The Alleluia Files [152-011-4.0]

By: Sharon Shinn

Category: fiction fantasy

SYNOPSIS:

Shinn's breathtaking Samaria Trilogy comes to an end amid a chorus of
praise.  Legend has it that the Alleluia Files contain the truth about
the god of Samaria.  Now, a child raised in captivity among the angels
will journey the length and breadth of her world to seek the documents
that will alter the face of Samaria forever.


Ace Books by Sharon Shinn

THE SHAPE-CHANGER'S WIFE

ARCHANGEL

JOVAH'S ANGEL

THE ALLELUIA FILES

If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that
this book is stolen property.  It was reported as "unsold and
destroyed" to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher
has received any payment for this "stripped book."

For Susie, for when she has time to read

An Ace Book / published by arrangement with the author

PRINTING HISTORY

Ace trade edition / April 1998

Ace mass-market edition / May 1999

All rights reserved.

Copyright 1998 by Sharon Shinn.

Cover art by John Jude Palencar.

This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by mimeograph or
any other means, without permission.  For information

address: The Berkley Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Putnam
Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014.

The Penguin Putnam Inc.  World Wide Web site address is
http://www.penguinputnam.com

ISBN: 0-441-00620-5

PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

CHARACTERS

The Jacobites

Jacob Fairman, their martyred leader

Conran Atwell, their current leader

Rinalda Linise, another martyr, the mother of twins

Tamer, a young woman

Zeke, a young man

active Jacobites still

Peter

Jani

Duncan

Horace

Sal

Wyman

Loa

Others

Ezra, a former priest

Jecoliah, oracle at Mount Sinai

servants at The Manor & Their Families on Angel Rock

Emmie

Jackson

Celia and Hammer Zephyr,  proprietors of the Gablefront Inn on Angel
Rock

The Angels

Bael, Archangel and leader of the host at the Eyrie

Mariah, Bael's angelica

Omar, Bael's son

Mercy, leader of the host at Cedar Hills

Jared, leader of the host of Monteverde

Catherine, Jared's sister

Lucinda, who resides on Angel Rock

Gretchen, her aunt

Others

Jasper, steward at The Berman House, a hotel in Semorrah

Jenny, a servant at The Berman House

Gene, chief ostler at Cartabella, the home of Isabella Cartera

Aria, Caley, Maretta, residents of Chahiela

Alina, George, Students at the Augustine School

The Edori

Maurice, captain of The Wayward

Reuben sia Havita, his first mate

Michael, Rico, Joe, sailors aboard the Wayward

Figures from the Past

Delilah, Archangel one hundred years ago

Alleluia, briefly Archangel during Delilah's time, then oracle at Mount
sinai

Deborah, oracle at Mount Sinai after Alleluia

Caleb Augustus, Alleluia's husband

Michael, Archangel before Bael

Joel, Archangel before Michael

The Gentry

Christian Avalone, a wealthy Semorran merchant

Isaiah Lesh, a Manadavvi landholder

Ben Harth, another Manadavvi landholder

Simon Davilet, an importer of technology

Isabella Cartera, a Bethel landowner

Richard Stephalo, a Bethel landowner

Annalee Stephalo, his daughter

CHAPTER ONE

It was full dark when Tamar and Zeke entered the city, and still they
moved with the caution of thieves.  They had arrived within view of
Breven at about noon and camped out far from the main road till dusk
brought a welcome coolness and a measure of safety.  Even so, it was
worth their lives to cross the city line.  But it had seemed, on
balance, even more dangerous to stay in Luminaux.

They had assumed the guise of a young Jansai merchant's son and his
submissive sister.  This allowed Tamar, at least, to layer her face and
body in the traditional scarves without which no respectable Jansai
woman left her house.  Zeke--pretending to be one of the arrogant gypsy
traders--could not cover his face without arousing suspicion, but he
had wrapped his head in one of the flowing white cloths the Jansai used
to protect themselves from the unrelenting desert sun.  And he had made
sure its long edges draped themselves over his shoulders and halfway
down his bare arms.  Just glancing at the two of them, no stranger
would notice that these travelers bore no glowing Kiss in their right
arms.  No one would halt them in the road, demanding their names, their
identities, their suspect affiliations.

"What street are we on?  Did you see?"  Zeke murmured to Tamar as they
passed yet another unmarked intersection.  They had entered Breven from
the west and had to pass through the less savory parts of town before
they reached their destination in the business district close to the
port.

"There are no signs till we're near the wharf.  We just keep walking
toward the ocean."

"But what if we're walking in the wrong direction?"  Tamar throttled a
moment's extreme irritation.  They had been on the road more than a
week, moving by night from town to city, dodging Jansai, angels, and
the merely curious.  Zeke's company, never exactly to her taste, had
grated on her more and more as the days dragged by.  There was nothing
he was not afraid of, no worry he failed to articulate.  A fine
revolutionary, she thought scornfully.  Though perhaps she did him an
injustice.  She had not witnessed her parents' slaughter at the hands
of religious zealots, as he had; her mother and father had perished the
same way, years earlier, but she had been weeks old, not an
impressionable fifteen.  Perhaps she, too, would be fearful and nervous
if she had seen what Zeke had.

"Conran told us," she said, lifting her hand in its billowing sleeve to
gesture at the glowing horizon.  "Most of the city business is done on
the streets nearest the water.  Ahead of us, there?  You see lights? 
He told us that things are easier to find once you're in the business
district."

"But it's so dark," he complained.

"You'll wish it was this dark when we get to the port," she said. "Once
we're under a streetlight, it'll be that much easier to tell who we
are.  Or who we aren't."

"No one can see your face," he said.

She almost stopped dead in the street, but the last thing she wanted
was to start an argument with Zeke, do anything that might attract
attention.  "What does that mean?"  she demanded, keeping her voice
low.  There appeared to be few others abroad at this hour, in this
neighborhood, but still.  No need to create a scene.  "We've only
traveled five hundred miles in the past seven days to get here, to this
city this night, but if you're afraid--if you don't think you can go
through with it--"

"I didn't say that!"  he responded sharply, his voice as quiet and
intense as hers.  "I think I have a right to be afraid.  I think you're
a fool not to be.  If anybody in this city--anybody--recognizes us,
we're dead, both of us, no questions asked, no news returned to our
friends, no prayers said for our souls--"

"Since you have no use for the god, I don't see why you'd care if some
priest prayed over you--"

"Well, when I'm dead I want someone to know it, even if it's just
Conran and the others."

"They'd figure it out soon enough," was her grim reply.  "Those who are
still alive themselves."

It was such a shocking thing to say that she was not surprised when he
did not answer, and they kept on their uncertain course toward the city
lights.  Well, but it was true.  Luminaux, for so long the haven of the
Jacobites, had become in the past few months no safer than any other
city in Samaria.  Since Archangel Bael had loosed his Jansai fanatics
on the Blue City, not one of the cultists was safe.  Oh, the Luminauzi
had tried to protect the Jacobites, offering them shelter in secret
rooms and false cellars, while formally protesting the invasion of the
Archangel's soldiers.  But the Luminauzi were a civil, not a military
force; they were the artists and intellectuals and politicians of
Samaria.  They didn't know how to repel armed Jansai bursting through
their doors at three in the morning.  They couldn't save the screaming
men and women dragged from their attics and hidden passageways by the
Archangel's warriors.  The Jacobites who could, fought back (and,
trained to terrorism, sometimes won these brief desperate skirmishes).
Those who could not perished.  Those who could run scattered from the
city in all directions.

They were to meet again in Ileah in two months' time, those who were
alive, who could make it that far, who escaped the notice of the
mercenary Jansai and ordinary Samarian citizens who didn't mind turning
in a Jacobite for a tidy reward.  Meet again and decide, then, how to
carry on their mission.

"Have you ever thought," Zeke asked unexpectedly, breaking the long
silence, "of setting sail for Ysral instead?"

"Instead of fighting here?  Instead of bringing the truth to a whole
world that does not want to see and can only blindly believe in lies so
old and impossible that only a child could fall for them?  Instead of
doing what I know is right--what my par--died for--what your parents
died for?  Instead ~~Ii ens

"I suppose not," he said on a sigh.

"No," she said.  "Never."

"Well, I have."

"Now's your chance," she said.  "Breven's your port.  Catch an Edori
boat tonight, be in Ysral in two weeks, You'll never be in danger
again."

"Well, I've thought of it," he said defiantly.  "I'm tired of running,
and hiding, and always being afraid.  And if we're all killed--if all
the Jacobites are dead--who will be left to carry on the fight?  Maybe
in a generation or two, when the whole world is wiser, Samaria will be
willing to listen to us."

Under her layers of loose cloth, Tamar hunched her shoulders as if to
shrug off his touch.  The same old tired argument.  We cannot reason
with them; we cannot make a difference; let us withdraw and try again
next .year, next decade, next century.  Cowardice, she called it, and
usually to the person's face, but it still was not the time to be
starting spectacular arguments with Zeke.

"Do what you want," she said.  "There must be an Edori ship in port.
You'll never have a better chance."

"And what about you?"  he said.

"What about me?"  she said, but she knew the answer.  This whole
venture had been her idea--destination, date, and dis-guise--and she
absolutely could not complete it without his help.  It was rare enough
for a Jansai woman to be out on the streets at night, even properly
attired and accompanied by a male member of her family; not one would
be out alone.  Without Zeke's protection, nominal as it was, Tamar
could not pretend to this role.  And if she was not a Jansai woman here
in Breven... well, she would have to be an ordinary Samarian. 
Farewell, veils; good-bye, flowing garments that covered her from
throat to toe. Only Jansai women dressed this way in the desert, where,
even in early spring, the temperature could ascend to astonishing
degrees of heat.

It was not her face that was so recognizable; indeed, there might be
only half a dozen people, besides her immediate friends, who would know
her on sight.  But the fact that she bore no Kiss in her right
arm--that would set her apart instantly.  That would identify her at
once for who she was.  Jacobite.  Cultist.  Anarchist.  The breed
singled out by Bael for his special vengeance.

"I can't leave you alone in Breven," he said.

She wondered if, all along, this had been his plan; if this was why he
had agreed to accompany her in the first place.  She had spoken truly:
he would never have a better chance to get to Ysral, for the Edori
ships docked there every day, and the Edori were famous for taking on
Jacobite refugees.  Of course, boarding a ship from that well-patrolled
dock was even more dangerous than crossing the desert on foot.

"You can," she said, "if you wait till we leave the priest's house."

"Won't you be afraid?  If you're by yourself?"

She smiled in the dark.  Zeke wasn't a half-bad fighter, and if they
were ever unlucky enough to fall into hand-to-hand combat here on the
Breven streets, he would no doubt make a handy battle partner.  But if
they were that unlucky, they were completely doomed, because they would
never escape these streets alive after engaging in a brawl like that.
She wouldn't miss his company, that was certain; and her survival
skills were no doubt good enough to see her back across the desert
alone.

"Once I've got the Kiss," she said, "I won't be afraid.  If you'll stay
with me that long, you can go, and luck to you."

"Well, I haven't decided for sure," he said, but his voice was rushed
with relief.  "But I've been thinking about it."

"You've got to go where your heart dictates," she said.  "Mine will
take me to Ileah.  If yours says Ysral, then go.  I won't stop you."

He did not immediately reply, and she let the silence lengthen between
them.  In any case, the less talking now, the better.  They had moved
past the huts of the poor on the outer perimeter of the city through
the wealthy, quiet neighborhoods where the streets were lined with
massive, shuttered, secretive homes.  Now, nearing the wharf, they
entered the busy nighttime world of Breven's business district. Glowing
circles of light puddled at the base of the streetlights on every
corner; the occasional truck growled by, clanking with its metal cargo.
Voices muttered from behind shut doors or called to each other across
the width of the pavement.  Footfalls produced by invisible travelers
sounded staccato and menacing in the dark.  From farther away came
ocean sounds: the groaning of ships pulling against anchor, the slap
and trickle of waves against the wooden dock.  The air was heavy with
the damp, scented exhalation of the sea.

"We're getting closer," Tamer breathed, and laid her hand on Zeke's
arm.  Not that she was afraid, certainly not; but any Jansai woman
would cling to her brother if she was abroad on a night like this.

"What was the street again?"  he murmured.

"Saturlin.  We're supposed to find the Exchange Building and turn
right, and Saturlin is a few blocks off that."

"The Exchange Building?  What's that?"

"The tall one with the eagle on top.  You must have seen it in picture
books."

"Oh.  That one.  If we--"

But "Ssh," she whispered, and pulled him back to the shelter of the
brick building they were passing.  They could just fit into the narrow
niche provided by the glass door; the awning over the lintel covered
both of them in shadow.  Zeke mouthed a word at her--"What?"--but she
shook her head, and in a few moments he heard it, too.  First the
rumble of the motor (big transport, from that sound alone), then the
laughter carrying eerily far over the city streets. Minutes later the
vehicle passed them, a huge, open truck carrying a load of Jansai
soldiers in its cargo space.  There was a jumble of talk and laughter,
indistinguishable words, then the sudden splintering crash of glass as
one of the Jansai threw a bottle over the side. Tamar felt Zeke flinch
beside her, but the truck was gone.  No one had seen them.

"Wonder what they're doing here," Zeke whispered.

"Looking for Jacobites.  If you try to find an Edori boat tonight, be
especially careful."

"There might be more."

"I'd count on it."

With renewed caution, they continued forward, crossing streets in the
middle of the block to avoid the lamplights, sticking as close to the
buildings as their bones allowed, communicating with hand signals so
they could more closely monitor the sounds around them.  They saw no
more transport trucks.  The few foot travelers they passed walked as
stealthily as they did, on the other side of the street, and did not
accost them.

The Exchange Building was not hard to find, for it was one of the
newest and tallest in the business district of Breven.  Even in the
unreliable street lighting, it was a glittering black, for it had been
hewn from a cold, dense granite alive with crushed quartz crystals.  On
the edge of the roof, twenty stories up, perched a ferocious bird of
prey, carved from the same black rock.  Its wings were half-extended
and its face was twisted in a perpetual snarl; it clutched a strand of
beads in one claw and a round globe in the other.  The Jansai motto,
Tamar remembered now, meant to signify trade and barter around the
world.  For at one time the Jansai were Samaria's most legendary
merchants.  Now they were the continent's most fearsome soldiers.

Well, they had always been fearsome, always had a history of violence
and brutality.  But not until the past twenty years had their savagery
been yoked and bent to the will of the Archangel.

Tamar touched Zeke on the shoulder and pointed to the right.

He nodded and followed her.  Across the street, two men were engaged in
a heated argument that was punctuated unexpectedly by harsh laughter.
This whole block was lit with a ring of lamps, so that it was almost
impossible to slink back into welcome darkness.  Tamar kept her hand in
the crook of Zeke's arm and tried not to look like she was hurrying.

Cross the street; escape the floodlights of the Exchange Building. 
Pick up the pace a little, hurrying into the shadows.  Here, the salty,
fishy smell of the ocean was especially strong, and the wind pressed
her garments tightly to her chest and thighs.  Another streetlight,
another stretch of pavement to cross.  Back into darkness.  One more
block safely negotiated.

Zeke saw the street sign before she did.  "Saturlin," he breathed, and
crowded her toward the right.  Saturlin was more of a cobblestoned
alley than a true street, so narrow that most of its traffic surely
came on foot.  But it had the advantage of sporting absolutely no
streetlights--which was also a disadvantage, because it was nearly
impossible to make out distinguishing characteristics of any of the low
buildings they slowly felt their way past.

"How will we know it?"  Zeke asked, his voice edgy.  "Do you have a
street number?  A name?"

"Eighth house on the left," she murmured.  "With red shutters."

"Red shutters!  I can scarcely see the windows, let alone the color of
the paint--"

"There.  Two buildings up.  There's a light on in the window and it
looks to me--well, there are shutters.  They might be red.  Let's get
closer."

They crept nearer, arriving at the uninviting wood door reinforced with
three bands of bronze.  Faint light did indeed filter down from the
second-story window, and as it passed through the slatted frame it
seemed to cast a rosy glow on the peeling paint of its shutters.

"Six, seven, eight... Well, I think this is it," Tamar said.

"Think?  And if it isn't?  What will you say to whoever answers the
door?"

"Oh, be quiet," she said impatiently, and rapped on the door as loudly
as she dared.  The silence of Saturlin, which had seemed comprehensive,
instantly grew more complete; it was as if the house itself held its
breath while the residents inside looked up wide-eyed and apprehensive.
Midnight visitors must be a rarity, then.  Tamar knocked again, just as
forcefully.

She was not prepared to have the door flung open or to find a giant of
a man glowering down at her from the threshold.  She took a step
backward, stumbling into Zeke, and found herself gulping once from
nervousness.

"Well?"  the large man demanded.  "Who are you?  What do you want?  Why
do you come to my door at midnight'?"

"I came--we're looking for a priest named Ezra," she began, but before
she could say another word, the big man grabbed her arm and jerked her
inside.  Zeke, scrambling after, barely made it inside before the door
slammed shut behind him.

"Ezra!"  the man repeated in a fierce whisper threaded with both
amazement and  fear.  "No one comes here asking for him!  No one!  Who
are you?  What do you want?  Tell me at once or I'll call the watch on
you."

Tamar shook herself free, feeling calmer now.  This was the right
house, sure enough, and it was unlikely this man would be turning
anyone over to the Jansai authorities.  "My name is Tamar.  I was told
about Ezra by a friend of mine named Conran Atwell.  This was the place
I was directed to go."

"Well, and Conran Atwell had best keep his directions to himself."  The
big man scowled.  Now that she got a chance to look at him, he was not
quite the giant he had seemed at first, but large enough.  It was his
burly figure, wild beard, and rough mane of dark hair that made him
seem so overpowering.  "I don't like strangers who come calling in the
dead of night."

"We won't take up more of your time than we can help," Tamar said. "Can
you direct us to Ezra?"

"No, I cannot, and I would not if I could!"

"Are you Ezra?"  she pursued coolly.  The big man stared down at her.

"And if I was, why would I tell you that?  The priest Ezra is no more.
That should be enough for you--and for Conran Atwell."

"I need to see him," Tamar said, unheeding.  "I need his help.  I know
he is here---or that he's you--and I won't go until I've had a chance
to talk with him."

"You'll go soon enough if I throw you out on the street," he threatened
her.

"I don't think you can afford an altercation on your door step," she
said.  "Or you would not have been so alarmed when we arrived."

"What man can afford a brawl in Breven?"  he muttered, but he was
eyeing her sideways in an effort to judge her nerve and her tenacity.
She could not tell how much of the bluster was real, how much assumed,
but she had quickly lost her fear of him.  Conran had assured her that
Ezra would help her ("though you may have to ask him more than once"),
and Conran had never lied to her.  And she had come this far ... "I
only want one thing from you.  I won't stay a minute longer than I have
to.  I won't ask for shelter, or food, or any other aid.  I just want
Ezra's ... services."

"And what can you afford to pay him?"  the big man asked bitterly.
"Nothing, am I right?  You Jacobites are all alike.  All guts and glory
and not a penny among you."

Zeke had smothered a gasp when their host named their party, and the
older man threw the younger one a look of scorn.  "Well, who else but
Jacobites would come to an ex-priest in the middle of the night, asking
for the only service a priest can provide?  Besides, if Conran Atwell
wasn't named Conran Atwell, he'd be named Jacob Fairman, for he's the
most thorough anarchist I ever met in all my life."

"I have money," Tamar said quietly.  "Not much, but some.  Would fifty
gold coins be enough for you?"

It stopped the big man in his rantings, and even Zeke stood stock-still
with surprise.  If he'd known how much I was carrying on me, he
probably would have robbed me this side of Breven, she thought
cynically.  Samaria had only recently changed over from a system of
gold coins to paper currency.  Most of the merchants were enthusiastic
about the new money, but the more wary elements of society still
preferred cold, hard metal.  For one thing, the exchequers at the
Exchange Building had to be keeping track of how much money they
printed, and that meant they could trace the bills from hand to
hand---or so the suspicious believed.  But gold was an anonymous
bounty, and it never devalued, and you could melt it down to create
something just as precious as its barter weight.  No one would turn
down an offer of gold--particularly not when the number in the offer
was so high.

"It might be," the big man said, giving her a long hard speculative
look.  "If I could see this money.  If I had it in advance."

 Bargain, bargain, bargain, part of her brain said, but another part,
the part that had trusted Conran this far, merely wanted strike the
deal and get it over with.  "Are you Ezra?"  she demanded.

"I'm Ezra."

"Then you can have the money now."

And she slipped her knapsack from her shoulder and knelt right there in
the cramped foyer, and she pulled out her gold.  She had taken a narrow
piece of red velvet and sewed it into a sleeve, and slipped in the
coins one at a time; then she had tied strings between each coin and
coiled the whole thing as tight as it would go.  Thus no clink of money
would give her away--to Zeke, to anybody--as she traveled.

"Shall I show you every coin?"  she asked as she used her pocket dagger
to slit each bit of string.

"Every last one," said Ezra.

So she used the tip of her blade to tip out the hem at the of the
sleeve and poured out the gold in a glorious tumble onto the cold
floor.  She could feel both Zeke and Ezra staring.  Nobody walked
around carrying a ransom like this, not in Breven not anywhere.

"Very well," Ezra said.  "Tell me what you want."

She came fluidly to her feet.  "I want you to install a Kiss in my
arm."

"You're a Jacobite.  You have no need for a Kiss that will bring you to
the attention of Jovah.  You do not even believe Jovah is your god."

"I have a need for a Kiss that will help me masquerade as someone other
than a Jacobite."

"So you fear for your life, and you compromise your principles to save
your skin."

"As do you, as does everyone."

Ezra's eyes narrowed at that, for he clearly wondered what Conran had
told her, but he did not reply directly.  Instead, he jerked his head
in Zeke's direction.  "And him?  Does he also want the Kiss?  And does
he have his own fifty gold pieces, or does he think you shall pay his
way?"

"I would think fifty gold pieces would buy Kisses for ten of my
friends," she said, "but you must ask him."

"No," Zeke said, speaking for the first time since they had leaped
inside the door.  "I don't want a Kiss in my arm.  I have no need of
one--I am going to Ysral."

"Well, and good luck on that venture," Ezra growled.  "Twice this past
week Edori ships have put into port and been boarded by Jansai
warriors.  I'd guess they searched every cargo hold and lifeboat,
looking for prey just like yourself."

Zeke's chin went up.  It was clear to Tamar that he did not care for
the ex-priest.  "I'll be careful," he said.  "I got us this far
safely."

Ezra was fitting the coins back into their velvet carrier.  When he was
done, he knotted it at the top and slid the whole package into a
voluminous trouser pocket.  "Doesn't matter to me what you do or
whether you make it," he said.  "I'll do what I'm paid for, and then
you're both out of here."

Tamar nodded.  "Then let's get to it."

Ezra led them up a shadowy stairwell to a suite of rooms on the second
floor.  Tamar looked around critically as they entered.  The stone
walls were badly mortared, and the electric light was dim and
insufficient for the space, which was furnished with chairs, tables,
and other oddments that appeared to have been salvaged from a junk
heap.  The whole building gave the impression of being ancient,
ill-built, and poorly kept, like some of the older structures in
Luminaux that had undergone inadequate renovation after the advent of
electricity.  But Breven, she knew, had had few permanent buildings
along its wharf until the past century, so this place was very likely
less than a hundred years old.  It had just been carelessly put
together and was no doubt cheap as dirt.

But what other residence could an ex-priest afford?

Ezra gestured toward a tattered black chair set awry in one corner of
the room.  "Sit there," he instructed Tamar.  "I'll be back in a few
minutes."

"She's already paid you," Zeke said loudly, swinging around to watch
Ezra as he headed for the door.  "So you'd better be back."

The big man briefly broke stride, then left the room without turning
back to reply, Settling herself on the chair, Tamar silently shook her
head.  No matter what, she was at the priest's mercy now.  Zeke's
posturing served no purpose.

But Zeke turned back to her, satisfied with his empty threat.  "Tamar,"
he said, coming over to crouch beside her, "where in the world did you
get that much money?  And why didn't you tell me you had it?"

She elected to leave the second question unanswered.  "Conran gave it
to me."

"And where did he get it?"

"He said it was a legacy.  That my mother left it."

"Your mother?  Who---why--none of the Jacobites have that kind of
money!"

Tamar was silent a moment.  Only a handful of the remaining Jacobites
had ever known her mother and father, and none of them had bothered to
sit and tell her warm, sweet remembrances of her martyred parents. That
they had died for the cause, she knew, in the first bloody uprising
nearly thirty years ago, the event that had taken the life of Jacob
Fairman and the other early fanatics.  That she was their only child
she also knew, their names had been given to her as Lianna and Rolf,
But they looked like, how they had met, what had drawn them to the
fiery radical Jacob Fairman--no one had ever bothered to tell her that.
Once or twice she had suspected that her mother was a daughter of the
Manadavvi, the wealthy elite class living in the rich province of Gaza,
and that would certainly account for the inheritance of fifty coins. 
Or perhaps not.  The few affluent individuals who had joined the
Jacobites had usually dumped all their jewels and assets into the
community coffers, always woefully low.  For a young woman to have the
foresight to set aside a dowry for her daughter was singular in the
extreme.  So perhaps Conran had lied about the money.

"Well, that's what he told me.  Frankly, I don't care where he got it.
It'll buy me my Kiss."

Zeke gave a minatory look at the door through which Ezra had left.
"Maybe it will," he said darkly.  "If we can trust him.  What do you
know about him, anyway?"

She shrugged.  "He was a priest for twenty-five years and now he's not.
Conran was not specific.  My guess is that he was caught in some kind
of illegal pursuit, so the oracles stripped him of his position."

"Installing Kisses in rebels?"

"Conran says not.  Not until after he was defrocked, anyway."

"So you're not the first who's come to him."

"No, but I don't think there have been many others."

"Is he a Jacobite?"

"I'm not sure," she said.  "He'd almost have to be, to be a friend of
Conran's.  But if he was a priest for twenty-five years--well, wouldn't
he have to believe in Jovah?"

"Maybe he converted.  Maybe he came to see the truth."

"Maybe he thinks they're all fools--angels, priests, and Jacobites,"
Ezra said from the doorway.  He was carrying a small leather briefcase
that was so covered in scratched, layered dust that it appeared to be
written on in mysterious hieroglyphics.

Zeke swung around to challenge him.  "So you don't believe in the god
Jovah, who sends sun and rain, and listens to the prayers of the
angels, and guards our souls when we die?"

"No, and I don't believe that there's some great electronic brain
orbiting over our heads on some thousand-year-old spaceship, either.
Although, to tell you the truth, I couldn't really decide which theory
is more preposterous."

"Then why did you spend half your life as a priest?"  Zeke demanded.

"Because it paid well.  Now shut up.  Go sit on the other side of the
room, you're annoying me."

Zeke stiffened and seemed to be considering a protest, but then he
stalked away and flung himself onto a dilapidated couch next to the
window.  Ezra pulled up a chair on Tamar's right side and opened his
briefcase on his knees.  She could not see inside; she was not sure she
wanted to.

"Will this hurt?"  she asked.

"Not at first.  I'll numb your arm before I start.  When it wears off,
it'll hurt like a knife wound for a day or two."  He snorted.  "We
always tell parents, "Oh, it's painless, the baby doesn't feel a
thing," but of course that's a lie.  Hurts like hell.  The baby just
can't say so, and none of the adults can remember what it felt like to
be Kissed by the god."

"How long will it take?"

"About half an hour.  If you sit still and stay quiet."

She nodded instead of replying, to show him she could be silent.  He
drew a wide, flat jar from his briefcase and pried it open, then
stirred the contents with his finger.  She frowned briefly as a faint
odor drifted past her.

"Hold out your arm," he demanded, and she extended her right hand.  She
had already rolled her sleeve up all the way to her shoulder, for the
Kiss would be inserted just under her bi  ceps.  He smeared a dollop
of white paste on her arm where the Kiss would go.

"Manna-root salve," she murmured.

The ex-priest looked at her sharply.  "Manna root is one of the
ingredients, but how do you know that?"  he asked.  "Only the priests
use it.  It's too rare for ordinary men and women to play with."

She shrugged against his grip.  "There was an Edori woman I knew in
Luminaux.  She had some.  Apparently the Edori use it all the time.
It's not so rare in Ysral."

Ezra granted.  "Maybe not.  They say the angelicas used to know how to
pray for manna seed to fall from heaven, but they've forgotten or lost
the prayers that used to coax it from Jovah's hands.  But the Edori
remember prayers none of the rest of us ever learned."

"I thought you didn't believe in prayers to Jovah."

"I believe in the results I see."

They sat for a while in silence as the salve went to work.  First it
felt cool against her arm, then it caused a shivering tingle, and then
the whole area went dead.  After about five minutes Ezra poked at her
arm with a needle.  "Feel that?"

"No."

"All right.  Look away if the sight of blood offends you."  But it was
her own blood, her own body, and so she watched.  Working with an
unexpected delicacy for a man with such big hands, Ezra retrieved a
small, wickedly thin knife from his briefcase and made one quick
incision in her arm.  She felt a certain pressure but no pain, even as
the blood quickly welled up along the cut.  Only when the droplets slid
down her skin, past the numbed area, did she feel their sticky
warmth.

Ezra was pulling another treasure from his case.  "Ever see one of
these?"  he asked.  "Not attached to a person, I mean."

He handed her a strange contraption that looked like nothing so much as
an opal-backed spider, only bigger than any spider she'd ever seen.
With her left hand, she took it, and held it up to the insufficient
light.  The top portion was smooth, beautiful, gemlike, an extremely
hard glass filled with opaque shadows.  The bottom half consisted of a
tangle of metallic black wires, stiff but bendable.

"A Kiss," she said.  "How does it work?"

He snorted again.  "Depends on what you believe, I guess.  The faithful
say that the Kiss is a product of Jovah's, fashioned by his hand, and
that the blood of a man--or woman--animates it.  The Jacobites believe
that it is some kind of electronic link to this spaceship they're
always talking about.  And that human warmth or movement or what have
you switches it on and allows the computer to track them around the
planet till they die."

"The second explanation sounds infinitely more reasonable to me," Zeke
called from across the room.

"Be quiet," Ezra said, not even looking at him.  "As for the mechanics
of it--" He took the object back from Tamar and proceeded to separate
the trailing wires.  "These are inserted into the incision and graft
themselves to the bone over a period of three days.  You can remove or
reposition a Kiss for up to seventy-two hours, but after that, there's
no digging it out of a person's arm without breaking through the bone
itself.  Or cutting his arm off."  He grinned wolfishly.  "Which is
something I have known to be done.  Here, now, brace your hand against
the edge of my chair.  And hold very still."

"Can I talk?"

"I would imagine nothing could stop you," he said, but absently.  With
one hand, he was holding the Kiss; with the other, he was prying apart
the edges of her slit skin.  He seemed to do no more than lay the wires
against the cut and wait.  Through the deadened nerve endings, she
almost believed she could feel those narrow metal fingers shiver with a
slowly quickening life of their own, sink through the layers of muscle
and vein to seek out the sturdy anchor of the bone.  Ezra applied some
pressure to the crystal top of the Kiss, edging it back and forth to
attain some perfect placement, then was still again.

"Does it light up?"  Tamar asked.

"Does what light up?  The Kiss?  Not that I've ever seen."

"I've heard it said that when true lovers meet for the first time, the
colors in their Kisses go wild."

His face wore a disdainful look.  "Romantic tales told by lovelorn
girls," he said.  "The idea makes no sense."

"Well, it would make sense if Jovah was a computer," Tamar argued.  "If
he had his reasons for wanting to mate certain men and women.  The
lights and colors could be--not an emotional reaction, but an
engineered, scientific one."

"Ridiculous," Ezra said.  "It doesn't happen."

 "So how many of these Kisses have you installed over your life?"  she
wanted to know next.

"Uncountable," he replied.  "Thousands."

"And where did you get the Kisses?"

He responded with a short dog's-bark laugh.  "When I was first
ordained, I was presented with this case of instruments and a box of
one hundred Kisses.  When I had used up every last one, I returned to
the oracle on Mount Sinai, and she gave me one hundred more.  And so I
continued for as long as I was a priest."

"Where do the oracles get the Kisses?"

"I did not ask.  Perhaps they construct the items themselves.  Perhaps
there are storerooms of them buried in each of the retreats.  Perhaps
Jovah sends them as requested.  I never cared."

"And how many Kisses do you have left from that final box of one
hundred?"

This time the laugh was fainter.  "Five."

"Then I am glad I came to you when I did."

"And this night of all nights.  You are never completely safe in
Breven, but today and tomorrow and the next day you might be considered
a little less at risk."

Tamar's voice was scornful.  "That is why we chose to come tonight, of
course.  Do you think we are complete fools?  With the Gloria to be
sung tomorrow morning, all the angels and most of their Jansai servants
will be on the Plain of Sharon.  We do not have to worry about them."

"Well, I would still worry a little bit," he said.  He lifted his hand
cautiously from the Kiss, but it stayed grounded in her arm.  He
nodded.  "Good.  It looks like it has rooted.  I'm going to smear some
more cream around your incision and bind the whole thing."

"And how do I care for it while the wound heals?"

"It shouldn't take more than a couple of days to heal.  The cut is
shallow, and the manna root is a marvelous salve--and, here, you can
take this jar of ointment.  I've got more.  But remember, the Kiss
itself will not be absolutely implanted in your arm until the three
days are up.  Keep the area dry and cover it with a bandage daily to
keep it free from dirt and dust.  Afte that, you should have to give it
no more care than you give your fingernails or your teeth."

"And if something goes wrong?  If it hasn't--rooted?"

He gave her that lupine grin again.  "Then come back.  I'll fix it."

"You know I can't do that."

"I wouldn't trouble myself.  In the twenty-five years I installed
Kisses, day in and day out, only twice did a Kiss fail ~awry.  And in
both those cases, the problem lay with the person receiving the
Kiss--both young children who scratched and clawed at the alien marble
in their arms.  That's the reason we always preferred to graft the Kiss
to infants--they don't like it any better, but there's less they can do
about it."

"And when the salve wears off'/Will it hurt?"

"Like any wound.  It will improve every day."

"Then we're all done here?"

"You're done."

Tamar rolled her sleeve back down, glad that its full folds hid the
bulky bandage.  She had hoped she would be able to walk out of Ezra's
place boldly, flashing her badge of citizenship, but apparently she had
three more dreary days to wait before she could pass as an ordinary
woman of Samaria.  Well, she had waited twenty-eight years.  She could
wait three more days.

"Ready, Zeke?"  she asked, coming to her feet.  Ezra, rising to his
considerable height beside her, forestalled her with a gesture.

"And where do you plan to go once you've left here?"  he asked.  "No
respectable inn would take you at this hour of the night,"

"We can go to the wharf," Zeke said, crossing the room to join them. "I
need to look for passage to Ysral."

"Not at midnight," Ezra said.  "That's when the patrols are most
zealous."

"Do you have a suggestion?"  Tamar asked quietly.

He gestured around the room where they were standing.  "It's not
luxury, but you can spend the night here," he said.  "Leave at dawn.
It's safer."

"I have no more money to pay you for such a great favor," she said.

Ezra shrugged.  "Included in the fee."

"Then we accept your offer," Tamar said before Zeke could come up with
any protests.  Though she suspected he was as glad as she was to find a
haven for the night.

 Ezra nodded once, sharply, and turned to leave the room.  Even this
gesture of altruism did not incline him to easy friendship.  "Don't
disturb me when you leave in the morning," he said.  "Just take the
stairs and go out.  The door will lock itself behind you."

"If we are not to see you again, let me thank you now," Tamar said, her
voice slipping into the slight singsong of formal gratitude.  "For the
use of the room, and for the great service you did me tonight.  Even
though I offered you money, you could have refused, and you 'did not. I
am in your debt."

He waved off the speech, though he did not look entirely ill-pleased.
"Best be careful on the streets as you leave, Gloria or no Gloria," he
said.  "Be especially wary on the wharf.  The Jansai love nothing so
much as Jacobite meat for breakfast, especially when that Jacobite is
on the verge of escaping."

"We'll be careful," Tamar said, holding out her left hand.  Almost
reluctantly, the big man took it.

