NINE
The Thunder of Destruction
Merrick held tight to Nynnia’s hand, or maybe she
was holding tight to his—whichever the case, he was glad of it. He
had not pulled his Center back, from the moment they had entered
this place. Ahead, Sorcha was a smoldering scarlet ember, the Bond
running back to him twisting like living lava, while Raed flickered
like hot silver flame. Prior Aulis was also scarlet, but flecked
through with blue fire: the mark of a Sensitive.
This confused Merrick. While he knew that
Sensitives were usually in high positions in the Order, he had
never thought to find one so high in both Active and Sensitive in
such a remote outpost. Deacons like the Abbot, with such high
ratings in both, warranted positions in larger Priories or Abbeys.
To find Aulis tucked away here was rather strange.
These concerns were shoved to one side when she led
them into what had to be the infirmary. Merrick immediately yanked
his Center back; too much human pain could overload his senses.
This, then, was where the remaining Deacons were.
The room reeked of so much sweat, urine and fear
that it was like a blow between his eyes. If he had been viewing
this with his Center, it would have been unbearable. All four of
them stood in the middle of the chaos, while the Prior watched
their reactions. Doing a quick head count, Merrick reckoned that
pretty much every Deacon and lay Brother was in the infirmary,
apart from three or four. After the destruction out in the Hall, it
wasn’t difficult to imagine what had happened to them.
Several lay Brothers, also bearing wounds, were
trying to hold down a young man wearing the blue of an Active, yet
he seemed to have no physical injury. His eyes were bulging from
their sockets, and with a start Merrick realized that the Brothers
had gagged the struggling man. Froth was starting to leak from the
corner of his mouth and stain the leather bit.
“Father!” Nynnia let go of the Deacon’s hand and
dashed over to a bulky older man sewing up a gash on a lay
Brother’s head. Merrick was relieved that she had not traveled so
far only to face grief at the end of her journey. He watched as the
old man tenderly pressed his daughter to him and kissed the top of
her head. She smiled at him so broadly that it was like the sun had
dawned in the small infirmary. “Father, this is Deacon Merrick
Chambers—he is responsible for me being able to get back to you—and
this is my father, Kyrix Macthcoll.”
The stout man’s hands were covered in blood, so he
did not offer a hand for Merrick to shake, but his smile was a
smaller reflection of his daughter’s. “Then I thank you, Deacon
Chambers—I need my girl home.” He turned and looked over his
shoulder. “Now more than ever.”
Nynnia was rolling up the sleeves on her dress.
“Who can still be saved, Father?”
“There are several Brothers in the other room who
could use your talents.” He patted her on the shoulder and then
gave a slight bow to Merrick. “Excuse our rudeness—but as you can
see we are both needed here.”
The Deacon, who was feeling particularly useless,
tucked his hands under his cloak. “Please don’t stand on ceremony
on my account.”
The girl’s eyes darted to Merrick, soft brown
and—he wasn’t imagining it—warm. She turned away with a swirl of
her dress.
He hated to leave her, but it was obvious that
Prior Aulis needed him, for there was one thing he had noticed: all
of the Deacons here were Actives. Not one Sensitive remained; had
any been alive, they would have been here watching over their
brethren.
Sorcha was voicing the very question that buzzed in
his head. “What the hell happened here?” She moderated her tone
slightly since they were in a heaving infirmary, but still, the
edge of panic was audible.
The short gray haircut that Priors often favored
made the older woman look somewhat masculine, Merrick noted as he
took in the deep wrinkles on her forehead. This woman’s life had
been hard to begin with, and it looked like it hadn’t been any
easier in the last few days. “What do you think happened?” she
snapped, her tone belying her grandmotherly looks. “We were
attacked by the unliving!”
It was the one thing no one wanted to hear. Even
with all the evidence out in the main hall, it was not a pleasant
thing to have confirmed. An attack on a sacred building of the
Order had not happened since the dark ages. Not in Arkaym, not in
Delmaire. Powerful runes were carved into Priory and Abbey
foundations and walls—kept active by constant reworking by the
Deacons. Their protection was immutable, more so than water. A huge
chasm opened up in front of Merrick as he realized the training he
had so recently completed was not proving as useful as he’d
imagined.
