The ghost-horse’s velvet lips delicately snatched the treat, and it snorted in pleasure.
Well, maybe not quite as dead as a doornail. But unnatural as hell. Unnatural as Sanctuary, a place Kama was determined to leave com- pletely out of the history she was writing of her father’s exploits. Sanctu- ary deserved no chronicler, as it deserved nothing more than the oblitera- tion it was so obviously seeking.
The town had its own genius, Kama was sure, an Ilsig spirit that had finally had its fill of interlopers and was nudging the place itself toward oblivion’s precipice. She wanted only to be quit of it before Sanctuary was razed to the ground by Rankans, gutted and left to rot by Beysibs, or torn stone from off of stone by internal strife.
A historian, Kama knew all the signs of a town dying. Sanctuary didn’t lack a one: its gods were impotent; its magic had lost its power; its populace was polarized by generations of hatred; its children wanted only to destroy.
“What, Strat?” she said, startled by words undeciphered but still ring- ing in her ears. She looked up. The big Stepson was already mounted, reins in his right hand, his left arm carefully resting on one thigh.
“I said, finding Zip should be easy-it’s his shift, the dead of night. You want him, let’s go up to the command guardpost.”
She shook her head- “Told you, he’s moving those damned stones. And the porking whatever that lives in ’em, tonight. Heard it from a reliable source.” The guardpost was safe for Strat, this time of night-Crit had the day shift; Strat’s erstwhile partner spent his evenings in an old Sham- bles Cross safe house the Stepsons used to run.