her. âDaisy?â he said. âAre you all right?â
His nickname for her. He hadnât forgotten.
âJust clumsy.â She looked around ruefully. âI was hoping for a more gracious arrival.â
âNothing to worry about.â He smiled, and her heart turned over. âThe pavements of South Kensington are vicious. Iâve been attacked by them more than once myself.â
Make a clever response, she told herself. Say something witty.
But he had already turned away, inclining his head toward Alastair. James and Alastair had not liked each other at school, Cordelia knew, though her mother did not. Sona thought Alastair had been very popular.
âI see youâre here, Alastair.â Jamesâs voice was curiously flat. âAnd you lookââ
He eyed Alastairâs bright yellow-white hair with some astonishment. Cordelia waited for him to continue, with great hope that he would say you look like a turnip , but he didnât.
âYou look well,â he finished.
The boys looked at each other in silence as Lucie raced down the steps and threw her arms around Cordelia. âI am so very, very delighted to see you!â she said, in her breathless way. For Lucie, everything was always very, very, very something, be it beautiful or exciting or horrid. âDarling Cordelia, we shall have so much funââ
âLucie, Cordelia and her family have come to London so that you and Cordelia can train together,â said Tessa in her gentle voice. âIt will be a great deal of work and responsibility.â
Cordelia glanced down at her shoes. Tessa was being kind in repeating the story that the Carstairs had come to London in a hurry because of Cordelia and Lucie needing to be parabatai , but that wasnât the truth.
âWell, you must remember being sixteen yourself, Mrs. Herondale,â said Sona. âYoung girls adore dances and dresses. I certainly did when I was their age, and I imagine you did as well.â
Cordelia knew this was entirely not true about her mother butkept her mouth shut. Tessa arched her eyebrows. âI do recall attending a vampire frolic once. And some sort of party at Benedict Lightwoodâs house, before he got demon pox and turned into a worm, of courseââ
âMother!â Lucie said, scandalized.
âWell, he did turn into a worm,â said James. âReally more of a vicious, giant serpent. It was entirely one of the most interesting parts of history class.â
Tessa was saved further comment by the arrival of the removersâ vans carrying the Carstairsâ belongings. Several large men leaped down from one of the vans and went to pull back the canvas covering the various furniture pieces, which had been fastidiously roped down.
One of the men assisted Risa, Sonaâs ladyâs maid and cook, down from the first of the vans. Risa had worked for the Jahanshah family when Sona was in her teens and had been with her ever since. She was a mundane who had the Sight, and thus a valuable companion for a Shadowhunter. Risa spoke only Persian; Cordelia wondered whether the men in the van had tried to make conversation with her. Risa understood English perfectly, but she liked her silence.
âPlease thank Cecily Lightwood for me, for the loan of her domestic help,â Cordeliaâs mother was saying to Tessa.
âOh, indeed! They will come on Tuesdays and Thursdays to do the rough, until you can find suitable servants of your own,â Tessa replied.
âThe roughâ was everything Risaâwho cooked, shopped, and helped Sona and Cordelia with their clothesâwould not be expected to do, like scrubbing the floors or caring for the horses. The idea that the Carstairs were planning to hire their own servants soon was another polite fiction, Cordelia knew. When they left Devon, Sona had let all the servants go, save for Risa, as they weretrying to conserve as much money as