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7
SIMON
The sun is just rising when I hear my door creak open. I pull the blankets up over my head. âGo away,â I say, expecting Penny to start talking at me anyway. Sheâs good at immediately making me forget how much I missed her over the summer.
Someone clears his throat.
I open my eyes and see the Mage standing just inside the door, looking amusedâat least on the surface. Thereâs something darker underneath.
âSir.â I sit up. âSorry.â
âDonât apologize, Simon. You must not have heard me knock.â
âNo ⦠Let me just, Iâll just, um ⦠get dressed.â
âDonât trouble yourself,â he says, walking to the window, giving Bazâs bed a wide berthâeven the Mage is afraid of vampires. Though he wouldnât use the word âafraid.â Heâd say something like âcautiousâ or âprudent.â
âIâm sorry I wasnât here to welcome you back yesterday,â he says. âHow was your journey?â
I push the covers off and sit at the edge of my bed. Iâm still in my pyjamas, but at least Iâm sitting up. âFine,â I say. âI mean, I suppose ⦠not exactly fine. My taxi driver was a goblin.â
âAnother goblin?â He turns from the window to me, hands clasped behind his back. âPersistent, arenât they. Was it alone?â
âYes, sir. Tried to scarper off with me.â
He shakes his head. âThey never think to come in pairs. What spell did you use?â
âUsed my blade, sir.â I bite at my lip.
âFine,â he says.
âAnd Into thin air to clean it up.â
The Mage raises his eyebrow. âExcellent, Simon.â He looks down at my pyjamas and bare feet, then seems to study my face. âWhat about this summer? Anything to report? Anything unusual?â
âI would have contacted you, sir.â (I can contact him, if I need to. I have his mobile number. Also, I could send a bird.)
The Mage nods. âGood.â He looks at me for a few more seconds, then turns back to the window, like heâs observed everything about me that he needs to. The sunlight catches in his thick brown hair, and for a minute, he looks even more like a swashbuckler than usual.
Heâs in uniform: dark green canvas leggings, tall leather boots, a green tunic with straps and small pocketsâwith a sword hanging in a woven scabbard from his tooled belt. Unlike mine, his blade is fully visible.
Pennyâs mum, Professor Bunce, says that previous mages wore a ceremonial cowl and cape. And that other headmasters wore robes and mortarboards. The Mage, she says, has created his own uniform. She calls it a costume.
I think Professor Bunce must hate the Mage more than anyone who isnât actually his enemy. The only time I ever hear Pennyâs dad talk out loud is when her mum gets going on the Mage; heâll put his hand on her arm and say, âNow, Mitaliâ¦â And then sheâll say, âI apologize, Simon, I know the Mage is your foster father.â¦â
But he isnât, not really. The Mage has never presented himself to me that way. As family. Heâs always treated me as an allyâeven when I was a little kid. The very first time he brought me to Watford, he sat me down in his office and told me everything. About the Insidious Humdrum. About the missing magic. About the holes in the atmosphere like dead spots.
I was still trying to get it through my head that magic was real, and there he was telling me that something was killing itâeating it, ending itâand that only I could help:
âYouâre too young to hear this, Simon. Eleven is too young. But it isnât fair to keep any of this from you any longer. The Insidious Humdrum is the greatest threat the World of Mages has ever faced. Heâs powerful, heâs pervasive. Fighting him is like fighting off