Genevieve, she did.

“It was about six years ago,” she began, her voice fading, carried back across the sea of years to a far but never forgotten shore. “I was just a pickpocket on the streets, really. One day, I was watching the shops in the marketplace…”

Claude maneuvered through the front door as best he could, arms laden with parcels, and glowered at the servants who had taken so long to admit him. “Find a place for these,” he demanded, shoving the packages into the chest of a startled doorman, and suggesting by his expression just where the fellow might stick them. Barely waiting long enough for the man to take the weight, he spun and strode up the stairs, taking them two at a time in his long-legged stride.

Even as he approached the master's office, his scowl deepened. No doubt the old coot would have something else that needed doing, some new banal task that would occupy time Claude really didn't have. But he wasn't about to overtly disobey, and he certainly didn't want anything to go wrong with the archbishop's arrangements…

But Alexandre was neither hard at work on the books, nor shouting instructions to this servant or that. He sat behind his desk, staring dreamily off into space, a strange grin flittering about the edges of his mouth.

“Sir?” Claude asked, gently shutting the door behind him. “What's wrong?”

“Nothing's wrong, Claude.” Alexandre turned to him, still smiling. “I think…We have to keep this secret, of course, at least for now. Until we can make things right.”

“Um, of course, sir. Keep what secret, exactly?”

“She's alive, Claude. She's alive, and maybe…maybe she'll come back to me.”

The servant's eyes widened briefly, then narrowed. “Perhaps, sir, you'd better tell me everything.”

And he stood, listening, with his hands clasped behind his back so Alexandre couldn't see the violent clenching of his fists.

The candle guttered madly, little more than a floating wick in a pool of gooey wax by the time the young woman's narration finally ended. She'd left out almost nothing-nothing save Alexandre's own worship of Olgun, for that was not her secret to tell. Her throat was raw, and she was surprised, albeit only mildly, to discover that her cheeks were damp once more.

William de Laurent leaned back in his chair. He folded his hands in his lap to prevent himself from overstepping the bounds of propriety, for at that moment all he wanted was to reach out and comfort this poor girl who had suffered so much, persevered through hardship and horror the likes of which few could imagine.

“You are truly blessed,” he said at last, his own voice hoarse with suppressed emotion.

She couldn't help it; she laughed, loudly and bitterly. “You have a unique sense of fortune then, William.” She punched the name ever so slightly, as though pointedly reminding him that he'd given her permission to use it.

“You misunderstand me, Adrienne. Yes, I said Adrienne. You no more stopped being Adrienne when you took the name Widdershins than this desk”-here he thumped a fist against the solid wood-“would become, say, a mule, just because I were to call it one.

“But what I mean is that you have a strength about you that enabled you to come through all this. That is a blessing. And more to the point, it amazes me utterly that Olgun-and I mean no offense to your god, you understand-hasn't gotten you killed by now.”

“What?” Widdershins blinked twice, her own mounting indignation both channel and counterpoint to the deity's own sudden ire. The air around her tingled. “Olgun's saved my life more times than I can count! He's gotten me out of some unbelievably tight spots, and he's usually the one trying to talk sense into me! What could possibly drive you to say something like that?!”

“Again, you misunderstand.” The archbishop leaned toward her, resting both elbows on the desk. “Adrienne, Olgun never told you the full import of what you did for him two years ago, did he?”

Her stomach tightened, and for a frantic moment she fought a sudden urge to flee. “What do you mean?”

“You saved Olgun's life.”

This time, the laughter died before it left her throat. It sounded absurd-save a god's life, indeed! — and yet, it felt right.

“Adrienne, there are a great many theories and philosophies within the High Church. Sitting around and debating the unknowable is something that overeducated old men like me enjoy so much, we've made it part of our official ecclesiastical duties. And one of the things on which we choose to speculate is the nature of the gods themselves.

“Why do you suppose the gods seek our worship?” he asked her. “What do you suppose they would do-they would be-without us?”

“Olgun?” Widdershins asked hesitantly. There was nothing, nothing from the god save an embarrassed silence.

“Consider that most of the gods of the Pact come to us from the scattered tribes and communities before the founding of Galice. That a god of great import in one city might oversee a single bloodline or guild in another. That they are older than modern society, and yet so few of them-or at least, of those we still acknowledge-demand observances that would be considered immoral to contemporary thought.

“Some of us in the Church believe that our worship actually shapes the gods-not so much as they shaped us, of course, but what traits the bulk of a god's worshippers believe he has, he has. What emotions we believe he feels, he feels. And without our faith, without mortals to honor and revere him, he would cease to be. He would…Well, in all ways that matter, he would die.”

“No.”

“You are Olgun's last living worshipper, Adrienne. If you perish, so, I fear, does he.”

“But I'm not the only one who believes in him!” Widdershins insisted, half lunging from her seat, all but tripping herself in the folds of her gown. “You believe in him now!”

“I believe, but I do not worship him. That's what they need from us. Devotion, not simple acknowledgment.”

Widdershins wanted to scream, to lash out, to cry, to deny it all, and she couldn't quite figure out why. Was it just the idea of bearing such an enormous responsibility? Wasn't it enough that she was liable to get herself killed by her own thoughtless actions? She had to take responsibility for the life of an “immortal,” too?

“If I'm the only one keeping him alive,” she said, brightening as she saw her way clear of the archbishop's smothering web of revelation, “then he'd be doing everything in his power to protect me! So what the figs is all this about him getting me killed?”

De Laurent smiled gently. “Listen to what I've been saying, Adrienne. Our worship gives them life, power, and personality. I would imagine that the fewer worshippers a god has, the more each individual shapes his nature. Your relationship is, if you will, monogamous. Just you, just him; something, I might add, that is absolutely unique in my experience. Neither of you is consciously aware of it-well, I'm sure you're not, though I guess I ought not speak for a deity-but you've been shaping each other's disposition since the day of the murders.”

The thief rocked backward, found herself sprawled crookedly across the plush, upholstered cushions. I don't want to hear this!

“You're a risk taker, Adrienne. You told me you always have been. You also told me it's gotten worse in the recent past, that you've been taking chances even when you knew they were dangerous, even stupid.”

“Because of Olgun,” she whispered, hands clenched at her sides. “I've made him more prone to taking risks…”

“Which he has been, albeit unintentionally, channeling back into you,” de Laurent concluded. Then, at the look of betrayal that shone so clearly on her face, he quickly added, “You should hold no malice for Olgun over this. I doubt he was any more aware of this than you.” He paused long enough to give a hefty shrug that lifted his entire cassock. “And even if he knew, there's little he could've done about it. Even the gods can no more escape what they are than can man.”

“Is that true?” Widdershins demanded, her attention clearly focused elsewhere. De Laurent felt nothing at all,

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