Chapter 1
Chapter 1
The third layer appeared at 11:47 p.m., which was the sort of precise time Ellery Wren trusted because it had been earned.
By then the conservation lab had gone properly quiet. Not silent—libraries were never silent, not even after hours—but reduced to its foundational sounds: the low hum of the dehumidifier in the corner, the faint electric whine of the UV lamp, the occasional sigh of old pipes behind stone walls. The room smelled of wheat-starch paste, deionized water, and the particular dry sweetness of parchment that had survived long enough to become temperamental about it.
Ellery preferred the lab at this hour. During the day there were emails and researchers and careful conversations about budgets, all of which were perfectly reasonable and therefore exhausting. At night there was only the work. A fifteenth-century psalter lay open before her on a foam cradle, its binding supported, its wounded pages lifted one by one with a bone folder so smooth it felt less like a tool than an extension of intention.
The visible text was a Latin psalm in a cramped, disciplined hand. Beneath it, as she had established the previous week under magnification and multispectral imaging, lay the ghost of an earlier life: a property record, scraped away and overwritten, its legal abbreviations still surfacing here and there like stubborn weeds through paving stones.
Ellery had loved palimpsests from the first time she met one. Most people saw damage or inconvenience. She saw argument. Conversation. The page refusing to be only one thing.
Tonight she was checking the lower gutter margin for residual moisture damage. The UV light flattened the world to blue-white and shadow; the page looked less like parchment than a winter pond with writing frozen into it. She slid the bone folder beneath the corner of the leaf, eased upward, and stopped.
There was something else beneath the legal text.
Not a stain. Not offsetting from another page. Not a conservator's wishful hallucination brought on by too much fluorescent light and too little dinner. Characters—if they were characters—shimmered under the scraped-away record in a script she had never seen and would not, if asked, have admitted was possible.
Ellery went very still.
The shapes were curved and angular at once, like letters designed by someone who had never accepted the distinction between line and motion. They did not sit obediently on the page. They moved. Not quickly; not in any way the eye could accuse of drama. They cycled. Shifted. Recombined in slow, rhythmic pulses, as though the page were conjugating itself through hidden tenses.
She blinked.
The layer vanished.
Ellery stared at the parchment until her eyes watered. The Latin remained. The legal ghosts remained. Nothing else.
“All right,” she said aloud to the page, because talking to manuscripts after eleven was either professionalism or an early warning sign, and she preferred not to inquire too closely. “Again.”
She adjusted the lamp angle. Nothing.
She changed the wavelength. Nothing.
She checked her glasses, though she knew perfectly well the problem was not her glasses. She pushed them back up her nose anyway. Then she leaned in without trying to seize the page with her attention, the way one sometimes saw a watermark only by looking through the paper instead of at it.
There.
The third layer returned, shy as an animal at the edge of woodland. A shimmer under the undertext. A grammar beneath the grammar beneath the grammar. She felt her pulse in her wrists.
It was not random. That much was immediate. The sequence repeated at intervals—four seconds, perhaps five—with slight modifications, as though each recurrence carried the memory of the last. She had the absurd impression that the page was not displaying writing but performing it.
Ellery reached for her notebook and made three quick sketches before the characters slipped again beyond focus. The sketches were useless. What she drew looked like decorative notation for an instrument no one had built.
She spent the next hour trying, with increasing scientific dignity and decreasing hope of preserving it, to reproduce the sighting under controlled conditions. Direct UV. Indirect UV. Lamp off, desk light on. Desk light off, emergency bench light only. Looking straight at the page. Looking slightly to the left. Looking while holding her breath. Looking while not being ridiculous.
The third layer came and went according to laws that either had not yet been published in the conservation literature or were personal to it and therefore unlikely to submit to peer review.
At half past twelve she sat back on her stool, flexed her stiff fingers, and looked around the empty lab as if someone else might have arrived to witness the impossible while she was occupied being methodical. Rows of tools gleamed softly in their trays. Bone folders, microspatulas, sable brushes, weights wrapped in smooth cotton. The cabinets along the wall stood with the reserved patience of institutions that believe, not incorrectly, that they will outlast everyone presently employed by them.
