picked a real bad day to get hitched, mister.”

“Looks like.” I found a coin for no good reason. “You got a safe place to hide, kid?”

He took it. “Safe as any, I reckon. Good luck to you and your lady. You might not talk like one, but I reckon you’re a gentleman, all the same.”

And then he was gone.

Carris came wobbling over, a question on his face.

“Bad news?”

“It isn’t good. Black cloud coming down the Brown. Sounds like somebody’s idea of a grand entrance.”

He just nodded. There wasn’t much to say.

I wondered where the Regency lay, and if Gertriss and Evis and Buttercup had managed to reach the shore. Buttercup was an Old World banshee-surely the mere sinking of a steamboat wouldn’t do more than get her wet?

I cussed and opened the flask and emptied it, right there in plain sight of Father Wickens and a dozen collected holy grooms.

I didn’t think any Angel worth her wings would begrudge me that one small comfort.

Chapter Twenty-Seven

I’d been right about the chimes. Two had indeed sounded. I counted three more. As the last tone faded, Father Wickens called us to gather close around him.

We did. Carris was walking better, and his eyes were clear. Worried, but clear.

I stuck a short plain dagger in his hand as soon as all eyes turned to the good Father. He took it without a word and put it in a pocket.

“Gentlemen, the time has come. Please line up in this order-Woesmith. Grant. Selby.”

He rattled off names. Grooms and groomsmen parted with ribald jokes and punches back and forth.

Carris was next-to-last, by arrangement. I took up the rear.

“Gentlemen,” said the father quietly, when we were arranged to his satisfaction. “These are troubling times. War and wrack may well be loosed upon us, before this day is done. For that, I am sorry, because no couple deserves to begin their journey together through such fearful times.”

Nods and murmurs, all around. The Father closed his eyes and prayed.

“I call upon Numena, the Angel of Peace, and upon Forna, the Angel of Love. I implore you to bless these unions, and guard them, and keep the twin beasts of War and Loss far from them, for all their days. Amen.”

“Amen.”

“Follow me,” said the Father. The big old doors swung open, though as far as I could see, they were touched by no one.

Up and up and up we went.

The Curtain of Grace could have benefited from the attention of a competent seamstress. To call it threadbare would be an injustice to threadbare furnishings everywhere. I could practically see through the thing.

Had I not been standing so close I could smell the mustiness of it I imagine it would look quite different. The Chapel was lit only by candles. The ceiling sported a monstrous stained glass window, but like everything else in Rannit it was coated with so much black crematorium soot it cast more shadow than light.

So I peeked through moth holes in the Curtain of Grace and tried to pick Japeth Stricken’s ugly face out of the crowd.

I wasn’t having much luck. The guests were seated in darkness. I couldn’t tell man from woman.

I cursed under my breath and stomped and fumed.

“Easy,” said Carris. “He’s probably not even here.”

“Or he could be out there with a crossbow and half a dozen ogres. I wouldn’t see that either.”

The Father read. The Father prayed. A very large lady with an even larger voice sang a couple of songs at a pitch and a volume that rivaled the Regency’s steam-whistle.

A lesser priest took the altar, greeted the guests and spoke at length on the sanctity of marriage and the grim fate of those who would seek to loosen the bonds of man and wife. Then the sizable lady sang again, more prayers were read, and I was nearly moved to call for a chair and a soothing pillow.

The Sun arced lazily across the stained glass above. I could only make out the subject depicted when the Sun was directly behind that portion of the glass. Angels warred with devils, it seemed, while saints looked on, serene.

I estimated the time remaining until noon and shifted my weight from leg to leg, just as I’d done during the War.

“Here come the brides,” whispered Carris as the lady with the thunderstorm voice tuned up once again.

I admit it. I looked. If the Angel of Love hadn’t wanted me to look, why had she put a moth hole right in front of my face?

The Brides marched in, each clad in white. White veils. White gowns. Long white trains.

I had to wait a bit, to catch sight of Darla. She was at the end of her line, as I had been.

Say I’m biased. I am. But hers was the loveliest gown, the most delicate veil, the most luxurious train.

Her bright white gown was worked with sliver threads, and they glittered, very subtle, in the candlelight. It was tight at her waist and trimmed with silver lace at her neck. Her veil hung just so, revealing only hints of her face behind it, just the smallest glimmer from her big brown eyes.

The Brides turned, their backs to us. Darla was so close I could have reached out and touched her. I did smell her perfume and breathed it in good and deep.

There was a ruckus among the guests. A door opened and closed. Voices were raised, and then hushed, and after a moment a grim-faced Father Wickens took the altar.

“I apologize for the interruption of this sacred ceremony,” he said. “But I am told there is a disturbance in the sky. It seems the foes of the Regency draw near, and we are being urged to cancel the ceremony so that all may seek safety.”

His fist stuck the altar.

“Anyone who wishes to leave may do so. At once. But know this. I will finish what I have begun. I will see the Broken Bell rung, come war, come ruin, come the hell-damned Devil and ten legions of the Fallen with him.”

A ragged chorus of cheers rose up. From my peephole, though, I saw frightened faces, hands raised to lips and people leaving their pews.

“Five minutes,” said the Father. “Leave or stay. The choice is yours. But I will not halt this ceremony a moment longer than that.”

Darla took a step backward. She poked at the curtain with her hand.

“Darling,” she said, not whispering. “Is that you, back there?”

“My name is Clemens. I’m just here for the cake.”

“Can you see the man in the second row, right side, five from the right end?”

I peered over her shoulder.

“Not really. What about him?”

“He just stood.” She leaned forward, staring into the candlit room.

“Honey, he’s wearing Toadsticker.”

I bent and lifted the curtain and darted out to stand beside her.

The chapel was descending into pandemonium. People were trying to leave their pews and make for the doors but were all trying to move against each other. Shoving and shouting broke out, and the Father called for order, and a couple of Church guards waded into the fray, using the butts of their pikes to restore a heavenly calm.

But Japeth Stricken wasn’t heading for the door.

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