Thieves World 8 – Soul of the City by Asprin, Robert

Thieves World Book #08

Soul of the City

Edited by Robert Lynn Asprin

CONTENTS

Dramatis Personae Lynn Abbey

Power Play Janet Morris

Dagger in the Mind C.J. Cherryh

Children of All Ages Lynn Abbey

Death in the Meadow C.J. Cherryh

The Small Powers that Endure Lynn Abbey

Pillar of Fire Janet Morris

Dramatis Personae

The Townspeople

AHDIOVIZUN; AHDIOMER viz; AHDIO, Proprietor of Sty’s Place, a legendary dive

within the Maze.

LALO THE LIMNER, Street artist gifted with magic he does not fully understand.

GILLA, His indomitable wife.

ALFI, Their youngest son.

LATILLA, Their daughter.

OANNER, Their middle son, slain during the False Plague riots of the previous

winter.

VANDA, Their daughter, employed as maid-servant to the Beysib at the palace.

WEDEMIR, Their son and eldest child.

DUBRO, Bazaar blacksmith and husband to Illyra.

ILLYRA, Half-blood S’danzo seeress with True Sight. Hounded by PFLS in the False

Plague.

ARTON, Their son, marked by the gods and magic as part of an emerging

divinity known as the Stormchildren. Sent to the Bandaran Isles for his safety

and education.

ULLIS, Their daughter, slain in the False Plague riots.

HAKIEM, Storyteller and confidant extraordinaire.

JUBAL, Prematurely aged former gladiator. Once he openly ran Sanctuary’s most

visible criminal organization, the Hawkmasks. Now he works behind the scenes.

SALIMAN, His aide and only friend.

MAMA BECHO, Owner of a particularly disreputable tavern in Downwind.

MASHA ZIL-INEEL, Midwife whose involvement with the destruction of the Purple

Mage enabled her to move from the Maze to respectability uptown.

MORIA, One-time Hawkmask and servant to Ischade. She was physically transformed

into a Rankan noblewoman by Haught.

MYRTIS, Madam of the Aphrodesia House.

SHAFRALAIN, Sanctuary nobleman who can trace his lineage and his money back to

the days of llsig’s glory.

ESARIA, His daughter.

EXPIMILIA, His wife.

CUSHARLAIN, His cousin. A customs inspector and investigator.

SNAPPER JO, A fiend who survived the destruction of magic in Sanctuary.

STILCHO, Once one of Ischade’s resurrected minions, he was “cured” of death when

magic was purged from Sanctuary.

ZIP, Bitter young terrorist. Leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of

Sanctuary (PFLS).

The Magicians

HAUGHT, One-time apprentice of Ischade who betrayed her and is now trapped in a

warded house with Roxane.

ISCHADE, Necromancer and thief. Her curse is passed to her lovers who die from

it.

ROXANE; DEATH’S QUEEN, Nisibisi witch. Nearly destroyed when Stormbringer purged

magic from Sanctuary, she is trapped inside a warded house and a dead man’s

body.

Others

THERON, New military Emperor. An usurper placed on the throne with the aid

ofTempus and his allies. He has commanded that Sanctuary’s walls must be rebuilt

by the next New Year Festival.

The Rankans living in Sanctuary

CHENAYA; DAUGHTER OF THE SUN, Daughter of LOW an Vigeles, a beautiful and

powerful young woman who is fated never to lose a fight. DAYRNE, Her companion

and trainer.

LEYN, OUUEN, DISMAS AND GESTUS, Her friends and fellow gladiators.

GYSKOURAS, One of the Stormchildren, currently in the Bandar an Isles for

education.

PRINCE KADAKITHIS, Charismatic but somewhat naive half-brother of the recently

assassinated Emperor, Abakithis.

DAPHNE, His estranged wife, living with Chenaya’s gladiators at Land’s End.

KAMA; JES, Tempus’ daughter. 3rd Commando assassin. Sometime lover of both Zip

and Molin Torchholder.

LOWAN VIGELES, Half-brother of Molin Torchholder, father of Chenaya, a wealthy

aristocrat self-exiled to Sanctuary. Owner of the Land’s End Estate.

MOLIN TORCHHOLDER; TORCH, Archpriest and architect of Vashanka; Guardian of the

Stormchildren.

ROSANDA, His estranged wife, living at Land’s End.

RANKAN 3RD COMMANDO, Mercenary company founded by Tempus Thales and noted for

its brutal efficiency.

SYNC, Commander of the 3rd.

RASHAN; THE EYE OF THE SAVANKALA, Priest and Judge of Sanvankala. Highest

ranking Rankan in Sanctuary prior to the arrival of the Prince, now allied with

Chenaya’s disaffected Rankans at Land’s End.

STEPSONS; SACRED BANDERS, Members of a mercenary unit founded by Abarsis who

willed their allegiance to Tempus Thales after his own death. CRITIAS; CRIT,

Leftside leader paired with Straton. Second in command after Tempus.

RANDAL; WITCHY-EARS, The only mage ever trusted by Tempus or admitted into the

Sacred Band.

STRATON; STRAT; ACE, Rightside partner of Critias. Injured by the PFLS at the

start of the False Plague riots.

TASFALEN LANCOTHIS, Jaded nobleman, slain by Ischade’s curse, then resurrected

by Haught. His body has become Roxane’s prison.

TEMPOS THALES; THE RIDDLER, Nearly immortal mercenary, a partner of Vashanka

before that god’s demise; commander of the Stepsons; cursed with a fatal

inability to give or receive love.

WALEGRIN, Rankan army officer assigned to the Sanctuary garrison where his

father had been slain by the S’danzo many years before.

The Gods

DYAREELA, A goddess whose worship in Sanctuary predates the Ilsigi presence and

which has been outlawed many times since then.

HARRAN, Physician and priest to Siveni Gray-Eyes, now part of her four-fold

divinity.

MRIGA, Mindless and crippled woman elevated to four-fold divinity with Siveni

Gray-Eyes.

SABELLIA, Mother goddess for the Rankan Empire.

SAVANKALA, Father god for the Rankan Empire.

SIVENI GRAY-EYES, Ilsigi goddess of wisdom, medicine and defense, now

transformed into a four-fold diety.

SHIPRI, Mother goddess of the old Ilsigi kingdom.

STORMBRINGER, Primal stormgodlwargod. The pattern for all other such gods, he is

not, himself, the object of organized worship.

JIHAN, Froth Daughter. His parthenogenic offspring, betrothed to the Stepson’s

mage, Randal.

The Beysib

SHUPANSEA; SHU-SEA, Head of the Beysib exiles in Sanctuary; mortal avatar of the

Beysib mother goddess.

POWER PLAY

Janet Morris

Tempus, a mercenary general in the service of Ranke’s new emperor, was knee-deep

in the bloody purges marking the first winter of Theron’s accession to the

Rankan throne when the sky above the walled city began to weep black tears.

By the time dawn should have broken, ashen clouds massed to the very vault of

heaven so that not even the Sun God’s sharpest rays could pierce the arrayed

armies of the night. The city of Ranke, once the brightest jewel of the Rankan

empire, shuddered in the dark, her ochre walls stained dusky from the storm’s

black and ugly might.

Thunder growled; winds yowled. Black hail pelted Theron’s palace, shattering

windows and pounding doors. On temple streets and cultured byways it bounced,

sharp as diamonds and large as heads, bringing impious priests to their knees

and cheap nobles to charity in slick streets covered with greasy slush freezing

to ice as black, some said, as their emperor Theron’s heart.

For all knew that Theron had come to power in a coup instigated by the armies-he

was a creature of blood, a wild beast of the battlefield. And the proof of this

was in the allies who had brought him to the Imperial palace: Nisibisi witches,

demons of the black beyond, devils of horrid aspect, even the feared near

immortals of the blood cults-Askelon, the lord of dreams, and his brother-in-law

Tempus, demigod and favorite son of Vashanka, the Rankan wargod, to name but

two- had lent their strength to Theron’s cause.

Did not Tempus still labor at his gory task of purging the disloyal-all who had

been influential in Abakithis’s court? Did not women still wake to empty beds

and find pouches made of human skin and filled with thirty gold soldats (the

Rankan price for one human life) nailed to their boudoir doors?

Did not those few remaining adherents of Abakithis, former emperor of Ranke (now

deceased, unavenged, much cursed in his uneasy grave), still scuttle even

through the deadly, knife-sharp hail with bulging pockets to the mercenaries’

guildhall to leave their fortunes at the desk with scrawled notes saying, “For

Tempus, to distribute as he wills, from the admiring and loyal family of So-and

So,” while servants spirited noble wives and children out back ways and slumyard

gates in beggars’ guise?

Thus it was whispered, as the storm raged unabated into its second day, that

Theron and his creature Tempus were to blame for this black blizzard straight

from hell.

It was whispered by a woman to Critias, Tempus’s first officer and finest covert

actor, who had infiltrated the noble strata of the imperial city; And Crit, with

a wry twitch of lips that drew down his patrician nose and a rake of his

swordhand through dark, feathery hair, replied to the governor’s wife he was

bedding: “No one gives a contract for a sunrise, m’lady. No man. that is.

Theron is no more than that. When gods throw tantrums, even Tempus listens.”

Crit had fought in the Wizard Wars up north and the woman knew it. His guise was

that of a disaffected officer who had renounced his commission after Abakithis’s

assassination at the Festival of Man and now, like so many others of the old

guard, scrambled from allegiance to allegiance in search of safety.

So the governor’s wife just ran a finger along his jaw and smiled

commiseratingly as she said, “You men of the armies … all alike. I suppose

you’re telling me that this is good? This storm, this hail black as hell? That

it’s a sign we poor women cannot read?”

And (thinking of the prognosticators-bits of hair and silver and bone and luck

nestled in the pouch dangling from his belt that, with the rest of his clothes,

lay in a heap at the foot of another man’s bed) Crit replied in Court Rankene,

“When the Storm God returns to the armies, wars can be won-not just fought

interminably. Without Him, we’ve just been marking time. If He’s angry, He’ll

let us know on what account. And I’d bet it won’t be Theron’s-or Tempus’s. One’s

a general whom the soldiers chose exactly because the god had abandoned us

during Abakithis’s reign; the other is…”

It was not the woman’s hand, reaching low, which made him pause. She wanted

Crit’s protection; information was what he’d sought here in return. And gotten

what he’d come for, and more from this one-all a Rankan lady had to give. So he

thought-in a moment of unaccustomed tenderness for one who would likely

entertain, on his account, the crowds who’d throng the execution stands when the

weather broke-to explain to her about Tempus. About what and who the man Crit

had sworn to serve was, and was not.

He settled for “… Tempus is what Father Enlil-Lord Storm to the armies-wills,

and cursed more than Ranke and all her enemies put together. By gods and men, by

magic and mages. If there’s hell to pay because of Theron’s reign, rest assured,

lady, it’s he who’ll suffer in all our steads.”

The Rankan woman, from the look on her face and the hunger on her lips, had lost

interest in the subject. But Crit had not. When he left her, he marked her door

with a sign for the palace police without even a second thought to the fine body

behind it which would soon be lifeless.

The sky was still black as a witch’s crotch and the wind was chorusing its

judgment song in a many-throated voice Crit had heard occasionally on the

battlefield when Tempus’s non-human allies took a hand in this skirmish or that

choraling the way it used to when wizard weather blew in Sanctuary, where Crit’s

partner and his brothers of the Sacred Band were now, down at the empire’s most

foul and egregious southernmost appurtenance.

By the time Crit had retrieved his horse, his fingers were playing with the luck

charms in his beltpouch. Normally, he’d have pulled them out, squatted down,

shaken and thrown them in the straw for guidance.

But the storm was guidance enough; he didn’t need to ask a question he wouldn’t

like the answer to. If his partner Strat had been on his right tonight, he’d

have bet his friend any odds that, when the weather broke, Tempus would come

rousting Crit without so much as an explanation and they’d be heading south to

Sanctuary where the Sacred Band was quartered for the winter.

Not that he didn’t want to see Strat-he did. Not that he wasn’t happy that the

Storm god Vashanka, God of the Annies, of Rape and Pillage, of Bloodlust and

Fury and Death’s Gate, was manifest-he was. What he’d told the Rankan bitch was

true-you couldn’t win a war without your god. But Vashanka, the Rankan Storm

God, had deserted the Stepsons, Crit’s unit, in their need. So the unit had

taken up with another, perhaps greater, god: Father Enlil.

And the black, roiling clouds above, the voices which spoke thunder over the

fighter’s head, were telling a man who didn’t like gods much better than magic

and who was first officer to a demigod who meddled with both, that Vashanka

might not be too pleased with the fickle men who once had slaughtered in His

name and now did so in Another’s.

Things were so damned complicated whenever Tempus was .involved.

Grabbing a tuft of mane, Crit swung up on his warhorse and reined it around so

hard it half-reared and then, finding itself headed toward the mercenaries’

guild and its own stall, safety and comfort in the storm, fairly bolted through

the treacherous, slushy streets of Ranke.

Despite the darkened ways and chancy footing, Crit let the young horse run,

trusting pedestrians, should there be any, to scatter, and armed patrols to

recognize him for who and what he was. The horse had a right to comfort, where

it could find some. Crit couldn’t think of a thing that would do the same for

him, now that the gods had dropped one shoe and all he could do was wait until

Tempus dropped the other.

The storm didn’t exactly break, but on the fourth day it mellowed.

By then, Theron and Tempus had summoned Brachis, High Priest of the Variously

Named Wargods of Imperial Ranke, and concocted a likely story for the populace.

Executions, held in abeyance for the first three days of the storm, were

resumed. “More purges, obviously. Your Majesty,” Brachis had suggested, unctuous

to the point of insult, managing by his exaggerated servility to mean the

opposite of what he said, “will appease the hungry gods.”

And Theron, old and as gray as the shadows in this newly acquired but not yet

conquered palace full of politicians and whores, gave Brachis a tare fully as

black as the raging sky outside and said, “Right, priest. Let’s have a dozen of

your worst enemies bled out in Blood Square by lunch.”

Tempus stayed an impulse to touch his old friend Theron’s knee under the table.

But Brachis didn’t rise to Theron’s bait. The priest bowed his way out in a

swish of copper-beaded robes.

“God’s balls, Riddler,” said the aging general to the ageless one, “do you think

we’ve angered the gods? More to the point, do you think we’ve got one to anger?”

Theron’s jaw jutted so that the pitting of age made it look like a walnut shell,

or the snout of the moth-eaten geriatric lion he so much resembled from his

thinning, unkempt mane to his scarred and twisted claws. He was a big man still,

his power no mere memory, but fresh and flowing in corded veins and leathery

sinews-big and powerful in his aged prime, except when seen in close proximity

to Tempus, the avatar of Storm Gods on earth, whose yarrow-honey hair and high

brow free from lines resembled so much the votive statues of Vashanka still

worshiped in the land. Tempus’s eyes were long and full of guile, his form

heroic, his aspect one of a man on the joyous side of forty, though he’d seen

empires rise and fall and fully expected to see the end of this one-to bury

Theron as he had and would so many other men, with all their might ranged round

them. And Theron knew the truth of it-he’d known Tempus since both were

seemingly of an age, fighting the Defender on Wizardwall’s skirts when the

Rankan Empire was just a babe. The two were honest with one another when it was

possible; they were careful when it was not.

“Got a god to anger? We’ve got something mad enough to spit, I’ll own,” Tempus

replied. Now, Tempus knew, was not the time to raise false hopes of Vashanka the

Missing God’s return in a warrior who’d willingly and knowingly come to a throne

whose weight would kill him. It was the dirtiest of jobs, was kingship, and

Theron had become the man to do it by default. “If it’s Vashanka, then it’s a

matter between Him and Enlil. Theomachy tends to kill more men than gods. Don’t

be too anxious to get the armies’ hopes up-the war with Myg-donia won’t end by

gods’ wills, any more than it will by Nisi-bisi magic.”

“That’s what you think this infernal darkness is, then- magic? Your nemesis,

perhaps … the Nisibisi witch?”

“Or yours, the Nisibisi warlocks. What matter, gods or magic? If I thought he

had the power, I’d pick Brachis as the culprit. He’d do without both of us well

enough.”

“We’d do without all of his well enough. But we’re stuck with one another, for

the nonce. Unless, of course, you’ve a suggestion… some way to rid me, as the

saying has gone from time immemorial, of all meddlesome priests?”

The two were fencing with words, neither addressing the real problem: the storm

was being taken as an omen, and a bad one, on the nature of Theron’s rule.

The aging general fingered a jeweled goblet whose bowl was balanced upon a

winged lion and sighed deeply at almost the same time that Tempus’s rattling

chuckle sounded. “An omen, is it, old lion? Is that what you really want-an omen

to make this a mandate from the gods, not a critique?”

“What / want?” Theron thundered in return, suddenly sweeping up the artsy,

jewel-encrusted goblet of state and throwing it so hard against the farther wall

that it bounced back to land among the dregs spilled from it and roll eerily,

back and forth in a circle, in the middle of the floor.

Back and forth it rolled, first one way and then the other, making a sound like

chariot wheels upon the stone floor, a sound which grew louder and melded with

the thunder outside and the renewed clatter of hailstones which resembled

horses’ hooves, as if a team from heaven was thundering down the blackened sky.

And Tempus found the hair on his arms raising up and the skin under his beard

crawling as the wine dregs spattered on the floor began to smoke and steam and

the dented goblet to shimmer and gleam and, inside his head, a rustle-familiar

and unfamiliar-began to sound as a god came to visit there.

He really hated it when gods intruded inside his skull. He managed to mutter

“Crap! Get thee hence!” before he realized that it was neither the deep and

primal breathing of Father Enlil-Lord Storm-nor the passionate and demanding

boom of Vashanka the Pillager which he was hearing so loud that the shimmer and

thunder and smoke issuing from the goblet and dregs before him were diminished

to insignificance. It was neither voice from either god; it was comprised of

both.

Both! This was too much. His own fury roused. He detested being invaded; he

hated being an instrument, a pawn, the butler of one murder god, the batman of

another.

He fought the heaviness in his limbs which demanded that he sit, still and pop

eyed, like Theron across the table from him, and meekly submit to whatever

manifestation was in the process of coalescing before him. He snarled and cursed

the very existence of godhead and managed to get his hands on the stout edge of

the plank table.

He squeezed the wood so hard that it dented and formed round his fingers like

clay, but he could not rise nor could he banish the babble of divine

infringement from his head.

And before him, where a cup had rolled, wheels spun- golden-rimmed wheels of a

war chariot drawn by smoke-colored Tros horses whose shod hooves struck sparks

from the stones of the palace floor. Out of a maelstrom of swirling smoke it

came, and Tempus was so mesmerized by the squealing of the horses and the

screech of unearthly stresses around the rent in time and space through which

the chariot approached that he only barely noticed that Theron had thrown up

both hands to shield his face and was cowering like an aged child at his own

table.

The horses were harnessed in red leather that was shiny, as if wet. Beyond the

blood-red reins were hands, and the arms attached were well-formed and strong,

brown and smooth, without hair or scar above graven gauntlets. The’driver’s

torso was covered by a cuirass of enameled metal, cast to the physique beneath

it, jointed and gilded in the fashion chosen by the Sacred Band at its

inception.

Tempus did not need to see the face, by then, to know that he was not being

visited by a god, nor an archmage, nor even a demon, but by a creature more

strange: as the chariot emerged fully from the miasma around it and the horses

snorted and plunged, dancing in place, and the wheels screeched to a halt,

Tempus saw a hand raise to a brow in a greeting of equals.

The greeting was for him, not for Theron, who cowered with wide eyes. The face

of the man in the chariot smiled softly. The eyes resting upon Tempus so fondly

were as pale and pure as cool water. And as the vision opened its mouth to

speak, the god-din in Tempus’s ears subsided to a rustle, then to whispers, then

to contented sighs that faded entirely away when Abarsis, dead Slaughter Priest

and patron shade of the Sacred Band, wrapped his blood-red reins casually around

the chariot’s brake and stepped down from his car, arms wide to embrace Tempus,

whom Abarsis had loved better than life when the ghost had been a man.

There was nothing for it, Tempus realized, but to make the best of the

situation, though seeing the materialization of a boy who had sought an

honorable death in Tempus’s service wrenched his heart.

The boy was now a power on his own-a power from beyond Death’s Gate, true, but a

power all the same.

“Commander,” said the velvet-voiced shade, “I see from your face that you still

have it in your heart to love me. That’s good. This was not an easy journey to

arrange.”

The two embraced, and Abarsis’s upswept eyes and high curved cheeks, his young

bull’s neck and his glossy black hair, felt all too real-as substantial as the

splinters that had somehow gotten under Tempus’s fingernails.

And the boy was yet strong-that is, the shade was. Tem-pus, stepping back,

started to speak but found his voice choked with melancholy. What did one say to

the dead? Not “How’s life?” surely. Certainly not the Sacred Band greeting….

But Abarsis spoke it to Tempus, as he had said it so long ago in Sanctuary,

where he’d gone to die. “Life to you, Riddler, and everlasting glory. And to

your friend … to our friend… Theron of Ranke, salutations.”

Hearing his name shook Theron from his funk. But the old fighter was nearly

speechless, quaking visibly.

Seeing this, Tempus recovered himself: “You scared us half to death. Is this

your darkness, then?” Tempus stepped back and waved a hand toward the sky beyond

the corbeled ceiling overhead. “If so, we could do without it. Scares the

locals. We’re trying to settle in a military rule here, not start a civil war.”

A shadow passed quickly over the beautiful face of the Slaughter Priest and

Tempus, seeing it, wanted to ask, “Are you real? Are you reborn? Have you come

to stay?”

The shade looked him hard in the eye and that glance struck his soul and shocked

it. “No. None of that, Riddler. I am here to bring a message and ask a favor-for

favors done and yet to be done.”

“Ahem. Tempus, will you introduce me? It’s my palace, after all,” the emperor

growled, bluffing annoyance, straining for composure, and casting covetous

glances at the horses- if such they were-which stood at parade rest in their

traces, ears pricked forward, just a bit of steam issuing from their nostrils.

“Favors,” Theron murmured, “done and yet to be done….”

“Theron, Emperor of Ranke, General of the Armies and so forth, meet Abarsis,

Slaughter Priest, former High Priest of Vashanka, former-”

“Former living ally,” Abarsis cut in, smooth as a whetted blade, “and ally

still, Theron. We’ve a problem, and it lies in Sanctuary. Speaking through

priests is a matter for gods; my mandate is different. Tempus, whom we both

love, must listen to gods, not priests, but on this occasion, I am… well

equipped…” His grin flashed as it had once in life: “… to interpret.” Then

he shifted and his gaze caught Tempus’s and held: “The message is: the globes of

Nisibisi power must be destroyed; all the gods will rejoice when it is done.

Destroyed in Sanctuary, where there are tortured souls of yours and mine to be

released. The favor is: grant Niko’s wish in a matter of children … yours and

Ours.”

Ours? There was no mistaking the upper-case tone Abarsis had used-a tone

reserved for deific matters and one word ‘spoken by the dead High Priest of

Vashanka who had come so far to utter it. Liking the smell of things less and

less, Tempus took a step backward and sat upon the table’s edge, thinking, For

this, he comes to me. Wonderful. Now what?

For Tempus, who could refuse a god and obstruct an arch-mage, knew, looking at

Abarsis, that he could refuse this one nothing. It was an old debt, a mutual

responsibility stretching far beyond such trifles as life and death. It was a

matter of souls, and Tempus’s soul was very old. So old that, seeing Abarsis yet

young, yet beautiful in his spirit and his honor in a way Tempus no longer could

be, the man called the Riddler felt suddenly very tired.

And Tempus, who never slept-who had not slept since he had been cursed by an

archmage and taken solace in the protection of a god three centuries past-began

to feel drowsy. His eyelids grew heavy and Abarsis’s words grew loud, echoing

unintelligibly so that it seemed as if Theron and Abarsis spoke together in some

room far away.

Just before he collapsed on the table, snoring deeply in a sleep that would last

until the weather broke the following day, Tempus heard Abarsis say clearly,

“And for you, Tempus, whom I love above all men, I have this special gift… not

much, just a token: on this one evening, my lord, I have haggled from the gods

for you a good night’s rest. So now, sleep and dream of me.”

And thus Tempus slept, and when he woke, Abarsis was long gone and preparations

for Theron, Tempus, and a hand-picked contingent to depart for Sanctuary were

well under way.

Trouble was coming to Sanctuary; Roxane could feel it in her bones. The

premonition cut like a knife to the very quick of the Nisibisi witch, once

called Death’s Queen, who now huddled in her shrouded hovel on Sanctuary’s White

Foal River, beset from within and without.

Once she had been nearly all powerful; once she had been a perpetrator, not a

victim; once she had decreed Suffering and marshalled Woe upon human cattle from

Sanctuary’s sorry spit to Wizardwall’s wildest peaks.

But that was before she’d fallen in love with a mortal and paid the ancient

price. Perhaps if that mortal had not been Stealth, called Nikodemos, Sacred

Bander and member in good standing ofTempus’s blood-drenched cadre of Stepsons,

it would not seem so foolish now to have traded in immortality for the ability

to shed a woman’s tears and feel a woman’s fleeting joy.

But Niko had betrayed her. She should have known; if she’d been a human woman

she would have-no man, and most especially no thrice-paired fighter who’d taken

the Sacred Band oath, would feel loyalty or honor toward a woman when it

conflicted with his bond with men.

She should have known, but she hadn’t even guessed. For Niko was the tenderest

of souls where women were concerned; he loved them as a class, as he loved

fine horses and young children-not lasciviously, but honestly and freely.

Now that she understood, it was an insult: She was no waif, no fuddle

-headed twat, no inconsequential piece of fluff. And there was injury to

add to insult’s sting: Roxane had given up immortality to love a mortal who

wasn’t capable of appreciating such a gift.

She had been betrayed by her “beloved” over a matter that should have been

towering only in its insignificance: the “life” of a petty mageling, a would-be

wizard called Randal, a flop-eared, freckled fool who fooled now with forces

beyond his ability to control.

Yes, Niko had dared to trick Roxane, to distract her with his charms while this

posturing prestidigitator, whom she’d thought to have for dinner, got away.

And now Niko lurked in priestholes, palaces, and princely bedrooms, protected by

Randal (who had a Globe of Power similar to Roxane’s own, and more powerful) and

the countermagical armor given Niko by the entelechy of dreams. Not once did

sweet Stealth venture riverward, though his de facto commander, Straton of the

Stepsons, rode this way on evenings to visit another witch.

This other witch, too, was an enemy of Roxane’s-Ischade the necromant, whom by

rights the Stepsons should have hated more than they did Roxane, vilified in

their prayers as they nightly did Death’s Queen.

There was some irony to that: Ischade, a tawdry soul-sucker with limited power

and unlimited lust, was a friend of the Stepsons, ally of the mercenary army

that was all that stood between Sanctuary and total chaos now that the town was

divided into blood feuds and factions as the Rankan Empire’s grasp grew weak and

the Rankan prince, Kadakithis, was barricaded in his palace with some salmon

eyed Beysib slut from a fishy foreign land.

And Roxane, who’d been Death’s Queen on Wizardwall and flown high, ruler of all

she once surveyed, was shunned by Stepsons and even by lesser factions in the

town-all but her own death squads, some truly dead and raised from crypts to do

her bidding, some only a hair’s-breadth away from mossy graves like One-Thumb,

the Vulgar Unicorn’s proprietor, a.k.a. Lastel, and Zip, guttersnipe leader of

the PFLS (Popular Front for the Liberation of Sanctuary) rebels who couldn’t get

along without her help.

And Snapper Jo, of course, her single remaining fiend-a warty, gray-skinned,

wall-eyed beast, snaggle-toothed and orange-haired, whom she’d summoned from a

nearby hell to serve her-she still had Snapper, though lately he’d been taking

his spy’s job of day-barkeep at the Vulgar Unicorn too much to heart, thinking

silly thoughts of camaraderie with humans (who’d no more accept a fiend as one

of them than the Stepsons had accepted Roxane).

And she had her snakes, of course, a fresh supply, whom she could witch into

human form for intervals (though Sanctuary’s snakes weren’t bred for

masquerading and turned out small, sleepy in cold weather, and even more dull

witted than the northern kind).

Still, it was a pair of snakes-a butler-snake and a bodyguard-whom she called to

build a fire in her witching room, to bring her chalcedony water bowl and place

it on a column of porphyry near the hearth, to stay and watch and wait with her

while she poured salt into the water and words came from her mouth to make the

salt into her will and the water bowl into the open wounds in Sanctuary. Not

wounds of flesh, but wounds of spirit-the arrogance of loyalty given and

withheld, the gall of greed, the acne of innocence, the lacerations of love, the

pustules of passion which prickled such hearts as Straton’s, as Randal’s. as

those of the prince/governor and his flounder-faced consort, Shupansea (fool

enough to keep snakes herself, thinking that Beysib snakes might be immune to

Nisibisi snake magic), and even as Niko’s own consuming compassion for a pair of

children he wet-nursed like some useless Rankan matron.

And the water in her bowl took chop as the salt hit it, then began to cloud and

then to bubble as if salt had turned to acid in hearts all around the town. The

color of the water grew grayer, more opaque, and outside her skin-covered

window, snow began to fall in giant flakes.

“Go, snakes,” she crooned, “go meet your brothers in the palace of the prince.

Meet and eat them, then defeat the peace between the Beysib and her Rankan host.

And find those children, both, and bite them with the poison of your fangs, so

that death beats down on midnight wings and Niko will be forced to come to me…

to me to save them.” Almost, she didn’t get those last words out, because a

chuckle rose to block the speech’s end-especially the word “save.”

For as she’d looked into the bowl she’d seen a vision, then another. First she’d

seen riders, and a boat with a lion rampant on its prow: one rider was her

ancient enemy, Tempus, called the Sleepless One, avatar of godly mischief;

another was Jihan, a more potent enemy. Froth Daughter, princess of the endless

sea, a copper-colored nymph of matchless passion, a sprite with all the strength

of moon and tides between her knees; another was Critias, Strat’s partner and

better half, the coldest and boldest of the Stepsons, and the only man among the

lot of them who didn’t need more-than mortal help to do his job. And on the

boat, now seeming like a wedding gift, all wrapped in gilt and gloriously

colored sails as it drew nearer, was a man she’d helped become a king, one who

owed an unequivocal debt to Death’s Queen-Theron, Emperor of Ranke, who was so

anxious to pay Roxane’s price he was trekking to the empire’s anus to bow his

knee.

Oh, yes, she thought then. Trouble, let it come. For Roxane, once the visions

were cleared from the salted water of her bowl by an impatient, dusky hand, had

an idea-a thought, an inspiration, a vengeful task to undertake fitting to all

the harm past and present denizens of Sanctuary had done her: She’d seen the

error of her ways, and now she’d seen a new solution. She’d given up too much

for Nikodemos, who’d turned on her and spumed her. She’d trade this batch of

hapless souls to get back what she’d so foolishly bargained away.

And then it was left to her only to dismiss the snakes, drink the water in the

bowl, and settle down spread-legged in the middle of her summoning room floor,

awaiting the Devils of Demonic Deals, the Negotiators of Necromancy, the

Underworld’s Underwriters, to appear, to take the bait a witch could offer and

then, when sated, be tricked into giving Roxane back immortality in exchange for

the deaths of a pair of children who might be gods if ever they grew up, and

that of Nikodemos, who deserved no better if he’d thought to spurn the witch who

loved him and survive it. Of course, she’d throw in Tempus, too, for fun. He’d

make an undead of choice to send raping and pillaging up and down the streets of

Sanctuary of an evening, streets so thick with hatred and slick with blood no

one would even think to worry about what kind of death they got.

For Sanctuarites cared only for this life, not the next. They were ignorant of

choices made beyond the grave, or given up today for trifles. They didn’t know

or care that an eternity of hell could be had for cheap, or that the gods

offered out another way. • –

This was why she liked it here, did Roxane. Even once she’d sacrificed Niko and

his ilk-the entire Sacred Band and unpaired Stepsons, if she got lucky-she’d

stay around. Once there was no more Ischade to interfere, no silly priests like

the Torchholder to try to resurrect a dead god’s cult, the place would let her

have her way.

And so, decided, she crooked a finger and, from nowhere visible, a sound like

hellish hinges squeaking reverberated through her chamber, a non-door swung

down, and a Globe of Power could be glimpsed, spinning gently on its axis of

golden glyphs, its stones beginning to glow as its song of sorcery spun louder

aild, from hells Sanctuary wasn’t used to accommodating, a demon choir began to

chant.

It was the old way, the only way: evil for evil, tenfold. And she’d promised

hell to pay, visited upon this town for its of-fenses and its slights.

There remained only to touch flesh and nail to the globe spinning larger,

closer, right before her eyes.

She reached out and braced herself, for a demon lover would come with contact:

One did have to pay as one went, even if one was Nisibis’s finest witch.

Her nail screeched into the high peaks’ clay, and a demon screeched into

existence between her knees, and a hellish gale whose like was known as wizard

weather up and down the land stretched from Sanctuary’s southernmost tip up

along the Ran-kan seaboard where the imperial ship was under way.

And everywhere men remarked that, even for wizard weather, the gale was fierce

and loud, and full of sounds the like of a goddess being raped in some forgotten

passion play.

Sanctuary promised nothing of the sort to Critias, who’d ridden downcountry at

an ungodly rate with Tempus and his inhuman consort, Jihan, daughter of the

primal power men called Stormbringer (when they were so unlucky as to have to

call Him anything at all).

The ride-across No Man’s Land, a shortcut full of shades and mirages through a

desert the party shouldn’t have been able to cross in twice the time-hadn’t been

the sort of trip Crit liked. It was too fast, too easy, too full of magic-or

whatever the equivalent was when power was fielded not by a human mage, but by

Jihan, daughter of Stormbringer, lord of wind and wave.

Now that they’d nearly reached the town, it was too late for Crit to ask his

commander questions-whether, as rumor had it, Abarsis had really appeared to the

Riddler in Theron’s palace; why, even if that were true, Tempus had seen fit to

split his forces: the three of them were worth more than the score of fighters

accompanying Theron on his ocean voyage.

But straight answers were lacking in the Rankan Empire this season, and Tempus,

with Jihan around, was more obscure than usual.

So it came to pass that Tempus said to Crit as they came down the General’s Road

to the ford at the White Foal River: “Make your own way henceforth. Stepson,

among the pigs in their mire. Find Straton and reconvene your covert actors:

I want the whereabouts of Roxane and her power globe by midnight.”

“Is that all?” Crit asked, sarcasm finding its way into his tone-no disrespect,

but gods whispered in the Riddler’s ears and never spoke to Critias at all, so

that orders like these always seemed impossible, issuing from nowhere, though

he’d hardly ever failed to carry through a task, however vague, that the Riddler

set him.

But this time, as his sorrel stallion pawed the White Foal’s mud and lewdly eyed

the blue roan Jihan rode, Crit was more than usually defensive: Down in

Sanctuary, across the Foal somewhere, was Kama, Tempus’s daughter, whom Crit had

got with child. It had been in the Wizard Wars, against the Riddler’s orders,

and ill had come of it for everyone involved. He’d not thought of her-an act of

will, not fortune-until this moment, but looking out across the Foal where the

lights of Sanctuary’s whorehold, the Street of Red Lanterns, were twinkling in

the dusk, suddenly the mercenary fighter could’ think of nothing else.

And Tempus, who understood too much too often, who healed from every mortal cut

he took, who buried everyone he loved in time and enjoyed the confidence of gods

and shades, said softly in a voice like the river coursing gravel, “No, not all.

A start. Take a unit of your choosing, find Straton, use what he has, destroy

Roxane’s power globe by dawn, then seek me in the palace.”

“And is that the whole of it. Commander?” Crit asked laconically, as if the task

were simple, not a death sentence or an invitation to mutiny.

Crit saw even Jihan’s feral eyes go wide. The Froth Daughter, achingly

attractive to a fighter with her form clothed in scale armor shining like the

dusk, looked between the two men and whispered something to the Riddler, then

looked back at Crit.

The long-eyed Riddler did not, just stroked his gray’s arched neck. “It’s

enough,” replied the man Crit served and often had thought he’d die to please.

That evening, later, riding alone through the Common Gate in search of Straton,

Critias was^ no longer so sure that an honorable death would be a privilege-not

when it was here.

Sanctuary hadn’t changed, or if it had, the change was for the worse. There were

checkpoints everywhere and Crit had to bully his way through two of them before

finding a soldier he knew-someone who had an armband he could commandeer.

By then he’d skirted the palace, green-walled because some sort of fungus or

moss was growing there, and entered the Bazaar where illicit drugs, girls and

boys, and even lives were hawked openly in twisting streets.

His back unguarded, his sorrel spooked and dancing, he was heading for the Maze,

a deeper slum than this one, against his better judgment because he didn’t want

to look for Strat where his erstwhile partner probably could be found-lying in

with the vampire woman who held sway in Shambles Cross and used the White Foal

to dispose of victims.

From between two produce stalls Critias heard a hiss and a low whistle-old

northern recognition signs. Adjusting the armband (a dirty rainbow of cloth

specked with long-dried blood), he looked about: to his right was a fortune

teller’s tent-a S’danzo girl, Illyra, worked there. He saw her standing in the

door.

They’d never met, yet she waved-a hesitant gesture, part warding sign, part

blessing.

The last thing Crit wanted was his fortune told: he could feel it in his pouch,

where amulets grew heavy; on his neck, where hairs stood on end; in his gut,

which had frozen solid when Tempus had calmly ordered him to his death on a

flimsy pretext. Crit had never thought the Riddler’d held a grudge about his

daughter and her miscarried child. But there was no other reason to send

Stepsons up against a witch like Roxane.

Was that, then, what Abarsis had come to say to him? That it was time a few more

Sacred Banders made their way to heaven? Was Abarsis lonely for his boys? Before

Tempus had led the Band, Crit had fought for the Slaughter Priest. But in those

days Abarsis had been of flesh and blood, even if obsessed with tasks done for

the gods.

“Psst! Crit! Here!”

Between the stalls, opposite the fortune-teller’s tent, were too many shadows.

Crit sat his horse, arm crooked over his pommel, and waited, watching where his

mount’s ears pricked like dowsing rods.

Out from the gloom came a hand, white and long-a woman’s, despite the leather

bracer.

Crit squeezed with his right knee and the sorrel ambled forward-one pace, two.

Then he said, “Hello, Kama. What’s that you’ve got there, friend or captive?”

Beside the woman half in shadow was a waif-a flat-faced boy with almond eyes and

scruffy beard who wore a black rag bound across his brow.

The boy didn’t matter; the woman, crossbow pointed half to port so that its

flight would skewer Crit’s belly if she pulled its trigger mechanism back,

mattered more than Crit liked.

Tempus’s daughter laughed the throaty laugh that had gotten Crit in trouble long

ago. “Looking for someone?” Kama never answered stupid questions. She was as

sharp as her father, in her way. But not as ethical.

“Strat,” he said simply, to make things clear.

“Our ‘acting’ military governor, now that Kadakithis lies abed with Beysibs? The

leader of the militias and their councils? The vampire’s fancy man? You know the

way-down on the White Foal. But do take an unfortunate or two to appease her

hunger-for old time’s sake, I’ll warn you.”

Crit didn’t react to Kama’s acid comments on Strat’s faring-for all he knew, it

might be true; and he’d never show her she could still reach him, let alone hurt

him. He said, “How about this pud you’ve got here? Will he do?” For the signs of

something intimate between the woman and the street tough were clear to see-hips

brushed, though Kama held the crossbow; whispers went back and forth through

motionless lips.

And the youth was armed-slingshot on one wrist, dagger at his hip. The slingshot

was arrogantly aimed at Crit’s eyes by the time Kama said, “Don’t make the

mistake of thinking you understand what you’re seeing, fighter. You’ll need

help. If you’re smart, you’ll remember where and how to get it- Strat’s part of

Sanctuary’s problem, not its solution.”

Everyone found comfort where they could in wartime, and Sanctuary was war’s

womb, a microcosm of every horror man could foist upon his brother-worse now

with factions holding checkpoints and militias ruling blocks whose inhabitants

were never certain. The idea of Strat being a part of Sanctuary’s problem nearly

made him draw his own bow-Crit knew Kama well enough to know, if quarrels were

loosed, his would find its mark first: her woman’s hesitation would be her last.

And he might have, right then, no matter what her provenance, but for the pud

who didn’t know him and didn’t like any northern rider, especially one talking

to his girlfriend. The slingshot grew taut, the boy’s eyes steady as his stance

widened.

So there was that-a deadly interval of stalemate broken only when a drunk

caromed off a nearby doorway and knelt down, retching in the street.

Then Crit cleared his throat and said, “If you’re still a member of the

Stepsons, woman, I’ll want you at the White Foal bridge two hours before dawn.

Spread the word among the Third Commando, too; I’ll need some backup on this-(/

the Third’s still led by Sync, and if he’s not succumbed to Sanctuary’s blight,

I should be able to expect it.”

“Old debts? Words of honor?” Kama rejoined. “Honor’s cheap in thieves’ world.

Cheapest this season, when everyone has a power play to field.”

“Will you take my message, soldier?” He gave her what she wanted-recognition,

though he’d rather call her whore and take her over bended knee.

“For you, Crit? Anything.” Teeth flashed, a chuckle sounded, and he heard her

mutter, “Zip, relax; he’s one of us,” and the youth behind her grumbled a reply

before he slouched against a daub-and-wattle wall. “Before the break of day

we’ll be there…. How many would that be you’ll need?”

And Crit realized he didn’t know. He hadn’t a plan or a glimmer. What would it

take to wrest the Globe of Power from Roxane, the Nisibisi witch? “Randal’ll

know-if he’s still our warrior mage. Don’t ask questions woman-not here. You

know better. And Niko, find him-”

“Seh,” the young tough behind her swore. ‘This one’s walking wounded, Kama.

Niko? Why not ask the-”

“Zip. Hush.” The woman stepped out a pace from shadows, smiling like her father

a show of teeth with no humor in it. “Critias… friend, you’ve been away too

long, doing what high-bom officers do in Rankan cities. If not for… past

mistakes … I’d ride with you and explain. But you’ll find out enough, soon

enough, from your beloved partner. As for Niko, if you want him, he’s in the

palace these days, playing nursemaid to kids the priesthood loves.”

Before he could escalate from shock to anger, before he thought to move his

horse in tight and take her by the throat and shake her for playing women’s

games when so much was on the line, she melted back into her shadows and there

was a grating sound, followed by scrabbling, a square of light that came and

went, and when his horse danced forward, both Kama and the boy called Zip were

gone-if they’d ever been there.

Riding Mazeward on a horse suddenly and unreasonably skittish, he cursed himself

for a fool. No proof that it was Kama-what he’d seen could have been some

apparition, even the witch, Roxane, in disguise. He’d touched nothing; only seen

something he thought was Kama-there were undeads in Sanctuary who resembled the

forms they’d had in life, and some of those were Roxane’s slaves. Though if any

such had happened to Kama, he told himself, Strat would have sent word to him.

At least, the Strat he used to know would have. Right then, Critias could count

the things he knew for certain on the fingers of one hand.

But he knew he was going to the vampire woman’s house to find his partner. It

was just a matter of time; Kama’s allegations were already eating at his soul.

He had to leam the truth.

Kadakithis’s palace was full of fish-eyed Beysibs: Beysib men with more jewelry

on their persons than Rankan women from uptown or Ilsigi whores; Beysib women

female shock troops with bared and painted breasts and poison snakes wound about

their necks or arms-who seemed never to blink and gave Tempus gooseflesh.

Kadakithis wanted to introduce Tempus and Jihan to his Beysib flounder,

Shupansea; before Tempus could protest, in the prince/governor’s velvet-hung

chamber, that he needed no more women in his life, the Rankan prince had called

the woman forth.

Jihan, beside him, took Tempus’s arm and squeezed, sensing what passed on first

glance between her beloved Riddler and the lady ruler of the Beysib people.

For Tempus, noises lessened, the world grew dim, and in his heart a passion

rose, while in his head a voice he’d not heard clear for years urged: Take her.

For Me. Ravage the slut upon this spot/

The woman’s fish-eyes widened; a snake slithered on her arm. Her breasts were

fair and gilded; they stared at him with come-hither charms and it was only

Jihan who restrained him, prince or no, from doing what Vashanka wanted then and

there.

What Vashanka wanted? Tempus, who never backed away from any fight, took three

retreating steps as Jihan whispered, “Riddler, my lord? What is it? Has she

witched you? I will tear her legs off one by-”

“No, Jihan,” he muttered through clenched teeth in Nisi, a tongue neither prince

nor consort understood. He shook Jihan’s grasp from his arm and rubbed the

depressions her fingers had made: the Froth Daughter’s strength nearly equaled

his own. But neither of them was a match for Vashanka who, Tempus was now

certain, in some way had come again. He was here- more infantile, more

tempestuous than ever, but here.

And what that meant to a man who’d forsaken the Pillager and taken up with Enlil

to balance a curse no longer so sure upon his head Tempus couldn’t say. But

there was no doubt in him that soon he’d take some woman-this one if Vashanka

had His way of it-and consecrate whatever wench into the service of the god.

He just stepped forward, on his best behavior where the prince could see, one

palm sweating on the hilt of the sharkskin-pommeled sword, and took her hand.

“My lady, Shupansea, men call me Tempus-”

She interrupted: “The Riddler. We have heard tales of thee.”

And then from behind a curtain came Isambard, acolyte and priestly apprentice to

Molin Torchholder, running without regard to his priestly dignity, calling out:

“Quickly! My lady! My lord! There are dead snakes in the palace! There are more

snakes than there ought to be! And in the children’s rooms, where Nikodemos is

… he’s cut one of the sacred snake’s heads off!”

Isambard skidded to a stop an arm’s length from Tempus’s chest and lapsed into

panicked silence until his master entered the chamber. Molin Torchholder, ever

mindful of his position and demeanor, did not immediately clarify his acolyte’s

exclamations but appraised the assembly as if they, not he, were the breathless

intruders.

“Ah, Tempus. Back in town at last?” Sanctuary’s hierarch inquired, his voice

carefully modulated to conceal the manifold anxieties which that man’s

unexpected presence caused him.

“That I am.” Tempus detested priests, especially this one. And so he grinned

once more, thinking that Brachis, when he arrived with Theron’s sailing party,

would put this foul, dark-skinned priest in his proper place. “Well, Torch, your

minion seemed to have a problem moments ago. Surely you’ve got it as well?” His

sword was out by then, and Jihan’s also.

Kadakithis was scratching his golden curls, his handsome but vacant face

inquiring: “What’s this, Molin? Dead snakes? Is your state-cult out of hand

again? I told you Nikodemos was no fit guardian for those children. I-”

The Beysib monarch interjected smoothly: “Let me see these dead snakes, priest.

And mind you, I’m never sure that these troubles aren’t made by the Rankans who

announce them.”

By then Tempus and Jihan were running down the hall, toward secret passages

Tempus knew like the back of his sword-hand or Jihan’s female mysteries, which

led to the lower chambers where, near the dungeons, Niko and the children-whom

some said were more than that-were being kept.

Ischade’s Foalside house was more home than haunt, less forbidding than Roxane’s

to the south, but hardly an inviting place to visit.

Unless, of course, one was Straton, her lover whom she’d guided to de facto

power in Sanctuary’s factionalized streets, or an undead such as Janni or

Stilcho (both of whom had once been Stepsons), or a mageling such as Haught, who

learned what he could from the witches and sought to wake the power in his

Nisibisi blood.

Strat had been with Ischade hardly long enough for a candle to bum low when

Haught, whom Straton hated, came gusting in the door.

The place was softly lit and full of colors; precious gems and silks and metals

strewed the floor.

Straton was, by then, the finest thing she had, though-a human man, with all his

prowess, not an animated corpse or witchling.

She could love him, could Ischade, with a finer passion than the rest. But she

could feel in him a struggle, one that made shoulders sweat and muscles twitch.

She’d known that, hold him though she would, the day must come when holding

Straton would be hard.

His narrow Rankan eyes were haunted, deep-set, his jaw squared with indecision

lately when he came. And now, rolling off her at the sight of Haught, a hated,

half-understood rival, a symptom of all about Ischade Strat couldn’t justify or

wish away, he reached for a robe she’d found him, shrugged it on and, with just

his swordbelt, stalked outside.

“When you’re done with… it, him, whatever… I’ll be seeing to my horse.”

Strat still grieved for his lost bay warhorse; its death was something she could

and would undo, if only she thought Stra-ton could handle the revelation that

death was no barrier to Ischade.

Oh, he’d seen Janni, seen Niko embrace an undead partner. And Strat had not

reacted well.

“What is it, Haught?” she asked, impatient. She didn’t like the hubris growing

in this Nisi child. He was difficult, growing stronger, growing bold. And she

wanted to get back to Straton, who served her ends, who worked her will and

excused her wiles and helped her hold her interests in the town. Ischade’s

interests were important. And they were too tied up with Strat now to let Haught

get in the way.

So she thought to dance around the Nisi ex-slave, freed by her but not free of

her. She’d only started her mesmerizing when a sanguine hand reached out and

grasped her wrist.

Impertinent. This one soon would need an object lesson. She swallowed his will

with a stare and let him see he couldn’t even blink without her say-so. She

whispered, “Yes? Your business, please.”

And Haught, so pretty, so fiery underneath his slave’s face, said, “I thought

you’d want a warning. His boyfriend’s coming. …” Haught’s chin jutted

Mazeward. “What use he’ll be once Crit’s come hence, you might not like. So if

you want, I could-”

There was murder in the slavebait’s eyes. Murder sure of itself and offered

teasingly, a sexual ploy, a sensuous violence.

She denied it, not telling Haught that Strat was so much hers that Crit couldn’t

get between them… because she wasn’t sure. But she was sure that Straton’s

leftside leader, Critias, could not be murdered by one of hers. Not ever. Not

and allow Ischade to keep what she had now-subtle power over more factions than

any other had, even those who dwelled in the winter palace and looked to gods to

aid them.

The dusky wraith that was Ischade said a second time, “I don’t want, Haught. I

never want. You want. I have. And I have need of both Stepsons-of Straton and

his… friend. Go back uptown, see Moria, talk to Vis; we’ll have a party for

returning heroes tomorrow evening-in the uptown house. Wherever Crit is, Tempus

is as well. Find the Band’s best and invite them all. We’ll play a different

game this season; you tread carefully, do you hear?”

Haught, motionless and unblinking till she loosed him. sought the door with the

slightest inclination of his head and the most refined swirl of his cloak.

Trouble, that one, by and by.

But in the meantime, if she must fight for Straton, would she? She didn’t know.

She had a horse to raise, now, to see for certain what would happen. Strat would

have more decisions to make tonight than one.

Niko was holding one child under either arm when Tempus and Jihan came upon them

in the nursery.

One babe, Alton, had thumb in mouth; the other, Gyskouras, gave a single cry on

seeing the interlopers.

Then Gyskouras-god-child, Niko was certain-held out his tiny hands and Jihan,

mayhem forgotten, stepped over a decapitated snake oozing ichor, her own arms

outstretched and the red fires of Stormbringer’s passion in her eyes.

“Give him here. Stealth,” Jihan crooned, calling Niko by his war-name. “My

comfort’s what he seeks.”

Niko’s gaze flickered questioningly to Tempus, who made a sour face and

shrugged, sheathing his sword and squatting down to examine the snake.

Niko gave the child up to Jihan and shifted Alton, who immediately began to

wail. “Me, too! Me, too! Take Alton, or tears come! Take Alton!”

In moments, Jihan held both children, the dark-haired and the fair, and Niko was

kneeling opposite Tempus, the snake between them.

“Greetings, Commander. Life to you.”

“And to you. Stepson. And glory.” The words were only formula tonight, an

afterthought from Tempus, who had out a dagger and with it turned the snake’s

head toward him.

“How did you kill this thing. Stealth?” asked the Riddler.

“How? With my sword….” Niko’s brows knit. His canny smile came and went and

his hazel eyes grew bleak as he slipped his weapon from its sheath and laid it

across his knee. “With this sword, the one the dream lord gave me. You mean it’s

not an ordinary snake?”

“That’s what I mean. Not a Beysib snake, anyway. Look here.” He turned the snake

and Niko could see tiny hands and feet, as if the snake had been starting to

turn into a man when Niko’s stroke had killed it.

And the ichor, now, was steaming, eating like acid into the. stone of the palace

floor.

“Why did you kill it?” said the Riddler gently. “What made you think it would

attack you? Did it threaten? Did it rear up? What?”

“Because…” Niko sighed and tossed back ashen hair grown long enough to flop

into his eyes. He’d shaved his beard and looked too young for what he was and

what he’d been through; his scars were pale and the haunted look he bore made

Tempus glance away. These two were each other’s misery: Niko loved the

Riddler and feared the consequences; Tempus saw in the youthful fighter

the curse of a man the gods desire.

“Because,” Niko said again, voice low and heavy with words he didn’t want to

say, “Alton told me to. Anon-the dark-haired-he’s the prescient one. He knows

the future. He protects the god-child. I’m glad you’re here. Commander. It’s

hard trying to-”

But Tempus got abruptly to his feet. “Don’t say that. You can’t know it, not for

sure.”

“I know it. My Bandaran… my maat knows what it sees. Maat-my balance, my

perception-shows me too much, Commander. We have things to talk over; decisions

must be made. These childlren must go to the western isles, else there’ll be

havoc. I don’t want the blame of it. Gyskouras, he’s yours … your son-or your

god’s. I prayed…. Did the gods inform you?”

Tempus turned away from the young fighter and the words came back over his

shoulder to Niko and hit as hard as a blow from the Riddler’s hand. “Abarsis. He

came and told me. Now we’re all down here. Why in any god’s name didn’t you just

take them and go, if that’s the answer? Theron will be here by and by.” He

turned on his heel and faced Nikodemos. “You’re sequestered here like a

babysitter while Sanctuary is torn by the wolves of civil war? Are you no longer

a Sacred Bander? Do you command some regiment, a cadre of your own? Or did Strat

give you leave to-”

“It was by my order. Sleepless One,” came an unctuous voice from behind: Molin

Torchholder. The priest was accompanied by Kadakithis and by the prince’s side

was the Beysib woman, streaming tears, holding a dead and definitely Beysib

snake in her arms and weeping over it as if over a stricken child.

“Your order, Molin?” Tempus said and shook his head. “I own I didn’t think you’d

have the nerve.”

“He’s trying to help, Tempus,” said Kadakithis, looking worried and drawn,

trying to comfort the weeping Beysib monarch and keep peace as best he could.

“You’ve been away too long to judge this at face value. Nikodemos has been of

exceptional help to the State and we thank you for his loan.” The prince’s eyes

strayed to Jihan, a child on each hip and a beatific look in her inhuman eyes.

“Let’s go to the great hall and talk about this over food and drink. I warrant

you’re all tired from your long journey. We have much to decide and little time.

Did I hear that Theron is coming? Tempus,” Kadakithis’s princely smile was

strained and worried, “I hope you’ve told him good things of me-I hope, in fact,

that you’ll remember your oath. I wouldn’t want to end up like my relatives in

Ranke-spitted and bled out like pigs in the town square.”

If the curse-or its ghost-was still in effect, it would mean that all the

Riddler loved were bound to spurn him and those who loved him doomed to perish.

It was this that bothered him as he put a hand on Kadakithis’s shoulder and

assured the prince that Theron would look with kindness on Kadakithis’s

particular problems here in Sanctuary, that “he’s coming because the Slaughter

Priest manifested in the Rankan palace and told a soldier to look to the souls

of his soldiers. That’s why we’re all here, boy-and lady.”

He didn’t tell them not to fear. Both the prince/governor and the Bey matriarch

were too familiar with statecraft to have believed him if he had.

It wasn’t until after dinner that everyone realized there were too many dead

Beysib snakes in the palace for Niko-or the single snake he’d killed-to be

responsible. And by then, it was nearly too late.

Strat’s horse was at the gate. The bay horse he’d loved so well, who’d carried

him through so many campaigns. And Ischade was standing in her doorway, where

night blossoms bloomed, watching with that look she had which cut through the

shadows of her hood.

She’d healed the horse, obviously. She had the healing touch, when she wanted

to, had Ischade. He was so glad to see the bay, who nuzzled in his pockets for a

carrot or the odd sweetmeat, it took him a while to clear his throat and make

sure his eyes were dry before he turned to thank her: “It’s wonderful having him

back. There’s not another in my string to equal him-not his size, his stamina,

his conformation. But why didn’t you tell me? I’d not have believed he could

be…” His words slowed. He looked harder at her. “… healed. That’s what you

did, isn’t it? Spirited him away somewhere after I had to leave him for dead,

and nursed him back to health?” The horse’s teeth felt real enough, nipping his

arm for attention. “Ischade, tell me that’s what you did.”

Her words were wispy as the wind. “I saved him for you, Straton. A parting gift,

if this visitor of yours…” She pointed up the road, where a figure could be

seen if one looked hard through the moonlight-a rider so far away the sounds of

his horse’s hooves were yet masked by the breathing of the bay. “If this visitor

makes an end to what is-was-between us. It’s yours to say.”

With that, she turned and went into her house and the door closed, of its own

accord, with an all-too-final sound.

He’d never heard it close that way before.

He examined the bay from head to tail, from poll to fetlock, waiting for whoever

it was Ischade said was coming, but he couldn’t find a scar. It was bothering

him more and more. He’d seen Janni, once a Stepson, now a decomposing thing

motivated by revenge upon its Nisibisi murderers; he’d seen Stilcho, in better

shape but still not one to be mistaken for a living man. But the bay was just

exactly what he’d been-all horse, all muscular quarters and deep-hearted chest.

The bay couldn’t be a zombie horse. At least he didn’t think it could.

He was just thinking to mount up and see how it went when the approaching rider

drew close enough to halloo: “Yo! Strat, is that you?”

And that voice froze Straton like a witch’s curse: it was Critias. Critias, his

leftside leader; Critias, to whom he’d sworn his Sacred Band oath. “Crit! Crit,

why didn’t you tell me you were coming?”

Crit just kept riding toward him, inexorable on a big sorrel. Crit, seeking him

here. That meant that Crit had heard. That he knew, or thought he knew, the hows

and whys of something Straton barely understood himself.

They’d come together to Ischade’s house the first time- met her together. Then,

Crit had tried to “protect” Straton from the necromant. Now, if damage there

was, it was done.

