“I do wish people wouldn’t try to cheat me,” he said. “Idiots, anyway, trying spells anymore. Nothing of this intensity works right.”
With a sigh he turned. “Clean up this mess,” he said to one of his men, “and tomorrow detach a work detail and raze this place. We can use the stone.”
Then he went away to get some sleep. He had a long day tomorrow, on
Stormbringer’s business.
His men took the bodies away to the chamel house and left the place in darkness.
One thing they did not take: one small form, wholly there now, in the darkness of the shadows beyond the moon; a shape like a small delicate dog, with too many lives sitting behind her eyes.
Tyr snarled, and got up, and walked out into the night to consider her vengeance.
SANCTUARY NOCTURNE
Lynn Abbey
Walegrin had his back to Sanctuary-vulnerable, unconcerned. One foot rested on a broken-off piling; his folded forearms rested on his upraised knee. His eyes were empty, staring at the still, starlit harbor, watching for the faint ripple that might mean a breeze coming up.
A thick blanket of sun-steamed air had clung to the city these last four days.
Last winter they-the powers in the palace-had told him to paint false plague signs along the streets. Then, in a dry spring, pestilence had erupted from the stagnant sewers and only luck, or divine intervention, had saved Sanctuary from a purging. Now, as the dank, foul air leeched vitality from every living creature, plague season had come in earnest and the nabobs were worried. Worried so much that they fled from the palace and their townhouses to outlying estates, some no more than Ilsigi ruins, to await a change in the wind. Improvements to the city’s long-neglected ramparts had ground to a halt, as stone, brick, and work-gangs were openly diverted to providing comfort and security to those rich enough, or powerful enough, to afford it.