"Jovah keep you," he said, "if you care for that blessing."  She
smiled, and responded with the Jacobite's traditional farewell: "May
your friends guard your back, may the seasons be kind, may you never
weary in your faith, till we find the Alleluia Files at last."

Zeke and Tamar were up at first light.  They quickly dressed and ate
from their dwindling supply of rations.  Tamar wasted a few minutes
investigating the Kiss on her arm.  During the night the numbing agent
had evaporated, and she had woken to a deep, insistent ache--not
unbearable, but not easy to overlook, either.  She carefully untied the
bandage Ezra had applied and was pleased to see no bleeding or swelling
around the incision.  Manna root was an excellent salve indeed.

The Kiss itself looked different in the light of day--more vibrant,
more concentrated.  More sentient, Tamar thought, though that was a
concept that belonged more to the angels than to a properly educated
atheist like herself.  If it indeed represented an electronic link to
the computer that orbited overhead, then it might perhaps have animated
somehow as it connected to her flesh, but it did not grow more alive.
It was a mechanism, a thing, constructed by men for the edification of
a machine.

Still, the faintest milky glow seemed to swirl dreamily in its crystal
depths.

She spread a little of the manna ointment around the incision but,
contrary to Ezra's instructions, did not rebandage her arm.  When she
donned her Jansai veils and garments again, she left her arms bare so
the Kiss would show.  It might not be completely anchored in her bone
yet, but she would be careful not to bump or bruise it; this was a
badge she could not wait even one more day to show.

"Are you finally ready?"  Zeke asked impatiently as she finished tying
her headdress in place.

"Ready.  Let's go."

 They moved quietly down the steps and let themselves out on the
street, closing the door behind them.  Tamar tugged the handle till she
felt the lock fall home, then she turned to survey the close alley. Not
much more welcoming in spring sunlight.  They needed to get to the more
publicly traveled areas.

"I've been thinking," she said.  "Instead of canvassing the wharf, it
might be safer to go to the marketplaces or the cafes and see if we can
find an Edori captain off his ship.  Make arrangements there.  He might
be able to help you get safely board."

"Makes sense," Zeke said.  "But how will we recognize a sea captain?"

She grinned.  "Well, I'd guess any Edori we run into in Breven will be
a sailor, whether or not he's a captain.  That's a start.  And of
course we'll recognize any Edori we see."

"True enough," Zeke said. "Let's go look."

It was true; though rare on the Samarian continent these days Edori
were instantly recognizable anywhere.  Dark-haired, dark eyed,
mahogany-skinned, Edori all possessed a certain resemblance that would
have set them apart from ordinary Samarians even if their genial,
welcoming dispositions did not.  Tamar had not met many Edori, for most
of them had emigrated to Ysral over the past hundred years, but all of
them had amazed her with their fearlessness, joyousness, and genuine
interest in the world around them.  She could not believe centuries of
oppression had not bred such common delights from them. It had only
taken a trio of decades to turn the whole lot of the Jacobites grim.

Breven by day was a very different proposition than it had been by
shadowy night.  For one thing (Gloria or no ~ there were hundreds of
people abroad, cramming the sidewalk and filling the pitted roads with
vehicles of all descriptions.  Most of those they passed were
Jansai--as distinctive as the Edori but mainly by virtue of their
loose, flowing clothing and predilection for gaudy jewelry.  But the
whole range of Samarian society could be found on these streets, for
Breven was a trading capital second only to Luminaux.  In the past
fifty years it had even eclipsed Semorrah, the inland city that had
been the business heart of Samaria for centuries.  Thus Zeke and Tamar
passed elegant Manadavvi from Gaza, middle-class ~burghe from Bethel,
ordinary farmers from southern Jordana and, finally, a solitary Edori
man standing outside a shop window and looking in with an expression of
wonder.

He was gazing at a confection of lace and satin, a woman's garment that
Tamar would never have expected to see in a Breven market, and she
nodded at Zeke to let him know she could handle the opening
conversational gambit.  Accordingly, she came to a halt beside the
spellbound traveler and let loose a lilting laugh of complicity.

"I'm not sure what I'd say to a man who brought that home to me," she
observed.  "But at least I'd know what was on his mind!"

The Edori turned to her instantly, his waist-length braid whipping over
his shoulder.  A quick grin lightened his dark face.  "Well, if a man
wanted to bring a woman a gift he'd be sure she'd like, this might not
be the one," he replied.  "Is what I was thinking."

"Are you shopping for a wife, a lover?"  she asked, remembering
belatedly that the Edori were said to never marry.  "Or merely
courting?"

Still smiling, he put both hands before him, palms outward, as if
pushing away trouble.  "A man like me's got no business courting," he
said.

"And why would that be?"

"I'm a wanderer by nature.  The ocean is my lover, or so the women
say."

"Oh, a sailor," she said, nodding sagely.  "And how long will you be in
port?"

He glanced up at the sun, measuring time, and laughed.  "Another two
hours, it looks like.  I should be back on board already.  But facing
two weeks of nothing but wave and wind, a man likes to take a few more
minutes to feel his feet on solid ground."

"Cargo boat?"  she asked.  "Or merely pleasure?"

He laughed again.  "Well, despite what you'll hear any sailor say,
there's a pleasure merely to be on board ship, crossing the ocean again
and again.  But we're a cargo boat.  We trade mostly in spices, gold,
and electronics."

"Passengers?"  she asked, and suddenly her voice was very low.

His face immediately grew sober, but not a muscle in his body changed
position.  Anyone watching them would have noticed nothing tense in
either of their postures.  "From time to time," he said.  "But it's a
rarity."

"Would it be possible," she said slowly, "for you to tell me the
conditions?"

"Are you the one who desires passage?"

"No.  My friend.  The man across the street who's eating the tangerine.
He wishes to set sail for Ysral immediately."

"It's not my decision," the Edori said regretfully.  "My captain's on
board already, and it's his boat.  His choice.  I'd be willing to ask
him.  One man isn't much of a burden."

"He can pay a little, though not much," Tamar said.  "But he can work
to help pay his way."

"It's not the gold.  It's the getting out of Breven harbor.  Let me
ask.  I'll see what the captain says."

"You said you're sailing in two hours.  Will you come meet us
somewhere?  What shall we do?"

The Edori thought swiftly.  "The ship's called The Wayward.  She's
docked on the southern edge of the port, facing the Varnet Building. Do
you know it?"

She shook her head.  "Describe it."

"White marble.  Sixteen stories.  Everything else around it is squat
and dark, so you cannot miss it."

"All right."

"If the captain has agreed to take your friend, an hour and half from
now we'll throw a red blanket over the railing that you can see from
shore.  I'll bring the dinghy to the dock and pick him up.  He must be
watching for the blanket, for that will be the moment I leave the ship,
and it will only take me minutes to make it to shore.  I will only stay
dockside enough to pick up a passenger.  If he is not there, I will
return to my ship immediately.  Is that clear?"

"Perfectly clear.  I know thanks are inadequate--"

Now he smiled again, the rich, happy smile of the Edori "We, too, know
what it is like to be persecuted by the Jansai, he said.  "We are all
brothers under the skin.  We will help one who asks.  No thanks are
needed."

"But I am glad to give them.  And my friend will be profuse in his
gratitude."

"Your friend--his name is?"

"Zeke.  Ezekiel."

"I am Reuben sia Havita.  I hope he is with us as we sail."

And then casually, so as not to seem too eager or too afraid, they
parted, the Edori heading purposefully toward the wharf, Tamar crossing
the street and meandering forward a block until she caught up with
Zeke.

"Well?"  he asked urgently, his voice low.

"He's willing, but he has to check with his master.  We need to be at
the harbor in a little more than an hour.  They'll signal from the
ship."

"What's the cost?"

"He quoted none."

"That's ridiculous!"  Zeke replied, his voice rising.  "No one would do
such a service for free!"

Tamar glanced around, but no one appeared to be eavesdropping.  "Sshh,"
she hissed.  "I told them you'd be willing to work for your passage.
And it wouldn't hurt you to bring your own food."

"We don't have much left."

"We have some time.  Let's see what we can find in the market."

Accordingly, they made their way to the open-air bazaars that could be
found in any sizable Samarian city, and began shopping.  It was spring,
so there were few fresh fruits to be found, but they wanted dried food
anyway, rations that could be packed and carried and eaten at leisure.
Zeke, preparing for a longer trip, bought more than Tamar did, but she,
too, was looking at a journey.  They had little money left between
them--they had started out with very little, except Tamar's secret
cache--so they bartered with the merchants and bought as dearly as they
could.  "It's time to head toward the dock," Zeke said for the
hundredth time, when there were still plenty of minutes to spare, but
Tamar could not entirely blame him for being nervous.  So she said,
"All right," and stowed a package of wrapped apricots in her backpack,
and they headed toward the southern edge of town on streets that
paralleled the sea.  Not until they had glimpsed the Varnet Building
did they cut east toward the wharf.

Just in case anyone was watching them, just in case anyone was curious,
they took a roundabout route through the shops and office buildings
that were just now, at about nine in the morning, opening their doors
for business.  Tamar could not resist casting a longing eye at some of
the fashions on display in the broad windows--though she had seen
things just as fine in Luminaux--and anyway, she had neither the money
nor the idle vanity to see herself attired in such frivolous shoes and
gowns.  No self-respecting Jacobite did.

When Zeke got distracted, it was at the doorway leading into an
electronics shop, and what stopped him was the sound of singing pouring
from some hidden source.  He was not the only one to be swayed by the
music.  A crowd of perhaps twenty people had come to an almost
absentminded halt in the street and on the sidewalks immediately
outside the store, and they were all listening with rapt, bemused
expressions.

"What is it?"  Tamar whispered, but Zeke shook his head without
replying.  She stood still and listened more intently.  There were two
singers performing in matchless harmony, a man and a woman whose voices
rose and fell in a complex shifting pattern of melody and descant.
Their voices were passionate beyond description, beyond the ability of
their bodies to contain them; it seemed as if their notes must shatter
their hearts and then explode the wiring of whatever fabulous circuitry
had carried the music so improbably to this street corner in Breven.

It was the climax of the song, of course; within moments the duet
reached its conclusion to the sound of thundering applause, likewise
broadcast over the shop speakers to the spellbound audience in the
street.  It was a moment before Tamar thought to draw breath.  She
noticed others near her similarly gathering their wits and inhaling
long drafts of air.

"What was that?"  she demanded quietly of Zeke.  "One of those new
recordings?"

He shook his head.  "The Gloria," he said.  "They seem to be carrying a
live broadcast.  You have just heard the angels singing, probably for
the first time in your life."

Tamar stiffened.  There was no skill, no superiority she was willing to
cede to the angels.  "It was not so fine," she lied.  "But why are they
still singing the Gloria?  I thought it began at dawn."

"A little after," he said.  "And continues all day, or so I heard. What
incredible music."

"Was that Bael that we just heard singing?  Bael and the angelica?"

Zeke shrugged.  "I don't know.  I wouldn't recognize his voice if he
stopped me on the street and called my name.  But they have voices like
that.  Voices to turn you into a believer."

She would have scolded him furiously for such a heretical remark,
except that any of twenty people could have overheard her--and she
herself, had just witnessed the music that had so moved him.  "Well,
I'm glad you got a chance to listen to a few notes, she said briskly.
"But we can't stand here loitering."

"We've got time," he said.  "Just a few more minutes."

She stared at him in true irritation, but before she could remonstrate,
the voice of a new singer came lilting over the speakers.  It quite
literally turned Tamar in her tracks to face the open doorway, as if by
such a minute adjustment in her stance she could more closely audit the
music being performed five hundred miles away on the Plain of Sharon.
This performer was a young woman singing completely a cappella, and her
voice was so sweet and so true that it seemed elemental, unrehearsed,
like starlight or autumn or sea.  The verses melted into each other,
health poured into wealth; the very air Tamar breathed seemed gilded by
the singer's richness.  When the liquid silken outpouring of song came
to a wistful conclusion, the silence was so empty that Tamar almost
staggered forward into it.  She put her hand out to steady herself
against the wall of the shop.  Her blood pounded suddenly into the back
of her head; her eyes shut against a momentary dizziness.  Suddenly her
arm ached with a sharp and fire-edged pain.

"Zeke," she said brusquely.  "We must go.  Now."

"I know," he said, and reluctantly started forward again, threading his
way through the unmoving crowd.  Tamar had to force her feet to follow
him, for they had turned heavy and difficult.  She still trailed one
hand along the marble wall of the building to aid her balance.  She
closed her eyes briefly and lowered her head.  She must have lost more
blood last night than she had realized; shame on Ezra for not warning
her about the weakness this morning.

"That's odd," Zeke said, a few paces later, by which time she had more
or less recovered.

"What?  That they broadcast the Gloria like that?  I didn't know it was
possible."

"It's the first year they've tried it.  But that's not what I meant.
Your arm.  Look at it."

"What about my--" she began, and then faltered.  The Kiss, which had
seemed more alive this morning, now positively  blazed with an
iridescent flame.  Colors sparked in its ~nacre depths, faded, and grew
calm as she watched.  "Jovah ~gu me," she said faintly.

"He won't," Zeke replied automatically.  "What was that about?  It's
almost completely dull again now."

"I have no idea," she said.  "Maybe it's some part of that bonding
process Ezra talked about last night."

"It looks like it would be hot.  Is it hot?"

"No," she said, but she touched it anyway, to find a final warmth just
now fading from the glass surface.  Perhaps the surge of heat she had
felt moments ago was not her imagination after all.  "No," she said
again.

"Strange," he said.  "Maybe you should ask someone what it means."

"Certainly.  The first angel I come across, perhaps--or, a Jansai
warrior, There are plenty of them here.  "Excuse me, kind sir, but I'm
a Jacobite in hiding and I've just had a Kiss installed in my arm, and
I wondered if you could explain to me--"

"Well, you could ask somebody less suspicious.  Someday."

"I'll do that.  Meanwhile, you have a ship to board."

By now, they were only a block over from the wharf, and through the
spaces between buildings, they could spot the array of ships clustered
along the harbor.  The smaller vessels--the sailboats, the fishing
boats, the shuttles--were crowded up to the wooden dock, masts and
sails and banners creating a tangle of shapes and colors against the
sky.  Farther out, stately and patient, were the big ships too heavy
for the shallow waters at the harbour's edge.

"What's this ship's name?  Do you see her?"  Zeke asked anxiously. 
Once clear of the bewildering effect of angel music he had reverted to
his normal fretful personality.

"The Wayward.  I think she's a midsized ship, because Edori don't have
huge cargo boats, but he said he'd send the dinghy in.  So she must be
out a ways ... Yes, I think that's her.  Straight out through those two
buildings, do you see?"

"No, I--oh, yes.  Yes, I do.  But there's no red rug over the
railing."

"Be patient.  I think we have a few more minutes to wait.  He didn't
want to come to shore until the last possible moment."

The Edori ships were all easy to spot, for they were sleeker, and in
general less showy than the Jansai vessels.  Tamar had heard that they
were also faster, usually outrunning the Jansai, who practiced piracy
on the high seas.  The Wayward had little decoration to distinguish it,
except the name painted in flowing red letters on the bow and the flag
of the Edori nation flying from its mast.  Like the Jansai, the Edori
had made a bird their mascot, but theirs was a white falcon winging its
way diagonally across an onyx background.  Freedom.  All the Edori had
ever wanted.

"How many more minutes?"  Zeke wanted to know.

"I don't know.  Ten, maybe.  Fifteen.  How quickly can you get to the
dock from here?  He said it would take him ten minutes to reach the
dock from the ship."

"I could make it in three."

"Walking casually, so you would not draw attention?"

"Well, five, then.  It's only a hundred yards away."

"Do you want me to stay here or come with you?  Which would be less
noticeable?"

"Come with me.  No, stay here.  It would look odd if someone saw us
walking together and then I boarded the boat and you did not.  And
you'd better take off that Jansai disguise as soon as I'm gone."

"I know.  I will.  Is there anything else you need?  Anything else I
can tell you?  Any messages I can carry back for you when I meet the
others again in Ileah?"

"Tell them I'm in Ysral, and to look for me if they ever go there. Tell
them I'm safe and happy.  That it's what I wanted."

There had been a girl in Luminaux whom Zeke had been involved with--a
pretty girl with red-blond hair and a mild disposition.  As far as
Tamar knew, she had escaped the Jansai depredations.  "Anyone in
particular I should tell?"

"No.  Conran.  Anyone who asks."

She had lost so many friends in the past few months that it was hard to
lose one more, even one as unrewarding as Zeke.  She was finding it
difficult to say good-bye.  He was one of hers, part of her circle; and
that circle grew smaller every day.  "Take care of yourself," she said,
putting her hand on his arm.  "Find new friends, and safety.  Don't
lose your faith.  Never forget us."

"There's the signal," he said, and unexpectedly bent down to kiss her
on the mouth.  "Good luck to you, too.  Watch me to the ship, and I'll
wave as we pull away to freedom.  I won't forget. We'll meet each other
again."

"Till then," she said.  "Till we find the Alleluia Files."  He gave her
a smile of rare, genuine excitement, and turned to hike at a brisk but
reasonable pace toward the dock.  She faded back into the shadow of the
Varnet Building, watching as she had promised.  She almost lost him
once or twice in the pres of people on the wharf, but then she caught
sight of his tall thin figure again, weaving through the crowd.
And--the waters of the harbor were crowded, of course--but surely that
was the dinghy that had cast off from The Wayward the instant the red
blanket billowed over the rail?  It picked its way past the sail boats
and the outbound barges, taking a quiet, determined course for the
dock.

"Free and safe," she murmured, still watching.  Zeke was on the dock;
the shuttle craft was twenty yards away.  "As you always wanted."

And then four idle men in close conversation at the edge of the water
turned with one motion and formed a phalanx aroun Zeke.  Even from this
distance, Tamar could see the astonishment on his face, succeeded
quickly by comprehension and terror.  Two of them grabbed his arms; one
of them spoke to him in measured tones, informing him of his crimes;
the fourth one pointed toward the water and shouted.  But the dinghy
had already reversed itself, heading rapidly back toward its
mothership, and there didn't seem to be a patrol boat in the water. 
The Edori appeared to be safe.

Not so Zeke.  As she slumped against the wall, dizzier now than she had
been at the angels' singing, Tamar watched him struggle and protest and
grow frantic with fear.  One of the Jansai hit him, and he fell
backward, kept upright only by the men who held his arms.  Two of the
other Jansai laughed.  On their jackets, Tamar could see the sapphire
crescent moon that was the badge of the Archangel Bael.

"Zeke," she whispered.  She had pressed one hand against her mouth, one
against her stomach; she was afraid she would either start screaming or
retching.  She felt like a traitor, allowing him to go alone to an
undetermined hell, but there was nothing she could do now to succor
him.  If Ezra had betrayed them there was nothing she could do to save
herself.  She pressed her back as tightly as it would go against the
cool white surface of the Varnet Building, and felt herself shiver in
the meandering dispassionate spring air.

CHAPTER TWO

Jared tilted his head toward the sun and shut his eyes, hoping that if
he merely concentrated on the music, and did not look at the
performers, he would be able to appreciate the singing as he should.
Both Bael and his angelica, Mariah, had exceptional voices, and their
duets at the Gloria were generally considered outstanding; but Jared
couldn't stand either of them, and so it was hard to like their music.
And at two hours for a standard mass, he had a long, hard wait ahead of
him if he didn't find some way to make the time pass pleasantly.

It was cool this year, this far north, and the weak spring sunlight did
little to warm his cheeks, but it was still a welcome sunlight for all
that.  Gaza had experienced a long, bleak winter, and no matter how
often Jared flew aloft to pray for sunshine, the clouds had always
returned, full-bodied and sullen as a rejected mistress.  But the
Gloria signaled the start of true spring, the promise of gentle days,
budding greenery, clear skies.  It could not come soon enough for
Jared.

Mariah's thin soprano broke free of Bael's powerful bass, and Jared
opened his eyes again, his concentration broken.  The years had been
kinder to the Archangel than to his wife; every now and then on the
highest notes, her voice showed the strain of age, a tendency to grow
sharp, almost screechy.  Nobody else had commented on it, at least in
Jared's hearing, but surely they had noticed.  Well, she had been
angelica for nineteen years, and she had been past thirty when she
assumed that role, so perhaps he should not judge too harshly.  It was
a difficult task, this annual performance of the Gloria on the Plain of
Sharon.  Mariah still accomplished it with adequate grace.

 For a moment, Jared studied the singer and the angel waiting
motionlessly beside her.  As always, they looked to him like prophets
culled from the ancient pages of the Librera.  Bael-with his pewter
hair, full beard, flowing blue robes, and broad silver wings--looked as
if at any moment he would fling ~out his arms and speak pronouncements
handed to him directly from Jovah.  Mariah seemed no less possessed.
Reed-thin, black haired, dramatically dressed in a slim red sheath, she
delivered her solo with passionate, writhing conviction.  Her eyes were
shut tightly, her hands were clenched and drawn up to her heart and she
produced every note as if it were the word of the god himself.

Jared sighed infinitesimally and looked away.  He should not mock them,
not even silently and to himself, but their blind zeal had stirred up
no end of trouble during the past two decades and he for one would be
glad to see their tenure ended next year.  But who was to follow them?
That was a troubling question indeed.  Even when the oracles asked
Jovah that question directly, the god did not reply.  No successor had
been named so no successor had been groomed, and for the first time in
more than seven centuries, Samarians blankly faced a future in which
they had no idea who would be their spiritual and political leader.

Jared had no doubt that Bael was willing to continue his rule for
another twenty years, and it worried him that some of the other angels
might agree to such a solution.  Surely a council of angels, river
merchants, Jansai, and Manadavvi would be convened to consider their
alternatives if such an eventuality arose--if Jovah never spoke--but
Bael was a powerful man with a horde of influential friends.  If he
wanted to keep the job, failing divine intervention, it might be
impossible to wrest it away from him.

Jared's eyes wandered from Mariah's contortions to the face of the
young man standing just behind her.  Well, not so young as all that--at
thirty-five, three years older than Jared and more ambitious.  Bael's
son by a liaison outside his marriage, Omar was an intense,
intelligent, and highly focused individual.  It had been the tragedy of
Bael's life that his only child had been born human, not angelic.
Omar's tragedy, too.  For nobody doubted that Omar would have been
willing to take his father's place as Archangel if mortals had been
allowed to ascend to the position.  As it was, Omar would appear to be
out of luck.

Even had Omar been angelic, such a bequest would have been
unprecedented.  In the annals of Samarian history, the title of
Archangel had never gone from parent to child.  In fact, most often it
rotated between the three angel holds in Gaza, Bethel, and
Jordana--Jovah's way, most likely, of making sure no one family
consolidated power too great even for the god to balance.  But then, it
was unprecedented that Jovah had waited so long to choose his next
Archangel.

Jared knew that he himself was considered a contender for the post of
Archangel.  As leader of the host in Monteverde, the angel hold in
Gaza, he held a position of some authority and respect.  And the
Archangel before Bael had come from Cedar Hills, the hold in Jordana.
Bael himself was from the Eyrie in Bethel.  Thus, it was Monteverde's
turn to produce the next leader.  But Jared felt he was unlikely
material.  He lacked the single-minded dedication to power that Bael
had evinced for all nineteen years of his reign; he lacked the desire
to bend others to his will.  It was hard for him to work up a real
rage, or even an unshakable conviction.  And, at least to judge by
Bael, an Archangel must be able to do all that and more.

Now, suddenly, Bael's voice was joined to his angelica's again, and the
two voices rose in scrolling harmony.  This time when Jared closed his
eyes, it was in a moment's pure pleasure; ah, that was a nice turn,
that shifting melody, that leaping octave.  When Bael's voice broke
free of Mariah's to commence with the second male solo, Jared allowed
himself to simply enjoy a few moments of excellent music.  Despite his
opinion of the man, Jared had to admit that Bael could sing.

It was another half hour before the mass concluded, and during that
time Jared had found his thoughts drifting off again and again.
Everyone else seemed rapt and overawed by the performance, but Jared
could only pay attention for isolated measures.  Still, he politely
joined the wild applause, and nodded when an Eyrie angel murmured in
his ear, "What a voice the man has!  Surely Jovah listens!"

"He listens to us all.  Or so we hope," he answered piously, and earned
a puzzled look.  He gave the angel a lazy grin and turned to find Mercy
standing beside him.

"Where exactly do we fall on the schedule?"  she wanted to know.  "Do
we sing next?  Last?  Did you bother to ask?"

 "No, I thought you would," he said, giving the answer that he knew
would annoy her most.  She bridled, and he couldn't help laughing.  He
reached out a careless hand to squeeze her shoulder.  Small, brown, and
compact, she stood more than head shorter than he; only her wings, just
now folded primly back, gave her any stature.

"You're such an easy target," he said.  "We sing fourth.  I did
inquire."

She frowned at him, but it was impossible for Mercy to remain angry at
anyone.  "You're such a trial to me," she said.  "I suppose you haven't
practiced your part, either, since I was in Monteverde three weeks
ago."

"Well, once or twice.  Do you think it would be inappropriate if I just
glanced over the music once more--?"

"I think I'll do a solo, thank you very much," she said.  "I've been
rehearsing one, just in case."

"Hush," he said.  "Omar is about to sing.  You don't want to distract
him."

She gave him another expressive look--whether it was to signify her low
opinion of him or Omar was unclear--but instantly fell silent and
turned to listen.  It was a comfort to Jared to know that Mercy had
even less love for Bael and his family than he did.  Which was odd in
itself since Mercy, true to her name, cared for almost everybody.  She
had led the host at Ceda Hills for fifteen years, since her father died
on her twenty-sixt birthday, and she had managed it well.  Although she
had never married, she had had three daughters, and more or less
mothered everyone else who fell into her sphere, even Jared.  He could
not resist the impulse to tease her, but he liked her more than he
liked anybody else he knew.  Most people did.

Omar had a rich, brooding baritone that just now was driving back the
tentative sunlight over the Plain.  Jared had heard tales of the girls
who swooned over the sound of that melancholy voice, but frankly, it
had never appealed to him.  This might be a man you would want to sing
at a loved one's funeral, but on a joyous occasion such as the Gloria,
his voice seemed wholly out of place.  Or perhaps it was merely the
selection, a plaintiv mournful plea for guidance and salvation.  Jared
thought he actuaily heard someone behind him weeping.

"A little too affected for my taste," he whispered in Mercy's ear.  She
nodded emphatically but put a finger to her lips to silence him.  He
grinned again, then stifled a yawn.

The next singer, however, was more to his taste, a young angel from
Mercy's hold singing a dizzyingly accomplished aria to the
accompaniment of a flute.  She was good enough to put him on his
mettle, and so it was with a certain enthusiasm that he guided Mercy
through the crowd to the central ~cleating where where other performers
had stood.  There was quite a throng gathered on the Plain this year,
and the angels from the three holds stood at the heart of it.  Around
them, in widening circles, stood the Jansai, the Manadavvi, the rich
river merchants, the corporate farmers, the lesser gentry of Samaria,
and the curious, ordinary folk who made this one great annual
pilgrimage to bask ~in the reflected glory of the realm.

"How many people would you guess?"  he asked Mercy in a low voice as
they waited for the audience to settle.  "Six thousand?  Eight?"

"Hundreds of thousands," she replied.  "Or did you forget?  They're
broadcasting the Gloria this year."

He glanced quickly around, for he had somehow overlooked the
significance of the banks of microphones and strings of black cable.
Well, for the past ten years the Gloria had been recorded through just
such equipment, and sales of these recordings had been phenomenally
successful, and so he had forgotten that this year the event would be
carried live to any citizen who had a receiver.

"Now, that makes me a little nervous," he said.

"Nothing makes you nervous," she retorted.

The crowd had grown quiet, almost (or so it seemed to Jared) ~ager.  He
might not be Archangel material, but he did have his virtues: and one
of them was a voice to please the heavens.  He nodded twice at Mercy,
to give her the beat, and they both burst Into song at the same
instant.

It was the Margallet Duet in D major, one of the most demanding and
breath-stealing compositions in the sacred canon, short but rigorous
piece.  Jared felt as if his whole body was singing it, his toenails,
his wristbones, his scalp.  The music shed from his heart, driven by
the same ecstatic beat; he was not aware of breathing in or alchemizing
oxygen into song.  He merely became the music, body and soul, and
beside him, Mercy did the same.

He was almost surprised when the song came to its abrupt, delirious
conclusion.  He took a quick step forward to avoid toppling over; it
was as if some great contrary pressure had suddenly ceased to be
exerted.  The crowd was still clapping and calling out praises before
he had completely recovered himself.

but he looked down at Mercy with a smile.  "Good enough for you?"  he
asked.

"I think you did practice."

"Not at all.  I'm a natural."

"Nobody's a natural at Margallet.  That was fun."

"Let's do it again next year," he said, and they both waved once more
to the audience.  As they moved from the center circle their place was
taken by a young angel who looked to be in her mid-twenties.  Her blond
hair fell in a simple, straight cut to her shoulders; her wings were
lacquer white.  In the direct sunlight poised and still, she looked
like an ormolu statue of an angel.

"Who's that?"  Jared asked Mercy in surprise.  "How can there be an
angel in all of Samaria that I don't recognize?"

She had to stand on tiptoe to see over the crowd.  "Who--oh, that's
Lucinda.  She came with Gretchen Delmere."

"Lucinda?  What kind of name is that for an angel?  Gretchen Delmere?
Who are these people?"

Mercy shook her head.  "I forget how young you are.  But would have
thought you'd have heard this story sometime.  Lucinda is the daughter
of Rinalda Linise.  Or don't you know who she is?"

Jared found his lips forming the name Rinalda Linise, but he did not
speak the words aloud, for Lucinda had started singing and thought
dried up; he turned to listening marble.  She sang with a lucid,
rainwater purity that blended with the air, the sunlight the dance of
butterflies around them; this, it was suddenly clear, was the fresh
scent of spring.  Neither the notes nor the lyrics registered with him.
He had no idea if her song was gay or pensive, if she prayed for rain
or peace or thunderbolts.  But she sang, and the whole world became
music.

When she stopped, there was dead silence for a few moments as angels
and mortals shook themselves back to a state of common comprehension.
The applause that followed was so long and so sustained that Bael might
be supposed to be jealous.  Jared saw Mariah approach her and speak in
her ear, shouting over the noise of the clapping and calling, but the
girl blushed and shook her head.  Keeping her eyes down and hurrying
through her admirers, Lucinda quitted the center and disappeared into
the crowd.

"You must tell me more about her," Jared exclaimed, turning to Mercy,
but her attention had been caught by an angel Bethel, and she was deep
in another conversation.  Then accosted by a woman from Luminaux, whom
he only remembered meeting, and by the time he was free of her Mercy
had drifted off.

The  Gloria was falling into its more relaxed state, one that would
endure for the remainder of the day.  As soon as Bael and Mariah had
sounded their final "amen," the official business of the day was done;
all the rest of the performances were less for glory of the god than
for the entertainment of the masses.  as the Archangel ended his piece,
the vendors opened booths for commerce, and the melee began.

It was said you could buy anything your heart desired on the blue
streets of Luminaux, but it was almost as true on the Plain of Sharon
the morning of the Gloria.  Of course, there was every imaginable food
item available--several thousand people had to eat, after all--but in
recent years the Gloria had become a sou-hunter's dream.  Shirts
embroidered with angel motifs, oil of Bael, miniature reproductions of
all three angels, posters printed with the list of all Archangels from
Uriel to the present, cookbooks featuring Mariah's and Mercy's favorite
recipes--all this and more could be had for a handful of or a few of
the crisp new paper bills.

Naturally, you could buy recordings of Glorias from the past as well as
other music.  Highly prized were copies of the music brought with the
first settlers to Samaria seven hundred and fifty years ago.  These
recordings, until recently, had only been available on the original
silver disks that could be played nowhere except on special equipment
built into the eyrie and Monteverde.  But sound--recording it and
sending it where someone wanted it to go--was the new frontier in
technology and some clever fellow had discovered how to copy the music
onto the bulky black disks Samarians used today.  Jared had been told
the quality was quite good, and sales had been brisk.  Particularly
popular were the tracks laid down by Hagar, the first angelica, whose
voice Jared had never heard Although, frankly, he would have plunked
down a few dollars for a recording of the solo Lucinda had just
performed Well, perhaps it would be available.

Jared wandered through the merchants' booths, idly looking over the
merchandise and eating a meat pie.  With half an ear he listened to the
music still coming from the center of the plain.  it would go on all
day.  It sounded like the angels had finished singing, and now the
amateurs were lifting their earnest voices to Jovah.  As the day wore
on, livelier groups would present their music, and listening would
become more fun; but the unspoken rule seemed to be that no one should
sing anything lighthearted before the hour of noon.

He paused at a small ~family-run booth and stared meditatively at the
items for sale, predominantly items of clothing embroidered with the
blue crescent moon that was Bael's standard Vests, shirts, scarves,
reticules, all bore the sapphire sliver, sometimes one big scythe of it
across the whole broad back of a blouse, sometimes hundreds of tiny
moons duplicated in a random pattern across an entire bolt of silk.  He
wondered if Bael knew what license the vendors were taking with his
personal monogram, which he wore in sapphire jewels on silva bracelets
around each wrist.

Jared glanced down at his own bracelets, plain gold bands set with
emeralds, each cluster of three gems arranged to form a simple leaf.
All angels wore such bracelets, to mark their lineage and their hold;
angels from the Eyrie wore sapphires, those from Monteverde wore
emeralds, those from Cedar Hills wore rubies.  Jared had seen some of
Bael's Jansai wearing the crescent badge, but this was going a little
too far.

He looked up, debating a stern reprimand, but the merchant was busy
totaling up a sale and looked quite happy about it.  Jared hesitated,
shrugged, and moved down to the next booth.  Ah, glass sculptures
featuring representations of angels in flight, in prayer, in dramatic
poses.  Hardly, one would think, an improvement over the merchandise in
the last booth.

"Shopping for home decor, I see," said a man's voice behind him.  "I
cannot wait to see which exquisite piece you choose."

Jared turned, a grin already on his face.  "I am guided by your taste,
Christian," he invited.  "Choose for me."

Christian obligingly stepped forward and began examing the statuary.
"Well, of course, this is a nice effort--I particularly like the agony
in the angel's face.  What is she praying for do you suppose?  It
cannot be something so mundane as rain or sunlight."

"She is asking the god for enlightenment," the young shopkeeper said,
suddenly entering their conversation.  He was enthusiastic and sincere,
and most probably was the artist as well.  "See?  She looks to the
heavens, but her hands are spread toward the earth.  She knows that
despite her wings, she will live a mortal life, grow old and die, and
she asks Jovah to help her reconcile that with her divine nature."

"Ah," said Christian, and gave the glass angel a friendly pat on the
head.  "Sort of a universal theme, then."

"Could I show you anything else?  We can customize our pieces, you
know.  See, she wears tiny bracelets around each wrist--I can set them
with whatever gems you desire.  Well, gem chips."

"They would have to be chips," Jared agreed.

"Let us think it over."  Christian nodded to the artist, taking Jared
by the arm.  "We have a little more shopping to do."

"Good prices!"  the young man called after them.  "And remember the
customizing!"

"Jovah defend me," Jared said when they were a few paces away.  "And
the sad thing is, I'm sure he does a tremendous business."

"A guardian angel for every room," said Christian.  "Does he do silver
and bronze in addition to crystal?"

"If we asked, I'm sure he would.  He customizes, you know."

"Well, if I ever need to buy you a gift--"

"Which, thank the god, I cannot imagine you ever will--"

"I'll know just what to get you."

"So!"  Jared exclaimed.  "Before you had a chance to torment me, had
you been enjoying the Gloria?  I looked for you last night, by the way,
but could not find you."

Christian pointed behind them, in the general direction of the hotels
set up toward the northern edge of the plain.  Less than fifty years
ago, Archangel Joel had finally given permission for a few wealthy
business investors to build permanent structures on the Plain of Sharon
to act as housing units for those who attended the Gloria.  Up till
that point, everyone who journeyed in for the event stayed in
progressively more elaborate tents and pavilions, so that setup and
teardown could take all week.  It had seemed foolish to build hotels
that would only be used for two or three days a year, but the Manadavvi
and the river merchants--and even the angels--were getting used to
their comforts and did not relish camping out on the night before the
most important social event of the year.

