TWENTY-TWO
The Danger of Vespers
They followed the water out of the caverns.
Merrick came up with that idea, and Sorcha was only too grateful to
let her younger partner take the lead. She trailed at the rear as
Raed followed Merrick. The cave grew narrower and the red light
dimmed as they got out from under the baleful presence of the
Possibility Matrix.
Raed caught her arm just as Merrick disappeared
from view around a corner. The Pretender’s lips against her ear
were for a moment warm and distracting, until he whispered into it,
“Did you notice the one person who was not shown in that
contraption?”
He pulled back, and in the light of the lantern his
eyes were stern. Comprehension flooded across her mind: Nynnia. The
slip of a girl should have been in many of those scenes, but she
had not been; what exactly that meant, Sorcha couldn’t grasp.
Raed tilted his head and shrugged, indicating he
too was at a loss. Neither of them asked Merrick, though; he was
too busy trying to get them out without going back up through the
Mother Abbey.
They went on, wrapped in silence and contemplation.
Sorcha couldn’t get the images she had seen in the Possibility
Matrix out of her mind. Fire was one of the true elements of the
geistlords, and were Vermillion to burn, it could mean only one
thing: someone wanted to release a hell of a lot of them.
History was littered with plenty of crazed people’s
attempts to reach the deepest parts of the Otherside. All had ended
in disaster for the summoner and usually a fair proportion of the
innocents around them.
Sorcha was so concentrated on these dire thoughts
that she nearly crawled into Raed. “Not right now,” he quipped as
she brushed against his breeches. “Merrick says there is a large
pool of water ahead. Shall we risk swimming under it?”
“Not much choice, unless we want to go back through
the Abbey,” she said, suddenly feeling the walls closing in on
her.
They swam, diving down beneath the rock and into
the frigid water of the lagoon. Sorcha ducked under, feeling her
chest constrict as if a person were sitting on it. Her muscles
tensed as she concentrated on not taking a disastrous gulp of
water. For a moment it felt as though her arms and legs were made
of lead and she might just sink to the bottom of the lagoon. Then
the Bond clicked over in her head, guiding her like a compass,
swinging reliably north, if north were the two men. Though her skin
was stinging uncomfortably, she was able to kick out and swim
alongside Raed and Merrick as they popped up in the predawn
grayness of the city.
Together they swam to an empty pier. It looked like
they were only a few streets away from the Abbey at the Prince’s
Canal. The boats bobbing nearby were painted the bright orange that
said they were available for hire, but there was no sign of any
ferrymen just yet. This deep into Vermillion, trade was nonexistent
until the daylight hours. Activities that required darkness were
carried out farther away on the fringes—places that these
city-sanctioned ferries would not go.
As they hauled themselves onto the pier, Merrick
gasped through chattering teeth, “We—we are lucky the lagoon
isn’t—isn’t frozen.”
“Yes,” Raed choked, wringing out his cloak in a
vain attempt to get dry. “Very damn lucky.”
Sorcha did the same to her hair before tying it
back up against the nape of her neck. The important thing here was
to think only one step ahead at a time. If she tried to take in the
big picture, she might just seize up. If they were to change the
possibilities they had seen in the matrix, then they would need to
work at the top of their efficiency—they couldn’t afford to begin
doubting. “Now we need to find the others at this tavern and get to
Brickmaker’s Lane. No way of telling when those events may
happen.”
Raed nodded, and then smiled wickedly. “If I know
the habits of aristocrats at all, it won’t be early. Not much of a
reputation for early risers.” He craned his head over the tops of
the boats and voiced the one issue that was now bothering Sorcha.
“The question is—how do we get to the tavern? Normal observers I
can handle, but this Sight thing—”
“I have an idea,” Merrick chimed in, and raised a
leather pouch with the shape of a tin inside. It was a very
familiar shape.
Sorcha’s hand flew to her pockets. It was indeed
the very same container she kept her cigars in. “How did
you—”
“Now, now.” The young man’s eyes gleamed with
delight at his having managed to fool her. “Some of us weren’t
brought up by the Abbey—some of us learned a thing or two
beforehand.”
He pulled the tin out of the pouch and opened it.
Inside were not the two remaining cigars Sorcha had gratefully
accepted as gifts from the citizens of Ulrich, but a mound of the
white rock dust from the cavern.
Despite their dire situation, she felt rage fill
her. “Where are my cigars, Merrick?”
