“If the saints heard his prayers and truly worked a miracle,” said Joachim, ignoring my comment, “he needs my spiritual guidance so that he does not become puffed up and proud. By now the crowds will have dissipated, and I may even be able to call my cathedral my own again.”
The only thing I had going for me, I thought as we walked the short distance down the cobbled street from the episcopal palace to the side door of the cathedral, was that the bishop now seemed as disturbed to have the Dog-Man and his purported miracles in his church as I was.
But the crowds had not yet completely dissipated. Cyrus, a thin black form, knelt in prayer at the high altar, and at least a dozen people, mostly women, knelt beside him. Colored light from the stained glass windows washed over them. Among them were Celia and the Lady Maria.
Hildegarde stepped out from behind a pillar to meet us. “They’ve been like that for ages,” she muttered. “I would have thought they’d be stiff by now.”
The Lady Maria and several of the others, among whom I now recognized the mayor, were indeed shifting uncomfortably. But Celia, her head lowered and face very white, seemed transported beyond issues of physical comfort.
The bishop went down on his knees beside them. In a minute the townspeople seemed to become aware of him. Several lifted their heads and glanced toward each other uncomfortably. After a few more moments, a man rose and tiptoed quietly away. Joachim, his eyes closed, paid no attention. Two women followed, then another. Last of all the mayor rose, murmuring, “I will not forget,” and patting Cyrus’s shoulder as he turned to go. Soon Celia and the Lady Maria were the only people left kneeling beside the bishop and his newest seminary student.
Maria looked up, then got to her feet, shaking out her skirt, and came over to the front pew to sit next to me. “Our chaplain never expects us to kneel on the stones like that,” she said in a good-natured undertone, “or not us old ones anyway! But then a little suffering may be good for the soul, or so the priests tell us.”
Both Cyrus and Celia lifted their heads then. I met the Dog-Man’s eyes fleetingly before he looked away, then reached for words of the Hidden Language to try to find indications of evil around him. A blatant but silent spell, worked directly contrary to what the bishop would have allowed me to do if I asked him, revealed no supernatural power beyond that of the saints. Maybe, I thought in disappointment, folding my hands and trying not to look like a wizard, Cyrus had checked his demon at the cathedral door.
Celia did not give me a chance to probe any further. “Holy Father, I am so glad for this opportunity to see you,” she said to the bishop, her voice low and vibrant. “My life and my spiritual calling have long been confused, but now at last they are clear. I shall leave tomorrow for the Nunnery of Yurt, there to make my profession as a novice.”
Just as I had feared all day. The bones’ infection had now gotten to someone else-not to Theodora, but to Celia. If Cyrus was responsible for the warriors-and the bones-then he had even more to answer for than perverting the people of Caelrhon. But I was also interested to notice that in those with a religious bent, like Celia and Joachim, this strange infection apparently made them want to throw away everything for quiet contemplation. Would the bones make another wizard as murderous as they made me? Perhaps, I told myself, dismissing the question, it was not good to ask too many questions about the differences between priests and wizards.
When I had spoken to Elerius on the telephone, he had reassured me that no one in Yurt had started demonstrating inexplicable behavior. While I waited, listening through the receiver to the distant sounds of the royal castle of Yurt and thinking I might hear Antonia’s voice, he had probed the bones again. A subtle, almost invisible spell, very unlike any school spell, had dissolved by itself while he was trying to find a way to neutralize it. That should mean, I tried to reassure myself, that Celia would be the last.
But in the meantime she had just announced, publicly and unequivocally, her intention to become a nun. “If that is your choice, my daughter,” said the bishop kindly, “and God has guided you in it, then of course I shall do all to assist you.”
“But, excuse me, Holy Father, she can’t!” cried Hildegarde. “Mother would kill her.”
“Christ said that those who would follow Him must forsake even father and mother,” put in Cyrus, “braving the cross for His sake.”
“You need her permission,” said Hildegarde, ignoring him and taking her sister by the shoulders. “You’re supposed to become duchess of Yurt. You can’t just throw it all over without even telling her!”
“We shall discuss this further in private,” said Celia in an icy tone that I myself would not have dreamed of arguing with. She dipped her head to the bishop-and to Cyrus? — and hurried down the nave, Hildegarde behind her.
The Lady Maria bounced up from the pew. “I should get over to the castle,” she said. “I brought the Princess Margareta with me, and she’s probably wondering what’s been happening all day. We got in first thing, you realize, and I knew something was up but that it would take a wise head to straighten it out, not the princess’s curls!” I had known the Lady Maria twenty-five years and had not yet once thought of her as having a wise head, but it was much too late to explain that to her. “So I’m afraid I’ve left the little princess sitting all by herself, when my plan had been to give her some amusement by taking her on this trip. I don’t think she ever had more than a school-girl’s infatuation for the king, of course, but after what’s occurred I thought it better to provide her with some change of scene.”
And she pranced out, leaving me staring after her. What had occurred? I wanted to shout. Elerius had not said anything about Paul and the Lady Justinia having eloped, or whatever else they might have done, but then he probably would not see it in the same light as I would. I had needed to get back to Yurt for two days, now more than ever-if it weren’t for the matter of an acolyte working with a demon.
Cyrus, left alone now with Joachim and me, made as if to go, but the bishop did not give him a chance. “I need to talk to you, my son,” he said gently, “about the miraculous restoration of all the burned houses and businesses. Even the Bible does not record such events.”
“Compared to the Lord’s parting of the Red Sea,” said Cyrus, looking at me suspiciously, “the rebuilding of a few charred structures is trivial.”
“But you,” said Joachim thoughtfully, “are not Moses.”
“No,” said Cyrus promptly, “and that is why I am so profoundly grateful to the saints who have listened to my poor prayer.”
I bit my lip to keep from saying several things, mostly doubting and sarcastic. This was Joachim’s cathedral, and especially now that Cyrus was starting to act as if it was his instead, the bishop would not want the interference of a wizard. “Why,” he said, even more gently, “do you credit your own prayers, my son, rather than those of others?”
Cyrus looked up at him quickly, dark eyes shadowed. In his quiet answer there was a trace of something that I would have called smugness. “Because the saints told me so, Father.”
I couldn’t listen to him anymore. I walked halfway down the nave and leaned my forehead against a pillar. The only point on which I felt unsure was whether he was deliberately trying to mislead the bishop or whether he was deceived himself. He seemed horribly sure of himself, but was that because he did not even know that a demon was working beside him? Suppose the demon, who must be lurking somewhere in the city, waiting for him to emerge from the cathedral again, had deluded him into thinking that it was not a demon but a saint?
I turned my head to glance back toward the front pew where Joachim and Cyrus were talking. If he was now trying to deceive the bishop, then I would take him by the scruff of the neck with my strongest binding spells, regardless of what disrespect I might be doing the church, and drag him to the demonology experts at the school. (This of course assumed I would have the slightest success against someone who used supernatural power to oppose me-a point on which I did not want to dwell.)