The hotels, of course, were an instant success, usually completely
reserved more than a year in advance; Jared could not imagine attending
a Gloria under any less civilized conditions.  And the hotel owners had
almost as instantly come up with ways to increase their revenues, by
sponsoring summer music festivals and autumn merchandise fairs on the
broad grounds of the plain.  Jared assumed that within a few decades
the plain would become so booked with other major events that there
would hardly be a day open for the Gloria itself.

"I wasn't staying with the rest of the Semorran contingent, Christian
was saying.  "I was a guest of Isaiah Lesh."

Jared's eyebrows rose, though it was hardly a surprise.  Christian
Avalone was the most influential, and probably the most wealthy, of the
Semorran merchants; the fact that Jared liked him personally didn't
make him any less of a politician, his finger always on the fluctuating
pulse of the Samarian market And Isaiah Lesh was the patriarch of the
oldest Manadavvi clan in Samaria.  The two men had much in common, not
the least of which was a complete and utter fascination with power.
Christian was the younger of the two, a sleek, attractive, charming,
and possibly dangerous man in his early forties; Isaiah, wellmanicured
and faultlessly civil, was at least fifteen years older.  But they had
been allies for years--and not always friendly to the angels.

"So you stayed up talking late into the night," Jared said lightly as
they strolled forward.  They continued to glance into the booths they
passed and silently pointed out anything of particularly gaudy
interest.  "Let me guess.  And one of your topics was the inadequacies
of the angels and how you could make them see reason."

"Certainly Bael's name came up once or twice, but I wouldn't say we
were dwelling on his flaws.  I like that picture of Mariah, don't you?
The grimace seems particularly dead-on."

"Perhaps she posed for it.  Was it the new tax that irked you, or the
ban on technological imports?"

Christian waved a hand dismissively.  "Old news.  Old topics."

"But still very real grievances."

"We'll bring them up at the next council meeting.  Again.  Eventually
Bael will come round to our way of thinking.  Or you will."

"I will?"

"Or Mercy.  Or whoever is named Archangel," Christian added.

Jared couldn't help grinning.  "Then you'd better start cultivating
Mercy, because it's unlikely to be me."

"No, not if ambition has anything to do with it," Christian agreed.
"Though there's no one I'd prefer to see--"

Jared chopped a hand through the air to cut off the discussion.

no new complaints?  Just the same old grumbling?"

"You know the story," Christian said mildly.  "The Manadavvi and the
river merchants are never content.  We always must be complaining about
something.  But in the end, we're compliant."

Jared let it go.  As Christian said, unrest among the power enclaves
was constant, even in the historical context; as far back as Archangel
Gabriel's time, these two groups had been trying to wrest power from
the angels.  Jared made it a point to stay on good terms with Isaiah
and his brethren, and let Bael fight the real battles.  But he made
sure he was never less than fully apprised of what the Manadavvi did
and thought at all times.

Christian had come to a stop in front of another booth and picked up
another portrait.  This one was done in charcoal and showed a certain
aptitude for art as well as a familiarity with its subject.  "Now this
I'm half-inclined to buy," the merchant said.  "It's good, don't you
think?"

Jared looked over his shoulder.  "She'd kill you," he said.  "Mercy
isn't one to encourage these sorts of excesses."

"But it's caught her look, don't you think?  I've seen that expression
on her face a hundred times."

"Ten dollars," the artist said quickly, standing up and coming over to
wait on them.  "Or one gold piece."

"I can't resist," Christian murmured, and pulled a wad of bills from
his pocket.  Jared rolled his eyes but forbore to make another comment.
He waited while the young man carefully inserted the portrait in a
protective cardboard jacket, and then he and Christian continued down
the broad aisle of booths.

 "She'll see it when she comes to Semorrah," Jared warned him.  "You'd
better hide it away somewhere."

"Nonsense, she never comes to visit.  You don't either, now that I
think of it."

"Name the day.  I'm always glad to sample the sophistication of the
city.  Monteverde is lovely and calm, but every once in a while it's a
little tame.

"How about--two and a half weeks from today?"  Christian suggested, so
smoothly that Jared wondered if somehow this invitation had been the
point of the entire conversation.  "Can you get free?"

"Mercy will tell you that I'm always too willing to get free," Jared
responded.  "I'll be there.  Perhaps I can stay a day or two."

"I'll tell the boys to expect a debauch," Christian said.  His two
young sons had always been rigorously polite every time Jared had met
them, but then, he had only seen them for a few minutes at a time under
the direst of social pressures.  Christian's wife had died shortly
after the youngest one was born, and Jared didn't imagine that
Christian had much time to provide a warm and nurturing home for
them.

Before Jared could reply, Christian's attention was claimed by a group
of Castelana merchants strolling by in the opposite direction.  Jared
greeted everyone pleasantly enough--he knew them all, of course--then
slipped away, looking for more congenial company.

He found it quickly enough, in the form of three young Man-adavvi women
who gaily caught his arms and persuaded him to eat lunch with them.
Since the Manadavvi land fell in the province of Gaza, Jared was a
frequent guest in the wealthy households, and knew all the sons and
daughters.  Particularly the daughters.  Not one of the great Manadavvi
families didn't hope the leader of the Monteverde host would take a
fancy to his oldest girl and bring her home to his hold.  It wasn't
just that there was no honor higher for a mortal than to marry an
angel--think of the power such a wife might wield!  What father would
not want to see his daughter so advantageously situated?

From their hands, Jared passed back to the merchants, and, by easy
stages, back to the angels.  It was late in the afternoon when he
finally caught up again with Mercy, who was, for wonder, sitting alone
at an impromptu cafe draped with a bright yellow awning.

"Can I sit with you, or are you enjoying your solitude?"

Jared demanded.  Not waiting for an answer, he pulled up one of the
wrought-iron chairs, turned it around backward, and seated himself.
Resting his arms on the back, he stretched his wings out behind him as
far as they could go.

"I'm enjoying my solitude, but I'd rather have your company," she said.
"Are you hungry?  Do you want to order something?"

Jared made a slight gagging noise.  "I don't think I'll eat again till
I'm seventy.  I've had more pies and cookies and cheese pastries--"

"I know," she said.  "But one day a year won't hurt you."

"So have you had fun?"  he asked.  "Who have you seen?"  They talked
idly for a while, trading gossip and information.  Mercy was even more
surprised than Jared had been that Christian had been so cozy with
isaiah Lesh.

"I don't care for that much."  She frowned.  "And did you see where the
Jansai pitched their tents?"

Hotels or no hotels, the nomadic Jansai always brought their own
accommodations.  Always had, always would.  "I didn't notice."

"Clear across the Plain.  As far from the main strip as they could
get."

"So?"

"So is there a rift between the merchants and the Jansai?  They've
always been allies.  What are they divided over?"

Jared shrugged.  "The trade with Ysral, would be my guess.  The Jansai
want to control the flow of goods into Samaria, but the Edori are
welcome at more and more ports--"

"There's plenty of room for Jansai and Edori boats at any harbor."

"Well, then--who knows?  Does it matter?"

Mercy shook her head with a great deal of irritation.  "Why are you
such a care-for-nobody?"

"I'm not!"

"You are.  You're such a bright young man.  You have so many gifts. But
younothing matters to you.  You let everything slide by.  What does it
take to stir you up?  What does it take to catch your attention?"

 "Well, a spat between the Jansai and the river merchants isn't it,"
he said, amused.  "How can it possibly matter?  If it's important,
we'll find out about it.  If not--why worry?"

She leaned forward, suddenly intense.  "You should be Archangel, you
know," she said.  "You're the only logical choice.  Everyone should
know it.  Jovah should know it.  You should know it, and you should be
at the oracles' doors day and night demanding that they petition the
god on your behalf.  It is not good for Bael or the merchants or
Samaria for us not to know who the next Archangel will be.  And do you
care? Do you worry?  This is your life!  Your duty!  And yet you spend
your days flirting with Manadavvi girls too silly to remember their own
names."

"In the first place, why should I be Archangel?  Why not you?"

"I'm too old."

"Just about Bael's age when he ascended."

"And I have daughters and other responsibilities and I don't want it.
But you--"

"Why me?  Why not Jonas or Sara?  No law I ever heard said the
Archangel had to be leader of the hold."

She brushed all this aside.  "Because you're a natural leader or you
would be if you asserted yourself.  Because you're a brilliant thinker
when you remember you have a brain.  Because you have a highly
developed moral sense and an ease with people that makes you courteous
but nobody's fool.  Because you look the part."

He burst out laughing.  "Well, thank you for that, I suppose, but I
don't think it's on Jovah's list of qualifications."

She sighed.  "And all you do is laugh at me, and go on your usual
indolent way."

He reached out a hand and gave her shoulder a slight squeeze.  "Jovah's
will be done," he said gently.  "It is up to the god to name the one he
would exalt.  If I spent my nights ranting to the doors of Mount Egypt
or Mount Sinai, the oracles would have no more news for me than they do
now.  Let it go.  Trust your god."

She sighed again and spread her hands apart, signifying resignation.
Jared dropped his arm.  "So tell me about the rest of your day," he
said. "Who else did you talk to?"

"I spent five minutes with Gretchen Delmere.  I wanted to talk to her
longer, but someone snatched her away from me."

"That's what I wanted to ask you about!"  he exclaimed.

"That girl--Lucinda?  Who is she?  What's her story?"

Mercy instantly grew grave.  "A sad one.  It goes back, oh, twenty-five
or thirty years.  When the Jacobites were first becoming a nuisance."

Jared rapidly cast his mind back to that chapter of Samarian history.
Well, "nuisance" might not be the right word.  Jacob Fairman had begun
a town-to-town campaign to evangelize for his concept of Jovah--not a
god but a machine, a spaceship, left over from the time of the first
settlers' arrival.  According to Fairman, this spaceship, which
ceaselessly orbited overhead, was endowed with wondrous equipment and
abilities.  It had huge stores of grain which it could release when the
angels prayed for food; it had miraculous chemicals which it could
shoot into the atmosphere when the angels prayed for rain.  It was
equipped with fearsome weaponry which could unleash tremendous
destruction when the angels prayed for a thunderbolt to strike the
earth--or when mortals displeased the god, and he punished them with
his fury.

The threat of Jovah's wrath, of course, was the reason the Gloria was
sung on an annual basis.  It had been written in the Librera, the holy
book, that every year at the spring equinox People from all over
Samaria must gather and sing to the glory of the god.  By coming
together in harmony, they were proving to the god that they lived
together in peace.  If they failed to perform the Gloria on the
scheduled day, the god would strike the mountain range on the edge of
the Plain of Sharon.  If, three days later, they still had not sung, he
would strike the river Galilee, which was the border between Bethel and
Jordana.  If even this failed to convince them to sing, he would loose
a thunderbolt that would destroy the world.

It had happened once, nearly two hundred and fifty years ago, in the
time of the Archangel Gabriel.  The Gloria had been delayed, and the
god had struck down the Galo mountain that used to anchor the
southernmost edge of the Plain.  There was still, under two and a half
centuries of creeping undergrowth, a huge black circle of rock where
the thunderbolt had fallen.  Never since that time had the date been
missed.

But Jacob Fairman had not been impressed by this evidence.  Certainly
the lightning had struck, he said, but it had been tossed down by a
warship, not by the god's pointing finger.  Every sacred mystery he
could explain away through science.  The magical Kisses every believer
wore in his arm?  Electronic links to the ship's main computer!  The
ability of angel prayer to call forth sunshine or lure down rain?  The
ship's response to aural stimuli.  Nothing stumped him.  Nothing
silenced him.  And a small, growing group of Samarians began to listen
to him, to believe him, to question the very foundation of Samarian
society.

Of course, he was outlawed and his words were banned.  he only went
underground, and his adherents grew.  Many believed Archangel Michael
had had no choice but to execute him--Fairman and a handful of his
followers--for political treason and religious heresy.

It hadn't stopped the Jacobites, however, though for many years they
had seemed dormant.  Bael, from the time he had been instated as
Archangel, had vigorously suppressed them.  and everyone had thought he
had eradicated their influence.  But five years ago there had been an
unexpected resurgence in Jacobite fervor.  Bael had quelled it in the
most ruthless manner possible, aided willingly by his Jansai troops. It
would not have been Jared's way (had he been in Bael's position), but
he had to admit it had been effective.

Although recently there had been more rumors ... Jared shook his head.
"This girl is too young to be one of the original cultists.  She could
hardly have been born in Jacob Fairman's lifetime."

"That's just it."  Mercy sighed.  "That's when she was born."

"Tell me."

"It was, as I say, almost thirty years ago.  Jacob Fairman's adherents
were turning up in the oddest places.  In Luminaux."

"I would have expected that," he murmured.

"In Castelana.  In some of the Manadavvi households.  In Cedar
Hills."

Now Jared sat up straighter.  "In Cedar Hills?  Impossible!"

Mercy nodded.  "There was a girl.  Rinalda.  She was the daughter of
angels, but she was mortal herself.  Well, she was the
great-granddaughter of the Archangel Delilah, so perhaps someone should
have expected her to have passionate and rebellious blood.  She had
three sisters, all of them angels.  Perhaps this led her to believe
that life was unfair.  Perhaps it led her to seek other avenues of
excitement.  Who knows?  In any case, she had left Cedar Hills to seek
her fortune in the world.  And somehow met up with Fairman and
his--heretics."

"Did you know her?"

"A little.  I was more than ten years younger, and I had spent most of
my life at the Eyrie.  I didn't know everyone at Cedar Hills well.  And
she had little patience with angels at that time.  Or ever."

"So what happened?"

"So she fell in with the Jacobites and became quite a convert, and
traveled with them from town to town proselytizing.  Apparently, she
was quite charismatic, too--as you might expect!  A woman from the
angel holds denying the existence of the god!  Who wouldn't believe
her?  She drew crowds wherever she went.

"Naturally, Michael couldn't allow this to continue, so she was found
and brought back to Cedar Hills.  Against her will, of course.  They
say she tried over and over to escape.  No one was supposed to bring
her news of the Jacobites, but apparently someone did, because she
always seemed to know when there was some particularly bloody
confrontation.  And she knew when Jacob Fairman was killed.  And it
made her nearly mad.

"But by then," she continued, speaking a little more slowly, "she had
another problem.  For, although she had hidden it for quite a while,
eventually it became obvious that she was pregnant.  And would soon
bear a child."

"Whose child?"  Jared asked sharply.  "Fairman's?  A Jacobite's?"

"Well, she had already been a prisoner for eight months before anyone
noticed her condition, and it was another four months before her
delivery.  So it was clear that, whoever had sired her child, he most
likely lived at the hold."

Jared spoke carefully.  "Was she--did she say--had she been assaulted
while she was prisoner there?"

"I don't think so," Mercy said.  "Rinalda was not the type to keep such
an abuse to herself, had it been so.  I think she took a lover, and it
helped make her wretched days more bearable.  But she never named him.
Not though Michael threatened her with the wrath of Jovah himself."

"And when the baby was born?  What then?"

"When the baby was born, it was clear that whoever her lover was, he
was angelic.  For she bore an angel child.  And only an angel can bear
or sire another angel."

Jared took a quick breath.  "Lucinda?"

Mercy nodded.  "And Lucinda's sister.  A mortal girl."

Jared stared.  "Twins?  One angelic, the other not?  I have never heard
of such a thing."

"Nor had anyone else.  The consternation at the birth was almost
equaled by the amazement.  For although there is always rejoicing when
an angel is born, Michael found it hard to credit that any of his flock
had actually consorted with the Jacobit prisoner."

"Still.  She had lived there most of her life, after all," Jared said.
"They must have known her for years.  It was not as if she was some
rebel farmer's daughter who had been brought and incarcerated."

"True.  Yet Michael was furious and demanded that whoever was
responsible step forward and admit his guilt.  No one did of course,
and as I say, Rinalda never named him.  She was to suffer, though. They
instantly took Lucinda away from her to be properly raised by someone
more suitable to oversee an angel's upbringing."

"What happened to Rinalda and the other girl?"

Mercy was silent a moment.  "Died," she said quietly at last.

"How?"

"She managed to escape.  Taking the baby with her.  It was less than
three weeks after she'd given birth, and she wasn't strong.  And it was
winter--the worst winter southern Jordana had seen in this century. Two
days later a Jansai caravan found her on the side of the road, frozen
to death, the baby girl in her arms, Also dead.  I don't remember the
last time I have felt ~so sad."

"I don't wonder.  What a miserable tale."

"The day after that," Mercy went on, as if he hadn't spoken, "the angel
David killed himself.  Flew as high as he could over the Heldora
Mountains, folded his wings to his sides, and let himself fall.  You
cannot imagine the shock we all felt.  He had been such a beloved and
warmhearted boy.  Everyone assumed, of course, that he had been
Rinalda's lover.  We hadn't had any proof.  But I see no other way to
read the story."

"And this is the heritage of that lovely girl!  No wonder she sings
with such an unearthly voice."

"I don't know how much of her own story she knows.  So few people
remember it these days--and, of course, Gretchen has kept her far from
Cedar Hills for most of her life."

"Yes, tell me about this Gretchen and where in the world Lucinda has
been all these years.  I don't believe I've ever laid eyes on either of
them."

"Gretchen was David's sister--mortal, of course, but brought up in the
hold just like he was and used to angel ways.  About three years after
David and Rinalda died, she went to Michael and offered to raise
Lucinda herself.  He objected at first, because he saw no reason an
angel should be raised anywhere except in one of the holds, but she
finally convinced him.  She had always been a fairly earnest young
woman, and David's death made her almost grim.  Quite formidable.  In
the end, Michael agreed.  And she took Lucinda away with her to Angel
Rock and there, as far as I know, they have lived ever since."

"Angel Rock!  That dreary place!"

"Yes, it is not where I would have chosen to grow up myself.  But she
does not appear to have taken any particular harm from it.  She looks
reasonably refined and you have to admit her voice is amazing."

"Yes, but those are fairly external signs.  To be brought up by a
joyless maiden aunt on some tiny island in the middle of the ocean--it
makes even my careless blood run cold."

"No, I don't envy her her life," Mercy agreed.  "I invited Gretchen to
come to Cedar Hills for a few days, and bring Lucinda.  I hope she
accepts.  I think it would do them both good to be around more ordinary
company for a while.  And I plan to tell Gretchen that I'd be happy to
keep Lucinda for a few weeks--or a year or as long as she cares to
stay.  I think it's time that girl had a few normal hours in her
life."

"I wonder why this aunt Gretchen spirited her away like that," Jared
commented.  "I would have thought she would have considered Cedar Hills
the best place for the girl."

"Maybe she was afraid Lucinda would always be treated strangely because
she had such an odd history.  Or maybe she was angry at Michael because
he allowed such a series of disasters to happen, right under his nose.
Or maybe--and sometimes I've thought this was the true reason--she was
afraid of Rinalda's tainted blood.  That rebel streak.  She wanted to
get the girl as far from the mother's influences as possible.  Who
knows?

 Maybe she was right.  There are no Jacobites on Angel Rock."

"Let me know if she comes to you at Cedar Hills.  I'd like to get to
know her.  I'll come down and visit."

"I'll be glad to have you."

After a few more idle remarks, they rose to their feet and went their
separate ways, back to the friends and obligations In their separate
holds.  It occurred to Jared as he wound his way through the
still-lively crowd that he had promised to make two visits in the next
few weeks, although neither journey had been in his mind when he first
came to the Plain.  Not that it mattered.  Christian and Mercy were two
of his oldest friends.  Visits to them could be nothing but
enjoyable.

CHAPTER THREE

Lucinda moved through the Gloria with a sense of inexhaustible wonder.
She had never seen so many people gathered together in one place in her
life.  Perhaps two dozen souls all told lived on the island they called
Angel Rock, and it was rare even half of them were in the same room
simultaneously.  To be confronted with thousands of new faces all at
once was confusing and bewildering.

And wonderful.  She couldn't remember the last time she'd been so
excited.  Well, she could, though.  The day, a little over two years
ago, when a cruise ship carrying a hundred passengers from Luminaux to
Ysral had foundered off the edge of Angel Rock, and all one hundred had
come to stay on the island.  the three small inns that served as the
main commercial center of the island could not easily accommodate all
guests, but they did what they could.  Men and children were bunked in
the tap-rooms and the parlors, while the women were allotted the beds
and couches and floors of the bedchambers.  Two young girls had shared
Lucinda's room with her, and they stayed up late into the night,
talking excitedly about the adventure at sea and life back in Samaria.
These unexpected guests had stayed for a week, and Lucinda had spent
that whole time walking around in a state of rapt, awestruck delight.
The shortage of food, the complete lack of privacy, the problems with
the plumbing--none of these had bothered her in the least, though they
had seemed about ready to drive Aunt Gretchen mad.

That was the time she began pestering her aunt to bring her to Samaria
for a visit.  Can we go for my birthday?  Can we go to visit your
relatives?  Can we go for the Gloria?  Can we go, can we go, can we go?
Gretchen seldom talked about Samaria.

 Most of what Lucinda knew about the place she had learnt from
visitors who docked for a day or two at Angel Rock, replenish food and
fuel, to rest after a bad storm, to leave a man who had fallen ill. But
nothing had prepared her for this pageantry.

She was not sure her aunt ever would have heeded her plea except that
one day an invitation came from the Archangel himself, asking them to
attend the Gloria.  She remembered that Gretchen had read the letter
with an odd mixture of alarm and resignation, then sighed before she
handed it to Lucinda.

"I would have thought he would have forgotten all about you by now,"
was Gretchen's comment.  "I suppose we have Jonas to thank for this."

"Jonas?"  Lucinda asked absently, quickly scanning the letter.  Her
heart had started a galloping rhythm in her chest; it took all her
energy to keep her voice calm.  Gretchen hated any display of emotion.
"Oh, that young angel who was here ~last month."

"Yes, who was just supposed to stay overnight and ended up staying for
three days because you flirted with him so much."

Lucinda looked up.  "I didn'tflirt with him," she said mildly.

"Well, whatever you call it, when you sit up all night ~playing
melodies on your harpsichord and singing harmony together."

"He had a nice voice," Lucinda said.

"Well, you can be sure he flew back to Bael and told him just how fine
your voice is, and that's why the Archangel has invited you not only to
come to the Gloria, but to sing."

"He says that?  Where?"

"On the second page.  He adds that if you aren't familiar with any of
the sacred music, or aren't comfortable singing in front of a large
group of people, he certainly won't pressure you."

"Oh no!  I would like it very much!"

"It's his way of telling me," Gretchen said, taking the letter back and
reading it for a second time, "that he wonders if I have raised you
right, taught you all the things you need to know.  It's his way of
finding out if I have been a fit guardian for you."

"Why wouldn't you have been?  And why would he care?"  Lucinda asked,
puzzled.  Gretchen merely sniffed and refused to answer.

"But he can't fault me for your voice or your musical training," her
aunt went on with a certain grim satisfaction.  "That he'll see right
away."

"He will?  Then does that mean--oh, Aunt Gretchen, can we go to the
Gloria?  Can we really?"

"We don't have a choice about it," Gretchen replied, but her voice, and
her expression, softened as she looked at Lucinda's joyous face.  "You
don't gainsay the Archangel.  But you're happy about it, aren't you?
Well, then.  Maybe, it's worth going."

They had spent the next few weeks in a frenzy of preparation, cleaning
and repairing their best clothes, practicing the music Lucinda would
sing at the Gloria, hiring neighbors to care for the inn while they
were gone, contracting with a ship owner to carry them to Breven.

This should have been easy, since there were ships in and out of Angel
Rock on a daily basis.  But many of them were Edori vessels, and
Gretchen had an advanced and unshakable distaste for the Edori which
she had never satisfactorily explained to Lucinda.  "They're heathens,"
she told her niece once.  "They don't live like civilized folk."
Another time she spoke contemptuously of the Edori's heretical
religion, similar to the Samarians' true belief in Jovah but radically
different in that the Edori did not recognize Jovah as the one supreme
god.  Still another time, she mentioned that the Edori did not believe
in marriage and recognized no bond to another living soul.  Lucinda let
most of this roll once through her head and then melt away, as she did
with so many of her aunt's pronouncements.  The truth was, Lucinda had
decided, Gretchen lived by a set of rigid standards that she was afraid
to relax for herself, and so she viewed with profound distrust anyone
who was gaily able to contravene her own narrow definition of
correctness.

So--although Gretchen had overcome her dislike of the Edori enough to
trade with them on a regular basis--she would not accept a berth on one
of their ships.  Which was unfortunate, since most of the ships that
put into the small harbor at Angel rock were Edori.

It had not always been that way--or, at least, Angel Rock had not been
intended as a haven for Edori.  Until the last century it had not even
been inhabited.  The ocean that lay between Samaria and Ysral was too
vast for an angel to cross in one day, and so angels had never been
able to fly the distance to the smaller continent.  It had been Edori
who had first navigated the unmarked sea to discover Ysral, whose
existence had once been rumored.  Edori had settled Ysral and made it
their homeland, and so many of them emigrated there that within fifty
years of its discovery, almost no Edori were left on the central
continent of Samaria.

Once the Edori established themselves on Ysral--and they began ferrying
back boat loads of exotic fruits and marvelous grains--it became only a
matter of time before the Jansai and other Samarian entrepreneurs
opened up their own trade routes to Ysral.  And once ordinary Samarians
were traveling between continents, it became imperative for angels to
find some way to negotiate the waters so that they, too, could freely
go between civilized lands.  They could journey by boat, of course,
though it was beneath their dignity.  They preferred to fly.

And so exploratory teams of Jansai were sent out to locate suitable
islands along the route to Ysral where an angel could rest along the
way.  Angel Rock, which was almost midway between the two continents,
proved to be perfect.  It was large enough to support a small community
that would cater to the traveling angels, and hospitable enough to make
that community a pleasant place to live.

It was never expected to be more than an outpost, a single utilitarian
dorm with one or two misanthropic overseers who'd not mind their
solitary existence, but it had grown to be some thing a little more
lively.  Angel traffic was heavier than they anticipated; Edori ships
put in there constantly, Jansai traders less regularly, and commercial
liners from Luminaux or one of the Manadavvi ports even less
frequently.  But it had become point of pride among the residents of
the island to be able to offer good food, quality accommodations, and
passable entertainment to their visitors, and so the reputation of the
island had become quite high.  High enough to draw world-weary
travellers every once in a while, who stayed for the summer season,
swam in the sun-warmed ocean, bargained with the Edori for ~inchible
goods, and generally considered the island a luxurious treat from the
stresses of their lives.

So it had not been, for Lucinda, a particularly lonely existence.  But
that did not keep her from desiring, with all her heart to travel to
Samaria and sing at the Gloria.  It took so long for Gretchen to find a
ship she was willing to cruise on that, more than once, Lucinda
considered offering to fly them both to the Gloria.

But she knew better than that.  Gretchen was afraid to fly.  They would
go by boat or they would not go.

At last a Manadavvi pleasure ship came through, and the captain
willingly agreed to take two passengers as far as the port of Lisle on
the edge of Gaza.  Were they willing to leave in the morning?  They
were.  Providentially, one of their guests that evening was an angel
who would be flying back to the Eyrie in the morning.  With him,
Gretchen sent a letter to Bael informing the Archangel that she and her
niece would arrive at Lisle in nine days.  Would he have someone meet
them there to escort them to the Plain of Sharon?

The voyage itself was much more boring than Lucinda had expected.  She
was not allowed near any of the interesting parts of the ship (the
engine room, the galley, the captain's bridge), and the area of the
upper deck where she was permitted to stroll was greatly restricted.
She did enjoy standing at the stern and watching the aquamarine water
curl away into a sculpted white wake as the ship made its stately way
through the ocean.  And she struck up a few conversations with the
other travelers on board, though she had always found Manadavvi to be
haughty and unsociable, and these were no different.  And Aunt
Gretchen, predictably, was seasick.  So Lucinda had very little to do
and no one to talk to.

But, oh!  how different it was in Lisle, in Gaza, on the Plain of
Sharon!  And what color, what music, what splendor there was at the
Gloria!

Within minutes after singing her piece, Lucinda had managed to evade
her aunt's eye and melt into the crowd.  Since they had arrived at the
hotel on the Plain it had become easier and easier to slip away from
Gretchen, who had become increasingly distracted by all the people
gathered for the event.  This despite the fact that Gretchen had tried
to keep a tighter hold on Lucinda than usual.  But here, at the Gloria,
it was impossible to keep track of anyone.

The first thing Lucinda did when she got free of the angels was buy a
stick of candy-coated ice cream.  She had seen dozens of others eating
these confections and she had practically ached of desire.  When she
learned that not only did the ice cream come in a variety of flavors,
but the candy coating did as well, she was struck dumb.  She had not
even imagined such luxury in her life.

The ice-cream vendor smiled at her.  It was early in the day and he was
not yet irritated with the crowds.  "There's strawberry ice cream
covered with white chocolate, strawberry cream covered with dark
chocolate, chocolate ice cream covered with orange candy, chocolate ice
cream covered with ~mk, cherry ice cream covered with peppermint--"

"Strawberry and white chocolate," Lucinda said very quickly, before she
could hear another choice and change her mind.  She handed over a
silver coin (Gretchen had given her a handful and said gruffly, "I
suppose you'll want to buy a few things", and moved down through the
bazaar.  Nothing in the world could compare to this.

She knew her meager hoard of coins wouldn't buy much, but she didn't
care about souvenirs anyway; it was enough for her to be able to stare
and absorb.  The scarves, gloves, blouses, skirts, shoes, rings,
bracelets, hats, belts, statues, paintings, mugs, dolls, and other
treasures formed a fabulous array, gorgeous and dizzying, and she moved
from booth to booth content just to look.  She bought two more ice
creams (different flavors) and kept moving down the aisles.

She did have trouble negotiating the crowds because of her wings.  She
was not used to having to hold them so tightly to her body to keep them
from being trampled on or knocked against, and more than once she cried
out sharply when someone's unwary foot came down hard on a trailing
wing feather.  Everyone was profuse with apologies, and she knew it was
her own fault; she saw other angels moving easily about, seeming none
the worse for wear.  But then, they had had practice living among
throngs of people.

Of course, she didn't know a soul here, so she was pleased when total
strangers made a point of stopping her more than once as she browsed.
They didn't say much, and kept their voices extremely
respectful--"Beautiful song, angela!  .... I enjoyed your solo so much!
.... Jovah is sure to have heard your voice, angela, you sing like the
god's own chosen child"--and she wished she could have more extended
conversations with one or two of them.  And she wondered why they
called her "angela."  No one on the island did so.

Eventually, she got a chance to ask.  She had come to a stop at a booth
that sold musical recordings, and she was ~fin-the black disks when a
smooth voice spoke in her ear.  you considering buying a mass, angela? 
I'd recommend one of the ancient recordings over the modern ones.  Our
singers have their virtues, but none of them approach Hagar's
brilliance."

She turned with a ready smile, for she had recognized the voice.  She
had met Bael's son Omar two nights ago at a dinner so huge she had been
tempted to count the plates to see how many sat at the table.  They had
exchanged only a few words, but he had seemed pleasant enough then. And
now she was willing to talk to anyone.

"I cannot buy one," she said.  "I have no equipment to play it on.  But
wouldn't I love to have a handful of these!"

"The equipment is not expensive.  Perhaps your aunt will buy it for you
to take back with you.  I would think music would be considered a
luxury in such a lonely place as Angel Rock."

"It's not so lonely," she said, smiling again.  "And as for music, I
have always been willing to make my own."

"And a fine job you do with it.  I enjoyed your piece very much
angela."

"Thank you," she said.  "But why does everyone call me angela?"

He looked amused.  "I suppose they would not on the island.  It is a
term of courtesy--angela, angelo--bestowed upon angels.  The Angelica
is the Archangel's spouse, of course.  If you want to be very polite
that is how you always address an angel.  She shook her head.  "There
is so much to remember.  We don't have this many rules on Angel
Rock."

"Well, rules multiply in direct proportion to the number of beings
gathered together in one place.  I suppose, on Angel Rock, you would
need no more than one or two laws to everyone.  But here on Samaria--"
He laughed softly.  "We cannot have nearly enough."

She was not sure how to reply to that and was relieved when a ~ very
brief pause.  "So how are you enjoying your visit to the mainland? This
is your first trip back since you were very small, as I understand
it?"

"Yes.  I can't even remember having been here before, though Aunt
Gretchen says I was three when we left.  But I love it!  so exciting! 
So much to do and see and find out--"

"So you aren't feeling a little overwhelmed by all the splendor?"

"Not at all!"  she replied sunnily.  "I just wish it would go on for
days and days."

"Well, most of us feel that one day is about all the ~reve we can
stand.  But I'm glad you're enjoying it.  Would you feel up to having a
light meal with my father and me?  He sent me over to fetch you, in
fact--if you have no other obligations."

One can't gainsay the Archangel, she heard Gretchen's voice in her ear,
but it wouldn't have occurred to her in any case.  "I'd be delighted,"
she said.  "Where is he?"

Omar led her to an open-air cafe set up under a red tent.  Bael and
Mariah were already seated at a white iron table set with low stools
that allowed angel wings ~ comfortably folded in place.  Bael's silver
wings, in ~l' behind him in a pleated cascade over the grass that
formed the cafe's floor.  Lucinda stepped carefully to avoid treading
on them.

"Lucinda!  My girl!  Come sit with us, angela, please do."  Bael
addressed her in a booming voice that seemed designed more for
prophetic utterances than simple social conversation.  She settled
herself across from him; Omar sat to her left, facing Mariah.  "We're
so pleased you could join us for a little luncheon.  Are you quite
starved?"

She laughed guiltily.  "Actually, I've been eating ice creams for the
past hour.  We have nothing like that on the island."

"I hope you haven't made yourself sick," Mariah said in a quick,
worried voice.  "That ice cream is so sweet and rich I can only eat a
few bites before my stomach--,well."

"Oh, I feel fine," Lucinda said blithely.  But I'm not hungry right
now.  Maybe I'll have something to drink."

"Sir!  Bael called out, summonning the waiter.

The young lady would like something to drink!  "

In a few minutes they were all settled with their iced juice and their
trays of cheese and breadsticks, and Bael was refocusing his attention
on his guest.  He leaned slightly forward across the table, fixing her
with dark blue eyes that seemed capable of staring at hell without
wavering.

"So!  Are you enjoying your first Gloria?"  he demanded in a rolling
voice.

She was getting just a little tired of this question.  "Very much.  The
music was amazing.  I was just spellbound during your performance.
Angelo."  Belatedly she nodded at Mariah.  "Angela."

Bael waved this off.  "My angelica and I have sung at nineteen
consecutive Glorias.  We are expected to be brilliant.  But your voice
took us all by surprise.  Tell me, who have your teachers been?"

"My aunt Gretchen, mostly.  From the time I was very small, she taught
me--oh, everything.  Scales and breathing exercises and basic harmony
until I was old enough to start learning real music."

Mariah leaned over and spoke in her husband's ear, although everyone at
the table could hear her.  "Strange.  I don't recall that Gretchen had
a particularly exceptional voice."

"Adequate merely," he replied, again as if no one else could overhear.
"But as long as she understands music, her voice is of little
consequence."  He addressed Lucinda again.  "And what is your
repertoire?  You performed the solo quite impressively, but can you
sing the masses as well?"

"Oh--of course--maybe a hundred of them," she said.  "I haven't
counted."

"A hundred?"  Bael repeated.  "All by memory?"

"I was taught that it was impolite to sing with the score in front of
you.  As if you didn't care enough about the music to learn it."

To her left, Omar laughed softly.  "And Gretchen Delmere was always
certainly an expert on politeness."

"Well.  A hundred masses.  That is certainly a remarkable number," Bael
said.  "I take it that you actually can read music--that you did not
learn these merely by listening to a recording and memorizing?"

Aunt Gretchen had been right; Bael wanted to make sure she had had the
proper instruction and made it clear he didn't believe she could
have.

"I can read music," she said.

"She has no equipment to play a recording on," Omar said.  So she told
me.  Which makes her accomplishment even more amazing."

Lucinda looked at him.  She was not enjoying this part of the
conversation, though she was making an effort to hide it.  More of Aunt
Gretchen's politeness.  "Is it such a high number then?"  she asked
him.  "How many do you know?"