“I needed to keep this dry, and believe me, this
could save—”
She snatched the tin off him and stared hopelessly
at the pile of dust. “Where—where are the cigars?” she choked out.
She’d been planning to grab a moment, even just a short one, before
heading to Brickmaker’s Lane. Facing imminent death, it was the
least she deserved.
When Merrick pulled the sad, wet remnants out of
his pocket she almost sobbed. It was too bitter an end for such a
fine smoke as a Nythrumi gold. A crime. Among all the danger, this
was the last straw.
“You better have an explanation, Chambers!”
At her back, she could hear Raed break into
laughter. She understood it was faintly ridiculous to be worrying
about her cigars at this point, but damn it, they were the only
part of her old life that she had left.
The young Deacon smiled at her, a reaction that
only a few weeks before would have provoked a damn slap in the
face. “The rock blocks magic . . . My thinking was, if it could do
that, what might it do if used in a cantrip?”
Through her dismay, Sorcha’s brain clicked over on
that concept. The design ylvavita could hide people in plain
sight well enough for the ungifted, but wasn’t even worth the
bother against Deacons. However, if Merrick was right, then maybe
it was. Her cigars would have at least been sacrificed for a worthy
cause.
“I’ll buy you two fine new cigars,” Raed whispered
to her in a voice that made her heart pick up its pace. She turned
and smiled at him, glad that he’d been able to forgive her the
Bond—or at least put it out of his head enough to go on.
In the end Raed very skillfully jimmied open the
ferrymen’s silent building, and they were able to find some clothes
there. It felt wrong to stuff their cloaks, Order emblems and
talismans into rough sacking bags. Stripped of clothing she’d been
wearing since a child, Sorcha felt weakened somehow.
It was silly, but there it was. Raed was also the
expert in disguise, and before she knew it he had them cloaked and
looking nothing like two powerful Deacons. Merrick’s hair was
twisted at odd angles, his face smeared with dirt, and, at the
Pretender’s direction, he even dragged his foot a little.
He concealed Sorcha’s femininity with extra
clothes, and tied the bundle of sacks on her back. It wasn’t heavy,
but it was still slightly galling. It was with some grim humor that
she cleaned the first cantrip off Raed’s forehead. “All right,
let’s see if this works.” Dipping her finger in the dust, she drew
the new design, all curls and flourishes on his warm skin, and then
turned to Merrick.
The younger Deacon let his Center fall away; she
could feel it like it was her own. He cast his head from side to
side. “I think it works. If I’m not looking specifically for you,
my Sight slides off you.”
“As long as he doesn’t do anything to draw
attention,” Sorcha commented wryly, to which Raed let out a little
chuckle. “If I can sacrifice my cigars, then you can sacrifice your
pirate swagger. Now, Merrick, try the cantrip on me.”
He did so and then stood back to examine the
effect. “Not quite as effective, but in a crowd of people I think
it would hold.”
It wasn’t exactly a ringing endorsement, but it was
all they had. Readjusting their disguises, they went out into the
street. Luckily away from the Prince’s Canal, trade was beginning
to pick up; three more disheveled porters made not one jot of
difference. They worked their way, dodging carts and streams of
pedestrians, to Dyer’s Lane and the little tavern called the Red
Flag. The street reeked of the trade it was named for, but at least
it was a stench of this world.
Raed had a quiet word with the craggy-faced
proprietor and they were led out to a back room where Aachon and
the crew, as well as Nynnia and her father, were waiting. Their
faces showed the feral looks of the hunted. Sorcha guessed the same
expression was on her face.
“What did you find out, my prince?” Aachon cut
straight to the point, his dark eyes lingering only momentarily on
their garb.
“The Arch Abbot has been taken and the Grand
Duchess will be sacrificed, most likely by day’s end.” Raed took a
seat next to his first mate and poured himself a tankard of ale. No
one said a word until he had drunk his fill. He let out a satisfied
gasp and dropped the tumbler back to the table. “And what’s more,
forces unknown have something called a Possibility Matrix, in which
they can see the future.”
The crew members’ eyes widened at that. Frith
swore, “By the Ancients, Captain—if they can do that, how can we
beat them?”
Nynnia sat staring into her cup of ale. Almost too
quietly to be heard, she said, “The future is a very fragile thing.
The possibilities are always changing. If we move quickly enough
and act unpredictably enough, it is not impossible to beat.”
