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<blockquote>

_30th Nemesis 332_<br>

To the Clergy of the Chapter,<br>

Both Severally and Collectively<br>

Greetings in the name of Pas, in the name of Scylla, and in

the names of all gods! Know that you are ever in my

thoughts, as in my heart.

The present disturbed state of Our Sacred City obliges us

to be even more conscious of our sacred duty to minister to

the dying, not only to those amongst them with whose recent

actions we may sympathize, but to all those to whom, as we

apprehend, Hierax may swiftly reveal his compassionate

power. Thus it is that I implore you this day to cultivate the

perpetual and indefatigable--

</blockquote>

Patera Remora composed this, Silk thought; and as though Remora

sat before him, he saw Remora's long, sallow, uplifted face, the tip

of the quill just brushing his lips as he sought for a complexity of

syntax that would satisfy his insatiate longing for caution and

precision.

<blockquote>

The perpetual and indefatigable predisposition toward

mercy and pardon whose conduit you so frequently must be.

Many of you have appealed for guidance in these most

disturbing days. Nay, many appeal so still, even hourly.

Most of you will have learned before you read this epistle of

the lamented demise of the presiding officer of the Ayuntamiento.

The late Councillor Lemur was a man of extraordinary

gifts, and his passing cannot but leave a void in every heart.

How I long to devote the remainder of this necessarily

curtailed missive to mourning his passing. Instead, for such

are the exactions of this sad whorl, the whorl that passes, my

duty to you requires that I forewarn you without delay

against the baseless pretexts of certain vile insurgents who

would have you to believe that they act in the late Councillor

Lemur's name.

Let us set aside, my beloved clergy, all fruitless debate

regarding the propriety of an intercaldean caesura spanning

some two decades. That the press of unhappy events then

rendered an interval of that kind, if not desirable, then

unquestionably attractive, we can all agree. That it represented,

to judgements not daily schooled to the nice discriminations

of the law, a severe strain upon the elasticity of

our Charter, we can agree likewise, can we not? The

argument is wholly historical now. O beloved, let us resign it

to the historians.

What is inarguable is that this caesura, to which I have had

reason to refer above, has attained to its ordained culmination.

It cannot, O my beloved clergy, as it should not,

survive the grievous loss which it has so recently endured.

What, then, we may not illegitimately inquire, is to succeed

that just, beneficent and ascendant government so sadly

terminated?

Beloved clergy, let us not be unmindful of the wisdom of

the past, wisdom which lies in no less a vehicle than our own

Chrasmologic Writings. Has it not declared, "_Vox poputi,

vox dei_"? which is to say, in the will of the masses we may

discern words of Pas's. At the present critical moment in the

lengthy epic of Our Sacred City, Pas's grave words are not to

be mistaken. With many voices they cry out that the time has

arrived for a precipitate return to that Charteral guardianship

which once our city knew. Shall it be said of us that we

stop our ears to Pas's words?

Nor is their message so brief, and so less than mistakable.

From forest to lake, from the proud crown of the Palatine to

the humblest of alleys they proclaim him. O my beloved

clergy, with what incommunicable joy shall I do so additionally.

For Supreme Pas has, as never previously, espoused for

our city a calde from within our own ranks, an anointed

augur, holy, pious, and redolent of sanctity.

May I name him? I shall, yet surely I need not. There is

not one amongst you, Beloved Clergy, who will not know

that name prior to mine overjoyed acclamation. It is Patera

Silk. Again I say, Patera Silk!

How readily here might I inscribe, let us welcome him and

obey him as one of ourselves. With what delight shall I

inscribe in its place, let us welcome him and obey him, for he

is one of ourselves!

May every god favor you, beloved clergy. Blessed be you

in the Most Sacred Name of Pas, Father of the Gods, in that

of Gradous Echidna, His Consort, in those of their Sons and

their Daughters alike, this day and forever, in the name of

their eldest child, Scylla, Patroness of this, Our Holy City of

Viron. Thus say I, Pa. Quetzal, Prolocutor.

</blockquote>

As Silk refolded the letter, Shell said, "His Cognizance has come

down completely on your side, you see, and brought the Chapter

with him. You said--I hope you were mistaken in this, Patera, really

I do. But you said a minute ago that if the Ayuntamiento knew you

were here they'd have you shot. If that's true--" He cleared his

throat nervously. "If it's true, they'll have His Cognizance shot too.

And--and some of the rest of us."

"The coadjutor," Silk said, "he drafted this. He'll die as well, if

they can get their hands on him." It was strange to think of Remora,

that circumspect diplomatist, tangled and dead in his own web of

ink.

Of Remora dying for him.

"I suppose so, Patera." Shell hesitated, plainly ill at ease. "I'd call

you--use the other word. But it might be dangerous for you."

Silk nodded slowly, stroking his cheek.

"His Cognizance says you're the first augur, ever. That--it came

as a shock to--to a lot of us, I suppose. To Patera Jerboa, he said.

He says it's never happened before in his lifetime. Do you know

Patera Jerboa, Patera?"

Silk shook his head.

"He's quite elderly. Eighty-one, because we had a little party for

him just a few weeks ago. But then he thought, you know, sort of

getting still and pulling at his beard the way he does, and then he

said it was sensible enough, really. All the others, the previous--the

previous--"

"I know what you mean, Patera."

"They'd been chosen by the people. But you, Patera, you were

chosen by the gods, so naturally their choice fell upon an augur,

since augurs are the people they've chosen to serve them."

"You yourself are in danger, Patera," Silk said. "You're in nearly

as much danger as I am, and perhaps more. You must be aware of it."

Shell nodded miserably.

"I'm surprised they let you in here after this."

"They--the captain, Patera. I--I haven't..."

"They don't know."

"I don't think so, Patera. I don't think they do. I didn't tell them."

"That was wise, I'm sure." Silk studied the window as he had

before, but as before saw only their reflections, and the night. "This

Patera Jerboa, you're his acolyte? Where is he?"

"At our manteion, on Brick Street."

Silk shook his head.

"Near the crooked bridge, Patera."

"Way out east?"

"Yes, Patera." Shell fidgeted uncomfortably. "That's where we are

now, Patera. On Basket Street. Our manteion's that way," he

pointed, "about five streets."

"I see. That's right, they lifted me into something--into some sort

of cart that jolted terribly. I remember lying on sawdust and trying