On the bench, the psalter waited. Under ordinary light it looked entirely innocent.
Ellery closed it with both hands, more gently than necessary. A fifteenth-century binding remembered every indignity, and she had no intention of adding herself to its list.
She signed the treatment log, wrote a note to herself that was terse enough to preserve her professional reputation even if found by others—Possible unidentified luminescent subtext under UV; re-examine tomorrow—and gathered her coat, scarf, satchel, and the vague feeling that the world had shifted a fraction of an inch while she wasn't looking directly at it.
Outside, Edinburgh in November had decided to be made of stone and cold. The night air struck her face cleanly enough to feel edited. She walked uphill through the Old Town with her hands in her pockets and her mind replaying the page in loops: Latin, legal record, third layer. Beneath beneath. Not metaphorically. Literally.
The city at this hour suited her. Closes opened and closed like parentheses. Windows glowed over wynds that had gone dark centuries before electricity was invented and somehow still seemed to remember that. Edinburgh had always felt to Ellery less built than overwritten: medieval insistence beneath Georgian confidence, volcanic force beneath both. A city in palimpsest.
She passed the Vennel steps, then slowed at the corner where McKinnon’s Used and Rare kept its window display. She walked by this shop nearly every day and had formed the sort of fond, unexamined attachment one forms to a place that appears to believe in the same things one does. Tonight the display made her stop dead on the pavement.
The books were arranged by colour.
Not casually, not with the decorative eye of someone who wanted the window to look pleasing in an Instagrammable sort of way. Deliberately. Cover-spines passing from red through orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet with the exacting confidence of a spectrum. Ellery stared at it, irritated with herself for never having noticed before. She would have sworn, if asked this morning, that the display changed according to subject or staff whim or no system at all.
Now the chromatic order was unmistakable.
And beneath it—
She stepped closer until her breath fogged the glass.
Across the spines, ghosting in and out just beyond direct sight, the same shimmer she had seen in the psalter moved like light under water. Characters beneath titles. A second arrangement beneath the visible one, more intricate than the gradient and somehow using it, as if the colours were not decorative but functional. Not books in a shop window. Something arranged according to a principle she almost, almost understood.
A taxi hissed past on wet road. Somewhere behind her a bottle bin received a contribution with impressive commitment. The ordinary city continued to ordinary-city itself. Ellery remained motionless on the pavement for three full minutes, watching the hidden layer flicker through the familiar one.
When she finally turned away, it was not because curiosity had been satisfied. It had become something larger and less manageable than curiosity, something with a draft to it, as though a door had opened somewhere nearby and the cold coming through was not weather but depth.
Her flat was small, top-floor, and lined with books to a degree her mother would have called hereditary. Ellery made tea because this was what one did in the presence of the inexplicable if one had been raised properly. She carried the mug to the armchair by the window, set it on a side table already occupied by three open books and a stack of articles on manuscript adhesives, and opened the notebook in which she had sketched the third layer.
The marks on the page were stubbornly inadequate. They had the irritating quality of notes taken in a dream and examined while awake.
She took off her glasses, rubbed the bridge of her nose, and looked down at her right hand around the mug. The gold signet ring her grandmother had worn all her life caught the lamplight—a small, warm glint. The engraved pattern on its face had never quite made sense to Ellery. Not floral, not heraldic, not geometric. She had spent years assuming it represented some family symbol she had simply failed to identify.
Tonight, with the memory of the moving script fresh behind her eyes, the engraving looked less like ornament and more like a fragment.
Not of any alphabet she knew.
Her tea cooled. The city settled around her. On the table, the notebook lay open like evidence waiting for a better question.
Ellery did not sleep much that night. Whenever she drifted off she saw the psalter page again, but not as it had been under the lamp. In the dream the page deepened infinitely, one text beneath another beneath another, each visible through the next, and she had the distinct, absurd certainty that if she could only learn how to look properly, the whole world would do the same.