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The kneeling high-captain bent his head, and shocked silence filled the chamber.

* * *

“So at last the enemy has a face and a name,” Vroxhan said softly. He and the Inner Circle had withdrawn to their council chamber, accompanied only by Lord Marshal Surak.

“For all the good it does us,” Corada replied heavily. “If Ortak is correct—”

“He isn’t correct!” Surmal snapped, and turned to Vroxhan. “I claim Ortak for the Holy Inquisition, Holiness! Whatever else he may or may not have done, he has fallen into damnation by the respect he grants this demon. For the sake of Mother Church and his own soul, he must answer to the Inquisitors!”

Surak stirred, and Vroxhan looked up at him.

“You disagree, Lord Marshal?” he asked in a dangerous voice.

“Holiness, I serve the Temple. If the Circle judges that Ortak must answer, then answer he must, but before you decide, I beg you to weigh his words most carefully.”

“You agree with him?” Corada gasped, but Surak shook his head.

“I didn’t say that, Your Grace. What I said is that his words must be weighed. Mistaken or not, Ortak is the most experienced officer to have met the demon-worshipers and survived, and he has spoken to them. Perhaps this has corrupted his soul and led him into damnation, yet his information is our only firsthand report of the heretics’ leadership. And,” Surak looked at Surmal, “with all due respect, Your Grace, punishing him will not make any truth he may have uttered untrue.”

“Truth? What truth?” Vroxhan demanded before Surmal could respond.

“The truth that the demon-worshipers have defeated every army sent against them … and that we have no more armies to send, Holiness.” Deathly silence fell, and Surak went on in a grim, hard voice. “I have forty thousand Guardsmen to garrison the Temple itself. Aside from them, there are less than ten thousand of the Guard in all eastern North Hylar. The secular lords of the north have been defeated—no, My Lords, crushed—as completely as Lord Marshal Rokas and High-Captain Ortak, and the better part of the levies of Telis, Eswyn, and Tarnahk with them. We have fifty thousand of the Guard west of the Thirgan Gap and another seventy thousand in South Hylar, yet they can reach us here only by ship, and it will take many five-days to bring any sizable portion of that force to bear. The secular levies of the remaining eastern lands amount to no more than sixty thousand. They, and the men I have here to guard the Temple, are all we can throw against the heretics, and every officer who returned with Ortak reports the same of the demon-worshipers’ army. It is far smaller than our original estimates, yet every man in it appears to be armed with a rifle which fires more rapidly than a joharn, not less.”

“Which means?” Vroxhan prompted when the lord marshal paused.

“Which means, Holiness, that I can’t stop them,” Surak admitted in a voice like crushed gravel. The prelates stared at him in horror, and he squared his shoulders. “My Lords, I am your chief captain. My responsibility to you before God Himself is to tell you the truth, and the truth is that somehow—I do not pretend to know the manner of it—this ‘Lord Sean’ has built an army which can crush any force on Pardal.”

“But we’re God’s warriors!” Corada cried. “He won’t let them defeat us!”

“He has so far, Your Grace,” Surak replied flatly. “Why He should let this happen I can’t say, but to pretend otherwise would violate my sworn oath to serve God and the Temple to the best of my ability. I’ve searched for an answer, My Lords, in prayer and meditation as well as in my map rooms and with my officers, without finding one. At present, the heretics are less than three five-day’s march from the Temple itself, and the last army in their path has been destroyed. If you command it, I will gather every man in the Temple and every man the remaining secular levies can send me and meet the heretics in battle, and my men and officers will do all that mortal men can do. Yet it is my duty to tell you our numbers may actually be lower than the heretics’, and I fear our defeat will be complete unless God Himself intervenes.”

“He will! He will!” Corada cried almost desperately.

Surak said nothing, only looked at Vroxhan, and the high priest’s hands clenched under the council table. He could almost smell the panic Surak’s words had produced, yet even in his own fear, he knew the lord marshal had spoken only the truth. Why? Why was God letting this happen? The thought battered in his brain, but God sent no answer, and the silence after Corada’s outburst stretched his nerves like an Inquisitor’s rack.

“Are you telling us, Lord Marshal,” he said at last, in a carefully controlled voice, “that the Temple of God has no choice but to surrender to the forces of Hell?”

Surak flinched ever so slightly, but his eyes were level.

“I am telling you, Holiness, that with the forces available to me, all I and my men can do is die in the Faith’s defense as our oaths require us to. We will honor those oaths if no other answer can be found, yet I beg you, My Lords, to search your own hearts and prayers, for whatever answer God demands of us, I do not believe it lies upon the field of battle.”

“What if … what if we accept the heretics’ offer to parley?” Bishop Frenaur said hesitantly. The entire Circle turned on him in horror, but the Bishop of fallen Malagor met their eyes with a strength he hadn’t displayed since Yortown. “I don’t mean we should accept their terms,” he said more sharply, “but the Lord Marshal tells us his forces are too weak to defeat them in battle. If we pretend to negotiate with them, could we not demand a cease-fire while we do so? At the least, that would win time for our forces in western North Hylar and our other lands to reach us!”

Negotiate with the powers of Hell?” Surmal cried, but to Vroxhan’s surprise, old Corada straightened in his chair with suddenly hopeful eyes. “Our very souls would—” Surmal went on wildly, but Corada raised his hand.

“Wait, brother. Perhaps Frenaur has a point.” The High Inquisitor gaped at him, and the old man went on in a thoughtful voice. “God knows the peril we face. Would He not expect us to do anything that we can, even to pretending to treat with demons, to buy time to crush them in the end?”

“Your Grace,” Surak said gently, “I doubt the heretics would fall into such a trap. Whatever the source of their intelligence, it’s fiendishly accurate. They would know we were bringing up additional forces and act before we could do so, and—forgive me, My Lords, but I must repeat this once more—even if we brought up all of our strength, I fear their army could defeat us if we took the field against them.”

“Wait. Wait, Lord Marshal,” Vroxhan murmured, and his brain raced. “Perhaps this is God’s answer to our prayers,” he said slowly, intently, and his eyes snapped back into focus and settled on Surak’s face. “You say we cannot defeat this ‘Lord Sean’ in the field, Lord Marshal?”

“No, Holiness,” the soldier said heavily.

“Then perhaps the answer is not to meet him there,” Vroxhan said softly, and his smile was cold.

Chapter Thirty-Six

“It sounds too good to be true.” Sandy paced up and down the command tent, hands folded behind her, and her face was troubled.

“Why?” Tamman retorted. “Because it’s what we’ve asked them to do for weeks?”