latter in midflight.
It was stupid to vault onto a moving object. It was suicidal when the moving object was two hundred feet in the air. But if his presence was to be deduced no matter what, then he preferred to be caught flying, which would allow him to claim that he had never set foot on the ground.
He sighted Marble, sucked in a deep breath, and vaulted where he hoped she would be.Â
He rematerialized in thin air, with nothing under him. His heart stopped. A fraction of a second later, he crashed onto something hardâMarbleâs back. Relief tore through him. But there was no time to indulge in the shaking exhaustion of having cheated death. He was too far aft. Shouting at Marble to keep steady, he scrambled forward along her smooth spine, even as he pointed his wand at the house to erase the impassable circle.
Already there had been a cluster of villagers gathered outside the circle, discussing among themselves whether they ought to go in. The removal of the circle lifted all such inhibitions. The villagers rushed into the house.
Titus had no sooner grabbed the reins than the Inquisitor and her entourage arrived. A moment later, her second in command raised a formal hail.Â
Titus took his time descending, applying miscellaneous cleaning spells to his person as he did so: it would defeat the purpose of his stunt to appear before the Inquisitor with the detritus of the house still clinging to him.Â
There was an open field behind the house. Marbleâs wings swept close to the ground, forcing the Inquisitorâs retainers to throw themselves down, lest they be impaled by the spikes that protruded from the front of those wingsânatural spikes that Titusâs grooms had polished into stiletto-sharp points.
Marble was now on her feet, but Titus did not dismount: the Inquisitor, in a deliberate slight, was not yet present to receive him. He took out two apples from the saddlebag, tossed one to Marble, and took a bite of the other. His heart, which had not yet slowed to normal, began to beat faster again.
The Inquisitor was an extractor of secrets, and he had too many of them.
Out of the corner of his eye, he saw the Inquisitor emerge from the rear door of the house. Marble hissedâof course a beast as intelligent as Marble would hate the Inquisitor. Titus kept on eating the appleâat a leisurely paceâand dismounted only after he tossed aside the core.
The Inquisitor bowed.Â
Appearances were still keptâAtlantis enjoyed pretending that it was not a tyrant, but merely first among equals. Therefore Titus, despite not having a dram of real power, reigned nevertheless as the Master of the Domain; and the Inquisitor, a representative of Atlantis, was officially of no more importance than any other ambassador from any other realm.Â
âMadam Inquisitor, an unexpected pleasure,â he addressed her.Â
His palms perspired, but he kept his tone haughty. His was a lineage that stretched back a thousand years to Titus the Great, unifier of the Domain and one of the greatest mages to ever wield a wand. The Inquisitorâs parents had been, if he was not mistaken, traders of antique goodsâand not necessarily genuine ones.Â
Ancestry was an indicator of little importance when it came to a mageâs individual abilitiesâarchmages often came from families of otherwise middling accomplishment. But ancestry mattered to the average mage, and it especially mattered to the Inquisitor, though she was no average mage. Titus reminded her as often as he could that he was a vain, self-important boy who would have been nothing and no one had he not been born into the once-illustrious House of Elberon.
âUnexpected indeed, Your Highness,â replied the Inquisitor. âThe Midsouth March is remote from your usual haunts.â
She was in her early forties, pale, with thin, red lips, almost invisible eyebrows, and eerily colorless eyes. He had first received her at