Crit said, “Am I too late?” crooking one leg over his saddle and fishing in his

pouch for the makings of a smoke. In Ischade’s garden there was always a weird

light and it underlit the line officer’s face so that Strat couldn’t tell what

Crit was thinking. Not that he ever could.

Something inside him tensed. He said, because there had been no Sacred Band

greeting between them, “Look, Crit. I don’t know what you’ve heard or what you

think, but she’s not like that….”

“Isn’t she? Still got your soul. Ace? Or wouldn’t you know?” Crit’s eyes were

slitted and he fingered the crossbow hanging from his saddle.

Strat noticed that there was an arrow nocked, and that the bow would fire, from

that position, straight into him at the click of a safety and the touch of a

trigger. He tried to shrug away the suspicion he felt, but he couldn’t. “You’re

here to save me from myself? She’s the only reason we’ve survived here-the Band,

the real Stepsons-while you and the Riddler have been upcountry playing your

palace games. I’m not asking you where you’ve been. Don’t ask me how I’ve spent

my time. Unless, that is, you’re ready to be reasonable.”

“I can’t. I haven’t time. Riddler wants us to roust Roxane, get the Globe of

Power and destroy it by sunup. Maybe your soul-sucking friend’ll have a few

ideas as to how to help us, if she likes you so well. If she does, maybe I’ll

let her live until you can explain. Otherwise…” Crit lit the smoke he’d rolled

and the spark illumined a carefully arranged face that Straton knew wasn’t one

to argue with. “Otherwise, I’m going to bum her ass to a crisp and then do what

I can to beat some sense back into you… partner. Before it’s too late. So, you

want to call her out? Or just come with me and we’ll die like we’re supposed to,

shoulder to shoulder, fighting the Nisibisi witch.”

Strat didn’t have to call Ischade; she was beside him, somehow, though he hadn’t

heard the door open or seen light spill out and he didn’t think Crit had,

either.

She was so tiny in her cowl and long black cloak. He wanted to put an arm around

her shoulder, dared not, then dared. “She’s on our side, Crit. You’ve got to-”

“The hell I do,” Crit said, and shifted his gaze to her. “I bet I don’t have to

explain one whit to you, honey. I just hope you’re not too hungry to wait

awhile. We’ve got something on that’s just your style.”

“Critias,” said Ischade with more dignity than Strat would ever have, “we should

talk. No one has been hurt, no one has to be. You come-”

“-to get my partner. We can leave it at that.”

“And if he is unwilling to leave?”

“Doesn’t have squat to do with it. I’ve got responsibilities; so does he, even

if he’s forgotten them. I’m here to remind him. As for you, we can use you.

Come help out, and I’ll let you have your say-later. Right now, I’ve got

orders. So does he.” Critias gestured to Strat, who looked at Ischade and

could not, in front of Critias, plead with her for patience, for help, or

even for his partner’s life.

But Ischade didn’t strike Crit dead, or mesmerize him. She nodded primly and

said, “As you wish. Straton, take the bay horse. He’ll serve you well in this.

I’ll ride your dun. And we’ll give Critias what he wants-or what he thinks he

wants.” She turned then to Crit.

“And you, afterwards, will give me the courtesy of a hearing.”

“Lady, if any of us can hear anything after sunrise, I’ll be more than willing

to listen,” said Crit as Ischade raised a hand and Strat’s dun trotted toward

her.

Roxane had been waked abruptly from exhausted sleep when Niko lopped the head

from her finest minion-she would miss the bodyguard snake. And Stealth would

regret what he had done.

She’d paid a heavy price this evening; her thighs ached and her buttocks smarted

as she got out of her bed and felt her way through the dark.

Her Foalside home was small sometimes, large at others. Tonight, it was

cavernous with all the forces she’d disturbed.

She found her witching room and and sluiced the sweat from her body as she

filled her scrying bowl herself.

Then, trembling with pain and fury, she spoke the spell to open the well that

held the power globe, and another to summon a fiend of hers-the slave named

Snapper Jo who spied for her in the Vulgar Unicorn where he tended bar.

Before the fiend arrived, she spoke her spell of utmost power and in the bowl

she saw a fate she didn’t understand.

Men were there, and the cursed Beysa, and a goddess called Mother Bey locked in

love or hate with Jinan’s terrible father, Stormbringer. And these two deities

straddled the winter palace while, inside, Niko played with children and Tempus

with the fates of men.

She trembled, seeing Tempus and Niko in one place-the very place where her

surviving snake (more talented than most) slithered corridors in Beysib-snake

disguise, biting and killing where he could.

Good. Good, she thought, and brought back Niko’s face to the surface of her

bowl. But this time, the vision was not of him alone. Over one of Niko’s

shoulders she could see the Riddler-or the Rankan Storm God, whose aspect was

the same; over the other, a woman’s face and that face was comely in an awful

way-her own.

The meaning of it, remaining hidden, chilled her.

She could do only so much; she had certain words to say.

She said them and the dark witching room was lit with balefire. The light

touched the globe in its hidey-hole of nothingness and the globe began to spin.

If there was some bond of fate between her and egregious Tempus, the thread must

be cut. Even if it were Niko’s life, she must do the deed. And the baby god

could not be suffered to survive. Both children’s lives and souls were promised

to a certain demon of her recent, intimate acquaintance.

And the cold she felt, which raised gooseflesh on sanguine Nisi skin as smooth

as velvet, which drew back lips as beautiful as any that had ever spoken death

for men-that cold had to do with failing and winning, with perishing and

surviving.

As the door to her outer chamber shivered from something scratching on its

farther side, she decided.

She let the globe spin faster, let the colors from its stones bathe her in their

light.

A rushing wind filled the scrying room and in its midst was a woman’s form,

changing shape.

Black mist spun around the comeliest of female guises. Black wizard hair grew

long and covered limbs cut clean and meant to hypnotize any man. Her fine long

nose grew chitinous, then hooked; her firm flesh sprouted feathers.

And by the time Snapper Jo, still wiping his claws on his barman’s apron,

thought he’d better open up the door himself, an eagle with a wingspan ten feet

wide stood where Roxane was before.

And Snapper, her spy among the Sanctuary denizens, who tended bar at the Vulgar

Unicorn, clacked prognathic jaws together and wrung his clawed and warty hands.

“Mistress,” he gurgled in his fiendish, grating voice, “is that you?” His eyes

that looked every which-way squinted at the eagle swathed in dusky light. He

squatted down, gray gangly limbs akimbo in submission. “Roxane?” said the fiend

again. “Call Snapper, did you? Here I be, for what? Some murder? Murder do,

tonight?”

And the eagle cocked its head at him and let out a screech no fiend could

misconstrue, then took wing and flapped by him, out the door, leaving him

bleeding from a flesh wound made by claws much sharper than his own.

Muttering, “Damn and damn and murder damned,” the fiend scuttled after her.

Looking askance at her black shadow in the moonless sky. Snapper Jo chewed a

long orange lock of hair in dark frustration. To be human was his wish; to be

free of Roxane his hidden dream. But sometimes he thought he never would be free

of her.

And the trouble was, at times like these, he didn’t care. He was hungry as the

night for blood; just the thought of carnage made him giddy.

So he scuttled on, following the eagle in the night, cackling wordlessly under

his breath as Roxane, in eagle’s guise, led him toward the winter palace, then

lost him in Shambles Cross when he came across a fresh and bleeding morsel of a

corpse.

Jihan was alone with the two children, her scale-armor discarded, cuddling one

to either breast on Niko’s bed in the nursery when the snake, man-sized but

silent, slithered in.

The Froth Daughter was not human, but she was lonely. Tempus was no man for

progeny-he considered nothing but himself.

Jihan had wanted children of her own and been refused by him. Now, thanks to her

father, fate, and Niko, she had two fine boys to care for-one of them Tempus’s

own.

She would never give them up. She was ecstatic in her joy, and drowsy.

Thus she didn’t see the snake until it reared, fangs wide and gaping, and struck

like lightning, biting Arton on the arm.

Then, wide awake with two terrified babes to hold, one wounded and screaming,

the other howling just as loudly, she cowered.

To reach her sword or freeze the snake, arching high above the bed and glaring

fire-eyed down upon her, she’d have to put down one or both children.

This the frustrated mother could not do. She tried to shield Gyskouras with her

body, interpose her own arm, even force it like a gag into the snake’s gaping

jaws.

But the snake was wise and quick and its jaws unhinged, so that it bit right

through Jihan’s arm and punctured the godchild’s flesh and shook the Froth

Daughter and the child, stapled together by its fangs.

Jihan wailed in rage and agony-a sound the like of which had not been heard in

Sanctuary since Vashanka battled Storm-bringer in the sky at the Mageguild’s

fete.

And that brought help, though she barely knew it as her body fought the poison

and her arms, about the snake’s neck, grew weaker as she wrestled it. Even

Tempus and Niko paused in horror at the sight of Jihan locked in bodily combat

with the viper, the god-child being crushed in between.

Beside Tempus, Niko drew a breath and then reached out: “Riddler! Quickly! Take

this dagger.”

The dagger, like Niko’s sword, was dream-forged and it felt hot in the Riddler’s

hand.

He raced his Stepson, on his right, to reach the snake and the two of them began

to hack away.

With every stroke acid ichor spouted, so that Tempus’s skin sizzled, blistered,

and peeled.

There was no time to fear for Niko, beside him as if they were once more a

bonded pair.

Jihan was wound in coils, protecting one child who was absolutely silent. The

other, Arton, was curled up moaning, forgotten on the floor except when ichor

struck him and he squealed at the pain.

The snake didn’t flail or shrink from the damage Niko’s sword did, though

Tempus’s deeper cuts could give it pause.

The Riddler realized just in time what must be wrong-just as the snake was

tensing and Jihan, mouth open and eyes bulging as the breath was squeezed from

her, called his name and the viper fixed Niko with a gaze that pushed Stealth

backward and made him drop his sword.

For no snake, not even a Nisibisi snake, should be growing larger and bolder as

it fought and bled.

Tempus looked up and around and saw the source of the snake’s supernatural

power: an eagle perched, bating, in the bolthole of the palace wall.

Beside him, Niko faltered, his face blistered, his ankles entangled in the ever

growing coils of the snake.

Tempus knew he risked Stealth’s life as he stepped out of striking range and

raised his knifehand.

His eyes met the eagle’s and it called softly, a cry like a baby’s, and raised

its head and clacked its beak.

Then the dagger Stealth had loaned him flew through the air and struck the

eagle’s breast.

A screech like a witch burning at the stake resounded, so that Niko lost his

footing, hands clapped to either ear, and fell among the deadly coils.

But it was a chance Tempus had had to take.

And as he strode forward, faster than anything else within that room because, at

last, his wrath had brought the gods awake and power rose within him, the eagle

overhead burst into flame.

The flames began around the dagger in its breast and licked hot and higher as

the bird took wing.

But Tempus had no more time for watching birds or taking chances; he heard a

dagger fall from the bolthole’s height as he waded amid the coils-first to

Stealth, who still fought gamely though ichor had burned one eye shut and his

limbs were bound with writhing snake.

Pitting all his strength against the failing power of the snake- now shrinking

but perhaps not fast enough-the Riddler struggled.

Vaguely he heard voices behind him as palace praetorians gathered. “Stay back!”

he shouted without looking.

He was watching Jihan’s eyes pop, her more-than-mortal hands clutching the noose

of snake still at her throat.

The damned thing was dying and as it did it was whipping back and forth, tossing

Niko like a hook on a fishing line, crushing Jihan. And somewhere, in that

thrashing mess of green slime and human limbs, a child was lost.

His child, Niko had said. But that wasn’t why the Riddler hacked as if splitting

cordwood with Niko’s dream-forged sword. He’d never fought harder than he did

then to free Stealth-if there was kinship between him and any here, it was

strongest for his partner.

Admitting this, while all around pieces of snake flew like steaks from the block

of a master butcher and smoke rose as ichor ate at stone, Tempus found reserves

of strength in anger.

This youth, foolish Stealth, was not going to die on his account and leave the

Riddler with that weight to bear eternally. Jihan and the god-child bom of a

ceremonial rape-both of them were more than mortal. Niko was just a human fool

and human foolishness-honor, valor, sacrifice, and love.-were things Tempus

could not ever claim.

He didn’t notice when Beysib and human help pitched in beside him-his god-given

speed made them seem too slow and the task too great to make them matter.

But Jihan, once he’d cut through the widest coil at her throat, was help worth

having.

And once she was free, and it was clear that she’d saved the child from certain

death, the Beysibs and the Rankan priest and Kadakithis all crowded round the

Froth Daughter and the child.

Which suited Tempus, who finished cutting the yet-quivering coils from the

Stepson who’d fought beside him and helped Niko to his feet.

Only when the boy, through his one good eye, put a hand on Tempus’s shoulder and

said, “Life to you. Commander- and thanks,” and collapsed into Tempus’s arms did

Niko’s leftside leader have time for snake-bitten children or Jihan.

For he’d found out, there among the butchered chunks of snake and royal ranks of

confusion, that the bond Niko and he once shared was stronger than it had ever

been.

Jihan limped over to him, where he lay Stealth down, and frowned at the bums on

Niko’s face and his acid-eaten eye. “The placenta of a black cat, powdered at

midnight, Riddler- that will heal his eye. The rest, I can do.”

The Froth Daughter’s hand was gentle on Tempus’s face, turning it away from the

boy. “We have children who are worse hurt,” Jihan said. “Both poisoned by the

snake who bit them.” Her chest was heaving, her muscles torn; flaps of skin hung

loose from her thighs as if a man-wide rope had burned her.

But the children-Arton and Gyskouras, who might be his or perhaps just the

offspring of the god-had crowds to care for them and all of Sanctuary’s

priesthood to pray for them, while Stealth had only what a Stepson could expect.

Tempus sat flat on the floor, knees crossed under him, ignoring ichor slick

which smarted and caused his skin to hiss and curl. “Get me what medicine you

can, Jihan. You and I must heal this one. He wouldn’t want life returned by

magic.”

They exchanged glances-one immortal and mortally tired, one feral and full of

the fire of fierce and forgotten gods.

Then Jihan nodded, rose up, and said, “Your dagger skewered the eagle-witch. I

saw it. She’s wounded, maybe gone for good.”

But it didn’t please him, not at the price Niko always seemed to pay for others’

folly.

Sometime in that interval, because Niko was conscious and could hear, Tempus

affirmed and renewed their pairbond so that he had a rightside partner once

again. And so that Niko, should it matter, would know that he was not alone.

Down by the White Foal Bridge, the gathered Stepsons waited: Kama was there,

with a dozen hand-picked fighters from Sync’s 3rd Commando.

It made Crit uncomfortable to command the Riddler’s daughter’s unit, so he gave

them the periphery, made them the watch guards, kept what distance from her he

could.

Strat, on the other hand, was comfortable with everything coming out of the dark

that evening-with his bay horse, with paired Stepsons riding up, holding

torches, with Ischade’s whispered council, with men who once were Stepsons and

now were no longer men-men who stayed in shadows when Crit looked at them

straight on.

Strat had “explained” about Stilcho and Janni and Ischade’s talent for raising

uneasy dead. Strat said it was a favor she did them, a gift to those who’d died

with their honor blighted.

Crit hadn’t argued-there wasn’t time. Strat was addled, bewitched, and if he got

through this he was going to beat some sense into the big fool as soon as

possible, do something final about Ischade or make her loose her hold on Strat.

If-

Something puffed and popped and Crit’s horse shivered. Looking to his right,

Crit saw Randal, the Stepsons’ warrior mage, decked out in Niko’s armor.

“Greetings, Crit. I heard you’d like some help.” The flop-eared mage looked

older, more fearsome tonight in dream-forged battle gear. He caught Crit staring

at his cuirass. “This?” Randal touched his chest. “It’s Niko’s, still. Just a

loan. We … have an understanding, but no pairbond.” The freckled face aped a

smile (hat was wan in torchlight as his horse reared and Crit realized it wasn’t

quite a horse at all-it was definitely transparent, though horselike in every

other respect.

“Help. Right. Well, Randal, you know the Riddler’s orders, if you’re here. Any

advice? Or should we ride right in there, storm the place, bum it to the

ground?”

At his knee came a touch as soft as a butterfly landing. “I told you, Critias,

just walk right in and take it-walk in by my side, if you will…. She’s not at

home and, if my guess is right, quite indisposed.”

Crit looked from Ischade to Randal for confirmation. Randal nodded. “That’s my

best guess as well.” The mage scratched one ear. “Only, I’ll go in with Ischade.

Roxane’s my enemy, not yours-at least not so much so. And you don’t trust

Ischade … no offense, dear lady.”

“None taken. Yet,” said the woman whose head reached only to Crit’s knee, but

who seemed taller than anyone else about.

Strat rode up, concerned, looking at Crit as if to say, ‘You’d better not start

trouble now, partner or not. Don’t push your luck.’

“I’m going,” Crit said. “I have my orders.”

“Into a witch’s house?” Strat shook his head. “You may be my partner, but these

are my men, until we’ve worked things out. We needn’t risk them, or you. We’ve

got friends to deal with magic who deal with it routinely. Ischade. Randal.

Please be our guests-” As he spoke, Strat bowed in his saddle and, one hand

outstretched in a sweeping gesture, motioned the mage and the necromant to

precede the fighters up the cart-track to Roxane’s house. And as his gesturing

hand neared Crit’s horse, it snatched a rein, and held it.

“Strat,” Crit warned. “You’re pushing matters.”

“Me? I thought it was you, mixing in what you don’t yet understand.”

“Let go of my horse.”

“When you let go of your anger.”

“Fine,” Crit sighed, holding up empty hands and feigning a smile. “Done.”

Strat stared a moment at him, then nodded and freed the horse. “Let’s go,

then… partner?”

“After you, Strat. As you say, you’re in command-at least till morning.”

Inside Roxane’s Foalside home was a smell like burning feathers and a glow as if

the whole place smouldered.

Ischade was well aware that any instant, the premises might burst into flame.

She said so to Randal.

They’d never worked this close, the Tysian Hazard and the necromant.

It was an eerie feeling, especially when Randal drew his kris, a recurved blade,

and said, “It directs fire. Don’t worry, Ischade. I didn’t fight the Wizard Wars

for nothing,” in his tenor voice.

They walked over boards that creaked as if the place had been abandoned for

eternity and Ischade’s neck grew cold with trespass.

Randal said, waxing more the fighter with a woman watching, more the expert

First Hazard of the Mageguild with a famous witch pacing by his side, “I’ll open

the rent where she keeps it, get it out for you. But you’ll have to destroy it.

I can’t.”

“Can’t?” she said, disbelieving.

“Shouldn’t, really. You see, I’ve got one of my own. I wouldn’t want it to think

I’d turned hostile. You should understand.”

She did.

It was odd to work so closely with a rival mage of rival power. She wondered if

there would be a price.

And there was, of sorts, though it did not fall on them directly.

When Randal had made the requisite passes with his hands and a flap in space

fell down and the globe lay revealed, Ischade’s soul wrenched: she loved beauty,

baubles, precious trinkets, and the power globe was all of those and more. It

was the most beautiful, potent piece she’d ever seen. If not for Randal, here

and witness, even despite Strat she would have claimed it for her own.

When he got it out, the floorboards creaked and the roof above began to smoke.

She could see that it singed him and that he’d expected that, now with the

timbers above flaring like tarred torches.

In the ruddy light. Randal knelt down, and she did also, and he told her what

words to speak.

Then he said, “Reach out and set it spinning-just a push with your palm will

do.”

As she touched the globe, Ischade felt a shock more intense than any she’d known

for ages-this was not a matter of raising dead or ordering the lives of lesser

mortals. This was a matter of power great enough to flout the gods.

And there was a bite to all Nisi magic, a corrosion different from her own. She

rocked back upon her heels, nearly mesmerized herself though nothing less could

have done it to her.

Randal pulled unceremoniously at her elbow. “Up, my brave lady. Up and out

before the beams fall down and roast us or she… comes back… somehow.”

And then Ischade realized that her sense of Roxane’s presence might be more than

just echoes from the globe.

Quick as smoke she got her feet under her and ran, Randal beside her, toward an

open window.

Once they’d scrambled through, there was a roar as deep as any dragon’s and the

whole house burst apart in flames.

And in the middle of the blaze Ischade could see the globe, still spinning,

spitting colored fire of its own and spouting tongues of purer fire that licked

up towards the heavens.

Horses thundered, coming near.

Strat was there, lifting her up onto the bay’s rump as if she were a child, and

Crit did the same for Randal.

Neither asked if the task was done. All could see the globe, spinning brighter,

whirling larger, consuming the lesser flame of burning wood and stone and thatch

and blazing like a star.

The horses were glad to be reined back; the heat was singeing. You couldn’t hear

a word or even the trumpets of mounts who hated fire as they reared and walked

backwards on hind legs.

For it seemed, as the house collapsed, that the sky itself caught fire. Demons

of colored light slunk through that wider blaze and slipped away.

Wings of lightning beat against the firmament where a rising sun was dwarfed to

dullness by their light.

And down from purple lightning and clouds that came together, combusting to form

a great cat-thing with hell-red eyes who swiped at it as it came, flew an eagle.

A flaming eagle, descending from the sky, chased by a giant cat of roiling cloud

so black it swallowed all the heat, as if a house cat chased a sparrow in the

dwelling of the gods.

The bird plummeted, wings bent. The cat struck, sent it spinning, struck again.

A scream like heaven rending issued from one, a growl like hell’s bowels

settling came from the other.

And the bird tumbled, then righted, then darkened and streaked, shrinking, into

the lessening flame that had been the witch’s house.

Ischade saw that bird dive among the timbers where a Globe of Power was now

melted, fragments of white hot clay and parboiled jewels, and take a fragment in

its beak and speed away.

When she looked away, she saw that Randal, face beaded with sweat and freckles

standing out black as soot, had seen it too.

The mage gave an uneasy shrug and smiled bleakly. “Let’s not tell them,” he

whispered, leaning close. “Maybe it’s not … her.”

“Perhaps not,” Ischade replied, looking up at the smouldering sky.

The morning after the sky caught fire, Tempus was sitting with Niko when Randal

came to call.

“I’ll see to him. Commander,” said the mage, who touched his kris, from which

healing water could be wrung.

Jihan had applied the powdered placenta of some unlucky cat, and Niko’s eye was

healing.

But these wounds would take a while, even with magic to help them.

And beside the stricken fighter, in the nursery, two children lay in sleep from

which no one had yet managed to rouse them.

That, Tempus knew, was really what Randal must do here. But he had to say,

“Stealth and I have reaffirmed our pairbond. Can you tend him in good

conscience, with a minimum of magic?”

Randal himself had once been paired with Stealth, at the Riddler’s order, and

loved the western fighter still.

The mage looked down, then up, then squared his shoulders. “Of course. And the

children, too… if I have- their father’s permission?”

“Ask the god that; he’s the stud, not me,” Tempus snapped and stormed out.

He had a woman to rape to placate the god within him, a necromant to thank in

person, and a welcome to prepare for Theron, emperor of Ranke, when he arrived.

But Jihan found him before he could find a likely wench on the Street of Red

Lanterns. Her eyes were glowing and she squeezed his arm and wanted to know,

“Just what kind of houses are these?”

He had half a mind to show her, but not the time: she’d come to get him to

mediate between Crit and Strat in matters of command and to ask whether they

could all attend a “fete for returning heroes” being given by friends of

Ischade’s who lived uptown, and whether he’d noticed anything strange about

Strat’s bay horse.

And since he had troubles enough of his own, and Jihan was one, he agreed to

come with her, gave permission for the Band and Stepsons to attend the fete, and

lied about the horse, saying he hadn’t noticed anything strange about it at all.

DAGGER IN THE MIND

C. J. Cherryh

“My lady-” Stilcho said, ever so quietly. The dead Stepson hesitated in the

doorway of the back room of the riverhouse. Hesitated longer. Ischade sat in the

chair before the fire with her hands clasped between her black-robed knees and

gazed there, the fire leaping and casting light on her face, on the bright

scatter of cloaks and trinkets that made the house like some garish carnival.

And Ischade, a darkness in it, fire-limned. The wind rushed in the chimney. The

fire roared up with a dizzy sibilance. The candles burned brighter so that

Stilcho flinched back. Flinched and flinched again in the other direction, for

he encountered a body behind him and a hard hand on his shoulder.

He turned and looked by mistake straight into Haught’s dark Nisi eyes. A muscle

jumped in his jaw. His throat grew paralyzed. Haught’s grip burned him, numbed

him; and there was no sound in all the world but the roar of the fire and no

sight in the world but Haught laying a cautionary finger to his lips and drawing

him away, quietly.

Back and back into the tangle of silks and drapes and shadow that was that over

small room he shared with Haught.

And in this privacy Haught seized his shoulders and put his back to the wall, in

the slithery touch of the silken hangings. Haught’s eyes held his like a

serpent’s.

“Let me go,” Stilcho said. The voice came through jaws that tried to freeze,

that tried to turn to the cold unburied meat and bone that they were without Her

influence. No pain, no agony. Just a dreadful cold as if something very solid

had come between him and his life-source. “L-let me g-g-go. She s-said-” You

weren’t to touch me with magic-that was the part that stuck behind his teeth.

There were just the eyes.

“Hear it?” Haught asked. “Feel it, dead man? She’s worried. She’s unweaving her

magics. Souls are winging back to hell tonight. Do you feel yours slipping?”

“Get your ha-hands from me.”

Haught’s hands slid up his shoulders and held there. “She’s forgotten you

tonight. I haven’t. I’m holding you, Stilcho. /. And I can peel you like an

onion. Or save your wretched soul. Do you feel it now?”

“Ish-”

Haught’s grip tightened, that of his hands and that on his soul. The paralysis

grew, and Haught’s voice sank deeper and deeper, so that it was not sound at

all, only the dazzle of winter cold, was snowflakes falling on dark wind.

The Queen of Death is dethroned. Power is free tonight. Fragments of it drift on

the winds, sift through the air, fall on the earth.

It slays the dead.

It casts down the powerful.

Stilcho shivered, his living eye widened and the dead one saw abysses.

He tottered on the edge, reached up hands cold as clay and held to Haught as to

his last and only hope.

There is something that shines and I see it, dead man.

It beckons the powerful with an irresistible lust.

And she dares not.

The dust shines and shimmers and falls everywhere and she dares not gather that

power up. She seals up the ways. She burns it with fire.

Nisi power. She loathes it and desires it.

I am Nisi, dead man. And I will have that thing. She sits blind and deaf to me

what we say she cannot know. That is my power. And it needs one thing.

Things will change, Stilcho. Consider your allegiances. Consider how you fare

when she forgets you.

He had a very clear picture then what Haught wanted. He held the image of a

shining globe that spun and shimmered. Lust was part of it, in the same way that

light was. It was raw power. It was dangerous, dangerous as some spinning blade,

as some terrible juggernaut let loose. That shining, spinning thing was a

humming regularity that beat like a pulse, that held all the gates of hell and

creation in harmony with itself, all beating away with the same thump-thump of a

living heart, that was the tiniest imperfection in this spinning. If it were

perfect there would be nothing.

The universe exists on a flaw in nothing at all.

A little wobble in the works.

He caught at his chest, feeling an unaccustomed hammering. He felt it as

threatening at first, and then he realized that it was a thin, occasional beat

in a perfect stillness. It was his own heart giving a little thump of life. And

he felt it because for a moment it had been utterly silent.

“You know,” Haught said, “you understand it now, what I want.” Haught’s fine

hand touched his face, and a little chill numbed him. “Now forget it, dead man.

Just forget it now. Until I need you…. I want to talk to you, Stilcho, Just a

moment. Privately.”

Stilcho blinked. It was the living eye he saw from now. It was his enemy Haught,

a Haught looking uncommonly void of malice, a Haught holding him gently by the

shoulder.

“I’ve wronged you,” Haught said. “I know that. You have to understand, Stilcho

we were both victims. I was yours; you were their pawn. Now I have a certain

power and it’s you who are the slave. A sweet difference for me; and a bitter

one for you. But-” The hand moved softly and warmth spread from it, like life

through clay, so poignant a pain that Stilcho’s vision came and went. “It

need not be bitter. You so scarcely died, Stilcho. Earth never went over you;

fire never touched you. Just a little slip away from the body, a little slip

and she caught you in her hands before you could get much beyond the merest

threshold of hell, drew you back to your body in the next breath; and this

flesh of yours-this is solid, it bleeds if cut however sluggishly; it

suffers pain of flesh. And pain of pride; and pain of fear-”

“Don’t-”

“And when mistress wants you, it does infallibly what a man’s body ought-tell

me: does it feel anything?”

Stilcho gave a wrench of his arm. It was no good. The paralysis closed about his

throat and stopped the shout; Haught’s eyes caught his and held and the arm fell

leaden at his side.

“I have the threads that hold you to life,” Haught said. “And I will tell you a

secret: she has never done as much for you as should be done. She can’t, now.

But she could have. The power that could have done it is blowing on the wind

tonight, is falling like dust, wasted. Do you think that she would have thought

twice of you? Do you think that she would have said to herself-Stilcho could

benefit by this, Stilcho could have his life back? No. She never thought of

you.”

Liar, Stilcho thought, fighting the silken voice; but it was hard to doubt the

hand that held the threads of his existence. Liar-not that he believed Ischade

had ever thought of him; that he did not expect; but he doubted that there had

ever been such a chance as Haught claimed.

“But there was,” said Haught softly, and something fluttered and rippled through

the curtains of his mind. “There was such a chance and there still is one. Tell

me, Stilcho-ex-slave speaks to slave now-do you enjoy this condition? You’ll

trek to hell and back to preserve that little thread of life of yours; you’ll

whimper and you’ll go like a beaten dog because even death won’t make you safe

from her, and your life won’t last a moment if she forgets you the way

she’s forgetting those others. But what if there were another source of life?

What if there were someone to hold you up if she neglected you-do you see the

freedom that would give you? For the first time since you died, poor slave, you

can choose from moment to moment. You can say-this moment I’m hers; or: for

these few I’m his. And if anything should happen to me-that choice will be gone

again. Do you understand?”

There was warmth all through him. Warmth and the natural give of his stiffened

ribs-it hurt, like cramped muscle. His heart beat at a normal rate and the

socket of his eye ached with a stab of pain that was acute and poignant and for

a moment giddy with strength.

Haught caught him as it faded and the river-cold came back. Stilcho shivered, a

natural shiver; and Haught’s face before him was pale, beaded with sweat:

“There,” Haught gasped, “there, that’s what I could do for you if I were

stronger.”

Stilcho only stared at him, and the living eye wept at the memory and the dead

one wept blood. It was a seduction’ as wicked as any ever committed in

Sanctuary, which was going some: and he knew himself the victim of it. Of drugs

and temptations he had sampled in his life, of ghassa and krrf and whatever

lotos-dreams the smoke of firoq gave, there was no sensation to equal that

moment of painful warmth, and it was going away now.

He needs a focus, Stilcho thought; he had learned his gram-marie in bitter and

terrible lessons and knew something of the necessities of black sorcery. He

wants a familiar. Nothing so simple as snake or rat, not even one of the birds

he wants a man, a living man. 0 gods, he’s lying. He knows what I’m thinking.

He’s in my skull-

Yes, came a soft, soft voice. / am. And you’re quite right. But you also taste

what my power would be. I’m still apprentice. But to hide a thing is another of

my talents. And Mistress doesn’t see me. I’ve learned the edges of her power,

I’ve mapped it like a geography, and I simply walk the low places, the canyons

and the chasms of it. She’s committed an error great mages make: she’s lost her

small focus. Her inner eye is set always on the horizons, and those horizons

grow wider and wider, so the small, deft stroke can pass her notice; I can sit

in a small place and listen to the echoes her power makes. It makes so much

noise tonight it has no sense of a thing so small and soft. And I approach

mastery. It lacks one thing. No, two. You are one. The thought will remain. I

will seal it up now, I will seal it so you needn’t fear at all; all that will

remain is a knowledge that 1 am not your true enemy. Wake up, “Stilcho-”

Stilcho blinked, startled for a moment as he found himself face to face with

Haught. Something was very wrong, that he was this close to Haught and feeling

no fear. It was a situation that produced fear of its own. But Haught let him

go.

“Are you all right?” Haught asked with brotherly tenderness.

Witchery did not obliterate memory of past injury. It only made things seem,

occasionally, quite mad.

And the fire still roared in the front room, where he had no wish to go.

Ischade herded another soul home. This one was a soldier, and wily and full of

tricks and turns-one of Stilcho’s lost company who had deserted in the streets

and hid and lurked down by the shambles, where there was always blood to be had.

Janni, she thought; that was a soul she sought. It wailed and cursed its feeble

curses; not Janni, but a Stepson of the later breed. She overpowered it with a

thrust that shriveled its resistance and the only sign of this exertion was a

momentary tension of her closed eyelids and a slight lift of her head as she sat

with hands clasped before the fire.

She had grown that powerful. Power hummed and buzzed deafeningly in her veins,

straining her heart.

Small magics stirred about her, which she supposed was Haught at his practice

again; but she paid it no heed. She might summon the Nisi slave and use him to

take the backload, but that led to a different kind of desire, and that desire

was already maddening.

There was Stilcho. There was that release, which was not available with Straton.

But what was in her tonight even a dead man might not withstand; and she had

sworn an oath to herself, if not to gods she little regarded, that she would

never destroy one of her own.

She hunted souls through the streets of Sanctuary and never budged from her

chair, and most of all she hunted Roxane.

She smelled blood. She smelled witchery, and the taint of demons which Roxane

had dealt with. She felt the shuddering of strain at gates enough for a mortal

soul, but not yet wide enough for things which had no part or law in the world

to linger.

One there was which Roxane had called. It was cheated, and vengeful, and

demanded the deaths of gods which a mage tried to prevent. It had intruded into

the world and wanted through again.

One there was which ruled it, for which it was only viceroy, and that power

tried the gates in its own might: it was more than demon, less than god; but

since she had never bargained with gods or demons it had no hope with her.

Mostly she felt the slow sifting of power everywhere on the winds, profligate

and dangerous.

Leave it to me, she had said to Randal, who had enough to do to cheat a demon of

his prey. She felt Randal too, a little spark of fire which gave her location

and a sense of Randal’s improbable self, cool blue fire which lay at the heart

of a dithering, foolish-looking fellow whose familiar/alterself was a black dog:

friendly, flop-eared hound that he was, there was wolf in his well-shielded

soul; there was the slow and loyal heart of the hound that lets children pull

its ears and trample it under knees and hug it giddy: but that same hound could

turn and remember it was wolf; and the eyes which were not slitted green lit

with a redder fire and a human-learned cunning. Wolf was clever in a wild

thing’s way; dog on the hunt was another matter. That was Randal. She shed a

little touch his way and flinched at once, hearing the thunder rumble and

feeling the raw edges of nature gone unstable.

Warning, warning, warning, he sent; and she gathered it up and felt the rising

of the unnatural wind.

Get the dead hence, send them home. A god lies senseless, at the edge of raving.

And he is prey to demons and their minions.

She located another soul, a lost child. It was glad to go. And another, who

loved a man in the Maze. She drove that one away with difficulty; it was wily as

the mercenary and more desperate.

She found a minor-class fiend hiding in an alley; it tried desperately to

pretend it was a man. Know you, know you, it protested, does what you want, oh,

does everything you want. … It wept, which was unusual for a fiend, and hid in

a tumble of old boxes as if that could save it from the gates. I find HER, it

snuffled.

That saved it. That Her was Roxane. The fiend knew instinctively what she

wanted. It proposed treachery (which was its fiendish part) and hoped for mercy

(which was its human vulnerability).

FIND, she told it. And the orange-haired fiend leapt up and gibbered with that

hope for mercy. It went loping and shambling off shattering boxes and wine

bottles and scaring hell out of a sleeping drunk behind the Unicorn.

Ischade’s head tilted back; the breath whistled between her clenched teeth and

the lust came on her with fever-pulse, let loose by this magical exertion. She

had expended a certain kind of energy. It had gone far beyond desire, went

toward need; and she hunted the living now, hunted with a reckless, hateful

vengeance.

Nothing petty this time. No inconsequential, unwashed victim picked up in the

streets, slaking need with something so distasteful to her it was self-inflicted

torment.

She wanted the innocent. She wanted something clean. And restrained herself

short of that. She looked only for the beautiful and the surface-clean,

something that would not haunt her.

And a lord of Ranke, who got up to close the shutters against the sudden and

importunate wind, inhaled the stench that swept up from riverside and suffered a

physical reaction of such intensity he dreamed awake, dreamed something so

intense and so very real that it mingled with the krrf-dream he had taken refuge

in this storm-fraught night. It had something of terror about it. It had

everything of lust. It was like the krrf, destructive and infinitely-desirable

in that way that knowledge of other worlds, even death, has a lust about it, and

a soul trembles on the edge of some great and dangerous height, fascinated by

the flight and the splintering of its own bone and the spatter of its own blood

on the pavings-

Lord Tasfalen took in his breath of a sudden and focused in horror at the

starlit pavings of his own courtyard, realizing how close he had come to

falling. And how desirable it had been. He blamed it on the krrf and flung

himself away and back to the slave who shared his bed, vowing to have a man

whipped for the krrf that must have something in it beyond the ordinary. He

experienced a taint of fear, stood there in his bedroom with the slave staring

up at him in purest terror that the handsome lord was suffering some kind of

seizure, that he had perhaps been poisoned, for which she would be blamed, and

for which she would die. Her whole life passed before her in that moment, before

Tasfalen sank down on the bed in a convulsion he shared with a woman a far

distance from his ornate bedchamber.

That was the extent to which Ischade’s power had swelled. It hunted like a

beast, and left Tasfalen shaking in a lust he could not satisfy, though he

tried, with the slave, who spent the hour in a terror greater than any she had

yet experienced in this gilt prison, with this most jaded of Rankene nobles.

Ischade leaned back and shut her eyes, lay inert for a long time while the

thunder rumbled and rattled above the house and a flop-eared, freckled mage

labored to save a god and a seer. Sweat bathed her limbs, ran in trails on her

body beneath the robes. She felt the last impulses of that convulsion, tasted

copper on her tongue, rolled her eyes beneath slitted lids and thanked her own

foresight that she had sent Straton to Crit this night.

Not yet for this fine nobleman. Sweets were for prolonging. She lay there with

the fires sinking in the hearth and on the candles round the room; and in her

blood. She stretched out the merest tendril of will and wrapped it about the

house, ran it like lightning along the old iron fence and up to the rooftree,

where a small flock of black birds took flight.

She sent it pelting gustlike down the chimney and scouring out across the floor

with the roll of a bit of ember.

“Haught!” ,

Haught was there, quickly, catfooted and sullen-faced as ever, standing in the

doorway of the room he shared with Stilcho. Ex-slave and ex-dancer. She gazed at

him through slitted eyes, simply stared, testing her resolve; and beckoned him

closer. He came a foot or two. That was all. Cautious Haught. Wary Haught.

“Where’s Stilcho?”

Haught nodded back toward the room. The fires were silent. Every word seemed

drawn in ice, written on the still air inside and the stormwind without.

“This is not a good night, Haught. Take him and go somewhere. No. Not just

somewhere.” She pulled a ring from her finger. “I want you to deliver this.”

“Where, Mistress?” Haught came and took it, ever so carefully, as if it were

white-hot; as if he would not hold it longer than he had to. “Where take it?”

“There’s a house fourth up and across the way from Moria. Deliver it there. Say

that a lady sends to Lord Tasfalen. Say that this lady invites him to formal

dinner, tomorrow at eight. At the uptown house. And tell Moria there’ll be

another place for dinner.” She smiled, and Haught found sudden reason to clench

his hands on the ring and back away. “You’re quite right,” she said, faintest

whisper. “Get out of here.”

She lay back a moment, eyes shut in her dreams (and Tasfalen’s) as she heard the

door open and shut. She felt the tremor in the wards which ringed the place

about and sealed its gates.

Come with me, Randal had said, knowing what he faced in god-healing. Ischade, I

need you-

And Strat: Ischade-for the gods’ sake-

For no gods’ sake. No god’s.

She had fled Straton’s presence as she would have fled the environs of hell…

fled running, when she had left that place and left him and the ruin of Roxane’s

house, in utmost confusion and dread, her heart pounding in terror of what was

loose, not in the night, but in her own inner darkness-a thing which made her

shun mirrors and the sight of her eyes. So she sat before her hearth and hurled

magic into the fires and into the wind and into the gates of hell until she had

exhausted the power to control that power and direct it; then the fire went into

her bones and inmost parts and smouldered there.

Thunder rumbled again, instability in the world, fire in the heavens.

She drew a shuddering breath, tormented the dreams of the fairhaired Rankan and

thrust herself to her feet, took up her cloak and put it on with careful self

discipline.

The door opened with a crash, fluttering the candle flames, which blazed white

for a moment and subsided.

So hard it was to manage the little things. The merest shrug was lethal. The

gaze of her eyes might do more than mesmerize. It might strip a soul. She flung

up the hood and walked out into the wind and the night.

The door crashed shut behind her and the iron gate squealed’ violently as it

banged open. The wind took her cloak and played games with it, with a power that

might have leveled Sanctuary.

“Damn it, no. Let me be.” And Straton left the mage-quarter room and headed down

the outside stairs.

Left Crit, with argument echoing in the room and the dark.

Crit came to the door, came out onto the landing. “Strat,” Crit said; and got

only Strat’s back. “Strat.”

Straton stopped then and looked up at his left-side leader, at the man he owed

his life to a dozen times and who owed him. “Why didn’t you shoot? Why didn’t

you damn well pull the trigger when you came into the yard if you’re so damn

convinced? Ask me why things in Sanctuary have gone to hell-come in damn well

late and find fault with me when I’ve kept this town alive and kept the blood

from running down the damn gutters-”

Crit came down the steps and leaned on either wooden railing. “That’s not what

I’m talking about. It’s your choice of allies. Strat, dammit, wake up.”

“We’re public. We’ll talk about it later. Later isn’t tonight.”

Crit came a step further, checked him on the step. “Listen to me. We’ve got the

witch-bitch out. The other one’s got you. Command of this city, hell, you lost

it. Ace, you lost it a long time ago. I don’t know how the hell you’re still

alive but if the Riddler gets his hands on you now you’re done-dammit, Strat,

where’s your sense? You know what she is, you know what she does-”

“She killed me weeks ago. I’m a walking corpse. Sure, Crit. I’m best at full of

moon. Dammit, that woman’s why we’re clear of the Nisi witch, she’s why you had

a city left down here, and why the empire has a backside left at all. I’ll tell

you what it is with you, Crit; it’s knowing your partner was damn well right and

you were wrong; it’s having your mind made up before you got here and riding in

there to haul me out for a traitor-that’s what you came to do, isn’t it? To

shoot me down without a chance if I went for your throat? It’s not catching,

Crit. It’s not even true. They blame her for every body that turns up in the

alleys; in the Maze, for the gods’ sake- as if corpses never happened before she

came to town. Well, I’ve been with her when those stories spread; I know damn

well where she was at night; and they still blame her-”

“-like they blame lambs on wolves; sure, Strat; but a wolf’s still a wolf. And

you’re damn lucky this far. I’m telling you. The Riddler will order you. Stay

the hell out of there.”

“Stay the hell out of my business!” Strat slammed an offered hand aside and ran

the steps down to the bottom.

“Strat!”

He looked up in mid-turn. By the tone there might have been a weapon. There was

not. He hardly broke stride as he went for the stable, flung the door open, and

fumbled after the lantern that hung there. A soft whicker sounded. Another,

rowdier, sounded off loud and two steelshod hooves hit the stall: Crit’s sorrel,

ill-tempered and fighting the rein every step of the way into the stable,

bucking and banging boards and making itself heard upstairs.

“Shut up!” It was the same as yelling at Crit. About as useful. The hooves hit

the boards again.

And Crit arrived in the stable doorway, stood there dark against the starlight

on the cobbles outside. Straton ignored him and made another attempt at the

light. It took. He adjusted the wick and hung the lamp on its peg, and did what

he knew might be fatal. He turned his back on Crit and walked away down the

aisle.

Not a quarrel between friends. It was nothing private. Tempus’s orders were

involved. Tempus disavowed him, disavowed everything he had done, everything he

had set up, every alliance he had made; and told him (through Crit) to break off

with his woman and own up to failure. Sent his own leftside leader to kill him.

He gave Crit the chance. He walked the stable aisle and got his tack off the

rail, flung it up onto the rim of the bay’s box stall. He kept listening through

the sorrel’s ruckus, for the soft stir of straw that would be Crit walking up

behind him.

Try it. From disspirited suicide, to a gathering determination to fight back, to

the imagination that he could beat Crit, beat him to the ground, sit on him and

make him listen. Not kill him when he could. Then Crit would come to sanity.

Then Crit would be sorry. Then Crit would go and tell Tempus it was all a

mistake, and his partner had done the best that any man could do, tried his damn

heart out and done what no one else had been able to do, gods, had held the Nisi

witch at bay, had worked out at least a fragile truce with the key factions, had

patched the whole hellhole of Sanctuary together and held onto it.

He deserved thanks, by the gods. He deserved something besides a partner trying

to murder him.

Come on, Crit, dammit. Not a sound in the straw, not a move.

He turned around and looked. Crit was not there at all; had gone-somewhere.

Upstairs again, maybe. Maybe to pass an order.

Straton turned and flung the blanket on the bay, stroked its shoulder. The horse

bent its head back and delicately nipped at his sleeve, nosed his ribs. He flung

his arms about its neck, which indignity the bay protested by backing and

fidgeting; gave the warm neck a hug and a slap and tried to stop the stinging

of his eyes and the pain in his heart by holding onto something that simply

loved him.

She loved him that way. Supported him. Helped him. Never contested with him for

credit for this or credit for that, handed it all into his lap with a whispered:

But I don’t want that, Strat. You’re the mind behind it, you tell me what you

need. I do it for your sake. No other in all the world. Yours is the only

judgment in the world I trust more than my own. You’re the only man I’ve ever

trusted. The only one, ever.

She was quiet, was safety, she understood what he needed and when he needed it.

She was the only woman who knew him the way Crit had known him; knew what he

did, knew he was the Stepsons’ interrogator, unraveled his own pretense that

cruelty gave him no sexual thrill at all: took the body-knowledge which was his

skill at interrogation and at lovcmaking and bent him round again till he could

see the torment he inflicted on himself, inner war against his own

sensibilities. She took all these things and knit them up and let him turn

gentle and sentimental with her, which was his deepest, darkest secret- it was

this fragile, inner self she got to, which Crit rarely had. That he could

deliver himself to her inside and out, and sleep in her arms in a way he never

slept with his lovers-not without an eye and an ear alert, somehow-alert in the

way a cynic never sleeps, never trusts, never hopes. Ischade’s embrace was a

drug, the gaze of her eyes a well in which Straton the Stepson became Strat the

man, the young man, Strat the wise and the brave-

Strat the fool to Crit. Strat the traitor to Tempus. Strat the butcher to

everyone else he knew.

He flung the saddle up and the bay which was her gift stood quietly while Crit’s

damn sorrel kicked a stall to ruin and Crit did not come to see to the animal.

He checked the bridle and turned the bay and led it out into the stable aisle,

from there to the door.

Perhaps Crit would be waiting there, having known his chances slipping up on

him. Perhaps it would be one fast bolt through the ribs and never a chance at

all to tell Crit he was a fool and a blackguard.

Strat leapt up to the bay’s back and ducked his head, sending the bay flying out

that door with a powerful drive of its hindquarters. If a bolt flew past he

never saw it. The bay scrabbled for a tight turn on the dirt of the little yard

and lit out down the cobbles of the alley, never pausing until he reined it to a

walk a block away.

Where he was going he had no idea. Stay away, Ischade had said. He had believed

her then, the way he believed implicitly when she spoke in that tone to him,

that it was something she understood and he did not. It was something to do with

Roxane. It was something that brought a wildness to her eyes and meant hazard to

her; but it was a witch-matter, not his kind of dealing. Nothing he could help

her with. And he and Ischade had the kind of understanding he had once with

Crit, an understanding he had never looked to have with any woman: an unspoken

agreement of personal competencies. Witchery was hers. The command of the city

was his. And he would not go there tonight, though that was where every bone in

him ached to go, to reassure himself that she was well, and that it was not some

misapprehension between them that had driven her away. Things had changed. Crit

being back, and Tempus-gods knew what was in her mind.

If this visitor makes an end to what is-was-between us-

It’s yours to say-

His to say. His to say, by accepting her command to stay away tonight? or by

defying it?-He suspected one and then the other with equal force; he agonized

over it and called up every nuance of her voice and body and behavior over weeks

and months, trying to know what she had meant, whether it was keeping that

unspoken pact with her inviolate or defying it and risking (he sensed) his life

to pass those wards tonight- that would cancel that doubt he had felt in her. Or

confirm it.

Damn Crit. Damn Tempus’s coming now, late, when he had everything virtually in

hand. Damn their arrival that suddenly undermined everything he had built and

poisoned the air between himself and Ischade, the only (he suddenly conceived of

it as such), the only unselfish passion he had ever owned, the only peace he had

ever conceived of having in the world.

The bay horse picked up its pace again, moved with astonishing quiet over the

cobbles and down the long street where the scars of factional violence still

lingered.

Factions and powers. He waked suddenly, as if he had been numb since Ischade

flung him at Crit and Crit flung him away again. He heard Ischade’s voice

whispering in his brain: The only man-the only one who understands how fragile

things are-

The only one who stands a chance of holding this city-

The only one who might make something of it yet-truer than the weakling prince,

truer than priests and commanders who serve other powers-

You’re the only hope I have, the only hope this city has of being more than the

end of empire-

You might not have their love, Strat, but you have their respect. They know

you’re an honest man. They know you’ve always fought for this town. Even llsigis

know that. And they respect you if nothing else of Ranke-

-llsigis! he had laughed.

You are the city’s champion. The city’s savior. Believe me, Straton, there is no

other man could walk the line you’ve walked, and no other Rankan they know

fights for this town.

… They respect you if nothing else ofRanke.

Tempus counted him a failure. Tempus arrived in the midst of Roxane’s death

throes and laid that chaos to his account.

Let Tempus see the truth, let Tempus see that he could pull strings in this web,

let him hand peace with the factions to Tempus and let Tempus deal with gods:

Tempus was not inclined to tie himself down to one town, one place; Crit loathed

the place-but one of Tempus’s men next in line, one of Tem-pus’s trusted men

could find that answer to everything he wanted.

Ischade and Sanctuary.

There had been disturbance downstairs, a door had opened, and Moria hugged the

quilts to her in her lonely bed, lay hardly daring to lift her head. The whole

night was terrifying with thunders, with the fitful, fretful character of a sky

which promised no rain and perhaps the renewed warfare of witches. Her with the

Nisi witch. The full scope of disasters possible in that eluded gutter-bom

Moria; Moria the elegant, the beautiful, curled into a fetal ball in the soft

down comforters and the satin and the lace of the mansion Ischade provided Her

most pampered (and hitherto least used) servant. But the depth ofMoria’s

imagination was better than most-who had seen the dead raised, the fires blaze

about Ischade and pass harmless to her- but not to others. And she had every

Ilsigi’s reason for terror- a dead man had turned up one morning, outside her

very door: the skies arced lightnings overhead, terrible storms haunted

Sanctuary nights, and there were wails and scratchings round about the house

and the shutters, thumps in the pantry and the basement which sent even

the hardened staff shrieking down the halls in terror of ghosts and haunts-a

murdered man had lived here; he manifested in the basement all wrapped in his

shroud, to Cook’s abject terror and the ruin of a whole jug of summer pickles.

A ghostly child sported in the hall of nights and once Moria had wakened to the

distinct and most horrible feeling that something had depressed a body-shaped

nest on the feather-mattress beside her. (For that, she had sent a

terrified message to Ischade, and the manifestations abruptly stopped.) If

that were not enough, there were pitched battles in the streets downhill,

fires, maimed men carried past in blood-soaked litters-a fiend had rampaged

through the house of the very Beysib lady Moria had visited on Ischade’s orders,

and Moria knew all too much about the Harka Bey and their dreadful snakes and

their way of dealing with people who brought harm to one of their own. She

feared jars, jugs, and closets of late; she feared packages and baskets

brought in from market (on those days market functioned): she was

sure that some viper might lurk there, some Beysib horror come to find

Ischade’s helpless agent in some moment that Ischade was elsewhere occupied-the

Mistress would take a terrible vengeance for such an attack: Moria believed

that implicitly; but it was also possible that Moria would be dead and unable

to appreciate it.

And, o Shipri and Lord Shalpa, patron of a one-time thief and Hawkmask, even the

dead were not safe from Ischade, who might well raise her up to let her go on

like poor Stilcho, like the Stepson-slave Ischade took to her bed and performed

gods-knew-what with because he was dead and could not succumb to Ischade’s

curse-could not die as every man died who had sex with Ischade-or Stilcho died

nightly and Ischade raised him up from hell (though how her living and latest

lover, the Stepson Straton, had survived beyond one night she could not guess;

or did guess, in lurid imaginings of exotic practices and things that she dared

not ask Haught-does he, does Haught, with Her? Would he, could he, has he ever-?

with direst jealousy and helpless rage; for Haught was hers). It was all too

confusing for Moria, once-thief turned lady.

And now the Emperor was dead in Ranke, the world was in upheaval, and back from

the Wizard Wars the Stepsons came scouring through the streets, all grim in

their armor and on their tall horses; back in Sanctuary again and determined to

set things into their own concept of order.

Make the house presentable, Ischade had sent word through Haught; and told her

the house had to host the chiefest of these devils, including Tempus, who was an

Ilsigi’s direst enemy: an Ilsigi hostess had to entertain these awful men,

with what end to the business Moria could not foresee.

A door had opened downstairs. It closed again. She lay between terror and

another thought-for Haught came to her now and again. Haught came wherever he

liked and sometimes that was to her bed. It was Haught who had made her

beautiful, it was Haught who cared for her and made her imprisoned life worth

living.

It was Haught who had prised a knife from her fingers and prevented her from

suicide a half a year ago, then kissed those fingers and made gentle love to

her. It was Haught who stole a little of the Mistress’s magic for her and cast a

glamor on her that had never yet gone away. Perhaps the Mistress tacitly

approved. But the Mistress had never laid eyes on her new self; and that might

happen tomorrow night-

That would happen. Oh, if there were a way to make herself invisible she would

do it. If that were Haught-it must be Haught, coming up the stairs so quietly.

A shiver came over her. She remembered the thing which had been in bed with her.

She remembered the cold in the air and the steps which used to come and go in

the basement, which might pass a door in the middle of the night and come

padding up the stairs-

The latch of her room gave gently. The hinge creaked softly. She lay with her

back to these sounds in that paralysis that a bad dream brings, in which a thing

will not be real until one looks and sees it standing by one’s bed-

The step came close and lingered there. There was a water-smell, a river-smell,

a beer-smell unlike Haught’s perfumed, wine-favoring self. It was wrong, wrong-

She spun over the edge of the bed and came up with the knife she kept there on

the floor, as someone dived across the bed at her. She leaped back with that

knife held with no uptown delicacy: she was a knife-fighter, and she crouched in

her be-ribboned lace and satin whipping the tail of her gown up and aside to

clear her legs. A ragged shape hulked on its knees amid her bed, silhouette in

light from the hall. It held up its hands, choked for air.

“M-mo-ri-a,” it said, wept, bubbled. “Mo-ri-a-”

“0 gods!”

She knew the voice, knew the smell of Downwind, knew the shape and the hands

suddenly, and fled for the door and the lamp to borrow light in the hall, her

hands atremble and the straw missing the wick a half a dozen times before she

lit the lamp and brought it back again in both hands, the knife tucked beneath

her arm.

Mor-am her brother huddled like a lump of brown rag amid her satin sheets. Mor

am stinking of the gutters, Mor-am twisted and scarred by fire and the beggar

king’s torture, as he was when She withdrew her favor.

“M-moria-M-m-moria?”

He had never seen her like this, never seen the glamor on her. She was an uptown

lady. And he-

“0 gods, Mor-am.”

He rubbed his eyes with a grimy fist. She-found the lamp burning her hands and

set it on a bureau, taking the knife from beneath her arm. “Gods, what happened?

Where have you been?” But she needn’t ask: there was the reek of Downwind and

liquor and the bitter smell of krrf.

“I-been-lost,” he said. “I w-went-H-Her business.” He waved a hand vaguely away,

riverward, toward Downwind or nowhere at all, and squinted at her. The tic that

twisted his face did so with a vengeance. “I c-c-come back. What h-ha-hap-pened

t’ you, M-m-mo-ria? Y-y-you don’t look-”

“Makeup,” she said, “it’s makeup, uptown ladies have tricks-” She stood and

stared in horror at the kind of dirt and the kind of sight she had grown up

with, at the way Downwind twisted a man and bowed the shoulders and put

hopelessness in the eyes. “Lost. Where, lost? You could’ve sent word- you could

have sent something-” She watched the tic by Mor-am’s mouth grow violent: it was

never that way when Ischade prevented it. Ischade was not preventing it. For

some reason Ischade had stopped preventing it. “You’re in trouble with Her,

aren’t you?”

“I-t-tr-tried. I tried to do what she w-wanted. Then I-1-lost the m-m-money.”

“You mean you drank it! You gambled it, you spent it on drugs, you fool! Oh,

damn you, damn you!”

He cringed. Her tall, her once-handsome brother-he cringed down and his

shoulderblades were sharp against the rags, his dirty hands were like claws

clutching his knees as he crouched rocking in the cream-and-lace of her bed. “I

got to have m-m-money, Mo-ri-a. I got to go to Her, I got to make it g-g-good-”

“Damn, all I’ve got is Her money, you fool! You’re going to take Her money and

pay Her back with it?”

“You g-g-got to, you g-g-got to, the p-pain, Moria, the pain-”

“Stay here!”

She set the knife down and fled, a flurry of satin and ribbons and bare feet

down the polished, carpeted stairs, down into the hall and back where even in

this night Cook’s minions labored over the dinner-the infamous Shiey had

acquired a partner with a monumental girth and a real skill, who co-ruled the

kitchen: one-handed Shiey managed the beggar-servants and Kotilis stirred and

mixed and sliced with a deft fury that put an awe into the slovens and dullards

that were the rule in this house. They thought She had witched this cook, and

that the hands that made a knife fly over a radish and carve it into a flower

could do equally well with ears and noses: that was what Shiey told them. And

work went on this night. Work went on in mad terror; and if anyone thought it

was strange that one more beggar went padding in the front door at night (with a

key) and Little Mistress came flying downstairs in her night-gown to rummage the

desk in the hall for the money not one thief in the house dared steal-

No one said a thing. Shiey only stood in the door in her floured apron, and

Kotilis went on butchering his radishes, while Moria ignored them both, flying

up the stairs again with the copper taste of a bitten lip and stark fear in her

mouth.