“Why is no deal I make ever simple?” Raed muttered
grimly.
Prior Aulis’ attention turned swiftly on him. “Who
is . . .” Her voice trailed off. “Raed Rossin!”
The Pretender threw his hands up in the air. “Is
there no such thing as anonymity anymore?”
“We were also attacked.” Merrick stepped forward in
front of their rescuer. “Captain Rossin saved our lives when a
possessed sea monster attacked and destroyed our ship. We made a
deal with him, or we wouldn’t have been able to get here at
all.”
He expected surprise from the Prior, but perhaps
her experiences of the last few weeks had softened her attitude to
the impossible. “I see,” she said, without any sign of emotion in
her tone.
The chaos of the infirmary swirled around them
while all three of the Deacons silently contemplated what to do
next. Merrick wondered what the point of those years of study had
been, if none of the rules held true any longer.
It was Raed who broke the stalemate. “Is there
somewhere else we can discuss this?” He jerked his head toward the
Deacons around them.
Prior Aulis nodded mutely and led them through the
stone corridors deeper into the keep, away from the smells of
charred flesh and blood. Her second-story chambers were small and
modest, looking out over the windblown courtyard. Without needing
to be asked, Merrick opened his Center to see if there was any
threat around them.
Through that double vision, he let his perception
stretch out as wide as it would go. The three people in the room
with him, the mad scramble in the infirmary, the damaged silhouette
of the lay Brother with the horses out in the stable, even the
chickens in the yard, all became immediately obvious to him—but no
taint of the unliving. He was becoming less and less sure of his
own abilities, but his search did confirm that one disturbing fact
he had already guessed.
“You really don’t have any Sensitives left within
the Priory.”
Aulis folded her hands, the tension apparent in the
set of her shoulders. “They were the very first target of this
attack.”
“Start from the beginning.” Sorcha stood next to
Merrick at the window, almost as if she was lending him some sort
of support.
“At first, there were only small attacks,” the
Prior said, rubbing one hand wearily over her mouth before
continuing. “Shades seen in the graveyard, farm animals shocked out
of milking.”
“All low-grade incidents.” Merrick nodded, feeling
like he should at least be taking notes, but Sorcha kept her arms
folded and he couldn’t write properly while using his Center. He
knew which was more important at this moment.
“They increased, more and more, until we were
drowning in them; that was when we sent word to the Mother Abbey
for help.” She opened a drawer in her desk and pulled out a sheaf
of papers. “Read some of the reports if you like.”
Sorcha made no move toward them, instead dipping
into her pocket and removing a cigar. She was polite enough not to
light it, but seemed to gain some calmness merely from rolling it
in her fingertips. “I think what happened after you sent that
weirstone message is more important.”
The Prior’s lips tightened, and her frown
deepened.
“The townspeople lost faith in you.” Raed took a
seat and shot Sorcha a sharp look. “After all, they must have been
disappointed when their protectors weren’t up to the task.”
Aulis half rose out of her chair, her face glowing
red under her cap of gray hair. “They did more than lose faith—they
turned on us! Why do you think we have the gates barred? That isn’t
against anything unliving!”
Merrick narrowed his Center on the Prior, feeling
her rage flare up to strangely high levels. Aulis cleared her
throat, regaining her composure slightly before taking her seat
once more. Many of the Order were a little arrogant; the sad fact
was that it often came with power.
The cigar in Sorcha’s fingertips stilled as she too
concentrated on the riled Prior. “And what happened after that?”
she asked softly. Along the Bond, Merrick felt her own Center reach
out to him. It was a strangely comforting, and yet frightening,
gesture. She trusted him enough to give it to him, but felt in
enough danger that she thought it might be needed. The situation
felt as desperate to her as it did to him.
“Morning Matins.” Aulis’ hands were clenched tight
on each other, her eyes unable to meet anyone else’s. “It came for
us at morning Matins.”
“In what form?” Sorcha’s voice was flat and
expressionless, but Merrick felt her tension in the Bond, and
observed the way her fingers unconsciously arched toward where her
Gauntlets lay at her side.
