Leaving Crit to take responsibility for fair and all. For unfair and all. So there was a new pecking order in beleaguered Sanctuary, and one which was fair only to the extent that it insulted and imperiled everyone, while satisfying no one.
Put it down, Crit told himself, to the foul humor that caused Tempus to be called “the Black.” Crit had the rest of the year to meet Theron’s decree of a unified, pacified Sanctuary. If he couldn’t manage it, Theron had promised to send the Rankan army here in force, a soldier in every hut and a fist in every face.
Not that Crit cared about the town per se. No, he didn’t. But he cared about his reputation, about not failing, about always doing what he was charged to do.
Even though for the first time in his life he’d truly argued, threatened to quit, to mutiny, to bolt, when Tempus had charged him with imposing order where order had never been, Critias couldn’t turn away from a job unfinished. No matter what it cost.
In short order it had cost him his only friends here: Straton, his right- side partner and Sacred Band brother; Kama, the Riddler’s daughter, abandoned in Sanctuary along with those others who had most dis- pleased her father; Marc, the weaponsmith who’d been his liaison with townies such as Zip; and Zip himself, the PFLS leader and third-shift commander, who now looked on Crit as the enemy because Crit was at the top of Sanctuary’s reporting chain.
Where he’d never craved to be, and where Strat had struggled so hard to land.
Shaking his head, Crit started as moisture that had condensed on his unkempt hair spattered his brow and cheeks. In nondescript dockside garb, he was waiting for a contact. Doing what he knew how to do because Crit was a shadow mover, not an empire shaker. Tempus had left him with a shattered infrastructure he needed to fuse, somehow, into a working whole. Or lose. Fail. Crit knew how to do everything required of a soldier but that-he didn’t know how to fail. He’d never learned. Was constitutionally incapable of learning, Strat used to say.