Banaschar, who had in turn noted her approach and stared steadily back, his expression setting hard.
'What are you doing here?' the woman demanded.
'Have you sensed nothing, High Priestess? Complacency is a disease fast spreading, it seems.'
The woman's gaze shifted to the guards kicking at the doors. 'What has happened?'
The door on the right splintered, then was knocked back by a final kick.
Hellian gestured for Urb to enter then followed, Banaschar behind her.
The stench was overwhelming, and in the gloom was visible great splashes of blood on the walls, fragments of meat scattered on the polished tiles, and pools of bile, blood and faeces, as well as scraps of clothing and clumps of hair.
Urb had taken no more than two steps and now stood, staring down at what he was standing in. Hellian edged past him, her hand of its own accord reaching for the flask tucked in her belt. Banaschar's hand stayed her. 'Not in here,' he said.
She roughly shook him off. 'Go to Hood,' she growled, pulling the flask loose and tugging free the stopper. She drank three quick mouthfuls. 'Corporal, go find Commander Charl. We'll need a detachment to secure the area. Have word sent to the Fist, I want some mages down here.'
'Sergeant,' said Banaschar, 'this is a matter for priests.'
'Don't be an idiot.' She waved at her remaining guards. 'Conduct a search. See if there's any survivors—'
'There are none,' Banaschar pronounced. 'The High Priestess of the Queen of Dreams has already left, Sergeant. Accordingly, all of the temples will be informed. Investigations will begin.'
'What sort of investigations?' Hellian demanded.
He grimaced. 'Priestly sorts.'
'And what of you?'
'I have seen enough,' he said.
'Don't even think of going anywhere, Banaschar,' she said, scanning the scene of slaughter. 'First night of the Clear Season in the Grand Temple, that used to involve an orgy. Looks like it got out of hand.' Two more quick swallows from the flask, and blessed numbness beckoned. 'You've a lot of questions you need to answer—'
Urb's voice cut in, 'He's gone, Sergeant.'
Hellian swung about. 'Damn! Weren't you keeping an eye on the bastard, Urb?'
The big man spread his hands. 'You was talking away to 'im, Sergeant. I was eyeing the crowd out front. He didn't get past me, that's for sure.'
'Get a description out. I want him found.'
Urb frowned. 'Uh, I can't remember what he looked like.'
'Damn you, neither can I.' Hellian walked over to where Banaschar had been standing. Squinted down at his footprints in the blood. They didn't lead anywhere.
Sorcery. She hated sorcery. 'You know what I'm hearing right now, Urb?'
'No.'
'I'm hearing the Fist. Whistling. You know why he's whistling?'
'No. Listen, Sergeant—'
'It's the fry pan, Urb. It's that nice, sweet sizzle that makes him so happy.'
'Sergeant—'
'Where will he send us, do you think? Korel? That one's a real mess. Maybe Genabackis, though that's quieted down some. Seven Cities, maybe.' She drained the last of the pear brandy in the flask. 'One thing's for sure, we'd better set stones to our swords, Urb.'
The tramp of heavy boots sounded in the street beyond. A half-dozen squads at the very least.
'Don't get many spiders on ships, right, Urb?' She glanced over, fought the bleariness and studied the miserable expression on his face. 'That's right, isn't it? Tell me I'm right, damn you.'
A hundred or so years ago, lightning had struck the huge guldindha tree, the white fire driving like a spear down its heartwood and splitting wide the ancient trunk. The blackened scorch-marks had long since bleached away as the desert sun burned its unceasing light upon the wormriven wood. Swaths of bark had peeled back and now lay heaped over the bared roots that were wrapped about the hill's summit like a vast net.
The mound, misshapen where once it had been circular, commanded the entire basin. It stood alone, an island profoundly deliberate in the midst of a haphazard, random landscape. Beneath the jumbled boulders, sandy earth and snaking dead roots, the capstone that had once protected a slab-walled burial chamber had cracked, collapsing to swallow the space beneath, and in so doing settling an immense weight upon the body interred within.
The tremor of footfalls reaching down to that body were a rare enough occurrence – perhaps a handful of times over the past countless millennia – that the long-slumbering soul was stirred into wakefulness, then intense awareness, upon the sensation of not one set of feet, but a dozen, ascending the steep, rough slopes and assembling at last around the shattered tree.
The skein of wards