He laughed aloud.  "Maybe a dozen quite well, and fifty so well enough
to remember them if I practice," he said.  "Those serve me adequately
on the occasions I am called up to perform."

"So your musical background is sufficient," Bael went on, addressing
Lucinda again.  "And your deportment seems satisfactory.  I assume you
have been taught the other basics--literature, history, rudimentary
mathematics?"

"Well, I suppose you could quiz me," she answered with a smile.
"Otherwise, how will you be sure I really do know what you think I
should?"

There was a short pause while everyone else at the table ~assimilated
the fact that they had been rude and that she was so unsophisticated
that she did not realize it.  Bael, however, if he was nonplussed, did
not show it.  He reached across the table to pat her hand.

"There, now," he said, in a voice too loud to be as soothing as he
intended.  "You mustn't be offended.  You seem an exotic creature to
us, and we only want to get to know you."

"I don't seem exotic to me," she replied, but she managed to smile.
"You're the ones whose lives seem strange."

"As they are," Omar murmured.  "As they are."

"But then, tell us more of life upon this island," Mariah said in her
high nervous voice.  "Is it really just you and your aunt living there?
 No one else?"

"Oh, no.  There are twenty-two other people there right now And Hammet
is expecting his brother and cousin to come any day now, because the
inn has grown so much he needs help to maintain it.  Actually, Hammet
has talked about building another hotel--more of a luxury place, you
know, because we have been getting more tourists during the summer
months.  and then he'd probably have to hire five more workers.  So it
could be growing pretty rapidly in the next few months."

"And exactly how do you--well, how do you entertain yourself?  Out on
an island with twenty-two other people?"  the Angelica asked.

Lucinda grinned.  "Mostly I work.  There's only me and Aunt Gretchen
and Emmie and Jackson, and the hotel has ~ei ~orns.  So I clean, and do
laundry, and work in the garden, and sew, and trade with the merchants
who put into port, and help in the kitchen and--" She laughed.  "If it
needs to be done, I can do it.  There's never time to sit and be
bored."

"And do you have any friends there, child?"

"Child" did not seem like the right word for someone who was nearly
thirty, but Lucinda let it slide.  "Twenty-two friends," she said with
a smile.  "How many do you have?"

That stopped Mariah; indeed, it stopped the whole table, although Omar
was silently laughing.  Lucinda just let the reply hang there, too
stubborn to soften it with another comment.  She might be a wide-eyed
miss from the desolate island, but she had dealt with her fair share of
unscrupulous shipowners and wily Jansai, and she knew how to hold her
own in any transaction.

"Mariah counts all the people of Samaria as her allies and friends,"
Bael said finally.  "And here comes one of them now.  This is another 1
we would like to have you meet."

He was gazing beyond her, so Lucinda quickly turned her head to see a
middle-aged, dark-haired woman making her way slowly through the crowd.
She was dressed very simply in a white robe and sandals, and she held
the arm of a young girl walking beside her as if she needed physical
support.

"Jecoliah," the angelica said in that voice she still appeared to think
was a whisper.  "I did not know she was here."

"I saw her briefly last night," Bael replied.  "Omar, could you direct
her to our table?"

"Certainly, Father," the young man said, and came smoothly to his feet.
In a few moments he was leading the white-robed women to their table
and helping her seat herself on his own stool.  Then he and the girl
with Jecoliah stood a few paces behind her, patiently waiting.

"Jecoliah," Bael said, his deep voice raised even a little more than
usual, as if he spoke to a deaf woman.  "We are pleased to see you
here.  Are you enjoying the Gloria?"

"Very much," she said.  "Are you?"

Bael missed the humor in the reply, for he went right on speaking, but
Lucinda could not help a private grin.  "Indeed, I am.  Jecoliah, I
wanted to introduce you to one of our young guests.  Her name is
Lucinda, and she has come in for the week from Angel Rock.  Lucinda,
this is Jecoliah, the oracle of Mount Sinai."

 Jecoliah peered in Lucinda's direction out of friendly, closed eyes,
and Lucinda realized that the older woman was not deaf after all, but
nearly blind.  "You must be David's daughter, she said instantly.  "I
am indeed pleased to meet you.  You look something like him, though he
was darker than you are.  But you have his eyes."

Jecoliah was the first person in Samaria who had mentioned her father's
name, and Lucinda immediately liked her.  She was delighted when, at
that very moment, someone called out to Bael, and the Archangel and his
wife left the table.  Omar slipped quietly into Mariah's deserted
seat.

"I know nothing about my father except what my aunt has told me,"
Lucinda said.  "And she does not talk about him much."

"Well, he was young, which made him rash, and he was in love, which
made him ill-advised," Jecoliah said with a sigh.  "But other than that
he was sweet-tempered and good-natured and you couldn't find a soul to
say an unkind word about him.  He was a good man."

"The oracle speaks, and thus every word is true," Oma murmured.

Lucinda ignored him.  "Forgive my asking," she said to the other woman,
"but I am not certain what an oracle is.  Or does."

Omar smiled, but Jecoliah merely nodded.  "You would have no knowledge
of us, there on Angel Rock.  There are three of us, one in each
province, and we serve as mediators with the god.  We can speak to him
not directly, not by voice--but through special screens that allow us
to ask him questions and receive his written reply."  Jecoliah smiled.
"I do not see well at all--that is why I have one of my acolytes lead
me around as if I were an old woman--but I can see well enough to read
the script of Jovah's hand."

Lucinda was fascinated.  Gretchen had never talked about oracles.  "And
what sorts of questions do you ask the god?"

"Lately, who will be Archangel, but he has not replied," Omar said.

"No, but he will," Jecoliah said calmly.  "He always does, And we ask
him who will be angelica or angelico to the Archangel.  And we report
to him events that transpire so that he can interpret them for
us--perhaps not for this generation, but the next one and the one that
follows.  We tell the god the details of Samaria, and he tells us how
to live."

It sounded complex and mysterious to Lucinda, and she decided not to
pursue it further.  "Did you know my mother as well as my father?"  she
asked.

Jecoliah shook her head.  "Very little.  Only well enough to see what
everyone saw, that she was passionate and hard to hold.  And to be
angry that her life ended as wretchedly as it did."

"Old tales.  Old wounds," Omar murmured, but there was a warning note
in his voice.  Lucinda looked directly at him.

"I know the story of how my mother lived and died," she said.  "Don't
be afraid of what she'll tell me."

He smiled at her with a certain rue, and she liked him better than she
had for the last twenty minutes.  "Any tale of pain and betrayal stirs
the emotions when it's told, whether for the first time or the
hundredth," he said.  "I've no doubt you'll hear it more than once
during your sojourn in Samaria.  Just remember that it was long ago,
and no one suffers anymore, and nothing you feel can change it."

"And you remember that I am not a child," she said softly.

He nodded.  "Then we will deal well enough together."

Lucinda stayed another ten minutes talking to the oracle and the
Archangel's son, but that last exchange with Omar lingered in her mind
more than the rest of the conversation.  She felt uncharacteristically
broody as she left the table and continued wandering through the
fairgrounds, or maybe it was just that she was getting tired.  The week
had been a long one, after all, and this day had started before dawn
and been packed with events.  So she was actually relieved when she
spotted Gretchen's thin, tall form moving stiffly through the crowds,
obviously on the lookout for someone, most likely herself.  And she was
more surprised than excited to learn that she and her aunt had been
invited to spend a few days at the angel hold in Jordana, and that
Gretchen had accepted.

CHAPTER FOUR

The trip to Cedar Hills took three days, though Lucinda and any of the
other angels could have completed it in less than half that time But
they moderated their pace to accommodate the caravan that traveled
below them on the paved highways of Samaria.  When Lucinda learned how
her aunt and the other mortals ~from Cedar Hills were to be
transported, she almost decided to ride with them.  She had never seen
anything like the huge, rumbling vehicles with their great exposed
engines and long holll bodies designed to carry human cargo over great
distances.  These particular vehicles, so the angel Jonas informed her
while they waited for the journey to begin, were luxury accommodations.
They were specially fitted on the interior with padded seats and
comfortable footrests and both heating and cooling systems to keep the
air temperature bearable.

"And this is the only way to travel, if you're not able to fly," he
said.  "The Jansai transport tracks--Jovah ~sax They're open-air
vehicles, nothing to shield passengers from the wind or the sun or the
rain, and they're noisier than the water falling over the Gabriel Dam.
They'll take you over the track three times faster than you could go on
horseback, but a miserable way to achieve speed."

"And those are your only choices?  The Jansai trucks or these?"

Jonas bobbed his head from side to side in an ~equive way.  He was a
good-looking, friendly young angel she knew from his past visits to
Angel Rock (when she was with him), and he seemed willing to tell her
every bit of information she didn't know.

"Well, there are the public buses, and they fall somewhere in between
in terms of comfort.  But they take days and days and days to cross a
hundred miles, because they stop almost at every little town along the
way.  Now, a few Luminaux engineers have been working on designs for
smaller vehicles--cars that will carry only three or four passengers at
a time--but the concept has been pretty much derided as inefficient.
And Bael has not been a friend to locomotive advances.  He has resisted
any new scientific projects, and he discourages the university from
developing much new technology.  So nobody's done much toward modifying
passenger vehicles.  But maybe next ~ the next year, with a new
Archangel in place--"

She'd already heard that phrase more times than she could count.  When
the new Archangel is installed ... When Bael's replacement is found ...
Since no one knew who the new Arcangel would be, everyone was free to
indulge in the more optimistic hopes about what that person would
accomplish.

"So, you think the new Archangel will be more of a friend to
technology?"

"Depends on who's chosen.  For myself, I don't care much, but there are
a lot of people who do.  There are many who'd like to see the Augustine
University back in Samaria--or who'd like a chance to see what the
Augustine researchers have come up with lately."

"What's the Augustine University?"

"Well, it used to be the most advanced scientific research institute
and teaching facility on the continent.  Based right at the foot of
Mount Sinai.  Started by a man called Caleb Augustus and an Edori named
Daniel sia Calasinsa.  It flourished during Delilah's day, and for
twenty or thirty years after that.  Credit them with virtually all the
electronic amenities we have today.  But.  like Bael, Archangel Joel
was no fan of technology, and he tried more than once to shut the
school down.  Eventually, its professors just moved the whole place to
Ysral. Where only the Idori are benefiting from the new marvels of
science."

"So they're the ones who built these trucks and buses?"

"The prototypes.  The early models."

"And what is it that Bael has against science?"

Jonas smiled.  "You must know your history better than that."

"Samaria was founded by settlers escaping a brutal war on a planet far
from here," she recited in a childlike singsong.  "Technological
advances had brought this world to the brink of destruction with
weapons so powerful they could not be withstood.  Our forefathers
prayed to Jovah, and he took them in his hand and carded them to
Samaria, where he instructed them to live in harmony all their
lives."

"Very good!"  he applauded.  "So Bael's fear, theoretically, is if we
encourage any scientific advancement, we will eventually build whatever
weapons these other ancestors did, and destroy ourselves and the whole
planet.  He's not the only Archangel to have felt that way, of course. 
That's why we as a society have not crept very far down the road of
progress in the last hundred years."

"Maybe it's a slow road."

"Maybe we have no incentives to make it a faster one."  They might have
continued debating for the next half hour, but at that point the rumble
of the big engines grew to a deafening level and the big buses
shuddered to life.  Around them, the air was suddenly patterned with a
massive interleaving of angel wings as the contingent from Cedar Hills
took flight.  Jonas and Lucinda flung themselves aloft and began the
long journey southward.

Lucinda loved to fly.  It was something of a guilty pleasure because
Gretchen hated to see her take wing, constantly fearing that she would
meet with an errant breeze and go cartwheeling down into the beautiful,
treacherous acres of the sea.  Early she had promised her aunt that she
would never fly so far that she couldn't see the green-and-tan contours
of Angel Rock--which had severely limited the scope of her travels. 
The idea of flying for hundreds of miles, without pausing, without
circling back, made her giddy with anticipation.

She drove her wings down sharply, repeatedly, gaining altitude as fast
as she could, till she was far above the ground, the trucks, the other
angels.  She saw Jonas glance up at her and rise a few yards, but
nowhere near her level.  A few of the other angels also turned their
faces up to her, calculating her speed and her distance.  They seemed
to be smiling.

This high up, the air was frigid and full of devious, sometimes
dangerous currents.  The cold did not bother her; like all angels, her
body was built to withstand the icy temperatures at high altitudes, and
indeed, she was often uncomfortable in a warm room.  As for the malice
of the wind, well, that was an adversary she had faced time without
number; she had had no other real opponent in the past twenty-eight
years, and so she had sharpened all her skills on it.

Now came a sudden up rush of air, swift and powerful; she pulled her
wings closer to her body and let herself glide on its back.  It stopped
abruptly and she fell, loving the breathtaking drop, the sensation of
speed in the moments before she ~spread her wings again and eased
herself from side to side to slow her descent.  For a few minutes she
coasted, then she arced upwards again, higher than before.  She flew
forward as fast as she could for as long as she could stand the pace,
outdistancing both the trucks on the ground and the angels in the air.
Then, once more she folded her wings to her sides and plummeted toward
the earth in a dizzying, blinding drop.  Unfurling her wings with a
snap, she felt the shock of arrested motion along every nerve and bone
in her body.  She hovered for a moment in place, laughed out loud.

A few minutes later Jonas caught up with her.  Lucinda had rarely had
an opportunity to fly beside someone; she liked this camaraderie, and
waved at him gaily.

"How far are we going today?"  she called over to him.  "Do you want to
race me to the next resting point?"

"I don't think so," he called back.  "I've come to tell you to display
a little more decorum.  You're causing much concern behind you."

She glanced back, but faces were invisible from here.  "My aunt?"

"I would guess she's already dead from fear.  No, Mercy herself asked
me to try and calm you down.  This is not at all the sort of behavior
we expected from the demure young girl from Angel Rock."

Lucinda grinned.  "There wasn't much else to do for fun when I was
growing up.  Of course, I had to make sure I was somewhere Aunt
Gretchen couldn't see me.  Don't tell me you can't take a dive like
that."

"Well, I can, but I don't like to.  The few times I've been
accidentally cast down by the wind, I have merely prayed to come out
alive."

"You should try it when there's nothing below you but~--"

"Thank you, I think not."

She laughed at him, but she settled down.  It surprised her too that
the other angels were so much more sedate--she would have thought
anyone with wings would have practiced endlessly, but it was not in her
to deliberately upset people who seemed to have her interests at heart.
So she descended to a lower altitude, slowed into a more regular pace,
and in this unremarkable fashion covered the rest of the miles of the
trip.

They spent two nights on the road in hotels only slightly better than
their own on Angel Rock.  Gretchen noted this fact with some smugness;
she prowled the corridors of each inn, on the lookout for amenities she
had not thought of or did not offer.  The two of them shared a room
both nights, Gretchen talked more than usual, almost exclusively of the
people they had encountered, both at the Gloria and on the trip.  She
mentioned names of people Lucinda could not remember and did not think
she'd met.  It seemed to her that she was reminding herself of the life
she had once lived, briefly and completely immersing herself in it one
more time, either to regret it forever once she left or to reassure
herself that she was better off now.  It was hard for Lucinda to tell. 
In any case, she wasn't required to make many replies to Gretchen's
ruminations, and so she listened sleepily and drifted quietly into
dreams.

On the third day, they arrived at Cedar Hills.  The angel hold was an
open, inviting place, a charming muddle of short buildings and tall
ones, residences and shops, pathways and garden plots and sudden sprays
of fountains.  Angels and mortals mingled together on the streets and
in the restaurants, and to Lucinda's eye, at least, they all seemed
happy and industrious.

Mercy showed Lucinda and Gretchen to their quarters, a suite of rooms
in a long, low building that seemed to be some kind of dormitory. "This
is where most of the unattached angels sleep," Mercy told them. "We
have other quarters for the residents with families, but this is
generally quieter, since there aren't children screaming up and down
the hallways.  My rooms are in that red building---over there--and most
of the grand functions are held in that big white building we saw as we
came in."

"This is lovely," Lucinda said, looking out the window at the open
square.  In the fresh spring sunlight, everything appeared newly washed
and cheerful.

Mercy smiled at her.  "You like it?  I confess to a certain partiality
myself.  I was brought up at the Eyrie, of course.  it has a majesty
that Cedar Hills doesn't possess--but that wasn't the point of Cedar
Hills.  When they built it, they wanted it to be accessible to
everyone, a place no one would hesitate to come with a grievance or a
problem.  It's much newer than the Eyrie and Monteverde, of course,
since it was built--oh, in Gabriel's time.  Two hundred and fifty years
ago.  So it hasn't seen quite the wear and tear of the other holds!"

Gretchen was looking about her with a face so full of emotions it was
hard to sort them out.  Unlike Mercy, Gretchen had been raised at Cedar
Hills and, until she took her niece away twenty-five years ago, had
rarely left it.  Lucinda watched her, wondering what she was thinking.
Was she glad to be back or sorry She had abandoned so much and missed
so much and could never, recapture any of those lost years.  For almost
the first time in her life, Lucinda wondered what passion had driven
her to leave a home she loved, carrying a small child in her arms, and
retreat to the most isolated spot in their entire world.  The question
made her feel a little cold, despite the sunlight.  She put her hand
lightly on her aunt's arm.

"Come on," she said.  "Let's unpack our stuff and then get some lunch.
You can show me everything."

"What I remember," Gretchen said, but she allowed herself to be turned
toward the closets.  Mercy watched them a moment, a thoughtful
expression on her face, before she turned and left them alone in the
room.

The next two weeks passed in a companionable haze.  There was never a
minute's boredom at Cedar Hills or, if you wanted companionship, ~ a
lonely moment.  Every meal was communal; every activity could be
shared; and visitors to the compound arrived nearly every minute.  It
was a cornucopia of souls.

Lucinda spent most of her time with the other angels.  In particular,
she enjoyed flying aloft with the others to sing to Jovah.  Although
Gretchen had doggedly taught Lucinda every one of the prayers used to
address the god, Lucinda had only rarely asked him for rain or sun or
wind.  At Angel Rock, they pretty much took what the god would send.

But she enjoyed flying straight into a pelting rainstorm, coming to a
fluttering pause beside another angel, and raising her voice in harmony
to beg the god for sunshine.  And she was delighted when, an hour or
two later, she could actually feel the shifting pressure of the air
around her as the clouds unraveled and the rain trickled to a halt. She
accompanied Jonas on three weather intercessions over various parts of
Jordana, and she loved the experience every time.

She participated in the impromptu concerts that somehow seemed to
happen every night after dinner, and she learned the singing games that
required great feats of memory and vocal range.  She flew to Luminaux
one day with Jonas and two other angels, and walked the blue streets of
that elegant city with awe and reverence.  Surely there was no place in
the whole world as beautiful as this.

During the two weeks of their visit, Mercy planned two formal dinners,
one to honor the angel Jared of Monteverde, and one to honor the
Archangel's son Omar, both of whom had dropped by for quick visits.
Lucinda had not met Jared at the Gloria, though he had been pointed out
to her, and during his visit she had only a five-minute conversation
with him.

"Are you enjoying your stay here?"  he inquired as they entered in the
foyer leading to the dining hall.  He posed the question in a careless,
casual voice--but then, everything about him seemed careless and
casual.  He was a tall man, but he slouched against the door frame as
if his height offered him no particular advantages; he was
good-looking, with strong, regular feattures and long, curling black
hair, but he did not appear to have much attention to his clothes or
his styling.  Only his gray eyes, lively and alert, gave much clue to
the quickness behind his indolence.

"Very much!  There's so much to see and everyone has been so friendly.
We went to Luminaux the other day.  I've never imagined such a gorgeous
place."

"No, Luminaux is quite unmatched," he agreed.  ~"All,m for sheer
architectural whimsy, you should take a trip to Semorrah.  The city
isn't as livable, but the design is fantastik."

She laughed.  "I don't think we'll be here long enough for me to visit
all the major tourist attractions.  Though what I've seen so far--"

"Makes you want to stay?"  he suggested.

"Makes me want to come back," she amended.  "I think I'd miss my home
if I were gone for long."

"Not what I'd expect to hear from someone who grew up in your
particular home," he commented.  "Then again, perhaps I underrate it.
I've never been to Angel Rock."

"Have you never been to Ysral, then?"

He nodded.  Half a dozen times.  But I've taken my rest on one of the
Jansai boats traveling between continents.  These are so crowded with
merchantmen traders these days that you don't really have to worry
about finding a place to halt at night."

"Our loss, then," she said, smiling.

He smiled back.  "Well, next time I go I'll be sure to stop by.  Now
that I know how friendly the natives are."

And that was all they said to each other.  Yet there was something
about him that appealed to her deeply, prompting her to ask Mercy about
him the next time she had a chance.

The small, brown-haired angel laughed and shook her ~head.  "I adore
Jared, I truly do, but I despair of him, too.

whom the god has blessed with every gift, and all he does is idle his
time away."

"What gifts?"  Lucinda said cautiously.

Mercy snorted.  "Besides the obvious one of physical beauty?
Intelligence.  Integrity.  The ability to deal with all kinds of
men--and women.  You should see the mortal girls fawn over him.  Not
that he seems to care.  He's had his liaisons, of course, but never
anything serious.  If nothing else, I wish he would find a few months
of happiness with some little angel-seeker and produce a child or two.
Then maybe there would be something in the next generation to look
forward to."

"Maybe he's just waiting to fall in love," Lucinda said.  Mercy made
that graceless sound again.  "Angels seldom do," she said.  "The
Archangel always marries according to the god's will, but not even he
considers the bond exclusive.  Most angels spread their affections
fairly far and wide--and a good thing it is, too!  The more lovers they
take, the more often they produce angel children, and that is something
that seems rarer every day.  Well, I don't despair of Jared yet.  He'll
surprise us all someday.  In some way.  I'm sure of it."

Omar, when he came to Cedar Hills, put more energy into getting to know
the visitor from Angel Rock.  Lucinda was not sure she was glad to see
him, since she had felt some mistrust of him by the time they parted on
the Plain of Sharon, but here in Jordana he appeared to make a special
effort to please.

"How long are you staying?"  he asked her one afternoon as they
strolled through the shops of Cedar Hills, eating ice cream.  I'd like
to bring you back to the Eyrie for a few days.  It's something you
really should see--the oldest of the angel holds, and the most
beautiful.  It's built right into the mountaintop, and the stone is
this son of glowing rosy color, and when you're inside it, it feels
like you're wrapped in warmth.  I can't explain it very well,
obviously."

"I'd like to see it," she said.  "And Semorrah.  Jared said that was
worth visiting."

"He was right.  And the Gabriel Dam, and Monteverde, and even Breven,
though it's not as pretty a place as the other cities.  But the
shipyards are fabulous."

"I don't know how much longer we'll be here," she said.  And then,
because she wasn't sure how well she would enjoy a tour in Omar's
company, she added without enthusiasm, "I'll ask my aunt if we can take
a journey."

But Gretchen, when approached, was adamant: They had to leave the very
next day.  This was news to Lucinda, and she received it with mixed
emotions.  Much as she was enjoying Samaria, the constant barrage of
people and events was beginning to wear on her.  And she missed Angel
Rock with an intensity that surprised her.  But to leave the very next
mornig-"Couldn't we wait a day or two?  Omar said--"

"No," Gretchen said firmly.  "Mercy says we'll find any number of boats
that can take us home, all docked at Port.  We can get there in a
couple of hours.  So, hurry now, better start your packing.  Make sure
you don't leave anything behind."

Something had upset her, that much was clear, and Mercy seemed just as
mystified as Lucinda.  "I hope it's not something I've said, some
courtesy I've omitted," the older angel said to Lucinda.  "She seemed
perfectly happy yesterday."

Mercy had sought her out in her rooms that evening, ad s by the bed
watching Lucinda pack.  "Oh, I don't think it's anything to do with
you," Lucinda said.  "Aunt Gretchen is very moody.  The smallest thing
can make her mad for days.  May be that she's remembered something at
the inn that she wanted to get done.  It may be that somebody said
something to make her feel she'd trespassed too long on your
hospitality.  It may be--she might have remembered something from
twenty years ago, and it made her sad, and she can't stand to be here
another minute.  With Aunt Gretchen, it's pretty hard to know."

Mercy watched her with shadowed eyes.  "You must have had a difficult
time of it," she said.  "Growing up as you did with an embittered woman
on a desolate island.  I feel like we've done wrong by you.  You were
born at this hold, and it is your hold.  I should have come after you
much sooner."

"I didn't need coming after," Lucinda said serenely.  I've always been
quite happy where I was.  And Aunt Gretchen loves me.  She's difficult
and contrary and I sometimes think ruled by fear, but she loves me.  I
haven't felt the need of anyone to care for me."

"Still.  If you get too lonely.  If you just want a change.  For any
reason at all.  Will you come back and visit me?  There will always be
room for you."

Lucinda crossed the floor and kissed the older woman on the cheek.  "I
will," she said.  "Thank you for the offer."

The next morning, they were on the road before nine.  Lucinda had
elected to ride with Gretchen in the van that Mercy had specially
ordered for their use.  It was not nearly as much fun as flying, but
Gretchen had looked so frail and alone as she climbed into the big,
empty vehicle that Lucinda didn't have the heart to abandon her.  The
ride was fairly bumpy, and too noisy to make conversation easily, so
they traveled in a silence that suited them both.

Lucinda looked out her windows, watching the gentle green countryside
roll by, and wondered when she would actually make it to Samaria again.
Somehow, this trip seemed like the one big event of her life, the
splash of bright color to which she would compare all other days,
sighing with fondness and regret.  She seemed destined for a quiet
life, half-lonely and half-full of wonder, and that had always been
enough for her; but she could not help being a little sorry that her
period of glory was ending so quickly.  She made herself smile and toss
the rueful thoughts away, but she continued watching out the window.

Port Clara was even smaller than Lisle, and there were only Edori boats
docked there this morning.  Lucinda felt a small lift of hope--surely
this would delay their journey by a day or two--but she had
underestimated the strength of Gretchen's desire to leave Samaria.  She
marched up to the first sea captain she found on the wharf and
bargained for passage to Angel Rock.  Then she hurried back to where
Lucinda was patiently waiting with their luggage.

"We leave within the hour," she said.  "Best buy anything you think you
might need for the journey."

Lucinda squinted out into the harbor.  "Which ship?"  she asked.

Gretchen pointed.  "The one there at the end.  It's called The
Wayward."

CHAPTER FIVE

Back in Luminaux, Tamar found everything changed.  None of her Jacobite
friends were there; all their houses and apartments had been rented to
others or left empty till new residents could be found.  She was to
approach the sympathetic merchants and artisans she had relied on for
help in the past.  After her experience with Ezra, she believed anyone
could betray her.  If he had betrayed her.  She couldn't be sure.  But
who else?  And could not anyone, anyone at all, whisper her name to the
angels or the Jansai?  So, she avoided the familiar streets, rented a
room in a district she did not know, and took a job cooking at one of
the city's hundreds of cafes.  She needed the money.  She needed the
food.  She needed to buy time to think.

The trip from Breven had been accomplished easily enough, although her
nerves were so unsteady that every minute had been harrowing.  If Ezra
had betrayed them, she was lost; she walked through the city streets
with a spotlight on her head.  He could describe her height, hair
color, clothing, the rubbed newness of the wound around her Kiss.  She
must disguise herself.

So she had spent a careful half hour at the market, buying materials,
and she had used one of the filthy public rest rooms to do what she
could to alter her appearance.  An application dye made her bright
blond hair several shades darker, and a few cuts with a razor made it
short, spiky, severe.  Sapphire eyeshadow turned her green eyes a murky
aquamarine.  Heeled sandals added inches, new clothes changed her
style.  She gazed at the mirror and forced herself to stand upright,
straighten her shoulders, assume a commanding expression that said I
belong, a posture and an attitude that no fugitive would attempt.  She
powdered the scarlet skin around the Kiss, dulling it to the flesh tone
of the rest of her arm.  She surveyed herself again.  She did not much
resemble the woman who had walked in.

She had very little money left, but she did not want to chance sneaking
out of the city at night.  Nothing could look more suspicious, not if
they were searching for her.  Her best course was a bold one: buying a
ticket on one of the commercial buses that traveled between Breven and
the rest of Samaria.

At the station--which was merely a heavy, striped tarp draped over a
huge expanse of concrete--she found she had just enough money left to
book a seat on a bus heading for Luminaux.  That suited her; it was too
early to go to the rendezvous at Ileah, and at least she was familiar
with the Blue City.  Even better, the bus would be leaving in half an
hour.  She found an empty bench and waited almost motionlessly for her
route to be called.

The scent of sea air wafted in through the open walls, cutting a
welcome edge through the overpowering odor of fuel.  The grumble of
many simultaneous motors was giving her a headache, but there was
nowhere to sit to avoid the sound and smell of the buses; they were
parked on all four sides of the station.  Mute and miserable, Tamar
endured.

At last, the thirty interminable minutes crawled by and the call went
out: All aboard for Luminaux.  All for Luminaux.  She knew a moment's
panic as she rose to her feet, clutching the little bag she had carried
with her across the desert.  What if they were waiting for her, Jansai
soldiers disguised as weary travellers?  What if they were cruelly
allowing her to gain the sight of freedom, laughing to themselves,
watching as she tossed her head and strode with a carefree woman's walk
right to the very doorway of the bus?  What if they were to take
her--now?  No, not until she truly thought she was safe, not till the
bus had rumbled to life, shouldered its way down the crowded city
streets, attained the open road beyond the city limits.  Would they
take her then?  Would they stop the bus, haul her off screaming and
fighting, bludgeon her to death there on the side of the road?  Or,
worse, take her to the Archangel's hold to await who knew what sort of
peril?

No one she knew had ever returned once the Jansai had gotten hold of
them.  Some of the Jacobites did not believe that could possibly mean
the worst--torture and murder--they optimistically spoke of comfortable
prisons and deportation to Ysral.  if a jail could be comfortable.  As
if any Jacobite, shipped to Ysral, would not find a way to return to
his friends in Samaria and tell them what had happened.  No, Tamar was
a realist And one who fell into the Jansai's hands, or the Archangel's
would be dead.

Like Zeke.

She would not think of Zeke.

If she had walked with him to the harbor, she would be dead too.  She
would not think of that, either.

The bus shuddered deeply and rolled into reverse with excruciating
slowness.  Righting itself, it plowed forward through the city streets
with a blind assurance that sent pedestrians, carts, and smaller
vehicles scurrying out of its way.  ~The, In a ~ cleared the narrow,
cramped streets of the inner city and ~ bowling past the closed,
watchful houses of the wealthy Jansai.  They were at the city limits.
They were on open road with the desert sand stretching limitlessly on
either side of them.  Then, they were ten miles from Breven.  She was
free.

The bus was a local, she discovered soon enough, which stops at
virtually every small town between Breven and Luminaux; consequently,
it would take three days to cover the ~eile between the cities.  Well,
on foot or by horse it would have been much longer, so she shouldn't
complain, but she was sure hunger would do her in before they had
covered half the distance.  She had bought a little food before she
left Breven, but it was not nearly enough.  Like most Jacobites, she
was lean to begin with, and her body had few reserves.  But then again,
like most Jacobites, she was familiar with hunger.  She knew how to
wait it out.

But by the third day, she began to get light-headed.  As she sat on the
bus, staring out the window, she suddenly felt her stomach drop away
and her mind whirl into a dizzy spiral.  The sensation was so physical
that she clutched at her armrest, fear ful of actually falling out of
her seat.  She closed her eye's, but her head kept spinning; she could
almost feel the rush of wind against her cheeks.  Again, her stomach
seemed to plunge to her shoes; again, she felt as if she was tumbling
down.  And then.  mercifully, the motion stopped.

She opened her eyes carefully to find everything about her changed--the
lush countryside serene outside her window, her seatmate drowsing
peacefully beside her.  I must be getting sick, she thought, or closer
to starvation than I thought.  First thing I'll do when we get to
Luminaux is buy a steak.

And later that evening, five minutes after they'd pulled into the Blue
City, that was precisely what she did.  Mortimer's was run by a man who
had always been sympathetic to the Jacobites, and the cook let her
through the back door without a question.  But.  "I'll feed you," said
Sadie, the old woman who had been the chef here since before Tamar was
born, "but you can't be hanging around here.  They've come by a few
times, looking."

"The Jansai?"

"Yes, and each time Mortimer showed them the whole place, top to
bottom, before they were content to leave.  So it's not safe here."

"Can I spend the night?  I don't have anywhere to go."

Sadie pursed her lips.  "I'll ask him," she said.  "I don't know what
he'll say."

But Mortimer sent back a message saying she was welcome to the bed in
the cellar for a few days, but he couldn't promise to protect her if
the Jansai came looking.  That was as good a deal as Tamar expected,
and she accepted quickly.  She'd eaten the steak in about three
minutes, and Sadie took pity on her and brought her a bowl of
potatoes.

"I don't have any money," Tamar said.

Sadie shrugged.  "When did you ever?"

"I'll help clean up."

"If you want."  But the old woman was pleased.

It took Tamar two days to find a place to stay and a job at a small,
well-respected restaurant.  There was always work available in Luminaux
if you were willing to do menial tasks.  The city was filled with
artisans and intellectuals who were not always keen on scrubbing floors
and cleaning out stables.  Tamar didn't mind dirty work--she'd been an
ostler more than once, and prided herself on her ability to Calm the
edgiest-tempered horse--but this time she wanted a job with perks. Like
food.

At the restaurant, she could have all the scraps she wanted.  So she
was able to hoard her meager salary, paying out only what she needed
for rent.  And the single room in the dilapidated house on the edge of
the city was a miser's dream, so most of her money went into a sock
that she hid under the bed.  against the next journey.

It was still too soon to go to Ileah; the Jacobites were supposed to
reconvene there for another month and a half.  Tamar was guessing that
the other rebels were also discovering that there was little safety
anywhere else and that they may well head for Ileah a few weeks early.
In any case, she was betting that she would not be the only one there
if she went before the rendezvous date.

But she could not go penniless and starving.  So she worked for two
weeks, saving every copper.  Meanwhile, she visited the bazaars,
looking for bargains--sturdy shoes, clothes, a new backpack.  At the
cafe she ate everything she could stuff into her mouth, putting on a
few pounds against the chance that her food would run out again.  What
she didn't eat, she took home if it could be dried and packaged for
later. She had no end of nuts, raisins, apples, and crackers,
everything suitable for transport.

She did not go back to Mortimer's.  She kept away from bars and the
coffeehouses where her friends used to congregate.

She didn't try to track down the girl who had loved Zeke and had lived
with her mother and father in a three-room apartment over a used
bookstore.  There, the Jacobites had frequently gathered to debate
philosophy and dream about their version of a perfect world.  Tamar may
as well not have been in Luminaux at all, for all the comfort it gave
her.

One night, walking home from the restaurant, she took the long way back
to her room, through the center of town.  Luminaux had been christened
the Blue City because every building, every statue, every flower, every
cobblestone sported some shade of that cerulean color.  At night, the
soft streetlights were the most subtle shades of cobalt, sapphire, and
indigo from the walls and the awnings; even the mist rising from the
wet sidewalks seemed tinted with turquoise.

But color was not all that made Luminaux rich.  On every street corner,
stooped old musicians crouched over scratched cellos, trios of young
girls paused to sing exquisite harmonies, painters set up their
landscapes on easels and offered to draw portraits on the spot.  All
night long, vendors sold pies, licorice sticks, beer, and hot coffee.
And that was just in the streets.  If you had the money for the
entrance fee, you could go into any one of hundreds of restaurants and
taverns, try the food, listen to the music, watch the theater, or join
the debate.  Luminaux was a city not only of beauty, but of
possibilities.

Anything you wanted could be had there.

Except safety.

Tamar paused outside a darkened doorway and listened to a pair of
trumpets weaving a silver melody.  She had spent much of her life in
Luminaux and never once walked into an establishment like this.  Hadn't
had the time, hadn't had the inclination.  She had been too intent on
changing the world, formulating plans, reading manifestos.  And all it
had netted her was the most solitary evening of her life, far from her
friends (if her friends were still alive), far from realizing any of
her dreams.  Sometimes it seemed it would be easier to lay down all the
burdens, philosophical and real, and stroll into a place like this and
order a couple of bottles of wine.  And drink both of them to the
dregs.