Sorcha gave her a startled look as the feeling in
the back of her head changed from a niggle of little importance
into something far more concerning. “What can you possibly know of
such things?” she barked.
“I know much, Deacon Faris.” She raised her eyes
until they met Sorcha’s. Suddenly the world contracted around the
slim young woman’s form. None but the Deacons in the room could
feel it, but whatever cunning mask she had fashioned for herself
had now slipped.
Sorcha pushed back from the table and leapt to her
feet. “What are you?” she demanded.
Merrick’s Center flared as he too surged upright.
“Nynnia?” His voice cracked even as he stood at Sorcha’s
side.
Nynnia remained seated, calm, but her father leapt
up. “Foolish Deacons! You only ever see what you want to.” The old
man’s eyes bulged and his fists clenched at his side. If his
relationship with Nynnia was an act, it was a damn good one.
She is not a geist. Merrick’s voice in
Sorcha’s head was steady, despite what was being revealed. I
cannot tell what she is, but she is not one of their kind.
Dazzled as he was by Nynnia, Sorcha still did not doubt his
skill.
Nynnia spoke but did not look directly at Merrick.
“You know something of the Murashev.” No expression touched her
young features, but her eyes were swimming with power. “Therefore
you cannot be ignorant of what it could do in this world. We have
very little time. Do you want to stay and argue or save this
world?”
For a moment they stood there, frozen in a tableau:
the Deacons poised, Kyrix glaring, the crew looking about in
confusion and Nynnia the calm center of it all.
Sorcha could hear her heart beating in her chest,
yet much as she hated to trust Nynnia—they had no other choice. And
she had saved Merrick’s life. Slowly both Deacons took their
seats.
Nynnia turned her head and looked out the grubby
window. “What else did you see in the waters?” she asked, her tone
as distant as if she were asking about the weather or the price of
embroidery thread.
“We saw Vermillion burning,” Merrick
muttered.
“Sorry to hear about Vermillion,” Aachon said
coldly, “but why should we care about the usurper’s sister?”
Sorcha was about to open her mouth and reply when
Nynnia suddenly flung herself across the table. The tumble was so
unexpected that the others seated around her had only time to gape
as she spun past them and collided with a man who had come up
behind them.
For a second Sorcha thought the creature had gone
quite mad, and she was ready to come to the aid of the other patron
when she saw the gleam of metal in his hand. Then everything got
more confused. Shouts rang out as Raed spun around to face the
dozen or so intruders. The crew leapt to his defense, while Merrick
and Sorcha scrambled to get out of the way as the giant Aachon
picked up the table and threw it at those threatening his captain.
A bar fight was obviously not an unknown situation for these men,
but Sorcha also managed to get in a few punches while chaos
reigned.
Yet it was Nynnia who was the center of the storm.
Her lithe body, which had seemed beautiful but useless, now
revealed itself to have the elegance of a deadly dancer. She spun
and whirled, knocking men aside with graceful kicks that should
have been set to music. While the crew of the Dominion fought with
deft brutality, it was Nynnia whom Sorcha could not stop
watching.
The fight was over quickly; the thugs who were not
sent streaming from the tavern were lying unconscious on the floor.
“Nynnia!” Merrick’s horrified yell stopped the others in
mid-congratulations. The slim woman was staring down numbly at the
handle of the knife buried just below her ribs; blood was staining
her petal-colored dress. It was a deadly wound, tilted upward into
vital organs.
But before Merrick could reach her, Nynnia’s
father, who had stayed beyond the battle, moved to her. With a
little grunt, Kyrix pulled the knife loose. After exchanging a
glance with his daughter, he threw the dagger away without even
looking at it. It clanged into the corner.
“Nynnia?” Merrick took her arm as if he expected
her to fall over. She didn’t stop him as his fingers gingerly
explored the gash in her robe. Beneath, there was nothing but
smooth flesh. “Nynnia . . . you should . . . What—” He paused to
catch his breath.
“We have no time for explanations.” She pressed the
tips of her long fingers against the line of his jaw. “I am more
than you think, that is true, but I also have the same aims as
you—to stop the Murashev and save Vermillion.” She looked around at
the others. “Do you trust me?”
They looked at her hard, then around at one
another. Sorcha didn’t want to influence them, so she stayed
silent. She’d made up her own mind. Whatever Nynnia was, she was
powerful, and they needed all the friends they could get at this
point. Still, if Raed and his crew rejected her, Sorcha would stand
with them.
