The scribe master pushed aside his cloak's edge and braced his left hand on the counter's edge. The wood creaked under his grip.
Chane struggled up, dragging his sword in one hand. As he stumbled back toward the open door, he grabbed Wynn's shoulder and jerked her along.
"Get out!" he rasped.
Pawl a'Seatt flipped the cloak's other side.
Wynn glimpsed a sword hilt protruding above his right hip.
It was too long, too narrow for any sword she'd ever seen, as if the blade's tang had been directly leather-wrapped instead of first fitted with wood for a proper hilt. The pommel was too dark for steel, even in the room's night shadows.
"What's happening?" she asked, about to look to either Chane or Shade.
Pawl a'Seatt lifted his hand from the counter and pulled on his blade's hilt. "I said get away from that thing… journeyor."
The strange blade slipped free.
"Undead!" Chane rasped. "Wynn, get out!"
She glanced at him, but what little light crept in only silhouetted him from behind. She couldn't see his face.
"Listen to Shade!" he urged. "Listen to her!"
"Move away," Pawl a'Seatt repeated coldly, and stepped through the counter's opened top.
At first Wynn thought she saw a long war dagger in his hand, like the one given to Magiere by the Chein'âs, the Burning Ones.
But no, this blade was larger, longer, almost the size of a short sword. Where Magiere's was made of the silvery white metal of Anmaglâhk weapons, the one in Pawl a'Seatt's hand was nearly black, as if made from aged iron.
It was well more than a handbreadth wide above the plain bar of its crossguard. Each of its edges tapered straight to the point. But those edges were strangely rough in an even pattern.
Wynn squinted and saw that it was serrated.
Shade's noise remained constant, like mewling beneath a continuous shuddering snarl, but she didn't rush at the scribe master. Wynn put a hand on the dog's back as she stared at Pawl a'Seatt's face.
Black hair hung straight around his features from beneath the wide-brimmed hat. The faint ribbon of light exposed skin not even close to Chane's pallor. His eyes were brown, though too sharp and bright for the color. They were not the crystalline of an undead.
"No," she whispered. "No, he can't be."
He'd been present when the guild had chosen his scribes as the ones to come work inside the guild. Pawl a'Seatt had come to the gathering before noon, in daylight.
"I will not ask again," he said, but looked briefly out the broken window toward the street, where the conflict with the wraith had played out. "I will not allow even one of these things, let alone two… in my city."
My city? As much as that utterance puzzled her, Wynn was caught by something else.
Pawl a'Seatt knew what Chane was—knew what the wraith was, or had been.
"I tell you, he is an undead!" Chane hissed at Wynn. "Believe me!"
Shade began to physically shudder under Wynn's hand. Wynn side-stepped in front of Chane and pointed the crystal out like a spear's head.
"We were just leaving," she said.
Master a'Seatt shook his head.
"You go alone." He turned his gaze on Chane. "I watched you throw yourself through that black thing. The guards died quickly, yet here you stand. And you fled from the light that drove off another undead. I do not know how you mask your nature… your presence… Only one other has ever done this. And he left here long ago."
Chane's hand tightened on Wynn's shoulder as he whispered, "Welstiel?"
Only the barest change registered in Pawl a'Seatt's expression—but it was there, that slight widening of his eyes in intensity, and Wynn caught it. The scribe master knew Magiere's half brother.
Welstiel Massing had been in Calm Seatt at one time? Did Chane know of this and hadn't told her? The ring was the only connection she could think of.
Magiere and Chap could sense an undead, but Welstiel had always eluded them. And he had often hidden Chane as well.
Pawl a'Seatt spoke as if he too could feel an undead's presence but had been baffled by the lack of such in Chane. But he never looked at Shade, as if she didn't matter. Even an armed man, like Rodian, had reacted a little at Shade's distress in the hospice ward. Shade's noise kept eating through Wynn's uncertainty.
She could remember one other time she'd heard this, but not from Shade.
Chap had reacted differently to Li'kän than to any other undead. He had told Wynn later that the ancient white female was not like other Noble Dead or vampires. Li'kän had left Chap cold and frightened instead of heated for a hunt.
Wynn found it hard to breathe.
Was Pawl a'Seatt another ancient one? Was she standing before another of il'Samar's «Children»? And still, he had been out in daylight.
He looked alive enough to her. Even Li'kän couldn't conceal the telltale physical signs of an undead—though Wynn had once seen her walk straight through a shaft of daylight.
Chane, still young for a vampire, also had to be wary of close scrutiny by anyone.
"You will not touch him," Wynn managed to get out. "If you saw him in the street, then you saw what he did. He was protecting the city, protecting the guild!"
"He… you… simply accomplished what I would have done myself," Pawl a'Seatt countered, his tone hardening, "once I finally found it. Move aside now!"
Wynn thought she saw those brilliant brown eyes of his turn suddenly pale and glassy.
They glinted, but that wasn't possible. It was only faint street light catching in his irises, the brief spark seeming too much in a dark room.
If Pawl a'Seatt was what Chane claimed, he wouldn't hesitate to toss her aside. She could think of only one reason he hadn't done so already: She was one of the sages.
"The wraith isn't an isolated incident in our world!" she nearly shouted. "Chane and I are among the few who believe something from the Forgotten History is returning. We may be among the few who can hinder or stop it! I will take him out of the city, far from here. You will never see him again."
Pawl a'Seatt turned his head toward her. A hint of disbelief—or disdain—wrinkled his smooth brow.
"I have too much to learn… too much to do," Wynn rushed on. "If you saw us out there, you know I need him if I'm to stay alive long enough to uncover the truth. You are not taking that from me."
She slid her hand over Shade's face and shoved.
Shade backed toward the door, and Wynn retreated, backing Chane along until she'd gotten him onto the outer steps. Only then did she withdraw the staff and its crystal.
Master a'Seatt followed slowly, his hard gaze still fixed on her. He didn't close or strike, only maintained the same distance between them.
Wynn stumbled as she retreated down the shop's steps. She wasn't about to turn her back on this man—whatever he was.
Pawl a'Seatt stopped in the doorway.
Even as Wynn went to retrieve il'Sänke and Rodian, the scribe master never took his cold gaze off of her.
Chapter 20
Dawn was a ways off when Ghassan il'Sänke climbed the steps to his quarters above the guild's workshops. He had never been so tired nor wanted to be alone more than now. He knocked briefly before entering.
A glowing cold lamp rested upon his desk. By its light, Wynn sat on the floor looking calmly at the scroll's blackened surface, with Shade lying beside her.
"Wynn," he said in warning, "you have not called your—"
"Mantic sight?" she finished. "No, I'm too exhausted. Whatever is left in the scroll can wait."