Buildings of the Order usually occupied high ground—much like temples or palaces. It made for not only the best scenery but also the best view of geist activity.
They were on the incline of the hill. The houses were beginning to dwindle and become more like shacks, when the familiar wailing of mourners reached them. They had come across a cemetery. That also was traditional. Burying the dead within sight of a Priory or an Abbey had become almost a necessity in the Dark Time and continued to be recommended. A burial was in progress.
Jey whispered in her partner’s ear—rather bad manners Sorcha felt.
“We must stop here for a moment.” Delie turned and addressed the Vermillion Deacons somewhat stiffly. “There were more deaths last night.”
No further explanation was necessary. Sorcha waited by the gate, while Merrick went back to tell Bandele to go on ahead to the Abbey. They had Deacon business to take care of.
It felt good to be of some use to their hostsed in herwo sets of partners examined the scene with practiced eyes. The Sensitives sent their Centers out, while the Actives remained poised in case they found something.
The knot of mourners was streaming into the graveyard. The gate and fence were both made of bone-white wood and rattled in the light wind. The sound was mournful, disturbing and had to be deliberate. When it mixed with the cries of the bereaved, the effect was enough to raise goose pimples on Sorcha’s arms, despite the heat.
Unlike in Vermillion, there was no coffin, just the body wrapped in brightly colored cotton carried on the shoulders of menfolk. Small medallions glittered and flashed in the sunlight where they hung from the body. Sorcha had studied enough to know they were symbols of little gods—indicating that this man was a believer. It mattered little to the geists.
“I see nothing suspicious,” Merrick whispered. His eyes were closed, but as he was sharing his Sight with Sorcha, she could see what he meant. The grief of the funeral cortege was all that stained the ether.
“The spectyrs have been very cunning of late.” Jey’s eyelids flickered. “We should make absolutely sure.”
Both Sensitives reached for their Strops by instinct. When Merrick secured the leather rune-carved strap over his eyes, Sorcha again shared his vision. The world was a beautiful place when her partner looked at it. They could see the movement of the wind, the sorrowful plumes of grief wafting from the mourners and the flicker of tiny insects over the flowers in the cemetery. Nothing escaped their gaze.
No shades followed in the wake of the dead. No spectyr wore the face of the lost one. Sorcha let out a held-in sigh of relief as her hand dropped away from her belt.
“Can you see this, Deacon Jey?” Merrick’s voice was full of dread, but he was not looking at the cemetery any longer.
Sorcha shared his vision, and what he was looking at was far in the distance. Against the horizon, on the other side of the river Saal, were a line of low hills. She had already noted them as they climbed out of the port city. The day was cloudless and relentless in its heat. However, with the aid of the Strop the scene was quite different. On those hills a gray mass, which could have been mistaken for thunderclouds, was gathering. It was as if a stone had dropped into the pit of Sorcha’s stomach.
“I can,” the Chiomese Sensitive choked out, “but I have never witnessed the like before.”
“Neither have I.” Her partner’s voice came out rough and shaken.
Naturally they would not. Both were too young to remember. Sorcha, however, had come across with the Emperor from Delmaire years before and seen many deadly things.
She had stood on a ship with Arch Abbot Hastler, the one who would later betray his Order, on one side, and Kolya on the other. Sharing his Sight and looking out toward the continent that would be her new home, she had seen the mass of clouds where there were actually none. She’d asked her Abbot what they signified, and his response had chilled her then as it did now.
“The geists are gathering, preparing for us, waiting for battle.”
“By the Bones.” Merrick took his Strop off with shaking hands. “We had better report this to the Prior.”
Their simple trek to the Hive City was coinciding with something else—something far more momentous. Sorcha felt foolish that she had ever thoght this journey would be simple—that it would ever be just about Raed. The maelstrom was focused once again around the Triple Bond.
TEN
Within a Welcome Embrace
Merrick’s stomach rolled on seeing the cloud of geist activity on the horizon. It was always that way with a Sensitive; the body reacted against the undead. Sorcha might have witnessed such things before, but he had only read about them. As he fought down his nausea he realized that, despite his satisfaction at finally seeing Chioma, he would have been quite happy to never experience a geist storm firsthand.
Without a word passing between them, the four Deacons turned and very quickly passed the wagon train on the way to the Abbey. They all knew their duty to report what they had seen.
They were just going underneath the red archway of the building, into what Merrick might have termed safety, when the Bond sang. His Sight blurred, and he staggered back as the world that he knew dipped away. Inexplicably, his mouth tasted of dirty river water, and there was pain—so much that it felt as though his spine was being ripped out through his throat.
The sound of a savage growl echoed in his head—one that he knew very well. In the ossuary under Vermillion, Merrick and Sorcha had lost themselves, becoming part of a creature with Raed and the Rossin. It had been both terrifying and exhilarating—the kind of exhilaration that was full of danger. The kind you could easily get used to.
It didn’t matter how far away the Deacons were from the Young Pretender and the geistlord he carried; they could still draw on magic from Merrick and Sorcha.
They drowned in the geistlord for a long moment, lost in his strength and bloodlust. Then, mercifully and just as suddenly, they were free.
Jey and Delie were staring at them, wide-eyed and concerned. Sorcha had collapsed back against the door of the Priory, while Merrick found himself kneeling on the floor like a penitent of ages past. He knew they could not say anything to their fellow Deacons. Not even their superiors back at the Mother Abbey knew about the Bond with the Young Pretender—and for good reason.
The penalty would most likely be death. The sentence for any Deacon who had dallied with the Otherside was to be cleansed in the rune Pyet and their Strop or Gauntlets thrown in after them. It had been a generation or more since such a punishment had been meted out—but it was a ceremony that could easily be revived.
“Are you all right?” Jey bent down to help Merrick to his feet, while Delie ran to assist Sorcha.
His partner thought faster than he did. “Your weather takes some getting used to.” She mopped her brow and smiled shakily.
The look that passed between the two Chiomese Deacons said they were not entirely convinced that both of their Vermillion counterparts had been overtaken by the heat at the exact same time. Yet they were luckily too polite to challenge the explanation.
Bandele and the royal caravan passed under the mud brick arch last, and the gates were secured shut behind them. Merrick sidled up to Sorcha while the unloading went ahead. She must have felt what he had, but he still had to ask—to make sure he was not running mad.
Her face was white, her jaw set. Shoulder to shoulder, under the cover of their cloaks, he squeezed Sorcha’s hand. “He’s alive.”
She gave a quick nod as if she could not quite bear to speak yet.
“And close,” he added under his breath. The rest went unspoken. And so is the Rossin.
Sorcha flinched, but they dared not discuss this more, because someone in a vibrant green and blue cloak topped with a mustard yellow hood was coming down to greet them. The color clash alone drew the eye, but he was also a tall, broad man with a flashing smile—the kind of solidly built figure that would have made a fine warrior in any army. “Welcome! Welcome, Brother and Sister!” He eschewed the traditional bow and instead clapped them around the shoulders, as if they were indeed long-lost kin. “I am Abbot Yohari.”