“None I know of.”
Merrick felt his mouth go dry. The geist by the
roadside, the one summoned from the bodies of the Tinkers; that too
had been a new form. He licked his lips. “Could the Sensitives
identify it—”
“They had no time,” Aulis replied shortly. “They
were the first to burn. You saw what was left of them in the center
of the Hall.”
“Sensitives being attacked, unliving forms we’ve
never seen before . . .” Sorcha took a long, slow breath.
“And don’t forget, ones that can travel over
water,” Raed offered, his jaw tightening under his narrow beard. “I
take it, Prior, that you have a plan to survive all this?”
Her eyes flitted to Merrick and Sorcha seated in
the stone window. The glance was almost embarrassed.
“Oh, now I know you are joking!” Raed kicked the
chair away and jerked to his feet. “Those two? I had to pull them
out of the sea myself.”
Merrick clamped his arm down hard on his partner’s
shoulder, fearing she would beat ten kinds of revenge into the
Pretender. But, strangely, she attempted no such thing. Her body
was tense, but she was not even looking at Raed.
Out in the courtyard, the crippled lay Brother was
running toward the sound of a bell once more at the gate. Through
his Center Merrick could sense nothing unliving, but something very
human and very angry.
All three members of the Order leapt to their feet,
sensing a conflagration of rage from beyond the walls. Together
they bolted for the door, Raed shouting after them, “What? What is
it?”
Neither of the women was going to enlighten him, so
Merrick barked what they’d all sensed. “The locals are at the gate,
and they are very unhappy.”
As he raced down the stairs, Merrick heard Sorcha
ask the Prior how many of her lay Brothers and Actives were ready
to defend the Priory. Another first for the Order, he thought
miserably.
“We have five Actives uninjured, and maybe seven
lay Brothers, all in the infirmary.”
“No time for that.” Sorcha ran ahead of them and he
noticed that her Gauntlets were already in her hand. Merrick had to
remind himself that she was an experienced Deacon, with years of
dealing with people in a crowd situation, thanks to her time
seconded to the Imperial Guard—at least, that was what he
hoped.
He and Raed followed the Prior and Sorcha. The
terrified lay Brother was racing back to them, his hair flying
loose about his shoulders, and his eyes were wide circles in a pale
face. “Prior, Prior!” A thin trail of spit ran down his cheek. The
poor man was probably used to a very quiet life in this remote
corner of the world; the shock looked like it might kill him. “I
shut the gate as you told me to . . . I did . . . but they want to
talk to you. They’re shouting so loud!”
Indeed they were, jumbled words and threats that
made for an animalistic roar. The lay Brother had managed to get
the huge oak gates and the thick iron bar down, so most likely the
portcullis was still secure.
“Quickly.” The Prior gathered her habit around her
knees and scrambled most inelegantly up the walls to the parapets.
Night was drawing on and, as they reached the top of the walls, the
raw air wrapped itself tight around them. Snow could not be far
off, but the cold had done nothing to cool the anger of the crowd
below.
It seemed every citizen of the town had climbed the
hill. Many were carrying lit torches and shouting up to the Prior.
The crowd’s words were mostly blended together into a primitive
growl, but he heard many of them screaming for Aulis to come down
to them. She stood there staring, her lips pursed in real anger,
and looked ill moved to do so.
“I’ve never seen a person pulled apart by a crowd.”
Raed put one foot on the parapet and tilted his head down. “Exactly
how many of them have died thanks to your inability to protect what
you are supposed to?”
Merrick could understand that the Pretender had no
love for those who worked for the Emperor, but he found himself
defending the old Prior. “We’ve all been surprised by the events of
the last week or so. It’s unprecedented—the Prior Aulis can’t be
held responsible for that.”
“Watch out!” Sorcha slammed into Merrick just as he
was getting into full diplomatic flow. Together they smashed into
the stone of the parapet and tumbled away, just as fire burst right
where he’d been standing.