She hunched her shoulders once against the chill of the spring evening,
then put her feet in motion again and continued on home.

The question was how to get to Ileah, which was far from any commercial
bus route--and an abandoned settlement at that.  Seventy-five or a
hundred years ago it had been an Edori sanctuary, one of the tracts of
land put aside for exclusive use of the nomadic tribes who were being
crowded out of existence by exploding industrial population.  But like
all the other sanctuaries it had been deserted when the Edori began
their mass emmigration to Ysral.  Even while they lived in Ileah it had
not been much of a city by anyone's standards.  The Edori were gypsies,
campers, itinerant folk who did not put much stock in permanent
structures or municipal bylaws.

"It's got half a dozen tumbledown cottages, or maybe they're
storerooms--whatever, a few ratty buildings and one working well,"
Conran had told them.  It had been Conran's idea, of course, to meet in
Ileah.  Since Jacob Fairman's death a quarter century ago, Conran had
been the de facto leader of the Jacobites.  "It's far from the main
highways, so it's virtually ~a'tiled that no Jansai will wander
through.  I can't imagine that travelers will stumble upon us,
actually."

"How did you find it?"  Jani had asked him, but Conran had only smiled.
It was a stupid question.  If it had happened in Samaria, if it
existed in any of the three provinces, he would know about it.  Conran
knew everything.

He had drawn them a large communal map, insisted they memorize it, and
then destroyed it.  No one had been allowed to copy it so that in case
they were captured, they would not inadvertently lead their enemies to
their friends.  Tamar had studied the map for days.  If she closed her
eyes now, she could see the red line leading her from Luminaux to Ileah
through the variegated terrain of Jordana.

But how to get there?  She couldn't afford to buy a horse: she couldn't
honestly rent one, since she was unlikely ever to return.  If she
walked, it would take her weeks, and she couldn't pay for the food she
would need for a journey that lasted that long.  Castelana, the nearest
major city, was a hundred miles from Ileah; she could take a bus there
and walk the rest of way, she supposed.  If she covered thirty miles a
day on foot, the last leg of the trip would only take three days.  It
seemed her best option.

But then she got lucky, for the first time in the past months.  The
woman who worked beside her in the kitchen took the opportunity one
evening to share her problems with Tamar.

"It's a terrible thing not to trust your own daughter, but it is," the
woman said.  "I know I've raised her right, and know it's time she was
trusted on her own, but I'm a mother and I worry."

"Troubles, Ellen?"  Tamar asked absently.  Ellen was motherly and
fretful, and Tamar found her annoying but harmless.  They had not
become close, but they had managed to work together in passable
harmony.

"My girl.  Sophie.  She's only seventeen.  Edward has been courting her
since the time she was fourteen, and I know that they plan to marry. He
wants to take her to Stockton to meet his mother--now, doesn't that
just prove that he's a good boy and he's serious about my daughter? But
they'll be four or five days on the road, and you know any innkeeper
along the way will give them a single room if they ask for it, and I
just don't think that I can trust the two of them to behave
themselves."

If they've been courting for three years, they've had plenty of time to
become lovers, Tamar wanted to say, but there was no reason to shred
Ellen's comfortable illusions.  Instead she closed her eyes briefly,
recalling Conran's map of Samaria.  "Stockton?"

she repeated.  "Isn't that up around Semorrah?"

She knew it wasn't.  "No, it's practically in the Caitana mountains!"
Ellen exclaimed.  "I'm sure they're lovely people in Stockton, but you
just can't expect them to be as civilized as the Luminauzi."

"I have a friend in Stockton," Tamar said slowly.  "I haven't visited
her in at least two years."

"Well, I wish you were going to visit her now."  Tamar pivoted to face
Ellen and tried not to look too excited.  "That's what I meant," she
said in a mild voice.  "If you think u could spare me from the kitchen
for a couple of weeks.  If it would ease your mind any.  I'd be glad to
go to Stockton with your daughter and her friend to play chaperon."
Ellen's face lit up; she clapped her hands together and wagged them
under her chin like a child at a magic show.  "You would?  Really, you
would?  Of course I can spare you!  For something like this!  And you
could share a room with Sophie and the trip would cost you hardly
anything, and then I could be sure she was properly watched after.
Because you're a serious one, you are, and it's easy to tell you know
what's right and proper.  I'd feel so relieved if I knew you were with
them."

Tamar smiled.  "When do they leave?"

"The day after tomorrow.  If you can be ready that quickly?  I'm sure
they'd be willing to wait a day or two."

"I can be ready.  I need to buy a few things, but I can get those this
evening.  What time do they depart?  And how are they traveling?"

They were taking Edward's uncle's cart and team, though Ellen assured
Tamar that it was far grander than an ordinary cart or she would not
have countenanced Sophie traveling so far in it.  Tamar nodded, but she
was not deceived.  A cart was a cart, whether or not someone had
thought to install padded seats and an overhead tarp.  It would be
miserable in the rain, frigid in the cold, drafty in the wind, and bone
wrenching every mile of the way.  Still, it was transport, and Tamar
was not about to sneer at any unexpected windfalls.

Accordingly, she speeded up her preparations to depart, paid off her
landlord, packed up her bundles of dried food, and readied herself for
the journey.  Two days later she was saying hello to Sophie, farewell
to Ellen, and good-bye forever to Luminaux.

Her travel companions were much as she had pictured them.

 Sophie was a little more luminous than she would have expected
Ellen's daughter to be, but the dewy glow could have been produced by
love or the mere fact of being seventeen, and would wear off within a
couple of years.  Edward looked to be ~stud industrious, and two or
three years the girl's senior.  Tamar was aeons older than either of
them, but she greeted them as courteously as possible and threw her
luggage into the back of the cart.

She was pleased to note that Ellen had not lied: The cart was outfitted
with not only the cushioned seat that the driver could share with a
passenger, but two padded benches facing each other in the rear of the
wagon.  As she'd expected, there was a light frame built into the back
of the cart, over which a tarpaulin could be stretched if the weather
turned bad.  It wasn't luxurious, but it wasn't contemptible either.

"Do you mind riding in the back of the wagon?"  Sophie asked her
anxiously before they had even climbed in for the first time.  "It's
just that Edward and I have so much to talk about and I'd really rather
sit next to him for the whole trip."

Tamar smiled.  On the whole, she would prefer not having to make
conversation with either of her fellow travelers.  "The back suits me
just fine," she said.  "But you can tell Edward I'm willing to take a
turn driving if he gets tired.  I'm a pretty good hand with horses."

Edward, overheating, looked doubtful.  "They're my unclle's horses," he
said.  "I don't think he'd want me to trust them to just anybody."

Tamar shrugged.  "I've worked at the Lamphouse and ~l Banner," she
said, naming two of the better-known stables in Luminaux.  "And I used
to drive passengers from the Hotel to Port Clara in the hotel's
carriage.  You can trust me with horses.  But I don't blame you for
being cautious.  You don't know me."

"She's a hard worker," Ellen put in, having audited all this from the
sidelines.  "Always shows up on time.  You can trust her."

"Well, maybe," Edward said, making no promises.  "Are you ready?"

Sophie quickly hugged her mother one last time.  Tamar hopped into the
back of the cart and made herself as comfortable as possible.  In a few
moments she was waving good-bye to Luminaux, to the life she'd known
best, and they were on the road to Stockton.

The first two days passed in utter and complete boredom, punctuated
only by moments of severe discomfort, as the cart jounced briskly down
the road toward Stockton.  The road, at least these two days, was
relatively good--paved and in excellent repair--since it was one of the
country's major highways and accommodated a great deal of vehicular
traffic.  Of course, any time a truck or bus roared up behind them,
Edward was forced to pull his wagon to the side of the road, and even
then the horses neighed and strained against the traces.  The fumes
left behind by the big vehicles were noxious and enduring, and they
were all coughing by noon of the first day.

But the weather held fine and the horses appeared to be in good
condition, and she was on her way, so Tamar gave herself up to monotony
and let the hours roll indifferently by.

The first night, they stopped in a town so small it had not been on
Conran's map, but it did boast a couple of decent looking inns.  Edward
chose one at random and bespoke two rooms.  The three of them ate a
somewhat awkward dinner together, Sophie making attempts at
conversation with Tamar, who was not greatly interested.

"So, my mother tells me you have a friend in Stockton that you're going
to visit.  What's her name?"

"Elizabeth," Tamar replied.

"And where did you meet her?  Did she used to live in Luminaux?"

Jovah save her, she was going to have to make up an entire history.
"Yes.  We were neighbors while I was in school.  We were very close."

"Why did she move away?"

"To marry."

Edward looked up.  "Really?  Maybe I know her husband.  I lived up in
Stockton, you know."

Sweet god singing.  Worse and worse.  "His name is James Shelton.  I
don't know that he was raised there, though.  I think he moved to
Stockton to take a job."

Edward raised his eyebrows.  "Not much commerce in Stockton.  Unless
he's in banking.  There's a branch office of the Exchequer in Stockton,
you know."

"Banking.  I think that's it," Tamar said faintly.

"Do they have children?"  Sophie asked.

"One.  Born a couple of months ago.  That's why I wanto visit."

Sophie clapped her hands together (a gesture she must have copied from
her mother).  She appeared to be one of those fortunate women who
became sloppily romantic at the thought of holding an infant.  "Oh, how
wonderful!  What did you buy her for a baby gift?"

"I didn't have time to get one.  We left on such short notice--"

"Oh, but you have to bring them something!  Their baby!"

"I'll pick something up in Stockton.  See what they need--"

"No, no, you should have something in your hands when you arrive. 
Maybe if we have time tonight or tomorrow night, we can find something
in one of these little towns along the way."

Tamar's protests were quickly overruled, and she inwardly seethed for
the rest of the meal.  As if she had any additional dollars to be
throwing away on the fictional child of imaginary friends!  She had
best guard her tongue every minute for the rest of the journey.

The meal once over, they experienced another strained few minutes as
they ascended the stairs to their rooms, side by side in the well-lit
corridor.  Tamar headed straight for her door unlocked it, making no
comment to Sophie.  "I'll be right in," the girl said, and Tamar
nodded. She closed the door behind her but left it unlocked, and true
to her word, Sophie entered a few minutes later.

Tamar had already gotten herself ready for bed and climbed under the
covers.  Sophie moved moodily around the room brushing out her long
hair and sighing before the mirror.

"It's very hard to be seventeen," she burst out at last, putting down
her brush and turning to face Tamar.

Oh, dear god, no, Tamar thought, but Sophie rushed on before Tamar
could stop her.  No one realizes that I am a grown woman--that I know
what I want and am perfectly capable of taking care of myself and
making wise decisions.  Everyone tells me, "Oh, when you're older,
you'll understand, you'll see we didn't want you to do such and such.
You'll thank us for making you do thus and so."  But they're basing
everything on their own lives!  On their own experiences!  They don't
realize that mine are so much different!  My feelings are so much
different than theirs."

Tamar didn't quite have the heart to flounce over in bed and face the
wall, but she did close her eyes.  Sophie appeared not to notice. "From
the time I was quite young, I was very mature.  I helped my mother with
my younger sisters and brothers--and I worked, too!  I know how to be
responsible with money and I know how to hold together a household. Do
you know how much it costs to feed five people for a week?  I know, to
the penny!  And yet everyone says I am too young to marry.  They even
think I'm too young to fall in love."

Don't ask my opinion, Tamar warned her silently.  Don't invite my
comments, I'll tell you, I swear I will.

"Don't you think it is one of a parent's duties to know when to let
go?"  Sophie went on, unheeding.  "Don't you think a mother should
realize when her daughter is old enough to be responsible?"

Tamar's eyes flew open.  "My mother and father were ~tour-tiered when I
was a baby," she said flatly.  "I was raised by friends of theirs who
didn't have enough time to take care of their own children, so I was
passed from hand to hand according to who had a free moment to spare
that day.  By the time I was ten, I was deciding where to live, what to
eat, and who to trust.  By the time I was seventeen, I had taken a
lover, been abandoned by a lover, seen a friend kill herself, seen a
friend kill another man.  I think if you're seventeen, and you have a
chance to be your mother's daughter for another year, or another
minute, you should take that chance.  Life on your own is not nearly as
glorious as you might think.  It is hard, it is bitter, and every
minute of it wears you down.  That's what I think."

And in the absolute silence that followed, she closed her eyes again
and turned on her side.  Sophie did not say another word, switched off
the light and climbed into bed.  Tamar fell in-asleep.

So she was not surprised when, the next morning, all of the ~ of the
previous day returned.  On the front seat, she sat as close to Edward
as his grip on the reins would allow, whispering endearments or gossip
in his ear.  Tamar sat with one elbow on the back of her bench,
watching the countryside roll back behind them.  If her life had
depended on it, she could not have come up with a single conciliatory
thing to say.

Dinner that night was more relaxed, because they had a table with a
family of six traveling southward to Luminaux.  Sophie, of course,
instantly commandeered the baby, while Edward talked road conditions
with the patriarch.  Tamar concentrated on her food.  When she was
done, she excused herself and went up to her room.

Again, she was half-asleep before Sophie entered.  She stood
uncertainly in the middle of the room.

"I hope I didn't wake you up last night," she said.  "I'm a restless
sleeper, and my sisters have often complained that ~ through my
dreams."

"Didn't hear a thing," Tamar said.  "I fall asleep in seconds and never
wake up again till dawn.  Don't worry about me."

"I'm glad to hear it," Sophie said.  "I'll try to be quiet."

So of course Tamar simply had to turn over and feign sleep right away.
Sophie waited a good half hour, sitting motionless on her own bed,
before rising to her feet and tiptoeing from the room.  The door made
almost no sound as she closed it behind her.  Tamar grinned in the dark
and allowed herself to drift to sleep.

After that, things went a little better.  Edward seemed more at ease
and Sophie simply glowed, radiant with the retained ~fire passion.
Tamar couldn't help envying her a little--youth, innocence, and
happiness; it seemed unfair that someone should have all three--but it
was no part of her plan to thwart the young lovers.  She did not care
what they did in the dark as long as by daylight, they continued on
toward Stockton.

The third day, Edward had even mellowed enough and asked Tamar if she
was still interested in driving.  No doubt he wanted an opportunity to
put both arms around his beloved as they cuddled in the back of the
wagon, but the offer SUITED Tamar just fine.  Accordingly, she took a
hand at the reins, the next fifty miles passed a little more
pleasantly.

"You drive well," Edward told her that night over dinner.  "It's a
little odd for a woman to be so used to handling a ~tcan."

Tamar grinned.  "I can do a lot of odd things," she said.  "I can drive
a horse.  I can shoe a horse.  I can cook a meal for fifty.  I can make
a campfire, and I can repair an electric ~ if it isn't too far gone.  I
can drive a truck if I have to."

"You must have lived a strange life," Sophie said, her face ~ by the
memory of what Tamar had told her the other night.

Tamar looked at her and shrugged.  "It was my life," she said.  "It
seemed natural to me.  But I admit there are things in life that appeal
to me more."

It was on these terms of tentative goodwill that they continued on into
Stockton.  They arrived at the little town after a few hours on the
fifth day of their trip, and Edward carefully negotiated the narrow
streets.

