Chapter 11 Ilan

Ilan

Nothing good ever came of sudden meetings.

He’d been planning to track down Csilla and question her about her little act of theft, but the muster bells ringing urgent summons stopped his feet, and the eyes of the other priests forced him to follow into the chapter house.

There wouldn’t be a way to explain where he was going without the galling admission that a combination of exhaustion and misguided pity had resulted in what could be the largest leak in their investigation.

There were far too many clergy gathered in the dim room. Ordinarily the chapter house held a half-dozen members or so as their committees debated the daily workings of keeping order: food, supplies, sanitation, changes to service. All necessary tasks, but none requiring so many hands for approval.

Prelate Abe stood before them with a broad, dark-haired man dressed in the cream and silver cassock of the Incarnate’s service, though the hem hung above his ankles and black soil crumbled from beneath his boots with each step.

Ilan frowned at the little clumps dotting the stone floor.

The roads were damp this fickle time of year, but a wiser servant would have changed shoes before creating more work for his fellow Faithful. They didn’t wear road boots to service.

‘Sandor has come to us at a fortunate time,’ the Prelate said.

The stranger nodded at his name, raising a heavy hand in greeting. A gold and ivory signet ring with the Incarnate’s mark decorated his small finger, oddly delicate in contrast to the thick joint.

‘He has been sent by the Incarnate in response to the troubles.’

So this was their stand-in. Ilan let out a sharp breath as others raised their voices in praise. He, the Prelate, and others had all written to the Incarnate, urging him to hasten his return to the Brilliant City. War and taxes and council would mean little if the Church lost its power.

But the Incarnate didn’t come, and the stranger looked to be a poor substitute.

‘Indeed. He apologises for his delay; one man can travel more quickly than his convoy, and there has been far more . . . trouble than anticipated.’ The man addressed them in a rolling voice that carried easily through the murmurs.

‘I would like for the High Inquisitor to come and tell me what we know so far.’

‘You’ve gotten my letters, no doubt?’ This man should already know everything. Everything Ilan had been allowed to write, anyway.

‘Things get missed. The further out you go, the worse the roads are. And what has arrived is still with His Divinity.’

Ilan hoped there were letters missed, waylaid by a lame horse or a late-season freeze. If the Incarnate didn’t know how bad it was, his absence could be excused. Even the Incarnate couldn’t always count on the voice of Asten to speak clearly.

He scratched his tongue against clenched teeth as he walked past the muttering servants to the front of the room, their eyes like poking sticks.

‘There have been four deaths, all marked with demonic symbols.’ Ilan kept his tone neutral, but the quiet voices grew into a buzz like flies that needed swatting. ‘I asked for a script expert. Would I be right in assuming that’s you?’

Someone in the back made a noise of dismissal. A knifepoint of a headache began to form over his right eye.

‘Unfortunately, no. Have you had any leads that aren’t speculation?’ Sandor said the word like it was blasphemy.

The blade dug deeper.

‘None that have gone anywhere. The killer . . .’ The killer was smoke or spirit, fading in an instant and impossible to grasp. ‘No one has confessed to seeing him. I believe we might be dealing with something that slipped past the wards.’

If this man were meant to stand in for the Incarnate, he had little to lose from speaking plainly. Dancing around the issue had only left them leadless and sore.

The Prelate turned.

‘Ilan.’

Ilan stiffened at the plainness of his name here in front of the gathered clergy.

It was a mark of the equality of the Faithful to make no distinction between each other aside from that earned through service.

Inquisitor was a role he’d earned with every sin he’d scourged. The Prelate should acknowledge it.

‘Perhaps either you’ve been working too hard, or we’ve lost more of our power than we thought, but you’ve yet to come up with anything useful.

’ Prelate Abe clasped his arm, as if worried about a strike.

He wasn’t wrong to be. ‘Either way, Sandor will take charge of judicial matters for the time being. Ilan, you are hereby relieved of your duties as High Inquisitor and will act under Sandor, who will report directly to the Incarnate.’

Ilan’s mouth fell open soundlessly. He would have rather taken two hundred lashes.

