that even a determinedly eating Breeze wouldn't be able to make a dent in it.
They had waited all day for Spook to return to the lair. Tensions in the city were high, and most of their contacts had gone to ground, weathering the Citizen's paranoia regarding a rebellion. Soldiers walked the streets, and a sizable contingent had set up camp just outside the Ministry building. Sazed was worried that the Citizen had associated Breeze and Sazed with Spook's appearance at the executions. It appeared that their days of moving about freely in the city were at an end.
'Why hasn't he come back?' Allrianne asked. She and Breeze sat at a fine table, pilfered from an empty nobleman's mansion. They had, of course, changed back to their fine clothing-a suit on Breeze, a peach dress on Allrianne. They always changed as soon as possible, as if eager to reaffirm to themselves who they really were.
Sazed did not dine with them; he didn't have much of an appetite. Captain Goradel leaned against a bookcase a short distance away, determined to keep a close eye on his charges. Though the good-natured man wore his usual smile, Sazed could tell from the orders he'd given to his soldiers that he was worried about the possibility of an assault. He made very certain that Breeze, Allrianne, and Sazed stayed within the protective confines of the cavern. Better to be trapped than dead.
'I'm sure the boy is fine, my dear,' Breeze said, finally answering Allrianne's question. 'It's likely he hasn't come back because he fears implicating us in what he did today.'
'Either that,' Sazed said, 'or he can't get past the soldiers watching outside.'
'He snuck into a burning building while we were watching, my dear man,' Breeze said, 'I doubt he'd have trouble with a bunch of toughs, especially now that it's dark out.'
Allrianne shook her head. 'It would have been better if he'd managed to sneak
'Perhaps,' Breeze said. 'But, part of being a vigilante rebel is letting your enemies know what you are about. The psychological effect produced by leaping from a burning building carrying a child is quite sound. And, to do that right in front of the tyrant who tried to execute said child? I wasn't aware that dear little Spook had such a flair for drama!'
'He's not so little anymore, I think,' Sazed said quietly. 'We have a habit of ignoring Spook too much.'
'Habits come from reinforcement, my dear man,' Breeze said, wagging a fork at Sazed. 'We paid little attention to the lad because he rarely had an important role to play. It isn't his fault-he was simply young.'
'Vin was young as well,' Sazed noted.
'Vin, you must admit, is something of a special case.'
Sazed couldn't argue with that.
'Either way,' Breeze said, 'when we look at the facts, what happened isn't really all that surprising. Spook has had months to become known to Urteau's underground population, and he is of the Survivor's own crew. It is logical that they would begin to look to him to save them, much as Kelsier saved Luthadel.'
'We're forgetting one thing, Lord Breeze,' Sazed said. 'He jumped from a rooftop ledge two stories up and landed on a cobbled street. Men do not survive falls like that without broken bones.'
Breeze paused. 'Staged, you think? Perhaps he worked out some kind of landing platform to soften the fall?'
Sazed shook his head. 'I believe it a stretch to assume that Spook could plan, and execute, a staged rescue like that. He would have needed the aid of the underground, which would have ruined the effect. If they knew that his survival was a trick, then we wouldn't have heard the rumors we did about him.'
'What, then?' Breeze asked, shooting a glance at Allrianne. 'You're not truly suggesting that Spook has been
'I do not know,' Sazed said softly.
Breeze shook his head, chuckling. 'I doubt he could have hidden that from us, my dear man. Why, he would have had to go through that entire mess of overthrowing the Lord Ruler, then the fall of Luthadel, without ever revealing that he was anything more than a Tineye! I refuse to accept that.'
Yet, Sazed had seen that fall. He had seen the grace of the jump, the distinctive poise and natural dexterity of one burning pewter. Sazed found himself wishing for his copperminds so that he could search for references about people spontaneously manifesting Allomantic powers. Could a man be a Misting early in life, then transform to a full Mistborn later?
It was a simple thing, related to his duties as an ambassador. Perhaps he could spend just a little time looking through his stored memories, seeking examples. .
He paused.
He didn't need to look through his metalminds. He had set those aside for a very good reason-he could not be a Keeper, could not share the knowledge he'd collected, until he could sort the truth from the lies.
No, Sazed thought.
He sat down at the table, opening his portfolio, taking out the next sheet in the line. It listed the tenets of the Nelazan people, who had worshipped the god Trell. Sazed had always been partial to this religion because of its focus on learning and study of mathematics and the heavens. He'd saved it for near the end, but had done so more out of worry than anything else. He'd wanted to put off what he'd known would happen.
Sure enough, as he read about the religion, he saw the holes in its doctrines. True, the Nelazan had known a great deal about astronomy, but their teachings on the afterlife were sketchy-almost whimsical. Their doctrine was purposefully vague, they'd taught, allowing all men to discover truth for themselves. Reading this, however, left Sazed frustrated. What good was a religion without answers? Why believe in something if the response to half of his questions was 'Ask Trell, and he will answer'?
He didn't dismiss the religion immediately. He forced himself to put it aside, acknowledging to himself that he wasn't in the right mood for studying. He didn't feel like he was in the mood for much, actually.
Perhaps it
Either way, Sazed's worry about what was happening kept him from being able to focus on studying the Nelazan religion as he should. He kept getting the feeling that something very important was occurring. And Spook was at the center of it.
Where was that boy?
'I know why you're so sad,' Spook said.
Beldre turned, shock showing on her face. She didn't see him at first. He must have been too deep in the misty shadows. It was growing hard for him to tell.
He stepped forward, moving across the plot of land that had once been a garden outside the Citizen's home. 'I figured it out,' Spook said. 'At first, I thought that sadness had to do with this garden. It must have been beautiful, once. You would have seen it in its fullness, before your brother ordered all gardens plowed under. You were related to nobility, and probably lived in their society.'
She looked surprised at this.