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Danielle Trussoni - Angelopolis

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Danielle Trussoni Angelopolis

Angelopolis: summary, description and annotation

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A stunning follow-up to the best-seller Angelology. . . Part historical novel, fantasy, love story, thriller, and mystery. . . Its a must-read.
Booklist (starred review)
A New York Times bestseller and global sensation, Angelology unfurled a brilliant tapestry of myth and biblical lore on our present-day world and plunged two star-crossed heroes into an ancient battle against mankinds greatest enemy: the fatally attractive angel-human hybrids known as the Nephilim. With Angelopolis, the conflict deepens into an inferno of danger and passion unbound.
A decade has passed since Verlaine saw Evangeline alight from the Brooklyn Bridge, the sight of her new wings a betrayal that haunts him still. Now an elite angel hunter for the Society of Angelology, he pursues his mission with single-minded devotion: to capture, imprison, and eliminate her kind.
But when Evangeline suddenly appears on a twilit Paris street, Verlaine finds her nature to be unlike any of the other creatures he so mercilessly pursues, casting him into a spiral of doubt and confusion that only grows when she is abducted before his eyes by a creature who has topped the societys most-wanted list for more than a century. The ensuing chase drives Verlaine and his fellow angelologists from the shadows of the Eiffel Tower to the palaces of St. Petersburg and deep into the provinces of Siberia and the Black Sea coast, where the truth of Evangelines originsas well as forces that could restore or annihilate them alllie in wait.
Conceived against an astonishing fresh tableau of history and science, Angelopolis plumbs Russias imperial past, modern genetics, and ancient depictions of that most potent angelic appearancethe Annunciation of Gabrielin a high-octane tale of abduction, treasure seeking, and divine warfare as the fate of humanity once again hangs in the balance.

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ALSO BY DANIELLE TRUSSONI

Falling Through the Earth: A Memoir

Angelology

For Angela

Contents

One of the original branches of theology, angelology is achieved in the person of the angelologist, whose expertise includes both the theoretical study of angelic systems and their prophetic execution through human history.

And she began to speak to meso gently and softlywith angelic voice. Dante, Inferno

33 Champ de Mars, seventh arrondissement, Paris, 1983

T he scientist examined the girl, his fingers pressing into her skin. She felt his touch against her shoulder blades, the knobs of her spine, the flat of her back. The movements were deliberate, clinical, as if he expected to find something wrong with hera thirteenth rib or a second spine growing like an iron track alongside the original. The girls mother had told her to do as the scientist asked, and so she endured the prodding in silence: When he twisted a tourniquet around her arm she did not resist; when he traced the sinuous path of her vein with the tip of a needle she held still; when the needle slid under skin, and a rush of blood filled the barrel of the syringe, she pressed her lips together until she could no longer feel them. She watched the sunlight fall through the windows, blessing the sterile room with color and warmth, and felt a presence watching over her, as if a spirit had descended to guard her.

As the scientist filled three vials with blood, she closed her eyes and thought of her mothers voice. Her mother liked to tell her stories of enchanted kingdoms and sleeping beauties and brave knights ready to fight for good; she spoke of gods who transformed into swans and beautiful boys who blossomed into flowers and women who grew into trees; she whispered that angels existed on earth as well as in heaven, and that there were some people who, like the angels, could fly. The girl always listened to these stories, never quite knowing if they were true. But there was one thing she did believe: In every fairy tale, the princess woke and the swan transformed back into Zeus and the knight overcame evil. In a moment, with a wave of a wand or the casting of a spell, the nightmare ended and a new era began.

The First Circle

LIMBO

Alle des Refuzniks Eiffel Tower seventh arrondissement Paris 2010 V A - photo 1

Alle des Refuzniks, Eiffel Tower, seventh arrondissement, Paris, 2010

V . A. Verlaine pushed through the barrier of gendarmes, making his way toward the body. It was nearly midnight, the neighborhood deserted, and yet the entire perimeter of the Champ de Marsfrom the quai Branly to the avenue Gustave Eiffelhad been blocked by police cars, the red and blue lights pulsing through the darkness. A floodlight had been set up in a corner of the scene, the harsh illumination revealing a mutilated body resting in a pool of electric blue blood. The features of the victim were unreadable, the body broken and bloodied, her arms and legs angling at unnatural positions like branches cracked from a tree. The phrase ripped to shreds passed through Verlaines mind.