She loved her brother, gods help a fool. She was bound to him in ways that she

could not untangle; and she stole from Her to pay Her, which was the only thing

she could do. It was damnation she courted. It was the most terrible ruin in the

world.

It was for the arch-fool Mor-am, who was the only blood kin she had, and who had

bled for her and she for him since they were urchins in Jubal’s employ. It was

not Mor-am’s fault that he drank too much, that he smoked krrf when the pain and

the despair got to be too much; he had hit her and she forgave him in a broken

hearted torment-all the men she loved had done as much, excepting only Haught,

whose blows were never physical but more devastating. It was her lot in life.

Even when Ischade clothed her in satin and Haught touched her with stolen

glamor. It was her lot that a drunkard brother had to show up wanting money; and

adding to the sins that she would carry into Ischade’s sight tomorrow. It was

men’s way to be selfish fools, and women’s to be faithful fools, and to love

them too much and too long.

“Here,” she said, when she had come panting up the stairs, when she had found

Mor-am huddled still amid her bed, weeping into his thin, dirty hands. “Here-”

She came and sat down and put her hand on his shoulders and gave the gold to

him. He wiped his eyes and snatched it so hard it hurt her hand; and got up and

shambled out again.

He would not go to Ischade. He would go to the nearest dope-den; he would give

it all to some tavemkeeper who would give him krrf and whatever else the place

offered to the limit of that gold; and maybe think to force food down him; then

throw him out on the street when he had run through his account.

And when Ischade knew where he was-if Ischade got on his track and remembered

him among her other, higher business-

Moria sank down on her soiled bed and hugged her arms about herself, the satin

not enough against the chill.

She saw the bureau surface. The ivory-and-silver knife was gone. He had stolen

it.

The starlit face of Tasfalen’s mansion was buff stone; was grillwork over the

windows, and a huge pair of bronze doors great as those which adorned many a

temple. The detail of them was obscured in the dark and the windows were

shuttered and barred against the insanity of uptown.

But Haught had no trepidation. “Stay here,” he told Stilcho, and Stilcho turned

a worried one-eyed stare his way and wrapped his black cloak tighter about him,

melting into the ornamental bushes with which (unwisely) Lord Tasfalen’s

gardener decorated the street side.

Haught simply walked up to the door and took the pull-ring of the bell-chain,

tugged it twice and waited, arms folded, face composed in that bland grace which

he practiced so carefully. A dog barked in some echoing place far inside; was

hushed; there was some long delay and he rang again to confirm it for them-no,

it was no drunken prankster.

And now inside there had to be a consultation with the major domo and perhaps

even with the master himself, for it was not every door in Sanctuary that dared

open at night.

Eventually, in due course, there came a step to the door, an unbarring of the

small barred peephole in the embrace of two bronze godlets. “Who is it?”

“A messenger.” Haught put on his most cultivated voice. “My mistress sends to

your master with an invitation.”

Silence from the other side. It was a message fraught with ambiguities that

might well make a nobleman’s nightwarder think twice about asking what

invitation and what lady. The little door snapped shut and off went the porter

to more consultation.

“What are they doing?” Stilcho asked-not a frequenter of uptown houses, or one

who had dealt with nobility in life or death. “Haught, if they-”

“Hush,” said Haught, once and sharply, because more steps were coming back.

The peephole opened again. “It’s an odd hour for invitations.”

“My mistress prefers it.”

A pause. “Is there a token?”

“My mistress’ word is her token. She asks your master to attend tomorrow night

at eight, at a formal dinner in the former Peles house; dinner at sundown. Tell

Lord Tasfalen that my lady will make herself known there. And he will want to

see her, by a token he will know.” He reached up and handed a black feather

toward the entry, a flight-feather of one of Sanctuary’s greater birds. “Tell

him wear this. Tell him my lady will be greatly pleased with him.”

“Her name?”

“She is someone he will know. I will not compromise her. But this for taking my

message-” He handed up a gold coin. “You see my lady is not ungenerous.”

A profound pause. “I’ll tell my lord in the morning.”

“Tell him then. You needn’t mention the gold, of course. Good rest to you,

porter.”

“Good night and good sleep, young sir.”

Young sir. The peephole closed and a tight small smile came to the ex-slave’s

face; a fox’s smile. He stepped briskly off the porch with a light swirl of his

russet cloak and a wink of his sword-hilt in the starlight.

“Gods,” Stilcho said, “the ring- the ring, man-”

“Ah,” Haught said, pressing a hand to his breast. “Damn. I forgot it.” He looked

back at the door. “I can’t call them back-that wouldn’t impress them at all.”

“Dammit, what are you up to?”

Haught turned and extended a forefinger, ran it gently up the seam of Stilcho’s

cloak, and dragged him a safe distance from the door. “You forget yourself, dead

man. Do you need a lesson here and now? Cry put and I’ll teach you something you

haven’t felt yet.”

“For the gods’ sake-”

“You can be with me,” Haught said, “or you can resign this business here and

now. Do you want to feel it, Stilcho? Do you want to know what dying can be

like?”

Stilcho stepped away from him, his eye-patched face a stark pale mask under

black hood and black fall of hair. He shook his head. “No. I don’t want to

know.” There was a flash of panicked white in the living eye. “I don’t want to

know what you’re doing either.”

Haught smiled, not the fox’s smile now, but something darker as he closed the

distance between them a second time. He caught Stilcho’s cloak between thumb and

forefinger. “Do me a favor. Go to Moria’s place. Tell her expect one more for

dinner tomorrow; and wait for me there.”

“She’ll kill you.”

Moria was not the She Stilcho meant. There was terror in the single eye.

Stilcho’s scarred mouth trembled.

“Kill you,” Haught said. “That’s what you’re afraid of. But what’s one more trip

down there, for you? Is hell that bad?”

“Gods, let me alone-”

“Maybe it is. You ought to know. Tell the Mistress, dead man, and you lose your

chance with me.” Haught inhaled, one great lungful of Sanctuary’s dust-ridden

air. “There’s power to be had. I can see it, I breathe it-you like what I can

do, don’t deny it.”

“I-”

“Or do you want to run to Her, do you really want to run to Her tonight? She

told us to leave Her alone-But you’ve dealt with Her when the killing-mood is on

Her, you know what it’s like. You heard the fires tonight; have you ever heard

them bum like that? She’s taken Roxane, she’s drunk on that power, the gates of

hell reel under her-do you want that to take you by the hand tonight and do you

want that to take you to Her bed and do what She’s done before? You’ll run to

hell for refuge, man, you’ll go out like a candle and you’ll rot in hell

whatever there is left of you when She’s done.”

“No-”

“No, She wouldn’t, or No, you won’t go there, or Yes, you’re going to do exactly

what I asked you to do?”

“I’ll take your message.” Stilcho’s voice came hoarse and whispered. And in a

rush: “If you get caught it’s your doing, I won’t know anything, I’ll swear I

had no part in it!”

“Of course. So would I.” He tugged gently at Stilcho’s cloak. “I don’t ask

loyalty of you. I have ways to ensure it. Think about that, Stilcho. She’s going

to kill you. Again. And again. How long will your sanity take it, Stilcho? Shut

your eyes. Shut them. And remember everything. And do it.”

Stilcho made a strangled sound. Flinched from him.

Stilcho remembered. Haught took that for granted; and smiled in Stilcho’s

distraught face.

Before he swept the russet cloak back, set a fine hand on the elegant sword, and

walked on down the street like a lord of Sanctuary.

Straton stood still and blindfolded as the door closed behind, as the little

charade played itself out. He heard the tread of men on board and the scrape of

a chair and smelled the remnant of dinner and onions in this small, musty room.

“Do I take this damn thing off?” he asked, after too much of this shifting about

had gone on.

“He can take it off,” a deep voice said. “Get him a chair.”

So he knew even then that his contact had not played him false; and that it was

Jubal. He reached up and pulled off the tight blindfold and ran a hand through

his hair as he stood and blinked at the black man who faced him across a table

and a single candle-a black man thinner and older than he ought to be, but pain

aged a man. White touched the ex-slaver’s temples, amid the crisp black: lines

were graven deep beside the mouth, out from the flaring nostrils, deep between

dark, wrinkle-set eyes. Jubal’s hands rested both visible on the scarred

tabletop; those of the hawknosed man in the chair beside him were not visible at

all. And Mradhon Vis, who lately sported a drooping black mustache to add to his

dusky sullenness, sat in the comer with one booted foot on the rung of the next

chair and elbow on knee, a broad-bladed knife catching the candlelight with

theatrical display.

A man shoved a chair up at Straton’s back; he turned a slow glance that way,

took the measure of that man the same as he had of the two more in the comer.

Thieves. Brigands. Ilsigis. A Nisi renegade. Jubal from gods knew where. And

himself, Rankan; the natural enemy of all of them.

“Sit down,” Jubal said, a voice that made the air quiver. Straton did that,

slowly, without any haste at all. Leaned back and put his hands in his belt and

crossed his ankles in front of him.

“I said I had a proposal,” Straton said.

“From you or from the witch? Or from your commander?”

“From me. Privately. In regard to the other two.”

Jubal’s square-nailed finger traced an obscure pattern on the aged wood. “Your

commander and I have a certain-history.”

“All the more reason to deal with me. He owes the witch. She owes me. I want

this town quiet. Now. Before it loses whatever it’s got. If Tempus is here he’s

here for reasons more than one.”

“Like?”

“Like imperial reasons.”

Jubal laughed. It was a snarl, a slow rumbling. He spoke something in some

tongue other than Rankene. The man by him laughed the same. “The Emperor, is it?

Is it treachery you propose? Treachery against your commander?”

“No. Nobody benefits that way. You make your living in this town. I have

interests here. My commander has interests only in getting out of here. That’s

in your interest. You can go back to business. I get what I want. My commander

can get out of here without getting tied down in a fight in Sanctuary streets.

All that has to happen is a few weeks of quiet. Real quiet. No theft. No gangs.

No evidence of sedition.”

“Stepson, if your commander heard you promise that he’d have your guts out.”

“Give me the quiet I need and I’ll give you the quiet you need. You and I

understand each other. You won’t have a friend left in our ranks-if I fall. Do

you understand me?”

“Do I understand you’ve got your price, Rankan?”

“Mutual advantage.” Heat rose to his face. Breath came shorter. “I don’t give a

damn what you name it, you know where we all are: trade’s slowed to a stop,

shops are closed, taverns shut down-are you making money? Merchants aren’t; you

aren’t; no one’s happy. And you know and I know that if this PFLS craziness

goes on we’ve got a town in cinders, trade gone down the coast, revolutionary

fools in control or martial law as long as it takes, and corpses up to the

eaves. You see profit in that?”

“I see profit everywhere. I survive, Rankan.”

“You’re not fool enough to go up against the empire. You make money on it.”

Bodies stiffened all around the room. Strat folded his arms across his chest and

recrossed his ankles top to bottom.

“He’s right.” Jubal snapped his fingers. “He said the right word. Let’s see if

he goes on making sense. Keep talking.”

There was disturbance on the Street of Red Lanterns; but the crowd that gathered

did it in the discreet way of Red Lantern crowds: peered through windows and out

of doorways of brothels and taverns and just stopped in ordinary passages down

the Street if they were far enough away. It was glitter and drama, was this

district; and a great deal of the tawdry, and in this thunder-rattling night and

the bizarre quiet in town since the fire, it was a rougher-than-usual place, the

clients that showed up being the sort who were less delicate about their own

safety, the sort who took care of themselves. So the whores on the Street were

unsurprised at the commotion down by Phoebe’s: the small office where Zaibar and

the remaining Hell-Hounds served quiet duty as policemen on the Street-that

office was unastonished tod, and tried to ignore the matter as long as

possible. Zaibar in fact was deliberately ignoring it, since rumor had spread

who was on the Street.

He poured himself another drink, and looked up as a rider on a sorrel horse went

clattering past his office as if that man had business.

Stepson. He was relieved, and took a studied sip of the drink he had poured,

feeling his problem on its way to resolution without him. The disturbance was

far from the house in which he had a personal interest; and that rider headed

down the Street was one of Tempus’s own, which interference stood a much

likelier chance of curtailing the trouble down the street. So it was wise to

have sat still a moment and trust the problem to go away; the screams went on,

but they would stop very shortly, only one life was in the balance, and the

madam of the house (if not the whore) would probably agree that this

intervention was better than police.

They were nothing if not pragmatic on the Street.

“Well,” said Jubal. “I like your attitude. I like a sensible man. Question is,

is your commander going to like you tomorrow?”

“An empire runs on what works,” Straton said. “Or it doesn’t run. We can be very

practical.”

Jubal considered a moment. A grin spread on his dark, lined face, all theater.

“This is my friend.” He looked left and right at his lieutenants, and his voice

hit registers that ran along the spine. “This is my good friend.” Looking back

at Straton. “Let’s call it a deal-friend Straton.”

Straton stared at him, with less of relief than of a profound sickness in his

gut. But it was a victory. Of sorts. It just did not come with parades and

shouting crowds. It came of common sense. “Fine,” he said. “Does this include a

deal about that stupid blindfold? Where’s my horse?”

“At the contact point. I’m afraid it doesn’t include my whereabouts, friend. But

I’ll send you back with a man you know, how’s that? Vis.”

Mradhon Vis slipped his knife into sheath and let the front legs of his chair

meet the floor as he got up.

It was not the man Strat would have chosen to go with, blindfolded and helpless,

down an alley. Protesting it sounded like complaint and complaint did nothing

for a man’s dignity in this situation that had little enough of dignity about it

and precious little leeway. Straton stood up, his arms at his sides as a man

behind him took the chair away. Another man put the blindfold back in front of

his eyes and tied it with no less uncomfortable firmness. “Dammit, watch it,”

Straton muttered.

“Be careful of him,” Jubal’s deep voice said. But no one did anything about the

blindfold.

It was less trouble finding Tempus than Crit had anticipated when he talked to

Niko and knew where Tempus had gotten to. He reined in at Phoebe’s Inn (so the

sign said) and shoved the sorrel’s reins through a ring at the building’s side.

There were bystanders; and part of their interest diverted to him, who added

himself to the diversion-he scowled blackly and glanced around him with the

quiet promise what would befall the hand that touched his horse or his gear.

Then he walked on into Phoebe’s front room and confronted the proprietor, a fat

woman with the predictable amount of gaud and matronly decorum. “Seen my

commander?” he asked directly.

She had. Chins doubled and undoubled and painted mouth formed a word.

“Where?”

She pointed. “T-two of them,” she said. “F-foreign lady, sh-she-”

That took no guesswork. “Tell my commander Critias is downstairs. Do it.”

There was another scream from upstairs. Of a different pitch. For a whorehouse

the desertion of the front room was remarkable. Not a whore of either gender

came out of the alcoves. The madam ran the stairs and went careening down the

upstairs hall, vanishing into the dark.

And still not a beaded curtain shadowed in the downstairs. Not a sound, except

upstairs: a knock at a door, the madam’s voice saying something unintelligible.

A door opened finally. A heavier tread sounded in the upstairs and Crit looked

up as Tempus appeared at the head of the stairs-looked up with a stolid face and

a moil of trepidation in his own gut that was only partly due to disturbing

Tempus at this particularly agitated moment.

He watched Tempus come down the stairs; stood quietly with his hands in his belt

and composed himself to inner quiet.

And it occurred to him, staring Tempus eye to eye, that he had been a fool and

that he might have just killed the partner he was trying to save, because it was

not reason he saw there.

“What?” Tempus asked with economy.

“Strat-after we cleaned up on riverside, the witch-left. Strat and I parted

company. He’s gone missing. He’s not back at riverside.”

Of a sudden it seemed like his problem, like something he never should have

brought here. He seemed like a thoroughgoing fool. There was another tread on

the stairs now, and that was Jihan coming down, trouble in duplicate. But

Tempus’s face got that masklike look, his long eyes gone inward and deep as he

looked aside, a frown gathering and tightening about his mouth.

“How far-missing?” Tempus asked with uncomfortable accuracy and looked him

straight in the eye.

“He told me to go to hell,” Crit said, had not wanted to say, but Tempus did not

encourage reticence with that look. “Commander, he’d listen to you. She’s got

him-bad. You, he’d listen to. Not me. I’m asking you.”

For a long, long moment he reckoned Tempus was going to tell him go to hell too.

And assign him there. But he was a shaken man, was Critias. He had seen the most

practical-minded man he knew go crazy and desert him. Possession he could have

coped with; he might have put an end to Strat the way he would have dispatched a

comrade in the field, gut-wounded and suffering and hopeless; a man dreamed

about a thing like that and never forgot it, but he did it. Not this time. Not

with Strat cursing him to his face and telling him he was wrong. He was

accustomed to regard Strat when he said wrong and stop, and hold it, Crit, Crit,

stop it-. Straton the level-headed. Straton who seemed at one moment coldly

rational and in the next rode off on-whatever that bay horse had become. “Where

did you leave him?”

“Mageguild post. He left me. He rode off. I-lost track of him. He wasn’t at

Ischade’s. I thought he’d come to you. Niko said not, Niko said-find you.”

Tempus exhaled a long breath, took the sword he was carrying and hung it where

it belonged. Thunder rattled. The inn echoed with it as Jihan came on down the

steps. “Barracks, maybe,” Jihan said. “I don’t think so,” Crit said. “Where do

you think he’s gone?” Tempus asked. “To do something,” Crit said, and out of

that fund of knowledge a pairbond held: “To prove something.”

Tempus took that in with a grave and quiet look. “To whom?”

“To me. To you. He’s being a fool. I’m asking you-”

“You want an order from me? Or you want me to find him?”

Of a sudden Crit did not know what he wanted. One seemed too little; the other,

fatal.

“I’ll find him,” Crit said. “I thought you’d better know.”

“I know,” Tempus said. “He’s still in command of the city. Tell him he’ll be at

Peres on time. And he won’t have done anything stupid; tell him that too.”

A horse snorted softly, hooves shifted on cobbles; and Straton heard the sound

of their steps between narrow walls, knew before the hands left his arms that

they had come back to the alley and the little stable-nook where he had left the

bay. He felt the grip lift, heard retreating steps as he raised his hands and

pulled the blindfold off. The bay whickered softly. A trio of cloaked figures

went rapidly down the alley, one more than had brought him; the third would be

the man who had kept the horse safe in the interval.

He walked over and patted the bay’s neck, finding his hands shaking. Not from

any fear of violence. Even Vis’s personal grudge did not do that to him. It was

himself. It was knowing what he had done.

He took the reins and swung up to the bay’s back, reined about to ride out of

the alley and caught his balance as the bay rose up under him: a cloaked shadow

had slipped round the comer in front of him.

“That horse isn’t hard to find,” Haught said as the bay walked backward and came

down on four feet again, still shying. Strat reined him out of it, and held him,

hand to the sword he had never given up.

“Damn you-”

Haught held up something between two fingers. “Calm yourself. She sent me. With

this.”

Strat reined the bay quieter, still too wary to bring his horse alongside a man

who might have a knife. He slid down to his own feet, keeping the reins in hand,

met the ex-slave on a level and took the object Haught offered at arm’s length.

A ring lay in his palm. It was Ischade’s.

“She wants you-not at the uptown house tomorrow. Stay away. Come to the

riverhouse. After midnight.”

He closed his hand on the ring. A shudder ran through him with a reaction he had

no wish to betray to the slave’s amusement. He kept his face cold and his voice

steady. “I’ll be there,” he said.

“I’ll tell her that,” Haught said with uncommon civility, and whisked himself

around the comer again.

Strat slipped the ring on his littlest finger, and suffered a spasm that took

his sight away. The bay horse pulled the reins from his hands and then,

sheepish, stood there with the reins adangle while his master recollected his

sight and got his heart settled from its pounding.

It was apology, from Ischade. It was invitation as plain as ever witch or woman

sent a man. His heart pounded as he climbed up to the saddle and clenched his

fist on the ring that had now the slow sweet bliss krrf never matched.

He fought his head clear, knew that what the slave asked- what she asked-was

trouble, trouble not with Crit this time. Trouble that might take everything he

had done and his life and sweep everything away, but the witch knew that, but

Ischade wanted him and by this gift he knew how much she wanted him; he felt it

continually and the world swam in front of his eyes.

What are you doing? he asked her in absentia. Do you know what you’re asking?

And in the gnawing doubt that had been between them at the beginning and now

again: Does it matter to you?

The bay moved, and the alley passed in a blur of starlit cobbles, the glare of a

lantern. Things passed in and out of focus.

And in a profound effort he took the ring from off his finger and put it in his

pocket where it was only mildly euphoric.

Sweat ran on his body. He mopped at his face, raked his hair back and tried to

think despite the erotic mist that hazed the seeping brick, the effluvium of

rubbish and the gutter. The bay’s steps clopped along with a distant, dazed echo

in the alley’s wending transformation into a street where a dope den and a

tavern maintained half-open doors and a clutch of krrf-dazed sleepers sitting in

the mire outside. Music wailed; strings needed tuning. No one cared, least of

all the player. The alley meandered on. The horse did, while the mist came and

went.

Tempus would want him at that gathering at Peres. Tempus would want to talk to

him, want sense out of him, would look at him with that piercing stare of his

and spit him with it till he had spilled everything. That was what Ischade knew.

That was why Ischade wanted him out of there.

But then what, when he had fought with Crit and defied his commander and dealt

with Jubal and through Jubal, with the gangs. There were ways and ways to die.

He had invented one or two himself. Lying to Tempus offered worse. Desertion,

dereliction. Treason.

He felt a stab of ecstasy, and one of utmost terror; and knew he ought to take

that ring and fling it in the mud and go confess everything to Tempus, but that

was against his very nature- he had never run for help, had never thrown himself

at anyone’s feet, never in his life. Fixing things took nerve. It took the raw

guts to hang on to a situation long after it stopped being safe.

He was no boy, no twenty-five-year-old in shining armor, head full of glory

stories. He had worked the Stepsons’ shadowy jobs for a decade. He had just

never had to think that Tempus himself might be involved in a mistake. The man

the gods chose-But gods had self-interest right along with the rest of creation;

gods might trick a man-might trick an empire, play games with souls, with a man

who served their cause.

Tempus could be wrong. Gods know he could be wrong. He doesn’t care for this

town. I do. I can give it to him. Is that treason?

An empire runs on what works, doesn’t it?

I’ve just got to live to get it working. Prove it to Crit. Prove it to Tempus.

If it takes staying out of their way till I can get this thing organized-I know

holes Crit doesn’t.

Damn, no. They’ll go for her.

He gripped the ring in his pocket, suffered a twinge that dimmed his vision and

reminded him it was no small power the Stepsons might take on in Ischade. There

would be fatalities. Calamity on both sides.

He made up his mind, then, what he had to do.

The sun was a glimmer of red-through-murk above Sanctuary’s east when Ischade

came to the simple little shop in the Bazaar; she came after a trek through

Sanctuary’s streets and in a sordid little room in the Maze left a dead man the

world would little miss. That man left her disgusted, pricklish, soiled; and

such was the charge of energies in the air of Sanctuary that she hardly felt

that ebb of power his death made, felt not even a moment’s relief from what ran

along her veins and suffused her eyes and made that victim, in the last moment

of his life, wish he had never existed at all.

It left not the least satisfaction; more, it left a gnawing terror that nothing

would ever be enough, that there was no man in all the world sufficient to ease

that power which threatened to break loose in the muttering storm and in her

vitals. She blinded herself: she saw too much of hell and not enough of where

she was going, and if a gang of Sanctuary’s predatory worst had confronted her

and seen her eyes this moment, at dawn’s breaking, they would have stopped cold

and slunk away in terror. She had become-known. Victims were harder to come by.

Only fools approached her. And they were without sport and without surprise.

Tasfalen. Tasfalen. She clung to that name and that promise as to sanity itself

a prey that offered wit, and hazard, and difficulty.

Tasfalen could be savored, over days. Put off and extended for a week-

She might, she reasoned with herself, make Strat understand.

She might-yet-get through that shell of unbelief Strat made around himself,

teach him the things he had to know. He was ready for that. His infatuation was

sufficient. That her hunger threatened him, this, everything-was unbearable.

It was weakness. And she had not yet accounted for Roxane. No scouring of the

town had discovered her. That the dimwitted fiend had not found her tracks, but

that she had discovered nothing to indicate that Roxane had not perished-did not

make her secure in her present weakness. It was exactly the moment and the mode

in which the Nisi would seek her out….

… Strike through Strat, through this stranger Tasfalen, through anything at

all she least expected; most of all through a weakness….

And she was blind.

Knowing that, she came here, after a fruitless murder and a night’s searching

all of Sanctuary for Roxane’s traces….

… To find the traces Roxane left on the future.

A light burned inside the little shop. So someone was astir this dawn. She

rapped at a door she might have opened, waited like any suppliant at the fane.

Heavy steps came to it; someone opened the peephole and looked out and shut it

rapidly.

She knocked a second time. And heard a higher voice than belonged with that

tread, before the bar thumped back and the door opened inward.

The S’danzo Illyra stood to meet her, and that shadow to the side was Dubro, was

a very distraught Dubro; and Illyra’s face was tearstreaked. The S’danzo wrapped

her fringed shawl about her as at-some ill wind sweeping through her door.

“So the news has come here,” Ischade said in a low voice; and was pricklingly

conscious of Dubro to the side. She forced herself to calm, concentrating on

the woman only, on a mother’s aching grief. “A mage is with your son since

last night, S’danzo; I would be, but my talents are-awry tonight. Perhaps later.

If they need me.”

“Sit down.” Illyra made a feverish movement of her hands, and Dubro cleared a

bench. “I was making tea….” Perhaps the S’danzo conceived this as a visit of

condolence, some sign of hope; she wiped at her eyes with brisk moves of a thin

hand and turned to her stove, where a pot boiled. It was placatory hospitality.

It was something else, perhaps.

“You see hope for your son in me?”

“I don’t See Arton. I don’t try.” The S’danzo poured boiled tea through a

strainer, one, two, three cups. Brought one to her and ignored the other two. /

don’t try. But a mother might, whose son lay sick in the palace, in company with

a dying god. Priests or some messenger from Molin had been here already. Someone

had told the S’danzo; or she had Seen it for herself, scryed it in the

fracturing heavens, or tea leaves, gods knew.

And consolation might make a clearer mind in her service.

“Do you think they’ll slight your son,” Ischade asked, and sipped the tea, “for

the other boy? Not if they value this city. I assure you. Randal’s very skilled.

You certainly needn’t doubt which side the gods are on in your son’s case. Do

you?”

“I don’t know … I can’t see.”

“Ah. My own complaint. You want to know the present. I can tell you that.” She

shut her eyes and indeed it was little work to do, to sense Randal at work. “I

can tell you the children are asleep, that there is little pain now, that the

strength of the god holds your son in life. That a-” Pain assaulted her, an

acute pain behind the eyes. Mage-fire. “Randal.” She opened her eyes on the

small, cluttered room again, on the S’danzo’s drawn face. “I may be called to

help there. I don’t know. I have the power. But I’m hampered in using it. I need

an answer. Where is Roxane?”

The S’danzo shook her head desperately. Gold rings swung and clashed. “I can’t

See that way-it’s a present thing; I can’t-”

“Find her tracks in the future. Find mine. Find your son’s if you can. That’s

where she’ll go. A man named Niko. She’ll surely try for him. Tempus. Critias.

Straton. Those are her major foci.”

The S’danzo went hurriedly aside, snatched at a small box on the shelf. “Dubro

please,” she said when the big man moved to interfere; and he let her alone as

she sank down on her knees in the middle of the floor and laid out her cards.

Nonsense, Ischade thought; but something stirred, something twitched at the nape

of her neck, and she thought of the magic-fall that still swept the winds,

recalling that prescience was not her talent, and she had not a way in the

worlds and several hells to judge what the S’danzo did, how much was flummery

and how much self-hypnosis and how much was a very different kind of witch.

The cards flew in strong, slim fingers, assumed patterns. Re-formed and showed

their faces.

Illyra drew her hand back from the last, as if she had found the serpent on that

card a living one.

“I see wounds,” Illyra said. “I see love reversed. I see a witch, a power, a

death, a castle; I see a staff broken; I see temptation-” Another card went

down. Orb.

“Interpret.”

“I don’t know how!” Illyra’s fingers hovered trembling over the cards. “There’s

flux. There’s change.” She pointed to a robed and hooded figure. “There’s your

card: eight of air. Lady of Storms-hieromant.”

“Hieromant! Not I!”

“I see harm to you. I see great harm. I see power reversed. The cards are

terrible-Death and Change. Everywhere, death and change.” The S’danzo looked up,

tears flowing down her cheeks. “I see damage to you in what you attempt.”

“So.” Ischade drew a deep breath, teacup still in hand. “But for my question,

fortune-teller: Find me Roxane!”

“She is Death. Death in the meadow. Death on the path of waters-”

“There are no meadows in Sanctuary, woman! Concentrate!”

“In the quiet place. Death in the place of power.” The S’danzo’s eyes were shut.

Tears leaked from beneath her lashes. “Damage and reversal. It’s all I can see.

Witch, don’t touch my son.”

Ischade set the cup aside. Rose and gathered her cloak over her shoulder as the

S’danzo gazed up at her. She found nothing to say of comfort. “Randal’s with

them,” was the best that occurred to her.

She turned and went out the door. The power was still a tide in her blood, still

unabated. She inhaled it in the wind, felt it in the dust under her feet. She

could have blasted the house in her frustration, raised the fire in the hearth

and consumed the S’danzo and her man to ash.

It seemed poor payment for an innocent woman’s cup of tea. She banked the inner

fire and drank the wind into her nostrils and considered the daybreak.

“I can’t, I can’t, I can’t!” Moria cried, and went down the hall in a cloud of

skins and satin-till Haught caught her up, and took her by the arms and made her

look at him. Tears streaked Moria’s makeup. A curl tumbled from her coiffure.

She stared at Haught with blind, teared eyes and hiccuped.

“You’ll manage. You don’t have to say where I am or where I went.”

“Then take him with you!” She pointed aside to the study, where a dead man sat

drinking wine in front of her fire and getting progressively more inebriate.

“Get him out of here, I can’t do anything with the staff, they know what he is

for the gods’ sakes get him out!”

“You’ll manage,” Haught said. He carefully put the curl where it belonged and

adjusted a pin for her while she snuffled. He wiped her cheeks with his thumbs,

careful of her kohl-paint, and of her rouge, and tipped up her face and kissed

her gently on salty lips. “Now. There. My brave Moria. All you have to do is not

mention me. Say I delivered my messages. Say Stilcho’s with me and we’re going

to go down to a shop and see about that lock you want for your bedroom-now won’t

that fix it? I promise you-”

“You could witch it.”

“Dear woman, I might, but you don’t do a thing with an axe when a penknife will

do. You don’t want your maid blasted, do you? I doubt you want that. I’ll find a

lock / can’t pick and see if you can. If it suits, I’ll have it installed on

your door within the week. I promise. Now go upstairs, fix your make-up-”

“I want you here! I want you to tell Her what you did to me, I want you to tell

Her you made me beautiful!”

“Now, haven’t we been over that? She won’t care. I assure you she has quite a

many things on her mind, and you are the very least, Moria. The very least. Do

your job, be gracious, be everything I’ve helped you be, and the Mistress will

be very happy with you. Don’t ruin your makeup. Smile. Smile at everyone. Don’t

smile too much. These men have been a long time out of a house like this. Don’t

attract them. Behave yourself. There’s a love.” He kissed her on the brow and

followed the sudden panicked dart of her eyes, the appearance of a shadow in the

study doorway.

Stilcho leaned there reeking of wine, his thin, white face uncommonly grim with

its eye-patch and comma of dark hair. “My lady,” Stilcho said wryly. “Very sorry

to distress you.”

Moria just stared, stricken.

“Come on,” Haught said, and caught Stilcho by the arm, heading him for the door.

“I can’t find him,” Crit said, reporting in to the palace where Tempus had

appropriated an office, down the hall and up a stair from the uneasy business

Crit had no wish to know about.

Tempus made a mark on a map. The place was a litter of scrolls and books and the

plunder of the map room. They lay on the floor as well as the desktop and

afternoon light shone wanly through the window, a murky afternoon, beclouded and

rumbling with rain that never fell. He rose, walked to the window, hands locked

behind him-stared out into the roiling cloud beyond the portico. Lightning

flashed. Thunder followed.

“He’ll show,” Tempus said finally. “You’ve tried the witch’s place again.”

“Twice. I…” There was a moment of silence that brought Tempus around to face

the man. “… went as far as the door,” Crit said, much as if he had said gate

of hell. Stolidly. Eyes carefully blank. Tempus frowned.

“King of Korphos,” Crit said then.

“I remember.” A king invited his enemies to reconcile. Archers turned up round

the balcony at dinner and killed them all. Witchfire might serve. And: Nothing

new under the sun, an inner voice said; while another voice recalled dead

comrades: tortured souls of yours and mine which must be released. … At times

the world went giddy, skidded between past and present. Korphos and a Sanctuary

mansion. A missing Stepson, and a sorely wounded one, both prey to witches. A

thing that had happened, would happen, inevitably happened? Sometimes he had run

risks from mere expediency. Or perversity. He did not take his men into it to no

purpose.

Crit stood there, statue-quiet. Too damn willing. A snake had gotten in among

them, and Stepson hunted Stepson and stood there with that look that said

Anything you order.

“I’ve no doubt the witch can find him,” Tempus said. “If he doesn’t show up.

Don’t worry about it.” He gestured toward the door. Crit took the hint, and

Tempus walked as far as the hall beside him. “Just see you’re on time.”

“Is Niko-”

“Better.”

Maybe the tone invited nothing further. Crit went. Tempus stood there with his

hands slipped into the back of his belt until Crit had dwindled into a shape of

light and shadow on the white marble stairs that led to outer doors.

Niko was where Niko had no business being, that was where Niko was.

He struck his hand against his leg and headed down another stairs, past priests

who plastered themselves and their armfuls of linen and simples to the narrow

walls.

Through doors and doors and doors, till the thunder overhead diminished and the

last door gave way to a sanctum sanctorum deep in the palace bowels. He stepped

inside, saw the cluster around the bed, a half dozen priests, the mage, with

enough incense palling the room to choke a man. A child whimpered, a thin, faint

sound. And Tempus’s eye picked out his partner standing in that group. “Get

Niko,” he said as a priest passed him, and the priest scuttled into the cloying

room where he had no personal wish to go. The stuff offended his nose, gave him

the closest thing to a headache he was wont to have. He stood there with the

pressure throbbing in his temples which might be rage at Niko or the whole

damned business of priests and mummery and a mage’s ill-smelling concoctions, or

just the world gone awry. He stood there while the priest snagged Niko and led

him into reach, Niko walking as if he would break, one eye running and filmed

with gelatinous stuff,

the other patched.

“Damn,” Tempus snarled at the priest, “does it need the smoke?” He took Niko by

the arm and led him out into clean air, closed the door. “I’m not asking this

time; get to bed.”

“Can’t sleep,” Niko said. The ashbrown hair fell loose across his brow, trailed

into Jinan’s unspeakable unguents. “No use-”

“You’re raving.” He took Niko’s arm willy-nilly, led him

on.

“I saw Janni,” Niko said, mumbled, in a sick man’s disjointed way. “I saw him

here-”

“You don’t see a damn thing, you’re not going to see a damned thing if you don’t

get out of that foolery and leave those brats to the priests.”

“Randal-”

“-can take care of it.” He reached Niko’s appointed bedchamber, opened the door

and led him as far as the rumpled bed. “Now stay there, or do I have to set a

guard?”

“Eyes aren’t that bad,” Niko murmured. But he felt of the bedside and sat down

like a man with too many bruises.

Tempus had none. They healed. Everything slid off him and vanished. Only Niko

had the bandages, Niko had the scars, Niko was fragile as all he loved. “Stay

there,” he said, too sharply. “I’ve too much else. I don’t need this.”

Niko subsided quietly. Lay back with his eyes shut. It was not what he had meant

to say or do. He walked over and pressed Niko’s hand, walked out then.

Call off the damn dinner, he thought. What’s to be gained? How did I agree to

that?

It was before hell broke loose; it was to calm a nervous town. It was to get the

measure of a witch and her intentions. And to discover the threads that Strat

had run here and here and here through the town. In that regard it made more

sense than not. The affair was a stone in motion, downhill, and it would say

something now to the town to break off this engagement. “… Souls of yours and

mine…” Straton was one of those souls at imminent risk. And if there was a

thing which might pull Straton into reach it was this, his own witch-lover’s

arranging.

Why meet with them? Why this courting of Stepsons?

That was the insane question. He thought ofKorphos again; and the arrows. And

poisoned wine. And the Emperor.

He was not accustomed to direct challenge, but it was still possible.

The door stayed open to a steady stream of martial guests, arrivals afoot and

ahorse out front, with the clank of swords in the foyer, the inpouring of

wolfish men who towered and clattered with weapons they did not give up at the

door. Hand after huge hand took Moria’s as she stood sentry at the door of her

borrowed house, a powdered, perfumed mannequin that said over and over How kind,

thank you, welcome, sir and smiled till her teeth ached. Hands which could have

crushed her lingers lifted them to lips smooth, bearded, mustached, olive

skinned and white-skinned and unmarked and scarred; and each time she recovered

her hand and stared a moment too long into the eyes of this or that man she

felt the blue satin dress too low and the perfume too much and her whole self

estimated for value right along with the vases and the house silver. And she

was the thief!

Man after man and not a woman in the lot until a tall woman with one long

pigtail came strolling in and crushed her hand in a grasp rougher than the

men’s. “Kama,” that one said. Her hand was callused as the men’s. Her eyes were

smouldering and dreadful. “Pleased,” Moria breathed, “thank you. Do come in.

Dining hall to your right under the stairs.” She worked her fingers and thrust

out her hand valiantly to the next arrivals, seeing more on the street. More and

more of them. There could not be enough wine. A stray lock of her coiffure

slipped and strayed down her neck, bouncing there. She borrowed both hands up to

stab it back into place with a hairpin, realized the tall soldier in front of

her was staring down her decolletage and desperately thrust out her hand. “Sir.

Welcome.”

“Dolon,” that one said, and headed in the wake of the woman with the pigtail

while others came up the steps.

0 Shalpa and Shipri, where’s the Mistress, what am I doing with these Rankans?

They know I’m Ilsigi, they’re laughing at me, they’re all laughing….

A man arrived who was not a soldier, who came with servants: she mistook him for

a passerby until he abandoned the servants and came up the steps, seized her

hand and kissed it with a flourish of his cap.

He looked up. His hair was fair brown, his eyes were blue; he was Rankan of the

Rankans and noble and he stared into her eyes as if he had discovered some

strange new ocean.

“Tasfalen Lancothis,” he murmured, and never let go of her hand. “You are the

lady-”

“Sir,” she said, quite paralyzed by a nobleman who stared into her eyes in that

way. And she was further baffled when he plucked a black feather from his cap

and offered it to her. “How kind,” she murmured, blinking at him and wondering

whether she had gone totally mad or was another Rankan here to make sport of

her. She put it in her decolletage, having no better place, and saw his eyes

follow that move and lift to hers again with profoundest concentration. “My

lady,” he said, and kissed her hand a second time, which meant men standing in

line behind him. Her heart raced in a sense of impending disaster, the

Mistress’s dire displeasure. Heat and cold chased one another from her breast to

her face. “Sir-”

“Tasfalen.”

“Tasfalen. Thank you. Please. Later. The others…”

He let go her hand. She turned desperately to the men next, passed them through

with a hand to each and caught her breath as she stared at the tall pair next,

the taller one with the face that she had seen only at distance, riding through

the streets on a fine horse. His clothing was plain. His face was smooth and

cold and he was younger than she had thought until he took her hand and she

looked up into his eyes by accident.

She stood there in mortal terror, mumbled something and surrendered a limp hand

to the man next-“Critias,” he named himself. “Moria,” she said, never taking her

eyes from the man who walked through the hall, an apparition as dreadful as

anything the house had yet hosted. 0 gods, where is She? Is She going to come at

all? They’ll steal the silver, they’ll drink down the wine and wreck the house

and come at me next, they’ll kill me, they will, to spite Her….

Thunder rumbled above the house, the light outside was stormlight, and never a

drop of rain spotted the cobbles. She looked outside in mortal terror, expecting

more apparitions. Wind skirled, committed indiscretion with her skirts. She held

her threatened hair and watched wide-eyed as a last man came from around the

comer where the horsemen had turned in, where the beggar-stableboys Ischade had

provided did service with the horses, in the little stable-nook to the rear of

the house. The man wore cloak and hood. For a moment she thought it was Stilcho

and held onto her coiffure and dreaded his approach. But it was not, it was a

different man, who came up the step with a matter-of-fact tread and looked up at

her with an expression different than the rest-with an expression as if she were

a wall in his way and he had suddenly realized something was in front of him.

For a moment as he threw his hood back he looked confused, which in these grim

men was different in itself.

“I’m due here,” he said.

She liked this one better. He was human. She stared at him and blinked in the

wind and got out of his way. “Down the hall,” she called after him, and seized

the door, seeing no one else on the street, and pulled it to. Caught her skirt

and freed it and got the door shut. By that time he was gone down that hall, had

found the dining hall for himself.

There was a sudden quiet when he passed that door. She stopped in her own rush

toward the hall, terrified that there was something going on, rushed on, waving

frantically at Shiey, who appeared be-aproned and floured in the doorway.

“Food?” Shiey asked.

“Wait on the Mistress,” she hissed. “When the Mistress comes.” And then she

eased through that dining room door where a great deal of quiet had fallen. The

last-come stood still in the doorway, the Commander was at the other end of the

hall, and the two were staring at each other.

“Straton,” Tempus said. So she knew who it was; she felt the cold; she heard the

thunder rumbling over the roof and these great men with their swords all a

bristle with some offense that had to do with this man and his presence. Only

Tasfalen stood nonplussed, holding his wine glass and staring at Tempus as if he

had suddenly realized he was in very dangerous and exclusive company.

“Commander.” Straton came unfixed from the doorway and walked into the room. It

was all slipping out of control. Moria took a quick step forward, her throat

paralyzed with fear and her wits with doubt.

“Our hostess,” Tasfalen said, and swept in to seize her hand. She drew a great

breath, strangled by the lacings of the gown, and the air felt thin and strained

and charged, her head swirling with sleeplessness and the smell of wine she had

not even drunk. She took a hesitant step with Tasfalen clasping her hand.

“Please,” she said. Her voice came out a hoarse breath. “Please sit down. Shiey

” No, no, one did not shout for Cook in a formal party. She struggled to free

her hand. “Please.”

Tempus moved. A mountain might have moved at her wish and amazed her no less.

She saw to her dizzy relief all the men moving toward their seats, all of them

moving in on the double tables which did, miraculously, have room enough and to

spare….

Tempus took a seat. Tasfalen led her inexorably forward, past the rows of

chairs, toward the head of the table. Straton- Her Straton-walked on the other

side of the tables, got as far as Critias and Tempus, slung his cloak onto a

pile of others in the comer, and quietly stood behind a chair he chose. Not

looking at them. Or at her. She might have been walking the edge of a chasm.

Tasfalen delivered her to the place centermost of the head table. She shook her

head furiously, desperately, with Tempus standing next to that chair, the

Mistress’s chair; she belonged at the door, she had forgotten to take their

cloaks, they had draped them off in the comer in a pile on an unused bench or

hung them over the backs of their chairs; Cook delayed with the food, she had to

go back to the kitchen and get Cook into motion….

Eyes shifted from her toward the door. She turned, clutching the finials of the

carved chair, and saw Ischade in the doorway-an Ischade without her cloak; in a

deep-necked gown of deepest blue; the sparkle of sapphire at her tawny throat,

her black, straight hair in upswept elegance.

Straton left his place, walked through that vast silence and offered his hand to

Ischade. Quietly she took it, and he walked her the whole long distance up the

tables in mortal silence. Moria caught a breath, having forgotten to breathe.

The effort strained the limits of the corset and dizziness tightened her hands

on the chair as Tasfalen’s hand left her waist. Ischade had paused in her

walking to offer her hand to him, leaving Straton’s. The silence trembled there,

and Moria desperately transferred her grip to the next chair over, displacing

Tasfalen to endmost. She caught the edge of that glance: Ischade’s nostrils were

white about the edges and her mouth set in an anger carefully controlled.

He’s Hers, Moria thought, weak-kneed. Tasfalen’s Hers- with all that meant. With

absolute terror that stole the strength from her knees and made her wish that

she could bolt from the room. She felt the feather ride between her breasts with

every breath. Felt-something terrible in the air. Straton stood there,

motionless, his face frozen. No one had moved.

“Lord Tasfalen,” Ischade said, and turning that glance smoothly to Moria and

reaching out her hand. “Moria, my dear.” Ischade’s hand closed on hers. Drew her

close, closer, so close that the musk of Ischade’s perfume was in her nostrils,

Ischade’s hand firm on hers, Ischade’s lips dry and cool on her cheek. “How

splendid you look,”

Moria swayed on her feet. Ischade’s hand ground the bones of her hand together

and sent pain through her; Ischade’s eyes caught hers and for a moment gulfs

opened at her feet.

Then Ischade released her hand and offered it past her toward Tempus. Moria

turned her head, clutched the chair again, staring in helpless terror as she had

view of Tempus’s face and the terrible delicacy with which he lifted Ischade’s

small hand in his. Power and Power. She felt the hair rise on her nape as if the

whole air were charged.

“I owe you thanks,” Tempus said. “So I’m told. In the matter of Roxane.”

There was the smallest delay, another prickling of storm. “Welcome to Sanctuary,

Commander. How fortunate your arrival.”

0 my gods-

But Ischade turned then and let Tempus and then Straton draw her chair back. She

sat. Everyone settled into chairs. Moria fumbled weakly at hers before realizing

Tasfalen was drawing it back for her. She gathered her skirts, sat down as her

knees went to water.

Tasfalen seated himself and slipped his hand to hers beneath the table and held

with firm strength. Straton passed to Ischade’s other side, took the chair at

Tempus’s left, next to Critias. By some mercy, men had started talking to each

other. Then by a further one, the kitchenside door swung open and food started

coming.

Tasfalen’s hand rested on her thigh. She failed to care. She stared down the

long tables, listened to Tempus and Ischade speaking quiet banalities about wine

and food and weather-

0 gods, get me out of here! Haught!

She would have hurled herself even into Stilcho’s arms.

“I don’t know where she is,” Ischade was saying, again, in a voice not meant to

carry. “I’ve searched. I’ve spent the night searching. I had hoped for better

news.”

“How much do you know?” Tempus asked.

A pause. Perhaps Ischade looked his way. Moria drank a mouthful of wine and

tried not to shiver. “I know,” Ischade said. And reached for Moria’s hand again

beneath the table.

“Who told you?”

Another profound silence. “Commander. I am a witch.”

Thunder rolled and cracked overhead. “Damn,” Tasfalen said.And reached for

Moria’s hand again beneath the table.

Gentle man, she thought. Gentleman. He doesn’t understand this. He doesn’t

understand what he’s into, he’s as lost as I am-Ischade invited him, she must

have. Oh, what are they talking about, priests and searching and a demon? 0

gods, where’s Haught? It was a lie about the lock, he’s not off on any errand,

not now, with Her like this and the storm and the house full of Rankan soldiers

Why was Stilcho with him? What could he have to do with Stilcho?

She took another glass of wine. A third when that ran out. The room swam in a

haze, and the voices buzzed distantly in her ears. She picked at food and picked

at another course and drank another cup until she could stare about the room

without more than a distant trepidation. The conversation about the hall grew

more relaxed. Tasfalen whispered invitation in her ear and she only blinked and

gave him a dazed look at close range, lost for a moment in blue eyes and a

masculine scent unlike Haught’s, whose clothes always smelled of Ischade.

Doomed, she thought, damned. Dead. Gods save this man. Gods save me. And she

held his hand until his closed on hers with painful force.

“My lady,” Tasfalen whispered once, “what’s wrong? What’s happening here?”

“I can’t say,” she whispered back; while Ischade said something else to Tempus,

which made less sense than before. Of a sudden she realized they were speaking

some foreign tongue.

And there was no laughter. There was sudden quiet all about the table. No word

from Straton or the man next to him. Critias. The men nearest caught that

contagion and it spread down the table. Wine stayed untouched.

“It’s sufficient,” Ischade said at last. “Your pardon.” And rose.

Tempus got to his feet. Straton was next. The whole company began to rise, and

Moria thrust herself from her seat, tangling her legs and the skirts and the

resisting fabric of the chair until Tasfalen’s arm steadied her. She stood there

with her heart pounding in terror no wine could numb, suffered Ischade’s direct

glance, suffered a moment that Ischade put out a hand, lifted her chin with a

delicate forefinger and stared her straight in the eyes.

“M-m-mis-”

“How fine you’ve become,” Ischade said, and there was hell in that look, that

sent a weakness through her bones and her sinews and made her sway against

Tasfalen. Ischade let her go then, and nodded to the lord Tasfalen, as Straton

came and took her arm. She walked toward the door with Straton, while everyone

stayed standing and the confused kitchen started sending out another course.

A low murmur went past their backs. Slowly Tempus settled to his chair again. It

was going to go on. She was left with these men after all. Moria sank back to

her chair with the last strength in her legs and smiled desperately at Tasfalen.

Ischade walked for the door, paused to gather her cloak from the bannister of

the stairs, and let Straton drape it about her shoulders. “Thank you,” she said,

and walked on toward the door. Stopped abruptly as he followed. She looked back

at him and felt her whole frame shudder with the effort of calm, with the effort

to keep her face composed and her movements natural. “I said,” she told him

carefully, “that I needed time to myself. Don’t touch me-” As he reached his

hand toward her.

“I hod to come, dammit!”

“I said not!”

“Who is that man?”

She saw the madness in his eyes. Or it reflected hers, which pounded in her

veins and grew to physical pain. He caught her arms and she flung up her head

and stared him in the eyes until the hands lost the strength in their grip. But

the pain grew; became madness, became the thing that killed.

She shoved him back, violently, walked with quick steps to the door and heard

his steps behind her. She turned before he reached her.

“Stay away!” she hissed. “Fool!”

And jerked the door open and fled, into the wind, and on it.

CHILDREN OF ALL AGES

Lynn Abbey

It was spring in the lush forests far to the south of Sanctuary. Trees and

shrubs put forth their leaves; delicate flowers swayed on gentle winds and,

beneath a swag of ivory blossoms, a mongoose sneezed violently. He sneezed a

second time and for a moment he was not a mongoose but something larger,

something with huge, flapping ears. Then he was a mongoose again- preening his

thick, musteline fur; fluffing out his tail and casting coy glances at the

female a leap and a bound away. The female chattered her response and they were

off along the branches, across a stream and ever further from the magical trap

Randal had laid for her.

The Tysian mage had conjured and cast to exhaustion looking for her. She was the

finest mongoose alive: the largest, the fastest, the boldest, and the most

intelligent. She had, at least, evaded every snare he’d set from his power-web

in distant Sanctuary until, in desperation, he’d transferred his essence to the

forest to pursue her in person-or, rather, in mongoose. She was also, as

mongooses measured such matters, the most wildly attractive creature in the

forest. Giving himself over to mongoose instincts was doing Randal’s vow of

chastity no good at all. If he didn’t lure her into the charmed sphere soon he’d

forget himself completely and settle down to the business of begetting.

Forgetting Sanctuary and everything it stood for was not an entirely

unattractive notion-especially when her tail flicked across his nose and he was

lost enough in mongoose-ness that he didn’t sneeze. Roxane was missing; Ischade

was irrational and bloated with power; the Stormchildren were moribund with a

venom the snake-worshiping Beysib did not understand pooling in their veins; a

dead god’s high priest had been revealed to be a Nisibisi warlock-and those were

only Randal’s magic-tainted concerns. The mage had, however, one concern that

stood above all the rest; which made him secure against momentary lust and drew

him, and her, back to the grove where a circle of stones glowed a faint blue.

Nikodemos, the impossible Stepson whom Randal worshiped with a chaste, fervent

love, was trapped at the focus of every dangerous incongruity prowling Sanctuary

and anything that might help Niko was worth every risk Randal might have to

take.

She had caught him when they reached the grove. They were rolling across the

grass when they pierced the sphere and hurtled through nothingness back to the

palace alcove where the body of Randal slumped over an embossed Nisibisi Globe

of Power. The transfer back into himself was all the more uncomfortable for the

mongoose teeth digging into his neck and the pottery crags of the Wizardwall

mountains pressing against his breastbone. Randal slipped from the world back

into nothingness and sheer panic. He had almost regained himself when a weighted

net slapped over him.

“The cage, Molin. Damn you, the cage before she eats through my damned neck!”

“Coming up.” The erstwhile high priest of Vashanka brandished a wicker-and-wire

cage while magician and mongoose thrashed on the table.

Having the cage was not the same as having the unrequited mongoose in the cage.

Both men were bloodied and torn before the bolt was thrown.

“You were supposed to have the cage ready.”

“And you were supposed to be back before sundown- sundown yesterday, I might

add.”

“You’re my assistant, my apprentice. Apprentices are like children: Children

don’t make decisions; they do as they’re told. And if I tell you to have the

cage ready-you have the cage ready no matter when I return,” the magician

complained, daubing at the wounds on his neck.

The men stared at each other until Randal looked away. Molin Torchholder was too

accustomed to power to be any man’s apprentice.

“I thought it best to save the globe after you and she knocked it off its

pedestal,” he explained, nodding toward the table where an unremarkable pottery

sphere rested against a half-emptied wine glass.

Randal slumped back against the wall. “You touched an activated Globe of Power,”

he mused. He possessed the globe and still hesitated before touching it, but the

high priest simply picked it up. “You could have been killed-or worse,” Randal

added as an afterthought. His fingers wove glyphs that made the globe first

shimmer, then vanish into that way-station between realities magicians called

their “cabinets.”

“I’ve made my way doing what had to be done,” Molin said when the process was

complete. “You’ve led me to believe that the destruction of that globe could

unbind the planes of existence. I can see that, at its heart, the globe is

nothing but a piece of poorly made pottery. Perhaps it was necessary to use

magic to destroy it, as you and Ischade did with Roxane’s, but, perhaps, simply

falling off the pedestal would be as effective a destruction. I could not take

the risk of experiment; I moved the globe.”

Priesthoods, Randal considered as he met Molin’s stare, did a better job of

educating their acolytes than the mageguilds did with their apprentices.

Askelon, at his most magnificent, could breathe more life into the simplest

phrases, making every word a threat and a promise and a truth. But Askelon was

hardly mortal anymore. Not that Molin Torchholder was exactly typical

ofVashanka’s priesthood. Randal had met Brachis, Molin’s hierarchical superior,

and been singularly unimpressed. The truth was that only Tempus, who broke

mercenaries’, mages’, and priests’ rules at his whim, could conceal more raw

power in his voice and gestures.

It was a realization to make a cautious mageling look in some other convenient

direction. “You might make a mistake one day, Torchholder,” he said with a

confidence he did not feel.

“I will make many mistakes; I already have. Someday, I expect, I will make a

mistake I cannot survive-but I haven’t yet.”

Randal found himself staring at the unfinished portrait of Niko, Tempus, and

Roxane that Molin had nailed to the wall behind his worktable. There was

considerable similarity between the witch and the priest even though she had

been portrayed transforming herself into her favored black eagle and Molin’s

facial bones showed some of the refinements ofRankan aristocratic patrimony. It

wasn’t surprising: the priest had been born to a Nisi witch. He had, thus far,

adhered to his promise to learn only enough to defend his soul from his

heritage, but if he ever wavered from that determination, now that the

destruction of Roxane’s globe had every latent magician in Sanctuary on the

threshold of Hazard status, he would make the Wizardwall masters look like

children.

Molin said, “Not if you help me,” as if he’d read the younger man’s thoughts.

“The price is too high.”

The mongoose, who in the transfer from the forest to Sanctuary had experienced

being Randal as much as he had experienced being a mongoose, responded to her

desired mate’s distress with an eruption of motion and noise that bounced the

cage onto the floor. She set her teeth into the wooden slats and splintered two

of them before Randal reached her. Two were all she needed, however, to squeeze

out of her confinement. She was on his shoulder in an instant, her claws finding

purchase in his brocaded cloak and her tail ringing his neck.

“I’m … going … to … sneeze!” And he did-with an eruption that sent his

defender, and a small portion of his left ear, flying across the room.

Molin dove toward the door to capture the lithe creature before it gained

freedom in the endless corridors of the palace. Randal laughed through his

sneezes; the sight was worth an earlobe. Nothing remained of Torchholder’s

intensity or his dignity as he slid along the polished stone on his belly.

Despite these losses the priest kept his reputation: he did what had to be done.

Blunt fingers pinched the animal’s collarbone and a well-protected arm both

supported her and pinned her against his ribcage.

“Chiringee?” Molin crooned, rubbing a free finger under her chin as he got to

his feet, his long robe wrinkled, twisted, and revealing the naked, muscular

thighs of an experienced soldier and brawler. “So eager, are you?” He squared

his shoulders, the weighted hem dropped, and he resumed his perfect lifelong

disguise as priest and court functionary. “Well, let us go to the nursery then

and let you meet the little ones you’ll be guarding.”

Randal followed, blotting his wounds with his sleeve.

The nursery was more a chaotic phenomenon of palace society than a physical

location. Its denizens were moved from dungeons to rooftops, from the depths of

the Beysib enclave to the warmth and abundance of the kitchens as the fears and

influence of its overlords shifted. For three days a cavern-ceilinged hall known

as the Ilsig Bedchamber had managed to contain it to everyone’s satisfaction.

Protocol demanded that no one pass the guards without careful inspection. Molin,

Randal, and Chiringee waited until Jihan pushed her way through the doors. She

accepted the men in an eyeblink but stared hard at the mongoose, drawing on the

arcane intuitions she possessed as Froth Daughter to archetypal Stormbringer

only temporarily in mortal form.

“So this is the unnatural creature who is supposed to protect the children

better than I? It smells of Wizardwall magic.”

“Well, she is larger and more intelligent than she should be. It was an

unexpected benefit from the transition-”

Randal had more to say, but Molin took command again, leading their way into the

nursery.

