Chapter 27 Ilan
Ilan
Violent orange and red advanced on the outer buildings in a hot and ashen wind that stole all the chill of the night, demolishing boards and licking heavy against stone.
Panicked people crammed the courtyard, shouting, carts coming from all quarters with over-full buckets of water and muck from the river to try to smother the flames.
Someone had spread a large quilt over the stones beneath the statue of Arany, and a few injured souls sheltered beneath her many wings, her presence shadowing their puckered and blistered skin as dripping gold painted their wounds.
The Church had been attacked, and he hadn’t been there to stop it. He was the one who deserved to be scoured over this, and when the flames died he would kneel in what was left of holiness until his knees bled, whip himself until the pain matched his loathsome lapse in judgement.
‘What happened?’ Mihály ran up behind him, panting.
Ilan’s eyebrows rose; he would have thought the Izir would have stayed in his carriage, going to what was important to him.
‘You followed me?’
‘Of course. If people are hurt, I can do something.’
That was uncharacteristically thoughtful, but no reason to question small miracles. Everyone’s hands were helpful in a crisis.
‘Go find the injured, then. Help them if you can.’
Ilan’s eyes swept the building, trying to piece together the origins of the fire.
The smoke had a strange sting – not the clean burn of wood or even the sooty one of oil, but something chemical, a smell he associated with feverish childhood days trapped indoors – sharp medicine and spilled paints and wood finish.
As buckets of water were dumped, the heated wood and nails sizzled and the gagging scent intensified.
Heavy steps echoed behind him. The Prelate.
‘You know how weak we are.’ He lowered his voice. ‘And you bring the heretic here.’ Rhythmic shouts and splashes from buckets of hauled-in water sounded behind them, regular as bells.
‘He can heal the burned. This isn’t a time to question what little of the angel’s gifts remain in the world.’ Fuck, he was defending the Izir. Small miracles indeed. ‘What happened? This was clearly no cooking fire.’
‘One of ours said he saw a flash like dark deliverance.’ Abe touched his mark.
Ilan’s heated blood went ice. ‘The demon?’
Or the killer with some other dark magic. Perhaps the Seal could be washed by more than corrupted blood, and the ashes of the Faithful would scour it useless all the same.
But demons didn’t feel like this, as he now knew. The loathing and guilt in his throat were a meal he made for himself, the burning well-deserved as it went down, and Arany’s flowing tears told him there was still something blessed on this land.
‘We haven’t let anyone else in the city,’ Abe replied, which wasn’t an answer.
‘And the Seal?’ Ilan sucked in a breath at the same moment the priest sighed.
‘Still hidden. I don’t want to risk going down there while this is going on.’
Wise. More than rats and cats might follow.
‘Is there something I can do?’ He fumbled for the knife sheathed quiet and patient in his boot, pulse strong and worried. He would open a vein over the dying divinity, punishment and penance in one.
‘It won’t help.’ Abe curled his weathered hand over Ilan’s fingers. His skin was a mass of nicks and fresh scabs. ‘Nothing helps, but as long as Arany weeps, there’s hope. Talk to the witnesses. I’m going to count the dead.’
Ilan touched his mark as he headed towards the makeshift coalescence in the courtyard. It would be a good thing for the victims to die under Asten’s bright and eternal Eye. Better if it happened quickly.
One man was sitting up. Mattias, one of the Inquisitorial priests who’d served under him till everything shifted. The man’s right cheek was splotched in fetid purple-black, his eyelid bugling and swollen shut, lashes gone to cinders. If anyone had had a good view, it was him.
‘Can you speak?’ Ilan asked, and Mattias nodded slowly, shifting so his uninjured eye could catch Ilan.
‘It hurts, but I can.’ His voice was gravelled with pain.
‘Were you there when the fire started? Where was it?’ Everyone had a different story, when they noticed, what had burned first. Mattias was the worst off, the most likely to have seen something.
It still galled that if he’d been there, he might have been able to stop it. Mattias’ eye would have been the least of what he could have saved.
Guilt was a terrible emotion; how could sinners stand it? Perhaps that’s why confession worked so well. The demon’s touch still boiled on him. If he could stand to be less honest with himself, he would blame that lingering stroke of Shadow for his doubts.
For all his faults, he wasn’t weak enough for the comfort of self-delusion.
‘I was washing out the drains. There was a violet flash and smoke. I thought I was being delivered that instant.’ His face tightened on the last word, his curled hand stretching towards Arany. ‘But it was fire.’
‘No one else was there?’
Mattias shook his head, single eye wide. ‘I would have sworn it was a demon. It skipped like lightning, wasn’t natural.’
A demon. Just as they’d feared.
In Saika they said demons smelled of cut ice; here they said tar. But the demon on the road had been old fireplace ash, and the smoke here was rancid linseed.
‘Did you notice or smell anything? Powder or spilled oil?’ When he was twelve a cousin had brought little tubes of black grains from Mitlosk that exploded green and violet when lit and singed the silverberry leaves. Chemistry could mimic a miracle for a time.
Mattias groaned. ‘The drains always stink. How was I supposed to smell anything else?’
Fair point. Ilan left to walk around the remnants of the outbuilding to the drains Mattias had claimed lit with unnatural fire. He pulled off the cover, suppressing revulsion at the thin film that coated his finger. Along with cold sludge came traces of white filament.
He traced the path of the fires, where flames caught like ball lightning before running up in smoke. Someone had known just where to strike, where there would be dry wood and not stone.
It wasn’t an accident, or the result of restless violence, or even a demon. It was sabotage.
And it couldn’t have come from outside the Church ranks.
Mihály knelt among the injured beneath Arany, touching burns and speaking softly as his finery was ruined. Of course now they welcomed the blessed touch of the heretic – a hypocrisy, but an understandable one. One prone figure, however, slapped his hand away.
Elder ágnes, taken from anchorage, grey but still alive.
‘I can ease your breathing, at least momentarily, if you let me,’ Mihály was saying, and though the woman’s answer was lost in coughs, the shake of her head was emphatic. She hadn’t wanted any hands spared for her before, she wouldn’t want any now. That was the point of anchorage.
Ilan walked to them, gesturing for Mihály to rise, but still mildly surprised when he did so.
‘Mihály. Get Csilla. This is why I was trying to bring her.’
ágnes shifted, eyes cracking to look at him. A smear of ash had fallen over her hairline and streaked her face like a dried tear.
‘Csilla?’
Ilan nodded, gaze still flicking to catch anything that might tell him why this happened.
‘She’ll want to see you.’
ágnes reached out and touched his hand, barely the weight of feather brush behind it.
‘Please watch her.’
The memory of the despair in Csilla’s eyes as he told her to go stung like a nettle whip. She wouldn’t want him to be the one who watched her.
‘You’re not going to let her see you like this, are you?’ Mihály spoke softly. ‘You took in a lot of smoke. Your lungs are already damaged. At least let me make you comfortable before she gets here.’
‘I’m comfortable.’ She held out a shaking hand as a ward. ‘I’m safe under the gold.’
The old woman turned her palm up to catch a blessing.
Nothing came. The running gold was dry.