The wyvern could not fly fast enough for him. He kept looking behind himself, watching for pursuers. Theoretically he knew he had no cause to worry: the knowledge that the Crucible could be used as a portal was passed down only to those in the direct line of succession. But sometimes others in the family gleaned such information by trickery or by accidentthe Usurper, most famously.
The weather was turning uneasy. High winds ripped. Shearing currents blew the wyvern left and right. Then came a gust of headwind so vigorous, the wyvern was nearly flipped backward.
Titus flew lower, searching for calmer air. He did not find it. Nor did he find it at a greater altitude. A string of expletives left his tongue, only to be drowned by a roar that shook every bone in his bodythe exact same roar that had sent him fleeing from Sleeping Beautys castle.
The wyvern screamed. Despite the uncooperative winds, it accelerated, as if driven by sudden fear. Titus pulled the hood of his tunic over his head, covered most of his face with the edges of the hood, and turned around.
The night sky was empty, save for a luminescent dot. He uttered a far-seeing spell. All at once, a huge winged creature loomedso monstrously sized it would make colossus cockatrices look like sparrows. Even more grotesquely, the beast shimmered against the turbulent sky above.
A phantom behemoth, the steed of Angels.
Was this the change Prince Gaius had made to the story of Sleeping Beauty?
Phantom behemoths were not real. It had been concluded centuries ago that they were creatures of legend, born of the awe and fright of mages witnessing colossus cockatrices for the first time. But when a mage used the Crucible as a portal, everything inside became real.
He countermanded the far-seeing spell. The phantom behemoth faded again to a dot in the sky. It was still miles behind him.
The beast roared once more. The biggest winged creatures did not always fly the fastest. But judging by the roar, the phantom behemoth was closing in so swiftly, Titus might as well be running on foot.
He turned around again and tried to see if the phantom behemoth carried a rider. A smaller creature was tethered to it, a giant peregrinewhich looked like a flea next to the phantom behemoth. The peregrine most certainly carried a rider. In the eerie glow of the behemoth, the riders eyes were entirely colorless.
The Inquisitor!
And the rider who sat on the enormous head of the behemoth, with his handsome and oddly familiar-looking face, was none other than the Bane.
Iolanthe didnt know how she managed to bring down the wyvern on Black Bastions landing platform without killing them both.
But her feet were on solid stone, and the wyvern was being skillfully led away by a pair of grooms, without erupting into a rage that would roast mages in a hundred-foot radius.
She expected to be challenged immediately, but everyone on the landing platform who wasnt busy with the wyvern sank to one knee, with murmurs of Mlady.
Who knew help was so desperately needed at Black Bastion?
She descended into the bailey. More people paid obeisance to her. And even more dropped to their knees as she marched through the great hall. Who did they think she was? Helgira herself?
She kept pushing farther into the fort. Each time she was faced with a choice of directions, she chose the one that looked more sumptuous.
Opposition came in the form of a nondescript maid. As Iolanthe stepped into Helgiras richly decorated apartment, the maid cried, That is not our lady!
No? Iolanthe raised a brow. She snapped her finger, and a bolt of lightning flashed outside the window.
The maid appeared horribly confused.
Iolanthe snapped her finger again and another, even more impressive lightning bolt sizzled across the width of the sky.
Forgive me, my lady. The maid sank to her knees, shaking.
Iolanthe ignored her. Inside the bedchamber, she passed through the prayer alcove to the Black Bastion in the Citadels copy of the Crucible.
This Black Bastion was much calmer, its inhabitants preparing for bed rather than war. Iolanthe thought its mistress away from home until she saw a woman standing before a window, her long black hair fluttering in the strong breeze.
Helgira.
A woman who lived in warlike times should be more alert to her surroundings. Iolanthe could be an assassin, waiting in the shadows. Helgira, however, remained oblivious to Iolanthes presence, her breaths emerging in a series of trembling sighs and gasps. An Angel . . . I have been blessed. I have been blessed.
She was probably in a bout of religious mania. But out of curiosity, Iolanthe used a far-seeing spell to look out the window.
The soles of her feet prickled. A phantom behemoth. No wonder Helgira was dazed. In every chapel and cathedral Iolanthe had ever visited, they had been painted on the ceiling, the steeds of the Angels.
But wait. There was a wyvern, a few miles closer to her, and it carried a rider. She redoubled the far-seeing spell. The riders features were still too faint, but she recognized the gray, hooded tunic that Princess Ariadne had specified in her vision.