The hour candle beside Jihan’s cross-legged stool was half-burnt-nearly

midnight. The chamber was silent except for the rapid, shallow breathing of the

Stormchildren who should have been in their hardwood beds but had been in

Jihan’s arms and were now draped one over the other on the floor. She scooped

them up before settling back on the stool.

“They should be in their beds,” Randal complained. “How can you protect them

with them sleeping in your lap?”

“They were restless with fever.”

“They’re two steps from death, lady. They haven’t moved in a week!”

“I will protect them as I see fit-and I don’t need a little mage flaunting his

borrowed power and his menagerie….” Her eyes had begun to glow and the air in

the bedchamber had gone frosty.

Molin dropped the mongoose and placed his hands against both of them. “Jihan,

Chiringee is only another precaution, like the guards outside, to assist you. No

one challenges what your father has ordained: you are the Caretaker.”

Jihan’s eyes cooled and the room began to warm.

In point of fact, Randal was not tremendously impressed by Jihan’s caretaking.

The woman, if she could be called that, was obsessed with maternal longings; she

had clutched the Stormchildren to her breast when Roxane’s snake made its attack

rather than drawing her sword and attacking like the hellcat fighter she was.

Both children had been bitten and she had taken a divine battering, but the

worst injuries had fallen on Niko when he had come to her rescue.

Jihan had recovered almost at once and Sanctuary was better off with Arton and

Gyskouras deep in envenomed slumber but Niko, despite Tempus’s concern and

Jihan’s healing, looked and felt worse than the White Foal undead. He was also,

because of his need for Jihan’s healing touch, a permanent resident of the

nursery along with the Stonnchildren.

Randal didn’t pretend to understand Niko’s enthrallment with Roxane or his all

consuming interest in the Stonnchildren-he didn’t even understand his own

affection for the jinxed mercenary who had rejected his friendship more than

once. He had touched Chiringee when they mingled in the transfer sphere,

inoculating her with his love for Niko and an awareness of Roxane’s essence (an

essence which, albeit neutralized, pervaded his own Globe of Power whose

previous owner had loved and used the beautiful witch countless times). The

mongoose might not be able to slay the snakes but she would give Niko a few

moments of warning and that, not the safety of the Stormchildren, was all that

mattered to Randal.

“We had a cage built for her but, with the influence of the transfer, it wasn’t

enough to hold her,” Molin was explaining to Jihan. “We’ll have Arton’s father

make a stronger one in the morning. In the meantime I’ll tell the guards to keep

the Beysib women out. She’d go after their vipers.”

“Then don’t build a cage,” the Froth Daughter said with an icy laugh. “They need

a few less snakes.”

“The vipers are sacred to the Beysib and to Mother Bey. You, most especially,

should respect this,” Molin said sternly as the temperature continued to drop.

“Mother Bey! Mother Bey, my hind foot. Do you know where she found her first

snake? That’s all she needs, you know, a silly blood-mouth World Serpent. Not my

father. No, she doesn’t need him at all!”

When she wasn’t doting on the children, Jihan fumed about her father’s

progressive entanglement with the fish-folk’s goddess, Mother Bey. Jihan, who

had never had a rival for her father’s affection, was developing a dangerous

resentment for all things Beysib.

Gods were the priests’ problems. Randal had heard the adolescent protests before

and was openly relieved to leave them to Molin. He found a fist-sized watch-lamp

beside the glowing brazier, lit it, and headed toward the curtained alcove where

Niko convalesced. Tempus had forbidden the direct application of magic on his

partner’s wounds so Jihan worked her healing through vile unguents; the taint of

rotting offal drew Randal to the alcove more surely than the flickering

lamplight. He swallowed his sneezes as he drew the curtain aside and stood at

Niko’s feet.

The mercenary thrashed on his pallet in the grip of nightmares or pain.

“Leave me be!” he gasped-and Randal pressed his back against the wall of the

alcove.

Chiringee had followed the magician. She stalked across the damp, discarded

linens, easily eluding Randal’s cautious attempts to restrain her. Her teeth

glistened and her tail quivered as it only did when she was closing on her prey.

Randal set the lamp carefully on the footboard and moved closer.

“Leave me!” Niko murmured again before his words became incoherent moans and his

body stiffened into an arch above the pallet.

Randal froze, horrified not merely because the creature he had enchanted to

protect Niko was going to rip through the soft flesh of that Stepson’s neck but

because he knew, despite his chastity, that Niko was a victim of neither

nightmares nor pain. The injured mercenary collapsed flaccidly on the linens;

Chiringee’s jaws clicked shut harmlessly and Randal watched as Niko’s lips moved

silently around the word he most feared: “Roxane…”

The mongoose reared up and began a keening that drew Molin and Jihan to the

alcove.

“He’s had a relapse,” Randal said, a tremor in his voice. “I’ll go tell Tempus.”

He ran from the alcove and the nursery hoping he could reach privacy before the

deceit and sick fear that had taken root in his bowels overcame him.

“I can see that,” Jihan said coldly as she stared first at Molin, then at her

patient. She drew the linens up to cover him. “Go now, I’ll take care of him

alone.”

Molin was alone in his sanctum when Illyra arrived at the palace to deliver

Chiringee’s new cage. She had been instructed to take it directly to the

nursery, but she was the natural mother of one of Sanctuary’s Stormchildren and

when she insisted that she would see Vashanka’s priest first no one argued with

her. She dumped the iron-wire contraption on the floor and ordered Molin’s

scrivener, Hoxa, from the room.

“Is something wrong, Illyra? I assure you: Alton receives the same care as

Gyskouras.” Molin stood up from her table and gestured to take her heavy cloak.

“I have Seen things.” She kept the cloak tight at her neck though braziers and

windows made the sanctum one of the more comfortable private rooms in the

palace. “Torchholder- it’s getting worse, not better.”

“Sit down, then, and tell me what you’ve Seen,” He dragged his own chair around

to the front of the worktable for her. “Hoxa! Get some mulled cyder for the

lady!” Propping himself against the table, he addressed her with calculated

familiarity. “Since the… accident?”

“That night.”

“You said you Saw nothing,” he chided her.

“Not about Arton or the other boy; not something I even noticed or understood at

the time. But the others have felt it too.” She pulled the cloak close around

her; Molin understood that once again Illyra was violating some S’danzo taboo

with her revelations. “There are stones-spirit stones-from the times before men

needed gods. When they were lost that was when the S’danzo were born and when

men began to create gods from their hopes and needs….

“If men possessed these stones again there would be no need for gods.”

She paused when Hoxa came into the room with two goblets.

“Thank you, Hoxa. I won’t be needing you again tonight. Take the rest of the

cyder and have a pleasant evening.” Molin handed Illyra the goblet himself. “You

think that with these stones we could free your son and Gyskouras?” he suggested

when it seemed she would say no more but only stare at the twisting plumes of

steam.

Illyra shook her head. Tears or the fragrant vapor of the cyder had smeared the

kohl under her eyes. “It’s been too long. One of the lost stones was invoked and

destroyed that night- some of its magic was directed against the children, some

went into a woman who came to me with death in her eyes, some of it is still

falling to the ground like rain, but all of it was evil, Torchholder. It had

been damaged when the demons hid it in the fires of creation. Our legends have

played us false. Men can no longer live without gods.

“The other women have felt the falling but I’ve felt something else in the

shadows. Torchholder-there’s another stone in Sanctuary and it is worse than the

first one.”

Molin took the goblet from her trembling fingers and held her hands between his

own. “What you call spirit stones are, in fact, the Nisibisi Globes of Power,

the talismans of their witches and wizards. The one that was destroyed was the

source of most, if not all, of the witch Roxane’s power. She was evil, it is

true, and the demons will have their sport with her, I’m sure. But the globes

themselves are only pottery artifacts. The S’danzo needn’t worry about the

second one, whatever its previous owners might have been.” He stopped short of

telling her that Randal’s globe still rested, enveloped by nothingness, on the

table behind him.

Illyra shook her head until her hood fell back and her dark, curling hair fell

freely around her shoulders. “It is a spirit stone and the demons have tampered

with it,” she insisted. “It is not safe for men to possess it.”

“It could be destroyed, like the other one.”

“No.” She shrank back as if he had struck her. “Not destroyed-Sanctuary, the

world, wouldn’t survive. Send it back to the fires of creation-or to the bottom

of the sea.”

“It is safe, Illyra. It will hurt no one and no one will hurt it.”

She stared distractedly at the table; Molin wondered what her S’danzo sight

could actually reveal. “Its evil cries out in the night, Torchholder, and no one

is immune.” She lifted her hood and moved toward the door. “No one,” she

reminded him as she left.

The priest finished his cyder, then opened the parchment window. Time always

passed strangely when he was with Illyra-it had seemed no later than early

afternoon when she arrived, but now the sun had set and a fog bank was moving

across the harbor to the town. He should have arranged an escort for her back to

the Bazaar. Despite her prejudices Illyra was one of his most prized informants.

“Isn’t it rather early to be sending them home. Torch?” a familiar voice

inquired from behind.

Molin turned as Tempus settled himself into the chair which creaked and was

dwarfed by his size.

“She is the mother of the other child. Sometimes she brings me information. I

don’t mix business with pleasure, Riddler.”

They used mercenaries’ names when they met; their personalities always created

the aura of a battlefield between them.

“What was her information?”

“She is worried about the globes and their owners.”

“Globes, owners: plural? Aren’t we left with globe, singular, and owner,

singular?”

Molin smiled and shrugged as he dragged Hoxa’s stool across the room to sit

beside his guest. “I suppose you’d have to ask an owner.”

“Why haven’t you? You’re supposed to be Randal’s apprentice.”

“Haven’t seen our long-eared Hazard since he left to find you sometime after

last midnight. It seemed young Niko had some sort of relapse.”

Tempus put a mild edge on his voice: “I haven’t seen Randal in days and I saw

Niko just before I came here. He was up and complaining about Jinan. No one

mentioned any ‘relapse’.”

“Well, our little mage is a bit naive about these things, chaste and virgin-pure

as he is. He saw something he didn’t want to see, though, something he called a

‘relapse’, and went running from the room like he’d seen a ghost. You put it

together, Riddler.”

The edge, and some of the confidence, faded from Tempus’s voice: “Roxane. Death

doesn’t stop Death’s Queen. She reaches me where I cannot defend myself. Hasn’t

Niko suffered enough?” he asked a god who no longer listened.

“We never did find Roxane’s body, you know. And by your own reports she could

steal a body as easily as a soul. She pacted with demons that night; she had the

power to slip inside his skull like a whisper-and we’d never know!”

“But Jihan would. She says there’s not one iota of Niko that isn’t pure. Pure

pain. I tried to make him hate me once, and he suffered more.”

“Damn you, man! He wasn’t suffering when I saw him last night,” Molin shouted,

slamming his fist on the table to get the mercenary’s attention. “If Roxane

hasn’t possessed Niko, then he’s calling her back himself with these dreams. We

could have a serious problem on our hands.”

“I’d go to hell itself to set him free of her,” Tempus resolved, starting to

rise from his chair.

“Roxane’s not in hell-she’s in Niko. In his memories. In his lusts. He’s

bringing her back, Riddler. I don’t know how but I know what I saw.”

“The curse won’t have him.”

“Which curse? Yours, hers, or his? Or hasn’t it occurred to you that Niko loves

the witch-bitch far better than he loves you?”

“It is enough that he loves me at all.”

“Very convenient, Riddler. This Bandaran adept, reeking of moat, brings the

world’s own chaos in his wake and it’s all because he has the misfortune to

admire you. I suppose you’ll tell me Vashanka’s gone because he loved you, too

after his fashion.”

“All right,” Tempus roared, but he sat down again. “My curse-all mine-on the

people I love. Does that satisfy you?”

“Well, at least I should be safe from it,” Torchholder replied with a smile.

“Don’t play games with me, priest. You’re not in my league.”

“I’m not playing with you; I’m trying to set you free. How many years have you

been dragging that around with you? You think the universe spins in your navel?

The only curse you’ve got is the arrogance of believing yourself responsible for

everything.” It was sudden death to provoke Tempus’s wrath- everyone in the

Rankan Empire knew that-so the priest’s audacity left the immortal mercenary

flat-footed and muttering • about magicians, love, and other things that passed

the understanding of ordinary, uncursed, men.

“Let me tell you what I do understand, Riddler. I understand that a curse is

only a threat-a potential. No wizard-no, more than that: no god-can curse a

disbelieving man. No acceptance-no curse: it’s as simple as that, Tempus Thales.

You made some backwater mage’s curse a prophecy. You rejected love in all its

forms.”

The shock was beginning to wear off; Tempus stiffened, his lips a taut line of

displeasure across his face. Molin rocked back on the stool until its front legs

were off the floor and his shoulders rested against the worktable: a posture so

vulnerable it was insolent. “In fact,” the priest said amiably, “a mutual

acquaintance of ours-the highest authority in these matters, as it were-assures

me that your curse is, shall we say, all in your mind. A bad habit. He says you

could sleep like a babe-in-arms if you wanted to.”

“Who?”

“Jinan’s father: Stormbringer,” Molin concluded with a smile.

“You? Stormbringer?”

“Don’t look so surprised.” The stool thumped back to its normal alignment with

the floor. “We were both, in a sense, orphans. I…” Molin groped for the

appropriate description, “-experience him quite regularly. Now that is a curse.

Our paternal ancestor is head-over-heels in lust with the Beysib’s Mother

Goddess-except they don’t have a matching set of heads, heels or whatever.”

“Torch, you push me too far,” Tempus warned, but the power wasn’t there. “The

Empire’s coming back. Vashanka’s coming back.” His voice was more hopeful than

commanding.

Molin shook his head, tsk-tsk’ing as if he spoke to a child. “Open your eyes,

Riddler. Unbelievable as it might seem, the future is here in Sanctuary. There’s

an empire coming, and a war-god as well, but it won’t be Rankan and it won’t be

Va-shanka. You came here, I imagine, to tell me to toe the line when the

imperial ship arrives. Let me make a counter-proposal: Make your commitment to

your son-keep Brachis, Theron, and all Ranke alive only until Sanctuary is

ready to conquer it.”

“You’ll see your guts spinning on a windlass for that, priest,” Tempus hissed as

he stood up and headed for the door.

“Think it over, Riddler. Sleep on it. You look like you need some sleep.”

The big man said nothing as he disappeared into the darkness beyond Molin’s

apartments. If he could be brought into line, or so Stormbringer said, the

ultimate triumph of the Storm-children would be ensured. There were things even

the primal war-god didn’t know, Molin mused as he closed the window, but he

might be right about Tempus.

“I tell you-she’s gone mad. She’s lost control. She’s gathering her dead-but she

can’t find them all.”

The young man wrung his hands together as he talked; his words slurred and broke

in a constant agitation of pain and chronic drunkenness. The fog of his breath

in the cold, damp air was enough to intoxicate a sober, living man. Both witches

raised better looking corpses, better smelling ones for that matter, but Mor-am

wasn’t dead-yet.

“S-She’s l-l-lost c-control. S-she’s l-l-looking for s-someone to k-k-k-k-” he

gasped and coughed his way into incoherence.

Walegrin sighed, poured two-fingers of cheap wine, and slid it across the barrel

head. In a backwater town renowned for its depravity and despair, this one-time

hawkmask had drifted beyond the pale. Mor-am needed both white-knuckled hands to

get the mug to his lips; even then a dirty stream oozed out the comer of his

ruined mouth. The garrison captain looked away and tried not to notice.

“You mean Ischade?” he asked when the wine was gone.

“Seh!” Mor-am’s back straightened and his eyes cleared as he uttered the Nisi

curse. “Not Her name. Not aloud. S-She’s l-l-looking for s-someone to k-k-kill

someone p-powerful. I c-could find out h-his name.”

Walegrin said nothing.

“I s-saw Her w-with T-T-Tempus-at m-m-my s-sister’s h-h-house. S-She w-w-was

angry.”

Walegrin studied the stars overhead.

Mor-am gripped the cup again, throwing his head back, sucking loudly, futilely

on the rim. He made a supreme effort to control his wayward tongue. “I know

other things. She’s looking for the witch. Got to have power-have her focus

back. I can follow Her-She trusts me.”

A flock of the white Beyarl made their way to the palace. A falcon’s cry echoed

across the rooftops. The white birds swooped back toward the harbor. Walegrin

watched their slow-circling patterns and Mor-am lurched forward across the

barrel head to grip his wrist with moist, sticky hands.

The young man began to speak in a rapid, malodorous whisper: “M-Moria’s changed.

G-G-Got f-friends w-w-who aren’t Her f-friends. D-Deads at the P-Peres h-house

w-w-who s-should b-b-be in h-hell. T-Taken a 1-1-lover. M-Moria’s a th-thief-1

1-like H-Her. H-He’s a m-mage-m-maybe b-b-better th-than H-Her. S-She’ll t-t

tell you w-w-what e’s-”

The captain wrenched his arm away and whistled sharply. A burly soldier emerged

from the inky doorway where he had been posted.

“Take him to the palace,” Walegrin commanded, taking a cloth from a sack at his

feet and carefully cleaning his hands.

“S-s-she’ll know. When I d-d-don’t come back. She’ll look for me.” The ex

hawkmask’s voice was shrill with desperation as he was hoisted to his feet. “You

said gold-you said: ‘gold for information’.”

“It doesn’t pay to sell out your family-pud, I thought you’d’ve learned that by

now,” Walegrin replied coldly. “Take him to the palace.” He nodded and another

soldier stepped forward to see that the command was carried out quietly.

Walegrin threw Mor-am’s mug into the garbage that lay everywhere in the burned

out, sky-roofed warehouse. It had come this low: Rankan soldiers holding forth

in ruins; listening to the ramblings of the city’s scum; talking to the dead and

the undead. A delegation was coming from the capital. His orders were to keep

Sanctuary quiet, to keep it free of surprises and, above all, to keep an ear out

for rumors about the Nisi witch. He rested his hand on his sword hilt and waited

for the next one.

“He might be right, you know,” a voice called from the darkness.

A man separated from the shadows-mounted and armed. He came through a gap in the

walls-the man’s head wreathed in shifting moisture, the horse as cool and shiny

as a marble statue. Walegrin stood up, his hand remaining on the sword.

“Slow up there,” the stranger ordered, swinging his leg over the saddle. “Word’s

out you’re talking to anybody-even other Rankan soldiers.” His words emerged in

a plume but the bay horse, though it snorted and shied from the lingering scent

of the fire, made no mark on the night air.

“Strat?” Walegrin inquired and received a confirming nod. “Didn’t think you came

uptown much these days.”

The hawk cried again. Both men glanced up past the charred, skeletal roof-beams,

but the sky was empty.

“I was up here the other night at Moria’s dinner party.” Straton kicked the

broken barrel Mor-am had used for a seat aside and selected another one from the

rubble. “This place secure?” He glanced around at the gaping walls.

“It’s mine.”

“He might be worth listening to,” Strat said, shrugging a shoulder toward Mor

am’s path.

Walegrin shook his head. “He’s drunk, scared, and ready to sell the only ones

who’ve stood by him. I’m not looking to buy what he’s selling.”

“Especially scared-especially scared. I’d say he knows something no cheap wine

can hide. I’ve seen the new face Moria’s wearing these days; Ischade didn’t put

it there. I’d talk to him about that-get his confidence. Ease the burden on his

mind.”

Strat was known to live within the necromancer’s curse- and without it, if

current rumor were true. He knew Ischade’s household as no other living man knew

it. Likewise, he was the Stepson’s interrogator-a superb judge of a man’s

willingness to talk and the worth of what he said.

“I’ll talk to him, then,” Walegrin agreed, wishing he had a larger fraction of

Molin’s canniness. The Stepson had gotten the upper hand in their conversation.

He was sitting, silent and smiling, while Walegrin was sweating. The younger man

pondered possibilities and motivations, listened to the lonely hawk, and

abandoned all attempts at subtlety. “Strat, you didn’t come here to help me do

my job with that wrecked hawkmask and it’s not safe for a Stepson to be east of

the processional-so why’re you here?”

“Oh, it’s about a hawkmask: Jubal.” Strat paused, bit an offending fingernail,

and spat into the darkness for effect. “He made an agreement with me and I want

you and yours to honor it.”

Walegrin snorted. “Commander-this had better be good. Jubal made an agreement

with the Stepsons?”

“With me,” the Stepson said through taut lips. “For peace and quiet. For no

confrontations while Sanctuary has imperial visitors. For business as usual as

it used to be. He’s pulling back; I’m pulling back. The PFLS will be exposed and

we’ll take care of them-permanently. Consider yourself honored that I think we

need your voluntary cooperation.”

“What cooperation?” Walegrin snapped. “Are we the ones rampaging through the

streets? Are we running rackets? Strong-arming merchants? Did we turn the town

on its ear, then run off to war leaving the locals masquerading in our places?

You want to take care of the PFLS-there wouldn’t be any PFLS without the high

and-bloody-mighty Third Commando and there wouldn’t be any Commando without you

and yours. Dammit, Commander, I haven’t got a headache you didn’t cause one way

or another.”

Straton sat in stony silence. There’d never been any love lost between the

regular army soldiers, enlisted to the service of the Empire, and the elite

bands like the Stepsons or the Hell-Hounds, bound only to the interest of the

gold that paid them. For Straton and Walegrin, whose orders-keep the peace in

Sanctuary-were identical and whose positions-military commander-were untenably

identical, the antagonism was especially acute.

Walegrin, having spent the better part of his life in blind admiration of the

likes of Straton, Critias, or even Tempus, expected the Stepson to blast them

out of their conversational impasse. He felt no relief when, after long moments

of staring, enlightenment overcame him: Strat was out of his depth and sinking

faster than he, himself, was.

“All right,” Walegrin began, leaning across the makeshift table, forcing the

anger from his voice the way Molin did. “You’ve got the garrison’s voluntary

cooperation. What else?”

“We’re changing the rules-some of the players won’t like it. The PFLS is going

to push-”

Walegrin raised a finger for silence; the hawk’s cry rose and fell in a new

pattern. “Keep talking,” he told the Stepson. “Don’t look around-we’re being

watched. Thrush?” he asked the darkness.

“There was one following him-” a voice explained from the shadows behind

Walegrin’s back. “He’s up on the roof over your right shoulder-with a bow

that’ll put an arrow through you both. There was another-no weapons that we

could see- came up a bit later. Now the second’s seen the first an’ he’s

circling around.”

“Friends of yours?”

“No, I came alone,” Strat replied without confidence as a hiss that might have

been an arrow crossed the open sky above them.

“Let’s go,” Walegrin ordered, pushing away from the barrel head.

The gods alone might know who had followed Straton, Walegrin thought as he

crouched and ducked into the shadows where Thrusher was waiting for him. Every

Stepson had enemies in this part of town and Strat had more than most. He might

even have enemies who’d kill each other for the privilege of killing him.

Walegrin couldn’t indulge in expectant curiosities, though- not with Thrusher

picking a cat’s path through the garbage ahead of them. His squads had patroled

these warrens and knew where safe footing lay. He could only follow and hope

Strat had the good sense to do the same. Thrush led them onto the nearby

rooftops in time to see their bow-carying quarry land on the muddy cobblestones

below.

“Recognize him?” Walegrin demanded, pointing at the receding silhouette.

“Crit.”

Stepsons hunting Stepsons, was it? “After the other one,” Walegrin barked at

whichever of his men could hear. There were better ways to get information from

Critias than risking a rooftop confrontation. He turned to follow Thrusher and

realized that Strat hadn’t moved since identifying his erstwhile partner.

“It’s no time to be asking yourself questions, Straton.”

“He came to kill me,” Strat whispered, then stumbled on a loose roof tile and

lurched toward the eaves.

Walegrin caught a fistful of shoulder. “He hasn’t-yet. Now move it before we

lose the other one, too.”

Strat glowered and thrust Walegrin’s arm aside.

The second interloper knew the backways of Sanctuary and was hugging darkness

back toward the Maze and safety. Moonlight caught a youthful outline arching

from one rooftop to the next and Thrusher’s crablike scuttle as he followed.

“Not for the likes of us,” Walegrin decided, judging the weight of the leather

armor he and Strat wore. “We go below. It’s our only chance.”

He led the way, crashing through the rubble and needing Strat’s help more than

once to shoulder through a crumbling door or wall that threatened to block their

way.

“Lost ’em,” Strat muttered when they burst through a flimsy gate to find

Lizard’s Way deserted.

Walegrin cupped his palms around his lips and emitted a passable imitation of a

hawk. “Gave it a good try, though,” he added between gasps. “Worth a jug between

us.”

Strat was nodding when a hawk cried and a face appeared in the gutters above

them.

“Round the alleys and back. Captain. We caught her.”

“Her?” both men said to themselves.

Kama glared at the night from the calf-deep stench of a Maze rooftop rain

cistern. Stupidity and bad luck. Another fifteen steps and she would have been

so deep in the Maze they would never have found her, but not this time. This

time the damn shingle had to give way and take her sliding down a rain trough.

That was the bad luck. Stupidity was not knowing the trough ended in a cistern

when she had taken this exact route a dozen other nights. She would have ignored

the makeshift rope Thrusher dangled above her if survival weren’t more important

than pride or if her ankle weren’t already swollen from the fall and her hands

abraded by her efforts to free herself on her own.

She bore the indignity of being hauled up like a sack of dead fish, knowing that

the worst was yet to come.

“0 gods, no-” a familiar voice breathed softly. “Not you-”

Kama refused to look in that direction but stared instead at the young-ish

officer in charge of the garrison troops who had pursued, then rescued, her.

“Well,” she demanded, “are you satisfied or are you going to drag me up to the

palace?”

Walegrin felt his throat tighten. Not that he wasn’t accustomed to seeing a

woman in men’s clothing-in a thief’s night-dark clothing at that. This was

Sanctuary, after all. The garrison soldier guarding their flank was a woman he’d

hired himself and as nasty a fighter as was ever bred in the Maze. But the young

woman standing in front of him, her wet clothes plastered to her and her long

hair snapping like whips when she tossed her head, was the backbone and brains

behind the 3rd Commando, and probably the PFLS, for that matter. Worse-she was

Tempus Thales’s daughter.

“Who sent you?” he stammered, and had the god’s good luck to find the one

question that would leave her as uncomfortable as he was.

“Did your… did Tempus send you?” Strat asked, stepping into the light of a

freshly kindled torch.

Kama tossed her head, barely acknowledging Strat’s question, and stood silent

until Thrusher stepped forward and grabbed her weapon hand.

“Lady, you want to use this again?”

“Yes-let go of me-”

“Thrush.” Walegrin moved to restrain his lieutenant who had already unstoppered

his wineskin. “I’m sure the lady has her own… resources.”

Thrush turned around, exposing the wound to the torchlight. Everyone in the

courtyard who carried a sword felt a twinge. The skin on Kama’s palm lay in

twisted spikes cross-hatched with black splinters from the cistern walls; not a

wound that killed but one that stole reflexes and precision, which was just as

bad. Kama shed a fraction of her composure.

“Lady,” Thrush stared up into Kama’s eyes, “you got a good doctor in there?” He

shrugged a shoulder Mazeward and pointed the wineskin at her palm.

“Are you any better?”

Thrusher bared all his teeth.

“He’s not bad,” Walegrin confirmed, “but the demon’s piss he keeps in that sack

of his is guaranteed.” , “Given to me by my one-eyed grandmother….” Thrusher

explained as a stream of colorless liquid spurted toward Kama’s hand.

“It’ll hurt like hell,” a faceless voice warned from beyond the torchlight.

But Kama already knew that. Her face went white and rigid and stayed that way

until Thrusher put the cork back in the wineskin. Strat offered a strip of his

tunic as a bandage as her own clothing was as filthy as the wound had been. She

seemed relieved when Strat put his hand under her arm.

“Why?” Strat asked in a voice Walegrin saw rather than heard.

“Go on back to the barracks,” Walegrin ordered quickly but made no move to leave

the courtyard himself. “We’ll see the lady to her lodgings.” He met Strat’s

glower and outlasted it. “You and I have a jug of wine to split,” he explained

when his men had vanished.

“Why, Kama?” Strat repeated. “Didn’t he think Crit would carry out his orders?”

They began moving slowly toward the warehouse where Strat had left his bay

horse.

“I’ve been following Crit,” Kama admitted. “When I saw him with the bow-I don’t

know if he’s got orders or not.” She paused to tuck a hank of hair behind her

ear. Whatever pain remained in her face had nothing to do with her injuries.

“Nobody in the palace understands any more. They haven’t set foot in the

streets. They don’t understand what’s happening. …”

Like everyone else who had spent the winter in Sanctuary- rather than in the

palace, or Ranke or some relatively secure war zone-Kama had lived through hell.

Walegrin guessed she would have more faith and friendship for anyone who had

also endured those long, dead-cold nights on the barricades, regardless of the

color on their armband, than she could feel for any outsider-even her father.

“It takes someone who’s been out here to understand,” he agreed, sliding his arm

under Kama’s other arm so she didn’t need to put any weight on her twisted

ankle. “There’s one I trust. I’d trust him at my back on the streets and I trust

him in the palace….”

Molin Torchholder slouched back against the outstretched wings of a gargoyle. He

would have preferred to be somewhere well beyond the city walls but winter was

finally yielding to Sanctuary’s fifth season: the mud, and he wasn’t desperate

enough to brave the quagmires masquerading as streets and courtyards. The palace

rooftop was deserted except for workmen and laundresses who could still be

counted on to leave him alone. He closed his eyes and savored the gentle warmth

of the sun.

In a methodical fashion he reviewed the conversations and rumors that had passed

his way. The garrison commander, Walegrin, was finally showing promise; acting

on his own initiative, he had established friendly relations with Straton and

Tempus Thales’s daughter, Kama. That was a good sign. Of course, the fact that

Straton was on the streets, cut off from both Ischade and the Stepsons and

dealing with Jubal, was a bad sign. And confirmation that Kama was the

intelligence behind the PFLS was the worst information he’d had in months- even

if it wasn’t a surprise. Tempus, never an easy man to predict under the best of

circumstances, would be chaos incarnate if any of his real or imagined family

turned on one another.

The whining hawkmask the garrison had interrogated had told them everything he

knew, and a good deal he did not, about Ischade. Like Straton, the priest found

it interesting that Ischade had rivals within her own household-rivals who could

transform an Ilsig harridan into a Rankan lady. Molin knew the necromancer had

been detaching herself from her magic since her raven had appeared on his

bedpost with no message and less desire to return to the White Foal. If Ischade

found her focus again, the bird would let him know by its departure. If she

didn’t, well: Jihan could protect the children, Randal would protect his globe,

and the rest of magic could destroy itself for all he cared.

On the balance, then, the thoughts percolating through his mind were satisfying.

The street powers-the Stepsons, Jubal, the 3rd Commando, and the garrison-were

reining in their prejudices and rivalries without overt interference from the

palace. Sanctuary-flesh-and-blood Sanctuary-would be quiet when the imperial

delegation made its appearance. The disorganization of magic and the broodings

of Tempus Thales seemed soluble problems by comparison.

“My Lord Torchholder-there you are!”

Prince Kadakithis’s relentlessly cheerful voice dragged the priest from his

reverie.

“You’re a devilish hard man to find sometimes. Lord Torch-holder. No, don’t

stand-I’ll sit beside you.”

“I was just enjoying the sunshine-and the quiet.”

“I can imagine. That’s why I followed you-to get you while you were alone. My

Lord Torchholder-I’m confused.”

Molin cast a final glance at the glimmering harbor and gave his whole attention

to the golden-haired aristocrat squatting in front of him. “I’m at your service,

my prince.”

“Is Roxane dead or alive?”

The young man wasn’t asking easy questions today. “Neither. That is, we would

know if she were dead-a soul such as hers makes quite a splash when it surfaces

in hell. And we would know if she were alive-in any ordinary sense. She has, in

effect, vanished which we think, on the whole, is more likely to mean that she

is alive, rather than dead, but safely hidden somewhere where even Jihan can’t

find her-though such a place is beyond all imagining. She might, I suppose, have

become Niko herself-though Jihan assures us she would know if such a thing had

happened.”

“Ah,” the prince said with an indecisive nod. “And the Stormchildren-nothing

will change with them one way or another until she’s either fully dead or

alive?”

“That’s a rather inelegant way of summing up a week’s worth of argument-but I

think that you’re fairly close to the heart of the matter.”

“And we don’t want our visitors from the capital to know about her or the

Stormchildren?”

“I think it would be safe to say that whatever chaos the witch could cause on

her own it would be made immeasurably worse were it witnessed by someone, as you

say, ‘from the capital’.”

“And because we don’t know where she is, or what she’s going to do, or when

she’s going to do it; we’re trying to guard against everything and starting to

distrust each other. More than usual, that is-though not you and I, of course.”

Molin smiled despite himself-beneath that affable dense-ness the prince

concealed a certain degree of intelligence, leadership, and common sense. “Of

course,” he agreed.

“I think, then, we’re making a mistake. I mean, we couldn’t be making it easier

for her-assuming she actually is planning something.”

“You would suggest we do something different?”

“No,” the youth chuckled, “I don’t make suggestions like that-but, if I were you

I’d suggest that, rather than guarding against her, we put some sort of

irresistible temptation in front of her-an ambush.”

“And what sort of temptation would / suggest?”

“The children.”

. “No,” the priest chided, only half in jest now; the prince’s suggestion had

him thinking of intriguing ways to deal with both Tempus and magic. “Jihan

wouldn’t stand for that.”

“Oh.” The prince sighed and got to his feet. “I hadn’t thought about her. But it

was a good idea, wasn’t it-as far as it went?”

Molin nodded generously. “A very good idea.”

“You’ll think about it then? Almost as if I had inspired you? My father said

once that his job wasn’t finding the solutions to all the Empire’s problems but

inspiring other men to find the solutions.”

Molin watched the prince make his way back to the stairway, greeting each group

of laborers. Kadakithis had been raised among the servants and was always more

confident, and more popular, among them than his aristocratic relations

suspected. He might astound them all and become the leader Sanctuary, and the

Empire, needed.

The priest waited until the young man had reentered the palace before quietly

making his way toward a different stairway and the Ilsig Bedchamber where he

would promote the prince’s notions and his own inspirations to those most able

to implement them.

Jihan was bathing Gyskouras when the Beysib guard announced him. She handed the

inert toddler to a nursemaid with evident reluctance and headed for the door

with the long, rangy stride of a woman who had never worn anything more

confining than a scale-armor tunic. Water was her element; she glowed where it

had splashed against her.

For a moment Molin forgot she was a Froth Daughter, remembering only that it had

been well over a month since his wife had left him and that he had always been

attracted to a more predatory sort of woman than was socially acceptable. Then

an involuntary shiver raced down his spine as Jihan passed judgment on him; the

flash of desire vanished without a trace.

“I was expecting you,” she said, stepping to the side of the doorway and

allowing him into the nursery.

“I didn’t know I was coming here myself until a few moments ago.” He lifted her

hand to his lips, as if she were any other Rankan noblewoman.

Jihan shrugged. “I can tell, that’s all. The rabble,” she gestured toward the

doorway and the city beyond it, “aren’t really alive at all. But you, and the

others-you’re alive enough to be interesting.” She took the Stormchild,

Gyskouras, from the Beysib woman’s arms and went back to the obviously

pleasurable task of bathing him. “I like interesting…”

The Froth Daughter paused. Torchholder followed her stare to its target.

Seylalha, the lithe temple-dancer and mother of the motionless toddler in

Jihan’s arms, was doing a very attentive job of wiping the sweat from Niko’s

still-fevered forehead.

“Don’t touch that bandage!”

Seylalha turned to meet Jihan’s glower. Before becoming the mother of Vashanka’s

presumed heir, the young woman had only known the stifling world of a slave

dancer, trained and controlled by the bitter, mute women whom Vashanka had

rejected; she seldom needed words to express her feelings. She made a properly

humble obeisance, cast a longing glance at the child, her own son, Gyskouras,

cradled in Jihan’s arms, and went back to stroking Niko’s forehead. Jihan began

to tremble.

“You were saying?” Molin inquired, daring to interrupt the fuming creature who

was both primal deity and spoiled adolescent.

“Saying?” Jihan looked around, her eyes shimmering.

If Jihan had not had the power to freeze his soul to the bedchamber floor, Molin

would have laughed aloud. She couldn’t bear to see something she wanted in the

possession of anyone else and she always wanted more than even a goddess could

comfortably possess.

“I wanted your advice,” he began, lying and flattering her. “I’m beginning to

think that we should seize the initiative with Roxane, or her ghost or whatever

she’s become, before our visitors from Ranke arrive. Do you think that we could

bait a trap for her and-with your assistance, of course-catch her when she came

to investigate?”

“Not the children,” she replied, clutching the dripping child to her breast.

“No, I think we could find something even more tempting: a Globe of Power-if it

looked sufficiently, but believably, unattended.”

Jihan’s grip on Gyskouras relaxed, a faint smile grew on her lips; clearly she

was tempted. “What do I do?” she asked, no longer thinking of children, or even

men, but of the chance to do battle with Roxane again.

“At first, convince Tempus that it’s a good idea to give the appearance of doing

something very foolish with the Globe of Power. Suggest to him that he could

solve the problems within the Stepsons by letting them prove to themselves and

everyone else that Roxane is dead and powerless.”

“Tempus? He spends more time with his horses than he does here with me or the

Stepsons. I’d like to do more than talk to Tempus.” Her smile grew broader when

she mentioned the man who was, by Stormbringer’s command, her lover, companion,

and escort during her mortality. “The two of us alone could take the globe and

the witch….”

Molin felt a trickle of sweat run down his back. Jihan had taken the bait,

embroidering his notions with her own, mortally incomprehensible, imagination.

If he could not lure her back to plans he could shape and control, the exercise

would become a disaster of monumental proportions.

“Think of the Stormchildren, dear lady,” he said in what was both his most

unctuous and commanding voice. “Think of your father. You can’t leave them

behind-not even to travel with Tempus or to destroy the Nisibisi witch.”

Jihan wilted. “I couldn’t leave them.” She patted Gy-skouras’s golden curls

apologetically. “I must put those thoughts behind me.” With her eyes closed, the

Froth Daughter focused divine determination against mortal free will until her

shoulders slumped in defeat. “I have so much to leam,” she admitted. “Even the

children know more than I do.”

“When the Stormchildren are well again, then you will travel with them to

Bandara; you will leam everything that they learn. For now, though, only you can

sense Roxane through her deceits and disguises. Tempus can devise a trap for

her-but only you will know if she falls into it.”

She brightened and Molin almost felt sorry for Tempus. The mercenary would have

no choice now but to close ranks within the Stepsons and concoct the tactics

necessary to lure Roxane out of her hiding .place; no one, not even a

regenerating immortal, could stand for long against Jihan’s enthusiasm. The

priest relaxed, then caught a flicker of movement at the comer of his eye. Niko

had pushed away from Seylalha’s tenderness and was staring, with his one

unbandaged eye, off into nothingness. Perhaps he had heard them mention Bandara?

Perhaps-? Molin shook his head, preferring not to think at all about any other

possibility.

The hand that reached out of the darkness to grab Molin’s shoulder had the

strength of an iron trap. It was only by yielding to its force, collapsing and

rolling through the mud, that the priest avoided becoming a prisoner of his

assailant. He scrabbled for balance, tearing a small knife free from the hem of

his priest-robe’s sleeve as he scanned the courtyard for some detectable sound

or movement. Then he saw the silhouette and threw the knife aside; no four

finger blade would deter Tempus for long.

“I’ve taken all I’m going to take of your schemes. Torch.” The mud squished as

the big mercenary took a step forward. He leaned down and hoisted Molin to his

feet by the front of his robe, then pressed him against the damp brick of the

palace wall. “I warned you once-that’s more than you deserve.”

“Warned me of what? Warned me that you’re in over your eyes with capital

politics that have no meaning in this town? You want Sanctuary quiet when your

high-and-mighty usurping friends get here-well, what are you doing about it? You

started off well: you got Roxane’s Nisi globe; drove her into hiding- but you

haven’t done anything since.” Molin’s voice was cracking from the pressure

Tempus put against his breastbone but it could not be said that his courage had

failed him as well.

“The streets will be quiet-I’ve seen to that.”

“Straton saw to that. You can’t take credit for the acts of a man who thinks

you’ve issued orders to have him killed by his partner, Riddler.”

Tempus gave the priest one last, vicious shake, then released him to slide down

the wall to his proper height.

“But this scheme of Jihan’s-of yours. Torch, it’s beneath you, using her against

me like that. We’ve got all our vulner-ables in one place and the strength to

guard them. It’s no time to be traipsing through the countryside splitting our

forces.”

“I’m a siege engineer, Riddler. I build walls and I tear them down. It took our

golden-haired light-weight, Kadakithis, to point out how predictable our tactics

have become. I’ve got one idea for luring the bitch into the open-but I don’t

want to try it. I was counting on Jihan’s provoking you into coming up with

something better.”

“And if she doesn’t?”

“I’ll bum the portrait that little Ilsigi painter made of you, Roxane, and

Niko.”

“Vashanka’s balls. Torch-you aren’t afraid of anything, are you? We better talk

this through. Where’ve you got that painting now? Still here in the palace?”

Tempus took Molin’s arm, more gently this time, and led him toward the West Gate

of the palace.

“It’s where it’s always seemed to be, Riddler,” Molin said as he shook free of

the other man’s assistance. “But don’t think that because you can see it you can

reach it. Randal’s taught me a bit about hiding things in plain sight.”

They went through the gate in silence, not because of the tension between them

though it was as thick as the perennial fog-but because they were both aware

that the walls were the most porous part of the palace and that nothing private

should be said in their shadow. They continued in silence, Tempus leading,

through the better pans of town into the Maze and toward the Vulgar Unicom

where, improbably enough, privacy was sacred.

“I’d leave that picture wherever you’ve hidden it if I were you, priest,” Tempus

warned after he’d bellowed their orders toward the bar,

“Certainly it would be cleaner if the little ginger-man had painted a simpler

picture. I gather he’s had more problems with things coming to life. He claims

not to know at all what happens when his paintings cease to exist.”

Molin looked at a recently replastered section of the wall, still noticeably

less grimy than the rest and completely unmarked by grafitti or knife gouges.

Lalo had painted the soul of the tavern there once and a score of people had

died before it had been laid to rest again. Both men were thinking about the

painter’s unpredictable art when a warty, gray arm thrust between them.

“Good beer. Special beer for the gentlemen^” the wall-eyed bouncer with the

garish orange hair said with a smile that revealed corroded, and not quite

human, teeth.

Tempus froze and Molin, whose aplomb was sturdier, took the mugs.

“A fiend, I should think. Not quite what Brachis and his entourage will be

expecting when they order a drink. If we’re lucky they’ll blame it on the beer,”

Molin commented as the acid, lifeless brew crossed his lips.

“Hers,” Tempus said and hid his face behind his hands. After a moment he raised

his eyes. “And nobody notices. Roxane’s fiend is ladling the Unicorn’s swill and

no one bloody notices'”

“A living fiend, my friend. You’ve been away too long. In this part of town

being alive, in your own life, is all that really matters.”

Tempus sighed. He drained the crudely made mug and motioned for another round.

Now that he had adjusted to the smoky light, Molin could see that the Riddler’s

eyes were bloodshot and the skin around them was bruised from exhaustion.

“I should kill you for that, too,” Tempus said, rubbing his eyes, making them

redder. “A bad habit, you said. There’s a magician-The Dream Lord, Askelon; my

brother-in-law- he overstepped himself at the Festival of Man, as you may have

heard. Been exiled to Meridian by greater powers than his own. Usually I don’t

have to worry about him but now, thanks to you, he’s always right there at the

comer of my mind, waiting to get into my dreams.”

“He gets into everyone else’s dreams and they’re none the worse for it,

Riddler.”

“Not into my dreams, damn you!” He took the second mug from the fiend without a

flinch, downing it as he had the first.

“More beer? Good beer for the gentleman?” the fiend inquired. “Snapper Jo gets

good beer for the gentleman. Snapper Jo remembers this gentleman, this soldier.

Mistress made sure Snapper always remember… Tempus.”

Tempus’s hands were on Snapper Jo’s throat; Molin’s were on a long, wickedly

efficient knife but the fiend only smiled. He knotted the muscles in his warty

neck and belched his way to freedom.

“Just where is your Mistress?” Tempus demanded, rubbing his knuckles.

The creature shrugged and crossed its eyes. “Don’t know,” he admitted. “Snapper

went looking for her. Nice dark lady asked Snapper to look for the Mistress.”

“Did Snapper Jo find his Mistress?” Molin asked.

“No, not find. Look everywhere-look in hell itself. Not find. No Mistress!

Snapper Jo free!”

The notion overwhelmed Snapper Jo. He hugged himself, trembling with joy, and

went back to the bar without another thought for the two men watching him.

“If we believe him, then she’s not dead,” Tempus admitted. “If I’d believe a

fiend,” he corrected himself. “Torch, I talked to Niko about all of this. He

says he’s free of her-free like he hasn’t been in years. I believe Niko, Torch.

There’s nothing left of Roxane except memories-and bad habits.”

It was Molin’s turn to bury his head in his hands. “Niko and the fiend: both

free of Roxane. Thank you, Riddler-I’ll believe the fiend. He says he looked in

hell and didn’t find her; Ischade sent him to hell looking for Roxane and he

didn’t find her there. Now, Niko, I’ll wager he not only told you that he was

free of Roxane but that all our precautions were unnecessary. I’ll wager he told

you that he could take care of the Stormchildren all by himself.”

“All right. Torch. We’ll tell Niko we’re moving the globe and the kids-and then

we’ll watch him. We’ll even send a little procession out past the walls to one

of the estates. But by Enlil, Vashanka, Stormbringer, and every other soldier’s

god-you’re wrong. Torch. Niko’s free of her-she’s nothing but nightmares to him.

Maybe there’s something still after the Stormchildren-or the globe-but not

Roxane and not through Niko.”

Tempus set his ambush for the night of the next full moon. Walegrin muttered a

number of choice, unreproducible words when half of the garrison was pulled off

duty to shovel dirt, patch roofs, and in other ways make a tumble-down estate

north of the city walls look like the prospective home for what Tempus called

his “vulnerables.” His muted protests erupted into a full-scale tirade when, by

noon of the appointed day, it was clear that any advantage to having the charade

on the night of the full moon would be offset by one of Sanctuary’s three-day

torrents.

The palace parade ground was an oozing morass which had already foundered three

good horses-and it was clear sailing compared to any other street, road, or

courtyard. It would be well nigh impossible to get the carriage from the stables

to the gate much less up the slopes to the estate. Walegrin pointed this out to

Critias as they huddled down under oiled-leather cloaks and slogged across the

parade ground on foot.

“He says, use oxen,” Crit replied impassively.

“Where am I supposed to get a team of oxen before sundown?”

“They’re being provided.”

“And who’s going to drive them? Has he thought of that? Oxen aren’t horses, you

know.”

“You are.”

“The bloody hell I am, Critias.”

They had reached the comparative shelter of the stable doorway, where the water

gushed off the eaves in streams that could, with care, be avoided. Critias

removed his dripping rain helmet and wrung it out.

“Look, pud,” he said, tucking the hat into his belt, “I don’t make up the

orders. Orders come from the Riddler and your man, Torchholder. Now when those

oxen get here, you hitch them to the carriage and drive them out to the estate.

If they’re,” he pointed a thumb back toward the palace, “sitting tight with

their gods, everything will go according to plan-somehow. And if they’re not

then you could be the best bloody drover in the world and it wouldn’t make a

whore’s heart’s bit of difference.”

Thus, some hours after nightfall, Walegrin found himself still in his oiled

leathers standing beside the ungainly rumps of a pair of oxen. Randal was slowly

making his way down the rain-slicked stairs clutching the skull-sized package

containing his Nisibisi Globe of Power. The mage wore a ludicrously old

fashioned panoply which hindered his already over-cautious progress. Tempus

looked uncomfortable as he waited under the stone awning with a child tucked

under each arm.

“Almost there,” Randal assured them, glancing back toward the torchlight and, as

luck would have it, overbalancing himself just enough to slip down the last

three steps.

There wasn’t a person, living or dead, within Sanctuary who hadn’t heard a rumor

or two about the witch-globes. Walegrin dropped his torch and lunged for the

package. His efforts were, however, unnecessary as the package hung politely in

mid-air until Randal stumbled to his feet and reclaimed it. The effect was not

lost on Walegrin or any of the dozen or so others detailed to escort the oxen-or

on Tempus who came down the stairs behind Randal to deposit his silent, unmoving

bundles within the ox-cart.

The mage and the mercenary commander exchanged whispers which Walegrin couldn’t

hear above the sound of the rain. Then Tempus shut the door and came up beside

Walegrin.

“You know the route?” he inquired.

Walegrin nodded.

“Then don’t move off it. Randal can-take care of the magic regardless but if you

want protection from anything else you stay in sight of the spotters.”

With a noncommittal grunt Walegrin loosened the long whip from the bench beside

him and tickled the oxen’s noses. Tempus stepped quickly to one side as the cart

lurched into motion. The beasts had no halters or reins, responding only to the

whip and the voice of their drover. Walegrin figured he’d try to keep everything

moving from the driver’s bench but he imagined, accurately as it turned out,

that he’d be in the mud beside the oxen before they cleared the old Headman’s

Gate and lumbered onto the nearly deserted Street of Red Lanterns.

“It’ll be dawn before we get there,” Walegrin cursed when the rightside ox

paused to add its own wastes to the sludge in the street.

But the man-high solid wheels of the cart kept turning and the oxen were as

strong as they were slow and stupid. Straton and a pair of Stepsons joined the

procession where it cleared the last of the huge, stone-walled brothels. Strat,

a lantern dangling from the pike he carried in his right hand, brought his bay

horse alongside the ox-cart. Walegrin gripped at a dangling saddle-strap for

some security in the treacherous footing.

It was nearly impossible to keep the torches lit. The men on horseback were

having a harder time of it than Walegrin and his team. Walegrin watched the mud

directly in front of them and lost track of how many checkpoints or spotters

they had passed. They halted once, when the undergrowth cracked louder than the

rain, but it was only a family of half-wild pigs. Everyone laughed nervously and

Walegrin touched the oxen with his whip again. Another time Strat spotted

shadows moving above them on the ridge, but it was only their own men breaking

cover.

They had reached the stony trail leading to the estate when the oxen bellowed

once in unison, then sank to their knees. Walegrin dropped the saddle-strap and

went racing back to the cart where his sword was stashed. The horses panicked,

rearing up and collapsing as much from the bad footing as from the metallic

drone every man and beast was hearing, feeling, between his ears.

“Do something!” Walegrin yelled to his passenger as he tugged his sword free of

its scabbard. The first touch of En-librite steel against his skin made a shower

of green sparks, but it dulled the pain in his head as well. “Stop her, Randal!”

“There’s no one out there,” the mage replied, poking his head and shoulders

through the cart’s open window. His archaic armor, like Walegrin’s sword, had a

faintly green presence to it.

“There’s damn sure someone out here!”

Walegrin stood on the drover’s bench. Save for Strat all of the escort had been

thrown into the mud; save for Strat’s bay all the horses were either on their

sides screaming or plunging into the morass of the fallow fields surrounding the

estate. One horse, he couldn’t tell which, shrieked louder than the rest- a

broken leg most likely. Walegrin felt a rising tide of panic only marginally

related to the dull roar in his skull.

Strat heeled the bay horse around as if it were a sunny day on the parade

ground, then launched it at the only stand of trees in sight. Walegrin watched

the bobbing lantern for a few moments before it disappeared.

“Move in. We haven’t been hit yet,” he yelled to the garrison men who, like

himself, held the strange green-cast steel of Enlibar in their fists and were

somewhat insulated from whatever assaulted them. “Well, do something, Randal!”

he added for the benefit of the mage who had vanished back into the darkness.

“Use that bloody ball of yours!”

As abruptly as it had begun, the droning ceased. Except for the one in the

field, the horses quieted and got back to their feet. One of the men slogged

through the mud groping for a torch, but Walegrin called him back to the circle.

“It’s not over,” he warned in a soft voice. “Randal?”

He crouched down by the window, expecting to see the freckled mage bathed in the

glow of his magic. Instead he walloped his chin on Randal’s helmet.

“Shouldn’t you be doing something with that globe? Raising some sort of defense

for us?”

“I don’t have the globe,” the mage admitted slowly. “We never intended to move

it or the Stormchildren. Sorry. But there’s no one out there, no one watching us

in any way.”

Walegrin grabbed the mage by his helmet and twisted it around until Randal was

facing him. “There bloody well better be someone watching us-a whole damned

estate full of some-ones watching us.”

“Of course there is,” Randal sighed as he freed himself. “But no one, well,

magically inclined.”

“What happened, then? The horses just decided to panic? The oxen just felt like

sinking into the mud? I imagined there was a swarm of bees in my head?”

“No, no one’s saying that,” a familiar voice, Molin’s voice, called from the

nearby darkness. “We don’t know what happened any more than you do.” He swung

down from his horse, handing the reins to one of the five garrison men who’d

accompanied him down from the abandoned estate.

For once Walegrin was not about to be mollified by his patron’s soothing

phrases. His men had been endangered for nothing. A horse, no easy thing for the

garrison to replace, was this very moment being put out of its misery. His

complaints and opinions were still flowing freely when a lantern was seen to

emerge from the trees.

“Strat?” Walegrin yelled.

There was no reply heard above the sound of the pelting rain. Each man silently

put his hands back on his sword and waited until the bay was an arm’s length

from the ox-cart and Strat’s grim, torchlit face could be seen clearly.

“Haught.”

“What?”

“Haught,” Strat repeated, throwing a piece of dark cloth onto the drover’s

bench. “And someone else-maybe Moria, maybe dead.”

“Haught?” Randal poked his head out. “Not Haught. He’s got Ischade’s mark on

him. I’d have recognized-”

“I’d recognize him before you would,” Strat interrupted, and there was no one in

the group who could gainsay that claim.

“Does that mean Ischade?” Molin asked nervously. They accepted the necromant as

the lesser of the two witches, but even so neither was a force that any man.

except Straton, was comfortable with.

“It means Haught. It means he wants the globe. It means he wants to be Roxane,

Datan, or some other bloody magician. You can take the Nisi away from Wizardwall

but you can’t boil the treachery out of their blood.”

Molin stood silent for a moment after Strat had finished. “At least, then, it

wasn’t Roxane. Tempus will be glad to hear that.”

The other groups Tempus had assigned to guard the oxcart’s progress were

beginning to appear. Crit came up with a half-dozen Stepsons, most of whom

appeared to have heard Strat’s accusations or at least had no desire to look

their erstwhile field commander full in the face. The 3rd Commando, or a good

sized part of it, rode up from behind. Whatever Tempus’s opinion of the

operation, he’d made certain it didn’t lack for manpower.

“I think we’ve found out what we wanted to know,” Molin said, not quite

takingcommand away from Strat, Crit, and Walegrin, but eliminating the need for

them to decide who was in command. “Randal, borrow a horse. We’ll head back for

the palace. They’ll want to know what’s happened. Straton- you should probably

come along. The rest of the Stepsons can lend a shoulder to the garrison men in

getting this cart turned around and back to the palace. I’ll leave it to you

two,” he nodded toward Critias and Walegrin, “to decide if you need the Third’s

help. I’ve arranged for brandy and roast meat to be waiting at the palace

barracks: Be sure that everyone- regulars. Stepsons, and the Third if they want

it-gets a share.”

Molin waited until Randal had directed a docile-looking horse toward Straton

before turning his own gelding away from the men gathered around the ox-cart.

Critias had ridden down to talk to the 3rd and Walegrin was proving himself

quite capable of getting the oxen to turn the cart around. A few riders from the

3rd split off toward Strat and Randal but most of them headed back toward the

General’s Road and whatever billets they had Downwind or near the Bazaar.

He held the gelding to a slow walk a good number of paces behind them. They were

all Rankan people, allied in one way or another to the Emperor or the remnants

of the Vashankan priesthood he was no longer on good terms with. They were

probably as uncomfortable around him as he was around them but here they had him

outnumbered.

The riders were well beyond the ox-cart and still a good distance from the walls

when Molin felt the first twinges of divine curiosity. Blood-red auroras rose

from the horizon; the ground heaved and stretched, moving him further apart from

the others. Despite the rain soaking through every garment he wore, the priest

felt a cold, nauseous sweat break out on his forehead and spread, quickly, until

it reached his weak, suddenly numb knees.

Stormbringer.

Gathering every mote and shred of determination, Molin concentrated on weaving

his fingers around the saddle hom. Not there. Not on a rain-swept field with

Tempus’s men all around him. His heart pounded wildly. He heard, but could not

feel, the loose stirrups clanking against the lace-studs of his boot.

One step. One more step. The longest journey is made of single-

The red auroras rose until they touched the zenith. Molin felt the scream

trapped in his throat as the god reached out and pulled him from his body, mind

and soul.

“Lord Stormbringer,” he said, though he had no proper voice in the featureless,

ruddy universe where he met with the primal storm god.

You tremble before me, little mortal.

The roaring came from everywhere and nowhere. Molin knew it well enough to know

it could be louder, more painful, and that the present modulation revealed a

certain, dangerous, humor.

“Only a foolish mortal would fail to tremble before you, Lord Stormbringer.”

A foolish mortal who seeks to elude me? I do not have time to waste searching

for foolish mortals.

Here, in the god’s universe or perhaps within the god, there was no place for

hidden thoughts or verbal gymnastics. There was only nothingness and the raw,

awesome power of Stormbringer himself.

“I have been such a foolish mortal,” Torchholder acknowledged.

You trouble yourself with the opinions of those not sworn to me or the children.

You know that all Stormgods are but shadows of me-as Vashanka is a shadow I have

abandoned, the llsig god a shadow I have forgotten, and the one they call

“Father Enlil” a shadow which shall not fall across Sanctuary.

“I did not know. Lord Stormbringer.”

Then know now! The universe throbbed with Stormbringer’s pique. I am Sanctuary’s

god. Until the children claim their birthright I am their, and Sanctuary’s,

guardian. Fear only me!

Of course they fear you. A second presence, feminine but no less awesome,

wove its way through and around the presence that was Stormbringer.

Mortals fear everything. They fear the woman’s god more than they fear the

man’s god, and they fear a woman without a god most of all. You must tell

them where to find the witch-woman who killed my snakes.