‘Prelate, with respect—’

‘With respect, you will hold your tongue. This is more important than your pride.’ He gestured to the tiled floor, glazed red echoing the fading blood and power rolling below. ‘You have done your best, but we need fresh eyes. You know what’s at stake.’

Ilan swallowed hard, an unfamiliar fear skittering down his back.

Arany’s sacrifice was what let the Church still see Asten’s hope for his creation made manifest, reflected in consecrated glass and water and stone.

The weak would never keep faith without visible proof of sin or power, and Asten would stay beyond their reach.

If Sandor had been sent by the Incarnate, it was Their divine will. Ilan’s place was not to doubt, certainly not resent, even if forcing his temper to heel made his shoulders shake.

Sandor smiled and clapped him companionably on the back, and it took all Ilan’s willpower not to return the gesture with a blow.

‘Come now, won’t it be a relief to have the responsibility lifted from your shoulders? I will still be relying on you.’

Ilan gave the smallest possible nod. He would bear the humiliation for the sake of his city, acrid as the flavour was.

Abe nodded. ‘Now, Ilan, go with Sandor and show him what there is to see thus far.’

None of the seated servants would meet Ilan’s gaze as he passed, and his hard steps echoed in the rounded chamber.

‘I’m surprised you haven’t yet brought the man in to hang,’ Sandor said when they were alone in the corridor.

Though they had plenty of space and Ilan took up far less of it, the larger man insisted on walking right beside him, occasionally jostling his arm.

‘You have quite a reputation for keeping the city spotless. Hard to believe you’ve only been at it, what, three years? ’

There was a needling note to the question, though when Ilan glanced at the man, his eyes were still straight ahead.

‘A little more than four now, I believe.’

He’d been twenty-one when he entered the great city for the first time and had been granted his rank two years later. The results had quieted even the loudest tongues wagging that he hadn’t truly earned it.

‘Humans crave order as much as they resist it. I simply put things right. I’m blessed to have such a calling.’ He moved to the side and was followed, sped up and was matched. They danced step in step as his irritation rose. ‘And how fares the Incarnate?’

‘Things are progressing well. Asten’s return is closer each day.

’ Sandor emphasised the words with another bump, and Ilan watched his steps, thinking how easy it would be to jut out his foot just so, and send the man sprawling to the floor in the dapple of stained-glass light.

Just another accident, as Sandor would surely say all his ridiculous goat-like butting was.

‘No doubt the broken territories will be welcomed back to our fold by the end of the year.’

That was a far more generous assessment than the rumours said.

The plan to bring the entirety of the continent back into the Union was on its second generation and seemed more of a drudge than holy war.

Seda had decided Asten’s decision to abandon the world was enough reason to abandon Their Church, and in Ilan’s opinion, good riddance.

The Church and governing classes alike were bleeding money into the campaign.

If an entire region wished to declare themselves damned, so be it.

‘I’ll pray for his success,’ is what he said instead. It would serve everyone for the whole matter to end, one way or the other. ‘He can only do so much from afar. Like send orders for murder.’

It was a sharp and graceless stab, but would show him how much the Incarnate trusted the man he had sent.

Sandor’s steps didn’t falter. ‘The matter of the heretic, I take it? The one who didn’t die?’

So he did know.

‘Who wasn’t killed,’ Ilan corrected. ‘The girl they sent failed.’ Refused. ‘I offered to handle the matter myself, but the Prelate thought it best to wait for the Incarnate’s direction. He was worried about retaliation from the Izir’s followers.’

The other man made a small hmm. ‘He was right to. And as I rode through the city, it was quiet. Has the heretic spoken since the attempt?’

He’d spoken to Ilan, which had been unwelcome and extremely annoying, but not what Sandor meant. There’d been no gatherings last night that he’d been made aware of. ‘No.’

‘Then he was silenced, as Asten willed him to be. The Incarnate’s order was wise, and the result was achieved without sin.

If he stops speaking, the people will have to have something – they’ll come back, whether it be from fear or for nourishment.

We do not always know why Asten orders what They do, but this was clearly what was meant to be. ’

‘Clearly.’

Hopefully his rolled eyes would be mistaken for heavenward praise. Something about the easy dismissal still didn’t sit well with him, even when he tried to push it away as his own desires being thwarted.

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