“He’s going to have to wait his turn, isn’t he? Ischade’s not satisfied yet; neither is Tempus and the rest haven’t even launched their attacks. I hear it was Jubal’s men that fished her out and that he gave her a lecture that dried the water right off her. You know Molin; He’s not one to waste energy when so many others are willing to-“
“It’s not just Chenaya, Kama, it’s Rashan, that pet priest of hers. Rashan and his crawling little altar out there. He sits out in the heat for hours and stares at Savankala’s shadow. He’s god-bugged-and he’s got no love for the
Torch.”
“God-bugged?” she asked, her body tightening.
Walegrin stammered. It was his own phrase; one he’d first used for Molin himself when Stormbringer had been after him. He used it to describe a man’s face after the gods had been in his mind-when he went about his business as if a nest of fire-ants raced under his skin. When he was not only unpredictable but nigh invincible. Walegrin had witnessed those changes more than once and had only one word for them: god-bugged.
“Yeah, god-bugged,” Kama repeated after he had lapsed into silence. “Crit’d like that; maybe I’ll tell him sometime. You think Rashan’s god-bugged, too?”
“Even if he isn’t, he’s doing a good job of convincing Chenaya that she’s got the gods’ own work to do in Sanctuary.”
“Savankala’s not all-powerful down here, you know,” she reminded Walegrin.
“I didn’t say Savankala. The frogging priest’s god-bugged. It could be any one of them. He’s going out in the middle of the night stealing old stones from who knows where and piling them against his altar.”