The deities twisted around each other but did not mix or merge. Molin knew he

was in the presence of what was already being called the Barren Marriage. Yet

there was something like mortal affection, as well as immortal lust, between

these two. He felt the part that was Stormbringer contract, and an upright

figure with the head of a lion, the wings of an eagle, and the lower parts of a

bull manifested itself out of the red mist.

“I cannot tell you where she is,” the apparition said in a voice that was both

male and female. “There are things forbidden even to me. Demonkind is brother

and sister to you mortals, but no kin to gods. The S’danzo have the greater part

of the truth; the Nisi witches have the rest.

“Roxane promised the souls of the children-or her own if she failed. She is not

where you or I can find her-and she is not fallen among the demons. What I

cannot find, what the Archdemon cannot find, must lie in Meridian or beyond.”

Molin discovered that he, like Stormbringer, had become corporeal and, so far as

he could tell, very much the man he had always been. Tracing his fingers along

the familiar, imperfect embroidery of his sleeves, he considered what he knew of

the topology of nonmortal spheres and Meridian, the realm of dreams where

ASkelon held sway. He thought about ASkelon as well and reflected that if there

were one entity-ASkelon hardly qualified as a man-who could both complicate and

resolve their problems, the Dream Lord was that entity.

He made the mistake, however, of thinking that because he felt like himself, he

was himself and slipped into rapid considerations as to which of the players

would be best for the part.

“That is not for you to decide,” the lion reminded Molin, baring its glistening

teeth. “ASkelon has already made his choice.”

“Tempus will not go.”

“Give him this, then.” Stormbringer laid a linen scarf across Molin’s

unwillingly outstretched hands.

The netherworld that was the gods’ universe fractured. Molin held the scarf to

his face for protection as the lion-head apparition became hard, dark pellets

that beat him into a dizzying backward spiral. The scream he had left frozen in

his throat tore loose and engulfed him.

“It’s over now; relax.”

A strong, long-fingered hand was wrapped around his wrist, pulling his hands

away from his face. The hard pellets were wind-driven raindrops. His hands,

Molin realized as he unclenched them, were empty. He was on his back-had fallen

from his horse.

“You’re back with us ordinary folk,” the woman told him as she yanked on his

cloak and twisted his torso until his shoulders were propped on a relatively dry

pile of straw. “Are you all right? Your tongue? Your lips?”

He pushed himself up on his elbows. There wasn’t a muscle, bone, or nerve that

didn’t ache-as it always did after Stormbringer. But it was, he told her while

still trying to understand where he was and what had happened, nothing worse

than that.

“They say that my… Tempus would bite through his lip, or break a bone. I never

saw it. He wouldn’t notice it, really. You’re not him, though.”

“Kama?” Molin guessed.

He was in some crude shelter-a lean-to the shepherds used, by the smell of it.

The worst of the weather was deflected, anyway. She’d hung a lantern from the

center-pole but it didn’t provide much light and the priest had only seen

Tempus’s daughter a few times, mostly when she was considerably younger.

“I saw you stiffen up like that. I guessed what would happen. It wasn’t

Vashanka, was it?”

“No.”

She squatted down beside him; the lantern lifted her profile from the

surrounding darkness. She wore a youth’s leather tunic, laced tight and

revealing nothing. Her hair was twisted into a knot at the crown of her head and

was clinging to her face in damp tendrils where it had come loose. She shuddered

and went looking for her own cloak which, when she found it, was covered with

mud and useless from the rain.

“Did the others go on?” Molin asked.

Kama nodded. “They’ll have reached the palace by now. Strat knows I’m with you.

He won’t say anything.”

Molin looked into the lantern. He should, by right, stagger to his feet and hie

himself back to the palace. His life was full of gods, magic, and the intrigue

that went with them. There was no room for love, or lust-especially not with

Kama.

“You needn’t have stayed with me,” he said softly, shifting the focus of his

analysis and persuasion away from politics.

“I was curious. All winter I’ve been hearing about the Torch. Almost everything

that worked had your fingerprints on it. Nobody seems to like you very much,

Molin Torchholder, but they all seem to respect you. I wanted to see for

myself.”

“So you saw me falling off my horse and foaming at the mouth?”

.She gave him a quick half-smile. “Will the Third actually share that brandy and

meat?”

“I don’t have the Empire or the priesthood behind me anymore,” Molin admitted.

“I can’t coerce a man’s loyalty and I can’t inspire it either-I know my limits.

I bribed the cooks myself long before I left the palace.” A stream of water

broke through the branch-and-straw roof, hitting him full in the face. “No one,

if he’s done work for Sanctuary, should be out on a night like this without some

reward. If the Third went to the barracks, they got their share.”

“What about you?”

“Or you?”

Kama shrugged and picked at the loose threads of a bandage tied around her right

palm. “I won’t find what I want at the barracks.”

“You won’t find it with the Third-”

Kama turned to stare darkly at him.

Stormbringer, the witches, the children: everything that was important in the

larger scheme of things fell from Molin’s thoughts as he sat up, closing his

hands over hers. “-You won’t find it with any of his people.”

It was a thought that had, apparently, already occurred to her, for she unwound

into the straw beside him without a heartbeat’s hesitation.

They returned to the palace after the sky had turned a soft, moist gray but

before, they hoped, any of those whom Molin had to see were awake. There was

nothing to set them apart from any other weary, soaked travelers coming to

shelter within the palace walls. Molin did not help her from the saddle or see

to the stabling of her horse. True, he found himself gripped by an emotion

uncomfortably close to sudden love, but not even that was enough to make him a

fool. He would have said nothing if she had wheeled her horse around and headed

back toward the Maze; he said the same when she followed him up the gatehouse

stairs.

He led the way to the Ilsig Bedchamber where, in consideration of all that

hadn’t happened during the night, he expected to find Jihan, the Stormchildren,

Niko, and the bedlam residents. He found, instead, a funereally quiet chamber

with only Seylalha hovering between the cradles.

“The mere’s guild?” Kama inquired, reading the same omens the priest did. “The

mage’s?”

Molin shook his head. His mind reached out to that distant comer where his Nisi

magic heritage, the gods, or his own luck sometimes placed reliable

inspirations. “With the Beysa,” he said slowly, then corrected himself: “Near

the snakes.”

When the Beysib arrived in Sanctuary they had brought with them seventy of the

mottled brown eggs of their precious beynit serpents. These eggs, packed in

unspun silk, had been installed in a specially reconstructed room where a

hypocaust kept the stones comfortably warm. The eggs had hatched before the

start of winter and the room itself, filled with the fingerling snakes, had

become the favorite haunt of the Beysa and her immediate entourage.

It had also become, because of the skill of the Beysib snake-handlers in

preparing decoctions of any venom or herbal, the meeting place of all the palace

healers. Jihan brewed Niko’s vile unguents there and occasionally, when the

other residents of the Ilsig Bedchamber objected loudly enough, administered

them there as well. Molin knew he had guessed correctly when he saw Beysib

snake-handlers milling forlornly in the hypocaust antechamber.

“You took your own time getting down here,” Tempus grumbled as the priest

entered the room. He might have added more, but he fell silent when Kama eased

through the doorway as well.

Molin took advantage of the lull to look around. Crit caught his eye first

because he, like Tempus, was staring at Kama as if she’d grown a second head.

Jihan was here as well, though her smile was warmer than Torchholder had seen

before. She set down a mortar brimming with dark, spiky leaves and embraced Kama

as a long-lost friend. Her movement allowed him to see the real reason they were

all in the uncomfortably warm room: Nikodemos.

The Stepson lay on his back, trussed like a roasting chicken and, though he

seemed to be sleeping quietly enough now, his face was bruised and his hands

covered with blood. Molin took a step closer and felt Tempus’s hand close around

his arm.

“Leave him be,” he warned.

“What happened?” Torchholder asked, retreating until Tempus relaxed. “Randal

said-”

“You guessed right,” Crit interrupted with a bitterness that made the priest’s

blood run cold. “She made her move through Niko at about the right time.”

“It was Haught,” Tempus spat out the name. “Niko bolted for the window saying

‘Haught’. It was a warning.”

Critias ran his hand through dark, thinning hair. “But not for us. Haught was

making his own moves and Roxane had to stop him.”

“That’s what Strat says,” Jihan added.

“It doesn’t matter whether Strat’s right or not.” Crit had begun pacing like a

caged tiger. “It doesn’t matter whether Haught’s Ischade’s catspaw or Roxane’s.

It doesn’t matter if Jihan-”

“I didn’t.”

“-Told Niko about the double-shuffle with the globes. All that matters is that

the witch-bitch had Niko. Again.”

“What happened?” Molin repeated, though by this point he was getting a pretty

good idea and was more interested in the shifting alliances of the threesome.

“When Jihan tried to keep him from jumping out the window he went berserk. It

took four guards to hold him until she could get something down his gullet to

keep him quiet,” Critias explained calmly.

Molin moved closer to Niko, this time without Tempus’s interference. The young

man had taken a beating, but the priest wasn’t looking for bruises.

“What about the mongoose, Chiringee?” he asked, examining the bloody tears on

Niko’s hands and wrists. “Randal said it was attuned to Roxane.”

Jinan looked at Tempus, Tempus looked at the wall, and Crit’s voice was a

monotone: “It attacked him-and he killed it. Ripped it apart and started to eat

it-didn’t he?”

The Froth Daughter reached back to grasp Tempus by the wrist. “He was berserk,”

she said softly. “He didn’t know what he was doing. It doesn’t mean anything.”

Glittering crystals of ice and water formed in her eyes.

Critias gave them a malignant stare. When he reached the door he gave Kama the

same stare, for reasons Molin could not begin to understand, then he shoved her

aside. Molin felt the muscles tighten along his sword arm. It would be the

height of folly-Kama fought her own battles and Critias was as cold a killer as

moved through the shadows-but the Stepson would answer for that gesture.

“Roxane has taken Stealth?” Kama asked the frozen room. None of the rumors

circulating in the Maze had presumed so much.

Tempus pulled his arm away from Jihan. “Not yet,” he muttered as he followed

Crit from the room.

Molin and Kama turned to Jihan who, with a slight nod of her head, confirmed

their worst suspicion. Kama sank back against the wall, shaking her head from

side to side. The Froth Daughter, for her part, reclaimed her mortar and went to

kneel beside the slate-haired Stepson.

“He was drunk,” the dark-haired mercenary said to herself. “Too much wine. Too

much krrf. Too much everything.” She closed her eyes, purging herself of grief

and Niko with long, ragged breaths.

“It’s not over yet,” Molin told her, daring to take her arm and realizing, with

some surprise, that he looked straight ahead, not down, into her eyes. “Last

night I was with Stormbringer.”

Her eyes widened but she didn’t resist as he guided her from the hypocaust and

past anxious snake-handlers.

“I have to talk to Tempus-convince him to do something he doesn’t want to do.

But it’s far from over, Kama.”

She nodded and slipped from his grasp. “I’ll want to see you again,” she said,

holding his hand lightly as she stepped away.

“I have a wife. Sabellia’s priestess and a noblewoman in her own right. She’s

staying out at Land’s End with my brother, Lowan Vigeles, and she’ll make

whatever trouble she can.” Molin swallowed hard, knowing that Rosanda had her

good qualities as well but that they no longer meant anything to him. “I am the

priest of a dead god and the nephew of a dead emperor. I walk a dangerous path

in full view of my enemies-and I would not walk any other.”

Kama laughed, a sensuous laugh that could get a man in trouble. “If I cannot

walk through your doorway wearing gowns and jewels then you’ll find me as I am

outside your windows or already in your bedchamber.” Then, with another laugh,

she was gone-heading back to Jihan and Niko.

Molin returned to his quarters, ordering Hoxa to prepare a cauldron of hot water

and to find, somewhere, dry robes and boots. The young man procured the

bathwater and the boots, but when he came from the wardrobe with a fresh robe he

brought an unwelcome surprise as well: a scarf of linen the length of a man’s

outstretched arms and the color of Storm-bringer’s horizons.

“Have the day for yourself, Hoxa,” Molin had mumbled as he drew the cloth

through his fingers. “I need time alone.”

He’d taken that time, sitting in a room that had been an arcane attic. Randal’s

Nisi globe remained not on his worktable; Lalo’s triple portrait was not nailed

to the wall behind him; Ischade’s abandoned raven, in all its ill-tempered

glory, was truly flapping from one perch to another, and now Stormbrin-ger’s

gift for Tempus had made its appearance as well. Unlike the other artifacts,

the strip of cloth with its ordinary, girlish embroidery seemed innocent

enough-until he considered that the sight of it was supposed to convince

Tempus to risk sleep and a visit to the realm of Askelon.

The rain finally stopped. It would be days before the streets dried-if they

dried at all before the next storm swept through. Molin tucked the scarf in a

pouch and threw a cloak over his shoulder. There wouldn’t be a better time to

find Tempus. He didn’t have to go far, just a sidelong glance out the window.

The Riddler, followed closely by an exceptionally grim looking Critias, was

coming to pay him a visit.

“That picture,” the nearly immortal mercenary snarled, pointing above Molin’s

head as the heavy wood door slammed against the wall.

Pointedly ignoring the priest, Crit walked around to examine the picture

closely. After touching it with his fingers he used his knife to scrape off a

bit of the background-and got plaster-shavings for his efforts.

“It’s not there, Critias,” Molin warned.

“Get it,” Crit ordered.

“You don’t come in here giving me orders.”

“Let him see it,” Tempus asked wearily. “/’// make sure no harm comes to it.”

Molin tried to concentrate. He’d been childishly pleased with himself when he’d

hidden the actuality of the canvas while leaving its semblance plainly visible

on the wall. It was hard enough for an apprentice of his experience to tuck

something away in magic’s shadows but now, with Tempus and Crit watching him

impatiently, it was proving impossible to find it again. He had almost located

the frayed edges when the door slammed open again and he lost them.

“You can’t bum it,” Randal said, the words coming between gasps for air. “No one

knows what will happen when you do.”

“We bum the witch-bitch when we bum it-that’s what happens.” Critias touched his

knife to the facsimile ofRoxane’s face as he spoke. “Find it,” he added for

Molin’s benefit.

“We don’t know what happens to Niko… or Tempus,” Randal continued.

Critias fell silent and Molin, getting desperate, lucky, or both, closed his

mind around the canvas and gave it a little tug. The image on the wall shimmered

before vanishing and, with an unpleasant sulphurous discharge, the rolled canvas

dropped to the floor at Tempus’s feet. He reached down and held it in his fist.

“No,” the big man said simply.

“We can’t destroy the globe,” Critias said as Randal shuddered in agreement. “We

can’t kill the Stormchildren.” Molin’s knuckles went white. “And now you’re

telling me we can’t bum the picture. Commander, what can we do?”

Molin saw his opportunity open before him. Opening the pouch, he laid the scarf

across the worktable and waited for reaction. Randal stared, Crit looked

nervous, and Tempus jerked upright.

“Mother of us all,” he sighed, laying the canvas on the table, taking the scarf

in its place. “Where did you get this?” His fingers read the uneven stitches as

he spoke.

“Stormbringer,” Molin answered softly enough that only Tempus could see or hear.

“Why?”

“To convince you that you have to sleep; that you have to talk to ASkelon

because Askelon’s decided he’ll only talk to you. And, more important, because

Stormbringer thinks Askelon’s got a way to reach Roxane.”

“Thinks? The god thinks? He doesn’t know?” He closed his eyes a moment. “Do you

know what this is? Did he tell you?”

Molin shrugged. “He thought it would be sufficient to convince you to go where

I’d already told him you had no intention of going.”

“Damn her,” Tempus said, throwing the scarf on the table and taking the picture

again. “Here,” he threw it at Critias, who let it drop to the floor, “do what

you damned well want with it.”

DEATH IN THE MEADOW

C. J. Cherryh

I

The floor creaked to the slightest step, and Stilcho moved quietly as he could

across to the old warehouse door, not trying escape, no, only that it was so

everlasting cold and he wanted the sun to warm his flesh, the sun that shone

bright through a crack in the shutters. He wanted it, and he had thought a long

time about getting up from that board floor and venturing outside-

-he had thought about going further too, but the front step would be enough, the

front step was all he dared think of, because Haught sleeping back there had

ways to know what he planned-

-so he thought, o gods large and small, gods of hell and gods of earth, only of

getting out into that light where the sun would warm the stone step and the

bricks and warm his dead flesh which right now had that lasting chill of rain

and mud and misery. He could not abide the stink and the cold of mud, that made

him think all too much of being dead, in the ground, in the river cold-

I’m not running, I’m not going anywhere, just the sun…. That, for Haught’s

benefit, should he wake-with his hand on the door.

The hair stirred at Stilcho’s nape. His flesh crawled. He stopped still and

turned and looked, and saw Haught sitting up in the shadows, a bedraggled Haught

with a bloody scrape on his face and the whites showing dangerously round his

eyes. Stilcho set his back against the door and gestured toward it with a shrug.

“Just going out to get the-”

Do you play games with me? With me, dead man?

No, he thought quickly, made that a torrent of no, letting nothing else through,

and felt every hair on his body rise and his heart slow, time slow, the world

grow fragile so that for a moment he knew the progress of Haught’s mind, the

suspicion that his one failure had diminished the fear of him, that a certain

piece of walking meat needed a lesson, that this thing Ischade slept with (but

not with him) could be dealt with, shredded and sent to the deepest hell if it

needed to learn respect-

-Stilcho knew all that the way he suddenly knew Haught was running through his

thoughts, knowing his doubt, his dread, his hate, everything that made him

vulnerable.

“On your knees,” Haught said, and Stilcho found himself going there, helplessly,

the way every bone and sinew in him resonated to that voice. He stared at Haught

with his living eye while the dead one held vision too, a vision of hell, of a

gateway a thing wanted to pass and could not. But if he was sent there now, to

that gate, to meet that thing-

“Say you beg my pardon,” Haught said.

“I b-beg your pardon.” Stilcho did not even hesitate. A fool would hesitate.

There was no hope for a fool. Ischade would banish him down to hell to confront

that thing if he went back to her now after what Haught had done, and Haught

would tear his soul to slow shreds before he let it go to the same fate. Stilcho

knelt on the bare boards and mouthed whatever words Haught wanted.

For now. (No, no, Haught, for always.)

Haught gathered himself to his feet and ran a hand through his disordered hair.

His pale, elegant face had a gaunt look. The hair fell again to stream about it.

The smile on his face was fevered.

He’s crazy, Stilcho thought, having seen that look in hospital and in

Sanctuary’s own street lunatics. And then: 0, no, no, no, not Haught! No!

The prickling of his skin grew painful and ceased. Haught came closer to him,

came up to him and squatted down and put his hand on Stilcho’s cheek, on the

blind side. Chill followed that touch, and a deep pain in his missing eye, but

Stilcho dared not move, dared not look anywhere but into Haught’s face.

“You’re still useful,” Haught said. “You mustn’t think of leaving.”

“I don’t.”

“Don’t lie to me.” Silken-soft. And the pain stabbed deep. “What can I give you

to make you stay?”

“L-life. F-for that.”

“No gold. No money. No woman. None of that.”

“To b-be alive-”

“That’s still our bargain. Isn’t it? They know about us. They took care enough

to set a trap for us. You think then that She doesn’t know? You think then that

we have infinite time? I’ve covered us thus far. They might not know who we are.

But careful as 1 am, dead man, Stralon came close to us. He probably knew us. He

probably passed that on. And that damnable priest and that damnable mage may

know who they’re looking for now. They might have thought it was Her. Now they

may go to Her and tell Her our business. And that won’t be good for us at all,

will it, dead man?”

“No.” It came out hoarse and strangled. “It won’t.”

“So let’s don’t take chances in the daylight, you and I. I have my means. Let’s

just be patient, shall we? I’ll take the Mistress. I’ll deal with Her. You wait

and see.” Gently Haught patted him on the cheek and smiled again, not

pleasantly. “The thing we need went back to the priest. It’s not there and it

is. I know how it works now. And I know where it went. Right now we need to move

a little closer uptown-when it’s dark, do you see?”

“Yes,” Stilcho said. If Haught asked him if pigs flew he would have said yes.

Anything, to make Haught go away satisfied short of what he could do, and what

he could ask.

“But in the meanwhile there’s a trip for you to take.”

“Oh gods, no, no, Haught-there’s this thing, I see it, gods, I see it-”

Haught slapped him. The blow was faint against his cheek. The dark gateway was

more real, the thing ripping at it was clearer, and if it looked his way-

“When it’s dark. To Moria’s house.”

Stilcho slumped aside on his knees, rested his back against the door, his heart

hammering away in his chest. And Haught grinned with white teeth.

The old stairs creaked under any step (they were set that way deliberately, for

more than one Stepson used the mage-quarter stables and the room above)-and

Straton trod them carelessly, which was the best way to come at the man whose

sorrel horse was stabled below.

He had left the bay standing in the courtyard. It would stand. He left it just

under the stairs, out of line of the dirty window above, if Crit had come to

look, if he were wary. But perhaps he would be careless. Once.

Or perhaps Crit was waiting behind the door.

Strat reached the top landing and tried the latch. It gave. That should tell him

enough. He flung the door inward, hard; it banged against the wall and rebounded

halfway.

And Crit was standing there in the center of the room with the crossbow aimed at

the middle of his chest.

The stream Janni followed ran bubbling over the rocks, among the trees, cold and

clear; and a wind sighed in the leaves with a plaintive sound, like old ghosts,

lost friends. The trees stood, some unnaturally straight, some twisted, like old

monuments. Or memories. They afforded cover, and the place had a good feel to

it, this shade, this shadow of green leaves.

The brook left that place and flowed into sunlit grass. The meadow beyond hummed

with the sound of bees, was dotted with wildflowers, was eerily still, no wind

at all moving the grass, and Janni looked out into that place with a profound

sense of terror. That meadow stretched on and on, lit in uncompromising day, and

the grass that showed so trackless now would betray every step. There was no

cover out there.

If he were so foolish she could find him, Roxane could track him down in

whatever shape she chose, and he could not stand against her. He knew that he

could not. He had failed once before, and that failure gnawed at his pride, but

he was not fool enough to try it twice. Not fool enough to go out where Roxane

waited in the bright sunlight, in a center defended by such emptiness and calm

that there was no surprise possible; but he had the most terrible feeling that

the sun which had stood overhead had at last begun to move toward its setting,

and that that sunset would signal a change and a fading of life in this place.

The moment he conceptualized it, that movement seemed true, though he could not

see it clearly through the trees-he saw shadows at this margin of the woods,

cast out on the yellow grass, and they inclined by some degree.

“Roxane!” he called out, and Roxane-ane-ane the forest gave back behind him; or

the sky echoed it, or the silence in his heart. He felt small of a sudden and

more vulnerable than before. He had to keep moving in the woods, constantly

seeking some place of vantage, some place where the trees ran nearer to the

heart of that meadow where the trouble lurked.

But wherever he went, however far he circled this place, the brook reappeared in

its meanderings. He knew what it was, and that if there was a place where it did

not exist, then it would be very bad news indeed.

It ran slower than it had, and more shallow. Now and again some dead branch

floated down it, which presaged something. He was afraid to guess.

“Come in,” Crit said. “Keep your hands in sight.”

Strat held his hands in view and walked into the doorway of the mage-quarter

office. He kept the door open at his back. That much chance he gave himself,

which was precious little. In fact there was such an ache in him it was unlikely

that he could run. It had been anger on the way here. It had been resolution

going up the stairs. Right now it was outright pain, as if that bolt had already

sped. But he cherished a little hope.

“You want to put that damn thing down, Crit? You want to talk?”

“We’ll talk.” But the crossbow never wavered. “Where’d she go, Strat?”

“I don’t know. To hell, how should I know?”

Crit drew a deep breath and let it go. If the crossbow moved it was no more than

a finger’s width. “So. And what are you here for?”

“To talk.”

“That’s real nice.”

“Dammit, Crit, put that thing down. I came here. I’m here, dammit! You want a

better target?”

“Stay where you are!” The bow centered hard and tendons stood out on Crit’s

hands. “Don’t move. Don’t.”

It was as close as he had ever come to death. He knew Crit and what he knew sent

sweat running on him. “Why?” he asked. “Your idea, or the Riddler’s?” If it was

the one, reason was possible; if it was the other. … “Dammit, Crit, I’ve kept

this town-”

“You’ve tried. That much is true.”

“So you try to kill me off a friggin’ roof?”

The bow did move. It lifted a little. About as much as centered it on his face.

“What rooP”

“Over there by the warehouse. And come bloody fnggin’ along with me last night,

that’s why I came here, dammit, this morning, to see whether you’d gone crazy or

whether you think I didn’t bloody see you up there yesterday. I figured I’d give

you a good chance. And ask you why. His orders?”

Crit shook his head slowly. “Damn, Ace, I saved your life.”

“When?”

“On that roof. It was Kama, you understand me? It was Kama that was at your

back.”

A little chill went through him. And a minuscule touch of relief. “I hoped. Why,

Crit? Is she under his orders?”

“You think the Riddler’d do it like that?”

“You might. If he was going to. I don’t know about her. You tell me.”

Crit swung the bow off a little to the side, turned it back again, then aimed it

away and let it angle to the floor. He looked tired. Lines furrowed his brow as

he stared back. “She’s into something of her own. Into-gods, something. That’s

all. The Third’s got interests here and she has, and gods know- What the bloody

hell is it about this town? Damn woman goes crazy, up on the roofs with a bow-.

It’s Walegrin she’s after, I’m thinking; and then I’m not so sure-”

“You were following me.”

“Damn right I was following you. So was she. She bends that bow,. I put a shot

right across to discourage her and put the wind up you, what the hell d’you

think I’m doing? IfI’d’ve meant to shoot you I’d have hit you, dammit!”

Strat wanted to think that. He wanted to believe every word of it. It was all

tangled, Kama with Crit-that was old business; but maybe not so old to either of

them. And Kama the Riddler’s daughter. He saw the trouble in Crit’s eyes, saw

the pain which was the real Crit, behind the nothing-mask. “I guess you

would,” he said hoarsely. It was not so easily patched up. There was

nothing mended but maybe the roughest of the edges. “I guess that was what

set me to thinking. It didn’t feel right.”

“Dammit, wake up! What does it take? Tempus is going to have your guts for

string if you don’t solve it, hear me? He’s given you more room than you’ve got

a right to, he’s left you your rank, he’s left you in titular command, for

godssake, how long is he going to be patient, waiting for you? You know how

patient he’s being? You know what he’d have done with another man?”

“He left me in command. I still am. Till he takes it.” The last came out hard,

and left a dull shock behind. Tempus could ask. And get nothing from him. He

knew that, the way he knew rain fell down and sun came up. He was hollow inside.

Crit could have shot him. That would have been all right. That would have solved

things. As it was, he failed to care. He walked over to the table and the cheap

bottles of wine they had here because it kept and the water here tasted like lye

and copper. He pulled a loose cork and poured a little glass, knowing it was a

deadly man at his back and matters were no more resolved now than they had been.

He turned and held it out to Crit. “Want one?”

“No.” Crit still stood there with the bow aimed at the floor. “Where’s the

horse? You leave that damned horse down there in the yard in full view?” .

“I don’t plan to stay.” Strat drank a mouthful of the sour wine and made a face.

His gut was empty. Even a little wine hit it hard. “I’ve patched up a peace in

this town. I figured it could make me some enemies. And Kama has contacts in the

Front, doesn’t she? I figure-I figure maybe she’s got her answers, and they’re

not mine.”

“She tried to shoot you in the back. I stopped it. You come in here madder than

hell at me; and her, you just-No. You’re not bloody mad, are you? You came in

here-what for? Why did you walk in here, if that was what you expected?”

“I told you. I thought if you’d meant to hit me you would have. Didn’t get a

chance to talk to you last night. That’s all.” He downed the rest of the wine in

the cup and set it down before he looked around again at Crit, at the bow and

the open door. “I’d better go. My horse is in the yard.”

“That damn horse-that damn spook. Ace, the damn thing doesn’t sweat, it doesn’t

half work, like the zombies, f’godssake, Ace, stay here.”

“Are you going to stop me?”

“Where are you going?”

He had not truly considered that. He had not known whether there was truly any

time beyond this room. Nothing he did presently made sense: there was no need to

have come, no need to have patched things up with Crit, only it was something he

had not been able to avoid thinking on since yesterday and last night, and now

there was no more need to think about that. His partner was not trying to kill

him. Tempus was not. Unless Tempus had sent Kama, but somehow other things rang

more true. Like the PFLS. The Front. Like the agencies that wanted chaos in

Sanctuary. He felt himself carrying the whole town on his back, felt his life as

charmed as if the gods that watched over this town watched over him, who was

trying to save it. And they both were corrupt, and they both were wreckage, he

and the town. He perceived compromises that he had made, by degrees. He knew

where he was now, and it was on the other side of a wall from Crit and all his

old ties.

He had not seen Ischade since that day outside Moria’s. Since he had blinked and

lost her round a comer. Or somewhere. Somewhere. The wards drove him from the

river house. He hunted Haught and failed to find him. He was altogether alone,

and altogether losing everything he had thought he had his hands on.

“I don’t know,” he said to Crit. “I don’t know where I’m going. To find a few

contacts. See what I can turn up. If you haven’t figured it out, it’s my peace

that’s holding so far. The bodies that’ve turned up-aren’t significant. Or they

are. It means that certain people are keeping their word. Keeping the peace in

their districts. You could walk the Maze blind drunk right now and come out

unrobbed. That’s progress. Isn’t it?”

“That’s something,” Crit admitted. And stopped him with a hand on his arm when

he tried to walk past him. Not a hard hand. Just a pressure. “Ace. I’m listening

to you. You want my help, I’ll give it to you.”

“What kind of trap is it?” It was an ingenuous question. He meant it to be. The

whole affair, Kama, the shot from the roof, had ceased to trouble him acutely,

had become part of the ennui that surrounded him, everywhere, in every

inconsequential move he made, every damned, foredoomed, futile move he made

since She had turned her back on him and decided to play bitter games with him.

Haught had given him the ring; Haught had made a move which might be Her move,

gods knew, gods knew what she was up to. The whole world seemed dark and

confused. And this man, this distant, small voice, wanted to hold onto his arm

and argue with him, which was all right as far as it went: he had a little

patience left, while it asked nothing more complicated than it did. “Whose

orders, Crit?”

“I’m on my own. I’ll go with you. Easier than following you. I’ll do that, you

know. I’ve been doing it.”

“You’ve been pretty good.”

“You want the company?”

“No,” he said, and shrugged the hand off. “I’ve got places to go, rounds to

make. Stay off my track. I’d hate for somebody to put a knife into you. And it

could happen.”

“But not to you.”

“Not so likely.”

“You hunting that Nisi bastard?”

It was more complicated than that. Ischade was involved. It was all too

complicated to answer. “Among others,” he said. “Just stay off my track. Hear?”

He walked on out the door.

The bow thunked at his back, the air whispered by him and the quarrel stood

buried in a single crash in the stout railing just ahead of him. He stopped dead

still, then turned around to Crit and the empty bow. His knees had gone weak for

a moment. Now the anger came.

“I just wondered if you’d wake up,” Crit said.

“I am awake. I assure you.” He turned on his heel and headed down the stairs

with his knees gone undependable again, so that he used the lefthand rail,

shaking and shaken, and hoping with the only acute feeling he had left, that

between the wine and the shock he would not stumble on the way. That it was Crit

up there watching him, Crit who knew how to read that white-knuckled grip on the

rail, made his shame complete.

Damn Crit to hell.

Damn Tempus and all such righteous godsridden prigs. Tern-pus had dealt with

Ischade. Tempus had said something to her at that table, in that room, and she

had said something to him at great length, concluded her business like some

visiting queen, before she went running off, leaving him for a fool in front of

the whole damned company. He had not gone back after his cloak. Had not been

able to face that room.

But suddenly it occurred to him that Crit might know what Tempus and Ischade had

said together. He stopped at the bottom, by the bay horse, his hand on its neck,

and looked up the stairs where Crit stood with the unarmed bow dangling by his

side.

“What’s the Riddler’s dealing with her?” Strat asked.

“Who? Kama?”

Strat frowned, wondering whether it was deliberate obtuse-ness. “Her, dammit, at

the Peres. What was she after?”

“Maybe you ought to ask him. You want to shout his business up and down the

stairs? Where’s your sense, for gods-sake?”

“That’s all right.” He turned and gathered up the bay’s dangling reins. “I’ll

manage. Maybe I will ask him.” He flung himself up to the bay’s back, felt the

life in it like a waking out of sleep, a huge and moving strength under him.

“It’s all right.” He turned the bay and rode out of the courtyard, down the

narrow alley.

Then the malaise came back again, so that the street began to go away from his

vision, like an attack of fever. He touched his waist, where he carried the

little ring, the ring that would fit only his smallest finger.

She had sent it by Haught.

Haught attacked the column and tried for-whatever Tempus was on the other side

of. Tempus and the priest. And the gods.

Damn, it shaped itself into pattern, it shaped all too well: Ischade owned no

gods. Haught and the dead man, who made a try that might, succeeding at

whatever they were after-have shaken the town.

Ischade had sent him back to Crit that night Crit came to the riverhouse and

nothing had been the same.

He slipped the ring into the light and slipped it onto his finger, the breath

going short in his throat and the touch of it all but unbearable; it was like a

drug. He had not dared wear it into Crit’s sight, a token like that. But he wore

it when he thought there was no one to see, no one but the Ilsigi passersby who

might see him only as the faceless rider all Stepsons were to the town: he was a

type, that was all, he was a power, he was a man with a sword and everyone in

town wanted to pretend they had no special reason to look anxiously at a Rankan

rider too tall and too hard to be other than what he was. So if that man’s eyes

were out of focus and all but senseless, no one noticed. It was only for a

moment. It was always, in the last two days, only for a moment, because when he

held that metal in his hand he had a sense of contact with her and his soul was

in one piece again.

He shivered and looked up where a rare straightness of a Sanctuary street

afforded a sliver of sunlight, the gleam of uptown walls.

* * *

There was a rattle at the window, a spatter of gravel against the second-story

bedroom shutters, and Moria started, her hand to her heart. For a moment she had

thought of some great bird, of claws against her shutters; she expected some

such visitation, even in the daylight. But she came up off her bed where she had

flung herself, dressed as she was in the stifling, tight-laced satins that were

what a lady in Sanctuary had to wear, 0 Shalpa and Shipri, so that her head

reeled and her senses wanted to leave her every time she climbed stairs or

thought too much on her situation.

Now she knew that rattle of gravel for what it was: someone down in the side

lane that led back toward the rear of the house and the stable. Someone who knew

where her bedroom was, maybe that importunate lord who had beseiged her step;

maybe- Shalpa! maybe it was Mor-am come back. Maybe he was in some dire trouble,

maybe he needed her, maybe he would try that window, the only one off the street

except the servants’ and the kitchen at the back.

She went and flung the inside shutters open, looked out and saw a lately

familiar, handsome face staring up at her with adoring eyes. At one breath it

drove her to rage that he was back, rage and fear and grief at once, for what he

was, and what a fool he was, and how handsome and how helpless in Her spells

which had somehow gone all amiss.

“Oh, damn!” She flung open the casement and leaned out, her corset-hard middle

leant across the sill and the compression of her ribs all but choking the wind

out of her as she set her palms on the rough stone. Cold wind stung her face and

her exposed front and blew her hair. Loose ribbons hit her in the face. “Go

away!” she cried. “Hasn’t my doorkeeper told you? Go away!”

The lord Tasfalen looked up with a flourish of his elegant hands, a glance of

his eyes that would melt a harder heart than an ex-thief’s. “My lady, forgive

me-no! Listen to me. I know a secret-”

She had started to pull back. Now she leaned there all dizzy in the wind, with

the air chilling her upper breasts and her bare arms, and her heart beating so

that the whole scene took on an air of unreality, as if something thrummed

unnaturally in her veins, as if the feeling that had come on her when Haught

touched her and turned her like this went on happening and happening and growing

in her, so that she was a danger and a Power herself, poor Moria of the gutters,

a candle to singe this poor lord’s wings, when a conflagration waited for him, a

burning that was Power of a scope to drink them both down….

“0 fool,” she moaned, seeing that face, hearing that word secret and that

urgency in his voice. It had as well be both of them in the fire. “Come round

back,” she hissed, and closed the casement and the shutters without thinking

until then that she had just asked a lord of Sanctuary to come in by the

scullery, and that at her merest word he was going to do it.

She stepped into her slippers, unable to bend in the corset, and worked one and

the other on with a perilous hop and a catch-step as she headed out to the

stairs, saving herself on the railings as she flew down in a flurry of too many

damned Beysib petticoats that kept her from seeing her feet or the steps. She

fetched up at the bottom out of breath, with a catch at the newel-post and an

anguished glance at a thief-maid who gawped at her.

“There’s a man out back,” Moria said, and pointed. “Go let him in.”

“Aye, mum,” the gaptoothed girl said, and tucked up her curls under her scarf

and went clattering off in unaccustomed, too-large shoes to see to that. The

maid was one of those who had come for the Dinner; and stayed, Moria not knowing

anything else to do with her. Like the new chef. As if She had forgotten about

everything, and left her with this huge staff and all these people to take care

of, and, gods, she had given Mor-am part of the house accounts, had given him

too much. Ischade would find it out. She would find this out….

Moria heard the maid clattering and clumping along the back hall, heard the door

open, and went into the drawing room where there was a mirror. She stood there

hunting her hair for pins to put the curls back in place.

0 gods, is that me? Am I like this, this ain’t me, outside, this is Haught’s

doing and She’s got Haught by now. She has. Maybe She’s outright killed him,

taken him into Her bed and thrown him in the river an’ all-like She’ll throw me,

all these damn’ beggars to come on me in the night and cut my throat- 0 gods,

look at my face. I’m prettier’n Her, She must’ve seen that-

A step sounded in the hall. A face appeared in the mirror beside her own. She

turned, dropping her hands as a curl tumbled loose, her breast heaved-she

suddenly knew what effect she projected, natural as breathing and dangerous as a

spider.

She saw adoration glowing in Tasfalen’s face, and the terrified pounding of her

heart and the constriction of the laces brought on that raininess again.

“What secret?” she asked. And Tasfalen came and seized up her hand in his, in

one move closer to her than she had planned to let him get. He smelled of spices

and roses.

Like a flower seller. Or a funeral.

“That I want you,” Tasfalen said, “and that you’re in deadly danger.”

“What-danger?”

He let go her hand and took her by both shoulders, staring closely into her

eyes. “Gossip. Rumors. You’ve become known in town and someone has slandered

you-incredible slander. I won’t repeat all of it. Say that you’ve been accused

of- trafficking with terrorists. Of being catspaw for-Is that part true? That

woman, that dark woman-I know her name, dear lady. My sources are highly placed.

And they mention your name-” His eyes rolled toward the uptown height, toward

the palace, the while he slid his hands to hers and drew them against him. “I

want to take you into my house. You understand, you’ll be safe there. In all

uncertainties. I have connections, and resources. I place them all at your

disposal.”

“I can’t, I daren’t, I daren’t leave-”

“Moria.” He gathered her against him, hugged her so tightly that the sense half

left her, tilted her face up and brought his mouth down on hers, which was

perhaps all he could do, being a fool; and perhaps there was something wrong

with her too, because his touching her did something to her that only Haught had

done before, of many, many men, some for money and some for need and most of

them come to grief and no good in the scattering of the hawkmasks. That was a

world that had nothing to do with the silk and the perfume and the smell and the

craziness of the uptown lord who smothered the breath that was left in her and

ran his hands over her with an abandon that would have gotten him a knife in the

gut back in her old wild days, but which now, through the lacings and the silk

and the lace, made her think nothing in the world so desirable as shed ding all

that binding and breathing and doing what she had wanted to do with this man

since first she had laid eyes on him there on her doorstep. He would not be like

Haught, not reserved, not holding so much of himself back: this man was fever

mad, and it was all going to happen right here in the drawing-room for the

servants and all to gawk at if she did not prevent him….

“Upstairs,” she murmured, fending off his hands from her. “Upstairs.”

Somehow they got there, him carrying her part of the way, till she lost a shoe

and he stopped for it; and she pulled him up the steps by the hand, damning the

shoe and the laces and all, which he started undoing at the top of the stairs.

She shed ribbons all the way to the bedroom, and they fell down together in a

cloud of silk sheets and her petticoats, which he made shift to shove out of

their way, layer after layer.

He got the last laces of her bodice and the damned corset finally, and she lay

there with her ribs heaving in the sheer sensuous pleasure of clear breaths and

the feel of his hands on her bare skin.

She knew, when the sense had gotten back to her along with her wind, that she

was the most utter fool. But it had all gone too far for more thinking than

that.

“I love you,” he said, “Moria.”

He had to, of course. She knew that, the way that the air thrummed and whispered

and the blood ran in her veins with that kind of magic Haught had put into her.

Am I a witch myself? What’s happening to me?

She stared into Tasfalen’s face, that of a man bewitched.

Or what is he? 0 gods, save him! Shalpa, save me!

“He’s quiet again,” Randal said. Randal’s foolish face was beaded with sweat and

white under its freckles, and his hair hung down in sweat-damp points; and

Tempus stared bleakly at the mage, his hand curled round a cup that sat on a

polished table, there amongst his maps and his charts. Behind the mage in the

doorway Kama stood, looking frayed herself.

Kama. Gods alone remembered how many others gone to bones and dust. She was

smart as she was likely to be: she had that hard shining in her eyes, about her

face, that he knew all too well: it was youth’s conviction it was without sin or

error; and if he troubled he could think his way through the maze of all the

things she thought, but he did not trouble: there was enough to occupy his

mind, and Kama was only a shallow part of it, shallow as a young fool was

likely to be, though complex in her potentials. She had the potential for

surprises to an enemy; was one part crazy and one part calculating and he had

not missed the gravitation of the two points that were her and Molin. The look

of a young woman in love? Not in Kama. The look of a young woman with a complex

of things seething in a still callow mind, which muddle he evaded with a

mental shrug of something close to pain: another complex fool, not born to be a

fool ultimately, but at that stage of growing when the wisest were prone

to the most wearisome, repetitious mistakes as if they were new in the world.

He knew what she had come to say. He read it before she opened her mouth,

and that irritated him to the point of fury.

“I’m going back into the town,” she said. “I can’t sit still here.”

Of course she couldn’t. Who of her age and her nature could? The battle was

going on here, but it was nothing she could get her hands into, so she went out

to find trouble.

“I’m going to find this Haught,” she said, and he could have mouthed the words a

second before they left her mouth.

“Of course you are,” he said. And did not ask Where are you going to look?

because of course she had no particular idea. Haught was the witch’s servant;

Haught was the trouble they had had previous; and Ischade-was by far the more

interesting question.

Ischade was keeping a promise. Or she was not, and a bargain was off. That was

something it would take time to leam. The souls of his dead, she had promised

him. And the safety of his living comrades as far as she could guarantee it.

There was something deadly dangerous in the wind and the woman was onto it,

doing battle with it-if she had told the truth. The possibility that she had

lied was one of those lines down which he was quite willing to think, down which

he had been thinking continually.

“Find Ischade while you’re at it,” he said. “Ask her whose Haught is.”

Kama blinked. He watched her put it together. He watched the caution dawn in her

immature-pretematurally mature mind, and watched the predictable thoughts go on,

how she would do this, how she would need more caution than she had planned on

in the other business.

Good. Things in the lower town wanted more caution than Kama was wont to use.

“Get out of here,” he said then, staring past her and thinking what the world

would be like without Niko, if they lost; if they lost Niko they would lose a

great deal more than one man; and he, personally-Niko was one who engaged him on

all levels, on too many levels. Niko was one who could cause him pain because he

could give him so much else, and without Niko, that magnet for the world’s

troubles, that fool of fools who thought the world his responsibility-Niko

almost made him feel it was, when he knew better. Niko was vulnerable the way

his kind was when the uncaring little fools got past his guard; when the

holding-action stopped and the god came thundering in to wrench the world

apart again and Niko was the one standing rearguard to fools more

vulnerable than himself. One like Kama was walking around and Niko was lying

there in a bed losing a fight far too abstract for Kama to understand. She went

out to do battle.

He did his fighting from this table, with a cup in hand. And could not, now that

he wanted to surrender, find the god. Even that, he might have foreseen.

Randal stayed when Kama had gone. Randal was a fool of Niko’s breed; and for a

moment Randal, sweating and white as he was, looked at him with Nik&’s kind of

understanding, and came and took the cup out of his hand, which gesture might

have gotten another man killed. Foolish man. Foolish little mage. Who blundered

his way along with more deftness and a keener sight and more guts than most ever

had at their best.

So Tempus let him do it.

“You won’t dream,” Randal said, “if you pass out.”

“I won’t pass out,” Tempus said, patiently, oh so patiently. “I heal, remember.

There isn’t any damn way. Now I want the damn god I can’t get there.”

“I’ve got a drug might… put you down a bit. If you let it.”

“Try it.” It took patience to say that. He already knew it would not work, but

Randal was trying.

No god answered him. Not even Stormbringer, who was- gods knew where. There was

not a cloud to be had out there.

Randal went away to find-whatever concoction he meant to try. Tempus filled his

glass again, perversely, in a cold fury at his own vitality, a fury on the edge

of panic. His body was not even in his control when the god was out of it. He

could not do so simple a thing as fall asleep, when the ache of the world got

too much. He healed, and that was what he did. He healed of the very need of

sleep and the effects of alcohol and the effects of drugs and every other

mortality. Askelon could have come and claimed him by force. But the gods were

not answering today.

None of them bloody cared.

Even Abarsis failed him. Or was held, somewhere.

II

A door opened somewhere far away. Ordinarily this would have alarmed Moria,

though servants came and went for their own reasons. This sounded deeper and

heavier than inside doors.

But just at that moment Tasfalen did something which quite took her senses

inside out; and in the danger in which they both pursued this moment she cursed

herself for butterflies and turned her mind to doing something which she had

learned off a hawkmask lover-easy to pick a man’s brain when he was feeling that

good. Then Tasfalen gave as good back, and better- Shalpa and Shipri, she had

never known a man with his ways, never bedded with a man who knew what he knew,

not even Haught, never Haught-

“Oh,” she said, “oh,” and “0 gods!”-when she brought her head up from the

pillows and saw the dark figure standing in the doorway.

Ischade said not a thing. The air became charged and heavy, copper-edged.

Tasfalen turned on an elbow. “Damn-” he said, and that was all, as if more than

that had strangled somewhere in his chest.

Moria caught at her bodice, caught her clothing together against a chill in the

air that breathed through from the hall. A scent of incense had come in, heavy

and foreign, recalling the riverhouse so acutely that the present walls seemed

darkened and she seemed to be in that room, strewn with its gaudy silks and

hangings and the spoils of dead lovers….

“Moria,” Ischade said, in a voice that hardly whispered and yet filled all the

room. “You may go. Now.”

It was life and not instant extinction. It was an order that sent her wriggling

amongst the sheets and her rumpled petticoats as if there were hot irons behind

her. Tasfalen caught at her arm, and his fingers fell away as she reached the

edge of the bed and her bare feet hit the floor.

Ischade moved out of the doorway, and extended a dark-sleeved arm toward her

freedom and the hall.

Moria fled in a cloud of her undone clothing, barefoot down the stairs, not for

the downstairs hall but for the door, for anywhere, o gods, anywhere in all the

world but this house, Her servants. Her law-

It was not where Ischade would have chosen to be-here, standing in a doorway, in

a ludicrous Situation in her own house: because the uptown house was hers, and

Moria one of her more expensive servants who had considerably exceeded her

authority.

This man who sat half-naked and staring at her-this lord of Sanctuary and Ranke,

who lived his delicate life on the backs and the sweat of the downtown and the

harbor and the ministerings of Ilsigi servants, this perfect, golden lord-she

felt him straining at the spell of silence she wove, saw him try to shift his

eyes away. But he was at once too arrogant to clutch the covers to him like a

frightened stableboy and far too arrogant to be caught in the situation he was

in. She let the spell go.

“It’s supposed to be an outraged husband,” he said, from his disadvantage.

She smiled. For a moment the black edges cleared back from her mind. /’// walk

out, she thought. There’s more to him than I thought. I could even like this

man. But the power strained at her fingers, at her temples, the soles of her

feet and ran in red tides in her gut. She felt Strat’s attention, somewhere,

felt the essence of him trying to get at her, to tear at her and wound like

something gnawing its own flesh to get at the iron that ringed it; Strat would

find her, he would kill himself finding her and that, for her, was her wound.

She could walk out and find another victim, find anyone else, anywhere, stave

off the hunger an hour, a day, another few days….

Tasfalen patted the sheets beside him. “We might discuss the matter,” he said

with his own arrogant humor. And tipped the balance and sealed his fate.

She walked in, and smiled in a different, darker way. Tas-falen stared at her,

the humor dying from his face, eyes quite fixed on hers in a mesmeric

fascination. His lust became evident.

Hers was uncontrollable.

Pavings tore Moria’s bare feet, a dozen passersby stared in shock, and Moria

burst past a gaggle of old housekeepers on their way up from market. Apples and

potatoes tumbled and bounced after her on the pavement, old women yelled after

her, but Moria dived into an alley down a track she knew, ran dirty-puddled

cobbles and squelched through mud and cut herself on glass and rubbish, mud

spattering up on her satin skirts and silk petticoats, blood as well, while the

breath ripped in and out of her unlaced chest.

The old warehouse was there. She prayed Haught was. She flung herself against

that door, bleeding on the step, pounded with both her fists. “Haught! Haught, o

be here, please be here-”

The door opened inward. She gaped at the dead man’s eye-patched face and

screamed a tiny strangled sound.

“Moria,” Stilcho said, and grabbed her by the arms, dragged her across the

threshold and into the dark where Haught waited, in this only refuge they knew,

the place Haught had told her to come if ever there was a time she had to

escape. He was here.

And the change in him was so grim and so profound that she found herself

clinging to Stilcho’s dead arm and pressing herself against him for dread of

that stare Haught gave her.

“She,” Moria said, and pointed up the hill, toward the house, “She-”

Only then in her terror did it sink in that she was half-naked from another

lover’s bed, and that it was rage which turned Haught’s face pale and terrible.

“What happened?” Haught asked in a still, steely voice.

She had to tell him. Ischade’s anger was worth her life. It was all their lives.

“Tasfalen,” she said. “He-forced his way in. She-”

A dizziness came over her. No, she heard Haught saying, though he was not saying

a thing. She saw Tasfalen leaning over her in the bed, saw Ischade as a shadow

in the doorway, felt all her terror again, but this time Haught was there, in

her skull, looking out her eyes and running his fingers over Tas-falen’s skin

Haught’s anger swelled and swelled and she felt her temples like to burst.

“Gods!” she cried, and: “Stop it!” Stilcho was shouting, his dead arms around

her, holding her up while the blood loss from her wounded foot sent a chill up

that leg and into her knees. She was falling, and Stilcho was shouting: “Gods,

she’s bleeding, she’s all over blood, for the gods’ sake, Haught-”

“Fool,” Haught said, and took her arm, gripping her wrist so hard the feeling

left her hand. The pain in her foot grew acute, became heat, became agony so

great that she threw back her head and screamed.

The bay horse clattered up the street and sent fragments of apple and potato

flying, sent a clutch of slavewomen screaming and cursing out of its path, and

Straton did not so much as turn his head. The ring had no need to be on his

finger. He felt. He felt all of it, lust running in tides through his blood and

blinding his vision so that he had only the dimmest realization what street he

was on or what house he had come to. He slid down from the saddle as the bay

came right up on the walk and the jolt when his feet hit the ground was physical

agony, much beyond any pleasure, as if sex would never again be pleasure to him,

as if it had always been pain masquerading as enjoyment and now he was on the

other side of that line. He came up the steps, grabbed the latch with all his

strength, expecting a locked door.

It gave way and let him in. A fat woman stood in the hall, mouth agape. He never

focused on her, only lifted his eyes toward the stairs and the next floor and

went that way, knowing where he was going because there was at the moment only

one focus in all creation. He grabbed the bannister and started up, blind in the

shaft of sunlight that flooded in there through a high small window, and feeling

the pounding of his blood as if he breathed awareness in with every breath, like

the dust that danced in the light.

“Ischade!” he cried. It was a wounded sound. “Ischade!”

The woods were held in a terrible stillness. Janni stopped, having worked

himself to the edge again, that margin where the sunlight and the meadow began.

But the sun was surely sinking. It was sinking rapidly, and the breeze had

stopped.

He looked down at the stream which always guided him and it was still. The water

had stopped running at all, and stood invisible except for the sky-reflection

and the light-reflection on its surface, which showed the maze of interlocked

and breathless branches overhead.

A leaf fell and another and another, disturbing that surface, breaking up the

mirror in which he and the sky were true. It began to be a shower of leaves,

falling everywhere in the forest.

“Niko!” he cried. He abandoned hope of attack. He tried to wake the sleeper,

back deep in the safe shadow, in the dark. “Niko, wake up, wake up, for the

gods’ sake. Niko-”

A breeze stirred from off the meadow, loosening more leaves, which turned yellow

and tumbled and lay like a carpet, covering the stream.

Then the water began to move, reversed its former course and flowed out of the

meadow into the forest, moving sluggishly at first, sweeping the leaves on in a

golden sheet. Then the current gathered force and swept all the leaves away as

he hastened into the dark.

A red thread had begun to run through the water, a curling wisp of blood that

ran the clear depths and grew to an arm-thick skein.

Janni ran and ran, breaking branches and stumbling over falling branches and the

slickness of the dying leaves.

“Ischade!”

Strat ran the stairs and nearly took the fragile bannister post down as he spun

round it on his way to the bedroom. He hit the doorframe with his arm as he

fetched up in it and stopped still at the sight of the figures in the tumbled

bed, the dark and the light entangled.

He stood with his mouth open, with the words choking him. And then waded forward

in a blind rage and grabbed the man by the shoulders with both his hands, hurled

him over and confronted a face he had seen before in this house.

“Strat!” Ischade shouted at him. It had the grotesquerie of comedy, himself, the

shocked uptown lord, the woman’s shout in his ears. He had never looked to be

made a fool of, dealt with the way she and Haught had dealt with him, made a

partner to her rutting with another man-who for one moment hung shocked in his

grasp and in the next flung up both arms to break his grip. “Damn you,” Tasfalen

yelled at him, “damn you and damn this lunatic house to hell!”

And the man tumbled against him, collapsing in a way that nothing alive ever

felt. Straton caught him in first reflex, recoiled on the second with the dead

man tumbling down off the bed and onto his feet. Movement drew his eye and his

reflexes: he seized Ischade’s wrist in an access of disgust and horror as she

got to her knees; he jerked her off the bed and to her feet in her

disarray and the entanglement of the sheets and the lord lying on his face on

the floor against his feet.

“Damn!” he cried, and shook her by both arms till her black hair flew and her

slitted eyes rolled white in her head. “Damn you, bitch, what do you think

you’re doing, what have you done?”

Her eyes opened wider, still showing whites, blinked again with the dark where

it belonged, a widening dark, a dark that filled all their centers and turned

those eyes into the pit of hell. “Get out of here.” It was not the voice he

knew. It was a feral snarl. “Out! Get out, get out, get out-”

The blood pounded in his veins. He shoved at her, flinging her onto the bed in a

flood of grief and rage and outright hate. She scrambled to get to the other

side, and he dived after her to stop her, hurling his weight on her, felt her

under him and himself in control for a moment, himself in a position to teach

her once for all that he was not hers to tell to come and go and do her errands

and do it all her way, when she wanted it, if she wanted it….

“Get off me!” she yelled at him, and hit him like any woman, with her fist. His

own hand cracked open across her face and blood spattered from her mouth, red

flecks on the pale satin pillow, her black hair flung in webs across her face

with the recoil. He jerked with one hand at his own clothing, pinned her with

his weight and his forearm, and elbowed her hard when she twisted like a cat and

tried to bite his arm. In that distraction she came within a little of getting

her knee into him, but he got his where it counted instead, and got both her

hands pinned.

“Fool!” she screamed into his face. ‘Wo/”

He looked into her eyes. And knew suddenly that it was a terrible mistake.

“Let me go,” Niko whispered to Randal, while Jihan was off doing something,

while Jihan flitted somewhere about the countless things that somehow diverted

the Froth Daughter in wild gyrations of attention. It might be Tempus, who still

courted unwilling sleep, and who was, in his present state, a magnet for

Stonnbringer’s daughter. It might be some other difficulty. She was likely where

trouble was. And Niko, so wan and wasted, so miserable his voice sounded

childlike soft, wrung at Randal’s heart.

“I can’t, you know,” Randal said. “I’m sorry, Niko.”

“Please.” Niko strained at the ropes. His unbandaged eye was open, bleary and

glistening with Jihan’s godsawful unguents. His skin was white and glistened

with sweat. “I’m all right, Randal. I hurt. In the gods’ mercy give me some

relief. I’ve got to-”

“I’ll get a pot, it’s all right.”

“Let me up. Randal. My back hurts, you know what it’s like to lie like this?

Just let me shift my arms a little. Just a moment or two. I’m fine now. I’ll lie

back down, I’ll let you put the ropes back again, oh, for the gods’ own sake,

Randal, it’s not your joints that feel like they’ve got knives in them. Have a

little pity, man. Just let me sit up a moment. Do for myself. All right?”

“I’ll have to put you back again.”

“That’s all right. I know that. I know you have to.” Niko made a face and

shifted his shoulders. “0 gods. My back.”

Randal bit his lip and put out a little magical effort on the strain-tightened

knots. They loosened, one after the other. He got the two closest, which tied

Niko’s feet to the bedframe. And got up off the end of the bed and carefully

undid the one on the left wrist, carefully, around the thick padding they had

put there to protect the skin. Niko sighed and flexed his legs and dragged his

arm down to his chest while Randal went around the bed to get the other one.

“Thanks,” Niko said, a ghost of a voice. “Ah. That’s better. That’s a relief.”

“Ought to give you a rubdown, that’s what.” Randal unwound the last rope, and

held onto Niko’s hand to work a little life into the arm.

Then something hit him in the side of the head and he went down blind and numb

and dazed from the impact of his skull on a marble floor.

“Niko,” he cried, trying to focus his eyes or his talent or to organize his

defenses, but the dark and the daze swirled around him in clouds and gray and

shooting flashes of red. He heard bare feet, going away at speed. “Ischade!” He

shouted the name aloud, silently, threw all he had of talent into that scream.

“Ischade! Help!”

