Deacons put their trust in the Patternmaker. It did not matter to him, but someday there would be a reckoning.

“Have you tamed the Rossin then?” Ratimana pointed a crooked finger at the great cat. “Dare you turn your back on such a cruel creature?”

The Rossin snarled at the geist in a man’s flesh, incapable of doing anything else to register his displeasure. Time had not taken away any of the sly, devious nature of Ratimana.

“The Rossin is here with us, and his own creature. We hold back his rage, but he is still what he is.” That Merrick had certainly learned to lie as well as many older Deacons. It was quite impressive.

The Patternmaker looked away and nodded. He did a very good impression of an old human. It brought out the protective instincts of those around him.

“The woman,” Merrick pressed, his scent growing hotter by the minute, “did you see her?”

“Took her, took her away,” Ratimana muttered. “Broken and made again, they took her to the Abbey. They have the Emperor on his leash and mean to slay every last Deacon.”

His words stilled the cellar.

“He means to bring down the Order altogether?” one of the other Deacons, the one that smelled like dead roses, asked in a whisper. Her head was shaking back and forth.

Yes, it was certainly hard for those of the Order to believe what had happened to them. The divisions were, however, what the Rossin delighted in. The schisms and infighting among all the Orders was bliss to him—like the warm carcass of a recent kill. If he could not slay the Maker or the Tormentor then he would enjoy this.

“If he has convinced, and tortured Zofiya into saying our Deacons kidnapped her—then the Order is done for.” Merrick sunk onto the floor, desperation coming off him in delightful palpable waves.

“And there is no way we can defend ourselves without the runes,” one of the sweet-smelling Deacons whispered.

“Then we must defend the Order with words,” Aachon, that great man-mountain, broke in. “We must go confront the Emperor and show him the duplicity of del Rue.”

“What a fine idea,” Sorcha snapped. “We go in with guns blazing and a hungry Rossin at our sides and see what happens? Or shall we perhaps save the Circle of Stars the trouble and just slit our throats now?”

The argument devolved into a shouting match. Even Deacons, usually so controlled, gave themselves over to the desperation of the moment. The Rossin would have purred if he’d been able.

That was until the Patternmaker staggered to his feet and held aloft the item he’d been making. In the dimness of the cellar the words began to glow with soft white light. The Rossin remembered the first time he’d seen such a thing, the first time he’d taken form, and begun this journey in the physical realm. It was not necessarily a pleasant remembrance. The great cat lowered his head and growled.

The Deacons immediately stopped their yammering, which was a great relief to his ears. Instead they turned and looked at the ugly, broken little man, holding above his head the thing they wanted. Power.

None of them had ever seen a rune Pattern before, but it was the physical representation of all that they used every day so thoughtlessly. The secret of it was kept away from the majority of their Order, lest the vulnerability be revealed, but it was how the power they stole from the Otherside was channeled into their foci.

It was the Patternmaker’s gift, and the Rossin had helped him create the first one. Now he was forced to watch as the Deacons clustered around Ratimana like foolish moths. The smell suddenly did not seem to matter to them.

The Rossin saw that there would be no blood right now, and decided he did not want to watch what had to happen. He’d seen it once, and that was enough. He would return when there was killing to do. Let the foolish mortal Raed deal with this.

The Young Pretender came back to his body and tried to realign his brain. It felt different hearing and seeing things through the Rossin’s eyes, and it left him with more than a bad taste in his mouth. His blood surged with rage, and it took him a long time to look at the Deacons without feeling the need to beat them to a bloody mass.

“Raed?” Sorcha and Aachon approached, finally noticing that the massive bulk of the Rossin was gone. They smelled of the man who the Rossin had identified as the Maker.

“He leaves you now, just like that?” Aachon asked as he handed Raed’s clothing back to him. It was one advantage of this closer connection with the Rossin; the ability to know when the change was coming had saved him plenty of pieces of clothing and personal belongings.

“I think he was too disgusted to stay,” Raed replied as Sorcha helped him to his feet. Across the cellar, the Deacons still surrounded Ratimana—including the fascinated Merrick. “Something about that man distresses him. Sorcha, I think he actually has met him before.”

She gave him an odd look, as if she wasn’t quite sure if it was he or the Rossin saying these things. Not that he was entirely sure himself half the time now. “He can help us, Raed. He says he can make a temporary Pattern so that we don’t go into the Abbey with nothing.”

“How can you trust him though?” He leaned forward and grabbed her shoulder.

“He is the enemy of the Circle of Stars,” she said jerking back from him, “and that is enough for right now.” He couldn’t understand her look of disappointment and outrage as she strode back to join the group around the Patternmaker. It was a perfectly reasonable question.

“To have power snatched away is no easy thing.” Aachon’s hand spasmed closed, around the space where the weirstone had once been. “When I was cast out of the Order, it took many years for me to find peace. Do not judge them too harshly.”

They watched as the Deacons talked excitedly to the Patternmaker, who stood in the middle of them grinning from ear to ear. He didn’t speak much, but he held what he had made high, showing three or four runes.

Aachon understood the nature of Raed’s silences after so many years. “We are down to very few choices, my prince. It is trust him, or watch the Empire fall into war and the geists overrun the land.”

Put to him that succinctly, the Young Pretender sighed. “By the Blood, this reeks of wrongness, but I see your point.”

They both cautiously rejoined the group. His crew gave him little nods of recognition, but the Deacons didn’t even look up—so entranced were they by the newcomer. He was the sole focus of their attention.

Sorcha was crouched down in front of Ratimana, holding her arm out before him. “Can you work runes here, on my flesh?”

Just where she had got that idea Raed did not know for sure, but it chilled him to the bone. He wanted to stop her, wanted to say something, but what could he say to her to change her mind? He was still getting to know Sorcha, but there was one feature of her personality that had stood out about her from the first moment they met. She was the most stubborn, determined person he had ever come across.

Either he went along with her, or she’d do it anyway and he’d be left alone to wonder about the outcome. Better that he, and the Rossin, were there to assist. As hard as it was to do, he managed to keep his silence.

Two of the Deacons helped the old man to his feet as he nodded. It looked like the gesture alone might knock him down. His eyes raked over them. “Yes, I can do that, but there will be consequences.”

“And, what would those be?” Merrick was at least a small voice of sanity in all this.

Ratimana ran his tongue over his lips in what Raed interpreted as a calculating gesture, as his hands clenched on the piece of broken board, which still gleamed in the darkness. Finally he admitted, “Not sure. Could be many things.”

The Deacons drew closer, but there was no fear on their faces—it was expectation. They were trained to die to defend normal folk from geists, and Raed knew very well that there were few old Deacons. They were used to taking risks.

Sorcha glanced at her colleagues and then held out her arm. “Do your best and we will do ours.”

Slowly but surely, the rest of them rolled up their sleeves in an echo of her gesture.

Sorcha looked at Raed. “You best come up with a plan and soon, because you will soon have your weapons.” Such conviction should have reassured him, but a feeling of dread consumed him as thoroughly as the Rossin did.

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