you want me to let you off?"  he asked.  "Where does your friend
live?"

~~~~[No OCR corrections have been made beyond this point.]

Tamar had debated this point for most of the morning, and she answered
with partial honesty.  "It doesn't matter," she said.  "My friend lives
a little outside of town, and I'll be travelling on to find her." 
Sophie shot her a quick, troubled look.  "We could take you to her
house, or wherever she lives," she offered.

"No," Tamar said.  "But thank you."

"We plan to leave for Luminaux again in four days," Edward said over
his shoulder.  "Where should we pick you up again?"

"I won't be ready to return that quickly," Tamar said gently.  "So just
go back without me."

Now Sophie looked even more troubled.  "My mother will be unhappy" she
said.

"I know.  She'll think I lied to her.  But I think you will be as
responsible without me along as you have been with me."

"I meant--she likes you.  She'll be sorry you're not coming back.  Or
do you plan to come back sometime?"

"Not anytime soon, I'm afraid.  Tell her I'm sorry.  She was always
kind to me."

"Are you sure we can't take you to this friend's place?"  Edward
persisted.  He had pulled the cart to a halt and now was turned on his
seat to look back at her.  Like Sophie, he looked grave and worried.

"I'm sure."

"Is there really someone you're going to?"  Sophie asked.

Tamar smiled.  "Yes, there's really a person and a place I'm going to,"
she said. "I'll be fine.  Don't worry."

And before they could voice another concern, she had gathered up her
belongings and hopped from the cart.  It was not her wish to be rude,
so she waved good-bye a few times as she began easing her way down the
sidewalk.  Edward merely nodded, but Sophie lifted her hand and waved
dispiritedly, as if she was watching her best friend say farewell for
the last time.  It  was a strange experience, Tamar found, to have a
virtual stranger anxious over her welfare.  It was not quite as
annoying as she would have expected.

There were several hours of daylight left, and she had no reason to
dawdle in Stockton, so she set out immediately on foot.  Ileah, she
judged, was forty or fifty miles due south and she could not possibly
make it there before nightfall, but she could get a good start.  And
she didn't need to be wasting any money on hotel rooms.  She could camp
out for the night.

Accordingly, she settled into a steady pace, not too ~ttxin and headed
southward.  This side road was not nearly as good as the northeastern
highway had been--indeed, it was little more than a trail, and it
obviously saw very little use.  Which was good for Tamar, excellent for
the Jacobites.  She was not much of a tracker, but she studied the
dusty road, trying to determine if other travelers had passed this way
recently, or if she would be the first to arrive at Ileah.  She thought
she discerned hoof prints in the dirt; soon enough, she would know.

She made a cold camp when it got too dark to see, and on a patch of
grass that looked softer than it really was.  Her bones hurt when she
rose in the morning.  She cleaned up as best she could and continued
on.  The morning sun was barely strong enough to chase away the chill
she had from sleeping on the ground, but by noon, walking had her hot
enough to wish for a cool breeze.  She was remembering now why she had
always hated traveling on foot.

But shortly after noon she was in sight of her destination From a
couple of miles away, she could see the poorly stone cottages clumped
together around what looked like a central green.  At this distance,
she could not see movement or hear noise--or even see smoke, which was
odd.  Ileah had never wired for electricity, so any heat or power would
have to come from fire.  But there did not appear to be a single drift
of smoke coming from any of the buildings, not even when she drew close
enough to hail the settlement.  Was it possible she was the first one
here after all?

But no, she saw as soon as she came within sight of the ~.

Jacobites had arrived early.  And the Jansai had followed.

There were maybe ten bodies strewn helter-skelter across the center of
the park, heads at abrupt angles, arms outflung before them on the
ground. Blood was everywhere, on their clothes, on the grass, rusty
brown in the pale brown dirt.  Tamar moved between them with a
sleepwalker's unreality, bending down at each still form, checking for
a pulse, checking for breath.  None of them was living.  She whispered
their names as she moved between them--"Daniel, Dawn, Martha, Evan,
Kate, Ruth"--because someone must mark their passing, and mark the site
of their deaths.  Not Jovah, of course--there was no god: he did not
care who lived and died.  But someone.  The nameless deity the Edori
worshiped.  Someone.  No one should die a death that went completely
unrecorded.

Hazed, she moved through the rest of the sanctuary, searching for more
of her friends.  In one of the otherwise empty cottages, she found two
more bodies.  Almost all the other buildings were deserted.

But in the last hut she checked, she found another body.  And when she
put her hand to the red-stained chest, she felt the rib cage rise with
breath.  Her own lungs nearly collapsed from shok.

"Peter!"  she cried, kneeling beside him on the dirt floor.  "Peter.
can you hear me?  It's Tamar!  Can you hear me?  Oh, the false god save
us, what can I do, what can I do ... Peter, I'm going to clean you up
and try to patch your wounds.  Just lie still, I'll do what I can
..."

She flew back outside, to the dilapidated well in the center of the
green.  One of these early arrivals had pushed off the cover and
t'found a usable bucket, and tied it to the stone edge of the well with
a long rope.  Tamar flung it down and heard it hit water, and hauled it
up as fast as her hands could pull.  The water was icy cold and would
no doubt send an injured man into trauma, but it was all she had.

She spent the next two hours examining Peter, binding his wounds,
rolling him onto a thin mat, and silently praying to a god.  Every time
she caught herself asking for divine intervention she clamped her mouth
shut and forced her mind to her task, but over and over again the words
began cycling of their own accord through her brain.  Conran had said
once that it was easy to be an atheist in a kind world; it was when
affairs were desperate that every man's inner strength was tested.  She
had never quite believed him before.

Peter appeared to have been both bludgeoned and stabbed.  It was hard
to tell whether the concussion or the wound had been worse.  By the
fact that the bleeding seemed to have stopped completely, Tamar judged
that it had been many hours since the attackers had arrived.  By the
fact that Peter was still alive, she guessed that it had not been more
than a day or two since they had passed through.  Perhaps theirs were
the horse tracks she thought she had seen on the road from Stockton.

On a normal day, she would have had nothing resembling medicine in her
backpack, but she was still carrying the manna-root salve that Ezra had
given her.  She spread some of it on the dozen open cuts along Peter's
neck and chest and arms, then bound everything up with the cleanest rag
she could find from the items in the cottage with him.  Not sure it was
a good idea or a bad one, she trickled some water down his throat.  If
he didn't throw it all up, she would follow later this evening with
broth. She knew that a man could last days, sometimes a couple of
weeks, without eating; she knew the weaker he was, the more likely it
was he would die.

Next a fire, because he was chilled straight through, and on the ground
for a day or two had done him no good.  She went outside again and
dragged back branches and enough wood to get a good blaze started.  The
cottage had been built to accommodate a central fire; there was a small
circul in the middle of the roof.  Or perhaps a century of neglect had
caused the ceiling to cave in.  In any case, the smoke escaped easily
and Peter could be brought as close to the blaze as she dared.

After that, there was little she could do for him except allow his body
to heal.  She searched through the possessions the Jacobites had left
in one of the abandoned cabins till she found some cookware, then she
put some dried meat into a pot of water and let this simmer over her
fire. Dinner for the wounded man, if she could induce him to eat it. 
She didn't think could swallow a bite herself.

It was afternoon before she had finished all these tasks.  she stepped
outside the cabin for a moment to take a breath of air.  And survey the
scene before her.  Twelve bodies it all.

She did not think she could dig twelve graves, but the Jacobites were a
clannish group; they would not mind lying side by side, body by body,
whispering to each other through eternity of the atrocities they had
seen in their lifetimes.  A communal grave would do for them.

Accordingly, she next searched for a shovel among the boxes and
backpacks and duffel bags that had been piled up in the cottage
apparently chosen as a storage room.  Someone had carried a fair
collection of belongings on a small, wheeled cart, pulling it by hand,
no doubt, since there didn't seem to be any sign of horses here; of
course, the Jansai could have appropriated any animals they found.  On
the cart she found a shovel and an ax and an array of knives.  Someone
had come prepared for chopping out a new life in a primitive
settlement.

On the west edge of Ileah, Tamar began to dig.  The ground was still
tough from winter frosts, and she found it harder going than she had
expected.  And nothing would be worse than stacking bodies in a grave
and finding that it was too shallow.  Doggedly, she continued, till her
back ached and her arms trembled, and the light began to fail.  Well,
she would have to finish it tomorrow.

But she could not leave her friends all night to the vicious curiosity
of night animals.  One by one, she pulled the ten bodies from the green
to the cabin where the other two had fallen, and she built a fire in
the open doorway.  Here they were as safe as she could make them.

From time to time she returned to check on Peter and to give him more
water.  Every once in a while, when she lifted his head, he would
mutter feebly in an incomprehensible tongue.  She wasn't sure; she
thought that was encouraging.  She spoke to him as she wiped his face
and tilted water down his throat: You're doing so well, I'm sure you'll
be fine, one more drink, in the morning you'll be so much better ...
She didn't know who she was reassuring, the man on the pallet or
herself.

In the evening, he did swallow a few spoonfuls of broth, and opened his
mouth for more when she paused, afraid to overdo it.  She was so
heartened by this that, once he fell back into a troubled sleep, she
made herself eat the rest of the soup.  She was not hungry, but
starving herself would serve no one.  She must keep up her strength.

Although now she was as exhausted as, in the whole course of her
tumultuous existence, she could ever remember.  Every muscle in her
body shook with fatigue, and her mind was dull with horror.  She
checked the fire burning at the cot door and then returned to the
cottage she would share this with Peter.  Lying on a thin carpet of
other people's belongings she fell soundly asleep before she had time
even to review events of the day.

Cold woke her once in the middle of the night, and she got up to
replenish both fires.  Peter moaned once, softly.  She gave him more
water and checked his bandages.  No blood appeared to be seeping
through.  Perhaps that was because he had no more blood left.  She
didn't know.  She couldn't tell.  She stumbled back to her bed and
slept again.

In the morning, she divided her time between tending to Peter and
digging the grave.  She cooked an apple in her stew pot and mashed it
up, spooning the sauce into her patient's mouth.  He ate it; another
good sign.  Back outside, she dug deeper into the ground, until she hit
what felt like bedrock.  Then she moved outward, making the hole wider,
big enough to hold a row of bodies, or two.

By noon, Peter was beginning to move choppily on the floor and the
grave was completed.  She fed him more broth and a substantial lunch
before attempting her most woeful task And then slowly, methodically,
not letting herself think about it too much, she dragged one body after
the other from the cottage to the grave, and buried her friends.

She was sweating and weeping as she heaved the lastt shovelful of dirt
onto the fresh mound.  She struggled for she drove the spade in the
dirt and leaned against it, all gone.  She should say something; there
should be a final farewell.  The dead should not have to leave this
world until their names were spoken one last time.

She said all twelve names very slowly, paused to think then named them
again, one by one.  "Daniel.  You could ~ all night without stopping,
and we laughed at your fierceness, but I wish I could take some of your
fierceness now into my heart.  Dawn, you were well named, because when
you walked into a room, it was as if sunrise repeated.  Martha.  You
taught me how to skin game and cook it over an open fire, so that I
would never go hungry and neither would anyone around me.  Evan ... I
spoke to you maybe three times in my life, but each time you said a
kind word.  I will try to ~ that kindness."

She pronounced six more names, six more eulogies.  She paused to run
her hand over her forehead.  Her hair stuck to her face and then to her
damp hands.  Two to go.  "Kate.  You ~ one.  People said I was so
solemn, but for you, everything was intense.  Everything mattered. 
Everything was right or wrong.  I'll miss your certainty.  And Ruth. 
At any time, in joy or sorrow.  Now a memory, for today."

She folded her hands across the worn wooden handle of the shovel and
leaned her forehead against her knuckles.  And sobbed like she had not
sobbed at any point in her life that she could remember.

At nightfall, Peter was thrashing about enough that Tamar was alarmed.
She didn't want him to hurt himself or disturb his bandages.  He had
opened his eyes several times, though he did not seem to recognize her,
but he was conscious as he took his food and he watched her as she fed
him. But sleep would not come to him again, or at least quiet sleep,
and she was afraid.

To calm him, she began to sing.  Music had been one of the many things
most Jacobites disdained--because music was the medium through which
the angels prayed to their mistaken god--and yet a few wayward melodies
had found their way into her head and stayed there.  Well, you could
not live in Luminaux and be completely indifferent to music, and she
had always found its power to be surprising and complex.  The right
song could enhance a mood or change it utterly; a few pensive notes
mourned over by a violin could set her to dreaming, a flare of
woodwinds could send her dancing.  It was not only the angels who could
draw power from music.

What she sang now was a melody she had heard a few times on the streets
of Luminaux, a sweet, wordless tune that had somehow gotten entangled
in her ears and settled down for good at the back of her throat.  From
time to time over the past year, she had caught herself humming its
wandering notes, and so it had stuck with her through repetition as
well as charm.  It was a lullaby or a love song, something gentle and
romantic, and as she sang it now Peter settled and grew still.

 There were no lyrics, so she made them up.  "Sleep Peter, sleep my
friend.  Tamar watches over you.  The stars over you.  The earth turns
under you.  All will be well ..."  words, meaningless phrases, but they
fit the melody and seemed to give him peace.  He grunted once more and
turned to his side, and then he fell into a deep sleep.

Tamar was right behind him.  The past few weeks--of physical exertion
and emotional turmoil had left her completely drained.  She had no
reserves of energy or agility left.  Tomorrow ... so much to do.  She
must look for food, hunt if she had time, search the unlikely spring
bark and berries.  Her own supplies were low and she hadn't found any
extra food in the Jacobites' storeroom.  Perhaps Jansai had taken those
provisions as well.  Well, she knew how to set traps, and Ileah wasn't
far from a river, mountain-fed perhaps, if Peter was well enough, she
could leave part of the day to fish for food.  She'd need a rod then,
and some kind of fishhook ... Her thoughts darted more slowly to plan,
and she drifted off to sleep.

Peter was better in the morning, but not exactly well.  As she fed him
another mashed apple, he looked her straight in the eye and said,
Tamar."  She was so excited that she almost dropped the spoon, but when
she cried out his name in response, he merely looked away, across the
room.  But it was a good sign.  She knew it was a good sign.  When he
fell back, she hurried outside and stood for a moment in the doorway,
looking around.

The stream was west.  Slightly east was wilder country, she might
expect to find rabbits and squirrels.  She could couple traps first,
look for the few edible plants that were available at this time of
year, come back to check Peter, then head off toward the river by noon.
Even if she had gone five hours, he should be well enough.  She would
have time to feed him once more before he slept again for the night.

Of course, she would need a rod, and if she had time, she might be able
to fashion a bow--of course, she didn't have arrows--but there might be
game birds, now that she thought of it, because she could hear wings
overhead, and she looked quickly to see if it was grouse, pheasant,
geese, or ~.  But it was huge.  It was not a bird at all.  It had great
monstrous wings, just now extended to a fl'i ldth.  Jovah, dear Jovah,
please god, if there was only a

The great wings tilted backward, the body straightened, angled toward
the earth.  A man, an angel, and he was on the ground not ten yards
from her.  He raised his hand as if to fling thunnderbolts, and Tamar
did not pause to think or even utter more doomed prayer.  She took off
as fast as she could run, leaving the false sanctuary of Ileah.

CHAPTER SIX

The month after the Gloria, Jared spent mostly in transit.  He did
return to Montevede about ten days, making sure everything was well
there, before heading off to Cedar Hills.  But at Monteverde, as usual,
his mother and sister had everything well in hand.  They even pretended
to be surprised to see him, which annoyed him, although it was supposed
to shame him into being more attentive to the hold's needs.

"Why, Jared!  It is Jared, isn't it?"  his sister greeted him.  "It's
been so long since you've been here--but, no, you must be my brother
after all.  How nice to see you."

And she leaned forward to invite a kiss on her cheek.  Catherine was
eight years his senior, placid, ironic, and frighteningly efficient,
and it was easier to admire her than to like her.  Jared kissed her,
dutifully but briefly, then turned to give his mother the same
salute.

"We heard that your singing was wonderful at the Gloria," his mother
said, greeting him more kindly than had Catherine.  "Didn't you say
Mercy would be singing with you?"

"Yes.  The duet went quite well, or so everyone told us."

"So tell us about your adventures on the Plain of Sharon," Catherine
invited, sinking to a low seat and gesturing him to do the same. 
Almost unwillingly, he did.

"No adventures.  I visited with Mercy and Christian, avoided Bael and
Mariah.  Pretty much the same as always."

, "Did that Gaelin girl catch up with you?"  Catherine asked[ "You
know, what s her name, Zeb Gaelin's daughter.  She was here asking
about you a day or two before the Gloria, and she said she'd look for
you there."  Jared felt a swift heat rise to his cheeks, not sure if it
was anger or embarrassment.  Beth Gaelin had made no secret of her
fascination with him over the past three years, and Catherine
considered it infinitely amusing.  Beth was a pretty enough girl,
daughter of a Manadavvi lordling, with all the acceptable society
manners.  Jared admitted to a little ill-judged dalliance when he'd
first met her, but it had been nothing serious.  Nothing to inspire
such devotion.  She had become something of a nuisance ever since.  He
had been known to accept or decline invitations based on whether or not
Beth would be present; that was how much he desired to avoid her.

"No," he said shortly.  "If she was there, I didn't see her."

"Jared, dear," his mother said, "will you be staying for dinner?  Or
must you leave again right away?  We get to see you so seldom, but I'm
not complaining.  I know how busy you are."

Ah, but trust his mother, in her sweetest voice, to drive the knife
deeper than Catherine would ever bother.  "I'll be here a week or two,
or longer if you need me," he said with hard-won courtesy.  "I do have
plans to go to Cedar Hills."

"Oh, leave when you will," Catherine said breezily.  "I don't think we
ever really need you.  But it would be nice to have dinner with you,
for a change."

He forced a smile.  "Count on it," he said.

But that had been the most unpleasant part of his quick stay at his own
hold.  The first hour or so was always spent hearing his mother and
sister remind him how carelessly he ran Monteverde.  But after that,
they were happy enough informing him of all the events that had
transpired in his absence and how they had handled any small crisis,
and the rest of the visit passed amiably.  He had completely recovered
his usual sunny disposition when, about ten days later, he took off for
Cedar Hills.

It was a two-day flight, and he considered stopping for a day or two at
Semorrah.  But he wasn't sure how long Lucinda and her aunt would be
staying at Cedar Hills, and he didn't want to miss them.  Therefore, he
broke his flight overnight at the river city of Castelana, and
continued on into Jordana the following day.

"Though you needn't have hurried," Mercy told him privately once he'd
arrived.  "It's looking like Gretchen might never want to leave.  She
wanders around with a somewhat dazed expression on her face, half
longing and half pain, or so it seems to me.  Like she's ruing what she
missed all these years."

"Maybe they'll move back, then," Jared said.

"It's crossed my mind.  In a day or two I might suggest it to her."

"And then ask her why she left in the first place."

"I told you that."

"You told me your guesses.  Not the same thing."

"So what do you think of Lucinda?"

"I've only exchanged a dozen words with her.  But she's exactly as I
would have expected."

"In what way?"

He had not tried to put it into words for himself.  "Less.  naive," he
said at last.  "Not sophisticated, exactly, but self assured even in a
foreign and intimidating environment.  She's not your giddy backwater
farm girl.  But still ~son of fresh and unspoiled."

"If heredity counts for anything, she could be the most stubborn born
and strong-willed girl on the planet.  Nobody's fool.  of course,
Gretchen wasn't exactly a country bumpkin when she left here.  She'd be
bound to give the girl an education that out of the ordinary."

What happens to her next?  She seems to think she's heading back to
Angel Rock someday soon.  Seems a pity to lose her forever to a place
like that."

"I'm working on it.  I'd like her to consider Cedar Hills home."

Jared stayed in the southern continent for four days, flying down to
Luminaux for three of them just because it was a pity to miss any
chance to visit the Blue City.  When he prepared  to leave for
Semorrah, Mercy showed a very faint disapproval.

"I saw you cozying up to Christian at the Gloria," she said "What are
the two of you hatching up now?"

"Nothing, as far as I know," he said, surprised.  "Why would you say
that?"

She shrugged irritably and toyed with the ruby bracelets on her arm.
"Sometimes I think Christian's keeping bad company these days."

"Isaiah Lesh?"  Jared asked.  "They've been friends forever."

"Isaiah's a troublemaker."

"All the Manadavvi are.  So far it's been minor trouble bothering you
about Christian?  He's one of your closest ..."

"He's spouting anti-Bael talk these days."

"He always has.  So have you and I, when it comes to it."

"We don't like Bael.  But we don't seek to oust him."

"Come, now," he protested. "Christian's a merchant.  He knows supply
and demand.  He wouldn't waste his energy trying to get rid of someone
who only has one more year of power."

Mercy spread her hands.  "You talk to him.  See what you think."

Jared gave her a solemn bow, but his eyes were laughing.  "I'll report
back to you, angela."

But her words had put him on guard, so that he noticed what he might
otherwise have disregarded when he arrived in Semorrah:  Christian was
keeping very interesting company indeed.

Jared arrived at the river city a little before sunset and flew in
lazily, as always, to enjoy the spectacular aerial view.  Built on a
tiny island in the middle of the Galilee River, Semorrah had been one
of the mercantile centers of Samaria almost since the country was
founded.  The whole city was constructed of a glinting white stone,
piled in layer after layer as building upon building crowded together
on the narrow island.  Not only was the architecture dense, it was
imaginative, decorated with dizzying spires, whimsical arches, and
friezes of great artistic complexity.  By night, as the colorful lights
of the city came up, Semorrah was startlingly beautiful to behold, a
magical place of glitter and moon-white stone.

In past decades, despite its prominence, Semorrah had been a difficult
city to get to.  The rushing water of the Galilee had made it nearly
impossible for engineers to build a bridge from the Bethel side of the
river, while from Semorrah to the Jordana bank, only a famously
unstable bridge had been constructed to span the water.  But that was
in the infancy of engineering, before the advent of the Gabriel Dam,
before scientists had perfected their theories of relative weight and
strength.

Fifty years ago Semorrah had become accessible, with broad, sturdy
bridges crossing to it from both sides of the river.  Traffic poured
across these overpasses in such a steady stream that the merchants had
had to hastily devise sensible restrictions, which included a ban on
all motorized vehicles.  The city was so small, with such narrow,
crooked streets, that trucks and transports could not negotiate its
lanes, and there was no possible way to enlarge them.  So anyone
wishing to bring cargo into Semorrah had to unload his merchandise at
one of the holding warehouses situated just outside Semorrah at the
foot of each bridge, and from there it would be transported by horse
cart to the private location.

This reliance on such antiquated methods of transportation gave
Semorrah a certain old-fashioned charm that heightened its already
considerable tourist appeal.  But Jared, and the men who traded there
daily, were not blinded to the real Semorrah.

It was a city of fast-paced, hard-hearted, completely ruthless and
thoroughly modern businessmen who never passed an opportunity to make a
dollar or undercut a competitor.  It was a place where you had to know
your facts, your assets, and your best friend's weakness to survive.
And nobody survived that cut-throat Semorrah lifestyle better or with
more suavity than Christian Avalone.

Which became evident within minutes of Jared's arrival at  The home
Christian had inherited from his father, a five-sided mansion
overlooking the River Walk.  A noiseless servant showed Jared instantly
to a library, where Christian was taking drinks with half a dozen other
visitors.

"Good!  You're here already.  You're just in time for a drop of
wine."

"Sounds good," Jared said, nodding to Ben Harfth and casually assessing
the rest of the company.  "The flight has made me thirsty."

"And it's excellent wine, since it came from country," Ben said in the
deliberate, well-bred voice that almost universal among the
Manadavvi.

"Always my preferred vintage," Jared said, accepting a glass from
Christian and sipping it cautiously.  Truth to tell, he wasn't much of
a drinker, wine or otherwise, but it was necessary to go through the
motions in such a situation.

"I think you know everyone here," Christian went on, still speaking to
the angel.  True enough: two Manadavvi landowners, three well-connected
Semorran merchants, one Castelana and a woman who was one of the
biggest landholders in ~stuttem Bethel.  "Although perhaps you haven't
had much chance to get to know Solomon Davilet?  He's just taken over
his father's business in Castelana."

"I was just in Castelana a few days ago," Jared said easily, moving
over to the merchant's side as Christian clearly wanted him to. "What's
your particular field?"

"Electronics," said Solomon eagerly.  "We were the company responsible
for wiring the Plain of Sharon for sound so the Gloria could be
broadcast across Samaria."

Which made him one of the cutting-edge corporate leaders in the country
and no big fan of the tecbnophobic Bael.  "I saw the microphones,"
Jared said.  "Did you have any way of gauging the success of the
broadcast?  How many people tuned in and so forth?"

"Well, we couldn't get numbers of listeners but we know how many
stations were set up to receive the signal, since we had to do advance
wiring at most of the individual receiver sites," the merchant replied.
"But I can tell you this.  There wasn't a city in Samaria of over one
thousand souls that didn't have a broadcast hookup, and in places like
Breven, there were maybe ten different sites."

"All commercial sites, though, right?"  Jared asked idly, though the
question was not idle at all.  "I mean, you're still broadcasting
business to business, aren't you, not going into private homes?"

"Mostly, but we have set up broadcast stations in a few individual
homes and complexes," Solomon said.

"Complexes?  Oh, Manadavvi compounds, you mean."

"Some of them.  And, for instance, Luminanzi schools."

"But unless the Gloria were being performed every day, what would these
people be listening to?"

"Well, that's just it.  You'd need a broadcast center providing some
sort of program for a certain number of hours a day and days a week.
Actually, you might be better off setting up a small series of regional
broadcast centers because of the difficulty of transmitting a clear
signal over a long range.  That's when tech nology goes hand in hand
with artistry, don't you see?"

"Seems like it's a long way off," Jared observed.

Solomon smiled.  Jared was suddenly and uncomfortably reminded of Bael;
the smile was a fanatic's intense expression.  "Not as long as you
think," he said.  "Not nearly as long."

Jared glanced around, but all the others appeared to be engrossed in
their own conversations.  Perhaps Christian expected Jared to learn
something important from this young entrepre  neur; perhaps he was
trying to distance the angel from the high rollers in the room.  "So do
you operate your own production and development divisions?"  he asked. 
"Or how do you encourage new technology?

"We have our own engineering staff, of course.  But often we import,
and then we fool around till we get a product that works for us."

"You import?"  Jared repeated blankly.

Solomon nodded.  "From Ysral."

"Ah," Jared said, nodding casually, though his skin prickled with
discovery. Definitely an ideological foe to angel Bael, as if he hadn't
already realized it.  "The school.  Do you go there yourself to look
over their new designs?

"Studied there," Solomon said proudly.  "I'm not a good engineer
myself.  Well, my father has been interested in transmission since I
was a child.  It seemed like a good idea to get some firsthand
knowledge if I was going to be carrying on the family business."

"So you must know the professors there.  That must give you a little
extra pull with them when you're looking at their products."

"Exactly.  The arrangement has worked well for all of us."  From across
the room, Jared could see Christian deep in conversation with Ben
Harth, but watching the angel closely nonetheless.  Surely Christian
had expected Solomon to share just this block of information with the
newest guest, though as a rule none of the merchants were particularly
open about imports when carrying on social discourse with an angel.
Then, had Christian told the others about Jared before he arrived? 
That he was safe to talk to?  Or that he should be sought for any
unorthodox opinions of his own?  It was no secret that technology was
trickling into Samaria despite Bael's best efforts, but before this, no
one had walked up to Jared and explained precisely how it was done.

"Dinner, then," Christian said, raising his pleasant voice.  "Is
everyone hungry?"

They all offered quiet affirmatives and filed out, Jared in rear.
Christian fell back to accompany the angel from the room.

"I congratulate you on your unmoved countenance," he said when they
were a few paces behind the others.  "You show no shock at all."

"Am I supposed to?"  Jared asked mildly.  "I thought you invited me
here because you enjoyed my company, not for my entertainment value for
your other friends.  Or were you hoping this little band of malcontents
would be gone before I arrived?"

"No, indeed, I would have been happy had you arrived a few hours
earlier.  They're all leaving in the morning, so you won't have another
good chance to talk to them."

"About what?  Accelerating the technological pace at which Samaria is
crawling through this century?"

"Exactly.  I knew you would understand immediately."

"It's not my pace to modify if I would."

"But would you?"  Christian murmured.  "That's the question at hand. If
you were in power.  If you were Archangel."

"I'm not Archangel now.  I have not been so named for the future.
Winning me to your cause is most likely a futile gesture."

"Not if any reasonable man--or woman--is selected by the god,"
Christian said in a pious voice that rang oddly hollow.  "You have
friends, and you're persuasive.  Where you show enthusiasm, others are
likely to follow."

"And what makes you think I am a convert?  Have I ever given you cause
to think so?"

"You've given me cause to think you'll listen to reason.  That's all we
ask.  It's only reasonable to see that our single hope of a secure
future lies in advanced technology."

They were at the doorway to the dining room now; the others were
seating themselves around the meticulously set table.  Jared hung back
a pace, lowering his voice still more.

"Our only hope of a secure future?"  he said, his tones disbelieving.
"What can you possibly mean?"

Christian had obligingly paused beside him.  "It doesn't take a genius
to see that if Ysral continues to develop a wide range of technology,
and Samaria develops none--or continues to rely on the outdated pieces
of equipment that Ysral agrees to share--that Samaria becomes the
weaker, dependent nation and Ysral /becomes dominant.  What if that
technology includes weapons, Jared?  What if Ysral becomes a nation of
warriors, and Samaria becomes a nation of victims?"

"The Edori are not at all warlike," the angel replied.

"There are more Samarians emigrating to Ysral every day," the merchant
reminded him.  "And Samarians, I regret to say, are not always the
calm, peace-loving men we would wish to be."

Jared shook his head.  "You cannot sway me with a threat of war," he
said. "War is the reason we abandoned technology to begin with, or have
you forgotten your history?  That is more likely to make me resist
science than pursue it."

"I have other arguments," Christian said, laying a gentle hand on the
angel's arm and urging him forward.  "We can talk about them tomorrow.
For tonight, let's just enjoy a convivial meal with like-minded
friends."

The meal itself was much less strained than Jared was expecting.  For
one thing, no one talked treason.  For another, the angel had been
paired with Isabella Cartera, the Bethel land owner, and the beautiful
widow was always pleasant company.  She was Edori-dark, with rich brown
hair and fathomless, lightless eyes, and it was possible to forget for
hours at a time that she could outmaneuver any of the men in the room
in a business deal.  She used every natural charm to its fullest
advantage, and then casually revealed how much cleverer she was than
any of her allies or opponents.

"Christian kept promising us, "My friend the angel will b here, my
friend the angel will be here," but of course we didn't believe he had
any friends at all, let alone powerful ones," Isabella said in her
molasses voice.  "We were delighted when you showed up, of course,
though it proved us all wrong."

Jared grinned.  "How long have you all been cooped up here?"  he
asked.

"Two days.  It was Ben Harth's idea.  Some of us get together every few
months and go over the basic trade agreements, trying to get better
deals for ourselves, and we always go back home with the exact same
percentages.  It's what passes for a social life when your heart is
ruled by money."

"Did you at least have time to go shopping while you wer here?"

"Yes, Christian's little boys took me to all the newest boutiques.
Christian actually owns one, did you know?  Strictly for tourists. It's
the most appalling place.  He says it makes a fortune.  I'm considering
buying in with him."

"You should open a franchise on the Plain of Sharon.  If you are truly
interested in dreadful merchandise."

"I didn't make it to the Gloria this year, I'm afraid," she said.  "I
listened to you, though, on one of Solomon's little receiver things.
You were very impressive, but of course you always are."

So Isabella Cartera was one of the few private individuals who had been
outfitted with Solomon's equipment.  Apparently the nucleus of Samarian
power mongers was more tightly knit than Jared would have supposed.

"Well, I have little to recommend me but my voice," he said.

"And your looks," she added promptly, reaching out a hand to catch hold
of a lock of his hair.  She drew it slowly through her fingers,
stretching the curl to its fullest length, then linger ingly released
it.  "Although looks fade so fast, don't they?  And it's not like
you're the promising youth you once were."

She was at least ten years older than he was, so he took it for irony,
but it may have been flirtation.  "And I tried so hard not to be
promising," he replied.  "For my mellow, advanced years, I'm going to
be dim-witted and difficult."

"Oh, I hope not," she said.  "Surely you still have time to redeem
those promises?  We're all counting on it."

Not merely flirting with him; seducing him to the cause.  Well, well,
well.  He smiled at her lazily.  "Name the promises you'd like to see
me keep," he said, "and I'll try to oblige."

He didn't know how she would have answered, but Ben Harth interrupted
them with a snort.  "Stop monopolizing the only woman at the table,
Jared," said the Manadavvi.  "Isn't it enough that you have all the
silly young girls fawning over you, or do you have to have the
attention of every woman in Samaria before you're happy?"

"I yield the prize," Jared said gracefully, ostentatiously turning his
chair away from Isabella's.  "So!  Robert!  Tell me how the markets are
these days.  Keep the terms simple, of course I'm not the businessman
you are."

The rest of the meal passed in a similar manner, though business topics
did spike frequently through the congenial chatter the way talk of the
weather would surface among any other group of people.  Jared listened,
but picked up no other significant details.  Not that he needed to.  He
had a pretty fair idea of why these people were here--and why Christian
join them.

Although, as it happened, he underestimated both his host and his own
potential in Christian's eyes.  ~And that he the following morning.

He had risen late, to find Christian already out of the house and most
of the others departed.  He had a light breakfast, entertained by
Christian's two young sons, then strolled the rooftop gardens
overlooking the white city.  He was admiring the angled architecture of
the nearby mansions when he heard footsteps behind him, and he turned
to find Christian.

"How you can drink wine till midnight and be up with the sun is a
mystery to me," the angel commented.

Christian laughed.  "Old habit.  I can't sleep past dawn or blood riots
in my veins.  And I didn't drink that much."

"You'd be a fool to, in that band of cutthroats," Jared said. "I was
afraid to take a swallow myself."

Christian laughed again and began a slow circuit of the rimeter path.
Jared fell in step beside him.  "They're friends," he corrected.  "And
if I showed weakness, they'd carve up my body, divide my bank accounts,
and they ever knew me."

"You weren't talking business the past two days," Jared said bluntly.
"And my guess is the talk was even more ruthless."

"What do you think we were discussing, then?"

"Bael's inability to appreciate the--shall we call it, technological
imperative?--and how you can speed his departure from his exalted
position.  And then, of course, you were also discussing the scientific
advances you have made despite Bael's specific prohibitions."

"You sound angry," Christian murmured.  "And surprised."

"A little angry," Jared admitted.  "And not as surprised to learn how
you spend your time as I am to find that you invited me here to witness
it."

"Now that shouldn't surprise you."

Jared halted and swung round to face the older man.  "Don't cast me in
the role of savior Archangel," he warned.  "Even if the god named me as
Bael's successor, what makes you think I'd take your part?  Doesn't it
occur to you that I might 'view this little convocation as heresy just
as surely as Bael would'?"

"No," Christian said sharply.  "Because you're not another And if you
think you are, or could be, you don't know Bael is capable of."

Jared frowned and resumed walking.  "He's narrow-minded obstructive,
and he's afraid of change," Jared said.  "And I don't care for him
personally.  But if--"

"He's a fanatic, and he's dangerous," Christian interrupted.  "It's not
enough that he's tried to resist every scientific advance Solomon and
Ben and Isabella and I could bring into the country.  He commits murder
in the name of ideology, and he breathes death on political rivals."

"Death and murder," Jared repeated.  "Surely you're speaking
metaphorically."

"I'm not," Christian said.  "He's on a campaign right this minute to
systematically eliminate the remaining Jacobites in Samaria--and I'd
say he's made damn good headway."

"The Jacobites!  Surely you can't expect him to tolerate them with any
pretense of warmth."

"No, but I don't expect him to kill them."

"He doesn't."

"He does.  A few weeks ago he loosed his Jansai troops on Luminaux with
specific instructions to seek out and destroy any known Jacobites.  And
they managed to find a handful, but most of the rest of them had fled.
And are even now being hunted down."

Jared could feel the muscles of his face contracting in a disbelieving
scowl.  "That's not true.  Luminaux?  Mercy said nothing of this, and I
was just there."

"She might not know the extent of it.  She might have thought the
Jansai were merely rousting out the Jacobites, scattering them just to
scare them.  But there were deaths, my friend, and more than I think
you'd like to count.  And there are more deaths to come."

"What do you mean?  If they're scattered--"

"Those who escaped the net in Luminaux agreed to meet in Ileah.  Do you
know it?  It's an abandoned Edori sanctuary in Jordana.  The Jansai
plan to hit it once the camp is full."

Jared felt a rush of anger and impatience.  "What's this about Ileah?
How would Bael even know about something like that?  You have to be
fabricating all this."

"I'm not.  Bael knows because he tortures captured Jacobites before he
has them killed.  Some of his Jansai caught one in Breven as he was
attempting to escape to Ysral, and he gave the interesting news about
Ileah."

Jared looked at his friend sharply.  "And how do you know all this?"

"Because I torture captured angels."

"And the next question," said Jared slowly, "is why you care so much
about Jacobites."

"Wanton destruction has never been my favorite pastiche, despite the
ruthlessness you might see me exhibit in my dealings," Christian said
lightly.

Jared shook his head.  "You've got a more personal it.  You're friends
with the Jacobites--or one of their ~bel."

There was a lengthy pause.  Christian had come to a hedge and surveyed
Jared with a long, sober look.  Not glancing at his hand, he reached
out and snapped a thin new branch off one of the manicured bushes
lining the walkway.  "I've an abiding interest in technology," the
merchant said. "It's led me to do a lot of research about scientific
development in Samaria. Doing that, one can't help but come across
references to the Jacobites' theories.  And some make sense."

"You cannot be serious," Jared breathed.

Christian nodded toward a stone bench set to overlook the soaring
architecture of Semorrah.  They sat, Christian apparently at ease,
Jared stiff and uncomfortable, his wings taut and quivering behind him.
 "What do you know about the Jacobite doctrine?"  the merchant asked.

"That it states the god is a machine!  That's all anyone needs to
know!"

"The Jacobites believe that the entity we call Jovah is in reality a
spaceship called Jehovah, which carried the original settlers here from
their home planet more than seven hundred years ago.  Now, you have to
admit that the histories of Samaria--the Librera and all the old books
that deal with nization--are very vague on how we came to be here.  The
Librera says we were carried in Jovah's hands.  Across countless miles
of space.  What hands?  How far?  Why couldn't thee have been a
spaceship called Jehovah that carded us this immense distance?"

"Because Jovah is not a spaceship.  Jovah is a god."

"Stop thinking like a brainwashed angel for a moment, and use the
intelligence I know you have," Christian said impatiently.  "Just
answer the speculation.  Why couldn't we have come here in a
spaceship?"

"What's a spaceship?  A machine that can fly through who knows how many
miles of space, carrying hundreds of people inside?  That seems even
more fantastic to me than the notion that a god could close his hands
around his people and carry them from one place to the next.  Why does
it seem so plausible to you?"

"Because I have never seen a god, but I have seen trucks and
transporters that can carry a hundred men over a thousand miles.  I
think with the right equipment and a little luck we could design
vehicles that can fly through the air.  And maybe through space."

"And so this--this vehicle has just stayed in the sky above us for all
these years, all these centuries, and pretended to be a god?"

"I don't think the spaceship has pretended anything.  I think it has
responded to the words of humans.  Say it is a machine.  Open your mind
to that possibility for a minute.  Say it responds to oral commands.
Music--what you call prayers.  Say it has been programmed to respond
one way when it hears one particular combination of notes, and another
way when it hears a different combination.  So one 'prayer' calls down
sunshine and another calls down thunderbolts.  Conceptually, it's very
simple."

"And, technologically, it's impossible!  You and your friends have just
recently invented ways to carry sound from one city to the next.  How
can you expect anyone to have created a machine so complicated that it
responds to such delicate and faraway commands?"

"The original settlers came from a place centuries more advanced than
we are.  If they could build a spaceship, they could build it to
respond to aural cues."

"But how do you explain away the Gloria?  It's the god who must hear
the prayers sung every year, the god who wants proof that Samarians can
live in harmony with each other.  A machine wouldn't care about
that."

"The Gloria is the easiest thing to explain away!  Because it is so
precisely orchestrated, don't you see?  The prayers--the musical
cues--must be sung on a specific date, at a specific time, from a
specific place.  If all the requirements are not exactly met, a
specific doom is meted out.  Jared, it's all math matical!  And
machines function purely through math!"

"But there's so much else," Jared said, as if nothing Christian said
had pierced his heart with a chill, as if the quick mind Christian
admired hadn't begun a rapid, ruminative clicking as soon as the other
man began making his case.  "The Kiss, for instance--"

Christian balled his fist so the glowing globe embedded in right his
arm showed in more visible detail.  "You know the answer to that one,"
he said.  "Electronic tracking devices so the machine can do head
counts and genealogy charts."

"And the oracles?  The divine communications that we receive from the
god?"

"Have you visited an oracle lately?"  Christian asked, ~ntly.  "Taken a
good look at those interfaces they use to ask god questions?  Those
screens are built of glass and metal, but much higher caliber than
anything we've come up with so far.  Those interfaces were designed to
send and receive electronic impulses.  Why does a god need high
technology?  Unless he's a god that's a machine."

Jared didn't answer.  Christian waited a moment, then went on.  "Are
you familiar with something called the Alleluia Files?"

"I've heard the term.  I don't know what it refers to.

"But you know who Alleluia was."

Jared nodded.  "An insignificant interim Archangel who filled in for a
few months while Delilah was injured."

"But Alleluia went on to become an oracle of some ~tion."

Jared shrugged.  "So?"

"The Jacobites believe that during the time Alleluia was Archangel, she
discovered proof that Jehovah is a spaceship, and that she recorded
this proof in some manner.  Of course she lived nearly a hundred years
ago, before sound recording was theoretically possible--but her husband
was Caleb Augustus, one of the founders of the Augustine school, and if
anyone could have made a recording of someone's voice, he would be the
man.  The problem is, no one has ever been able to find a copy of this
recording--what the Jacobites have named the Alleluia Files--and so no
one has been able to recover the proof."

"What proof?"  Jared demanded.  "What did she discover?"

"According to the legend," Christian said slowly, "she found a way to
transport herself to the actual spaceship.  She stood on board it and
conversed with the machine itself."

"Not possible," Jared said flatly.

"She was Archangel at the time," Christian continued, as if Jared had
not spoken, "and so the story goes that this visit to the spaceship
tested her faith to an extreme degree.  And it was hard for her to give
up her vision of Jovah as a god.  But she was converted--which is why
Alleluia is so central a figure to the Jacobite movement.  If an
Archangel can accept the truth, then cannot any man's eyes be
