Strat had wanted Sanctuary’s commission, should have had it. Crit couldn’t have wanted it less, so he got it. And that kept the vampire with her hidden agenda out of things, but at a personal cost only Tempus could have decreed. Only Tempus, who had no conscience, could split a Sacred Band pair like he’d split the love-match that had once been Kama and Critias.
Suddenly, she found her eyes blurry. She swiped impatiently at them with the back of her forearm. She couldn’t afford emotion now; it clouded her judgment. Her anticipation of men was generally good. Of Critias, it was woefully inadequate.
Of Strat, her forewarning was little better. Or maybe it was just the fact that Strat was drunk and his horse a numinous creature that caused them to take a shortcut over the White Foal Bridge and down a road leading past Ischade’s Foalside home.
Zip was transported, in an altered state where every night noise was new and hostile, down by the White Foal’s edge where he could barely see the eerie lights from Ischade’s house up the bank. He had a wheelbar- row and, at the bank’s crest, a wagon. He had three of his militia guard- ing the wagon, but he’d permitted none to come down here. Not to the shrine.
No one should touch the piled stones but him, the thing he served had told him. As it had told him to bring it blood, and worse, it had decreed the time and manner of its uptown move. It wanted to live on the Street of Temples, with the gods. Zip had found it a place, an alley behind the Rankan Storm God’s temple, and there it swore it would be content to stay.