, and though pretty, she was worn around the edges in a way that made me think sheād worked hard at enjoying life. She had on a wrinkled sundress and sandals, and hoop earrings that were big enough to wear as bracelets. Unsurprisingly, she regarded me with suspicion.
āOh! Iām sorryāI hope Iām not on the wrong island,ā I said, regaining my wits in time to remember to be charming, all the while thinking: In seclusion, my ass, Pendleton. āIām looking for a man by the name of Adair. I donāt suppose thereās anyone here by that name?ā
She cut me off so sharply that I almost didnāt get the last word out. āIs he expecting you?ā She spoke with a working-class British accent. Over her shoulder, a second woman stepped into view at the other end of the hall, a full-figured woman with long dark-brown hair. Her skirt came down to her ankles and she wore embroidered Turkish slippers on her feet. Aside from their shared displeasure at seeing me, the pair of young women was physically as dissimilar as two women could be.
āNo, he doesnāt know I was coming, but weāre old friends andāā
The two of them crowded the doorway now, shoulder to shoulder, a barricade of crossed arms and frowns set on lipsticked mouths. Up close like this, I could see that they were very pretty. The blonde was like a model, thin and boyish, while the brunette was lush and womanly, and a picture of them in bed with Adair came to my mind unbidden, the three in a tangle of bare arms and legs, heavy breasts and silken flanks. Their lips on his chest and groin, and his head thrown back in pleasure. A wave of hurt passed over me, tinged with that particular sense of belittlement rarely felt out of adolescence. I fought the urge to turn around and flee.
Had I been wrong to come here? No, knowing Adair hadnāt changed and had returned to his sybaritic ways made my task easier. There would be no strings, no possibility of reconciliation. I could forget about everything except asking for Adairās help.
āLook, girls,ā I started, shifting the weight of the knapsack in my hands. āWould you mind if I came inside to get out of this wind before Iām blown off a cliff? And if one of you would be so kind as to let Adair know that he has a visitor? My name isāā
āLanore.ā His voice rang in my ear, rushing to fill a space left empty. And then he appeared at the end of the hall, a shadowy figure backlit by the sun. My heart raced, being in his presence once again. Adair, the man whoād hurt and deceived me, loved and exalted me, brought a man back from the dead for me, given me all of time in the hope I would share it with him. Did he still love me enough to help me?
As I stood in Adairās magnetic presence, everything that had happened between us rushed back to me in a tumult, all that passion and anger and hurt. The chaos of the strange world I had known when Iād lived with him tugged at me. I stood at his door ready to ask him to take a journey with meāa journey that wasnāt without risk. The bond between us might be ruined forever. Still, I had no choice. No one else could help me.
A new chapter in our history was about to begin.
TWO

The girls stepped aside without a word, making room for Adair as he approached the front door. I could see him better as he moved out of the sunlight. I knew, of course, that physically, he would be unchanged from the last time Iād seen him. He was the same height and weight. His face was the same, with those arresting, wolfish eyes of green and gold. He wore his beard a little thicker, and had grown his curly dark hair to his shoulders, though at the moment it was held back in a loose plait. The only changeāand it was strikingāwas in his manner.
Adair was one of those people who came off from the first as aggressive and intimidating, the kind of man who naturally set other alpha males bristling. Menace always seemed to crackle just under the surface, and once you got to know him, it only got worse. His moods were changeable and you were never quite sure where you stood with him. Remarkably, that tension was now nearly gone. His natural aggression was nearly undetectable. He was subdued, though I suppose it mightāve been from the shock of seeing me.
āI canāt believe you came backāā Adair began, his voice full of emotion, but then stopped himself. He reached for my hand and drew me over the threshold, continuing in a more restrained fashion. āCome in, donāt stand outside. A person could be killed by the wind out there.ā
āI hope Iām not intruding,ā I said as I squeezed past the two women, who stared down on me coldly.
āNot at all. We donāt often get visitorsāas you can imagine, given the isolationāso your arrival is a surprise, thatās all.ā Adair closed the door, and the four of us looked at one another awkwardly. āWell, I should introduce everyone. Robin, Terry, this is Lanore McIlvrae, an old friend of mine. And, Lanore, this isāā
āRobin and Terry, yes.ā Terry was the brunette, Robin the blonde. They took turns shaking my hand limply, as though the last thing they wanted to do was to let me into their house.
āHow long has it been since you last saw each other?ā Terry asked, arching an eyebrow at Adair, her arms folded over her ample chest.
āFour years,ā I answered.
āIt seemsālonger,ā Adair offered.
The women made no attempt to mask their hostility, and I started to feel that Iād made a bad mistake by coming without warning. They both oozed sexualityāyou could tell by their dress and body languageāand I could only speculate as to what I mightāve interrupted. Before I could sputter another apology for the intrusion, however, Adair asked, āWill you be staying?ā and gestured to the knapsack I was holding before adding, āOh, of course you will. I shouldnāt even bother to ask: unless you have a boat at the dock or someone coming back for you soon, youāll need to stay overnight, at least. Though youāre welcome to stay as long as you wish.ā
āI realize this is terribly inconvenient of me, showing up unannounced,ā I said, looking gratefully at the girls before turning back to Adair. āThis isnāt purely a social call. Thereās a reason why Iām here, Adair. I need to talk to you.ā
His expression darkened immediately. āIt must be important for you to have made this journey. Shall we do that now? We can go to my studyāā
Robin sighed irritably, shaking her head as she reached for my knapsack. āFor pityās sake, did someone die or something? Surely that can wait till later. We should get you settled, find you a room first.ā She then started up the stairs without waiting for anyone to agree. He gave me a nod, indicating I should follow. I was sorry to leave him so soon but followed the blonde, the soles of...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Prologue
- Chapter One
- Chapter Two
- Chapter Three
- Chapter Four
- Chapter Five
- Chapter Six
- Chapter Seven
- Chapter Eight
- Chapter Nine
- Chapter Ten
- Chapter Eleven
- Chapter Twelve
- Chapter Thirteen
- Chapter Fourteen
- Chapter Fifteen
- Chapter Sixteen
- Chapter Seventeen
- Chapter Eighteen
- Chapter Nineteen
- Chapter Twenty
- Chapter Twenty-One
- Chapter Twenty-Two
- Chapter Twenty-Three
- Chapter Twenty-Four
- Acknowledgments
- Readers Group Guide
- About Alma Katsu
- Copyright