opened?"

"A faux Archangel--a pretender," Jared said quickly.  "She only held
her Position a few months.  The god found her want ing--"

"So much so," Christian interrupted, "that he accepted her as oracle a
few months later."

Jared braced his hands on his knees and looked down blankly at the
swept stone between his feet.  Every muscle of his body had tightened
in protest; it had taken all his self-control not to slap his hands
over his ears, not to jump to his feet and stalk away.  The Jacobites
were all crackpots and troublemakers, everybody knew that; it was folly
to give a moment's credence to any of their lunatic theories.  And yet
Christian Avalone was one of the smartest men Jared knew.  That he
would even entertain such heretical thoughts, let alone use them to
coolly explain away all of Jared's most basic beliefs... "Why are you
telling me this?"  the angel asked at last.

"What is it you want from me?  Surely not to propose to Bael that he
lend a thoughtful ear to the ravings of the Jacobites."

"I want you to look for the Alleluia Files," Christian said.

At this, Jared did come to his feet, and stood staring incredulously
down at his friend.  "What?"

More leisurely, Christian also rose.  "When Alleluia was Archangel,
there did exist two places in Samaria where she could have heard
recorded sound.  The angel holds.  In the Eyrie and Monteverde, there
were pieces of equipment that the original settlers had brought in,
music machines that were duplicated no place else on the continent.  I
think perhaps Alleluia---or her husband--found a way to use those
machines to make yet one more recording.  And where better to hide it
than in the mass of all those other recordings?"

Jared was shaking his head, not in refusal but in dismay.  "I can
search at Monteverde, of course, and it probably won't be that hard to
get a look at the Eyrie's music rooms, but--if I were to find this
recording?  What then?  I don't know that'd bring it to you, after
all."

"You would want to keep such a great secret to yourself, Jared?"

"She did, if what you say is true.  She must have had reasons."

"And perhaps they're listed in one of the files.  But you have
incentives she did not for spreading the truth."

"Those being?"

Christian spread his hands.  "That people are dying for truth.  Or that
great falsehood, whichever it turns out to be.  if proof exists, we
need to find it.  And stop Bael in his malicious zeal.  And go forward
armed with knowledge."

"And if there is no proof?  If the files do not exist, or I cannot find
them?"

Christian smiled.  "Then we find other ways to determine what exactly
Jovah is."

Jared left Semorrah in a profound state of shock.  He could feel it
drag at his wing tips, making his strokes slower and efficient; he
could feel it thickening the blood in his veins, making him grow chilly
and uncomfortable in those high, familiar altitudes.  It could not
possibly be true, of course.  The god was who he had always been,
remote but real, as reliable a guide as the constellations overhead. 
No slick, persuasive argument could change Jovah's essential nature,
could alchemize him from the divine to the mechanical.

But.

He would go to Monteverde, and he would look.  That much he had
promised.  He should, by rights, go straight to Bael and repeat every
word of the conversation, and he wondered why Christian was so sure he
would not.  Mercy would have--or maybe she would not have.  Mercy may
have been reluctant, as Jared was, to see Christian condemned to sudden
and complete ostracism, for Bael was not a man to let such a treason
fester.  Surely--even if Bael was murdering all the Jacobites he could
scare up, which of course Jared doubted--surely Bael would not have
someone as visible as Christian summarily executed.

it made Jared uneasy to contemplate why Christian thought he was a safe
confidant.  It should have seemed like a but it did not.  It made him
feel gullible and easy

Christian was telling the truth.  Or believed that what he said was the
truth. In which case, they were all on the down-slide into chaos.

In Monteverde, everything was peaceful.  Here, there were no claims to
make the normal world seem strange.  His mother and his sister greeted
him with their usual derisive afection.  Petitioners gathered outside
the principal receiving hall to ask for rain, for sun, for protection
against the weather And of course, there were the usual Manadavvi
visitors, to ingratiate themselves with the angelic host or argue in
politest of terms about some tax they were quite sure was
unnecessary.

Jared managed to elude them all, at least for the first day of his
return and set about his task.  If he was a highly controversial that
no one should be allowed to find, where would hide?  Not in the obvious
place, of course, but that's where he looked first: the music rooms.

Each of the three original holds had been designed with ~ or so of
these chambers: completely soundproofed, perfect rooms fitted with the
mysterious equipment that could play sacred music recorded by the first
settlers of Samaria.  Even today, those recordings outmatched anything
that they had been able to commit to disk; Hagar's sublime was so
superior that no one even attempted comparing.  When Samaria was first
settled, all three holds boasted such but in the time of Archangel
Gabriel, one of the originals was destroyed.  Thus a whole set of those
rooms had been wiped out at the Jordana hold called Windy Point, and
until recently, there had been nothing like them at Cedar Hills. 
Certainly not in Alleluia's day.  If those Alleluia Files were anywhere
near a machine that could play them, they were here or at the Eyrie.

But they did not appear, after a whole day's searching, to be at
Monteverde.  Jared went through each room, one by one, checking every
disk in the storage cabinet, opening each cover to verify that what was
inside matched the label.

"What exactly are you looking for?"  Catherine asked him a few hours
after his search started.  "You've been in every music room in the
hold."

"Uriel's recording of the Marvina Solo in B-flat major"."  Jared
replied without hesitation.  "Have you seen it?"

"Well, not lately.  Do you want me to help you look?"  Jared waved a
hand.  In fact, he had taken care to hide the recording in his room
that morning, just in case anyone decided to be inquisitive.  "Oh, no,
that's all right.  I'm enjoying  coming across a few titles I'd
forgotten we even had."

"Well, I'll ask around."

"Thanks."

He then spent a couple of hours in the archives, .t musty poorly
organized warehouse that held, apparently, every outdated book, map,
census, or tax roll ever compiled in Gaza.  If he found anything in
here, it would be through sheer luck, doggedness, and he knew before he
started that he was to devote his life to this investigation.  If
Christian wanted to search for fugitive disks in Monteverde, let him
come here and look for himself.

So he drew a blank that first day, but he wasn't surprised.  If he had
such volatile and inflammatory information on record, the last place he
would hide it would be an angel hold where anyone could pick it up and
listen to the contents.  He would go to the Eyrie, because he had
promised, but he didn't expect any better results there.  If the
Archangel Alleluia had not been a madwoman--and if she had actually had
the adventure ascribed to her--she would have been clever enough to
come up with some other hiding place.

Jared spread his wings and slowly sank to the dusty floor.  And if she
wasn't the mad one, perhaps Christian was.  Murder and witch-hunts;
could it really be true?  Was Bael really hunting down and destroying
the Jacobites?  True, he had acquired the allegiance of a handful of
Jansai warriors--an odd alliance in itself, since traditionally the
Jansai, like the merchants and the Manadavvi, chafed against angelic
dominance. And true, Jansai had never been above a little creative
coercion in their long history of violence.  But systematic extinction?
 Jared could not believe Bael capable of it.

One way to find out.  He came decisively to his feet, brushing the dirt
from his trousers and shaking out his wings.  He would go to Ileah and
see if there was any evidence of destruction.  And then he would form
some kind of idea of who to believe and what to do.

It was morning before Jared could get free of Monteverde.  He had just
emerged from the archive building when he was almost trampled by young
Solomon Davilet, who was barreling down the path without glancing right
or left.  Jared jumped back, sweeping his wings behind him, and Solomon
came to a quick halt.

"Jared!  Just the man I was looking for!  They said you were hiding
somewhere, but I knew I'd find you."

Tenacious; a trait all successful businessmen shared.  "Well, here I
am," Jared said.  "How can I help you?"

"I thought perhaps I was rude the other day," Solomon said earnestly.
"At Christian's.  When you asked about the transmitters.  Of course I'd
be glad to install a receiver in Monteverde.  We're hoping to get some
concerts and other events lined up.  And we'd be happy to set up a
receiver here.  Wouldn't want to slight the holds in any way
whatsoever."

"Of course not," Jared murmured.  "But I don't know that a transmitter
is something we would absolutely require--"

"It would put you right at the forefront of the new technology,"
Solomon said.  "People would come from all over Gaza to hear the
concerts.  At least, we think they would.  It would give you an
incentive to draw visitors to the hold.  And it would be good for us,
too," he added as an afterthought.

Jared considered telling the young man that he had often wished for a
way to discourage visitors from flocking to Monteverde, the most
accessible of the angel domains, but he let it slide.  It might be no
bad thing to know exactly what the techno-revolutionaries were building
next.  Bael might squawk when he found out what Jared had invited into
Monteverde, but he could explain it away, he thought.  Or dismantle it,
if it became all that troublesome.

"I appreciate your offer," he said.  "I'd be glad to accept one of your
receivers.  Come have dinner with me and tell me where we should set it
up and what's required.  And what sorts of events we can expect to
hear!"

So that had taken up most of the evening, and he had not been able to
avoid spending half an hour having drinks with a few of the Manadavvi
who had, apparently, camped out at Monteverde for the season. It was
late before he escaped them and it was pointless to take off at
midnight looking for a plot of ground he wasn't sure he'd recognize by
daylight, so he spent the night in his own room for a change.  And in
the morning, before anyone could stop him or inquire into his
itinerary, he departed for central Jordana.

It was six hundred miles, more or less, to Ileah, too much terrain to
cover in a day, so he broke his trip at Mount Sinai in northern Bethel.
He'd had the forethought to consult before he left the Monteverde
archives, so he had a fair idea where Ileah should be.  Accordingly,
about ninety miles east of Castelana, he sheered downward from flying
altitude and continued at a low, cruising speed about a hundred feet
over the land. Nothing much out here--not surprising, because a hundred
years ago no one wanted to waste prime territory on the sanctuary.  But
surely that was a cluster of stone buildings two hundred yards ahead of
him, and wasn't that smoke coming from one of them?  He dropped lower
and circled for a look.

A few moments later he spotted a solitary figure before one of the
tumbledown huts.  A woman, apparently.  He raised a hand in a friendly
wave but she stood frozen, looking at him in something like terror. 
Seconds after his feet touched the ground, she took off in a frenzied
run, clearly bent on escaping him.  Jared drove his wings down hard to
regain momentum, and followed in pursuit.

CHAPTER SEVEN

He had never seen anyone run so fast.  With the slow, awkward downbeats
required by low-terrain flying, Jared came after her, and he admired
her speed.  Just in case she had confused him with someone else, he
called out to her a few times--"Hello, there!  Don't be afraid!  Wait
For me!"--but as he had expected, she didn't even falter.  Either she
was afraid of angels, or she was afraid of everyone, because she kept
racing away from him as fast as her feet would take her.

It wasn't fast enough.  Several times Jared closed with her, coming
near enough to touch, and he felt the faint shock spark [from his wing
tips to his shoulders as his feathers brushed her skin.  The sensation
jolted her, too; each time she redoubled her efforts, straining ahead
with desperate determination.  It was hopeless, of course.  Angels had
incredible strength and unmatched endurance, and even the fleetest
human could not expect to outrun a flying angel.  She either didn't
know that or could not rationally accept it.  She ran.  She ran.

"I m Jared!"  he called to her, catching up again.  "From Monteverde.
Don't be afraid of me!  I don't want to hurt you!"

Once she looked over her shoulder, and the expression on her face was
of such stark panic that he actually missed a beat and lost a few
inches' altitude.  But he recovered quickly and came alongside her
again.  This was difficult, trying to match his pace to a human's
stride; he either overshot his mark or fell back every time he tried to
draw even.

"I need to talk to you!"  he shouted down at her.  "Stand still for a
moment and let me ask you--" Now she veered abruptly to one side;
effortlessly, he followed.  Their new course placed the sun behind him
and the shadow of his wings over her fleeing form.  He heard great sob
escape her before she expended all her strength in last burst of speed,
and then she fell to the ground, gasping.

He landed lightly a few feet away and stepped toward her.  "I'm Jared,"
he said again.  "Please don't be afraid of me.  I want--"

Instantly, she was on her feet again, stumbling forward.  He was aloft
again in seconds, but she had managed to gain a few yards.  He was upon
her again in minutes, of course, but he was beginning to get severely
annoyed.

"I'm not going to hurt you, damn it!"  he shouted.  "Just know You
can't outrun me!  Just stop and talk to me!"

Once more she fell to the ground, fighting for breth, shudddering with
exhaustion or terror.  Once again, Jared landed a few feet away, and
this time he made, no move to come closer.

"Please don't be afraid of me, he said in as coaxing a voice as he
could manage.  "My name is Jared.  I'm from the angel hold of
Monteverde.  I have no reason to hurt you."

From her hands and knees she stared over at him, and noted that despite
everything, she did not look a bit defeated.  He had never seen such
naked hostility on any face before.  Certainly, he had never done
anything to earn such a look in his life.

"Can you stand?"  he asked, because he was tired of telling her not to
be afraid.  "Do you need help?"

"I can stand," she said in a voice full of loathing, and herself
uptight.  She continued to glare at him, completely unrepentant.

"I'm Jared," he tried again.  "What's your name?"

She merely scowled and did not reply.

He gestured behind him.  "And this place is Ileah, is it?"  Again,
silence.

It appeared he had nothing to lose by full disclosure.  "I was told I
might find an encampment of Jacobites here," he said, watching her
closely to see if that startled her.  Is that true?"

"You're too late," she said flatly.  He noted idly that despite her
distress, despite her hatred--her voice was musical and sweet. Probably
a singer of some sort.  You could always tell.  "They're all dead."

The harsh words landed against his ears like three separate slow blows.
From his automatic assessment of this new person, he was knocked into
a state of grave disquiet.  All dead?"  he repeated stupidly.  "Are you
sure?"

"I buried them myself," she said.  "Do you want to dig up the grave?"

"No, I--how many?  When were they killed?"

"Twelve dead.  Maybe three days ago.  It happened before I arrived."

"Do you know who did it?"

For the first time her expression changed.  Her brows arched over her
eyes with mocking dislike.  "Angels?"  she suggested.

Again, he had the sense of having been punched, this time in the
stomach.  "No," he said sharply.  "Not possible."  She shrugged.  "Then
Jansai, I suppose."

"Do you have any guess as to why?"

"You're the one who named us Jacobites," she said.  "Wouldn't you
consider that reason enough?"

"No," he said again, just as quickly.  "Even if you were."

"Isn't that why you're here," she asked, "looking for Jacobites?"

He passed a hand over his face.  Suddenly he felt old, betrayed,
inadequate, and unprepared.  Was it really true?  Had Jansai really
murdered twelve Jacobites at this camp--and if so, had they acted on
their own or at the Archangel's behest?  Jansai, yes, he could believe
them murderers, but not Bael, surely not the Archangel ... "In a manner
of speaking," he said at last.

"I came looking for information.  I guess you've supplied it."

"Then you'll be going," she said.  "Good-bye."

Now he was the one to feel a wave of hostility, and he glared right
back at her.  He couldn't help noticing a few physical details.  Such
as despite the fact that she had clearly lived a hard life, her
features were as delicate and porcelain white as a Man-adavvi's.  And
that the short, tousled hair was several shades darker than the pale
blond brows, still raised questioningly over her green eyes.  And that
she had a Kiss in her right arm.  And that she looked familiar to him,
in the strangest way--not as if he had seen her before, but as if he
would see her again, so often and so intimately that he would not be
able to remember a time when she had been a stranger.

"Why do you have a Kiss?"  he asked, the superfluous question edging
out all the other more important ones.  "I thought Jacobites didn't
believe in Jovah."

She glanced down at her arm as if surprised to find what she was
wearing there. "It was part of my disguise," she said," looking back up
at him.  "I thought it would make me pass for one of you."

"An angel?"  he asked incredulously.

"No, a believer.  I thought it would save me from this But apparently I
was wrong."

"I'm not going to persecute you," he said automatically "But I wouldn't
be counting on that disguise, if I were you.  It appears as if someone
has betrayed you."

She nodded.  "And I know who, I think.  A man in Breven to whom I went
for help."

Jared frowned.  "I don't think so," he said slowly "I think it was one
of your own.  Someone who got arrested in Breven trying to escape to
Ysral."

She sucked her breath in on a gasp of pain.  She whispered
something--it may have been a name--but said nothing else, "In any
case," Jared went on, "if someone is looking, for you, he'll be looking
for the Kiss, too."

She looked down at it again, this time with the same loathing she had
directed at the angel earlier.  "Too late to try and get rid of it
now," she said.  "I understand that once it's installed, it's with you
for life.  But no one told me how sick it would make me."

"Sick?"  he repeated.

"Dizzy," she said.  "Ever since I got it.  Sometimes I feel like I'm
floating or falling.  No one ever told me that would happen."

"Well, it doesn't, to most people," he said.  "Are you sure you don't
have a fever?  You look very pale."

He had come a step closer but she stopped him with her eyes.  "I'm not
sick," she said clearly.  "I don't have time for that."

"Well, maybe we can talk somewhere else," he said.  "Can we go back to
Ileah?"

"What else did you want to talk about?"  she asked.  "The Jacobites
were here.  The Jansai killed them---either for sport or because
someone told them to.  Doesn't that about cover--"

"But--are they all dead?  All the Jacobites?"

Now her face showed scorn.  "No, of course not!  Do you think there are
only twelve Jacobites in the whole country?  They will find each other
again, don't you worry, and they will once again strive to bring the
message of truth to all men and women of Samaria."

"I would think the message of truth is looking a little sorrier these
days," he said grimly.  "I might rethink my proselytizing if I were
you."

"If we were weaker men and women, we might," she conceded.  "But only
cowards allow themselves to be defeated by violence and fear.  If Bael
is afraid of us, we must be making some progress.  Now is not the time
to lay down our arms."

"So you'd rather be a dead martyr than a live plotter?"  he demanded.
Fanatics made him furious.  "Seems pretty shortsighted to me."

"That's because there's nothing you believe in enough to die for," she
shot back.

He froze where he stood, anger battling with dismay--that it was true,
that she had thought to say it.  Well, no, there was nothing he could
think of offhand for which he would lay down his life.  but he had
always thought that made him sane, not pitiful.  "You could at least
expend some effort guarding your life while you can," he said at last.
"If the Jansai are patrolling this area looking for Jacobites, why
don't you get as far away as possible?"

"I will, once Peter is well enough to travel."

"Peter?"  he repeated quickly.  He could, see she instantly regretted
the careless slip.  "Who's Peter?"  When she didn't answer, he began
guessing.  "Someone who survived the Jansai attack?  Where is he--back
at the camp?  How badly is he hurt?"

"Why are you asking?"  she flung at him.  "Why do you care?"

He turned on his heel, back toward the cluster of huts that was Ileah.
He didn't want to leave her here a few hundred yards down the road to
Stockton, but something told him she wouldn't abandon her friend to an
angel's questionable mercies.  "Maybe I can help him," he said.  "Let's
go have a look."

He risked it; he took wing and returned to Ileah, hoping she would
follow.  He didn't even look back to make sure.  Within a few minutes
he had landed in the little village and stepped inside the only cabin
with smoke coming from the roof.  Yes, there was a sick man lying on a
rough bed.  Jared waited till his eyes adjusted, then knelt by the
patient and did a quick examination.

His skin was hot, his color was high, and the bright eyes that crossed
and recrossed the angel's face showed no signs of either fear or
recognition.  Jared inspected the bandage across the man's chest but
didn't disturb it.  This woman seemed ."I and levelheaded enough to
clean a wound and bind i' , But the man definitely had a fever, and if
he had had: I" days or more.,.

Running footsteps and then someone plunged through the door behind him.
 "Don't touch him," the girl panted.  "He's sleeping."

Jared turned to face her.  "He's got a high fever, he said bluntly. 
"Have you been able to feed him?  Give him anything?"

"A little.  He doesn't have much appetite, but what he swallows he
keeps down.  He's getting better."

"Maybe," Jared said ominously.  "But I don't think he'll make it
without my help."

Again, she gave him that fixed scowl, but she couldn't bring herself to
say she would sacrifice her friend to save accepting the angel's
assistance.  "How can you help him?  she asked at last.

"I can pray to the god for medicines that will heal him."  She
surprised him with a harsh, forced laugh.  "The god!  The god that does
not exist?  Why would I want to accept any medicines from his imaginary
hand?"

Again, he had to throttle his own anger.  "Have you ever seen an angel
pray to Jovah?"  he asked quietly.  "Have you ever seen an angel ask
for sun--and seen the sun emerge from behind a veil of clouds? 
Whatever you believe about the god, whatever you believe about prayer,
do not disparage it until you've seen it work."

"I do not believe in the god, and I have no faith in angels, either,"
she fired back at him.  "Why should I trust anything you give me?  It
could be poison, for all I know."

"It will not be poison," he said.  "It could save your life.  Now. Come
outside and watch me pray to the god.  Perhaps what you see and hear
will convince you."

She did not want to, but he could tell she saw no way to refuse.  She
could not continue to mock him if she herself could witness his
failures--and maybe she was curious, too.

Previously, she had never had a chance to see an angel at his prayers;
perhaps she wondered what such an act of blind devotion ~couldled.  She
followed him outside.

He took three running steps and threw himself aloft, climbing to
cruising level.  Normally, when he prayed, he flew as close to the
ceiling of heaven as he could, to be near enough to Jovah to pour his
song directly into the god's ear.  But he wanted this Jacobite rebel to
hear him, perhaps to be moved or even ~con-retied by the power of
prayer.

When he started to sing, he felt like the whole world was listening,
and he responded to the challenge.  Maybe it was just that he had never
had a skeptical audience before, and so he felt like he had something
to prove; or maybe it was simply a peculiar combination of low
altitude, high humidity, and the valley of central Jordana that created
a setting of breathless acoustics.  His own voice sounded new to him,
welling up from some unfamiliar place in his chest; the words that he
had sung countless times at hundreds of forgotten sites sounded fresh
and powerful.  He sang as if he offered Jovah the first prayer on the
first Samarian morning, and he felt each note register separately on
the god's merciful heart.

He was pleased with himself when, half an hour later, he touched down
on the ground outside the wounded man's cabin.  The girl whom he had
half expected to be inside, ignoring her angelic visitor, was standing
outside waiting for him.  She looked oddly disturbed, though she was
making every effort to hide it.

"So?"  she said when he came within earshot.  "Where is this medicine
the god is supposed to send?"

"It  will arrive.  It may take an hour or two--no longer.  Be
patient."

"And what does it look like?  How will we know it?"

"It arrives in the form of small pellets.  Jovah sends different drugs
for different diseases.  There are the pills that ward off plague and
the pills that scare away fever.  All kinds of medicines."

"How does he send it?"

"It falls from the sky."

She nodded in satisfaction.  "Dropped from the storage hold of the
spaceship.  I see."

"It is not!"  he denied, startled.  "It is formed by Jovah's own hand
fashioned for the individual emergency"

 "If he sent blue pills when I was sick and yellow ones' when you were
sick and pink ones when Peter was sick, then I think Jovah designed
them for each separate crisis.  But if he only has five or six
different kinds of drugs, and that's all you get every time you pray,
then I think this Jovah of yours has a limited stock, such as a machine
might store, and so is not a god at all."

He was so angry he could hardly stand still; but m the of his mind, he
was hearing Christian's voice.  Say the ship has been programmed to
respond one way when i sing one combination of notes, and another way
when it hears a different combination.  Jared thought of them as
prayers; Christian called them aural cues.  Could they be the same
thing?

"I am sorry to learn you were unmoved by my prayer," he said stiffly to
the girl, because he would not give her the satisfaction of knowing she
had shaken him.  "Perhaps you will be more impressed by the results."

"I heard you sing before," she said abruptly.

He focused on her.  "I can't imagine when."

"At your Gloria.  Over some piece of equipment in a shop in Breven."

"There were a hundred singers performing that day.  You could scarcely
pick my voice out from all those other tran!.  ers."

She gazed at him steadily a moment, and without word began softly
humming the closing bars of the Margallet duet.  His part, not Mercy's.
Usually a woman would h arid remember the soprano and alto lines, while
a man would,: strain the music sung by the bass and tenor.  Jared felt
the skin at the nape of his neck dance with chill, and a frisson of
~exemenr skittered over his Kiss.

"That's the piece," he admitted.  "How do you know it?"

"I don't know it.  I just heard it that one time."

"You must have liked it."

She turned away.  "I have an ear for music.  I can't help it" And she
ducked inside the cabin without looking at him again.  Jared shook off
his strange sense of premonition.  He settled himself outside to await
the god's bounty.

It was not long in coming.  Half an hour later the ground at his feet
was pelted with a handful of hard cinnamon tablets.  He wished the girl
had been outside to see the ~ but he knew even this miracle would not
impress her.  From a fabricated god, all gifts were suspect. 
Nonetheless, he gathered them up and carried them inside.

She was attempting to raise Peter to a half-seated position so she
could pour a little water down his throat.  Jared hastened forward to
assist her, crouching on the floor and taking the injured man's weight
against his own shoulder.  She did not bother to thank him, but held
the cup again to Peter's mouth and watched him drink.  Silently, Jared
handed her one of the pills.  She slipped it into Peter's mouth and
made him sip again.  The sick man swallowed but twisted against their
hold in protest.  The girl signaled to Jared, and he lay Peter back
against the allet.

"How long before the drug takes effect?"  she wanted to know.

"Maybe an hour.  We can give him one every eight hours until they run
out."

She held her hand out and he poured the rest of the red tablets into
her palm.  She inspected them without comment, then dropped them into
an empty cup at the side of the bed.

"Well," she said, in the voice one would use to close a conversation,
"thank you.  I guess you'll be going now."

He sat back on his heels, steadying himself with his wings spread
against the floor.  "Why would you think that?"  he said.  "I wouldn't
abandon you while your friend was still sick."

"And of course I appreciate that," she said dryly.  "But I don't think
there's much more you can do for us."

"But I want to stay."

"But I don't want you to."

"I wish you'd tell me your name," he said abruptly.

She looked at him coldly.  "I see no reason you need to know it"

"So I don't have to think of you as 'that Jacobite girl.""

"The description suits me."

"I am not your enemy," he said, suddenly intense.

"And I am not your friend," she replied.

He balanced there another moment, watching her, wondering what he could
possibly say to win her over, then he rose to his feet.  "I'll scare up
something for dinner," he said.  "Do you have anything or should I go
hunting?"

Chiefly, she looked ready to protest, and then she shrugged.

 "I have dried meat.  A few dried apples.  Not much else."

"There's a stream nearby.  Do you have a fishing rod?"

"There may be one in the storage cabin."

He headed for the door.  "I'll see what I can find."

He located no rod or reel among the Jacobites' equipment but a
long-handled net had been packed in with some clothes.  He carried this
with him to the stream, and there caught four trout in half an hour. 
Afterward he scanned the riverbank for anything that looked promising. 
There were varieties of purple flowers rioting along the muddy edge. 
On impulse, he picked a handful.

When he arrived back at Ileah, the girl appeared to be hanging out
washing. She had strung a line between one cabin and a stick she had
stuck in the earth, and to this she was attaching half a dozen dripping
shirts.  In the light wind of early evening, the wet clothing made a
pleasant snapping sound.

"Do you like fish?"  he asked, and she swung around to face him, drying
her hands on the front of her blouse.

"It's fine," she said absently.  "I built up the fire."

He showed her the flowers.  "For you," he said.

He had never seen anyone show such a look of c'nplete bewilderment. She
stood absolutely still, hands at her side, eyes fixed on his face, as
if she had forgotten the rudiments of speech and motion.  He could not
keep himself from stallings.  It was ludicrous, actually: an angel
offering wildflowers to a Jacobite at an abandoned Edori sanctuary that
had recently been overrun by murderous Jansai.  He urged the flowers on
her again.

"I thought they were pretty," he said.  "You've had rough couple of
days.  Can we put them in a cup of water?"

Still without speaking, she nodded twice, and gingerly took the
blossoms from his hand.  In a few minutes she had found a suitable
container, filled it with water, and carefully inserted the stems.  The
whole time she moved as if she were as glass that had already fractured
at some unimagined which would fly apart into a million pieces if
someone a whisper of breath against it.

"Do you want to cook, or shall I?"  Jared asked.

"You can," she said in a faint voice.  "I'll find another set of
dishes."

So they enjoyed a curiously domestic evening around the fire in the
sick man's cabin.  Jared fried the fish while Tamar laid the cloth on
the floor, setting it with two places and positioning the vase in the
exact center of the fabric.  She had stewed some sort of gruel for the
sick man, and while he cooked she coaxed a few mouthfuls down his
throat.  "Is he any better?  Can you tell?"  Jared asked.

"His fever seems to have gone down," she said.  "But he is much more
coherent."

if to belie her words, Peter suddenly spoke a few sharp, words.

"Jansai," he said.  "Killed them all."

She laid him back on the floor.  "I know," she said.  "Dawn and Daniel
and Kate and all of them.  But you'll be fine."  "My head hurts," he
said.

"Are you hungry?  Will you take more food?"  He shook his head
fretfully.  "Where's Conran?"

"Not here.  I don't think he ever showed up."

There was a moment's silence while the girl waited to see if he would
say anything else.  Jared thought Peter had fallen asleep again, but
suddenly he spoke again.  "Tamar."

"Yes'?"

"Tamar?"

"I'm here.  Peter?  Peter?"

But that was all.  The hurt man stirred uncomfortably on his bed,
sighed heavily, and drifted off.  She waited a few more minutes, then
moved over to sit before one of the plates she had arranged on the
floor.

Jared brought over the pan of steaming fish and served them.  She had
already cut up some of the dried apples and what looked like shriveled,
sorry carrots.  The fish smelled better than he would have expected.
Maybe he was just hungrier than he'd realized.  He lay the pan aside
and sat across from her.

"Tamar," he said thoughtfully.  "That's a pretty name."

"I'm so pleased that you like it."

"There was a famous Tamar, oh, a couple hundred years ago.  You've
heard of the Archangel Gabriel, of course?  She was his niece."

"I don't think I was named after any angel."

"She was mortal, though both her parents were angels.  They say she was
very troublesome."

For the first time he saw her smile.  He was more pleased than he could
have believed possible.  "Then perhaps I was named for her after
all."

"Would you be willing to tell me," he asked cautiously, "a little of
your story?  How you came to be a Jacobite, for instance?"

"Born to Jacobites and raised among them."

He felt a surge of alarm.  "Your parents weren't among those you found
murdered here, were they?"

She shook her head.  "They died when I was a baby.  Alongside Jacob
Fairman.  I was raised by their friends."

A stark story there; he could guess at its incredible bleakness and
solitude.  "I'm sorry to hear it," he said.  "No wonder you are such a
staunch believer in your rebel doctrine."

"I am a believer because it makes sense," she replied instantly.  "Not
because I have been misled by fanatics.  As you have been."

"I have been taught something that seems to me to be absolute truth. As
you have," he said mildly.  "I think you have been shamefully lied to,
but that doesn't lead me to think you should be executed.  It leads me
to think you should be educated, perhaps."

"You're the one who needs the education," she said.

"All right, then," he said.  "Educate me."

She was quiet so long that he was sure he had pushed her too far.  When
she started speaking, her voice was quiet and precise, a teacher's
voice, not a madwoman's.  Not a fanatic's.

"We believe the original settlers were brought to Samaria on board an
incredibly complex vehicle called a spaceship, designed to travel
billions of miles across the landscape of the stars.  This spaceship
was called the Jehovah, and it was a marvel of engineering.  Not only
could the settlers live on it in comfort during the years it took them
to complete its voyage, but it could be programmed to orbit above the
planet they chose to inhabit for hundreds or thousands of years.

"So Uriel and Hagar and the rest chose Samaria.  And the Jehovah
orbited overhead.  In its storage compartments, it held medicines and
seeds and chemicals, and it could release these items when people on
Samaria had need of them.  It was fitted with strange, amazing devices
that could focus power, modify the atmosphere of the planet and make
clouds dissolve or draw together.  And it was armed with powerful
weapons, aimed always at this planet, which could be unleashed whenever
certain conditions were met.  When an angel sang a prayer asking for a
thunderbolt.  Or when the people of Samaria failed to gather for the
annual Gloria, singing their songs of universal harmony.

"And over time, as the settlers deliberately abandoned their
technology, and their sons and daughters grew up ignorant of the most
basic tenets of science, they forgot that Jehovah was a spaceship.  And
they began to believe he was a god.  And they called the songs they
sang prayers. And they worshiped him for the good he could bring them,
and forgot that they themselves had created him.  That he was their
tool, not their creator.  That e was their servant, and not their
master."

"But why would a spaceship care about the Gloria?"  Jared asked, as he
had asked Christian.  "Why would it care if the people of Samaria live
in harmony or kill each other one by one in the most excruciating
manner possible?"

She had been contemplating the fire; now she raised her eyes to his
face.  Of course none of this matters to a machine, she said.  "But the
settlers who programmed the ship cared a great deal.  They had come
from a world so filled with hatred and violence that, so we were told,
the planet destroyed itself shortly after the colonists managed to
flee.  They did not want to see that violence repeated on their new
world.  They thought if they decreed that everyone came together once a
year in peace, they could ensure that they would never descend into the
mindless brutality of the world they had left behind.

"And so they fashioned small, electronic devices which would be fitted
to every man and woman on the planet," she continued, for a moment
fingering the Kiss in her arm.  "And impulses from these devices were
fed to a computer on the spaceship so it could track how many people
lived on Samaria every year.  And it could count how many attended the
Gloria.  And it would calculate by that if there was indeed harmony in
the world And if there were not enough souls gathered together on the
Plain of Sharon to meet the computer's requirements, it would send down
thunderbolts to threaten destruction."

"And if this story is true?"  he asked.  "What then?  If what controls
our lives is a spaceship, and not a god, if we pray for rain or drugs
or succor and what responds is a machine, what theen?  Can we stop our
prayers?  Can we ignore the Gloria? Won't we all perish in a rain of
lightning if we cease to adhere to Jovah's commands?"

She flung her head back; perhaps she had never considered what would
happen if the veil were ever successfully ripped from the god's face.
"Once the truth is known," she said "we can decide how to act."

"God or no god," Jared said, "I see no other way to behave."

"You would worship a machine?"  she said scornfully.

"Well, if it had the power to destroy my world I would certainly treat
it with respect," he said.

"But don't you want to know?"  she demanded.  "If what you have
followed all these years has been a piece of man made equipment--not a
god at all!--wouldn't you want to know the truth?"

Jared spread his hands, and the emeralds in his bracelets glinted
coolly in the firelight.  "I'm not so sure," he said giving her an easy
grin.  "Wouldn't I feel sort of foolish?  I think I'm happy with things
as they are."

"Well, I'm not.  We're not," she said decisively.  "It's time to
discover the truth."

"And how do you plan to do that?"  he asked ~sol'l5 have you and your
friends actually located the Alleluia files?"

"What do you know about them?"  she asked suspiciously.

"That they are the memoirs of the Archangel Allelui.  who is supposed
to have actually visited this spaceship.  And that she considered the
news so incendiary that she hid them somewhere that no one has been
able to discover in a hundred years."

"But she knew we would find them," Tamar said confidently, "when the
time was right.  And that time is now."

"Well, then," Jared said.  "Where do we begin?"

She frowned at him.  "You have no part of this search.  You are not one
of our allies."

"I am not your enemy," he said again.  "As you say.  it is better to
know the truth.  I will help you with your search."

"You said the truth would make you feel stupid.  You only want to help
us so you can destroy whatever evidence we find."

"I will destroy nothing.  I want to help you."

"We do not want an angel's help," she said positively.

"Are you certain?  Think of the places I can get to that  you cannot.
Inaccessible mountain peaks.  The most intimate interiors of angel
holds.  The homes of the very wealthy and the very devout.  What makes
you think this Alleluia wouldn't have hidden her files in one of those
places?  And the Jacobites will never find them if she has.  Maybe we
should make a list of places to search, and then begin visiting
them."

She was silent a long time, toying with the last remnants of food on
her plate.  "Why?"  she said at last.  "Why are you interested?  It's
not because you want to help us.  You'd just as soon all the Jacobites
disappeared off the face of Samaria."

"Or emigrated to Ysral.  True," he acknowledged.  "But there are
political factions besides the Jacobites in Samaria--parties with far
more clout than you'll ever have, I'm afraid--and some of them have
recently decided it's fashionable to embrace the Jacobite theories.
They can create a lot of trouble if they aren't contained or--oh, let's
say redirected.  My guess is some of them will be searching for these
files of yours.  And I'd just as soon have my hands on them first."

"So you can destroy them," she said again.

Jared shook his head.  He hadn't, in fact, thought the Whole thing
through this far (he didn't actually think he'd find these Alleluia
Files), but as he spoke he knew he told her the truth.  "No, if we find
evidence that the Archangel Alleluia discovered a way to walk to the
god's chamber and found herself instead in the heart of a huge machine,
I think we cannot suppress it.  There have been thirty years of
speculation on this exact topic, and the rumor is tearing Samaria
apart.  It's risking our fundamental harmony.  We need to know.  And we
need to know soon."

She watched him a long time without speaking.  She had a gift for
silence, he decided; she could fashion it into a weapon or a luxury.

"How can I make you trust me?"  he asked at last.

"I don't know that you can," she said.  "I'll think about it."

He rose to his feet.  "Good enough for now.  Will you stay the night in
the cabin with him?"

"Yes."

"Then I'll find somewhere else to sleep."

She nodded and made no effort to detain him.  He hadn't thought she
would.  He wandered out into Ileah, letting his eyes adjust to the
night that had fallen while they were inside.  Not much to choose from
here, and he was used to his comforts.

 But he could make do.  He picked one of the smaller ~I, that appeared
to be in passable repair and stepped inside it.  what he could make of
its interior.

To his surprise, Tamar spoke from the door.  She had followed him.
"There's an assortment of blankets and bedrolls in the storage cabin.
Things that my friends brought with them.  You can go through them and
take what you need."

He turned to face her, though he could scarcely see her in the dark.
"Thank you.  And I assume it's all right to build a fire in here?"

"You can take a light from my fire."

"Thank you again.  I will."

So within half an hour he was more or less settled for the night.  Once
she had helped him start a little blaze in his own hut, she had
disappeared, and he didn't expect to see her again till morning.  It
was full dark but not particularly late, and he did not feel especially
tired.  But there wasn't much to do in Ileah for entertainment.  He sat
for a while on the hard outside his new home and watched the stars make
their low wheel overhead.  Eventually he just gave up, went inside to
his hard bed, and coaxed himself to sleep.

Several hours later he woke up from sheer discomfort.  His fire had
almost died, though a few charred branches still glowed with a
malevolent orange light.  Jared rose and built up the blaze again,
piling on twigs and small limbs and finally two logs.  Then he sat back
on his heels a moment and watched the leap and twist of the brilliant
flames, holding his hands as close as he dared to the source of light
and heat.

It was at that moment he noticed the colors of the fire reflected in
his Kiss, for the glass seemed to ripple and dance with a pale,
undomesticated illumination of its own.  He had never seen his Kiss by
firelight before--or never paid attention- and he admired its shifting
opal patterns.

He wondered what time it was; he was wide-awake.  It wouldn't hurt to
walk by Peter's hut and see if the injured man, or the whole woman,
needed anything he could supply.  Quietly, in case they were both
peacefully asleep, he exited from his cabin and crept across the
village.

He was not fifty feet from the other hut when he realized that he was
not the only one astir.  Soft, disembodied music floated to him on the
still night air; it had the gentle unreality of starlight, intangible
but beautiful.  He closed his eyes to listen more attentively.  The
singer was performing some simple, repetitive melody that must be a
lullaby of some kind, but her voice was so clear and so faithful that
the music took on an unexpected dignity.  Even the childish words
became solemn and wise when pronounced by that pure voice; all the
secrets to the universe were contained in a single uncomplicated
measure of that song.

She sang for another ten minutes or so while Jared stood motionless,
clothed in shadow, a shadow himself.  When she ~ of voice, a few last
soothing words, and then there was silence from the cabin.  He waited
patiently another fifteen or twenty minutes, in case the sick man
should stir again, and the nurse would need to comfort him.  But there
was no more sound issuing from the cabin; both its inhabitants appeared
to be asleep.  Regretfully, Jared turned back toward his own bed.

And then caught sight of the Kiss in his arm, still coruscating with
sheets of cold fire, crimson and aquamarine and saffron. 
Automatically, he covered it with his hand, but it held no heat and
shot no arrows of pain into his arm.  Merely it reveled with a
soundless celebration of light, and the debauch looked likely to
continue on through till morning.

CHAPTER EIGHT

Peter was worse the next day--or, at least, no better.  "I do think the
pills are helping, actually," Tamar told the angel, "because every time
I give him one, he grows calmer and sleeps.  But he should be much
better by now, and you see he's not.

He's not lucid for more than three minutes at a time."

"I think he needs a doctor's help," Jared said.

He had expected her to protest, but she nodded.  "Yes, but the nearest
one must be Stockton, and since I have no carts or horses--"

"Do you expect any more of your friends to come here?  Or is this the
sum total that was supposed to gather in Ileah?"

She shot him a wary glance, so he realized she still did not trust him
and might not tell him the truth.  "Others might still be coming," she
said cautiously.  "But they might have been warned away, if someone
escaped the Jansai attack.  In any case, they are not here now, and
soon it will be too late for Peter."

"I'll take him to Stockton," Jared offered.

 "You?  How?"

He couldn't help smiling.  "I'll carry him, of course, and I'll fly
there.  It won't take me more than an hour."

"You can't carry him all that way!  It's forty miles or--"

"Angels have great strength," he told her.  "Didn't they ever teach you
that? Much greater strength than mere men.  I could carry a big man
across Samaria and only have to rest once or twice."

"But--you're not--he's not--he's my friend and he's my responsibility,"
she stammered.  "Why would you help him?"

"Because I'm a kind man," he said gently.  "Because, little though you
may believe it, most angels spend their lives helping
mortals--answering petitions, solving problems, interceding for them
with Jovah.  It was why we were put on this world It is why I prayed
for the medicine.  I will be happy to take him to Stockton.  And," he
added, seeing more trouble gather in her face, "not mention to anyone
that he's a Jacobite."

"I don't have any money," was her next protest.

"The doctor will consider it a favor to Monteverde and be happy to do
it.  Everyone wants to leave an angel in his debt."

"But--will he be all right?  Will he be safe with strang ..."

"Safer than he will be here, dying of infection in time.  Come!  Surely
you trust me this far.  I will not turn him over to Jansai."

"I could follow you, I suppose," she murmured.  "I could be in Stockton
in a day."

"You will wait for me here," he said sternly.  "I'll leave this morning
and be back this afternoon.  And when I return, we'll decide where we
want to begin our search for the Alleluia Files."

He could tell by her face that she didn't believe she'd ever agreed to
cooperate in this search, but that she didn't want to risk antagonizing
him just now.  He grinned and, unable to resist, reached out to pat her
spiky hair.  She jerked her head back but didn't move away.

"When I return, we'll talk about it," he amended.  "Get him ready to
travel.  I'll leave as soon as I've eaten."

Accordingly, less than an hour later, Jared was on his way to the
nearest city.  Tamar had spent the intervening time preparing Peter for
travel, cleaning him thoroughly, feeding him one more time, dressing
him in several layers of warm clothing.  She had written a brief note
which she tucked into the sick man's pocket, "explaining to him what's
been happening," she said when the angel asked.  Jared supposed it was
composed in some cryptic style that would give no information to any
angel or medical official who happened to scan it.