He had studied the creature as it died, watching the wings unfold over its body. Hed watched it shiver with pain, listening to its sharp, animal grunts as they dulled to a weak whine. The wounds were severea deep cut to the head and another to the chestand yet it seemed that the creature would never stop struggling, that its determination to survive was endless, that it would fight on and on, even as blood seeped over the ground in a thick dark syrup. Finally, a milky film had fallen over the creatures eyes, giving it the vacant stare of a lizard, and Verlaine knew the angel had died at last.

As he looked over his shoulder, his jaw grew tense. Beyond the ring of police stood every variety of creaturea living encyclopedia of beings who would kill him if they knew he could see them for what they were. He paused, assuming the cold, appraising position of a scholar as he cataloged the creatures in his mind: There were congregations of Mara angels, the beautiful and doomed prostitutes whose gifts were such a temptation to humans; Gusian angels, who could divine the past and the future; the Rahab angels, broken beings who were considered the untouchables of the angelic world. He could detect the distinguishing features of Anakim angelsthe sharp fingernails, the wide forehead, the slightly irregular skeletal structure. He saw it all with a relentless clarity that lingered in his mind even as he turned back to the frenzy surrounding the murder. The victims blood had begun to seep past the contours of the floodlight, oozing into the shadows. He tried to focus upon the ironwork of the Eiffel Tower, to steady himself, but the creatures consumed his attention. He could not take his eyes off their wings fluttering against the inky darkness of the night.

Verlaine had discovered his ability to see the creatures ten years before. The skill was a giftvery few people could actually see angel wings without extensive training. As it turned out, Verlaines flawed visionhe had worn glasses since the fifth grade and could hardly see a foot in front of himself without themallowed light into the eye in exactly the right proportion for him to see the full spectrum of angel wings. Hed been born to be an angel hunter.

Now Verlaine could not block out the colored light rising around the angelic creatures, the fields of energy that separated these beings from the flat, colorless spaces occupied by humans. He found himself tracking them as they moved around the Champ de Mars, noting their movements even while wishing to shut out their hallucinatory pull. Sometimes he was sure that he was going crazy, that the creatures were his personal demons, that he lived in a custom-made circle of hell in which an endless variety of devils were paraded before him, as if amassed for the purpose of taunting and torturing him.

But these were the kinds of thoughts that could land him in a sanitarium. He had to be careful to keep his balance, to remember that he saw things at a higher frequency than normal people, that his gift was something he must cultivate and protect even as it hurt him. Bruno, his friend and mentor, the man who had brought him from New York and trained him as an angel hunter, had given him pills to calm his nerves, and although Verlaine tried to take as few as possible, he found himself reaching for an enamel box in his jacket pocket and tapping out two white pills.

He felt a hand on his shoulder and turned. Bruno stood behind him, his expression severe. The cuts are indicative of an Emim attack, he said under his breath.

The charred skin confirms that, Verlaine said. He unbuttoned his jacketa vintage yellow 1970s polyester sport coat of questionable tasteand stepped close to the body. Does it have any kind of identification?

His mentor removed a wallet, its pale suede stained with blood, and began to sort through it. Suddenly Brunos expression changed. He held up a plastic card.

Verlaine took the card. It was a New York drivers license with a photo of a woman with black hair and green eyes. His heart beat hard in his chest as he realized that it belonged to Evangeline Cacciatore. He took a deep breath before turning back to Bruno.

Do you think this could really be her? Verlaine said, watching his bosss expression carefully. He knew that everythinghis relationship with Bruno, his connection to the Angelogical Society, the course of his life from that point forwardwould depend upon how he handled himself in the next ten minutes.

Evangeline is a human woman; this is a blue-blooded Nephil female, Bruno replied, nodding toward the bloody corpse between them. But be my guest.

Verlaine slid his fingers between the buttons of the victims trench coat, his hands trembling so hard he had to steady himself to make out the shape of her shoulders. The features of the woman were utterly unrecognizable.

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