him?
âIâm Avelâs air warden. I need to know.â
Francesca decided to stall. âYou have an order from an officer of the canonist.â
âAnd I am obeying it.â He studied her. âBut do you know what happened?â
She looked straight ahead.
They flew two more circles. Suddenly Cyrus pointed to the north. âSee that?â He seemed to be pointing to empty sky. âItâs an incoming airship. We arenât expecting one for another ten days.â
Francesca narrowed her eyes and barely made out a white speck in the blue.
âFran, you had better tell me everything. This is grave.â
She looked at him, but his light brown eyes were fixed on the distant airship. âWhy?â
âThat rig,â Cyrus said, pointing again, âis moving too fast to be anything other than a warship.â
CHAPTER Nine
Shannon-the-text touched his fingertips to those of Shannon-who-still-lived. Golden light flushed down the ghostâs arm as his author replaced lost text. He became aware of how each of his sentences was an analogy for part of his authorâs body. He became aware that he was not his author or even his authorâs mind, for there was no mind without body. And yet ⦠at the same time he was his author. It was impossible, but it was so. He was a creation.
The ghost shuddered to know reunion with this glorious body, this frail body, infested by unrestricted growth. Here was the burden of disease and age. Here was death, so close.
The ghost withdrew his hand. âShouldnât we be one?â he asked, but his throat could make no noise.
âWrite to me in Numinous,â his author said.
The ghost cast a golden sentence that would read, â What happened to us? I thought you were murdered. â
His author caught the words and translated them. âMurdered,â he said with a frown. âWhy would I have been murdered?â
The ghost wrote a quick sentence. âI woke in a library, holding a Numinous sentence that claimed Iâd been killed and needed to discover the murderer and warn Nicodemus.â
His author winced. âLast summer, Typhonâs hierophants stormed our safehouse in the North Gate District. They killed some of Nicodemusâs students, nearly killed me. They stole you from me. I thought they had deconstructed you ⦠I had given up hope.â He looked back down the hallway. âCome into the darkness before someone sees me.â
Stepping farther into the shadows, the ghost wrote another question: âBut who wrote the note about your murder?â
Again his author winced. âThat doesnât matter now. Weâve found you. Come.â
From the dark came a sound like bare feet slapping floorboards. Then a commanding whisper: âMagister, weâre going now. The Walkerâs preoccupied with the infirmary kites. Can you run?â
The ghost sucked in a breath. The voice filled him with memories of Starhaven and the Heaven Tree, of lessons and arguments and a fierce olive-skinned, green-eyed young man.
His author replied, âNicodemus, come see whom Iâve found.â The old manâs voice quavered, and the ghost was touched that his author was so moved.
The footfalls sounded again.
This far into the hallway there was little light, but the ghost could still make out the figure that appeared. He was older, barefoot, and dressed only in leather pants that ended at the knees. A thin scar ran along his left side, and his long black hair was tied into a ponytail. There were other, inhuman figures in the shadows.
When Nicodemus noticed the ghost, he leapt back into the dark. âMagister, get back! Typhonâs corrupted it.â
Shannon-the-author shook his head. âNico, donât worry.â Again he moved farther into the dark. âRemember what we discussed.â
The old man walked on, but the ghost did not follow. His author should have demonstrated more
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