That, and the more-than-occasional looks Mrs. Hancock cast their way.
The cricket talk did not stop at the end of supper, but continued in Fairfax’s room, a chat to which Titus was emphatically not invited.
He opened a cabinet next to his bed. Inside the cabinet was a late-model Hansen writing ball, a typewriter that resembled a mechanical porcupine, with keys arranged on a brass hemisphere. He loaded a sheet of paper into the semicylindrical frame beneath the hemisphere.
The keys began moving, driving the short pistons beneath them to form the words and sentences that made up Dalbert’s daily report to Titus.
The report, partly in shorthand, partly in code, would have made no sense to Titus’s schoolmates—or most mages, for that matter. But to Titus, a half page conveyed as much information as an entire English broadsheet.
Usually he was informed about the decisions of the government, but tonight there were no mentions of the regent or the prime minister. Instead Dalbert supplied what information he had gathered on Fairfax and her guardian.
Haywood had been born on the largest of the Siren Isles, a picturesque archipelago southwest of mainland Domain. His father had been the owner of a commercial fishing fleet, his mother a fishery conservation expert. The couple had three children: Helena, who died in childhood, Hyperion, who ran away from home at an early age, and at last Horatio, the high-achieving offspring to make any parent proud.
The records of his education were typical enough for a gifted and ambitious young man, culminating in his admission to the Conservatory, where his brilliance stood out even among a brilliant crowd. At the end of his third year, his parents passed away in rapid succession, and he began to run with a fast set. There were numerous minor infractions on his record, though his academic success remained undiminished.
The wildness came to an abrupt end when he assumed guardianship of an eleven-month-old baby named Iolanthe Seabourne. The little orphan had been under the care of an elderly great-great-aunt. When the old woman became ill, she had contacted the person named next in the late Seabournes’ will to take charge of the girl.
Interestingly enough, the guardianship had not been without minor controversy. Another friend of the Seabournes’ had stepped forward and claimed that before the child had been born, the Seabournes had asked to put her name in their will, as the one to care for their child in the unlikely event of their demise.
The will was brought out. Haywood’s name was in it, hers was not, and that was the end of the matter.
Everything seemed fine for a while, but seven years ago, Haywood was caught match-fixing intercollegiate polo games. He was relegated to a position at the Institute of Archival Magic, where he plagiarized one of the better-known research papers in recent memory. After he lost that post, he found work teaching at a second-tier school. Still unchastened, he accepted bribes from pupils in exchange for better marks.
Outrageous actions on his part, yet the memory keeper had not intervened.
As for the girl, she was a registered Elemental Mage III, uncommon but still far less rare than an Elemental Mage IV, one who controlled all four elements. Judging by her academic record, she had no intention of becoming a street busker—the choice of many elemental mages these days, eating fire before tourists for a living.
And interestingly enough, the deeper Haywood got himself into trouble, the better her marks became and the more effusive the praise from her schoolmasters. A desirable trait, this, the ability to subsume fear and frustration into a singular focus.
His door opened, and in charged Wintervale.
Titus crumpled the report and threw it into the grate. “We do not knock anymore?”
Wintervale grabbed him by the arm and dragged him to the window. “What the hell are those?”
The armored chariots were still there, motionless in the night air.
“Atlantis’s aerial vehicles. They have been there since before supper.”
“Why are they here?”
“I told you I met the Inquisitor today—must have run afoul of her,” said Titus. “Go ahead. Throw a rock at them and start your revolution.”
“I would if I could throw a rock that high. Aren’t they worried about being seen?”
“Why should they be? If anything, the English will think the Germans are up to no good.”
Wintervale shook his head. “I’d better go check on my mum again.”
“Give her my best.”
Titus waited a minute, then left his room to knock on Fairfax’s door. “It is Titus.”
“Come in,” she said, to his surprise.
She was in a long nightshirt, sitting barefoot on her bed, her back against the wall, playing with fire. The fire was in the form of a Chinese puzzle ball, one openwork sphere nestled inside another, and yet again another.
“You should not play with fire,” he said.
“Neither should you.” She did not look up. “I assume you are here to discuss freeing my guardian?”
Her voice was even. There was an almost preternatural calm about her, as if she knew precisely what she wanted to do with him.
When he was nowhere as certain what to do with her.
“Are you?” she pressed the point.
He had to remind himself that having sworn a blood oath to always tell the truth, he could no longer lie to her—at least not when asked a direct question.
“I came to get my spare wand back and to discuss your training. But we can talk about your guardian, too.”
She pulled the wand out from under her mattress and tossed it at him. “So let’s talk about him.”
“I am going back to the Domain in a few days. While I am there, I will arrange a visit to the Inquisitory to see how he is getting along.”
“Why don’t you order him released?”
She had asked the question to needle him. He had no such powers, not even if he were of age. “My influence over the Inquisitor is severely limited.”
“What can you do then?”
“I need to first see whether he is still in rescuable shape—he may or may not be, depending on what the Inquisitor has done to him.”
“What do you define as not being in rescuable shape?”
“If his mind has been completely destroyed, I will not run the risk of physically removing him from the Inquisitory. You will have to accept that you have lost him.”
“And if he is still all right?”
“Then I will need to plan—my goal has been to stay out of the Inquisitory, not to get in.”
“You can find out what you need easily enough, can’t you?”
“I can. But I would rather not be known to ask about it.”
“You don’t have anyone you can trust?”
He hesitated. “Not about you or any plans involving you—everyone has something to gain by betraying us.”
“I imagine a deceitful person such as you would see deceit everywhere,” she said, her voice sweet. “I can also imagine why no one would voluntarily risk anything for you.”
Her words pierced deep, like arrows from an English longbow.
Part of him wanted to shout that he longed for nothing more than trust and solidarity. But he could not deny the truth of her words. He was a creature of lies, his entire life defined by what others did not and could not know of him.
But things were supposed to be different with her—with Fairfax. They were to be comrades, their bond forged by shared dangers and a shared destiny. And now of all the people who despised him, she despised him the most.
“You see the difficulties involved in removing your guardian from the Inquisitory then,” he answered, hating how stiff he sounded. “That is, if he is found to be still sentient.”
“I will decide whether he still has enough mental capacity left to warrant a rescue.”