Two men lay motionless in the bedchamber. Tasfalen was one, already chilling,

his eyes half-open, his body curled up like a child where he had fallen, wrapped

half in the bedspread and the sheets. The other lay sprawled in a twist where

she had pushed him when he lost consciousness. He was still breathing. His face

ticced in what might be dream, in such dreams as she gave him, tilled his nights

with, confused the truth with.

And Ischade was trembling all over, shuddering and shaking from sheer fright and

aborted rage and the rush of power that, given time, would have done more than

wrenched the life away from the uptown libertine, would have wrenched his soul

out and shredded it beyond any power of demons or fiends to locate it.

As it was something got to it, something that wanted that kind of rage as it had

known when it died. That something wanted through, wanted the essence of a god,

wanted to be a god, or something like. It wanted a witch’s soul at second best,

and got Tasfalen’s, which was far from enough to pay what Roxane had raised. It

scented Straton’s soul unguarded, loosened from its ordinary resistance, and

Ischade flung power about him, a shrug as she caught her cloak up from under his

legs and jerked it free in a series of violent, angry pulls.

Ischade!

The appeal hit her like a scream at her back. She physically turned and looked

in the direction from which it had come. It was Randal’s voice. It was blue

light. It was…

She ran to the window, flung open the shutters, flung wide the window and

launched herself from the floor of the bedroom to the incoming wind that swept

the curtains, never questioning whether she had the control or knew where she

was going: Randal’s outpouring was a shriek of utter panic, shuddering and

wavering in and out of focus in a wild undulation across the whole of the town.

Ischade! Help!

It’s Roxane!

“She’s gone,” Haught whispered, gathering himself to his feet. “Her attention’s

elsewhere. It all is-”

“What are you doing?” Moria gathered herself up off the dust of the warehouse

floor and the mouldering sacking which was the seating Stilcho had provided her.

Her foot still hurt, though the bleeding had stopped. She staggered, blinked at

the ex-slave turned magician, her Haught, who had stood straight up and looked

off toward a blank wall of the rotting building as if his eyes saw through

walls. Stilcho caught her arm when she wobbled on her feet, his hand cool but

not cold, certainly not the deathly cold she always expected to feel. He held

her there; she held onto him a moment; then Haught just stopped being there.

There was a thunderclap that rocked the building, a wind jerked roughly and once

at her clothing and her hair toward the spot where Haught had been, and her

skull all but split with Haught’s voice thundering in it and into her soul and

her bones and her gut.

Go home. She’s not there now. I’ll find you at the house.

There was threat implicit in that order. There was rage and jealousy and all

promise what that power that racketed about her skull could do.

That and disgust for her soiling. Haught was always fastidious.

Dead man and damned drab. Wait for me.

She sobbed. It was different than a voice. It got into her soul and she had

never felt so dirty and so small and so worthless to the world.

Stilcho hugged her head against his chest, hard. She heard his heart beating,

which, through all her pain and her confusion, confounded her further; she had

not thought it beat at all.

The door to Molin’s office slammed wide, hit the wall and started a cascade of

books and papers about the feet of the apparition which staggered into the room

half-naked and wild and going straight for him, his desk, his life. And the

pottery globe which was/was not there. Molin flung himself in a dive which

intercepted Niko in mid-lunge as they both skidded over the desktop and off it.

The sick man rolled and twisted and it was Molin who hit the ground on the

bottom, Molin who had the wind half knocked from him and his skull cracked on

the rebound of his neck as he tried to curl and save himself. Sparks exploded

across his vision; Niko was trying to rip free, sweating, naked skin offering

precious little purchase as he surged to his feet.

Molin grabbed Niko’s leg with both arms, rolled and brought the Stepson down in

another scrape and clatter of furniture. The chair this time. As shouting closed

in on the room and he had hope of help if he could only hang on to the madman

who was trying to scrabble and twist round to get at him. He bent the leg and

grabbed the ankle and got his own foot around to slam into Niko’s face.

“Get him,” someone yelled from the doorway.

“Niko!” That shout was Tempus.

And something exploded through the window in a shower of glass, something that

existed a moment in midair and then toppled in a tumble of black cloak, black

hair and dusky skin that landed with a thump in front of Molin’s dazed eyes.

Ischade lay on the floor like a dead thing, eyes open, lips apart, a strand of

her black hair lying across her open eyes without a reaction at all, her bare

arm outflung, fingers curled in the light of the broken window. Blood welled up

in cuts on that arm-did not spurt, but only leaked, slowly, to pool under the

arm, amid the fragments of glass. All this he had time to see: Niko had suddenly

gone limp as Molin sprawled atop him. Ischade lay not breathing at all and he

was desperately afraid that Niko was not breathing either.

He pushed himself up on his arms, had help as a strong hand grabbed him and

pulled, and Tempus waded in, shoved the oak desk aside to get room and grabbed

Niko up in his arms.

“He collapsed,” Molin said, “he-just-”

Reason tottered. He felt himself pulled up and set aside like a child, and the

Froth Daughter let him go and sank down to grab Tempus’s arm as he held onto

Niko.

“I can’t get through,” Tempus shouted in desperation. “Dammit, Stormbringer-let

me get to him!”

“You can’t go in there,” Jihan yelled. Her fingers closed on his arm and dented

the muscle. “She’s there, Riddler, she’s in there, and you want it too much-Stay

here!”

It was wreckage, everywhere wreckage. Ischade cast about her in the woods, with

the wind blowing everything to wrack and the trees creaking and groaning in the

gusts. A stream ran there, and it was clear water around its edges, but its

center was blood; and in the center of the blood was a thread of black, like

corruption.

She knew where the attack came from. She clutched her cloak about her to shield

herself from it as best she could and ran with her back to the wind, trying to

find the lost soul whose refuge this was. A little bit of hell had crept in and

settled in the meadow. A great deal of it was not that far away, and there was

in a place this numinous a great deal of what it could use, if her enemy was an

utter fool and let it in.

A tree gave way at the roots and crashed down, taking others with it, showering

her with its ruin. She had no magic in this place. She had nothing but her mind,

and that was unfocused, chaotic as this place was chaotic: she was the worst of

helps for it, a raw Power without a center of her own, an existence without a

reason. It was the worst of places for her to come.

The ground quaked. Thunder rolled and a voice pursued her without words, a

shrieking shout that impelled the winds and stung with mortal cold.

She stumbled upon a tumble of rocks, a little rise, a place where a guardian

waited, faceless, selfless, a pale shape that shone with inner light and its

hands glowing more terribly than its face as it lifted them to bar her way,

light against her black, certainty against her doubt. It had had a name once,

and she suddenly knew it: once she knew that name, it took on shape and became

Janni, a torn and failing ghost that blew in tatters in the wind.

“I need his help,” she said. “Janni, I need yours.”

She had raised only his Seeming out of hell; the part of Janni that stood there

flaring with light came on loan from elsewhere, an elsewhere with which she had

as little to do as possible, wanting its expensive bargains no more than hell’s.

But he had come for this. To stand here. For hell’s reason: revenge; and a

reason out of that other place: raw devotion. It shone out of him like a candle

through paper, and made his face unbearable: she flinched and avoided the

sight of it. He blinded. He burned the eyes and left his imprint when she

looked aside, so that a shadow-Janni drifted in front of her eyes when a

shining hand at the edge of her vision indicated the sleeper by the

streamside.

“Niko,” she said, and exerted all the power she had stored, one vast push

against the wind and the accumulated ruin of this place. “Niko. Nikodemos.

Stealth, it’s not your time. Do you hear me?”

Mine, a voice said on the wind. Damn you. Damn you, Ischade.

It was, delivered out of a witch’s power, a curse that wrenched at the locks on

hell.

“Fool!” Ischade whirled in the echoing gust and shoved back with all that was in

her, keeping that Gate shut. It strained. It manifested, over across the stream,

a barred door in the stone cliff beside the stream, a door bent and creaking

under the blows of what might be a shoulder, an arm, a fragment of night itself

reaching for Niko’s soul-

“Niko!” she shouted. And: “Roxane, you utter fool!”

Niko’s back arched. It was Jihan and Tempus who held him. Molin attempted to get

his jaws open and to stop him choking while an occasional flutter of white

betokened a priest dithering this way and that in the doorway, between help and

hindrance. “Get her!” Molin snarled at the priest, applying all his strength to

Niko’s spasmed jaws, and nodding with a toss of his head toward the crumpled

black-cloaked form on the floor. “Keep her warm, I don’t care if she isn’t

breathing, tie up those wounds, shut her eyes, she’ll go blind, for godssakes-”

Niko spasmed again and Tempus swore and yelled his name as another staggering

form appeared in the doorway.

Randal came reeling in, with blood all down his chin and down the front of him.

“Nooo!” Randal cried, his eyes lighting suddenly as if they had spied something,

and he made a wild lunge toward the desk, but the priest got in his way,

staggered him and knocked him reeling into a chair against the wall as something

which was not-there burst with light.

Fire came back, blue and scorching as Randal recoiled out of the chair and threw

power at it. White light blazed out, for a moment illumining a figure that

clutched a Globe in its hands. The Globe spun without moving. It lit the whole

room.

And when it and the holder vanished the contents of bookshelves came pouring out

in a thunderclap.

“He put himself into it,” Randal yelled, his hands clenched, his hair standing

up in blood-matted spikes. “Into the cabinet! He put himself in and he moved

it!”

“I’ll get it,” Jihan cried, and: “Danunit, no!” Tempus shouted at her, for Niko

flung out the arm she let go: she grabbed it again, grabbed all of him and held

onto him with bonecrushing strength, her unnatural skin aglow and her eyes full

of violence for whoever had done this thing.

It was still going on, in whatever Place that racked body contained or was

linked to: Molin could not describe it. He had only the conviction it existed,

and it was coming apart under their hands: Roxane was tearing it apart from

inside, he understood that much, while Niko’s joints and muscles cracked and

strained. Niko would shatter his own bones, rip tendons from their moorings,

break his own spine in the extremity of the convulsions: it was a preternatural

strength. It destroyed the body it lodged in; and the mind-

A wind was blowing through the room, the air was cold where it met bare skin,

and Straton came up from his abyss with a gasp after air and a wild motion of

his arm that sought after Ischade.

It met chill, empty sheets.

“Damn!” he cried and rolled off the bed, staggering on the rumpled rug and the

sheets and the forgotten obstacle of Tas-falen’s body lying there stark and

cooling with the chill.

It was true. It was all true, what they said about Ischade, she had left him

with her dead and gone off somewhere to sleep it off. He felt of his throat and

felt of his chest with a chilled hand and staggered about with a throbbing

headache and no concept of direction while he got his clothes to rights.

Damn her. Damn, damn, and damn her to bloody hell.

Am I alive? Am I like that poor sod Stilcho, alive-dead, killed and brought back

out of hell, o gods-

A door opened downstairs; wind sucked in a chill gust from the window.

“Ischade,” he yelled, and flung himself past Tasfalen’s corpse, out the door,

toward the stairs. He caught himself at the top, looking down on Moria in a torn

and muddy gown, on Stilcho standing there ghastly as the truth in that bedroom.

He came down the stairs, broke through between them and headed out the door

where the bay horse stood curiously nosing the remnants of an apple core on the

walk. He ran for it, took the reins in his hand with no idea in heaven or hell

where he was going.

To Crit, maybe, to that place where Crit was waiting for him.

He got his foot in the stirrup and heard a sound he had heard on a score of

battlefields and a hundred ambushes. An arrow hit the wall and shattered. He

dropped from the stirrup, whacked the bay to get it out of fire, already knowing

it was stupid; he should have the horse for cover, the damned, foolish horse

which was the only thing in all the world which had never betrayed him.

It snorted and shied up and stayed. That was what made him hesitate in his dive

for cover, one half-heartbeat of disbelief…

… that persisted when the arrow smashed high into his chest and he staggered

back and fell on the pavings. There was a smell of apples. The pavings were

cold. The sky showed a clear, strange glow, going lavenders and white, and the

upper stories of the buildings went all dim. It did not particularly hurt. They

said those were the really bad ones.

III

Moria saw him fall. She never thought. She ran out onto the walk with Stilcho

shouting after her and the bay horse rearing and plunging in hysterics over

Straton’s body. She ran; and a man’s arm grabbed her around the waist and swept

her back to the safety of the doorway. In that moment she had time to realize

that she had just risked her life for a man she knew for another of Hers, for a

man she had seen only twice in her life, who had burst past her down her own

stairs, shoved her painfully against a wall and run out like the devils of hell

were after him.

She could comprehend pain that strong. Ischade’s service was full of it. It was

that fellowship which sent her pelting out after him, no other reason; and now

Stilcho in a terrible slowing of time and motion drew his hands from her waist,

turned in a flying of his cloak, a falling of the hood that normally hid his

eye-patched face-for a moment it was the good side toward her, the sighted side,

mouth open in a gasp for air, legs already driving in a lunge back to the

street. He skidded in low almost under the bay’s legs, grabbed the Stepson by

the collar and one hand and dragged him toward the door-he looked up as he came,

his half-sighted face wild and pale, the dark hair flying, and his mouth opened.

“Get out of there!” he yelled at her, “get out of the way!”

An arrow whisked past with a bloodchilling sound she had heard described and

instantly recognized. She spun back around the comer to the door and the inside

wall, and saw the arrow lying spent on the rug as Stilcho dragged the Stepson in

past her to drop him in the hall.

Moria hurled herself at the door and slammed it with all her might, shot the

bolt and went and shuttered the drawing-room window in haste, ducking down

beneath to slam the shutters tight and shoot the deadbolts. “Shiey!” she

screamed. “Shutter the downstairs! Quick!”

Something banged back in the kitchens. Outside on the street she heard the

clatter of hooves, the horse still outside the window: it whinnied loud and

stamped this way and that. Hooves struck stone pavings up close to the window;

and another shutter banged shut at the rear of the house.

“Upstairs,” Stilcho said. He squatted over the unconscious Stepson. He had a

knife out and he was cutting away the cloth from around a wound that might have

been high enough to miss the lung but which might have cut the great artery

under the collarbone-there was blood everywhere, on him, on the carpet. Stilcho

lifted a pale face contorted in haste and effort. “The upstairs shutters, woman!

And be careful!”

Moria gasped a breath. “Help him,” she yelled as Cook came waddling out in

panic, one-handed Shiey, who was worse as a cook than she had been as a thief.

But they knew wounds in this house. There were servants who knew a dozen uses

for a knife and a rope. She never looked back to see what Shiey did, only flew

round the newel-post, never minding at all the pain of her sore foot. She had

only the new and overwhelming fear that a shutter might be open, someone might

find a way in even on the upper floor-

She reached the bedroom and froze in the doorway, dead-stopped against the

doorframe.

Not a sound came out of her throat. She was Moria of the streets and she had

seen corpses and made a few herself.

But the sight of a man who had lately made love to her lying dead on the floor

in her bedspread-her heart clenched and loosed and sent a flood of nausea up

into her throat. Then she swallowed it down and ducked down low, got across the

room to get the shutters closed and bolted-for the window itself she did not

try.

Then she ran, past the dreadful death on the floor, out of that place and down

the stairs again for the comfort of Stilcho’s presence, for the dead-alive man

who was the only ally she had left, and to the Stepson who had come running out

of that upstairs room the same as she.

He was still lying on the hall floor, there beside the stairs, with Stilcho’s

cloak wadded under his head and Stilcho crouching over him. Stilcho looked up as

she came down the last steps, and his face and the face of the Stepson on the

floor were the same pale color.

“Name’s Straton,” Stilcho said. “Her lover.”

“T-Tasfalen’s d-dead,” Moria said. She had almost said my lover, but that was

not true, Tasfalen was only a decent man who had treated her better than any man

ever had, and who had died a fool. Of her doing, never this Straton’s fault:

Moria knew who she had left him with; and suddenly Moria the thief felt a pang

of tears and the sting and ache of all her wounds. “What’ll we do?” She leaned

with her arms about the bottom newel-post and stared helplessly at Stilcho and

stared at the man who was dying on her hall rug. Stilcho had gotten the shaft

broken. The remnant of the arrow stood in the wound, with bloodstained flesh

swelling it in tight. High in the ribs with bone to help lock it up and gods

knew what it had hit. “0 gods, gods, he’s done, isn’t he?”

Stilcho held up the fletching-end of the arrow from beside him. It had been

dipped in blue dye. “Jubal,” he said.

She felt a twinge of chill. Jubal was another who had owned a piece of her soul,

once. Before Ischade took her and set her in this house that no longer seemed

safe from anything. “You know how to pull it?” she asked.

“I know how. I don’t know what I’m cutting into. Your staff-that cook of yours

ran back in the kitchen after another knife. I need two to get on either side of

this thing. I need waddings and I need hot oil. Can you get them moving back

there?”

“They’ve locked themselves in the cellar, that’s where they are!” The silence

out of the servants’ end of the house suddenly interpreted itself and filled her

with blind rage. She knew her staff. She flung herself from the newel-post and

started down the hall.

And screamed as a light and a thunderclap burst into the drawing-room beyond the

arch beside them. Wind hit her.

She turned and saw Haught there, Haught disheveled and without his cloak, and

holding a pottery sphere in his hands, a sphere that by odd seconds seemed not

to be there at all and at others seemed to spin and glow.

Haught grinned at them, a wolf’s grin. And he let go the globe which hung where

he had left it, in midair, spinning and glowing white and a thousand colors. The

light fell on him and on her drawing room and paled everything. Then he tucked

it up again under his arm and ran one hand through his hair, sweeping it from

his face in that child-gesture that was like the Haught she had known, the

Haught who had shared her bed and been kind to her. Both of them stood there on

the same two feet, the mage she feared and the man who had given her gifts and

loved her and gotten her and him into this damned mess.

Whatever it was he had gotten, it was not a natural thing and it was not

something the Mistress meant him to have, Moria knew that by the look of it and

of him. And she was cold inside and full of a despair so old it made her only

tired and angry.

“Dammit, Haught, what the hell are you into?”

He grinned at her. Delight radiated from him. And he looked from her to Stilcho

to the man on the floor, the grin fading to curiosity.

“Well,” he said, and came closer, his precious strange globe tucked up in his

arms. “Well,” he said again when he looked down at Straton. “Look what we’ve

got.”

“You can help him.” Moria remembered her foot and a touch of hope came to her.

“You can help him. Do something.”

“Oh, I will.” Haught bent down and laid one hand on the Stepson’s booted ankle.

And the Stepson’s whole body seemed to come back from that diminished, shrunken

look of something dead, to draw a larger breath and to run into pain when it

did. “How did this happen?”

She opened her mouth to say.

“That’s all right,” Haught said. “You’ve told me.” He still had his hand on the

Stepson’s ankle, and closed it down till his fingers went white. “Hello,

Straton.”

Straton’s eyes opened. He made a small move to lift his head from the wadded

cloak, and perhaps he saw Haught, before the pain got him and twisted his face.

“Oh, damn,” he said, letting his head back, “damn.”

“Damned for sure,” Haught said. “How does it feel, Rankan?”

“Haught!” Moria cried, as the Stepson made a sound nothing human ought to make.

She jerked with both hands at Haught’s shoulders. “Don’t! Haught!”

Haught stopped. He stood up, slowly, the globe still beneath his arm. And Moria

flinched in the first backward step, then stood her ground, jaw clenched,

muscles shaking in the threat of this utter stranger who stared at her with eyes

that held nothing of the Haught she had known. There was something terrible

inside. Something that burned and touched her inside her skull in ways that ran

constantly through her nerves.

“Oh, I know what you’ve done, I know everything you’ll say, and what you really

think. It’s more than a little trying, Moria.” He reached and brought a finger

under her chin. “It can be a damned bore, Moria, it really can.”

“Haught-”

“Ischade doesn’t own you anymore. I do. I own you, I own Stilcho, I own this

house and everything in it.”

“There’s a dead man in my bedroom! Dammit, Haught-”

“A dead man in your bedroom.” Haught’s mouth tightened in the ghost of an old

smile. “You want me to move him?”

“0 my gods, no, no-” She backed away from Haught’s hand. He could. He would. She

saw that in his eyes, saw something like Ischade mixed with Haught’s prankish

humor and a slave’s dire hate. “0 gods, Haught-”

“Stilcho,” Haught said, turning his face to him, “you’ve just acquired company.”

Stilcho said nothing at all. His mouth was clamped to a hard line.

While upstairs something thumped, and that board that always creaked near the

bed-creaked; and sent ice down Moria’s back.

“Gods, stop it!”

“You don’t want your lover back?”

“He’s not my lover, he wasn’t my lover, he was a poor, damned man She got her

hands on, I just-I just-I was sorry for him, that’s what, I was sorry for him

and he was good, and I don’t give a damn, Haught, I’m not your damn property,

I’m not Hers, you can blast me to hell if you like, I’ve had all I’ll take from

all of you!”

Her shouting died. Her fists were still clenched. She waited for the blow or the

blast or whatever it was wizards did and knew she was a fool. But Haught’s face

stressed and it smoothed, and something flowed over her mind like tepid water.

“Congratulations,” he said. “But you don’t get those kind of choices. The world

doesn’t give them to you. / can. I have the power to do whatever I like. And you

know that. Stilcho knows it. You want power, Moria? If you’ve got a shred of

talent I can give you that. You want lovers, I can give you those, whatever

amuses you. And I’ll amuse you myself when the mood takes us. Maybe you’d like

Stilcho. Ischade’s probably taught him a lot of interesting things. I’m not

jealous.”

The hell you’re not.

Haught’s eyebrow twitched. Dangerously. And the cold eyes took on a little

amusement. “Only of your loyalty,” he said. “That, I’ll have. What you have in

your bed is your business. As long as I have the other. I don’t hold anybody my

property. Moria.”

Slave, she remembered, remembered the whip-scars on him, and saw his face grow

hard.

“I was apprenticed on Wizardwall,” he said. “And Ischade was fool enough to take

me on. Now I have what I need. I have this house, I have hands to do what I

want, and I have one of my enemies. That’s a beginning, isn’t it?”

He looked up toward the head of the stairs. Moria did, unwillingly, and saw

Tasfalen standing there naked to the waist and with his hair all rumpled as if

he had just risen from sleep.

But there was something wrong in the way he stood there, in the lack of

reaction, in the way the hand reached out listlessly for the bannister, all the

reactions of life but no reaction to what ought to stir a man. As if he did not

know that there was anything amiss with him or in what his eyes must register in

the hall below him.

“The body’s working,” Haught said. “The mind’s rather spotty, I’m afraid.

Memory’s not what it was. The soul might retain the missing bits-decay sets in

very soon, you know; some tiny bits of him have just rotted, already. So a lot

it had is gone. But it doesn’t need a soul, does it? It doesn’t need one for

what I want.”

“You said you’d help me,” Stilcho said from where he knelt by the wounded

Stepson.

“Oh. That. Yes. Eventually.” As the body that had been Tasfalen came down the

stairs in total disinterest. And stopped and stood at the bottom. “It doesn’t

have much volition. But it doesn’t need that either. Does it?”

Niko’s body went into still another spasm. Jihan had gotten his jaws open and

Tempus had forced a small wooden rod there-gods knew where Randal had come up

with it, out of what debris of the office. It kept Niko from biting his tongue

through. And Randal had pulled another thing out of that otherwhere of a mage’s

storage-had gotten bits and pieces of that armor he had worn and tried to fit

the breastplate to a body that kept trying to break its own spine.

Niko screamed when that touched him. He screamed and flung himself into a spasm

that Molin would not have thought was left in that wracked body; his own muscles

ached with pity and his hands sweated. “It’s killing him,” Tempus yelled, and

shoved Randal and the collection of metal aside. “Dammit, let him be; Jihan,

hold onto him, hold onto him-”

Tempus hugged him hard against him and shut his eyes and tried. Molin saw what

he was trying, sensed the effort to break through the barrier that existed in

Niko now. He threw his own strength into it, and felt Randal add his.

Trees groaned in the wind, crashed and fell, and the ground quaked. Ischade put

out all her effort to stay others, her arms about the sleeper, Janni’s white

shape holding him from the other side. The wind grew colder, and the thing

battering at the gate grew more powerful.

Even Roxane was afraid now. Ischade knew it. “Get out of him!” Ischade yelled

into the wind. “Witch, you’ve lost, get out of him, leave this place!”

I’ll know when to go, the voice came back. Give me Niko. “Fool,” Ischade

murmured, holding tight. “Fool, fool-You won’t get him, Roxane, I’ll send his

soul to hell before you get your hands on it, hear me?”

And then a gate would exist indeed, snake swallowing its tail, a gaping hole in

the world’s substance which would pull them all in. She said it and knew it was

not bluff, that she was not going to let go; she did not know how to let go, in

the way that Roxane did not know how; and at the end that was what would happen,

the thing would find its way up out of the pit that had opened in this place and

take the sleeper, and when it did, when it did, that snake-swallowing-tail

effect would envelop them all. Her doing, and Roxane’s.

Storm broke overhead.

Something else had manifested. Lightnings crashed. The ground shook; and of a

sudden a bolt crashed down nearby, where the gate was. All of existence

shuddered.

And there was sudden nothingness in her arms and in Janni’s. The sleeper melted

from them. The sky dissolved in rack and lightnings.

And a dark shape flew from the direction of the meadow to mingle with it, one

fused whirling mass of lightnings, of gray cloud, and of night that shot

destruction everywhere….

Niko’s unbandaged eye opened. He flung himself in a spasm against Jihan’s

strength and Tempus’s inert weight and Molin flinched at the scream that came

past the gag. Let him die, he prayed, was praying, when Randal scrambled out of

his disarray with the armor and reached after something else. The painting

manifested in his grip.

“Get a light,” Randal yelled at him. In one dullwitted moment Molin knew what

Randal was after, recoiled from the thought of the deed and wondered in the same

numb-minded flicker why a candle, why not call fire: but a candle was apt for

fire, the canvas was magical and unapt, it resisted destruction. “Light!” Molin

bellowed at the priest who hovered terrified in custody of Ischade’s body. The

priest cast about this way and that, and in that selfsame moment Randal snatched

up a handful of papers and blasted them into flame. The fire whumphed up and

took the corner of the canvas on which Tempus and Niko and Roxane existed in

triad, and Molin clenched his hands on the back of the chair in front of him and

flinched as the smoke poured up from it, as Randal held onto burning paper and

burning canvas, his face twisted in the pain of the burning that went up and up,

the fire licking out at sleeves, at robe, at hair, at anything it could get

while Randal turned and twisted in what looked like some grotesque dancer’s

contortions, keeping it away from himself and what else it reached for. Silver

smoke poured up, mingled unnaturally with black. There was a stench of sulphur,

and a shadow poured out of that smoke, a presence of intolerable menace. The

priest screamed and covered his head. Then that darkness went- somewhere.

At the same moment Niko’s body went limp as the dead and a slow trickle of blood

flowed down from his nose and around the comer of his mouth where the stick was

set between his jaws. Jihan looked puzzled and Randal stood there breathing in

great gasps with the sweat standing on his white face and his hands all black

and red, his lips drawn back in a grimace of pain and doubt.

Cloth whispered. Molin glanced aside in his distress and saw Ischade move and

rise on one elbow and the opposing hand. Her dark hair hid her face. She looked

up then, toward Niko, and that face was drawn and grim.

Tempus stirred and shoved himself up off the floor. His jaw clenched and knotted

as he looked into Niko’s face; while Jihan carefully pulled the stick from

between Niko’s jaws and closed his mouth, down which a ribbon of blood still

poured.

“He’s alive,” Ischade said. Her voice was ragged and hoarse. “He’s free of her.”

“But not of it,” Tempus snarled, “dammit, not of it-”

“Let it alone!” Ischade shouted. Her voice broke. She reached out a forbidding

hand and straightened the other arm, supporting herself. “It’s not loose. Yet.

Don’t meddle with it. It’s not something you can handle. Or that I can. I don’t

make that kind of bargain.”

“Do it!”

“No!” She got herself up on her knees and staggered to her feet. “He’s got Janni

still. And Janni on that ground is power enough to keep him till he wakes. She’s

still loose, do you hear me? Roxane’s still free, and she’s pacted with that

thing. She’s somewhere, and your meddling in that Place can only make it worse:

she’s still got ties there. She doesn’t want that gate open any more than we do:

not unless she can get it what she promised. Then she’ll open it. She’s lost her

power, she’s lost her hiding-place, we’re that much better off, but not if you

go head-on against her ally-”

“That’s not the worst of it,” Randal said. “Your apprentice just stole the globe

in all the confusion. I heard him coming and I couldn’t get here in time. I do

trust it wasn’t your idea.” Ischade opened her mouth to say something. The air

shuddered and Niko choked and moaned. Then she shut it and her jaw went hard,

her fists clenched. “It wasn’t,” she said. And did not speak any curse, which

restraint sent a chill down Molin’s back and reminded him what she was. “Well,”

she said, “now we know where Roxane’s gone, don’t we?”

“Don’t hurt him,” Moria said, “Haught, don’t.”

“Another of your lovers?” Haught asked, and prodded Straton’s side with his

booted toe.

“No. For Shalpa’s sake-”

“Your old patron.” Haught shifted the globe he held to the crook of his arm and

touched her under the chin. “Really, Moria, I make you a lady and look at you,

you smell like a whore and you swear like a gutter-rat. Carry a knife in your

garter, do you? No? Your brother stole it. What a life you lead.”

“Stay out of my mind, dammit!”

“You’re going to have to leam to control yourself, you know. Stilcho does. He

thinks about things when I ask him questions. He thinks about things other than

what I’m asking, he’s gotten very good at it. Sometimes he remembers being dead.

That’s his greatest weapon. Sometimes I see other things in his head, like what

it feels like to have people flinch away from you- bothers you terribly, doesn’t

it, Stilcho? You ran right out there to collect this bit of dogmeat just because

Moria was going to do it, just because death doesn’t mean a damn to you and you

wanted to do something she wanted, you wanted her to look at you and not flinch,

you want her, don’t you, you sorry excuse for a living man?”

“Stop it,” Moria cried.

“I just want the ones I love to know themselves the way I know them. Isn’t that

fair? I think we ought all to know where we stand. You want to go to bed with

him? He’s dying to.”

“That’s very funny,” Stilcho said. “Excuse him, Moria, he’s not himself.”

She clenched her hands together to stop their shaking and clenched her jaw and

stared up the bit she had to go to stare Haught in the eyes. “Well, dead, he’s

still got a heart in him. Where’s yours? They beat it out of you?”

It scored. It scored all too well. For a moment she thought she would die for

that, and she ought to be scared; but she was what he had said, she was a

gutter-rat, and a rat was a coward until it got cornered, its back to two walls.

Then it would fight anything. And these were her walls. This was her house. “My

house, damn you, and mind your manners, I don’t care what you’ve brought in with

that damn jug. Get this man off my floor, put him to bed where he belongs, get

this other poor thing set down somewhere where he won’t scare my servants, and

let me go up and take a bath, I’ve had enough of this goings-on.”

“There’s a love.” Haught chucked her under the chin. She hit at his hand. “Go

clean up. I’ll take care of the rest.”

She tightened her lips as if she would spit at him. It occurred to her.

Childhood reflex. Then her eyes fixed on a move behind his shoulder. On

Tasfalen, who had stood listless till then; now Tasfalen’s head lifted and the

eyes focused sharp; the chest gave with a wider breath and the whole body

straightened. Damned trick of his, she thought, to scare me with it.

“Not a trick,” Haught said, turning even while that cold touch ran over her

mind. “We have a visitor. Hello, Roxane.”

IV

Crit slid down from the saddle breathless and sweating, was on the marble steps

at the second stride, and took them two at a time. “Watch my horse,” he yelled

at men whose proper job at the doors was not hostelry, but one of them ran to do

that, and Crit kept going, inside the building in long strides-he wanted to run.

Being what he was, where he was, he refused to show that much of his anguish to

the locals.

He grabbed a middle-aged man by the arm, a Beysib who turned and stared at him

in that way a Beysib had to, with eyes that had no white and no way to turn in

their sockets. “Tempus,” Crit spat. “Where?” His haste was such that he had no

time to waste hunting; no time even to hunt an honest Rankan: he took the first

thing he could get.

“Torchholder’s office,” the Beysib lisped, and Crit let him go and strode on.

Broke finally into a jog, his steel-studded boots ringing down the marble hall

and echoing off the central vault. He saw the room, saw white-robed priests

hanging about outside its open door, and came up on them in his haste.

“Wait,” one said, but he shoved through and into the stench of burning and the

tumble of chaos in the room.

Tempus was there. Ischade. Molin. And a couple of priests. Molin and the priests

he ignored; he ignored the stink of fire, the ashes, the strewn papers and

tumbled books.

“They shot Strat,” he said. “Riddler, your damned daughter’s friends’ve shot

Strat, they got him in Peres, someone in Peres pulled him in and we’re trying to

pick the snipers off the street so we can get in there. They’ve got it ringed,

only thing they can’t hit is that damned horse, they got Dolon in the arm and

Ephis got two in the leg-”

“Damn, who?” Tempus grabbed him by the arm. “What in hell’s happened?”

“The Front, the damned piffles! They made one try on him, this time they shot

him. News is all over town, we got barricades going back up, we got every

precinct flaring up, we haven’t got the men to cover the whole damn city and

fight a sniper action: they got that whole damn street and I had to come way

wide and around to get in here.”

“My house,” Ischade said. “Strat’s there?”

“The Peres house. They got him in. We don’t know whether he’s alive or not-”

“Gods blast it!” Tempus shouted. “What’s your intelligence doing?”

Crit sucked in his breath. Walking rings around your daughter, was the thing

that leaped up behind his teeth, but he stopped it before it got out. “We fouled

up,” he said. That was all there was to say.

“Tempus.” Molin thrust out a hand to stop him on his way out. “Niko. Niko’s at

risk, you understand me.”

“Haught’s there,” Ischade said. “So’s Roxane by now. Right in the middle of it.

And Roxane’s got her ally poised here. In Niko. You need me for either and we

could lose it in either place. You choose. You’re the strategists.”

The witch stirred a step, looked down at her/his own body, and up again.

Tasfalen’s eyes burned with a preternatural clarity. “Give me that,”

Tasfalen/Roxane said, taking a second step toward Haught; and Haught clutched

the pottery globe the tighter and backed that step away while Moria shrank back

against the outside of the bannister.

“Oh, no,” said Haught. “Not so readily as that-compatriot. You may even be

outranked. Do you want to try me? Or do you want to take the gift I’ve already

given you and be reasonable?”

The witch laid a hand on her own naked chest, ran it down to the belly. “Is this

your sense of humor, man? I assure you I’m not amused.”

“I worked with what I had at hand. If you’ve seen the staff in this house you

know I did quite well. This one-” Haught grasped Moria by the arm and dragged

her behind him. “-is mine. The body is Tasfalen Lancothis. He’s quite rich. And

with your tastes I’m sure you’ll find amusement one way or the other.”

Tasfalen’s eyes looked up from under the brows and all hell looked out.

“We’ll do better,” Haught said, “if we both live that long.” He nodded toward

the street. “There’s considerable disturbance out there. They’re back at it

again. I found you, I offer you a body. I have the globe. For two wizards, this

is an opportune place and an opportune time: Ranke is dying in the streets out

there by what I gather. And here-” he moved his foot aside, against Straton’s

leg. “Here’s Tempus’s own lieutenant. His chief interrogator. His gatherer of

secrets. I think we have something to discuss with him, you and I. Don’t we?”

Tasfalen’s nostrils flared. The face seemed hollowed. “I want a drink,” Roxane

said. “I’m parched.”

“Moria,” Haught said.

“I’m not your damned servant!”

“I’ll get it,” Stilcho said, and got up from beside the unconscious Stepson and

went for the drawing room.

“Moria,” Haught said. “Don’t be a total fool.” His hand caressed her shoulder

but he never looked her way. “Lover’s quarrel,” he said to Roxane.

“Who are you?” Roxane asked, and Haught stiffened; his hand stopped its motion

and Tasfalen’s face went hard and careful.

“Answer enough?” Haught asked. “You knew my father. We’re almost cousins.”

Roxane/Tasfalen said nothing to that. But the expression became thoughtful, and

then something else again, that sent a shiver up Moria’s Ilsigi spine. The face

of the man she had lately made love with began to take on different lines, flush

with lifelike color, and settle into expressions alien to its personality.

Stilcho brought the drink in a glass, from the carafe and service on the drawing

room sideboard. Tasfalen reached for it; Roxane took it and lifted it with a

lingering suspicion in the look she turned toward Haught. Then she sipped at it

carefully, and let go a small sigh.

“Better,” she said. “Better.” And finished the glass and gave it to Stilcho. She

put out her male hand in the next instant and stayed him in his departure, then

turned the hand as if it had suddenly interested her as much as Stilcho. The

fingers ran up the fabric of Stilcho’s sleeve. And he stared back with a hard,

revolted stare. Of a sudden Tasfalen’s face broke into Tas-falen’s grin, and a

small short laugh came out. “Well.” Then the hand dropped and the face turned to

them again with the eyes aglitter. “You hold onto that globe so tightly-cousin.

You’re young, you’re handling something you’re only half able to use, and you’re

vulnerable, my young friend. This house is Ischade’s property. Anything she’s

ever handled is a focus she can use; and this is a place she owns, you

understand me. I felt your wards when I came through them, a nice little bit of

work for what they are, but that streetwalking whore isn’t what she was, either.

Now do we put something around this house she’ll have trouble breaking, or do we

just stand here playing power games? Because she’s on her way here, you can

believe me that she is.”

Haught tucked the pottery globe the more tightly in his arms, then slowly

reached out and set it in the air between them. It spun and glowed and Moria

flinched away, her arm flung up between herself and that thing. It hummed and

throbbed and hung there defying reason; it beat like a heart as it spun, and her

own hurt in her chest; her tangled hair lifted on its own with a prickling eerie

life, her silken, muddy-hemmed petticoats crackled and stood away from her body

with a life of their own. All their hair stood up like that, Tasfalen’s,

Stilcho’s, Haught’s, as blue sparks leapt from Tasfalen’s outstretched hand,

from Haught’s fingertips, flying against the globe and spattering outward

against the walls, lining the crack of the door, whirling up the stairs and into

the drawing room and everywhere. From somewhere in the cellars and the rear of

the house there was a general outcry of panic; it had gotten to the servants.

The sound became pain. It throbbed in time to the pulse. It screamed with a high

thin shriek like wind and became her own scream. “No,” she cried, “make it

stop-”

Strat moved. It was the hardest thing he had ever done, torn muscles and swollen

flesh tensing round the shaft in his chest; something else tore, and the swirl

of light spotted with black and went all to gray, but he knew where his enemy

stood and he had coordination enough to brace his good hand against the floor,

draw up the opposite leg while the pain turned every move weak and fluttery,

muscles shaking and weak: one good push, his foot behind the damned Nisi’s leg-

He shoved, with all that was in him. Haught screamed; he thought that was the

scream he heard, or it was his own.

Tasfalen’s hands clutched the globe. Tasfalen’s face grinned a wolf’s grin

“There, wizardling.”

Moria made herself as small as she could against the side of the stairs: she

shut both eyes, expecting a burst of fire, and opened one, between her fingers.

Haught and the witch stood facing each other, Stilcho was down on his knees by

the writhing Stepson, but no fire flew.

“You’ve a bit to leam,” Tasfalen said. “Most of all, a sense of perspective. But

I’m willing to take an apprentice.”

From Haught, a long silence: then, quietly: “Is it mistress or master?”

Tasfalen’s right eyebrow jerked in wrath. Then a grin spread over his face. “Oh,

I like you well, upstart. I do like you.” The pottery globe vanished from

his/her hands. “First lesson: don’t leave a thing like that in reach.”

“Where is it?” There was the ghost of panic in Haught’s voice, and Tasfalen’s

grin widened. Male hand touched male chest.

“Here,” Tasfalen said. “Or as close as hardly matters. I learned that trick of a

Bandaran.” He-Moria shuddered: it was impossible to look at that virile body and

think she- walked closer and stood looking down at the Stepson, who lay white

and still by Stilcho’s knee. “Ischade’s lover. Oh, you are a find, aren’t you?

And you’re not going to die on us, oh, no, not a chance of that-”

* * *

“… A chance of that,” a strange voice said; and another, hated: “I’ve no

intentions of it. Not with what he knows.”

“He has uses other than that. Her lover, after all. It has to play havoc with

her concentration. Even if personal pride is all that bothers her.”

“Oh, it’s more than that.” A grip closed on Strat’s wrist, lifted that, let go

and lifted the other, the wounded hand, with a pain that drove Strat far under

for a moment; he came back with the feeling of someone’s hands on him, roughly

probing among his clothing. “Ah. Here it is.”

“Hers?”

“I gave it to him. It should have come to you. In your other life.”

He thought what it was then. He would have kept the ring. He was sorry to lose

it. He had been a fool. He was sorry for that too. Play havoc with her

concentration.

With what he knows.

He understood that well too. He had asked the questions for years. His turn now.

He thought of a dozen of his own cases and had no illusions about himself. He

tried to die. He thought of it as hard as he could. Probably his own cases had

thought the identical thought at some stage.

“He wants to leave us,” the one voice said. A feathery touch came at Strat’s

throat, over the great artery. “That won’t do.” A warmth spread out from it, his

heart sped, a hateful, momentary surge of strength, like a tide carrying him up

out of the dark. “Wake up, come on. We’re not even started yet. Open the eyes.

Or just think about what I’d like to know about your friends. Where they are,

what they’ll do-it’s awfully hard, isn’t it, not to think about a thing?”

Crit. 0 gods. Crit. Was it you after all?

“We can take him into the kitchen,” one suggested. “Plenty of room to work in

there.”

“No,” a woman cried.

“Let’s not be difficult, shall we? There’s a love. Go wash. You’d rather be

taking a bath than stay for this, wouldn’t you? You do look a mess, Moria.”

THE SMALL POWERS THAT ENDURE

Lynn Abbey

Battlefield chaos reigned in what had once been Molin Torchholder’s private

retreat from disorder. Niko lay on the worktable while Jihan brought her healing

energies to bear on one tortured joint after another. Now and again the

mercenary’s eyes would bulge open and the sounds of hell would explode from his

mouth. The others would cease their arguings until the Froth Daughter had him

quiet; then the frantic bickering would begin again.

Crit’s simple statement, “We fouled up,” applied to everyone in the room-none of

whom were accustomed to failure on such a grand scale. Niko’s physical pain was

the least of their worries. The demon erupting in his moat- molded rest-place

had the power to reshape all creation-if Roxane didn’t do something preemptive

with the Globe of Power or the mortal anarchy of the PFLS-inspired riots didn’t

overwhelm them all first.

None of then noticed a new shadow at the threshold.

“Divine Mother! This is intolerable!”

Shupansea, exiled Beysib Empress and, by virtue of foreign gold and the strong

arms of clan Burek, de facto ruler of Sanctuary, stopped short in the open

doorway. She stared- knowing that it discomfitted these drylanders, but there

was no other way. Her mind, moving behind glazed, amber eyes, scanned from one

shadowed comer of the room to the other, from the floor to the ceiling,

absorbing every detail without the distraction of movement.

They had been arguing, singly and severally, but the sight of her united them in

silence. She knew them all, except for the dark-clad, disheveled woman sitting

on a low stool with a half-full goblet leaning out of her hands. Their combined

presence in such a small, private room could only mean disaster.

Shupansea was caught in an undertow of emotion as the images of violence

patterned themselves against her memories of the Beysa’s court those last few

days before her supporters in clan Burek had effected her rescue, and exile. Not

even the silken touch of her familiar serpent moving between her breasts could

break her horror-struck fascination with Niko’s broken, blood-streaked body. The

tears and shrieks of terror she had resolutely concealed from her own people

could not be withheld from this insignificant drylander.

Divine Mother, she repeated, this time a prayer as the silent undertow swept her

back toward incapacitating fear. Help me!

The downward surge was broken by the soft strength of Mother Bey cradling her

mortal daughter. Shupansea felt her pulse quicken as the goddess’ vitality

flowed within her own envenomed blood. She ascended through the Aspects: Girl,

Maiden, Mother and Crone, to Sisterhood, then broke through to Self-ness. She

blinked and stared across the room again.

“He yet lives,” the Presence said to her, and through her to the still-silent

assembly. “The mortal soul survives.”

Shupansea took long, gliding steps toward Niko. Tempus moved away from his self

assigned post at Niko’s side in a slow, graceful fury, determined to stop her.

She paused and stared-seeing him clearly for the first time: this nearly

supernatural man now spiritually naked and silently invoking the names of puny,

man-shaped gods. She lifted a finger of Power but was spared its use when

Another reached out to restrain him.

“That’s the snake-bitch goddess within her,” Jinan hissed, getting a handful of

Tempus’s biceps and squeezing it hard.

The Beysa reached out to catch a drop of Niko’s blood in the curve of her long

fingernail, then brought it to her lips. Blood was sacred to Mother Bey. She

savored the taste of it and absorbed all it told about Niko, his rest-place, and

the uneasy truce which held there. Visions of the handiwork of moat, the

Bandaran imitation of divine paradise, came as an unwelcome-indeed,

unimaginable-surprise.

You should be ashamed of yourselves, she, who tolerated no other deities in that

portion of paradise she called her own, roared at the pantheons and protogods

who shared a suddenly imperfect omniscience with her. THAT. An ephemeral finger

pointed toward the blazing column that was Janni and the ominous bulge beneath

it. That is what comes of giving mortals their own dreams. That is what they

have built with free will: a gateway for demons-for the destruction of us all!

Mother Bey reserved special ire for her erstwhile lover, Stormbringer, but her

mortal avatar was spared that confrontation. The goddess withdrew, leaving

Shupansea somewhat flushed and tingling with righteous indignation.

“How could you allow this to happen?” she demanded of Molin.

Molin straightened his robe and his dignity. “You knew all that we knew. Roxane

took control of Niko’s body; another magician has stolen the Globe of Power. The

rest, the consequences, we are only just beginning to understand.”

“I have seen with my mother’s eye, and the force within that young man,” she

gestured toward Niko with a bloodstained finger, “has nothing to do with

witches! Can’t you fools tell the difference between a demon and a witch?”

Tempus freed himself from Jihan’s restraint. He towered over Shupansea. “We know

exactly what we’re dealing with, bitch,” he said in a softly menacing voice.

“Well, what are we dealing with?” Shupansea replied, her head tilted back and

glowering with a stare he could not hope to break. Her serpent made its way up

the stiff wires of her headdress. Its tongue flickered; Tempus blinked and Molin

spoke instead.

“Roxane promised the Stormchildren to the demon. She poisoned the children but

she couldn’t deliver their souls and got herself wounded in the bargain. We knew

she was hiding; some of us thought she had a hold on Niko but we didn’t

guess she’d gotten behind him until it was too late and the demon’d come to

collect its payment from her. That was ASkelon’s message for Tempus: that

she’d gotten behind him somehow.”

Ischade shook her head. “It was never so simple. Roxane promised the demon a

gateway in exchange for Niko. The only gateway she knew about was the

Stormchildren. She thought she was safe from everything where she was-and that

Niko was safe as well. Now that it’s trying to take Niko, as it would have taken

the Stormchildren, she’s frantic herself. She understands less than we do-but,

with a globe again, she has vastly more power.”

“We understand the demon must be destroyed and the rest-place with it,”

Shupansea agreed.

Randal staggered forward, his face swollen and glistening from the fire, bits of

charred canvas and flesh trailing from his clawed fingers. “Not destroyed.” He

had breathed the flames; his voice rasped and gurgled in his throat. “It will go

someplace less defended. We need the globe. We can make it right with the

globe.” Passion exhausted him; he slumped forward into Jihan’s outstretched

arms.

“Is this true?” the Beysa demanded.

“It is likely,” Jihan admitted, trying to divide her ministrations between the

‘stricken mage and Niko, who moaned when her hands weren’t resting against his

flesh. “We can defend the rest-place, or the Stormchildren, but if Roxane has

the globe she’ll always be one step ahead.”

“Roxane, Niko, or your son, Riddler,” Ischade interrupted, focusing her own, and

everyone else’s, attention on Tempus. “You must make your choice. No matter what

I do, I will need time. I cannot wait any longer!”

But Tempus only shook his head. He took Niko’s hand and the unconscious Stepson

seemed to breathe easier. “Go where you want,” he said slowly.

Ischade set the goblet down and made ready to leave the room.

“Guards!” Shupansea shouted, and a pair of the shaven-pated Burek warriors

appeared in the doorway. “Provide her with shoes and clothing. Escort her

wherever she wishes to go-”

The necromant stared across the room, hell-dark eyes flashing rejection of

Beysib hospitality.

“You ought not squander yourself by leaving the same way you arrived,” the Beysa

said gently, a faint smile on her lips; her eyes still defended against the

power of that stare.

Ischade lowered her eyes and picked her way carefully across the shattered

glass. The great black raven, which had arrived moments after the first Globe of

Power had been shattered and had held itself aloof from all the commotion since,

spread its wings and flapped out the window its mistress had broken by her

entrance.

“How did Roxane get in there?” Tempus asked once Ischade was gone. “How? Not

even the gods can violate moat’s sanctuary.”

“Randal?” Molin asked.

The mage pushed himself away from Jihan’s healing hands. He started to speak but

the words were too great an effort. Quivering, he sank back to his knees; tears

ate their way down his cheeks. “They had him for a year, Riddler,” he pleaded

for understanding. “He hates her. He remembers and he hates her but when she

comes for him…. A year, Riddler. 0 gods, after a year he remembers; he hates

but he can’t-won’t-refuse.”

Critias pounded the windowframe. “Seh!” he said, watching the smoke rising from

the city’s rooftops. The Nisi obscenity was somehow appropriate. If the gods,

what remained of them, had intended to cripple what remained of order and

competence in Sanctuary they could not have done a better job. He had even

allowed the fatal thought-that the situation could not possibly get worse-to

percolate through his consciousness.

“Commander,” he said with a heavy sigh. “You’d better take a look at this.”

Tempus followed the lines of his lieutenant’s outstretched arm. He said nothing,

so the others-Molin, Jihan, Shupansea, and finally Randal-crowded around the

broken window.

“It’s all up now.” Torchholder turned away and slouched against the wall.

Jihan closed her eyes, reaching deep into her primal knowledge of all water and

salt water in particular. “We’ve got a bit of time. With the tides they won’t be

able to enter the harbor until after sundown.”

“I don’t expect you’d be able to send them back the way they came?” Molin asked.

Shupansea tried looking, staring, and leaning perilously far out the window and

saw nothing but the myopic fuzziness of the wharves and the ocean beyond it.

“Send what back?” she inquired with evident irritation.

“The Rankan Empire, my lady,” Tempus explained. “Come to find out what’s going

on in this forsaken backwater.”

“How many ships?”

“Lots,” the big man said with a feral grin.

The Beysa stepped back from the window, suddenly remembering that she had

dismissed her guard and that none of those between herself and the door could be

considered willing allies to her cause. “We must make preparations,” she said,

edging backward toward escape.

“You put the fear of Ranke’s strong right arm into her,” Crit snorted, once the

nervous woman had disappeared down the narrow steps. The lone ship fighting its

way through the tidal currents carried no more than two hundred men, including

oarsmen, and was equipped for tribute, not combat.

“I should have killed her,” Jihan muttered.

“You would never have left this room alive,” Tempus informed her.

“I? I would never have left this room? I could have frozen that little bitch

before she knew what happened to her.”

“And what would your father have said to that?” Tempos retorted.

The Froth Daughter went red-eyed and icy for a moment. She raised a fist toward

the Stepson’s commander and shook it at him. Her scale armor creaked as she

stomped back to the table where Niko was moaning softly. Molin peered intently

out the window lest she see his smile; Crit was fighting laughter himself and

nearly lost the battle when he glimpsed the priest biting his lower lip.

“I’m taking Stealth back downstairs,” Stormbringer’s daughter announced,

effortlessly holding the grown man in her arms. “Is anyone coming with me?”

She had strength and power it was dangerous to mock, however immature its

manifestation. Not even Randal, who of the men was the most clearly respectful

of gods and magic, dared to answer her.

“What now?” Randal asked, easing himself onto the stool Ischade had used.

Jihan’s touch had cleansed and sealed the surfaces of his wounds; he had his own

healing resources to call on but his continuing tremors indicated that the

little mage had not yet paid the full price for the day’s exertions.

With the last of the women departed, Tempus felt his confidence returning: “For

you-rest. If we need you again we’ll need you healthy. Go stay with Jihan and

Niko if you can’t finish the job yourself over at the Mageguild. Crit, you get

someone in that damn house others. And get Kama-however you have to do it. The

rest of us will see about restoring the appearance of order in this damn place

before that ship docks.”

He looked out the window again as trumpets blared from the gateways; Shupansea

had evidently reached her advisors. Squads of Burek fighters, deadly swordsmen

and archers despite their baggy silk pantaloons and polished scalps, were

double-timing across the courtyards. Either all Beysib were nearsighted like

their empress and believed the entire Rankan fleet loomed beyond the horizon, or

they were taking no chances.

When the triple portrait had burned, the fire had touched Tempus-not as it had

touched Randal, but purging him of the dark associations between Death’s Queen,

Niko, and himself. The shock, and the pain, were still strong-he’d kill the

witch when he could for the crippling scars she’d left in Niko- but the

compulsion he’d felt since the black storms in the capital was fading.

“Damn plague town,” he said to himself. “Infecting everything it touches with

its disease. Let the fish people have it.”

Torchholder looked over at him. “You just. might have something there, Riddler.”

He liked the idea coalescing in his thoughts; unconsciously he tugged at his

sleeves as a sense of competence returned to him. “Now, then-whatever we might

feel about the long-term implications of Theron’s delegation I think we all

agree that this is not the time to have any outsider wandering around. Right?”

The other men nodded reluctant agreement.

“We also know them well enough to know that once they suspect we’re hiding

anything they’ll make imperial nuisances out of themselves. And they’re

suspicious right now just from the smoke.” He didn’t wait for them to nod this

time. “They’ll want to be out there unless we give them a bloody good reason for

staying exactly where we put them: plague-quarantined for their own protection.”

Critias arched an eyebrow. “Priest, I could find myself liking you.”

Ischade made her way to the White Foal alone. She’d separated from her Beysib

escort near the Peres house when the anarchists and so-called revolutionaries

had challenged them. With their twirling swords they’d seemed more than a match

for the poorly-armed quartet that had come charging out of the alley and she had

been grateful for the opportunity to slide into the shadows unnoticed.

The house had called out to her: her possessions, her lover, her magic, the tiny

ring now on Haught’s slender finger. Not long before-before her explosive

journey to the palace-the call would have been irresistible. She would have had

the power to sunder any wards Roxane had concocted. And she would have done just

that: gone blundering into another abortive confrontation with the Nisi witch.

If the battle within Niko’s rest-place had done nothing else it had vented the

excess of power which had blighted her vision since Tempus had returned to

Sanctuary and ordered the destruction of the Globes of Power. Purged and

refreshed, she perceived the wards not simply as Haught’s betrayal or Rox-ane’s

arrogance but as the finely strung trap that they were.

They think I am still blind to the finer workings, she’d said to the raven

perched on the stone finial beside her. Their first mistake. Let’s see if there

are others.

No one bothered her as she picked her way across the open expanse of mud

surrounding the new White Foal bridge. It was probable that none of the bravos

running between Downwind and the more profitable riots uptown could see her

though even she was uncertain how far her magic, or her curse, extended in such

directions, now that her power had resumed its normal proportions.

Her house showed signs of her indisposition. The black roses brawled with each

other, sending up bloomless canes armed with wicked thorns that flaked the

rusted iron fence where they rubbed against it. And the wards? Ischade shuddered

at the sight of the heavy blotches of power smeared stridently across her

personal domain. With small movements of her hands, hands now less powerful but

once again skilled and certain, she constrained the roses and reshaped the wards

into a more acceptable pattern.

The gate swung open to greet her; the raven preceded her to the porch.

Once across the threshold, Ischade kicked the heavy-soled boots the Beysib

soldier had given her into a comer where, in time, her magic would twist them

into something delicate and brightly colored. She retrieved her candles, lit

them, and settled into the small mountain of shimmering silk that was, in the

final sense, her home.

Inhaling the familiarity-the lightness-of it, she gathered the tangled skein of

imaginary silk which bound the Peres house to her and studied her options. She

touched each strand gently, so gently that no one in the uptown house would

suspect her interest as she reacquainted herself with what rightly belonged to

her. Then she drew the thread that bound her to Straton as surely as it bound

him to her.

Straton!

Ischade lived at the fringes of time, as she lived at the fringes of the greater

magics practiced by the likes of Roxane or even Randal. She was older than she

looked; probably older than she remembered. Straton was not the first who cut

through her defenses-even her curse-to hurt her, but anguish had no sense of

proportion: it was now. The Peres house, Moria, Stil-cho, even Haught; she

wanted those back through pride but the sandy-haired man who hated magic had a

different claim. Not love.

Partnership, perhaps-someone who, because he had shattered the walls which

surrounded her, lessened the loneliness of existence at the fringes. Someone

whose demands and responses were simple and who, like all the others, eventually

broke the rules which were not. She’d sent Straton away for his own good and

he’d come back, like all the others, with his simple, impossible demands. But,

unlike the others, he hadn’t died and that, the necromant realized with a

shiver, might be- for want of a better word-love.

He would not die, or be stripped of his dignity, in the Peres house, if she had

to destroy the world to stop it.

Walegrin paced the length of the dark, malodorous cellar. Life, specifically

combat, had been much easier when he had been responsible for no more than the

handful of men he personally led. Now he was a commander, forced to stay behind

the lines of imminent danger coordinating the activities of the entire garrison.

They said he did the job well but all he felt was a vicious burning in his gut

as bad as any arrow.

“Any sign?” he shouted through the slit window to the street.

“More smoke,” the lookout shouted back so Walegrin missed Thrusher’s hawk-call.

The wiry little man swung himself feet first through another window, landing

lightly but not before Walegrin had his knife drawn. Thrush took the arrows out

of his mouth and laughed.

‘Too slow, chief. Way too slow.”

“Damn, Thrush-what’s going on out there?”

“Nothing good. See this?” He handed the blond man one of his arrows. “That’s

what the piffle-shit are using. Blue fletch-ings-like the one that took Strat

down up near the wall.”

“So it wasn’t Jubal starting all this?”

“Hell no-but they’re in it now: them, piffles, fish. Stepsons-anyone with an

edge or a stick. They’re giving no quarter. It’s startin’ to bum out there,

chief.”

“Are we holding?”