“She could have let the Captain get a knife in the
ribs,” Frith said in a low voice, and the others nodded in
agreement.
Aachon’s dark eyes didn’t look as convinced, but he
glanced at Raed. “It is up to you, my prince.”
The Pretender shrugged, and pronounced his verdict
with a broad grin. “Beautiful, powerful women don’t fall into your
lap every day—just what this venture needs, I say.”
Sorcha heard Nynnia murmur a question to Merrick,
but couldn’t quite make it out. If they were going to face the
Murashev, she found herself wanting him to have a little
happiness.
“She saved your life once,” Sorcha said reluctantly
to Merrick. “Now she’s saved Raed—what more does a girl have to do
to get your attention?”
The young Deacon pulled Nynnia in and kissed her
hard. Sorcha looked away; there was a limit. For once, the woman—if
that was what she was—looked flustered, her cheeks rosy with a
becoming blush. “We must move quickly. These thugs will be just the
beginning.”
Raed quickly strode toward the back door, but as
the rest followed, Sorcha turned in the other direction. She
grabbed hold of the publican who was carefully avoiding looking
straight at them. He looked too guilty for her liking. With the
careful application of force as taught to all novices, Sorcha had
him facedown on his own bar in seconds. He winced slightly as his
earthenware cups went tumbling to the floor; two smashed loudly.
Sorcha knew in his tiny brain he was trying to work out how a woman
two heads shorter than him had him pinned down. Before he could
decide to put up a fight, she hissed into his ear. “What is
happening at Brickmaker’s Lane today?”
Obviously the question was as simple as he was,
because a grin spread over his face and he gabbled an answer. “The
Emperor and the Grand Duchess are opening the public fountain
destroyed by geist attack last month.” She patted the publican on
the cheek, released him and followed the others out the back.
Brickmaker’s was only three streets over. Catching
up with them, she reported her findings. “Zofiya will indeed be
nearby and probably in the next hour or so. She’ll be officiating
the reopening instead of her brother, since the little goddess Myr
has jurisdiction over water.”
“The fountain.” Merrick was a smart lad; even with
stars in his eyes for Nynnia, he recalled the case.
“What is the significance of the fountain?” Raed
was checking the exit from the alleyway, but his mind was more than
capable of juggling several tasks.
“It was destroyed by a swarm of rei.” Sorcha was
pressing her memory hard; it had seemed such a trivial event, the
last dying breath of a cluster of crisis near the fringe of the
city. Rei were generally thought to be the souls of the drowned,
drawn to the energy of water and delighting in making mischief by
disrupting it. Vermillion—like every port city—drew them, with its
combination of water and people. Still, as annoying as they were,
they could also cause real damage—destroying pipes was their
particular specialty. No one liked their sewage being interfered
with, but it was even worse when public fountains bore the brunt of
their mischief. Everyone was affected then, as no one could drink
safely from the lagoon.
“The rei swarm didn’t just destroy the pipes.”
Merrick snapped his fingers finally, recalling the rest of the
memory. “They wrecked the fountain and the pipe feeding it, right
to the mains. They had to spend weeks digging back to fix it—back
to the old ossuary, I think.”
Sorcha’s chest contracted as if she’d been punched,
so much so that she had to lean back against the wall of the
building for a second. The Bond vibrated so loudly with her new
fears that Merrick—and even Raed—gasped.
Her partner suddenly realized what he had said.
“The ossuary! By the Bones!”
“Literally,” Sorcha snapped, feeling the circle
joining itself back up.
“Again”—Raed crossed his arms—“with the lack of
information.”
Sorcha stamped her foot to illustrate her point.
“Beneath us right now is the First Ossuary. Vermillion is a very,
very old city, and two hundred years ago there were simply too many
bodies filling up all the graves—nowhere to put new ones. So they
had to fill the caves on the fringe with the bones.”
Nynnia made a face. “Digging up the dead, in a city
infected with geists?”
“No, it wasn’t pretty.” Merrick squeezed her hand.
“But from the records of the native Order, they were eventually
able to get the city under control. Burning the bones would have
been even worse.”
“That has got to be where the Murashev is being
created.” Sorcha blinked, thinking of the last time she had been
down there; the endless rows of skulls and bones stacked upon one
another. The recollection made her shiver. Even though she’d been a
member of a Deacon Conclave, the looming menace had still been
palpable. The White Palace, the locals called it, as if it was a
mirror image of the Imperial Palace above.