He dimly heard Raed’s shocked oath, while Sorcha
helped him to his feet. A portion of the parapet was now a puddle
of flame, almost like a geist attack of some sort . . . yet he had
sensed nothing.
Raed was shielding Prior Aulis. “Felstaad fire.”
She darted closer to the Deacons. “The local alcohol is deadly
stuff. It makes for excellent missiles.”
They heard the clatter of other incendiaries
smashing and burning against the wall. Obviously the first had been
the best aimed. Cautiously, Merrick dared a glance over the edge.
The locals did look very well armed, and in the flickering light of
the torches they could be seen lighting rag wicks on small pottery
jars. Most of these they hurled at the gate, but they also sent a
fair number flying in toward where they’d last seen the
Prior.
“Let them see how they like Chityre,” Aulis
growled, yanking her Gauntlets out of her belt.
“What do you mean?” Sorcha actually grabbed hold of
her superior, stopping her before she could put them on. “You
cannot use the runes against civilians!”
Turning the power of the Order on the locals could
ruin all the work the Mother Abbey had done. In the falling dark,
the Deacon and the Prior stayed locked in a tableau of tension.
Merrick knew what his partner meant; the powers were never to be
used against people, only against the unliving. Aulis must have
been half-maddened by her terrible situation to even contemplate
it. Sorcha’s fingers stayed locked around the Prior’s wrists.
Shots rang out now. Wealthier townspeople often had
guns, for hunting and protection. Merrick, for one, had hoped
Ulrich was a poor town. The snaps of bullets reported off the
stone, while Aulis and Sorcha went through their silent battle of
wills. If either of them managed to get her hands on her Gauntlets,
bullets would be the least of anyone’s worries.
If it came down to it, Merrick realized with
surprising calm, he would give his Center to Sorcha. Then they
would be battling a Prior in her own jurisdiction. Another first
for the Order, one that would rock its very foundations. Merrick
held his breath.
“Venerable Aulis,” Sorcha hissed in a voice that
had not an ounce of deference in it, “let me deal with this.” A
long moment passed, and Merrick was not sure which he was more
afraid of: the two women or the mob screaming for blood
outside.
Finally, Aulis let out a ragged sigh and gave a
short nod to the tense Deacon. Sorcha rose cautiously to her feet
and slid on her Gauntlets.
Still crouched on the parapet, Merrick touched her
leg, afraid of the sudden expressionless glaze over his partner’s
features. “Sorcha?” It was a personal address that he hoped might
snap her back.
She looked down at him, and he recognized the gleam
of something in those vivid blue eyes; he’d seen it on the stairs
in his father’s castle, just before everything had gone mad.
“Trust me,” Sorcha said through a grim smile. “You
have to trust me.”
Slowly, Merrick let his hand slide away from her.
Despite everything—or maybe because of it—at this moment, he
did.
Thrusting on her Gauntlets, Sorcha opened a tiny
pinprick to the Otherside and summoned Chityre. Her hands lit up
like popping fireworks in the half-light, flashing and burning like
embers snapping from a brilliant fire. Stepping to the very edge of
the parapet, Sorcha held up her hands as they writhed with power.
Against the dying sun, her form was dark with only her Gauntlets
burning. Glancing to his right, Merrick saw Raed’s face outlined by
the light. He could tell by expression alone that the Pretender had
not seen an unveiled Active up close like this. The air prickled
with heat, as if a storm was coming. In a way, one was.
With a jerk of her hands, Sorcha let a surge of
power break from Chityre into the sky. It ripped through the air
like the boom of a cannon, accompanied by a flurry of bright fire.
It was a display that would not have been out of place at one of
the Imperial celebrations, and it had the desired effect.
Below, the crowd was suddenly silent. Merrick
wanted to stand up and see the expressions on their faces, but he
made do with reaching out with his Center. The waves of anger
washing off the mob were fluctuating, replaced with eddies of
fear.
Sorcha let another explosion flow through her
Gauntlets; this one was louder and seemed to rock the wall.
Merrick’s ears rang and through his Center it was like a pulse of
light that momentarily blinded him. When he recovered, he
feverishly checked; still no sign of the unliving.
