It was a strange divide, he thought, the watershed between student days and those beyond. He imagined he was only a few scant years older than this one, but he had graduated, spent two years abroad, and come back with more of the weight of the world upon his shoulders, more knowledge, more experience, and perhaps more wisdom. He hoped the Regents knew he could not teach wisdom. It was not something one could hold, or one could teach. He could but raise the lantern and point the way. His students would have to cover the terrain themselves. Of course he couldn't read Marcus' mind, didn't know that the name he gave was an alias, but he never forgot an aura, so this man didn't know Andry Ellis or any of his other aliases, only who he was. Though he thought if he continued to grow in Ionu's favor, and if he continued with the side business of espionage, even Hadrian Aelius might become another alias, and then who would he really be? He looked up with his storm-brightened eyes. "You haven't offended me." His aura flared and he looked down, eyes hardening as he protected himself from the faint spirit's attempt to inhabit his body. It wasn't a difficult thing to do; even having fed upon the soulmist, the ghost was hardly manifested. He didn't think it had malicious intent. It seemed so weakened that its will was probably instinctive, following the trail from soulmist to its progenitor, but it had run its metaphorical head into a metaphorical brick wall when it hit even a novice spiritist's aura. He looked up again. "I am Hadrian Aelius, a professor at the University of Zeltiva." That was the truth. |