“Holding what-” Thrusher began, only to be interrupted by the lookout and the

arrival of a messenger with a scroll from the palace. “There’s no territory

bigger than the ground under your feet.”

Walegrin read Molin’s message, crumpled the paper, and stomped it into the

offal. “Shit-on-a-stick,” he grumbled. “It’s gonna get worse-a lot worse. The

palace wants plague sign posted on Wideway and the Processional; seems our

visitors have arrived.”

“Plague sign?” Thrusher whistled and broke his remaining arrow. “Why not just

bum the whole place to the ground? Shit-where’re we supposed to get paint?”

“Use charcoal, or blood. Hell, don’t worry about it; I’ll take care of it. I got

to get out of here anyway. You find me Kama.”

The little man’s face blanched beneath his black beard. “Kama-she started the

whole thing… taking Strat down with Jubal’s arrow! There isn’t a blade or

arrow out there not marked for her back!”

“Yeah-well, I don’t believe she did it, so you get her back to the barracks for

safe-keeping. You and Cythen.”

“Your orders, chief? She’s probably meat by now anyway.”

“She’ll be alive-hiding somewhere near where we caught her that night.”

“An’ if she’s not?”

“Then I’m wrong and she did start it. My orders, Thrush: Find her before someone

else does.”

Walegrin endured Thrush’s disappointed sigh and watched as the little man left

the same way he’d come; then he went up to the street.

Plague sign: the palace wanted plague sign to keep the visitors on the straight

and narrow. It might work. It might keep the Imperials tight on their ship, away

from the madness that was Sanctuary. But it would sure as hell bring panic to

what was left of the law-abiding community and, the way things were going, it

would probably bring plague as well.

He wrenched a burning brand out of a neighboring building and, after sending the

lookout down to the cellar, headed off to the wharves. It wasn’t two hours since

the afternoon sky had been split by a dark apparition streaking between the

Peres house and the palace. Damn witches. Damn magic. Damn every last one of

them who made honest men die while they played games with gods.

* * *

Understanding came slowly to Stilcho, which was not at all surprising. There was

no peace in Ischade’s one-time house for understanding and a man, once he

understood himself to be dead, did not reconsider <he issue. Indeed, his first

reaction on seeing Straton there with an arrow by his heart was considerably

less than charitable. This bleeding hulk who had supplanted him in Her

affections; this murder-dealing Stepson who had massacred his comrades was

getting naught but what he deserved.

His opinion hardened further when the globe was spinning madness into all of

them and the injured Stepson had summoned the strength to reach into that

dazzling blue array of magic to disrupt it. At first, all Stilcho had seen was

the globe passing from Haught to Roxane: from bad to worse; he had cursed

Straton with all the latent power his hell-seeing eye possessed. He had not been

gentle getting his hands under Strat’s shoulders and dragging him along the

hallway while Roxane gloated and Haught wore a superficial obsequiousness.

Then he saw the little things they did not: the subtle wrong-ness in the globe

wrought wards, the holes through which She might be yet able to reach. He felt

the pulse of fear and anticipation pounding at his temples, making his hands

sweat-and that he had never expected to feel again; he even remembered,

distantly, what it meant.

Haught had said She had cut him loose-had proved it- but now Haught had nothing

except what Roxane had allowed and Death’s Queen would surely have claimed

him… if he’d been dead.

“I’m alive?”

He paused for a heartbeat’s time and went immediately back to moving the

Stepson, as they had ordered. What man could bear to lose such a precious gift?

But he tugged more gently now; Strat, whatever he had meant with his gesture,

had given him life. He pushed the kitchen door shut with his foot and wiped the

spittle from the fallen man’s chin.

“Kill me,” Strat begged when Stilcho bent over him.

Their eyes locked. Stilcho felt himself assaulted and dragged to a level of

consciousness he had never, living or dead, imagined.

Strat was going to be tortured; was going to be systematically stripped of every

image his memory held. Death would spare him nothing but the pain and, for

Strat, the pain would not be the true torture. Stilcho remembered his own

torture at Moruth’s hands. He shrank with the knowledge that no little heroics,

like a slash to the carotid, would spare this man. He had never, at his best,

risen above little heroics but he would now, for Straton. The determination came

instantaneously and suffused the resurrected man with a glow that would have

chilled the Nisi witches beyond the door-had they seen it.

“It won’t work. Ace,” he informed the Stepson as he contrived to make him a bit

more comfortable on the floor. “Think of something else. Think of lies until you

believe them. Haught can’t see the truth; he can only see what you believe is

the truth.” He ripped a comer from Strat’s blood-soaked tunic and tucked it up

his sleeve. “Don’t fight them; just lie.”

Strat blinked and groaned. Stilcho hoped he’d understood. There wasn’t time for

more. The door was opening. He prayed he wouldn’t have to watch.

“I said the table,” Haught said in his soft, malice-laden voice.

Stilcho shrugged and thought, carefully, about being dead. But Haught had no

energy for the likes of him, not with Roxane-Stilcho’s empty eye saw Roxane, not

Tasfalen-hovering behind him and Strat helpless at his feet.

“Find me Tempus’s secrets,” a man’s voice with strange, menacing inflections

commanded. “If they hide the son from me, I’ll have the father.”

The witch produced the globe from wherever she had hidden it. Stilcho clutched

his sleeve where the bloody cloth was hidden and backed toward the door. They

didn’t notice him leaving-or perhaps they did. They were laughing, a laughter

that rose in pitch until it blended with the maniacal whine of the globe itself.

But they didn’t call him back as he edged around the newel-post and slunk

upstairs.

It was not difficult to find Moria. She had only gotten to her bedroom doorway

before succumbing to the horror around her. Stilcho found her with her arms

wrapped around her ankles and her Rankan-gold hair spilling past her knees onto

the floor.

“Moria!”

She lifted her head to look at him-blankly at first, then wide-eyed. Her breath

sucked in and held, ready to scream if he came any closer.

“Moria, snap out of it,” he demanded in an urgent whisper.

Her scream was nothing more than a series of mewling squeaks as she scuttled

away from him. She froze, except for her eyes, when her spine butted into the

wainscoting. Stilcho, no stranger to utter terror himself, felt pity for her but

had no time to give in to it. Grabbing her wrist he hauled her, one-handed, to

her feet and slapped her hard when the mewling threatened to become something

louder.

“For godssakes get control of yourself-if you want to live through this at all.”

He shook her hard and she went silent, but alert, in his arms. “Where’s a window

that overlooks the street?” He had never willingly come to the uptown house,

never wanted to remember the times that he had.

Moria pulled back from him. Her bodice, much torn and retied, fell down from her

shoulders. She did not seem to notice but Stilcho, with death still in his

nostrils and hell itself downstairs in the kitchen, knew beyond all doubt that

he was as alive as he had ever been.

“Moria, help me.” He took her arm again. Haught hadn’t slighted her with his

magic: tear-streaked and disheveled she retained her beauty. 0 gods, he wanted

to go on living.

“You’re … you’re-” She put a hand out to touch the good side of his face.

“A window,” he repeated even after she fell against him, burying her face in a

shirt that had seen better days. “Moria, a window-if we’re going to help him and

save ourselves.”

She pointed at the window beyond her bed and sank back to the floor when he left

her to fight, oh so silently, with its casement.

Stilcho panicked for a second when the salt-rusted window swung wide open. Not

from the noise, because Strat screamed then, but from the wards he could see

shimmering like whorehouse silks flush against the outer walls. He forgot to

breathe until his heart pounded and his vision blurred, but it seemed the wards

were for larger forces and were not affected by the iron-and-glass casement.

The horse was still out there: Strat’s bay horse that Ischade had painstakingly

restored to life. It danced away from the fires burning beyond the wards and the

occasional bravo racing down the street but it had no intention of abandoning

its vigil-not even when Stilcho reached out to it as he had learned to reach for

all of Ischade’s creations. Eyes that were red, vengeful, and not at all equine

regarded him for a moment, then turned away.

Stilcho stepped back from the window, smiling. He retained the ability to see

the workings of magic but magic no longer took notice of him. It was a very

small price to pay for the ordinary sensations returning to him. Moreover, it

was one he had anticipated. He grabbed a handful of rumpled linen from the bed

and had begun tearing it into strips before he noticed Moria huddled on the

floor.

“Get dressed.”

She stood up, examining the tangled ribbons of her bodice. Heaving an

exasperated sigh, Stilcho dropped the sheets and gripped her wrists. The soft

flesh of her breasts rested against his hands.

“Gods, Moria-your clothes, Maria’s clothes! You can’t get out of here dressed

like that.”

Moria’s face lost its complete vacantness as the idea penetrated through her

terror that Stilcho-living, breathing Stilcho-would somehow get her out of here.

She yanked the ribbons free, tearing the dress and its memories from her, diving

into the ornate chests where, beneath the courtesan’s trappings which Ischade

had endowed her with, her stained and tattered street clothes remained.

She made a fair amount of noise in her industry, hurling unwanted lace and satin

to the floor behind her, but between the globe’s whine and Strat’s screams it

was doubtful that anyone in the kitchen heard or cared about the commotion

upstairs. Stilcho finished ripping the linen.

Blood would draw the bay horse. Stilcho pulled the bloody rag from his sleeve

and tied it to the linen. He’d used blood to bring the dead across water into

the upper town. Strat’s blood would bring the horse into conflict with the

wards, chipping away at the flaws in them.

“What are you doing?” Moria demanded, forcing the last of the rounded, Rankan

contours into a now snug Ilsigi tunic.

“Making a blood lure,” he replied, lowering the makeshift rope and swinging the

dull red knot at its end toward the horse.

She bounded across the room. “No. No!” she protested, struggling to take the

cloth from him. “They’ll see; they’ll know. We can get out across the roof.”

Stilcho held her off with one arm and went back to swinging the lure. “Wards,”

he muttered. He had the bay’s attention now. Its eyes, in his other vision, were

brighter; its coat rippled with crimson anger.

But wards and warding had no meaning to Moria, though she was one of Ischade’s.

She rammed stiff fingers into his gut and made a lunge for freedom. It was all

he could go to grab her around the waist, keeping her barely inside the house.

The linen slipped from his hands and fluttered to the street below. Moria

whimpered; he pressed her face against his chest to muffle the sound. Ward-fire,

invisible to her but excruciating nonetheless, dazzled her hands and forearms.

“We’re trapped!” she gasped. “Trapped!”

Hysteria rose in her face again. He grabbed her wrists, knowing the pain would

shock her into silence.

“That’s Strat down there. Straton! They’ll come for him. The horse will bring

them, Moria. Ischade, Tempus: they’ll all come for him-and us.”

“No, no,” she repeated, her eyes white all around. “Not Her. Not Her-”

Stilcho hesitated. He remembered that fear; that all-consuming fear he felt of

Ischade, of Haught, of everything that had had power over him-but he’d forgotten

it as well. Death had burned the fear out of him. He felt danger, desperation,

and the latent death that pervaded this house and this afternoon-but bowel

numbing fear no longer had a claim on him.

“I’m going to save Strat-hide him until they come for him. I’m going to save me,

too. I’m lucky today, Moria: I’m alive and I’m lucky. Even without the

horse….”

But he wasn’t without the bay horse. The bloody rag had landed on the carved

stone steps that had been, many years ago, the Peres family’s pride. The bay

pounded on the steps, surrounded but unaffected by ward-fire. It scented Strat’s

blood soaking into the wood planks of the lower hallway and heard his anguish.

Trumpeting a loyalty that transcended life and death, it reared, flailing at the

ephemeral flames which engulfed it. Stilcho watched as the mortal image of the

horse vanished and the other one became a black void.

“Moria, the back stairs, the servant’s stairs to the kitchen, where are they?

It’s only a matter of time.”

Candlelight flickered over Ischade’s dark-clad body. She had collapsed backwards

into her silken lair. Her hair made tangled webs around her face and shoulders.

One arm arced around her head, the other fell limply across her waist; both were

marked with dark gashes where the priest’s glass had cut her. Ischade had death

magic, not healing.

She was, if not oblivious to her exhausted body, unmindful of it. If her efforts

were successful there would be time enough for rest and recovery. She continued

manipulating the bonds which made all she had ever owned a focus for her power.

She set resonances at each flawed boundary, reinforced them as motes of warding

eroded away and tried not to feel the tremors that were Straton.

It was not her way to move with such delicate precision- but it was the only way

she had left. Balancing her power through every focal object within the Peres

house which could contain it, she hoped to build her presence until she could

pull from all directions and burst the warding sphere Roxane had created. She

had discarded the thread tying her to the bay horse. She had never regarded the

creature as hers but only as a gift, a rare gift, to her lover. Thus the moment

when it had scented Strat’s blood passed unnoticed but the instant when it

penetrated the wards was seared into her awareness.

Her first response was a heartfelt curse for whatever was causing havoc in her

neat, tedious work. The curse soared and circled the wards until Ischade

understood she had an ally within the house. She examined the small skein of

living and dead within whom she had a focus and found that one, Stilcho, was no

longer anchored. Stilcho, whom Haught had stolen and fate had set to living

freedom.

Smiling, she pushed her imperceptible awareness past the ward-consuming

emptiness.

“Haught,” she whispered, weaving into his mind. “Remember your father. Remember

Wizardwall. Remember slavery. Remember the feel of the globe in your hands

before she stole it from you. She does not love you, Haught. Does not love your

fine Nisi face while she wears a Rankan one. Does not love your aptness while

she is trapped in a body that has none. Oh, remember, Haught; remember every

time you look on that face.”

The ambitious mind of the ex-slave, ex-dancer, ex-apprentice shivered when

Ischade touched it. Foolish child-he had believed she would not look for him

again and had taken none-of the simple steps to ensure that she could not. She

sealed her hypnotic surgery with a gentle caress on the ring he wore: the ring

he had thought to use against her.

Ischade retreated, then, behind the little statues, the gewgaws and the sharp

knives she had scattered throughout the house. Her thoughts would eat at a mind

already disposed to treason just as the essence of the bay horse ate the ward

fire. It was only a matter of time.

“You have to eat. Magic can’t do everything.”

Randal opened his mouth to agree and received a great wooden spoonful of Jihan’s

latest aromatic posset. His eyes bulged, his ears reddened, and he wanted

nothing more than to spit the godsawful curdled lump to the floor. But the Froth

Daughter was watching him and he dared do nothing but swallow it in one

horrendous gulp. His hands were immobilized in gauze slings, suspended in oval

buckets filled with a salted solution of the Froth Daughter’s devising. His own

magical resources were insufficient to guide the spoon to his mouth- if he had

been so inclined in the first place.

He had been to the Mageguild and found his treatment there even less pleasant.

Get rid of the globe; get rid of the demon; get rid of the witches, his

colleagues had told him-and don’t come home again until you do. So he’d come

back to the palace to be tended by Jinan and to fret over the way fate was

unfolding for him.

“You tried,” Jihan assured him, setting the bowl aside. “You did your best.”

“I failed. I knew what happened and I let her trick me. Niko would have

understood; I knew that Niko would have understood why we had him down here. But

I listened to her instead.” He shook his head in misery; a lock of hair fell

down to cover his eyes. Jihan leaned forward to brush it back, moving carefully

to avoid the shiny, less severe bums on his face or the singed, almost bald,

portion of his scalp that still smelled of the fire.

“We’ve all made more than our share of mistakes in this,” Tempus commiserated

from the doorway. He unfastened his cloak, letting it drop to the floor as he

strode across the room. The hypocaust fires had been banked for two days but the

room was still the warmest, by far, in the palace. “How is he?” he asked when he

stood beside Niko.

The young man’s body showed few traces of his ordeal. The swellings and bruises

had all but disappeared; his face, in sleep, was serene and almost smiling.

“Better than he should be,” Jihan said sadly. She laid her hand lightly on

Niko’s forehead. The half-smile vanished and the hell-haunted mercenary strained

against the leather straps binding him to the pallet. “The demon has his body

completely now and heals as it wishes,” she acknowledged, lifting her hand.

Niko, or his body, quieted.

“You’re sure?”

She shrugged, reached for Niko again, then restrained that impulse by gripping

Tempus’s arm instead. “As sure as I am of anything where he’s concerned.”

“Riddler?” The hazel eyes flickered open but they did not focus and the voice,

though it had the right timbre, was not Niko’s. “Riddler, is that you?”

“Gods-no,” Tempus took a step forward then hesitated. “Janni?” he whispered.

The body that contained the demon and Janni and whatever remained of Nikodemos

writhed and pulled its lips back into a skull-like grin.

“The globe, Riddler. Abarsis. The globe. Break the globe!”

Its fingers splayed backwards, seeming to have no bone within them; its neck

snapped from side to side with force enough to make the wooden slats jump.

Tempus rushed to weave his hands through Niko’s slate-gray hair, cushioning the

other-world tortures with his own flesh.

“Do something for him!” he bellowed as the spasms rocked Niko’s body and blood

began to seep from his nose and lips.

“Do something for him!”

The demon’s mocking echo erupted from somewhere in Niko’s gut. Sparks sizzled

along Tempus’s forearm, paralyzing him. Niko’s arms, no longer trembling,

strained purposefully against the leather straps.

“It’s going to transfer!” Randal screamed, leaping up from his chair. He

gestured with bum-twisted fingers. His will called forth fire but his ruined

flesh could not support it. Groaning, he sank to his knees.

“Poor little mageling,” the familiar voice issuing from a shimmering blue globe

chuckled with strychnine sweetness. “Let me fix that for you.” A tongue of

indigo flame licked out from the globe; Randal, like Tempus, was motionless.

Jihan took a deep breath that formed ice in the salt-water buckets an arm’s

length away. She had been patient with these mortals, abiding by their

constraints, accepting their wisdom even when it contradicted everything her

instincts demanded, and now that they were finally helpless she was going to do

things her way.

Niko turned endless, empty eyes toward the blue sphere, asking a silent

question.

“Stormbringer’s Froth,” Roxane replied, with the malice and disdain reserved by

women for lesser women.

A frigid wind swirled through the once-warm room. No one, especially a Nisi

witch or a nameless demon, spoke that way about Jihan and survived. No matter

that Stormbringer had created his parthenogenic offspring from an arctic sea

storm, Jihan knew an insult when she felt one. She pelted the sphere with a

thick glaze of ice, then she leaned her palms on Niko’s chest.

“I’m here!” she announced, bringing a howl of cold air into Niko’s rest-place.

“I’m here, damn you.”

She rode her anger across the once-beautiful landscape of a moat-endowed mind.

The dark crystal stream roiled and froze in agonized shapes. Charred trees

snapped and crashed to the ground under the burden of the ice that came in her

wake. She reached the meadow where the pure light of Janni guarded the gate.

“I’m going in,” she told him, though she had no communion with such spirits and

could not hear nor understand his reply.

The heavy door with its man-thick iron bars loomed before her. Leaving a pattern

of rime on the metal, she passed beyond it to confront an eternity as vast and

empty as the demon-Niko’s eyes had been.

“Coward!” the Froth Daughter shrieked as nothingness, which was the essence of

all demonkind, leeched her substance away. She lashed out blindly, stupidly

expending herself against an enemy whose chief attribute was its absence. “Co

war-”

She retreated, a ragged wisp streaming back to the frost-bound doorway, and

collapsed in the meadow, her fury and her confidence equally diminished. Demonic

laughter using her own stolen voice compounded her shame. In her impotence Jihan

gathered shards of ice and hurled them at the gate.

“I’ll be back,” she told it as the ice melted into the thawing crystal stream.

“You’ll see.”

She sniffled and wiped her eyes on a damp forearm. The ground was slick with

melting ice; she slipped more than once. Pain and cold became part of her mortal

vocabulary as she made her way home, never once looking back to see that the

meadow was brighter or the crystal stream rushing fast and clear.

“I thought we’d lost her,” Tempus admitted as he watched the Froth Daughter pick

her way slowly across the hillside.

We? Do we care? Stormbringer inquired in a dangerously friendly tone.

Tempus didn’t bother to turn around. He wouldn’t be wherever he suddenly was

without some god or another’s interference; and he was no longer awed by

interference. “I care- isn’t that obvious? She damn near annihilated herself for

me.”

Your care is not enough. She is mortal now and requires something less abstract.

If love is beyond you, surely you remember rape? The Father-of-Weather

manifested himself before Tempus: all blood-red eyes and pans that did not

become a single whole.

The man who had been Vashanka’s minion shrugged his nonexistent shoulders and

gave the god a critical glance. “It is an option / retain,” he said defiantly.

You are a nasty little man-but I have need of you-

“No.”

She is a goddess.

“No.”

I’ll attend to this abomination.

“You’ll do that regardless-for what it did to her. The answer’s still no.”

I’ll turn my daughter’s eyes toward another.

“It’s a deal.”

The Stormchildren lay in state on a velvet-covered dais in the vault-ceilinged

room known as the Ilsig Bedchamber. Musicians gathered in an alcove, playing the

reedy, discordant melodies beloved by the Beysib and guaranteed to set Molin

Torchholder’s neck hairs on end. He pressed his forefingers against the bridge

of his nose and sought a pleasant thought, any pleasant thought, that might make

the waiting easier.

Shupansea, in a curtained alcove opposite the musicians, was equally anxious but

had not the luxury of isolation. Her waiting-women swarmed around her fussing

with her hair, her jewels, and the splendor of her cosa. She was the Beysa this

evening-as she had not been since her cousin’s execution in the summer. Her

breasts had been dusted with luminous powders and gilt with gold and silver; her

normally slender hips were augmented by the swaying brocade-jeweled panniers in

which her personal vipers were accustomed to ride. Her thigh-length fair hair

had been supported and wired until it hung about her like a cloak and condemned

her to look neither up nor down, nor side to side, but only straight ahead. It

was a costume she had worn since childhood but now, after a season in the modest

attire of the Rankan nobility, she felt awkward and feared for the outcome of

the rites they were about to perform.

“You must not sweat,” her aunt chided her, reminding her of the physical

discipline demanded of Mother Bey’s avatar.

She steeled herself and the offending perspiration ceased.

Footsteps came through the tiny doorway behind her. “You’re nervous,” a welcome

voice consoled her as the prince reached out to take her hand.

“Our priests would have us wait until the fifth decoction has been made but we

dare not. Not after this afternoon. We have countermanded the priests; it is the

first time we have done so. They are anxious but we think the waiting is more

dangerous than success or failure.”

“Mother Bey guides you,” Kadakithis assured her, squeezing the be-ringed fingers

ever so gently.

Shupansea lifted her shoulders a fraction. “She says only that I must not be

alone afterwards.”

The prince, who had finally edged his way through her women to stand where she

could see him, made a wry face. “You are never alone, Shu-sea.”

She smiled and gave him a stare which proved Beysib eyes could be erotic and

unsettling at the same time. “I will be alone tonight-with you.”

The music changed abruptly. Before the golden-haired prince could express his

surprise or pleasure he was politely, but firmly, shoved to one side.

“It is time.”

The Beysa came forward onto a cloth-of-gold carpet laid between the alcove and

the altar. Her first steps were tentative; she tottered between the outstretched

arms of her waiting-women. Her glazed eyes held no power, only simple terror of

the ancient bald priest who waited for her with a delicate glass’ vial and a

knife of razor-sharp obsidian.

Her beynit vipers, tasting the incense and the music, rose from the panniers to

begin their own journey. Shupansea trembled involuntarily as the scales slid

coldly between her thighs- for the cosa was meant for the display and

convenience of the snakes, not the avatar. Three sets of fangs sank deep into

sensitive skin: the beynit did not approve of her anxiety. Venom enough for the

deaths of a dozen men shot into her. She gasped then relaxed as the languid

strength of Mother Bey enveloped her.

She raised her arms, lifting the cosa away from her body. The serpents emerged,

baring their moist fangs and their vermilion mouths. It was her priest’s turn to

tremble anxiously. The Beysib priest summoned Molin to the altar where, without

ceremony or explanation, the ancient, bald man transferred the ritual artifacts

from the old order to the new and ran from the room.

Molin held both with evident discomfort and outright fear. “What do I do?” he

whispered hoarsely.

“Complete the ceremony,” the voice he had last heard in Stonnbringer’s swirling

universe informed him from Shupan-sea’s mouth. “Carefully.”

Torchholder nodded. The vial contained blood from the Stormchildren, venom from

the snake Niko had slain with Askelon’s weapons, and ichor from Roxane’s giant

serpent which had been combined and distilled four times over with I powders

the Beysib priests knew but had no names for. The ‘ scent of its vapors could

kill a man; a drop of the fluid might poison an army. Molin intended to be very

careful.

“The vial first,” the avatar informed him. “Poured on the knife edge and offered

to each of our children.”

Molin remained slack-jawed and motionless.

“The snakes,” Shupansea’s normal voice whispered, but the Rankan priest did not

begin to move. “Hold your breath,” she added after a long pause.

He had once said to Randal that he did whatever had to be done, be it moving the

Globe of Power or unstoppering the lethal glass teardrop. He held his breath and

tried not to notice the green-tinged fumes or the sizzling sound the liquid made

as it ate through the carpet and on into the granite beneath. The obsidian shook

when he extended it toward the smallest of the serpents-the one with its leaf

nosed head resting on the Beysa’s right nipple. He was prepared to die in any

number of unpleasant ways.

The beynit’s tongue flicked a half-dozen or more times before it consented to

add a glistening drop of venom to the sulphurous ooze already congealing on the

knife edge-and it was the most decisive of the lot. His lungs strained to

bursting and his vision drifting amid black motes of unconsciousness, Molin

faced the avatar again.

Shupansea held her hands out palms upward. He looked down and saw the lattice

work of uncountable knife-scars there. During his youthful days with the armies

he had killed more times than he cared to remember, and killed women more than

once as well, but he hesitated-for once unable to do what had to be done.

“Quickly!” Shupansea commanded.

But he did not move and it fell to her to grab the knife, letting its noisome

edges sink deep. 0 Mother! she prayed as her blood carried its searing burden

toward her heart. It was too soon. The priests had said wait for the fifth

decoction; they had abandoned their offices rather than preside at her death.

The serpents plunged their fangs into her breasts many times over but it would

not be enough. Not even the presence of Mother Bey within her would be enough to

change the malignancy Roxane had created. Clenching her fingers together, the

Beysa heard the rough edge of the knife grind into bone but she felt nothing.

She fainted, although the lifelong discipline of Mother Bey’s avatar was such

that she did not topple to the ground. Still, she was oblivious to the agony

when the imperfect decoction reached her heart and stopped it.

She did not hear the collective gasp that rose from Beysib and Rankan alike when

her eyes rolled white and the three serpents stiffened to rise two-thirds of

their length above her shuddering breasts.

She did not feel Molin let go of the knife or see him ignore the hissing beynit

to hold her upright when even discipline faded.

She did not hear Kadakithis’s enraged shout or the slapping of his sandals

across the stone as he raced to take her from the priest’s arms.

She experienced nothing at all until the prince’s tears fell into her open eyes

then she blinked and stared up at him.

“We’ve done it,” she explained with a faint smile, letting the now-harmless

knife fall from her scarred, but uncut, hands.

But barely. Shupansea lacked the strength to gather the drops of blood now

welling up on her breast in a second, pristine vial; nor could she take that

vial and place its contents on the lips of first Gyskouras, then Alton. Her eyes

were closed while everyone else prayed that the changed blood would awaken the

Stormchildren and they remained that way when the two boys began to move and a

chorus of thanks rose from the assembly.

“She needs rest,” the prince told the staring women around them. “Call her

guards and have her carried back to her rooms.”

“She is alone with All-Mother,” the eldest of the women explained. “We do not

interfere.”

Kadakithis blinked with disbelief. “The goddess isn’t going to carry her to bed,

is she?” he demanded of their glass-eyed silence. “Well, dammit, then-I’ll carry

her.”

He was a slight young man compared to any of the professional soldiers in his

service, but he’d been trained in all the manly arts and lifted her weight with

ease. The trailing cosa tangled in his legs, very nearly defeating him until he

planted both feet on the gilt brocade and ripped the cloth from its frames. The

beynit, their venom temporarily expended, slithered quickly out of his way.

“She is alone with me,” he informed them all, striding out of the bedchamber

with the Beysa cradled in his arms.

Molin watched as they went through the doorway-turning left for the prince’s

suite rather than right toward hers. He suppressed a smile as the snakes found

safe harbor with the other Beysib women, not all of whom were so comfortable

with a serpent spiraling under their garments as Shupansea had been.

Unimpressed by the ceremony surrounding them, the Storm-children behaved as if

just awakened from their daily nap. They had already pulled the velvet hangings

from the altar. Arton twisted the cloth around his head in unconscious imitation

of his S’danzo mother’s headgear while Gyskouras put all his efforts into

wrenching the golden tassels free from its comers.

The archpriest turned to his single acolyte, Isambard, who could scarcely be

expected to control the Stormchildren when they became either adventurous or

cantankerous-which they were certain to do. “Isambard, go downstairs to the

hypocaust room and remind Jihan that the children need her more than anyone

else.” The young man bowed, backed away, then scampered from the room.

Molin then turned his attention to the Beysibs in the room. The musicians he

dismissed immediately, sending them on their way with only the most perfunctory

of compliments. The women stared at him, defying him to give them orders as they

gathered up the discarded cosa and bore it reverently from the chamber. This

left him with a double-handful of priests, their foreheads still bent to the

ground, who had been left to him by Mother Bey’s high priest.

Ignoring the holes and the sacrilege, he paced the length of the gold carpet and

back again. “I think a feast is in order: a private feast. Something delicate

and easily shared: shellfish, perhaps, and such fruit as remains in the

pantries. And wine- watered, I should think. It would not do to dull their

appetites.” He paused, waiting to see which shiny head would move first.

“You’ll see to this.” He pointed his finger at the most curious of the lot; with

their bald skulls, bulging eyes, billowing tunics, and pantaloons, the Beysib

men all looked alike to him. He seldom thought of them as individuals.

The Beysib he had addressed cleared his throat nervously and the one at the

front of their triangular formation pushed himself slowly to his knees. “The

priests of All-Mother Bey serve only Her transcending aspects. We… that is.

You, the Regum Bey, do not serve the Avatar,” he explained.

Torchholder leaned forward to grip the other man’s pectoral ornament. Reversing

it with a quick snap, he used the golden chain as a simple garrotte. “The Beysa

will be hungry. My prince will be hungry,” he said in the soft, intense voice

his own people had come to fear.

“It has never been so,” the Beysib protested, his face darkening as the Rankan

priest hauled him to his feet.

“There is a first time for everything. This could be the first time you visit

the kitchens or it could be the first time you die….” Molin gave the pectoral

another quarter turn.

It was true that the Beysib could show white all around their eyes even when

they were staring. The priest gasped and clung to Torchholder’s wrist with both

hands. “Yes, Lord Torch-holder.”

The mosaic floor of the hypocaust room was hidden under icy, ankle-deep water.

Isambard removed his one-and-only pair of sandals and tied them together over

his shoulder before stepping into it. With his lantern held high he moved

cautiously, knowing there had been snakes down here once and not knowing if the

cold water would stop them.

“Most Reverend Lady Jihan?” he inquired into the darkness, addressing her as he

would have addressed Molin’s long-absent wife.

Silence.

“Most Reverend Lady?” he repeated, sloshing a few steps further.

They were all heaped together on the pallet where they had tied the demon

possessed mercenary, Nikodemos: Jihan, Tem-pus, Randal, and possibly Nikodemos

himself-Isambard couldn’t be sure in this light. They weren’t dead, or not all

of them anyway, because someone was snoring.

“Great Vashanka-Giver of Victories; Gatherer of Souls- abide with me on Your

battlefield.”

Lantern rattling in his hand, the acolyte moved forward. He cleared one of the

great columns that continued upward all the way to the Hall of Justice. A faint

light reflected off the water- a faint blue light such as his lantern could

never cast. His heart seized with panic and his gut tumbling with fear, Isambard

turned around.

A column of ice loomed midway between the bodies and the far wall. Within it a

blue sphere the size and height of his head throbbed; water cascaded to the

floor with each rising pulse. The light grew brighter, calling to him. He walked

toward it: one step, two steps, three-and put his foot down squarely on the

sharpened clasp of Tempus’s discarded cloak. The pain jolted him backward and

backward and broke the spell.

He had left the room before he had time to scream.

Roxane had been within the Globe of Power longer than was prudent especially

since her bond with life was through Tasfalen-who was dead and already beginning

to ripen. With her reacquisition of a globe, the Nisi witch was powerful beyond

comparison but even she could not do all the things which Sanctuary’s situation

required at once. She had a demon hounding her now, as well as all the other

enemies she had accumulated since the first battles were fought along

Wizardwall. The strain of uprooting her soul so many times was starting to show.

She was getting careless-being gone so long, leaving a freshly claimed sack of

bones like Tasfalen without ensuring that it was life-worthy.

Haught, who was frequently foolish but never careless, knelt beside Straton’s

unconscious body on the floor of the Peres house kitchen. The interrogation

Haught had promised his new mistress/master was going worse than slowly. In his

delirium, the Stepson made no distinctions between truth and imagination;

wandering, his mind had given Haught no more than tantalizing hints about

Ischade or Tempus-plus a throbbing headache.

He comprehended smaller healings like the slash on Moria’s foot; he could tamper

with the magic of his betters as he had when he’d exerted his control over

Stilcho but he lacked the complex magical vocabulary necessary to contend

directly with the inertia of a dead or mortally wounded body. He had failed with

Tasfalen; the Rankan noble’s body had turned a pasty shade of blue and its

stiffness, when Roxane returned, would be far more serious than muscle cramps.

But Tasfalen had been Haught’s first attempt; he had already learned from those

mistakes-and Straton was not dead.

The would-be witch studied Tasfalen’s silver-white eyes. A touch from the globe

and he’d have the power to mend Strat’s body enough that the Stepson would no

longer have his retreat into delirium and imagination. He’d unwind the man’s

secrets like so much silk from a cocoon and present his mistress/master with a

portion of it.

Just a touch.

A piece of Haught swiped out toward the Globe of Power like a child dragging a

finger through the icing on a cake. He had enough to heal and a bit to hide for

the future but he hesitated. The wards were wrong: weakened, eroded, vanishing.

He reached a little farther and had a vision of an equine face surrounded by

ward-fire; consuming the ward-fire-

“Impudent slime! Ice water! Damn her! And you-”

The voice was Tasfalen’s but the inflection was all Nisi and malice. The witch

swung a clublike open hand at him, striking with the force of a Wizardwall

avalanche. Haught heard his spine crack against the far wall and felt the blood

streaming from his nose and mouth.

She does not love you, a nameless voice rose out of Haught’s memory. Remember

your/other: a wind-filled husk of flayed skin when the Wizardwall masters had

finished with him. Haught shook the blood from his hand and healed as the witch

ranted, cursed, and swallowed the globe.

Haught was against the cupboard where Shiey kept the knives. Silently he called

one to his sleeve and held it against his forearm when he meekly rose and

followed his mistress/master from the room. He said nothing about the wards or

his vision.

Stilcho crept back up the stairway to the dark landing where Moria waited.

“It’s now or never,” he told the quiet woman, grateful he could not see her face

when he found her wrist and led her back down the stairs.

There were two stairways leading to the kitchen of the Peres house: one came up

from the larder and pantries in the basement, the other ascended to the

servant’s quarters under the eaves. Both had been occupied. Stilcho opened the

door to face the malevolent leer of the household’s cook, Shiey. He knew that

face-the last face his missing eye had seen-and it turned his bowels to ice. His

resolve and his courage vanished; Moria’s hand fell from his trembling fingers.

“We’re taking Straton to the stables,” Moria said in a soft but firm whisper as

she stepped out of Stilcho’s shadow. She had her own fears of these servants

whom the beggar-king Moruth had provided for the house and she had learned how

to hide those fears long ago. “You and you,” she pointed to the burliest pair,

“take his feet.” She looked up to Stilcho.

Giving the one-handed cook a lingering glower, the one-eyed man took position at

the Stepson’s shoulders.

“We’ll get him into the lofts, if we can. And we’ll wait for the help that’s

going to be coming-from everywhere.”

“An’ if’n it don’t?” Shiey demanded.

“We bum the stables around us.”

They grumbled but they had been listening as well; none disagreed. Moria held

the outer door for the men while Shiey gave her cupboards a final inspection.

“Took my best cleaver, didn’t he?” She prowled quickly through the cutlery,

slipping her favorite implements through the leather loops of her belt. “Here,

lady.” She spun around and flipped a serrated poultry knife the length of the

room. Moria felt the hardwood hilt smack into her palm before she’d consciously

decided to catch the knife rather than dodge it. “Ain’t nothin’ can’t be hurt

wi’ a good knife,” Shiey informed her with a grin.

* * *

Walegrin shoved the trencher to one side. Whatever the barracks’ cooks had

thrown into the dinner pot smelled as bad as the smoke he had breathed all

afternoon, and tasted worse. He had men still out in the streets-more than a

dozen good men, not including Thrusher, who had yet to return from his special

private assignment. Maybe the palace had good reason for wanting plague sign

splashed over every other color of graffiti out there; he hoped they did. The

populace was reacting with predictable panic.

He’d kept his men busy fighting but now the sun was down. A Rankan oar-barge

flying Vashanka’s long-absent standard had tied up at the wharf, its passengers

and cargo under imaginary quarantine. No one had yet seen a disease-slain

corpse; rumors were getting wilder and darker with each retelling. So far

Walegrin didn’t believe any of them, but some of the men were showing doubt at

the edges and the night had just begun.

Before he could decide on a course of action, the door to his quarters slammed

open admitting one of the veterans who’d been with him for years.

“Thrush’s at the West Gate with Cythen. They’ve got a body between ’em an’ they

say they won’t give it over.”

“Bloody hells,” the commander exclaimed, crumpling his cloak in one fist. “Watch

the pot, Zump. I’ll be back.”

He went down the stairs at a run. He’d believed in Kama; believed in the mugs of

ale she’d downed with Strat and him a scant week ago. He’d believed she hadn’t

put an arrow in Straton and believed she was smart and wary enough to keep

herself alive after it’d happened.

The temporary palace morgue was just beyond the public gallows. It glowed

faintly in the late twilight. With plague sign up the gravesmen were taking no

chances and had laid a fair carpet of quicklime beneath their feet. Thrush was

arguing loudly with his escort as Walegrin approached.

“As you were,” he commanded, positioning himself carefully between the gravesmen

and the shrouded corpse. “What’s the problem?”

“It’s gotta stay here,” the chief digger said, pointing to the dark object

behind Walegrin’s feet.

Thrusher sucked on his teeth. “But, Commander, he’s one of ours: Malm. He

deserves the rites inside-beside the men he served with for the last time.”

Malm had died two years back and had never stood high in Thrush’s estimation.

Walegrin peered into the darkness. His friend’s face was unreadable. Still, he’d

known Thrusher for thirteen years: if the little man wouldn’t leave Kama’s body

with the gravedigger’s there had to be a good reason.

“We tend our own,” he told the gravesmen.

“The plague, sir. Orders: your orders.”

It was easy for the straw-blond commander to lose his temper. “My man hasn’t got

the plague, damn you. He’s got a big, bloody hole where his stomach used to be!

Take him to the barracks, Thrush-now!”

Thrush and Cythen needed no urging to heave the sagging burden to their

shoulders and double-time it across the parade-ground while Walegrin dueled

silently with the gravediggers.

“Got to tell ’em,” the gravesman said, looking away as he cocked a thumbtoward

the Hall of Justice dome. “Orders’re orders. Even them’s that make ’em can’t

break ’em.”

Walegrin ran a hand through the ragged hair that had escaped the bronze circlet

on his brow. “Take the message to Molin Torchholder, personally then. Tell him

Vashanka’s rites -want performing in the barracks-plague or no plague.”

The least of the diggers headed for the hall. Walegrin waited a moment, then

turned back toward the barracks, quite pleased with himself. Until the gravesman

threatened him, he hadn’t been certain how he was going to get a message to his

mentor without drawing the wrong kind of attention.

“Upstairs-Cythen’s room,” Zump said as soon as he’d crossed the barracks’

threshold. Every one of the half-dozen men in the room was watching him. But at

least they weren’t thinking about plague or imperial barges. Walegrin forced

himself to walk slowly as he climbed the half-flight of stairs to where Cythen,

the only woman billeted with the regular garrison, slept.

Thrush and Cythen stood guard outside the open door.

“How is she?” Walegrin asked as they slid the bolt open.

“I’m fine,” Kama assured him herself, swinging long, leather-clad legs off of

Cythen’s bed.

A dark smear covered most of the right side of her face but it seemed mostly

soot. She wasn’t moving like she’d taken too much punishment.

“I guess I owe you my life,” she said uncomfortably.

“I didn’t think you’d kill Strat. You’d had too many opportunities before-better

opportunities. And you wouldn’t care if he was shacked up with the witch.”

She scowled. “You’re right on the first, anyway.”

“Piffles, Chief,” Thrusher interjected from the open doorway. “Two of them

guarding the cellar we found her in.”

Kama stood in front of Walegrin, looking through and beyond him. She had that

way about her-even dressed in scratched and rag-tied leather she had elegance

and, however unconsciously, the powerful demeanor of her father. The garrison

commander never had the upper hand with her.

“Personal?” he stammered.

“Personal? Personal? Gods, no. They saw me with Strat and you. They thought I’d

sold out-nothing personal about that,” she snapped.

Then why lock her up and put an arrow in Strat? And why Strat and not him?-he

was every bit as easy to find. It was personal, all right, as personal as the

sharp-faced PFLS leader could make it.

“You’ve got worse problems,” Walegrin told her.

Finally she turned away, watching the lamp-flame as if it were the center of the

universe. “Yeah, so they tell me. He used one of Jubal’s arrows, didn’t he? All

hell broke loose, didn’t it?”

Walegrin couldn’t suppress a bitter laugh. “Not quite. Came close. Seems someone

came out of the witch’s house an’ dragged .Strat back in. Stepsons thought

they’d go in to rescue him. Found the place’d been warded: Nisi warded-like

you’d remember, I guess. Old Critias lit back for the palace and found out that

Roxane’d broken out of wherever she’d been hiding and went there ’cause some

slave-apprentice of Ischade’s’d stolen a Globe of Power and stashed it there.

So, no, hell didn’t quite break out-it’s sort of holed up there in the old Peres

place.”

Kama ran her hands through her hair. Her shoulders sagged and when she turned

around again she looked straight at Walegrin. “There’s more, isn’t there.” She

didn’t make it a question.

“Yeah. There’s a boat down at the wharf with Vashanka’s arrows flying from its

mast. They say it’s Brachis at the least and maybe our new Emperor as well.

Can’t be sure because we’ve told them the town’s under plague sign: no one from

Sanctuary’s been on board; no one’s gotten off either. Whatever it is, it’s got

the whole damn palace fired up. They mean to have the town quiet if they have to

kill every known troublemaker before sunrise-and your name’s at the top of

everyone’s list. Word was that you didn’t even have to be brought in alive.”

“Crit?” she asked. “Tempus?”

Walegrin nodded after both names. “Kama, the only Stepson who might not want you

dead is inside the witch’s house with bigger problems than you’ve got. The

nabobs were in trouble anyway; Strat’s arrow didn’t make their problems but the

way it’s comin’ down you’d think you stole the globe and let Roxane out.”

“So what am I supposed to do? Hide the rest of my life? Climb to the highest

rooftop and leap to my ignominious death? Maybe I’ll just go back to Zip and the

rest. I can take care of that myself, at least.” She began pacing, though there

was barely enough space between the bed and the wall for her to take two steps

before turning. “I could get on that boat. Reach Theron, if he’s there-”

The garrison regulars exchanged glances. Under no circumstances was anyone who

knew what had been going on in Sanctuary going anywhere near that wharf without

an arm-long scroll of permissions. Walegrin took a step forward, blocking Kama’s

path.

“I’ve sent word to Molin Torchholder. I told you about him. If there’s anyone in

the palace who’ll understand the truth of this. it’s him.”

Kama stared in disbelief. “Molin’s coming here?”

“To perform your funerary rites. The diggers went to get him. He’ll come. He

might not be too popular with you Wiz-ardwall veterans but he takes care of

Sanctuary. You can trust him-I told you that,” Walegrin assured her, misreading

the shadows that fell across Kama’s face.

“How long?”

“I’ve sent word. He’ll come as soon as he can. The Interiors,” by whom he meant

the few Rankan soldiers still on detail within the palace, “say there was some

sort of big Beysib gathering around sunset-some sort of ritual. I don’t know if

he was involved or not. If he’s got to eat with them he may not get here till

midnight.”

Kama strode to the little window overlooking the stables and a corner of the

parade ground. She popped the shutters and leaned out into the night air.

“I’d just as soon you kept the windows closed and stayed out of sight,” Walegrin

requested, unable to give her a direct order.

An inaudible sigh ran the length of her back. She pulled the boards closed and

stared expectantly at him. “I’m your prisoner, then?”

“Damn, woman-it’s for your own good. No one’s going to think of looking for you

here-but I can’t keep them out if they get a notion to look. If you’ve got any

close friends you think you’d be safer with you just tell me about them and I’ll

see that you spend the night there.”

Kama had pushed as hard and far as she dared-more from habit than grand design.

“Is there any food left below?” she asked in a more civil voice, “or water?”

“Fish stew with fat-back; some wine. I’ll send some up.”

“And water, please-I’d like to wash before my funeral rites.” She flashed the

smile that made men forget she was deadly.

Torchholder, still garbed in the regalia he had worn when the Beysa had healed

the Stormchildren, came to the garrison barracks flanked by the gravediggers.

The diggers demanded to view the body but Molin, once he saw Walegrin’s anxiety,

dismissed them with a wave of his hand.

“Not before the rites,” he snarled contemptously. “Until the spirit is

sanctified and released, the impure may not view the remains.”

“Ain’t no ‘Shankan funeral I’ve ever heard of,” the second of the gravediggers

complained to his superior.

“The man was an initiate into Vashanka’s Brotherhood. Would you risk the

Stormgod’s wrath?”

The gravediggers, like everyone else in Sanctuary, suspected that the Stormgod

was impotent or vanquished but none of the trio was about to say so to a palace

nobleman whose power in the simple matters of life and death was not in

question. They agreed to return to their posts and await the delivery of the

body. Molin watched the door close behind them, then pulled Walegrin back into

the shadows.

“What in seven hells is going on here?”

“There’s a bit of a problem,” the younger man explained, drawing the priest up

the stairs. “Someone you should talk to.”

“Who’ve you got-?” Molin demanded as Walegrin knocked once, then shoved the door

open.

Kama had put her time and the water to good use. The soot and grime were gone

from her leathers and her face; her hair framed her face in a smooth, ebony

curtain. Walegrin saw something he did not immediately understand pass silently

between them.

“Kama,” Torchholder said softly, refusing for the moment to cross the threshold.

Throughout the afternoon and into the evening he had forced any thought of her

from his mind; had, in effect, abandoned her to fate. He believed she would not

have expected, or appreciated, anything else and saw by her face that he had

believed correctly-but correctness did nothing to alleviate the backlash of

self-imposed guilt which swept up around him.

“Shall I leave?” Walegrin asked, piecing the situation together finally.

Molin started; weighed a dozen responses and their probable consequences in his

mind, and said: “No, stay here,” before anyone could guess he had considered

some other course of action. “Kama, why are you here, of all places?” he asked,

closing the door behind him.

With Walegrin’s help, she explained her situation. How the PFLS leader. Zip, had

misinterpreted her encounter with Stra-ton and Walegrin and how that mistake had

started the downward spiral of events which culminated with not merely the

attempt on the Stepson’s life but the sabotage of all he had tried to

accomplish.

Molin, though he listened attentively, took a few moments to congratulate

himself. Had he dismissed Walegrin, he would have helped Kama because he loved

her-and, in time, she would have rejected him for it. Now, he could help her

because he had heard and believed her story before witnesses. She might still

reject him-she would always prefer action to intrigue, he suspected-but it

wouldn’t be through the weakness called love.

“You have two choices, Kama,” he explained when both she and Walegrin were

silent. “No one would be surprised if you had died today. I could easily see to

it that everyone believed that you had. You could take a horse from the stables

and no one would ever think to come looking for you.” He paused. “Or you can

clear your name.”

“I want my name,” she replied without hesitation. “I’ll appeal to the Emperor’s

justice….” It was her turn to pause and calculate options. “Brachis-” She

looked around the room and remembered the Stormchildren, the witches, and the

ir-remedial absence of Vashanka. “I’ll get the truth out of Zip,” she concluded.

Molin shook his head and turned to Walegrin. “Would you believe anything that

young man told you?”

Walegrin shook his head.

“No, Kama, maybe if Strat’s still alive in there and he says it wasn’t you,

you’d be believed, but no one else’s word will count for enough. You’ll do best

coming in to face your accusers.”

“Under your protection?”

“Under Tempus’s protection.”

Walegrin broke into the conversation: “He’s one of the ones who’ve ordered her

dead!”

“He ordered her captured-the rest is the enthusiasm of his subordinates. He’s

got caught in another skirmish with the demon-and Roxane:-for Niko’s soul. Jihan

barely pulled him out and she is, until the next sea storm at any rate, as

mortal as you or I. Tempus is in no mood for death right now.”

“You’re wrong if you think he’d go lightly with me,” Kama warned in a low voice.

“He acknowledges my existence- nothing more than that. It would be easier for

him if I did die.”

It cost her to admit that to anyone, stranger or lover. Molin knew better than

to deny it. “I’m not interested in making things easier for that man,” he said

in his own low, measured voice. “He will not dare to judge you himself, so he

will be scrupulously honest in seeing that justice is done by someone else.”

Kama tossed her hair behind her shoulders. “Let’s go to him now.”

“Tomorrow,” Molin averred. “He has other obligations tonight.”

Prince Kadakithis took the tray from the Beysib priest. He was gracious, but

firm: no one besides himself was attending Shupansea. It was her wish; it was

his wish; and it was time everyone got used to the idea that he gave orders too.

The bald priest had seen too much upheaval in one day to argue successfully. He

bowed, gave his blessing, and backed out of the antechamber. The prince set the

careful arrangement of chilled morsels beside the bed and returned his attention

to the Beysa.

Streaks of opalescent powder shot across the bleached white imperial

bedlinen. Brushing aside a blue-green swirl, Kadak-ithis resumed his vigil,

waiting for her eyes to open and more than half-expecting that he’d made a

terrible mistake. He smoothed her hair across the pillows; smiled; dared to

kiss her breasts lightly as he’d never dared to do at any of the few other

times they’d stolen moments alone together and jerked upright when he felt

something move against the back of his neck.

The Beysa ran orchid-colored fingertips down his forearm. “We are alone, aren’t

we?” she inquired.

“Quite,” he agreed. “They’ve sent food up for us. Are you hungry?”

He reached for the dinner-tray and found himself restrained. Shupansea raised

herself up and began dealing with the clasps on his tunic.

“Kith-us, I have two half-grown children and you have had a wife and concubines

since you were fourteen. I surrendered my virginity in a ritual that was

witnessed by at least forty priests and relations-tell me the first time wasn’t

just as bad for you.”

The prince blushed crimson.

“Very well, then. We’re pawns. The cheapest whore has more freedom than I’ve

had. But everything’s in flux now. Even Mother Bey is affected. She says not to

be alone tonight; I don’t think she can absorb your stormgod into herself as She

has done with all our heroes and man-gods. I could choose to be with a priest or

one of the Burek but I’ve chosen to be with you.”

She stripped the loose tunic back from the prince’s shoulders and pulled him

toward her. He resisted, fumbling with the accursed buckles on his sandals, then

committed himself to the changes she promised.

It was night at last, with the darker emotions of the mortal spirit obscuring

the heavens as surely as the smoke and the eternal fog. Ischade extinguished her

candles and gathered her dark robes around her. She had planned and deliberated

as she had seldom done, choosing decision over reaction despite its risks and

unfamiliarity.

She sealed the White Foal house with a delicate touch; if she failed, the dawn

would find nothing more than rotting boards rising from the overgrown marshes.

The black roses opened as she passed them, giving her their arcane beauty for

what might be the last time. With a caress she savored their death-sweet perfume

and sent them back where she had found them.

Across the bridge, deep within the better part of town, the bay horse consumed

the last of the ward-fire, leaving the Peres house naked to whatever moved in

the darkness. Ischade clung to the shadows with more than her usual caution; she

was not immune to mortal forms of death and there were others migrating

instinctively to the house now that its defenses had vanished. Crouched in a

doorway, she lit a single candle and studied the wisps of magic rising through

the ruins of Roxane’s wards.

At her unspoken command the front door faded from its hinges. Ischade crept

through, bristling with alertness and prepared to utilize every trick in her

carefully prepared arsenal. There was nothing to challenge or greet her as she

glided along the hallway, vanishing amid her numerous possessions.

She found the trail Straton’s blood had made and followed it through to the

kitchen. Stilcho’s heroism had borne fruit; but Straton’s safety was not her

only goal. Haught was here; the Nisi witch was here and she would not leave

until she had consigned both to hell and beyond.

Continuing her search, Ischade swept from room to room to the waist-thick beams

of the cluttered attic where her search had to end. Haught crouched outside the

sphere, enraptured by the nether-world dazzle of the globe, his eyes as wide and

glazed as any Beysib’s. Shiey’s cleaver lay in a twisted lump at his feet.

Tasfalen sang with a dead man’s voice, dragging one leg stiffly as he shambled

around the perimeter of the globe’s light.

Tasfalen?

Ischade did not immediately comprehend the changes which had overtaken Tasfalen

Lancothis. Had Haught somehow kept the globe? Had she simply imagined Roxane’s

taint on the corroded wards? Surely Tasfalen’s flawed resurrection had been her

one-time apprentice’s work; Roxane’s efforts were brutal but never so crude.

Concealed by shadow and the skein of magic she had spun, the necromant dared

briefly to listen to the globe’s song until she could piece the truth together.

She noted, even as Haught had noted, the carelessness which marked the Nisi

witch’s failure to protect her mortal shell and recognized the same mystic

illness from which she herself had only just recovered. For a fleeting moment

Ischade felt a sense of pity that one so powerful should be conquered by an

accumulation of minute errors. Then she set about weaving a gossamer web to

ground the globe’s radiant energy in her focal possessions as fast as

Roxane/Tasfalen could create it.

The faster the globe whirled, the stronger Ischade’s binding threads became,

until the whole house rattled and dust fell in flakes from the ancient

roofbeams-and still the Nisi witch sang her curses into the artifact. The

necromancer played out the last strand and stood up in the wash of blue light.

Tasfalen’s dead eye gave no indication of recognition; Rox-ane was too deeply

enmeshed in her spell-casting to spare the energy for simple words. A shriek of

rage emanated from the globe itself as the Nisi witch launched her attack-a

shriek that shattered abruptly as the power surged into Ischade’s handiwork and

made the web brilliantly visible. Curls of smoke twisted up from the weaker

foci, but the web held. Ischade began to laugh, savoring her counterpart’s

growing terror.

Roxane flailed helplessly with Tasfalen’s rigor-stricken arms, struggling to

free herself from the power gnawing at her soul.

“The wards!” Roxane’s disembodied voice howled above the globe’s whine. “No

wards! He comes for me!”

The Globe of Power spun faster, first swallowing the witch’s voice, then

swallowing her body within its cobalt sphere. Gouts of fire sprang up in the

joists and floorboards where Ischade’s web had touched them. Ischade covered her

hair with her cloak as she inched away from the conflagration swirling around

the globe. The Nisi witch was trapped, along with her accursed artifact; it was

time to see that Straton was safely away from the house and its outbuildings.

Straton-she put his face in the forefront of her mind and looked toward the

comer where the stairs had been.

An orange nimbus surrounded the image Ischade formed of her lover. A demonic

nimbus, she realized too late-after she had turned to face the throbbing cobalt

sphere again. No wards, Roxane had screamed: no wards to keep Niko’s demon at

bay. It had one soul but it could claim many. Her foot scuffed against the rough

planks, but Ischade moved forward as it beckoned.

“Straton.”

Haught kept himself small and low against the roofbeams. Insignificant-as he had

always been as a dancer or a slave; beneath the notice of witches and,

certainly, of demons. He saw the thing which had been Roxane flickering

between an awful emptiness and the dozen or more bodies the witch had taken

during her life. He saw Ischade think to escape-and fail, and lurch

inescapably forward. But mostly he saw the globe hanging midway between Ischade

and the demon: motionless and, for the moment, ignored.

Still keeping himself invisible in the demon’s perception, he drew himself into

a compact crouch. There was no need for the globe to be destroyed by this, he

thought while massaging the finger which bore Ischade’s ring. One leap would

take him across the sphere and down the stairs. He was a dancer still, in his

body; the leap was no great feat for him.

He caught the skull-sized artifact on the tips of his fingers. The momentum of

his leap brought the searing object hard against his breast as he forced the

center of a very small universe to shift from one existence through an infinity

of others. It clung to him; passed through him; absorbed him; shattered and

expelled him utterly.

Ischade was hurled against the rafters by the force of the globe’s destruction.

Wrapped in the fullness of her fire-magic she barely reached the stairway when

the roof itself was swallowed in the flames. Her robes were in flames before she

reached the streets.

A tower of fire soared from the open roof of the Peres house to the heavens

themselves. The demon, trapped in fire, warred with Stormbringer, whose

thundercloud form was illuminated by each lightning-bolt He threw. A crowd was

gathering, a crowd which saw her try to squeeze the flames from her hair and

robes and called after her when she raced down the streets with fire still

licking after her.

Molin Torchholder had been one of the first to climb to the palace rooftops for

a clearer view of the flame pillar. Bracing himself against the gritty wind he

looked past the light to the dark cloud beyond.

“Stormbringer?”

He nearly fell from the roof as a hand closed tightly over his shoulder. “Not

tonight,” Tempus said with a laugh.

There were others appearing at the myriad stairways, making their way to the

railing circling the Hall of Justice: Jihan and Randal, leaning on each other

for strength, with Niko close behind; Isambard, dragged forward by the exuberant

Storm-children; the functionaries, retainers, and day-servants all barefoot and

in their nightclothes. The palace was no different than the rest of Sanctuary

this night-every rooftop, courtyard, and clearing had its collection of

awestruck mortals.

Brilliant light streamed into the prince’s bedroom. He awoke, sighing with the

knowledge that the best must also seem the shortest, and meant to leave

Shupansea undisturbed. His heart sank when he realized he was alone in the bed;

it did not rise when he saw her transfixed by the column of light in the open

window.

Dragging a silken blanket behind him, he came slowly to join her.