“If the Grand Duchess were to be taken there and
sacrificed . . .” Even Nynnia couldn’t finish that sentence. It
didn’t take too much imagination to consider the
consequences.
Apparently, however, Frith had no imagination.
“What’s so cursed different about her blood compared to ours? She
bleeds red just like every other person!”
“Certainly she does,” Merrick replied, “but her
line is rife with old blood. Ancient blood.”
“They need it,” Nynnia said, with a sidelong glance
at her father.
Sorcha was beginning to suspect there was something
more to that relationship. Feathers of eldritch blue light twined
between the two. The flow of power from man to woman was like blood
flowing through shared veins. Life force. He might call himself her
father, and that could still be true, but he was also her foci,
just like Raed and the Beast, or the children of Ulrich and the
poltern. Whatever kind of creature she was, she needed her foci
just like the rest. It was both a strength and a weakness; a foci
meant she couldn’t be easily dismissed back to the Otherside, but
also bound them together so that her strength depended on his fate.
No wonder she had wanted to reach Ulrich so desperately when they
had first met.
Nynnia’s eyes locked with Sorcha’s, acknowledging
the Deacon’s observation and recognition. Sorcha’s gaze did not
flinch. “Don’t you think it is a good idea for your father to be
safely away from this?” she asked pointedly, while the men around
them murmured among themselves blindly.
The slim woman nodded slowly. “Yes, you are
right.”
“Better make it quick,” Raed commented. “There is a
crowd gathering.”
Sorcha stood at his shoulder and glanced out into
the street. He was right: people were streaming in the direction of
Brickmaker’s Lane; they were suddenly surrounded by eager
apprentices, mothers with wailing babies, gritty laborers and dyers
with their hands stained the colors of the rainbow. The Emperor and
his sister were coming out from the palace—not an everyday
event.
The opening of a public fountain was not something
that would have warranted the sovereign’s attention, but having
been so publicly attacked by geists, he was probably trying to
reassure the citizens by appearing with the Grand Duchess.
“By the Bones, I need a smoke,” she groaned,
thinking miserably of the ones lost to Merrick’s enthusiastic
plan.
Wordlessly, Raed reached under his disguise and
pulled two smooth brown Ilyrick reserves out of his pocket.
Sorcha’s smile was broad and thoroughly inappropriate for the
situation. She took them, knowing her hands were trembling
slightly. She tucked one into her pocket and tore off the end of
the other. It was a cigar that deserved better treatment, but she
simply didn’t have the time. Raed lit it for her, and she leaned
back for just a minute and drew the smoke sensuously into her
mouth. There was no time to enjoy this cigar as it should have been
enjoyed: slowly, on a balcony, watching the stars and in his
company. There would probably never be such a moment for
them.
Sorcha would take what she could get.
She pushed away from the wall, still sucking on the
cigar, and looked at Raed: her beautiful surprise. “Nynnia, get
your father out of here.” Sorcha fell back on old habits of
command. Pulling up the hood on her disguise, she gestured. “The
rest of us have an audience to attend.”
The crew, for once, did not look to Raed. Even
Aachon fell into step behind her as they blended in with the crowd.
Nynnia was talking with Kyrix, and they both looked distressed. As
the others flowed ahead of her a little, Sorcha hung behind,
waiting for Nynnia. She didn’t want to lose the creature in the
press of the crowd.
All it took was one glance away; when she looked
back toward the pair, Nynnia was hugging her father one last time.
She did not notice as a towering man, who had looked like just
another member of the crowd moments before, suddenly lunged
forward. Sorcha darted toward them, but she couldn’t reach them in
time. The man thrust a long knife under the old man’s rib cage and
gave a vicious twist. Without a noise, Kyrix crumpled to the
ground.
Nynnia cried out, but the Deacon grabbed hold of
her arm and tugged her into the crowd. The foci was already
dead—the attacker had known what he was doing. Their enemy, whoever
they were, must have realized something about the nature of the
woman missing from the Possibility Matrix.
Tugging the stunned Nynnia behind her, Sorcha
zigzagged through the crowd, trying to lose the attackers in the
tumult. Her heart was racing and her brain tumbling. How on earth
were they going to save the Grand Duchess from someone who could
see one step in front of them? Even Garil’s gift was not this
accurate. Her mind still lingered on the sigil of the Emperor on
that dispatch box that had started everything.
