Wirrin woke again when someone stepped into the cell. The vibrations of the step stopped abruptly at the doorway. Yern was still asleep on her chest. Wirrin opened her eyes.
Despite the solid, face-covering grey robe, Wirrin was quite sure that this was a different Flesh mage. She supposed it made sense to send a Flesh mage, the only variety she had yet to kill.
The mage stopped just inside the open door of the cell, hands clasped behind his back. âWirrin,â he said. âMy name is Rasak.â
âPicked the wrong one, Rasak,â Wirrin said. âShouldâve picked Haerst with a name like that.â
Rasak had much better control of his face than the previous Flesh mage. âI donât know which one that is, but Iâm very happy to have been accepted by Health.â
âIt interests me,â Wirrin said. âThat your God is called Health, now. Do you know what it was called before the War?â
Rasak had very good control over his face. âNot my business.â
âVos tholgek,â Yern muttered. âVesh og gok vik eshaulgoll?â
Wirrin shrugged and waggled her eyebrows at Yern. To Rasak, she asked: âWhat can I do for you, Rasak?â
âYou can come with me, Wirrin,â Rasak said. âThat we may speak.â
âSomewhere Vonaer canât hear?â Wirrin asked, with a smile. âVostupik, Yern.â
Finally, Rasak twitched.
Yern groaned and rolled off Wirrin. âVos vospaugoll,â she muttered.
Wirrin shouldnât have been so surprised when Rasak put a hand on her shoulder. Nor should she have been surprised by two mages wearing copper crossed hammers standing outside the cell, frowning under their hoods. Wirrin waggled her eyebrows at them.
As they walked, Wirrin felt more and more through the floor beneath her. Her and Rasakâs footsteps sent waves out through the huge Church in the centre of Ahepvalt. She could feel hundreds of people, with the occasional dead spots where other mages of Vonaer must have been.
âIt is not like this sense of ours,â Mkaer rumbled. âThey must do it consciously.â
âCould Vonaer know that Azavaer had also been excluded?â Wirrin wondered.
âWe canât know,â Mkaer rumbled.
Wirrin could feel what were certainly other mages, in their heavy robes with hoods over their heads. She didnât have the precision to feel the little medallions they all wore, but there were easily a hundred of them, excluding however many were hidden by Vonaer.
âDid Vonaer know your mages could feel like this?â Wirrin thought.
âYes,â Mkaer rumbled.
âAre they hiding something in particular from us, do you think?â Naertral burbled. âOr is Vonaer behaving as expected.â
âOnly one way to find out,â Ulvaer cackled.
Quite a ways from any of the dead-spots that marked Vonaerâs mages, Wirrin was led into a small room lit by an oil lantern. Around a small table were three other mages: a War mage, a Growth mage, and the Flesh mage who had defeated Wirrin by the river.
Rasak pushed Wirrin into one of two empty seats, next to the other Flesh mage, who put a hand on her other shoulder.
âWirrin,â said the Growth mage. âMy name is Gelas.â
âAnother wrong God,â Wirrin said. âShouldâve picked Ulvaer.â
âI forget,â Gelas said, face very blank. âYouâre some kind of polyglot.â
âIf youâre curious,â Wirrin smiled. âYour name means dry land, or desert.â
âDo me next,â said the other Flesh mage. âMy name is Aksov Wirrin tok bolrasak.â
Wirrin grinned. âIâll call you Wirrin,â she said. âAnd it will cause no confusion.â
âHis name is Olak,â said Rasak.
âI like Wirrin, better,â Olak said.
âAt least one of you has some sense,â Wirrin said. âAnd how about himâ â she nodded to the War mage â âor is he abiding by the rule about not speaking?â
âNot speaking to outsiders,â Gelas said.
Wirrin snorted. âMust make being a mage difficult.â
âIâm starting to wonder if Yern was right,â Ulvaer cackled.
âSheâs very sensible,â Wirrin thought. âWe know this.â
âSo,â Wirrin said aloud. âWhat can I do for the four of you, out of earshot of any mages of Vonaer and Azavaer?â
Olakâs grip on Wirrinâs shoulder tightened for just a moment.
âI believe Olak already asked you our question,â Gelas said.
âYou mean Wirrin already asked your question?â Wirrin smiled.
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Gelasâs eyebrows were edging together, against his will from the look of it. âSure, Wirrin here asked our question.â
âI didnât ask anything on your behalf,â Wirrin said. âSee how itâs not confusing.â
Gelasâs brows met in the middle, his mouth pulled down at the edges.
âAnd besides,â Wirrin continued. âAksov Wirrin tok bolrasak here didnât actually ask me anything, did he?â
Gelas rubbed his eyes. The War mage was almost certainly smiling.
âHow did you do it, Wirrin?â Olak asked. âAustovtak?â
âWhat do you care?â Wirrin said. âAnd why keep Vonaer and Azavaer out of it?â
Olakâs hand clenched less, this time.
âYou achieved something new, Wirrin,â Gelas said. âWe all want to know more about it.â
âWirrin, I have a suspicion,â Wirrin said, giving Olak a significant look. âI suspect that Vonaer and Azavaer like the state of things as they are more than the rest of your Gods.â
Olakâs hand stayed clenched, this time. Not quite painful, but getting there.
âWhich strongly implies something to me,â Wirrin said, looking at Rasak on her other side. âWhat do you think it implies, River?â
Rasakâs grip did not tighten, his face managed to stay neutral.
