himself, Merrick snorted and shook his head. “When I first saw you, that was what I thought. That woman will be a saint one day.”
Sorcha grinned, masking her own lingering concerns, and then stripped off her shirt, quite unconcerned about her nakedness before these men who had seen everything about her. She even pinned up her hair so that the Patternmaker would have nothing to distract him from his work.
Ratimana waited for her, seated on the floor, legs crossed, looking relaxed and at peace. It was amazing what the application of a little water and soap could do for a person. He smelled a thousand times better than he had in that dank cellar. He was a gift from Nynnia, yet another person she had underestimated in her life. Now it was time to learn some lessons and trust herself.
She sat down and held out her bare arms to the Patternmaker. “What do you think?”
Ratimana ran his firm, practiced fingers down from her shoulders to her fingers. “I think,” he said, his eyes fixed on nowhere, “that there is room for each rune from here to your wrist. Your sigil you must carve yourself, into your palms.”
She swallowed hard, feeling a trickle of sweat begin to form along her temple. “We’ll do that last then.”
The Patternmaker nodded. “Then I shall begin with Aydien on your right shoulder.” His fingers slid over the instruments they had gathered for him: a pointed comb, a container of black ink and a little hammer.
Merrick came and sat down on her left, while Raed took up a place behind her. Sorcha looked across at her partner. His gaze was as steady and true as it had ever been.
Then she leaned back and felt Raed’s hands rest lightly on the nape of her neck. His grip was warm and constant. The other hand she held out to the artisan who stood ready with the tattoo hammer.
The Deacon’s voice when she spoke was firm. “Let us begin then.”
TWENTY-EIGHT
Unseen Fangs
In the darkness of the night, after the exhausted Deacons slept, the Rossin took Raed’s shape. The Young Pretender was standing at the entrance to the cavern, watching the misty forest, while his thoughts roamed over what he had seen that evening. He barely had time to realize that the geistlord was on him, before he took over.
Ripped clothes and outrage would be all he’d have to remember of the moment, as the Beast stuffed him down deep into his own consciousness. This conversation was something that the Rossin would rather keep from him.
The air was chill, and the great cat’s breath stained it as he padded into the woods. He had not gone very far before a coyote’s howl sounded. The Rossin’s head swung up as he made a great bellowing roar in response and then sat under a twisted willow tree to wait.
The Fensena came to him, padding through the undergrowth. The coyote’s eyes gleamed in the moonlight, and he was as the Rossin remembered, lanky, shaggy and rather disreputable looking.
Even on the Otherside the Fensena had been useful. He’d specialized in working his way into other geistlords’ favor and then bringing them into the Rossin’s reach to become fodder. The coyote dined off the leftovers of the great pard, and now it seemed that he would do the same again.
The Fensena did tend to burn out his hosts rather fast. It was a similar method to the Wrayth and the Rossin, but far more likely to attract attention. That was why the coyote kept moving.
It was no simple chance that they had found each other while Raed was traveling to Phia. The Fensena had always possessed the ability to locate the Rossin—like real scavengers that shadowed lions on the plains. The Young Pretender had never even heard the coyote following him, but the Rossin had sensed him. It had been many hundreds of years since they had seen each other.
The cursed Ehtia had grown strong in this world, learning his lessons better than any geistlord could have. He’d also amassed followers that spanned the whole world. It was not surprising that the Wrayth had thrown its lot in with him.
The coyote flopped down on the ground and yawned as if the whole affair bored him.
The Rossin’s eyes narrowed.
The great cat flexed his claws. The coyote had not been reminded of his power for a long time. Perhaps it was nearly due again.
The Fensena must have felt the change in the air, because he whined and flopped down on his back. He presented his soft belly to show he still remembered his place.
The Rossin’s ears swiveled about.
The coyote’s wide smile would have frightened mortals to death.
The great cat lifted his head and inhaled. He smelled smoke, blood and saltpeter coming from a great distance and from all directions of the Empire.
The Fensena rolled to his feet, his cunning eyes fixing on his fellow geistlord.
The Rossin also rose to his paws and glared down on him.