“I hope you get my point!” Sorcha yelled from the
parapet, her Gauntlets still pulsing with Chityre.
The crowd below muttered, but at least they weren’t
screaming.
“You may have a couple of guns,” Sorcha continued,
the air around her warm and smelling faintly of almonds, “but you
are attacking a Priory full of Active Deacons. How many different
ways do you think we have of killing you?” She gestured with one
burning Gauntlet.
The night sizzled, warm now despite the wintry
chill only minutes before. And just as suddenly, the mood of the
crowd also changed, its rage dissipating into the night. A mob,
Merrick considered, was an ethereal thing that could turn on a
heartbeat, and the unveiled power that Sorcha was displaying was
enough of a catalyst.
“We’ll be back,” one last brave soul screamed at
them, and then they turned and descended back down the road.
Merrick got to his feet, while at his side Sorcha stifled
Chityre.
“They’re only retreating,” he observed. “They’ll
take some time to get their bravery back, but at some point they
will.”
His partner stripped off her Gauntlets with a
terribly grim expression. He felt through the Bond that even this
empty display had cost her. It had cost him too. It seemed that
there wasn’t a rule that couldn’t be broken.
Aulis was still crumpled against the wall, perhaps
waiting for someone to help her up. After a second, realizing that
no one was going to, she started to get to her feet. “You see now,”
she said in a low, angry voice, “what we have had to deal with
these last few weeks. Unconscionable.”
No one answered.
It was the Pretender who found his voice first. “I
don’t care about your impotent Deacons—my crew are in danger.”
Raed’s expression dipped away from rakish, toward deep concern.
Merrick could understand; no one could see the harbor clearly from
up here.
“The townspeople won’t let you leave the Priory.”
It was now Aulis’ turn to grin; a hard, bitter expression. She
pointed to the road and it did indeed seem that the mob had
retreated only to the bottom of the hill. The Prior gave a short
laugh. “It won’t matter to them one little bit that you aren’t a
Deacon. You’ve been in here; our taint has rubbed off on
you.”
Raed let out a sharp oath, took a half pace and
then jerked around. “I will get back to them, you know—whatever it
takes.”
Sorcha ran a hand through her hair. “This is an old
castle, no doubt with many secrets. No self-respecting lord would
let himself be trapped up here.”
The Prior tucked her hands into her long sleeves.
She remained silent for a moment, as if she wanted to hold on to
something. Finally she let out an annoyed sigh. “There is an
underground passage—an escape route that the Felstaads
built.”
“That’s all I need.” Raed turned and took the
stairs down into the yard once more.
“I will go with him,” Sorcha said bluntly, tucking
her Gauntlets away.
Merrick couldn’t believe what his partner was
saying. “You can’t!”
Her blue eyes were pools of darkness in the drawing
night. “You were the one who made the bargain, Chambers. The Order
does not go back on its word.”
“Deacon Faris is right,” Aulis chimed in,
apparently having recovered some of her commanding nature. “Much as
I dislike your companion, he should not be abandoned to those evil
townspeople, or to the unliving.”
Merrick was glad at least to hear something like
compassion from his superior. “Well, then, we should get
after—”
“Not we.” Sorcha caught his arm before he could
follow Raed. “Just me.”
“But we’re partners—we shouldn’t get
separated.”
“Would you leave the Prior undefended?” Aulis
snapped. “You are the sole Sensitive left!”
“Deacon Faris could run across this geist that
attacked you—”
“I will manage on my own Sight. By the sounds of
it, even I should be able to See the cursed thing.” Her eyes locked
with his, a hint of a smile playing on her lips. She knew she had
him beaten.
Merrick’s mouth worked, but the two women pinned
him with their stares.
Sorcha gave him a nod. “It won’t take us long to
get the Pretender’s crew to safety. Keep your Center wide-open, and
you can still reach me.” She clapped him on the shoulder.
She was the senior partner, more experienced than
he—this time he would have to trust her instincts. The Priory could
not be left blinded. However, Merrick could not let her get the
last word. He leaned over the wall and called after Sorcha. “Just
remember, Deacon Faris—no Teisyat. Absolutely no Teisyat!”