âWhat I wonder,â Wirrin continued, looking back at Gelas. âIs if itâs something all of you know. Or I could be wrong, I suppose. Thereâs precedent for that, you know?â
âI heard you once fell down a whole mountain,â Gelas said. âBecause some rich people offered you three flowers to climb to the peak with them.â
âI told Ketla and Baras about that in confidence,â Wirrin smiled. âFor War to spread that sort of thing around is very unprofessional.â
The War mage was certainly smiling.
âWirrin, am I allowed to speculate?â Wirrin asked, looking back to Olak. âI wouldnât want to upset you any further.â
Olakâs grip finally relaxed.
âWhat I would say is strongly implied, by the possibility that not all the Gods are happy about the state of things, is that this wasnât the intention,â Wirrin said. âThat they were trying to achieve something else, something more interesting perhaps, by forming their Church and wiping out the worship of the others.â
âAnd what would it matter if that were true?â Gelas asked.
âAs I told Wirrin here, before the aksov tok bolrasak, Iâm interested,â Wirrin said. âWhat could the Gods have wanted to achieve by getting rid of the others. And, had they been able to, would they have gotten rid of more?â
Olak and Rasakâs grips tightened at the same time.
âThe one called War, now, for example,â Wirrin said. âA perfectly capable War, no doubt. But not exactly popular at the time, right? Or Work? No one else much liked Vonaer, right?â
Olak and Rasakâs grips tightened again, getting close to painful now.
âI imagine you wonât answer these questions,â Wirrin said. âSo Iâll ask one that should be easier to answer in this room. Is this what Vonaer and Azavaer wanted? Or were they part of the plan, and are simply satisfied?â
âYouâre not the one asking questions here, Wirrin,â Gelas said.
âIâm the one answering them,â Wirrin said. âAnd I wonât answer any, unless you answer that.â
The room was silent. The mages looked at each other.
âKeep in mind that I am not asking about anyone represented in this room,â Wirrin said. âI donât expect any of you to tell me if you were deceiving each other, as well as Work and Light.â
In a room halfway across the Church, three mages stood very close to each other, muttering. Wirrin wasnât much good at hearing people through the ground either way, but they were far too quiet for her to have any chance.
âWork sought civilisation,â Gelas said, eventually. âLight is satisfied with peace and quiet.â
âIt should tell its mages that,â Wirrin smiled. âWe might not be here.â
Gelasâs lip curled. âLight will continue to claim that it was enforcing peace and quiet,â he said. âIf you ever have the opportunity to ask it of the riots.â
âWeâve answered your question, Wirrin,â Olak said. âHow did you do this?â
âI appreciate your candour, Wirrin,â Wirrin said. âI donât know the answer with complete certainty. Itâs never happened before, has it?â
The grips on her shoulders tightened painfully.
âLet me ask something of your God, Gelas,â Wirrin said, still smiling. âI expect it was third, if what Iâve heard about the first people landing where Ettovica is now, is true. How long ago was that?â
âWe already answered your question, Wirrin,â Olak said, teeth clenched.
Wirrin kept looking at Gelas, still smiling.
âIt must have been more than eight thousand years, now,â Gelas said, at length.
âIt will be hard to remember, then,â Wirrin said. âBut could it have resisted being awakened, eight thousand years ago? The Outsiders I have found could not, it seems.â
One of those three, huddled mages swore loud enough for Wirrin to hear it.
âA question for all the Gods who hear me now,â Wirrin said. âDid you ever try to join a mage? Join another Outsider already within someone? Or did you refuse every request like the other Outsiders did?â
The hands on Wirrinâs shoulders relaxed enough to almost let go.
âI have no idea what would happen,â Wirrin admitted. âAnd nor do any of you. If you do decide to try it, Iâd dearly like for you to tell me your results.â
All four mages were silent. In that room across the Church, those three mages were muttering furiously. Getting progressively louder, but still not loud enough for Wirrin to make out more than a syllable or two at a time.
Wirrin was only slightly less certain that this would fail than she had been when she tried it with Yern. She put a hand over each of the Flesh mageâs hands and tried to concentrate.
There was a feeling like chewing, like a bone snapping.
Wirrin woke, back in the cell.
âNot dead yet,â Yern said.
âNot dead yet,â Wirrin smiled. She was sore, tired, and laying on the floor as if sheâd just been chucked in there with no regard for comfort. Yern was sitting on the bed.
âWas it useful, then?â Yern asked.
âNot as useful as I might have hoped,â Wirrin said, sitting up slowly.
âDeeply useful,â Mkaer rumbled. âThe so-called-Gods had to lie to each other for their war to work last time. If we can sow doubt, it may be possible to avoid another war by turning them against each other.â
Wirrin frowned to herself. She would never have thought of it before. Sheâd never had any interest in the Church. She cared about the things theyâd done to people, of course. But how they worked, what they were like? She couldnât have cared less.
âWhat does it matter if the Gods are lying to each other?â Wirrin asked, aloud. âThe Church has been together five hundred years. Something so minor isnât going to make a difference now, is it?â
Yern pointed to herself and mouthed something to Wirrin. Wirrin had no idea what Yern was trying to say. She shrugged.
âI thought all the Gods got along,â Yern said, a bit too loud. âHow else could they have won the War?â
Wirrin smiled, and shrugged. âThatâs the point of the lies, presumably,â she said. âTo make sure Tavak Tesholg would participate.â
Yern frowned, her next question was much more sincere. âIs that Work? Not the God of Flatulence?â she giggled.
Wirrin chuckled. âI always forget about that. Itâs Work, yes. The real word for flatulence is takavt, right?â
Yern, giggling, nodded. âItâs the same word, Wirrin.â
Wirrin couldnât feel the Work mages outside the door, so they must have still been there.