Catching up with the others, she thrust Nynnia’s
hand into Merrick’s. “Your beloved just lost her invulnerability in
a rather messy way.”
The creature’s chin tilted up in defiance. “I am
still what I am. You need me.” She might have been in shock from
having her foci ripped away, but she had determination in
spades.
Sorcha began to warm to Nynnia. “I have no doubt of
that.”
“We should split up,” Raed said as they drifted
forward with the crowd’s ebbs and flows. “They’ll have less luck
tracking us that way—we can blend in more.”
“Not us,” Merrick hissed, his hand still locked
with Nynnia’s. “You and I and Sorcha . . . the Bond . . . We should
stay together.”
Sorcha thought about it a second. Although she
didn’t like the idea of splitting up, there were going to be a lot
of people at the opening, and without any idea of Zofiya’s
movements it was going to be difficult to position themselves in
the ideal way to protect her. Also, the assassins would undoubtedly
be looking for the group of them. The added difficulty of the
Possibility Matrix was impossible to calculate. It could easily
cloud her judgment so much that she would be swallowed by entropy.
Best to move.
“The Bond gives us an edge,” she muttered to
Merrick while they were pushed backward and forward in the press of
people. “We won’t lose each other.”
His look was suddenly not that of her partner, but
of a young man caught in the middle of something he had not
expected from his first case. Her sympathies went out to him. By
the Bones, I wish I could make this different for you—for all of
us.
I trust you. The answer came back as clear
as the shouting and arguing around them, even though Merrick had
not opened his mouth. His wise old eyes in that youthful face held
hers steady.
Sorcha smiled back—for once grateful for this
unusual Bond. Then she turned to Raed, sliding her hand in against
his chest, for a moment luxuriating in the warmth and strength of
him. She leaned in close, his smell of leather battling with the
cigar still clenched in her hand. “We’ll do as you say.” She
paused, took a long breath. “I trust you.” She had to say the
words, just in case he hadn’t heard through their Bond.
Underneath her palm, Raed’s heart was suddenly
racing. It wasn’t their dire situation that caused it, but his
body’s reaction to her nearness.
He jerked his head toward the crowd that gathered
before the towering fountain. “I will get my crew to spread out
over there. You, Merrick and Nynnia take up positions at the back—I
want you to be invisible.” His fingers wrapped around her chin, a
gesture she would not have tolerated from anyone else.
Sorcha reached up and stroked the line of his jaw,
his beard rough under her fingertips. “Take care of yourself,
pirate. I’ll be watching.”
His kiss was hard and sweet, driving away fear with
desire—at least for an instant. Then he turned and drew his men
away from them into the crowd.
Sorcha, Merrick and the hunched Nynnia pulled up
their hoods and drifted to the rear of the fountain. It was cold
enough that they were not the only hooded figures. They found a
spot mostly blocked by the bulk of the construction. Merrick’s mind
was now so wide-open that Sorcha’s head swam. The Sensitive had not
used any of his powers yet, but even so, the world was brighter
through two pairs of eyes than one.
At the front of the crowd Imperial servants were
beginning to hand out triangular flags in red and yellow: the
Emperor’s colors. As these were passed back through the throng,
Sorcha noticed the first Guard arrive, dripping in scarlet and gold
braid. She knew that they were incredibly well trained—but she was
just as sure that they were not prepared for what they were facing.
Toward the back, she saw the blue and emerald cloaks of the
Emperor’s own Deacons. Lolish and Vertrij, a good team—as far as
she knew. If her dark suspicions of the Emperor were correct, then
maybe not.
Nynnia was standing between them, and for the first
time Sorcha noticed tears on her pale cheeks. Either the creature
was an excellent actress or she had felt genuine affection for the
foci she had called father. “You must not fail,” she said softly,
glancing up at Sorcha through red-rimmed eyes.
“I know!” Sorcha snapped, feeling enough weight of
responsibility.
“No.” Nynnia pressed close to her ear and
whispered. “You must stop them summoning the Murashev—I have
seen her. Your world would not survive her coming.” When she pulled
back, her face was a mask of real terror.
Sorcha believed her. She nodded wordlessly.
A murmur traveled through the crowd like a ripple
of wind on water. The flags raised and waved
enthusiastically.
“They are here,” Sorcha whispered to herself, and
the cold descended about them all.