“She has kept her promises,” Shupansea explained, taking a comer of the blanket

around her shoulder and pressing close against him. “Stormbringer fights the

demon.”

It did not seem like gods and demons at first glance. It seemed like a single,

great cloud spewing lightning at a flame of impossible size and brightness-but

such a vision was, in itself, so improbable that the Beysa’s explanation was as

acceptable as any other. Certainly the lightning struck only the flame and the

flame directed spirals of its substance at the cloud. The stormcloud, with its

percussive thunder, deflected the fire away from itself to the ocean and,

occasionally, the city.

“He has it trapped,” the Beysa said, indicating the precision with which the

Stormgod’s bolts prevented the demon-fire from shifting its location. “They will

fight until the demon accepts annihilation.”

The prince was unable to look away from the awesome spectacle. Armed with

Shupansea’s explanations he could see the flame shrinking each time it launched

a missile against the lightning. He stayed Shupansea’s hand when she tried to

close the shutters.

“The end is inevitable,” she assured him, holding him tightly.

A fine powder blew through the window. The Beysa protected herself but tears

flowed freely from Kadakithis’s eyes.

“I want to see if there’s a beginning as well.”

“The beginning is here,” she reminded him, closing the .shutters and leading him

back to the bed.

PILLAR OF FIRE

Janet Morris

Death was riding the feral wind that blew in off Sanctuary’s harbor-even

Tempus’s Tr6s horse could smell it on the sooty breeze as horse and rider picked

their way down Wideway to the wharf and the emperor’s barge made fast there.

The Tr6s danced and snorted, its hooves sending up sparks from ancient cobbles

that seemed, in the dusky air, to have lives of their own. The sparks whirled

round the Tros’s legs like insects swarming; they darted hither and thither on

smoky gusts drawn seaward from the pillar of fire blazing between the heavens

and the Peres house uptown; they skittered along Tempus’s clothing like dust

motes from hell, stinging when they touched his bare arms and legs; they lighted

upon the Tros’s distended nostrils and that horse, wiser than many human

inhabitants of this accursed thieves’ world, blew bellowing breaths to keep from

inhaling whatever dust it was that glowed like fire and burned like hot needles

when it landed on the stallion’s dappled hide.

The hellish dust was the least of Tempus’s troubles on this morning that had

lost its light, as if the sun had slunk away to hide from the battle under way

beneath the sky. Oh, the sun had risen, brazen and bold, illuminating the

flaming pillar raging up to heaven and the storm clouds with their lightning

ranged round it. But it had been eaten by the stormclouds and the soot of the

fire and the lightning spewing up from the grounds around the uptown Peres house

and down from the furious heavens of the gods, who smote at witches’ work and

cheeky demons with equal force.

And it was this absence of the morning, this vanquishing of natural light, that

bothered Tempus (accustomed to analyzing omens and all too familiar with

godsign) as he rode down to greet Theron, the man he’d helped bring to Ranke’s

teetering throne, and Brachis, High Priest of Vashanka, while around the town

civil war and infamy reigned, unabated.

If the chaos around him (which he’d once been sent here to banish) weren’t

enough of an indictment of his performance, then the skittishness of the Tr6s

horse made it certain: he was failing ignominiously to bring order-even for a

day-to Sanctuary.

And though some men would not have taken the responsibility and clasped the

fault for all Sanctuary’s catalogue of evils to his bosom, Tempus would and

almost gladly did-the state of town and loved ones fulfilled his own dire

prophecy.

Only the Tr6s horse’s distress truly touched him now: animals were pure and

honest, not dour and divisive like the race of men. It might not be his fault

that Straton lay, somewhere, in the clutches of the revolution (Crit was sure),

dead or held for ransom; it might not be because of Tempus, called the Riddler,

that Niko was the perennial pawn of demons and foul witches; it might not be

directly attributable to him that his daughter, Kama, was now sought as an

assassin and revolutionary by his own Stepsons and the palace guard, thus

creating a rift between her unit, the Rankan 3rd Commando, and the other

militias in the town that no amount of diplomacy would ever bridge if she were

executed; it might not be on his account that Randal, once a Stepson and the

single “white” magician Tempus had ever trusted, was a burned-out husk, or that

Niko stared sightlessly at the pillar of flame uptown in which Janni, his one

time partner and a Stepson who’d sworn Tempus a solemn oath of fealty, burned

eternally, or that Jihan had been stripped of her Froth Daughter’s attributes,

humbled to the lowly estate of womankind, or that Tempus’s own son, Gys-kouras,

looked at him with fear and loathing (even trying to shield his half-brother,

Alton, from Tempus whenever the children saw him come).

But it probably was-he was the root and cause of all this slaughter: it was his

curse, habitual (as Molin Torchholder, a Nisi-blooded slime in Rankan clothing,

maintained) or invoked by jealous gods or hostile magic. He didn’t know or care

which force now drove him: he’d lost interest in which was right and which was

wrong.

Like the day around him, black and white and good and evil had lost their

character, merging like the sullen dusky noon in an unsavory amalgam to match

his mood.

But it bothered him that the Tr6s was nervous, sweating, and distressed. He

reined it down a side street, hoping to avoid the greater gusts of dust. For he

knew that dust as he knew the voices of the gods who plagued him: each particle

was a remnant of pulverized globes of Nisi power, magical talismans reduced to

pinprick size and myriad in number.

If Sanctuary needed anything less than a dusty cloak of Nisi magic wafting where

it willed, he couldn’t think what it might be.

And then he realized what lay ahead, down a shadowed alleyway, and drew his

sword: a little honest swordplay might cheer him up, and ahead, where PFLS

rebels in rags and sweat-bands fought Rankan regulars in the street, he knew

he’d. find it.

Though he was overqualified for street brawls-a man who couldn’t die and had to

heal, whose horse shared his more-than-human speed and more-than-mortal

constitution-numbers made the odds more honest: four Rankan soldiers, against a

mob of thirty, were trying to shield some woman with a child from whatever the

mob had in mind.

He heard shouts over the Tros’s hoofbeats as it lifted into a lope and trumpeted

its war cry as it sped gladly toward the fray.

“Give her up, the slut-it’s all her doing!” cried one hoarse voice from the mob.

“That’s right!” a shrill woman’s voice seconded the rebel demand: “S’danzo slut!

She bore the accursed Stormchild’s playmate! S’danzo wickedness has taken away

the sun and turned the gods’ ire upon us!”

And a third voice, streetwise and dark, a man’s voice Tempus thought he ought to

recognize, put in: “Come on, Walegrin, give her up and you go free-you and

yours. We’re only killing witches and their children today!”

“Screw yourself. Zip,” one of the Rankans called back. “You’ll have to take her

from us. And we’ll have a couple lives in exchange-yours for certain. That’s a

promise.”

Tempus had only an instant to realize that Walegrin, the garrison commander, was

one of the Rankans under siege, and to add up all he’d heard and realize that

the blond soldier’s sister-of-recoro, Illyra, must be the woman whose life was

the subject of a traditional Sanctuary streetcorner debate.

Then the Tr6s was sighted by the rebels at the rear of the crowd, which began to

part but not disperse.

Missiles pelted him, some barbed, some jagged, some meant for rolling bread or

holding wine-and some designed for war.

He ducked an arrow hurtling toward him from a crossbow, his senses so much

faster that he could see the helically-fletched blue feathers on its tail as it

sped toward his heart.

The Tros was hit between the eyes with a tomato: it had seen the missile coming,

but never flinched or ducked, its ears pricked like a sighting mechanism aligned

upon the crowd: it was a warhorse, after all.

But Tempus found this affront unacceptable, and took exception to the brashness

of the crowd. Reaching up with his left hand while still holding his reins, he

plucked the arrow from the air when it was inches from his heart and, as he

seldom did, flaunted his supernatural attributes before the crowd, holding the

arrow high and breaking it between his fingers like a piece of straw as he

bellowed in his most commanding voice: “Zip and all you rebels, disperse or face

my personal wrath- a retribution that will haunt you till you die, and then

some: you’ll leave my fury to your descendants as a bequest.”

And Zip’s voice called back from a gloom in which all white faces looked alike

and darker Wriggly skins faded to invisibility: “Come get me, Riddler. Your

daughter did!”

He set about just that, but not before the crowd surged inward as one body,

pinning the four Rankans and the girl they thought to shield against the wall.

He kneed the Tros in among confusion, took blows, and swung back and down with

his sharkskin-hiked sword, inured to the death he dealt, his conscience salved

before the fact by giving warning, so that his blood-lust now reigned unimpeded

and rebels fell, like wheat before a scythe, under his blade, a sword the god of

war had sanctified in countless bodies just like these, across more battlefields

than Tempus cared to count.

But when, finally, the crowd broke to run and none clawed at his saddle or bit

at his ankle or tried to blind the Tros horse with their sharpened sticks or

hamstring it with their bread knives, he realized he’d been too late to save the

day.

Oh, Walegrin, bloody and with a face pummeled beyond recognition so that Tempus

could only recognize him by his braided blond locks and the tears streaming from

his blackened sockets unheeded, would live to fight another day: he’d been

innermost, protecting Illyra-the S’danzo seeress who should have forseen all

this-with his own big body. But of the other three soldiers, one’s gullet was

split the way a fisherman cleans his catch, one’s neck was hanging by a thread,

and the third was hacked apart, limb from limb, his trunk still twitching

weakly.

It was not the soldiers, however, who drew Tempus’s attention, but the woman

they’d tried to shield, who in turn had been protecting her child. Illyra,

S’danzo skirts heavy with blood, cradled a young girl’s body in her arms, and

wept so silently that it was Walegrin’s grief, not her own, that let Tempus know

that the child was surely dead.

“Lillis,” Walegrin sobbed, manliness forgotten because an innocent, his kin, was

slain; “Lillis, dear gods, no… she’s alive, ‘Lyra, alive, I tell you.”

But all the desperate wishes in the world would not make it so, and the S’danzo

woman, whose eyes were wise and whose face was tired beyond her years and whose

own belly bled profusely where the axe that had hewn her daughter had gone

through child and into mother, met Tempus’s eyes before she turned to the field

commander who could no longer command so much as his grief.

“Tempus, isn’t it? And your marvelous horse?” Illyra’s voice had the sough of

the seawind in it and her eyes were bleak and full of the witch-dust settling

all about. “Shall I foretell your future, lord of blood, or would you rather not

read the writing on the wall?”

“No, my lady,” he said before he looked above her head and beyond, to where

graffiti scribed in blood defaced the mud-brick. “Tell me no tales of power: If

doom could be avoided, you’d have a live child in your arms.”

And he reined the Tros around, setting off again toward Wideway and the

dockside, forcing his thoughts to collect and focus on the audience with Theron

soon to come, and away from the writing on the wall behind the woman: “The

plague is in our souls, not in our destiny. Ilsig rules. Kill the witches and me

priests or perish!”

It sounded like a good idea to him, but he couldn’t throw in his lot with the

rebels: he’d made a truce with magic for the sake of his soldiers; he’d made a

truce with gods for the sake of his soul.

And perishing wasn’t an option for Tempus. Sometimes he wondered if he might

manage it by getting himself eaten by fishes or chopped into tiny pieces, but

the chances were good that his parts would reassemble or-worse-that each morsel

of him would reconstitute an entire being.

It was bad enough existing in one discrete form; he couldn’t bear to be

replicated countless times. So he smothered the rebellious impulse to throw in

his lot with the rebels and see if it was true that any army he joined could not

lose its battles.

He was bound by oath to Theron, to the necromant Ischade in solemn pact, to

Stormbringer in another, and to Enlil, patron god of the armies now that

Vashanka was metamorphosing into something else within the body of Gyskouras,

their common son. And he’d spent an interval with the Mother Goddess of the

fishfaces in which he’d learned that Mother Bey had lusts as great as any

northern deity.

So he alone, acquainted with so many of the players intimately and capable of

standing up to more-than-human actors, was competent to negotiate a settlement

among the heavens through supernal avatars and earthly rulers, the

representatives of their respective gods.

This task was complicated, not helped, by Kadakithis’s impending marriage to the

Beysib ruler, as it was obstructed, not advanced, by Theron’s arrival here and

now, when all was far from well and men had brought their hells to life by

meddling with powers they did not understand.

So he didn’t care, he decided, what happened here, beyond his personal goals: to

protect the souls of his Stepsons and those who loved him, to reward constancy

where it had been demonstrated (even by mages and necromants), to clear his

conscience so far as possible before he trekked back north, where the horses

still grazed in Hidden Valley and the Successors on Wizardwall would welcome him

back to what had become the closest thing to home he could remember.

But to do that, he must see Niko on the mend and on his way back to Bandara; he

must do what Abarsis had counseled, and more.

He must get rid of that thrice-cursed pillar of fire burning with renewed fervor

uptown, and spewing fireballs and attracting lightning and spitting bolts into

the sea, before a storm blew up from the disturbance.

For if a storm came riding the wake of all this chaos, then Jihan’s powers would

be restored, and Tempus would be sad dled with the Froth Daughter for eternity.

Now he had a chance to slip away without her and let her father, the mighty

Stormbringer, keep His word: find Jihan some other lover.

So he was hurrying, as he reined the Tros toward dockside where the Rankan lion

blazon flapped in a sea-wind too strong not to be promising wild weather.

And the Tros, scenting the sea and his mood, snorted happily, as if in

agreement: the Tros would as soon be quit of Jihan, who curried him to within an

inch of his life daily, as would he.

And if a storm would bring the dust to ground, and all the magic of Nisi

antiquity with it, then that was not his problem- not if he played his cards

right.

For once, Crit was grateful for the witchy weather that plagued Sanctuary worse

than all the factions fighting here.

“Getting Strat” was not going to be the easiest thing he’d ever done, but he

wasn’t arguing that the job was his to do: Ace was his partner; their souls were

too bound up to chance letting Strat die with any strings on him, no matter

which witch was holding the end of them.

And Strat wasn’t going to die in flames, not in some burning house that wouldn’t

burn down but only burned on and on like no natural fire.

Not that common sense was saying otherwise: crouched at the heat’s end, where

waves of burning air licked his face despite the water he was palming over it

intermittently. As he stared at the flaming funnel waiting for a plan to come

clear, Crit reflected that his Sacred Band oath made no distinction between

natural and unnatural peril. He hadn’t swom to stand by Strat, shoulder to

shoulder, until death separated them if it must, only in cases where it was

convenient, or magic wasn’t involved, or Strat was behaving as a rightman ought,

or the problem didn’t involve an urban war zone and the possibility of being

roasted alive.

The oath was binding, under any circumstances.

Watching the fiery tornado, like nothing he’d ever seen but the waterspouts of

wizard weather or the cyclone that had fought in the last battle on Wizardwall,

he was trying to determine whether it had a pattern to its burning and its

wriggling, whether the lightning spewing from the cloud above was dependable as

to target or random, and in general just how the hell he was going to get in

there.

Because Strat was in there. Everything pointed to it; Randal was sure of it; no

ransom demands had come forth from the PFLS. His orders were to fetch Strat and

Kama.

Kama could wait until all the hells froze over and Sanctuary sank into the sea,

for all he cared. He’d had an affair with Tempus’s daughter, true: he was

willing to pay for his indiscretion, not complaining. But Strat was his partner

Strat came first.

If they’d had arguments, then that was normal-they’d have them again… over

women especially. It went with pairbond, and he’d beat Strat silly if he had to,

to win his point. As soon as he had the porking bastard back where he could pull

rank, they’d settle things.

But you couldn’t settle anything with a dead man, unless he became undead like

the freakish bay horse who was partially present, trotting around the Peres

house on ghostly hooves, its coat looking as if it reflected the flaming

whirlwind around which it circled-or was a part of it. The horse was

insubstantial, sort of. But if he could catch it, maybe he could ride it up the

back stairs.

Strat had ridden it. And the horse and Crit were both here for the same reason:

Strat.

He decided to follow the horse on its rounds and forsook the cover of jumbled

stone, remnants of the Peres’s garden wall, behind which he’d been crouching.

The heat waves emanating from that spinning horror of flame struck him with

awesome force; he could feel his eyelashes singe and his lips start to blister.

Head down, following echoing hoofbeats as much as the flickering glimpses he

could get of this “horse,” he edged along in its wake.

If the house would just bum down, like any normal fire did once a fire had

consumed its fuel, things would be so simple: he could begin mourning.

He’d thought of just considering the whole unsightly and unnatural mess as a

funeral pyre, calling for reinforcements, and making the Peres estate Strat’s

bier. They’d say the rites, play some funeral games, he’d put everything he

owned up as prize or sacrifice.

But he couldn’t do that, not until he knew for certain that Strat really was

dead, and wholly dead: not likely to be resurrected by Ischade.

For that was what he feared the most: that the necromant wouldn’t be content to

let Ace stay dead, that she’d pine for her lover and eventually call him up from

ashes, make him an undead like poor Janni, who was somewhere in the cone of the

fire-Crit couldn’t imagine how or why, but he could see, if he squinted, the

dead Stepson, fully formed and unconsumed, doing something that looked like

bathing under a waterfall, but doing it in a heat that would melt bone in

seconds.

Crit had learned, fighting magic and sometimes fighting it with magic, not to

ask questions if he didn’t want to hear the answers. So he left the matter of

Janni to those who ought to tend it: to Ischade, who’d raised his shade after a

proper Sacred Band funeral; to Abarsis, who’d come down from heaven and escorted

Janni’s spirit on high, and done it where the whole Band could see it. If there

was an argument about propriety here, it was between the necromant and the ghost

of the Slaughter Priest: it wasn’t a matter for a decidedly unmagical fighter

like himself. If Janni hadn’t once been Niko’s partner and a Sacred Bander, it

wouldn’t have been the business of any Stepson what Ischade had done. As things

stood, all you could do, if you were so inclined, was pray for Janni’s soul.

But “it bothered Crit intensely because the same thing could happen to Strat

Ischade could make it happen.

He wondered idly, trailing the ghost-horse on its rounds about the Peres estate,

how you went about killing a necromant. If Strat didn’t come through this

intact, he was going to find out. Maybe Randal would know-if Randal ever again

was capable of doing more than swallowing when you put a spoon of gruel in his

mouth.

There had been a few minutes, he’d been told, when it \ seemed that Randal and

Niko had come through their battle with Roxane and the demon in good shape.

But physical flesh-even mageflesh and Bandaran adept’s flesh-could take only so

much. The two were alive; they’d live; whether they’d ever be as hale or as

smart as they once were, only time would tell.

Rounding a burned-out wall, the heat lessened perceptibly and Crit could stop

squinting and raise his head.

The ghost-horse was still right in front of him. In fact, when Crit stopped, it

stopped.

When he took a linen rag and wetted it from the waterskin dangling from his

belt, the specter craned its neck to look back at him, ears pricked, as if to

ask what he was doing.

What he was doing was anybody’s guess, but he didn’t try to tell the ghost-horse

that. The bay was still bay: it had a black mane and tail (although when the hot

wind ruffled them they streamed out like charred cinders, not horsehair); it had

a red-gold haircoat (now flame red and flickery as the patterns from the fire

chased each other along its flanks); it had black stockings (which resembled

burnt timbers). But it was more substantial than it had been around front, where

the fire was brighter.

Then it pawed the ground and whickered, still fixing him with a fire-light

centered gaze from liquid horse eyes.

The come-hither look and the forefoot pawing the ground were unmistakable to any

horseman: the bay wanted Crit to hurry up, climb aboard: it wanted to go for a

ride.

“Oh no, horse,” he said out loud to it. “I came by myself- no reinforcements, no

backup. I did that because nobody else ought to risk his life-or sacrifice it,

if that’s what’s going to happen here… because this is a matter between

pairbonded partners.”

The horse snorted disapprovingly, as if to remind Crit that it knew he was

trying to cover his own fear. Then it slowly turned around, so that its rump was

no longer facing him, and ambled toward him.

The big, liquid, obling-centered eyes said: Strut is mine, too; horses and men

are partners; mount up and let’s stop playing games. He’s waiting.

“Strat, damn you to hell,” Crit whispered, shaking his head to clear it of

horse-thoughts and horse-needs and horse-loyalties. This wasn’t even a living

horse, just a ghost, something Ischade had conjured from a dead animal.

But the thing kept coming, head high, feet carefully placed to avoid stepping on

its dangling bridle reins.

Bridle reins? Had they been there before? He didn’t think so.

The horse, now an arm’s-length away, stopped still. It whickered softly and the

whicker said, / love him too. The forefoot, pawing the ground impatiently,

added. We don’t have much time. And then the horse, in the manner of high-school

horses like Tempus’s Tros, bent one foreleg at the knee, curling it and lowering

his forequarters, the other front leg outstretched, while it arched its neck in

a bow meant to enable a wounded man or a high-bom lady to mount up without

difficulty.

“Crap, all right,” Crit said through clenched teeth and strode resolutely toward

the bowing ghost-horse, trying hard not to think too much about what he was

doing, or whether he might be imagining the whole thing-maybe a piece of timber

had fallen on him, a piece of masonry collapsed so fast he hadn’t had time to

realize it, and he was dead too, dead but denied a peaceful rest, trapped in

some netherworld with the ghost-horse, on which he’d wander forever, seeking his

lost rightside partner.

But no: The sky was full of lightning, there were shouts and mutters on the

breeze from somewhere near by where factions fought. There was a plague in

Sanctuary, all right, but not some spurious one that turned your lips blue and

made your armpits sore: it was a plague of human failing, of confusion, of greed

and desire and endless power plays.

It wasn’t, he admitted as he mounted the bay (which felt surprisingly

substantial, for a ghost-horse), the magic or the gods which made Sanctuary such

a foul pit, but human excess; magic was no more to blame than sword or spear or

rock. There were enough rocks on the earth to eradicate the race; magic

couldn’t do a better job, only a more colorful one. But rock or spear or wand

or Nisi globe didn’t murder on their own, nor enslave-the weapon must be

wielded; the true culprit was human greed and human will. And the killing

never stopped- in the name of magic or the name of god or the name of honor

or nationalism or progress or liberation, it was just killing.

And because it had always been so, and would always be so, Critias had come to

the profession of arms himself: the only protection he could see was to be a

perpetrator, not a victim.

That was why Strat had made him so angry when he’d become entangled with

Ischade: Strat had become a victim, and Crit had a horror of helplessness. Even

if Strat were just a lovesick fool, Crit still thought he’d been right when he

had shot past his friend that night on the balcony-if it had served to bring

Straton to his senses, then Crit wouldn’t be here, pulling himself up into the

sometimes-saddle of Strat’s sort-of-corporeal bay, riding into he-didn’t-know

what for abstracts of honor and duty that weren’t going to keep him alive if the

steaming stable toward which the bay was ineluctably heading crashed down upon

his head.

The stables weren’t exactly ablaze, but they had corn magazines and straw and

hay in them and sparks smoldered on the roof.

Crit reached forward to catch up the bay’s reins, but the beast had had a mouth

like iron in life and it was no better in afterlife.

He sawed on the reins to no avail, then quit trying in time to duck as the horse

trotted determinedly through the open stable doors and headed for wide stairs

which must lead to the stable’s loft.

Crit shifted his weight, thinking to throw one leg over the saddle and check out

the stable loft on foot, when the horse started climbing.

“Vashanka’s balls,” the task force leader swore, flattening himself to the

horse’s neck as it climbed a flight never meant for anything of its size and

boards creaked and groaned. “Horse, you’d better be right.”

It was: at the stair’s head was a landing, and as the bay’s bulk appeared there,

a woman stifled a scream.

It was hard to accustom his eyes to the dark; the climb up the stairs had been

too fast-everything was still milky green to Crit’s fire-dazzled vision.

But Crit heard voices and slipped from the bay’s back, his sword in hand.

Together, man and ghost-horse ventured into the dimness; horse’s head snaked

low, man’s sword paralleling its questing muzzle.

“Dear gods, what’s that smell?” Crit muttered to himself.

And someone answered: “Strat. Or me, Critias. Which smell do you mean?”

And the voice of Stilcho was familiar to Critias, who had once thought him the

best of his kind of Stepson. Blinking, Crit strained to see the ruined visage of

the undead soldier. Stilcho was one of Ischade’s minions. He should have known

the witch would still have her talons in Strat, one way or the other.

He was going to swing his sword up, cut the one-eyed, ghoulish head from

Stilcho’s torso and hope decapitation would provide the poor soul what rest

Ischade had denied-not be cause he expected his poor quotidian blade to do the

job against magic, but because he was a soldier and he could only do what he was

trained to do, when his vision cleared enough to see that Stilcho’s face was

neither so ruined nor so hostile as it ought to be.

And a hand touched his right shoulder, squeezed, and rested there-Stilcho’s

hand, warm and with the pulse of mortal blood in it so strong Crit fancied he

could feel it coursing.

“That’s right,” said Stilcho softly through a mouth hardly scarred, “I’m alive

again. Don’t ask-”

Crit’s question, “How?” hung in the air until Stilcho volunteered, “It’s just

too complicated. Stepson. Ask about Strat, that’s what you’re here for… or at

least that’s what he’s here for.” Stilcho jerked a thumb toward the bay horse,

head low, snuffling, taking slow, careful steps toward a shadow that might be a

prostrate man with a woman crouched by his side.

“That’s right, Stilcho-Strat. That’s all I want. Not you or your witch woman.”

It was Ischade there, hulking over Strat- it must be. Ischade’s ghost-man and

ghost-horse, and the nec-romant herself, ringing Strat round with magic.

Crit considered seriously for the first time the possibility that he was going

to die here. He didn’t believe for a moment that Stilcho was “alive” in the way

that Crit-or Strat, please gods-was alive.

He said to Stilcho, “That’s him, then? He’s alive, if he can’t control his

bowels. I’ll just take him and be-”

A voice from the shadowed loft said, “Shit, Stilcho, he’ll kill me,” as a hand

which was also Strat’s reached up feebly to stroke the ghost-horse’s questing

muzzle and the horse started to bow down again, not realizing that Strat was too

badly wounded to mount, no matter how easy the ghost-horse tried to make it.

Crit found that he was blinking back tears. Unreasonably, he wanted to sit down

crosslegged where he was, let things take their course-even if it meant burning

to death in this damned loft with a partner too sick to be moved but well enough

to remember that Crit had shot at him.

Crit said, “I wouldn’t-couldn’t. I busted my butt getting here, Strat,” but it

came out hoarse and low and he said it to the straw scattered on the loft’s

floor at his feet.

The woman was trying to help Straton, who didn’t realize he couldn’t get on that

horse by himself.

Crit sheathed his sword and put his hands in the air, then walked over to the

place where the ghost-horse nuzzled its master encouragingly.

Strat, half-prone, was staring at him. The big fighter’s hand was clutched to

his chest or belly-Crit couldn’t tell from all the blood in the way.

“Strat… Ace, for pity’s sake, let me help you,” Crit said, bending down on one

knee, empty hands outstretched.

The ghost-horse neighed impatiently and butted Straton’s shoulder. Behind the

pair, the woman stood-the woman named Moria from the Peres estate, but dressed

in street rags so that he hardly recognized her.

Stilcho said, “Strat, maybe you’d better… it’s not going to be safe here much

longer. They can take care of you better than we-”

“Stilcho,” Moria hissed, “come away. It’s for them to talk out.”

“Talk?” Strat laughed and the laugh choked him, so that he gurgled and wiped his

mouth with a hand that came away bloody. “We just did.”

The wounded fighter reached with his bloody hand to take one of Crit’s. “Well,

Crit, you going to watch, or you going to give me some help?”

“Strat…” Crit embraced his partner, oblivious of might-be enemies about him,

searching for harm, testing strength, mouthing harsh words that covered too much

emotion; “You stupid bastard, when I get you fixed up I’m going to beat some

sense into you.”

And Strat said, “You do that,” just about the time the bay horse trumpeted

joyously as he felt Strat’s weight on his back and Crit began the arduous

process of leading the mounted, wounded man out of the stable’s attic to safety

at least of the sort a Sacred Band partner could provide.

Fire raged inside Ischade, now that she had quenched it in her clothing and her

hair. It might have been her wrath that caused the houses across the alleys on

either side of her to flame up as she passed-uptown alleys she’d traveled before

and now again on her way to Tasfalen’s velvet stronghold.

An ache and a fury was in Ischade and perhaps it spread around her. But perhaps

it was just the pillar of flame and the young fires it set, so that better

uptown streets (where Sanctuary’s troubles never spread and rebels never sped)

were a smoking labyrinth like some upscale version of the Maze.

Rebels skulked here now, and peasants, looting: Wrigglies, arms laden with

pilfered, sooty treasure, jostled her, saw whom they bumped, and slunk away.

She saw rape and nearly stopped to feed-these mortal murderers wasted the best

part of their victims, let the manna go, let the essence, precious soul and

energy, escape. Ischade was weakened by the struggle in Peres’s, somewhat.

Somewhat. But not too much.

She moved on, through a day mercifully veiled in clouds and soot and a storm now

rising off the sea. She wondered, as the sky blackened with thunderheads boiling

up, if the storm was natural or summoned-then thought it didn’t matter: it was

convenient, either way.

She saw an enclosed Beysib wagon, overturned by brigands. Bald heads of Beysib

males littered the environs like playballs from some devil’s game, their

accustomed torsos near but not attached. She saw what fate was dealt a pair of

Beysib women. and wondered what the rebels thought to gain. If they kept their

war to downtown, they might win it. Up here, they asked for retribution that

would last for generations.

Amid pathetic cries, she stopped awhile, and closed her eyes-trusting to a

cloaking spell to hide her. When she moved on, she was emboldened, strengthened,

but sick at heart: for her to be reduced to scavenging was demeaning. But war

did what it willed.

Thunder wracked the streets and she looked upward, grateful for the lowering,

stormy dark but wary: she’d finish what she started, unless the stormgods

intervened. She owed Tempus something. And she owed Haught a different thing.

She had her word to make good. She had her interests to secure. She had work to

do before retiring to the White Foal’s edge.

It was not painless for Ischade, this sneaking to Tasfalen’s in the daylight.

Janni, one others, was still trapped in the cone of flame, where Stormbringer

and demons argued, where Rox-ane had been and now was not.

What would Tempus, who wanted the souls of his soldiers freed of strings and

tortures, make of Janni’s plight? Hardly an honorable rest, in his terms. But a

piece of bravery, in hers, the like of which she’d never seen.

All for Niko, or for something more abstract? she wondered as she found

Tasfalen’s gate and then his steps and her thoughts turned to Haught and Roxane

and what lay ahead, as she dealt with locks of natural and other kinds, and

doors likewise doubled, and, as the last portal opened to her will, a raindrop

struck her cheek, and then another, and thunder rolled.

The storm would ground the dust and douse the fires and she knew it was too

great a luck for Sanctuary, the most luckless town she’d ever seen. She knew

also that, inside the flaming pillar back at the Peres’s, evil was held at bay

by one whose name could not be spoken but could be approximated: Stonn-bringer,

the Weather-Gods’ father-Stormbringer, whose daughter Jihan was close at hand.

And then there was no time to put it all together: there was a ring on the

finger of Haught which she could see with her inner eye.

This she stroked and called home to her. Its spell, still strong, would bring

the scheming apprentice-if he was not already here.

In the ground hall full of shadows she paused. The door behind her closed at a

gust’s whim. The slam it made was daunting.

Her hackles rose-she hadn’t thought of the ring Haught had until she’d entered.

Was it her will, or only her perception, that saw him here?

Why had she come here? Suddenly, she wasn’t sure. She shook her head, on the

ground floor landing, and touched her brow with her palm. She owed Tempus none

of this-not so much. Tasfalen was dead, a minion to be summoned to the river

house. Why, then, had she risked the streets and come up here?

Why? She couldn’t fathom it.

And then she did, when Haught’s silken voice oozed down the stairs from a shadow

at their head.

“Ah, Mistress, how kind of you to visit sickbeds with so much at stake.”

She reached out for the ring he wore, but the apprentice was reaching on his

own: grown desperate, he was full of pain, and wanted to make her a gift of it.

Suddenly (more because she underestimated what lay behind him and what hid

within him than because of Haught himself) she was dizzy, spinning in another

place, a place of blood and murky water-of ice and great gates whose bars were

rent as if a giant shape had bent them out of its way.

Niko’s rest-place! How had she come here?… not by Haught’s strength.

And a laugh tinkled-a laugh with razor edges that cut her soul: Roxane.

Yes, Roxane-but something less and something more hobbled through that gate,

misshapen and huge, and shrunk until Tasfalen’s beauty masked it.

And then the thing… for it was part highborn, mortal lord, part witch, and

part Haught… held out its hand to take her arm as if to escort her to some

formal fete.

She met its eyes and gripped her own ribs with both her hands: to touch it might

imprison her here. This was where Janni had lost the last shreds of self-concern

that made him act predictably in the interest of what life he still led.

The eyes that bored into hers were gold and slitted; deep behind them glowed a

purple fire she knew wasn’t right.

She forced her leaden limbs to work and backed a step, watching first her feet

and then scanning the horizons, winding wards that worked in Sanctuary which

were much weaker here.

Niko’s star-shaped meadow, once ever-green and pastoral, the very essence of

spirit peace, was frostbitten, brown, and gray and riddled with ice like arrows.

Where trees had spread rustling leaves, their boughs now held shards of flesh

and writhing things resembling tiny men who cried like kittens being drowned.

And the stream which was his life’s ebb and flow ran with swirls of red and blue

and pink and gold: blood shed and to be shed; magic winding it round and chasing

it; Niko’s faith and the love of gods bringing up behind.

Tasfalen was cajoling: “Come, my love. My beauteous one. We’ll feast.” He

flicked a glance to the trees hung with anguished, living things. “The boughs

are ripe for picking, the fruit is sweet.”

And she knew the only salvation here, for her, was in the stream.

She didn’t know the consequence if she should do what her wisdom told her: take

a drink.

Before she could lose her nerve or be mesmerized, she whirled about and flung

herself knee deep in running water.

And bent. And drank.

And saw Niko, when she raised her dripping lips, sitting on the stream’s far

side, his face calm, unravaged. His quick, canny smile came and went and she

noticed he wore his panoply: the enameled cuirass, sword and dirk forged by the

en-telechy of dreams.

“It’s a dream, then?” she said, feeling the icy water with its four distinct and

different tastes run down her chin and hearing a lumbering behind her much

louder, and a rasping breath much deeper, than Tasfalen’s form could make.

“Don’t turn around,” Niko advised as if he were training a student in the

martial arts; “don’t look at it; don’t listen. This is my rest-place, after all

not theirs.”

“And me? It’s not mine, fighter. Nor are you.”

“And they are. I know.” There was no abhorrence in the Bandaran fighter’s

glance, just infinite patience. And as Ischade looked, his visage changed,

contorting through a metamorphosis that seemed to include all the tortures of

his recent past- eyes rolled up, cheeks split over bone, lips purpled and torn,

teeth cracked and crumbled, bruises filled with blood.

Then the entire process reversed itself, and a handsome man still in the last

bloom of youth regarded Ischade once more.

“You’re very beautiful, you know-in your soul,” Niko said. “It shows here. In

spite of everything.”

Behind her, the Tasfalen-thing was shambling closer; she could hear it splash

into the stream. She almost whirled to fight it; her fingers spread into a shape

suitable for throwing coun-terspells.

Niko shook his head chidingly: “Trust me. This is my place. As for your welcome

here-when I needed help, you came here, where risk is greater than mortals know,

and tried to aid me. I haven’t forgotten.”

“Are you dead?” she asked flatly, though it was impolite.

His smooth brow furrowed. “No, I’m sure not. I’m reclaiming what’s mine … with

a little help.” Behind the fighter, the semblance of the pillar of fire came to

be.

He knew it was there without looking. He said, “See, you must trust. We’re

giving Janni his proper funeral, you and I. At last. And you, who kept him from

worse and soothed his conscience, ought’to be here.”

“And… that?” Ischade meant what was behind her. All her hackles risen, she

found her mouth dry and eyes aching-if she had a mouth here, or eyes. It seemed

she did.

“We’ll put them back where they belong-not here. They’re yours to deal with, in

the World.”

He must have seen her frown, for he leaned forward on one straight and scarless

arm that might never have been shattered when a demon raged inside him: “Roxane

is … special. Different. Less. I’m free of all but my own feelings. For that I

don’t apologize. Like you, I deal in more than one reality. But 1 ask you for

mercy on her behalf…”

“Mercy!” Incredulous, Ischade nearly burst out laughing. The thing that was part

Haught, part Tasfalen (who was dead and had housed Roxane once and now again, if

Ischade understood the rules by which Niko’s magic games were played), was

shuffling close behind now, intent on biting off her head or munching on her

soul. It had been one with a demon; it had merged with devils; it had taken fire

out of the hands of arch-mages such as Randal and used it even against her. All

of this, Ischade was sure, was Roxane’s twisted evil come to ground. And Niko

wanted mercy for the witch that had made his life a living hell and wouldn’t

offer him so much mercy as clean death would bring.

“That’s right-mercy. I’m not like you, but we’ve helped each other. Tolerance,

balance-good and evil: each resides within the other, part and parcel.”

Ischade, who’d seen too much evil, shook her head. “You must be dead, or still

possessed.”

“Look.” Niko’s diction slipped into mercenary argot. “It’s all the same-no good

without evil, no balance… no maat. If we lose one, we lose the other. It’s

just life, that’s all. And as for death-we get what we expect.”

“And you expect what?” Now she realized that Niko himself was not naive, or

helpless, or entirely benign. “From me, I mean?”

“Mercy, I already told you.” The firewell behind him began to shimmer and to

dance, swinging its hips like a temple girl. “To your kind; for the record. For

the balance of the thing. Janni we will take now.”

“We?” It was one of the hardest things Ischade had ever done to engage in

philosophical discussion with Nikodemos while, behind, the shambling thing had

come so close she could feel its fetid breath upon her neck, and fancied that

breath moist and felt, she thought, a strand of drool land in her hair. Don’t

look at it; don’t turn around-it’s Niko’s rest-place and his rules, not mine,

apply.

“We,” Niko said as if it were a simple lesson any child should understand. And

then she did: behind him, a ghost appeared.

She knew ghosts when she saw them: this one was a spirit of supernal power, a

fabled strength, a glossy being of such beauty that tears came to Ischade’s eyes

when it sat down beside Niko, ruffling his hair with a fawn-colored hand.

“I am Abarsis,” it smiled in introduction, and she saw the wizard blood there,

ancient lineage, and love so strong it made her heart hurt: she’d given up such

options as this ghost had thrived on, long ago.

“We need Janni’s soul in heaven; it’s earned its peace. Give it that, and we

will restore you totally-all you were, all you had… including this northern

pair of witches … this amalgam behind you of all their hate-if, as Niko asks,

you show them mercy, then the gods will be well pleased.”

“And if not?” This was no place for Ischade-she had no truck with gods or ghosts

of dead priests. Damn Tempus, who muddled all the sides and made ridiculous

demands.

“That’s done long since,” said the ghost, unabashedly reading her mind. “We’re

here for Janni only, and to give a gift for your safekeeping him until we could

take him home. Now name it, Ischade of Downwind. Choose well.”

She wanted only to get out of there, to be whole and well and fighting on her

own terms, dealing with her own kind. And before she could say that, or think of

something better, Abarsis, one arm around Niko, raised his other hand to her,

saying: “It is done. Go with strength and purpose. Life to you, Sister, and

everlasting glory.”

And the rest-place went out like a light. The icy stream of colored water, the

pillar of fire which aped reality, the snuffling horror at her back which she’d

never truly glimpsed but only felt-and the two fighters, one spirit, one man of

balance: all were gone as if they’d never been.

She was standing on the dry floor of Tasfalen’s house and Haught was taunting

her to come up the stairs.

Mercy, Niko had asked of her. She wondered if she knew, still, what it was and

how to show it to creatures like these.

“Ischade… Mistress, aren’t you curious?” Haught was rubbing the ring and she

could feel the feedback of magic twisted, a deadly loop fashioned by a brash and

foolish child.

Temptation made her shift from foot to foot. She was stronger, she could feel

it: Niko and his guardian spirit had given her that. She could end them, here

and now-Haught and whatever animated Tasfalen. For, though she hadn’t seen him

yet, she knew he must be here: the rest-place revelation was like a map, a

schematic, a design which fit over human ones. So he was here, reborn, animated

by some power. And Niko had wanted mercy for Roxane….

Two and two fit together with a snap.

Ischade whirled on her heel and fled out the door. For a moment it resisted, but

her strength prevailed.

Haught, behind her, came running down the stairs with a shout.

But she was faster: she wrenched the door open, slipped through, and bolted it

with magic from the farther side.

Then, stepping back, Ischade considered mercy in all its meanings: if Tasfalen

and Roxane were with Haught, in any stage of being whatsoever, mercy could only

take one form.

And with strength loaned her from the rest-place of a mystery she didn’t

understand and under the benediction of the high priest of a god in whom she had

no faith, Ischade began to weave a spell so strong and fast she had no doubt

about it holding.

All about Tasfalen’s house she wove the ward-a special one, one that would keep

the house sealed and keep those within locked up until they learned what mercy

meant.

When it was over, she realized she had worked her spells in the midst of a

downpour which had soaked her to the skin.

Picking up her heavy robes, she headed homeward. Perhaps she should have found

the Riddler and told him what she’d done. But there were Crit and Strat to think

of, and she didn’t want to think of Strat-who was with Tempus by now, alive or

dead.

She wanted to think only of herself for now. She wanted things to be just as

they always had been before. And she wanted to think about mercy, a quality

quite strained and strange, but strengthening, in its way.

In Tasfalen’s house, what had been Roxane lay abed in Tasfalen’s body, half

conscious, rent in memory and power, a mere fragment knowing only that it wanted

to survive.

“Duuu,” it mumbled, and tried again to move the lips of a corpse twice

resurrected. “Dusss.” And: “Dusssst. Haughttt… dussst.”

The ex-slave was rattling windows barred by magic, cursing horrid spells that

couldn’t get outside, but bounced around the comers of the house and back upon

him like ricochets, so that each one was more trouble than it was worth.

Eventually his panic ebbed and he stalked over to the bedside, looking down at

the fish-white pallor of the man who’d brought him here.

Snatched him from somewhere-from elsewhere … perchance from oblivion. Someone

else might have been grateful, but Haught was too wise, too angry: he knew that

all witches took their price.

He’d thought to win; he’d lost. He was captive now, captive in a mansion with

fine stuffs around him, true. But he was caged like an animal by his former

mistress. And he was here only because of Tasfalen.

Nothing else could have done it. So he crouched down, thinking of ways to kill

the already-dead, ways to get the Roxane out of Tasfalen, where it was bodiless

and weak.

But then he began to listen, to try to understand what the thing on the bed was

saying: “Duuussss, duuussss, duuussss…”

“Dust?” he guessed. “Do you mean dust?”

The eyes of the revivified corpse blinked open, startling him so that he fell

back and caught himself on his hands.

“Duuussss,” the blue lips said, “on tonnnn.”

“Dust. On your… tongue?” Of course. That was it. The dust. It wanted the dust.

Not ordinary dust, Haught realized: the hot dust, the bright dust, the fragments

of the Nisi Globes of Power. And the corpse was right: the dust was their only

hope-his as well as… hers.

For the first time, Haught thought about what it meant, being caged with Roxane,

the Nisibisi witch-in-man’s-body-or what was left of her. If she perished, those

who held her soul would come for her. And Haught might be embroiled. Entangled.

Taken. Swallowed. Absorbed like interest payments.

His skin hompilated: there was enough intelligence in that body to have seen the

answer before he did.

What else was there, he was in no hurry to find out. And he had a long, trying

task ahead of him: the dust in question must be collected, mote by mote.

It was going to be arduous: the place was full of dust, most of it nonmagical.

It might take days, or weeks, or years, to gather enough-especially when he had

no idea how much was enough.

And when he had it, what would he do with it? Give it to the invalid ex-corpse?

Or find a way to make use of it himself? He didn’t know, but he knew he had

plenty of time to decide. And, since he had nothing better to do, he thought, he

might as well start collecting what dust he could, mote by mote by mote….

The storm pelted Sanctuary with all the fury of affronted gods. Rain sheeted so

hard that it punctured skin windows in the Maze; it ran so thick and wild in the

gutters that the tunnels filled up and sewers overflowed in the better streets

while, in the palace, servitors ran with buckets and barrels to place under

leaks that were veritable waterfalls.

On the dockside, everything was awash in tide and downpour, which gave Tempus

the perfect opportunity to suggest that Theron, Emperor of Ranke, Brachis, High

Priest, and all the functionaries forget protocol and begin their procession

now, to higher ground and drier quarters.

By the time the Rankan entourage reached the palace gates, Molin Torchholder had

already arrived, Kama in tow.

In the palace temple’s quiet, he was giving grateful thanks for the storm which

had come to quench the fires (that, unattended by gods, threatened to bum the

whole town down) while, at the casement, Kama stared out over smoking rooftops

toward uptown, where the pillar of fire spat and wriggled.

She had sidled into the alcove, away from priestly ritual, and she couldn’t have

said whether it was the cold storm winds with their blinding sheets of rain so

fierce that she could see it bounce knee-high when it struck the palace roof, or

the demonic twistings of the fiery cone which resisted quenching that made her

hair stand on end.

She was more conscious of Molin than she should have been. Perhaps that was the

reason for the superstitious chill she felt: she was about to be indicted for

attempted assassination and what-have-you, and she was worried about what the

priest really felt in his heart-about how she looked and whether he believed her

and what he thought of her… about whether anyone of her lineage ought to be

thinking infatuated thoughts about anyone of his.

It wouldn’t work; he was a worse choice for her than Critias. But, like Critias,

it was impossible to convince Molin of that.

It was nothing he’d said-it was everything he did, the way their bodies reacted

when their flesh touched. And it frightened Kama beyond measure: she’d need all

her wits now just to stay alive. Her father would take Crit’s word over hers

without hesitation; oath-bond and honor outweighted any claim she had on the

Riddler.

If she’d been born a manchild, it might have been otherwise. But things were as

they were, and Torchholder was her only hope.

He’d said so. He knew it for a fact. She didn’t like feeling weak, being

perceived as vulnerable. And yet, she admitted, she’d spread her legs on the

god’s altar for the man now coming up behind her, who slid his arm round her

shivering shoulders and kissed her ear.

“It’s wonderful, the timely workings of the gods,” he said in an intimate

undertone. “And it’s a good omen-our good omen. You must… Kama, you’re

shaking.”

“I’m cold, wet, and bedraggled,” she protested as he turned her gently to face

him. Then she added: “While you were communing with the Stormgod, my father and

Theron’s party came through the palace gates. My time is at hand, Molin. Don’t

hold out false hope to me, or gods’ gifts. The gods of the armies won’t overlook

the fact that I’m a woman-they never have.”

“Thanks to all the Weather Gods that you are,” said the priest feelingly and,

after peering into her eyes for an uncomfortably long instant, pulled her

against him. “I’ll take care of you, as I have taken care of this town and its

gods and even Kadakithis. Put your faith in me.”

Had anyone else said that to her, she would have laughed. But from Molin it

sounded believable. Or she wanted so to believe it that she didn’t care how it

sounded.

They were standing thus, arms locked about one another, when a commotion of feet

and then a discreet “Hrrmph” sounded.

Both turned, but it was Kama who whooped a short bark of disbelieving laughter

before she thought to choke it off: Before them were Jihan and Randal, the

Tysian Hazard, arms around each other.

Or, more exactly, Jihan’s arms were around Randal’s slight and battered frame.

She was holding the mage easily, so that his feet hardly touched the floor. His

glazed eyes roamed a little but he was conscious-his quizzical, all-suffering

looking confirmed it.

Jihan’s eyes were full of red flames and Kama heard Molin exclaim under his

breath, “The storm-of course, it’s brought her powers back.”

“Powers?” Kama whispered through unmoving lips. “Were they gone? Back from

where?” and Molin answered, just as low, “Never mind. I’ll tell you later,

beloved.”

Then he said, in his most ringing priestly voice, “Jihan, my lady, what brings

you to the Stormgod’s sanctuary? Are the children well? Is something amiss with

Niko?”

“Priest,” Jihan stamped her foot, “isn’t it obvious? Randal and I are in love

and we wish to be married by the tenets of your… faith… god, whatever. Now!”

Randal hiccoughed in surprise and his eyes widened. Kama would have been more

concerned with the exhausted little wizard if she wasn’t still reeling from

shock: Beloved, Molin had called her.

Randal raised a feeble hand to his brow and Kama wondered whether the casualty

was capable of standing under his own power, let alone making any decision about

marriage.

So she said, “Randal? Seh, Witchy-Ears, are you awake? My father isn’t going to

like you marrying his girl ranger, not considering the use he tends to make of

her. I’d-”

Jihan’s free hand outstretched, pointing, and Kama’s flesh began to chill.

Molin stepped in front of Kama. “Jihan, Kama meant no slight. She’s in dire

straits herself. With our help. Froth Daughter, you shall be able to wed your

chosen mage before…” He craned his neck to peer out the window, where no sun

could be seen, just the demonic pillar of fire and the lightning of

Stormbringer. “… before sundown, if that’s your desire, and I will wed mine.

If you aid me, my gratitude and that of my tutelary god will be inscribed in the

heavens forever and-”

“You’re marrying a mage?” Jihan’s winglike brows knitted, but her pointing

finger, with its deadly cold, wavered, and her hand came to rest on her own hip.

“Not a mage. Kama, here. I can divest myself of Rosanda easily enough: she’s

abandoned me. But I’ll need your help in securing Tempus’s permission… he’s

your guardian as well as Kama’s.”

“Guardian?” Both women snapped in unison as two feminine spines stiffened and

two wily women considered alternatives.

“Someone,” Torchholder intoned through the objections of the two women, “must

set the seal on the betrothal pacts,” thinking that he’d found a way to free

Tempus from Jinan and, for that boon alone, Tempus owed him any favor he cared

to ask.

And for Kama’s hand, Kama’s freedom, and Kama’s honor, he’d be glad to call

their debt even. But for Kama’s willing love he needed more. Standing behind

her, his arms circling her in the proper pose of the protective husband, he

whispered: “Trust me in this; accept a formal betrothal. I am sacerdote of

Mother Bey, Vashanka, and Stonnbringer. It will take a month to untangle

the necessary rituals. It will take longer-if you desire.”

The tension along her spine eased. She let her breath out with a careful sigh.

Once more, Molin Torchholder gave fervid thanks to the Stormgod, who had seen

fit to visit rain upon this paltry thieves’ world in all His bounty, to quench

the fires of chaos, and even to restore Jihan’s powers.

Over Kama’s head, as he looked out the window, it seemed to him that even the

demonic pillar of fire was shrinking under the onslaught of the god’s blessed

rain.

Tempus was still trying to explain to Theron, who’d come down here to the

empire’s nether-parts because of that black, ominous rain falling in the capital

of Ranke, Abarsis’s visit, and because it was the tendency of omens to make or

break a regent’s rule, that the plague had been specious (a handy way to keep

Brachis under wraps) and the storm merely natural; that the fires and the

looting were simply consequences of the demonic pillar of flame, which had

much to do with Nikodemos and nothing at all to do with Theron’s arrival;

and that “No one will construe it otherwise, my friend, unless we show

weakness,” when they came upon Molin Torchholder in Ka-dakithis’s palace hall.

“My lord and emperor,” Molin purred, and bowed, and Tempus stifled an urge to

let Theron know that Sanctuary’s architect/priest was a Nisi wizardling in

disguise, a pretender and defiler, and a loudmouthed meddler to boot.

Theron, who didn’t quite remember Molin but recognized the ornate robes of

office, said sharply, “Priest, what’s wrong with your acolytes that this place

is accursed by weather, witch, and demon? If you can’t restore order to your

little backwater of the heavens, I’ll replace you with someone who can. You’ve

till New Year’s day to set things right here-and no argument.” Theron’s leonine

visage reddened: he’d found someone to blame for at least part of what was wrong

here.

Only Tempus noticed the humor dancing in the shadows round the emperor’s mouth

as the Lion of Ranke bawled: “See Brachis, this is his mess as well, and tell

him my decree: either Sanctuary is made pleasing in the sight of gods and their

chosen representative-me-or you’ll both be out looking for new jobs come year’s

end.”

Molin Torchholder was too smart to wince or bridle. He stood stolidly, eyes

fixed on Theron’s hairy left ear until he was certain that the emperor was

finished.

Then he responded, “Very good, my lord emperor. I’ll see to it. But while I have

your ear-and Tempus’s-some news: Last night Prince/Governor Kadakithis pledged

his troth to the Beysib queen, Shupansea… an alliance is ours now for the

asking.”

“Really?” Theron’s manner mellowed; he rubbed his hands. “That’s the sort of

omen worth retelling.”

Tempus found his dagger in his fingers; he cleaned dirt from its chased hilt

absently, waiting for Molin’s other shoe to drop.

And drop it did: “Moreover, if I have leave to continue, sire? Many thanks.

Then: The esteemed Froth Daughter, spawn of Stonnbringer who is father of all

the Weather Gods, will marry our own archmage, the Hazard Randal. This alliance,

too, is fortuitous for-”

“What?” Tempus could scarcely believe his ears-or his good fortune.

Stonnbringer, at least, kept His word.

Molin continued, not deigning to notice the Riddler’s outburst: “-for us all.

And to make a threesome of favorable omens, I myself propose to marry-with all

suitable ceremony and with Tempus’s permission, of course-the lady Kama of the

Third Commando, daughter of the Riddler. Thus the armies and the priesthood will

be wed as well, and internal strife ended…”

“You’re going to what? You’re mad. Crit says she tried to mur-” Tempus bit off

words of accusation, thinking matters through as quickly as he fought in battle.

Torchholder was canny; the move was one sure to bring him power, consolidate his

position, put him beyond Tempus’s retribution and above reproach. But it would

also save Tempus’s daughter from a lengthy inquisition: even Crit would admit

that, since Strat was alive and would recover, Kama was more useful to them

alive than dead, if she shared Torchholder’s bed.

And Crit had sent word to him that there was some evidence that PFLS members had

used the blue-fletched arrows: the task force leader had warned against hasty

action, using all his operator’s wiles to posit misdirection, to give Tempus an

honorable way out of accusing his own daughter of an attempt at murder.

“So you’ll make an honest woman of my … daughter. Just don’t expect a dowry,

congratulations, or any leniency on my part if you later wish you hadn’t: a

divorce will get you killed. So will unfaithfulness, or perfidy of any sort.” It

was the least he could do for his daughter. And, said before the emperor,

Tempus’s conditions bound like law. It was a good thing that a priest of

Vashanka could have more than one wife, though Tempus wouldn’t have wanted to be

Molin when that one’s first wife heard this news.

Torchholder blanched, but smiled and said, “I’m off to tell her, then. And

you’ll take care of the other matter… the little misunderstanding she had with

certain troops of yours?”

“That goes without saying,” Tempus growled while Theron looked back and forth

between the two, uncomprehending.

When Molin had hurried away in a swish of robes, Theron elbowed Tempus and said,

light eyes sparkling, “Don’t suppose you’d tell an old warhorse what all that

was about?”

“Petty squabbles, unimportant. Now tell me about this expedition you want to

mount-the one to the uncharted east, beyond the sea. It interests me; I’m

restless. My men need some mortal enemies to fight-this going up against magics

and the gods tends to dull an army’s spirit. They want a battle they can win

upon their own.”

And Theron was glad to do that. They worked it out, on the way down to see

Nikodemos and the fabled Stormchildren in their nursery: Tempus would take his

forces-Stepsons and 3rd Commando and whomever else he chose from the empire’s

legions, and strike east. He’d ship the horses such cavalry must have, and

weapons and provisions; he’d bring back intelligence and rare goods, if there

were any; he’d set up embassies for trade and size up weak principalities for

conquest. And he’d do it without any help from witch or god-taking just Jihan

(and Randal) and his fighters.

The two old friends shook hands as they came down a flight of stairs and headed

for the nursery, with Theron sighing wistfully, “I only wish that I could join

you, Riddler. This kinging is even less than it’s cracked up to be. But it makes

me feel less trapped, setting you free, even for a few months….”

Tempus pushed the door inward and Theron fell silent.

The Rankan emperor remembered Nikodemos from the battle for the throne at the

Festival of Man. He’d been with Tempus once when the Riddler had had to bail his

Stepson out of a Rankan jail.

The ashen-haired youth sitting with a babe on either knee looked tired, wan, and

somehow much too gentle to be the same much-lauded fighter. But when Niko raised

his head and wished them life and glory, it was clearly the youngster whose fate

was dogged by a Nisibisi witch.

Tempus left Theron’s side and strode to where Niko sat.

As he did, Gyskouras buried his young head in Niko’s chiton and began to weep at

the sight of his natural father, and Alton, understanding more than children

should, shook his dark-haired head and told his blond companion: “‘Kouras, be

brave. Don’t cry.”

“Let him. They’re clear tears, and that’s a blessing,” Niko said softly to the

children, then looked up at Tempus and beyond, to Theron: “You’ll excuse me for

not rising, lords. They’re tired. They’re undisciplined. They’ve had too many

adventures for boys so young.”

“So have you, we’ve heard. Stealth,” Theron said kindly, remembering all that

went on upcountry to win him the throne from Abakithis, and how much Niko had

sacrificed to that end.

“You’re still taking them to Bandara, Niko?” Tempus asked offhandedly.

“If you still agree. Commander. If you’ll give me leave.”

Tempus almost said that Abarsis had usurped command from him in the matter, but

he was too pleased with the outcome of his talk with Theron. “Leave you have,

and leave to meet us in three months back in the capital-we’re mounting an

expedition and I’ll want you along.”

Something changed in Niko’s face, as if a tension had been drained. “You do? You

will?” Niko let the children slide off his lap and got slowly, carefully, to his

feet. The signs of all he’d been through then showed clearly: bruised bones,

favored muscles, a stiffness time would have to heal. “I’m glad.. .1 mean… you

might have thought me too much trouble-all I bring with me, wherever… my

witch-curse and my ghosts and all.”

“You’re the best I’ve got, Niko.” said Tempus levelly. “And the only man I’ve

called partner in a century. Some things can’t be changed.”

And although Theron might not have understood the last bit, Niko did, and moved

painfully to embrace him, stepped back, bowed as best he could to Theron, and

then, with a blush of humility, mumbled that he’d best begin preparations to

take the boys and make away.

Tempus took Theron out of there, then, and on the way back upstairs they chanced

to glimpse the skyline out the palace window, where a hair-thin column of fire,

a weakened pillar of flame, blew far right, then left, and then winked out.

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