"When he's ready," he said to her gently as she continued fussing
around Peter.

She sighed and stepped aside.  "He's ready.  It's just that I--so many
of the others are dead, I want him to be safe--and I do thank you for
this, I really do."

"I told you, I'm happy to do it," Jared said, carrying Peter from the
cottage and experimenting with the most comfortable grip.  The man had
probably never had much mass; now, a few days of illness had made him
practically weightless.  He would be no trouble at all for such a short
flight.

"In a couple of hours," Jared reminded Tamar.  "I'll be back."

She nodded, and he took off.  In deference to his passenger, he flew
fairly low to the ground, where the air was warmer, and at a slightly
slower speed than he normally would have enjoyed.  Once or twice, Peter
grunted or stirred in his arms, but for the most part he lay listless
and still in the angel's grip.

Stockton was quickly arrived at, and it took only one or two inquiries
to find a medical man.  As Jared had expected, the doctor was extremely
willing to take on an angel's patient and waved off Jared's offer of
payment.

"But what happened to him?"  the doctor asked as he stripped away the
sweaters and shirts to expose the bony chest, still wrapped in Tamar's
inexpert bandages.  "He looks like he was beaten almost to death."

"That would be my guess," Jared said.  "This is how I found him.  and
he's never been lucid enough to talk."

"Who should I contact when he's well enough to speak?"  Jared spread
his hands.  "Maybe he'll be able to tell you.  I know nothing about
him. But you can certainly get in touch with me at Monteverde to let me
know how he's doing or if you've found out anything about him."

"I'll do that," the doctor said, shaking the angel's hand.  Twenty
minutes later Jared left Stockton and headed back toward Ileah.  He had
paused to buy a few groceries, because he was tired of fish, boiled
jerky, and mashed apples, and he was sure Tamar must be, too.  Although
they obviously had no reason to stay at Ileah any longer, now that the
injured man was gone.  Although where she would agree to go with Jared
remained an interesting question.  He couldn't picture her happily
planning to sojourn in Monteverde or the Eyrie, making furtive
explorations for the missing files.  Well, they would think of
something.

Or, he thought as he landed in Ileah and looked around for the
Jacobite, perhaps not.  For, though the sick man's bed was still set up
in one hut and the laundry was still hanging on the line, Tamar was
nowhere to be seen.  And she did not answer his hail when he called her
name three times, with a little less hope each time.  No, she had made
good her escape, and there was no telling where in Samaria she could
have fled to now.

CHAPTER NINE

It took a week to sail from Port Clara to Angel Rock, although
technically, Lucinda learned, they weren't always sailing.  The Wayward
had two masts and a variety of sails, and when the wind was strong
enough, this was the captain's preferred method of locomotion.  But The
Wayward was a powered ship, with a big, clamorous engine locked deep in
her lower reaches, and she could travel on any sea, in still weather or
riotous, and never be for an hour becalmed.

This and other fascinating facts Lucinda learned from Reuben, first
mate of The Wayward, or, as he liked to describe himself, "the man who
does everything he's told to do and everything else that makes the ship
go, and who still gets in trouble if a single thing goes wrong."  The
captain, a weathered, wiry Edori of about sixty years, had heard this
description and grinned.  There seemed to be a warm affection between
these two men, as well as the three others who crewed the ship, quite
different from the stern relationships of the Jansai and Mana-davvi
seamen she had seen put in to Angel Rock.  But then, the Edori were
different in just about every way from all the other people of Samaria
that Lucinda had encountered.

As on the trip to Lisle, on this journey Aunt Gretchen kept entirely to
her cabin, and so Lucinda was free to amuse herself any way she could.
Since they were the only two passengers, her single hope of
entertainment lay with the Edori crewmen.  And of the five of them,
Reuben seemed the most happy to oblige.

He was a tall man, but lean, and constant exposure to the elements had
deepened the color of his skin to a rich mahogany.  He wore his
waist-length hair in a loose braid, tied with a strip of leather, and
his sleeveless vests or carelessly buttoned shirts showed off his
well-muscled arms and chest.  Lucinda thought he was quite the most
attractive man she'd seen, in Angel Rock.  or Samaria, and only the
most threadbare remnant of guile kept her from saying so.  Normally,
she said what she thought--to anybody, on any subject.  But Reuben was
so handsome that she was just a little inhibited, and shyer on some
subjects than she would otherwise be.  But every time he spoke to her,
however briefly, the instant his back was turned she put a hand in
exaggerated ecstasy to her heart and allowed her face to register
appreciation of his awesome beauty.

The times he talked to her were the highlights of those seven days
aboard the ship.

The first couple of conversations were merely civil--though Edori, she
had learned, had few of the automatic rituals of ~serve most people
extended to total strangers.  Their welcome was immediate and sincere,
and their goodwill was not dependent upon an acquaintanceship of more
than a few minutes.  It occurred to her to wonder if it would be
possible to ~cam an Edori's enmity, and if so, how, but that was a
question she never got around to asking.

That first day, when she spoke with Reuben, it was to ask him simple
things: how long the trip would take, how big the ship was, how long he
had been a sailor.  He showed her around The Wayward, told her she
could pretty much go where she chose, and introduced all the other crew
members to her.

"That's Maurice, he's the captain.  He's the oldest of the lot, but not
at all hard of hearing, so you can't mock him as you'd like.  That's
Michael, you'll remember him because he's ugly.  Part allali, you
know."

Michael had looked up at this description and grinned.  He was not as
handsome as Reuben, but in any other company he would have been a
strong contender.

"He's part what?"  Lucinda repeated.

"Ah, now you've offended her," Michael said.  "Best go bury your head
in shame and let me finish the tour."

"Allali," Reuben said with the most innocent expression imaginable.
"It's an Edori word that means anyone not of our race."

"It means," Michael said, "dirty, cheating, lying scum, or roughly
those words, which applies to anyone who's not an Edori."

"Ah," Lucinda said solemnly.  "Not a complimentary term, then."

"Well."  said Reuben, "not always.  Over there are Joe and Ricardo,
you'll never speak to them, so you've no reason to tell them apart, but
Joe's the tall one and Ricardo's the one with the bad leg."

"He's turned that around," Michael told her.  "Rico's the tall one and
Joe limps."

She looked from one to the other.  They both looked entirely serious.
"But who should I believe?"  she questioned.

"Me, of course.  In addition to being as ugly as a bail of fish bait,
Michael's a terrible liar.  Never believe a word he says."

"I'll ask them," she decided, and made her way over the coiled ropes
and stacks of boxes to where the two men were checking a net and
enjoying an amiable conversation.

"If I could just have a minute of your time," she said, and they looked
up with that universal Edori grin.  "I was sent to ask you--which one
of you is named Ricardo?"

"He is," the men said in unison, each pointing at the other.  Then they
each tapped their own chests.  "And I'm Joe," they added.

Lucinda could not keep the laughter from bubbling up.  "Oh.  Well, that
explains everything.  It was nice to meet both of you."

So that was how she met the crew members; and then, within a day, she
was taking her meals with them, too.  That first day, she brought food
to Gretchen's small cabin and ate with her aunt, but Gretchen had
little conversation to offer except bitter comments on the pitching of
the ship and the wretchedness of her stomach.  Lucinda saved her own
meal for the solitude of her room, and tried not to sigh too loudly
over each lonely bite.

The next day, as Reuben called them all down to the galley for lunch,
she impulsively asked him if passengers were allowed to eat with the
crew.  "If not, I do understand," she said, but Reuben instantly waved
her to a seat around the small, cramped table.

"Next I suppose you'll be wanting to haul the sails, too," he said.
"Well, that can be arranged, mikala!  We've always work for idle
hands."

"Mikala?"  she repeated.

 "Young lady.  An Edori term."

"And just as polite as the last Edori word you--"

"No, this one is truly respectable.  Me you can trust," he said,
entering behind them.  "It would be 'mikele' if you were a young boy. 
Very nice words.  Use them with pride."

"The mikala Lucinda will be joining us for meals from now on," Reuben
informed Michael.

"Good!  Then perhaps we will raise the level a notch or two."

Reuben eyed Lucinda with his head tilted to one side.  He was grinning.
"Do you think so?"  he said.  "She does not look much the intellectual
to me."

"Well, but it would not take much to impress you, or I had gathered,"
she replied, and was rewarded with a burst of laughter from both men.

"I'm thinking she took your measure quickly enough," Michael said to
his mate.

"At any rate, I'd rather look on her face than yours," Reuben
retorted.

The whole conversation had to be recapped for Joe and cardo when they
entered the galley.  Maurice, who never joined the crew for meals,
apparently stayed at the helm.  Lucinda listened closely, but she still
was unable to determine which was which; the other two referred to them
alternately by names.  It was annoying, a little, but it also continued
to be amusing.

So the first few days on board ship passed in a lively and pleasant
manner, and Lucinda tried not to abuse her privileges by getting in the
way.  The men were almost always busy, though they invariably had time
to spare her a friendly word, and she was grateful just to be given
free run of the ship and a frequent smile.

They were a little more than a day outside of Angel Rock before she had
her first extended conversation with Reuben.  She caught him in a rare
moment of laxness, as he leaned over the railing at the bow of the
ship, enjoying the cool liquid run of the wind against his cheeks.

"So are you looking forward to getting back to Ysral?"  she asked as
she came up beside him and put her hands on the rail to steady
herself.

"It'll be another week or so before I'm there," he said.  "And I won't
be there long before we set sail again.  Most of my life is spent at
sea, you know."

"I would have thought it would take longer than two weeks to get
between Samaria and Ysral," she said.

"Actually, you can do it in less time, if you're willing to run the
engine the whole way," he told her.  "But that takes fuel, which costs
money, and we're so rarely in a hurry that we don't often use it.  But
many's the time I've been glad to have it in the hold, ready to whisk
us across the sea."

"When the wind is calm," she said, nodding sagely.

His face crinkled in a grin.  "That, and when the wind is too rough and
we want to outrun it if we're able.  And if the Jansai are prowling the
oceans, looking for easy pickings.  Then the engine is our
lifesaver."

"The Jansai?"  she repeated, startled.  "What do you mean?"  He glanced
down at her, still grinning, but now it seemed that it was her
innocence that amused him.  "They're a warlike people, the Jansai, and
a covetous people, too.  And they've never cared much for the Edori.
They aren't above a little theft on the open ocean, if there aren't
other ships too close and they think they can get away with it."

"Theft--you mean, they attack you?  Attack your boats?  And steal your
cargoes?"

He nodded, still faintly amused.  She wondered for a moment if he might
be teasing her again.  "Aye, and sink the boats and all the men aboard
them, though that hasn't happened often in the past two or three years.
We've got the edge, you see, since our engines are better and our boats
are faster, and we keep a keen eye out for any ship sailing the Jansai
colors.  But there's many an Edori girl weeping because a Jansai
warship came close enough to board an Edori cargo boat, and the boat
went down with all hands aboard."

"But--surely--can't you tell the Archangel?  He would never countenance
such actions!  You're not Samarian citizens, true, but the Jansai are,
and he must be able to keep them in check."

Now the grin faded, to be replaced by a thoughtful, considering look.
"Aye, well, in fact the Archangel is none too keen to put a leash on
the Jansai, seeing as he's the one who let them out of the kennel," he
said.  "In public I'm sure he's against the piracy, but he has his
reasons for allowing it to go on."

"What reasons?  What could he possibly--"

"Well, the Edori have been known to be friendly to the Jacobites,"
Reuben drawled, "and Archangel Bael would be happy to see all Jacobites
quietly removed from the face of the earth."

"Jacobites," she repeated.  "I didn't realize any still existed."

He raised his eyebrows, "They wouldn't, if Bael had his way," he said.
"But I assure you, there are more than a handful left."

Now she leaned against the railing and stared at the ~re;ti without
really noticing it.  "My mother was a Jacobite," she said.  "So they
tell me.  She was a mortal, though born to angel, and she was raised at
Cedar Hills.  But somehow she got caught up with Jacob Fairman and his
friends, and she was converted.  I thought all the Jacobites were wiped
out when Fairman was killed.  But then," she added apologetically, "I
don't get all the current news about the mainland, and Gretchen doesn't
tell me everything she knows."

"Well, I'd say there are several hundred of them still .  and who knows
how many living in secret who would ~en irate the Jacobite doctrine if
it didn't mean their lives," Reube said.  "I was not joking, you know.
Bael has made it his mission to exterminate the rebels and their
heretical beliefs, and he has licensed the Jansai to do the work for
him."

"I believe you," she said, "but I don't see why."

"Because all of Bael's power rests in the notion that Yovah is a god,"
he said, using the Edori pronunciation of the god's name.  "If Yovah is
indeed a starship---some machine programmed to respond to certain voice
cues--what does that make Bael?  The custodian of a piece of equipment.
It destroys his position as spiritual leader of the country.  It shreds
the mystique of the angels.  It invalidates his life, basically."

Lucinda gave a small shrug, and felt her wings lift and settle with the
motion of her shoulders.  She was still gazing sightlessly down at the
glittering water.  "It still seems to me that he would want to know the
truth," she said.  "I would want to know, if I were Bael."

"Perhaps it's not a truth that we can know," Reuben said.  "It's too
hard to prove one way or the other.  Though we can devote our minds to
analyzing the question and coming up with reasonable guesses."

Now she turned to look at him, focusing at last on his face.  "And what
do you believe?"  she asked softly.

"You must understand that the Edori have never worshipped Yovah quite
the way you angels and the other Samarians have," he said easily.  "So
for us it's not quite as big a leap as it would be for some others."

"What exactly do you believe, then?"  she said.  "And why do you call
the god 'Yovah'?"

"Yovah is how the Edori have always said his name, though in the very,
very old oral histories we have records of the god being referred to as
Yahweh and Jehovah.  He seems to be a god whose name has many variants.
But centuries ago the Edori chose to call him Yovah, and so we have
called him ever since."

"As to what we believe," he said, his voice growing slower and deeper,
and losing every teasing edge, "we believe he is one god of many.  That
he was set above Samaria to watch over this planet, to reward us when
we prayed and chastise us when we erred, and to record our names on his
eternal scrolls.  But we do not believe he is the deity that pervades
the entire universe.  We do believe there is a god, all-powerful and
fantastic, who knows the location of every star and the longing of
every soul.  This nameless god, we do believe, controls Yovah and
controls all the minor gods that look after every other planet in the
universe.  We do not know his name or his form, but we know he is
there, that he hears us, that he watches us, and that he knows us.  And
that he has given us Yovah because he loves us."

"No wonder Gretchen told me you are all heretics," Lucinda murmured.
"This is blasphemy almost as astounding as the Jacobites'."

He smiled.  "It is not blasphemy if it is what you believe to be true"
he said mildly.  "And, as you can see, it is a philosophy that makes it
very easy to accept the idea that Yovah is in fact a machine.  A
starship, if you will.  With no other power than that bestowed upon it
by men."

"And is that what you believe?"  she asked.

He spread his hands in a considering gesture.  "I am not entirely
convinced," he said.  "I think it is a possibility.  I think,
technologically and mathematically, it could be true.  But I am not
completely willing to give up the idea of my personal god, standing so
close to my homeland that he can cool it with his breath or wet it with
his tears.  I would be sad to lose Yovah as a god.  But I  would not be
as sad as Bael."

"But you think it is possible?  You truly do?  That men could have
created something so complex, so wonderful, that ~f turies it could
imitate the functions of a god?"

"Yes," he said.  "I truly do."

"Then I must learn more about these Jacobites," she said.

He laughed, obviously surprised.  "So you are not offended?  Horrified?
Shocked?  I thought you would be."

"I have not been raised among the holds," she reminded him. "I do not
know what it feels like to be an angel who is revered by the common
men.  I have learned to pray to Jovah, true, and I have had him
respond, but no one but me was much impressed.  I have always thought
he was my god.  And I would be sorry to lose him.  But I think I would
be more sorry not to know the truth."

"Then," Reuben said, "I have something interesting I should show
you."

But he never got a chance.  At that moment Michael shouted to him from
the stern, and Rico (or Joe) called to him from belowships.  "Looks
like I'm wanted," he said, and spin'cd a moment to give her a final
smile. "We'll talk more later."

She knew she should retire to her cabin and keep out of the way of
whatever emergency was occurring, but curiosity sent her following
Reuben, a few discreet paces behind.  Still shouting, Rico erupted from
the galley hatch and raced toward the main mast.  He flung himself on
it and started to frantically climb the knotted ropes to the top. 
Lucinda stared in amazement.  Just then, she felt a sudden thump and
roar beneath her, and the ship lurched forward with such abruptness
that she almost lost her balance.  Someone had deployed the engine. 
Rico had made it halfway up the main mast and began calling numbers
down to his crewmates.  Joe and Michael and Reuben were hauling down
sails, coiling ropes, and shouting directions to each other so rapidly
that Lucinda could not keep track of who was where or what they said. 
Maurice apparently was still in the bridge, guiding the boat forward,
though it began a disorienting weave from side to side just as it
picked up speed.  She hoped he was in the bridge, and that they hadn't
just suddenly run amok.

Someone grabbed her arm from behind, and she almost screamed.  "Get
belowdecks," Michael ordered.  "Now!"

"What's happening?"

"Jansai.  Get below!"

"Jansai?"  she cried, but he had left her; he was running across the
deck shouting something unintelligible to Reuben.  Lucinda stood
immobile, uncomprehending, feeling the deck shake beneath her feet as
the engine revved to a higher pitch.  She could see the bow lift a
little against the rocking sea as the ship pushed its way more
forcefully through the uncooperative water.  Every separate plank and
nail seemed to tighten against the strain, to grow sleeker and more
sheer, as the ship cut through the water with ever-increasing speed.
And yet, Lucinda felt panic rising from the men around her.  It was not
fast enough.

There was another great boom, louder and more distant, and she whirled
to see what had caused it.  Something huge dropped into the ocean
twenty feet away, sending up a spray of water so broad that she was
completely soaked.  She wiped her eyes impatiently and stared.  So
close she could not believe she had not seen it before, a second ship
was veering toward them across the waves.  Like the Edori vessel, it
had dropped its sails, so it must be moving under outside power.  It
was bigger than The Wayward and painted a cobalt black, hard to see
against the waves, particularly at night.  No flag flew from its
highest mast, but it was not difficult to identify its origin:
Breven.

A Jansai ship was firing on The Wayward.

A second time she heard that buried explosion, only this time she saw
the cannon on board the Jansai ship glow with fire a moment before the
heavy ball arced across the water.  Again, the shot fell short; again,
Lucinda and the whole deck of The Wayward were drenched with seawater.
The Jansai ship kept coming at an alarming pace, angling across the
water to intersect with the Edori vessel.  Maurice had altered their
course, and the whine of the engine continued to increase as The
Wayward went faster and faster, but it seemed only too obvious that the
Edori boat had been caught unaware and could not correct for disaster
in time.

Someone grabbed Lucinda violently from behind, and she was whirled
around to face Reuben's angry eyes.  "I thought you were told to go
belowdecks!"  he shouted over the roar of the engine.  "Do it!  Go!"

"I want to help!"  she shouted back.  "How can I--"

He wasted no more time on words.  Heedless of how he handled her wings,
he spun her with his hands and hustled her across the deck toward the
ramp to the lower levels.  She tried to protest and she tried to
resist, but he was impatient and furious, and he nearly shoved her
through the narrow door.  She felt her feathers scrape agonizingly
against the tight frame, and she allowed herself to be pushed through
rather than suffer further injury.  Under her own power, she completed
the climb down, then stood for a moment in the hallway, indecisive.

There was another cannon shot, this one sounding more muffled because
she was belowdecks; the whole ship rocked by the force of the waves
kicked up by the ball as it hit the water.  Lucinda heard a helpless
shriek coming from the cabin next to hers, and rushed down the hall to
see what she could do for Gretchen.

Her aunt was standing at the edge of her bunk one hand splayed against
the wall, and her face completely colorless.  "Sweet Jovah save us!" 
she exclaimed when Lucinda ~bu into her room.  "Is there a storm?"

"There's a Jansai boat coming up---we didn't see it in time."  Lucinda
said, hurrying to her aunt's side.  "We're trying to outrun it.  You
might be safer sitting down.  Or lying down"

"Merciful god!"  Gretchen cried.  "Jansai!  Attacking Whatever for?
Will we all be killed?"

"I hope not," Lucinda said.  "Please, you must be calm, there is
nothing you can do--"

"We must make this boat go faster!  We must escape them!"

"Maurice is trying, I believe.  Reuben says Edori boats are faster than
Jansai ones, and we should be safe, but apparently we didn't see this
one coming until it was almost too late."

"Jovah, Jovah, Jovah, merciful Jovah," Gretchen moaned, obeying the
urging of Lucinda's hands and collapsing onto the bed.  "I cannot
believe this is happening.  Jansai attacking.  We will all be killed, I
know it.  We will all be drowned."

"I hope not," Lucinda said again.  But the words were barely out of her
mouth when another explosion was followed, seconds later, by the
crashing noise of a cannonball connecting with wood.  There was a
terrible sound of rolling thunder overhead as boards were splintered
and masts were struck and boxes were knocked askew.  Gretchen screamed.
Above them, the hoarse shouts of the Edori men tallied the damage and
estimated their chances.  They sounded afraid, Lucinda thought; and she
grew even more frightened.

 "Why are they attacking us?"  Gretchen demanded again.  "What have we
done?"

"They think there are Jacobites aboard," Lucinda said absently.

"Jacobites," Gretchen repeated numbly.  "Why would we--and even
if--dear god, if they but knew.  Not Jacobites aboard this ship, but an
angel.  If Bael finds out--ah, dear god, dear god--"

She went on this way for some time, but Lucinda had stopped listening.
Yes, indeed, an angel aboard; and Bael would not like it at all if he
found out.

"Stay here," she said suddenly to her aunt, and slipped from the room.
She ran down the short hallway and up the cramped stairway, hoping no
one was close enough to notice her in time to stop her.  Up on the
deck, the air was acrid and thick with smoke, and the Jansai ship had
drawn frighteningly close.  The noise--the engine, the shouting, the
whining of every timber--was incredible.  Lucinda felt her eyes water
and impatiently shook her head.  She must see clearly.  She must think
clearly.

She had heard one ball land; she looked around for it.  Not hard to
follow its erratic trail of destruction--and there it was, fetched up
against a toppled stack of crates not ten yards from where she stood.
She darted across the deck to retrieve it, knowing that the instant she
went into motion, a crew member would notice her.  She was right.
Someone shouted her name just as there was another boom, a singing
whine, and a terrifying crash as a cannonball plowed through the wall
of the captain's bridge.  She heard Maurice cry out, and she saw, from
the coruer of her eye, Reuben running her way across the deck.  She
scooped up the spent ball and flung herself aloft.

It was much heavier and much hotter than she had imagined, and she
almost dropped it on both accounts as she drove her wings hard against
the smoky air.  But she adjusted quickly for the weight, and she would
not be holding it that long.  She attained an extremely low cruising
altitude, and circled once above the Edori ship.

Faintly below her, she could hear more shouting--coming from The
Wayward, coming from the attacker.  She could see--or, from this
distance, imagined she could see--the Jansai crowded together at the
railing of their warship, pointing at her, calling out to their
comrades, "Do you see?  Do you see?  An angel aboard that vessel!" 
That should give them reason to pause, and so she hovered above the
Jansai ship, her wings spread as wide and steady as they would go,
allowing the afternoon sunlight to turn her feathers golden and halo
her yellow hair.  If they were really tracking Jacobites, they should
abandon their pursuit now, for surely they wouldn't believe that angels
and rebels would travel in peace together on the same ship.

But the Jansai boat did not slacken its pace.  Maurice, she was glad to
see, had not slowed The Wayward just because she had left it, and it
seemed to her that, imperceptibly, the Edori ship was drawing ahead.
The Jansai still followed, and she saw the red glow of their braziers
heating up for another round of cannon fire.  So she shifted her
position and beat her wings against the sullen air, and attained an
altitude so high above the warship that she could barely make out its
dark colors.  And then she opened her hands and let the cannonball
fall.

She could hear the mighty crash of its arrival, the thunderous
reverberations as it tore through the deck and tunneled through the
hull and fell with a great splash into the sea.  She had aimed just
right; it had smashed through the edge of the stern and ripped away a
good chunk of the planking, and even now the cold, excited water must
be rushing in on two levels.  She balled up her fingers, which felt
taut and crackled from the heat they had absorbed, and slowly spiraled
down for a better look.

Yes, the Jansai ship had stopped moving and all hands appeared to be
furiously attempting to repair the damage.  The Wayward had pulled
another hundred yards away.  Lucinda flapped her wings lazily and
regained a little of her altitude, slowly pursuing.  It felt good to
fly, to unfurl her clenched wings and feel the thick, viscous ocean air
lay its cushions under her feathers.  She would follow from the air for
another hour or so, watching out for other Jansai warships and enjoying
a little exercise.  By the time she landed, surely Reuben would have
lost some of the fury she was absolutely certain he was feeling.  Aunt
Gretchen she could handle; but the Edori's wrath was not something she
wanted to face immediately.

As it turned out, Reuben had had other things to worry about than the
angel's dangerous maneuvering.  The cannonball that had struck the
bridge had sent glass and twisted metal spraying through the small
chamber, and Maurice had been hit by flying timbers.  He was
unconscious and bleeding, and there was grave doubt about his chances
for survival.

Gretchen, who had always been a competent nurse, had assumed the chore
of caring for the captain.  Given a compelling task, she had managed to
overcome her seasickness and resume some of her usual brisk efficiency,
and she already had Joe and Rico running errands and fetching supplies
for her.  When they were not aiding her, they were helping Michael
repair the most extensive damages to the ship.  Reuben had climbed into
the shattered bridge and taken over the task of piloting the ship.

That left the galley to Lucinda.  The space was cramped but orderly; if
she did not turn too swiftly from table to grill, she could reposition
her wings without knocking anything from the countertops.  She was an
adequate cook, not an inspired one; she knew how to prepare a meal for
three or thirty, but it wasn't a job she sought out.  Still, everyone
else was obviously occupied, and this was something she could do, and
so she went to work willingly.

Michael, Joe, and Rico were surprised and grateful when she called them
down for the meal, though they waved off her offers of any further
assistance.  "Help your aunt with the captain," Michael said.  "That's
about all you can do."

"Well, and I'll clean up here.  And make breakfast in the morning.  How
long before we make it to Angel Rock?"

Michael looked somber.  "If we keep the engine running, we could be
there before dawn.  But the cannon fire did some damage and I'm not
sure how well the engines will hold up.  Might be best to drift in
under the sails.  We're still deciding."

"We don't have much of a harbor at Angel Rock," she said, "but there is
a yard where you can do repairs--"

Michael nodded.  "We know it.  We'll be there a day or two, most
likely.  But we'll be limping into port, I'm thinking."

He didn't say that they were in any immediate danger of shuddering
apart here in the middle of the cold ocean, so she didn't let herself
think about the possibility.  Much.  She of course could fly to safety
in a couple of hours, but how could she leave these six behind to drop
slowly, inexorably, into the hungry waters?  If she knew they were in
danger, she could rescue them, one at a time, fly first Gretchen then
Maurice then Reuben then the others to Angel Rock or some closer haven,
but it would take time, hours and hours, so she would have to know in
advance in order to save them all .... But they were not in any danger,
they just had to be careful.  By tomorrow they would be home.

She took a plate of food down to Gretchen, who was nursing the captain
in his own spartan cabin.  "How is he?"  she asked.

"Cold and in pain.  I think it's best not to give him anything to eat
right now.  I think he may have a concussion."

"The food was for you," Lucinda said gently.

Gretchen looked at her blankly for a moment.  "Oh.  I see.  Thank you.
Yes, I believe I am hungry."

Lucinda couldn't help smiling.  Her aunt was difficult, opinionated and
stubborn, but she was so strong.  Whatever the crisis, she had the
skills to rise to it, and forget her own illnesses and fears.  A month
ago Gretchen never would have admitted that she could be so absorbed in
nursing an Edori to health that she would forget her own bodily needs.
But Lucinda was not surprised.

"Do you need anything else?  I'm going to take dinner to Reuben now."

"No, I believe I've got everything I need.  Check with me again in an
hour or two."

"I will."

Finally, Lucinda prepared a plate for Reuben and climbed from the
galley to the deck to the bridge to deliver it.  In the moonless dark,
it was something of a trick to clamber over the disordered deck and
into the ravaged bridge, careful not to tear her skin or her clothes or
her wings on the sharp edges of splintered wood and ripped metal.  The
bridge, always small, was even more cramped now as planks lay across
its tiny floor and jutted into its confined space.

Reuben sat in the captain's chair, hands resting lightly on the redder,
eyes fixed before him on the glinting black surface of the sea.  As far
as Lucinda could tell, he was guiding the boat by memory alone, for she
could make out direction neither by constellation overhead nor
instrument panel at his side.  There was so little light from the stars
that they did not seem to sketch patterns either in the heavens or
across the water, and it was impossible to tell where the horizon line
lay.  The Wayward could be anywhere, it could be nowhere; it was
suspended in an element as foreign to her as space.

"This must be what it felt like to travel to Samaria on Jehovah," she
said softly, almost to herself.

Reuben did not start or turn suddenly around, so he must have heard her
approach, though he had offered no greeting.  "I have often thought
that same thing," he said.  "But surely the sea is less frightening
than the stars."

"You can drown in the sea," she reminded him.

"And you could, I am guessing, drift forever between the stars, lost
and disoriented, with no home port to go to.  I would choose the ocean
any day, I'm thinking."

"I brought you dinner," she said.

Now he turned to look at her, though she doubted he could make out
anything of her face in this nonexistent lighting.  "And did you cook
my dinner as well?"  he asked.

"I did.  It's not fancy, but it will nourish you well enough."

"Then you have yet another skill I would not have guessed.  First you
wage war like a Jansai, then you cook like any ordinary woman.  There
is more to you angels than a man first suspects."

It was disguised as irony, but she clearly read the anger.  "I will not
allow you to chastise me for doing what I could today," she said,
laying his plate before him so she could set her fists on her hips. "It
was a simple enough thing, and I was in no danger."

"It was wondrous brave, and you were in grave danger, and I will
chastise you if I like," he replied, his voice still under control but
a little less so.  "As I would reprimand any of my men who flung
themselves in harm's way, even to save their fellows.  Every minute you
were on deck, you were in danger from falling cannonballs."

"I was aloft soon enough."

"And a target even a half-blind Jansai could see!  Had they turned
their cannons your way while you floated above them in the air, could
you have moved quickly enough to evade them?  I think not!  And one of
those shots would have torn through your soft skin much more easily
than through the wood and metal and rubber of this ship."

"They would not have aimed at me," she said confidently.  "Kill an
angel?  Bael would never allow that.  Never."

"How would Bael have learned about it?"  Reuben demanded.  "If you were
dead and every soul aboard The Wayward went down, who would be left to
report atrocities to the Archangel?  I was close enough to the Jansai
ship to see where their guns were firing.  I saw the muzzle slipped
free of its support and aimed toward the heavens.  You could have died
in seconds, mikala, great angel wings or no, and not one of us could
have done a damn thing to save you."

It had not occurred to her--would never have crossed her mind--that she
could have been in any mortal danger, deliberately and maliciously
directed at her person.  The ball would not even have had to hit her
body; it could have tom through one of those delicate lace wings and
sent her plunging into the icy water.  But it had not happened.  She
would not think about it.

"I will not apologize," she said, lifting her chin, though he could not
see the mutinous gesture in the dark.  "For, say what you will, I saved
all our lives.  And I would do it again.  Though you locked me in my
cabin and forbade me to help."

"Well, and it was an act of courage and quick thinking such as I could
not have come up with myself, even had I wings such as yours," Reuben
said in a softened voice.  "If it were not for the great fear I had for
your life, I would be blessing you and thanking you now.  But my heart
stopped in my body when I saw you swooping away from this ship, and
when I thought that cannon would shred you to pieces overhead, I nearly
died myself.  I am not used to denying anybody the right to defend
himself or his friend.  I don't know why it was so hard on me to see
you take a chance I would cheer anyone else for taking.  Maybe I am
like every other Samarian, and I think any angel is a precious thing. 
But I would not like to live through another afternoon like this
one."

"No, and neither would I," Lucinda said in as offland a voice as she
could manage after that extraordinary speech.  "Let us hope none of us
is ever at such risk again."

Moments after that she left the bridge, murmuring some incoherent
phrase about needing to clean the galley.  Well, all Edori were flirts;
she had heard that often enough from Gretchen, from her friends on
Angel Rock.  All Edori could charm the heart from a woman's body with
honeyed words poured into her ear; they were laughing lovers who left
nothing but warm regret behind.  And sailors--they were not to be
trusted, they wooed girls in every port from Lisle to Port Clara to the
Ysral harbors, and to not a single one were they true.  So the words of
an Edori sailor, sweet though they sounded, were as insubstantial as
foam lashed up by a falling wave.

And yet he had sounded sincere, and the anger, she knew, had been
genuine; so maybe, the least littlest bit, he cared if she lived or
died.  And the thought was so amazing, so huge but so intimate, that
she could not get a hold of it.  It made her shiver, made her sing,
made her wrap her wings around herself for comfort and celebration. She
stood for maybe half an hour in the tiny galley, cocooned in her own
feathers, motionless, thoughtless, buffeted between doubt and fear, and
wondered what it would be like to be drowned in an Edori's love.

But her dreams that night were anything but romantic.  Lately--since
the morning of the Gloria--she had had odd nightmares, filled with fear
and violence and desperation.  Once or twice, waking at midnight, she
would find herself still gripped by a wretched panic, a sensation so
strong that she could not believe it was stirred up by nothing more
alarming than a dream.  It would sometimes be hours before the
desolation faded and she could sleep again in relative peace.

But it had been a few days since she had had the nightmares, and she
had been so tired this night upon seeking her bed that she had thought
she would fall instantly asleep.  And so she did--but a few hours later
she woke herself by her own crying, soft and hopeless and unfathomable.
Her face, her pillow, her hair were all wet with tears; she must have
been weeping for some time before her sobs awakened her.  She was
surprised by the leaden weight on her chest, the sense of loss and
helplessness.  What could she have been dreaming of, what terrible
images or fears had clenched upon her heart in the night?  Dimly her
mind showed her pictures of broken bodies, bloodied clothing, but she
could not reconstruct a narrative.  Maybe it was simply that the
violent events of the day had gone reeling through her head in a
drunken, brutal sprawl, and her mind could not process them rationally.
It was not an easy thing to ~com ont the possibility of one's own
death, or the deaths of those nearby.  She was not used to such sober
thoughts; they shocked through her body and transmogrified themselves
to nightmares.

She turned to her side and pillowed her head on her hands, but she was
a little afraid to go back to sleep.  She still felt weary, drained,
and sorrowful, for no cause that she could identify (no one had died,
after all).  Even Maurice had seemed stable enough when she last
checked on Gretchen before seeking her own bed.  Everything would be
fine.  Reuben or Michael had apparently decided that the engines were
whole enough to do their work, for they were still moving through the
ocean at top speed and they would be at Angel Rock sometime before
morning.  They would all be safe there; everything would return to
normal.  A few more hours and all would be well.

the tiny harbor at Angel Rock was crowded: in addition to the various
small working craft owned by island residents, there were three visitor
ships lined up at the dock.  Two were Edori and one bore the blue
colors of Luminaux, so Lucinda, who had been fearing Jansai, relaxed.
No danger lurking here.

Always a sleepy port, Angel Rock at dawn was completely deserted.
Lucinda flew in low over the wharf, just in case anyone was astir, but
she spotted no one.  So she flew on to the Manor, the eight-bedroom inn
that she and her aunt Gretchen operated, and landed on the flagstoned
walk leading to the front door.

Emmie was standing on the porch, shaking out a rug, which she dropped
to the ground when Lucinda touched down.  "You're back!  .We weren't
sure when to expect you!  Your aunt wrote from someplace a week or so
ago and said it might be another fortnight--"

"Is Jackson here?"  Lucinda interrupted.  "We've got a hurt man on our
ship, and we'll need a stretcher to carry him back here."

"He's sleeping, I'm sure."  Emmie sniffed.  "I'll wake him if you
like."

"Yes.  Tell him to go to the dock and await The Wayward.  Then get a
good breakfast ready for five or six.  I'll go see if I can find
Hammet.  How many rooms are empty?"

"Four of them."

Lucinda nodded.  "We'll put Maurice in one and the others can share.
Or--I don't know, they might want to sleep on the ship.  At any rate,
they should be here within the hour, so please hurry."

Emmie disappeared back inside, leaving the rug in the dirt.  Lucinda
hurried on foot down the short road to the Gablefront Inn, run by
Hammet and Celia Zephyr.  They were a charming, erudite couple who had
retired to Angel Rock from Luminaux five years ago; Hammet had been a
surgeon of some renown and Celia had been a metalworker.  Although
Hammet never failed to point out that his specialty had been bone
repair, he was the closest thing to a doctor living on the island, and
so they all brought him their illnesses, injuries, and aches for
healing.

Celia herself answered the door, dressed in an embroidered nightshirt
that looked expensive enough to pay for remodeling her hotel.  Her
salt-and-pepper hair was coiled on top of her head, and her complexion
was rosy from sleep.  "Why, Lucinda!  I had no idea you were back!  Is
there trouble?  Where's your aunt?"

"She's still on the ship that brought us from Samaria," Lucinda said.
"There's a hurt man on hoard.  I've sent Jackson to the harbor with a
stretcher.  Do you think Hammet can meet us at the Manor in an hour or
so?  I don't know how soon they'll arrive."

"But of course he can!"  Celia exclaimed.  "What's the nature of this
man's injury?  Hammet will want to know."

"Concussion and some pretty big chest wounds," Lucinda said.  "Our ship
was fired on by Jansai cannon, and the ball hit where Maurice was
sitting."

"Fired on!  Jansai!"  Celia repeated.  "I can't believe--"

"I couldn't either.  But I was there.  No one else was hurt."

"Sweet god singing,"  the older woman murmured.  "Don't you worry. 
I'll have Hammet over at your place in half an hour."

Lucinda checked in at the Manor again briefly to make sure both Emmie
and Jackson were doing as they were told, and then she glided back to
the wharf to waken the harbormaster.  Not that there was much he could
do, but Foster liked to be apprised of all the events going on in his
domain.

"Jansai, yes, they're a terrible nuisance on the high seas," he told
her as they strolled down to the dock to await The Wayward's arrival.
"More than one Edori ship has come dragging into harbor here having run
afoul of a Jansai warship."

"I didn't know anything about this," she said.

Foster shrugged.  "I suspect they war on none but the Edori.  Who are
not the type to complain to the Archangel.  He may not even know of the
piracy."

"Or he may," Lucinda said, thinking back to her conversation with
Reuben.

Foster shrugged again.  "Or he may.  The ways of the angels are
mysterious and sometimes prejudicial to mortals.  Which is why I left
Samaria twenty years ago."

"Someday you'll have to tell me the whole story," Lucinda said, but
absently.  She had spotted The Wayward's masts shaping out of the early
morning mist.  "When we have more time."

There was an excruciating wait (it seemed pointless to fly back to the
ship just to get in everyone's way), and then an hour's worth of bustle
as the ship docked and Maurice was carried off.  The sailors
commandeered Jackson's stretcher and bore their captain down the short
street to the Manor, following Gretchen's brisk lead.  Lucinda trailed
behind them, feeling useless and stupid.

Another pair of hours passed in purposeful activity as Ham-met examined
Maurice, Lucinda fed the sailors, and Gretchen consulted Emmie and
Jackson about the status of the hotel while she'd been gone. Everything
looked fine to Lucinda: The roof was still on and none of the windows
had been bashed in, so she couldn't imagine that anything dreadful had
gone wrong.  But Gretchen liked to be in control of her environment,
and she could not relax for half an hour until she had identified
potential problems that had boiled up in her absence.

Reuben slipped away before Lucinda had a chance to talk to him; she
guessed he had swallowed his breakfast, then tracked down the doctor in
Maurice's room.  There was good news, though: Reuben had told Gretchen
that he would much appreciate a room at the hotel, though he expected
the three others would sleep on the ship.  Which meant, for another day
or so, she would have the exquisitely wonderful, exquisitely torturous
gift of his company.

She busied herself cleaning the kitchen, though Emmie could do it well
enough.  Gretchen swept through, saying, "Well, nothing's irretrievably
broken, and that's a blessing, though a small one," before marching
toward the stairway to check on the condition of the upstairs rooms. 
Lucinda smiled, then she sighed.

It was another half hour before she had any news of Maurice, and that
was brought by Reuben himself.  Lucinda had drifted into the large
parlor and begun automatically to open curtains and neaten the
furniture, though Emmie had kept everything in reasonably good shape.
She cast a longing glance at her harpsichord, for she found nothing so
soothing as music, but she did not want to disturb the hurt man.  So
she merely dusted the top of it with the cuff of her sleeve, and closed
the lid over the keyboard.

"When you've time, you'll have to play a song or two for me," said a
voice from the doorway, and she was so startled she almost crushed her
fingers under the lid.  "At least, I assume you play?"

"I do, and so does my aunt.  She taught me.  How is Maurice?"

"Your kind doctor says he's well enough and just needs two or three
days of quiet rest, undisturbed by gunfire or violence."

"You told him what happened?"

"He did ask."

"Was he shocked?"

Reuben came farther into the room and shook his head.  "He didn't seem
like a man easily shocked, your doctor.  My guess is he's got sharp old
eyes that have seen a great deal in this lifetime."

"Luminauzi," Lucinda said with a shrug.

"Well, they are the wisest."

There was a moment's silence while Reuben stared out through the lace
curtains and Lucinda tried to think of something to demonstrate her own
wisdom.  All she could come up with was, "So what will you do now?"

"Wait a few days till the captain's better, then sail on to Ysral," he
said, still looking out the window.

"I meant--this minute.  Is there anything I can do for you?  For
Maurice?"

"Where are Michael and the others?"

"They went back to the ship.  They said they needed to sleep for a
week."

Reuben smiled.  "As do I. Perhaps we'll be here longer than a few
days."

"There's a room ready for you," Lucinda said tentatively.  "If you'd
like to go there now."

At last he turned to look at her, smiling faintly, and she felt all her
blood rush to her cheeks at the sheer beauty of his face.  "What I need
more than a bed right now," he said, "is a hot bath.  Is such a thing
to be found here on Angel Rock?"

"Yes, we have baths in a chamber out back," she said, though it was a
struggle to speak normally.  Which was ridiculous; she could not
imagine why she was behaving so oddly.  "I'll have Emmie heat the
water. It will be ready in ten minutes?"

"And then I'll sleep for a week," he said.  "When I come down, I'll be
so civil and cheerful that you won't know me."

"You may be changed," she managed to retort, "but I don't think a
little water and a little dreaming will improve you so much as all
that."

"Wait and see," he promised.  "Wait and see."

After that, the rest of the day was nothing but dull anticlimax. 
Reuben and Maurice slept; Gretchen sailed through the house, noting
inefficiencies and errors; Emmie trailed behind her, explaining things
away and rolling her eyes at Lucinda; Jackson kept to himself in his
basement quarters until he was summoned to a chore or an accounting.
Most of the neighbors dropped by to welcome them back, but of course
Gretchen had no time to visit with any of them.  Lucinda listened with
far less interest than usual to the recitations of events that had
occurred while she was gone (learning from three separate sources that
Timothy and Gia had decided to marry, though no one was supposed to
know it, and Parker was considering returning to the mainland, though
he had not decided if he would live with his son in Breven or his
daughter on her farm in Bethel).  These were the comforting, familiar
threads of her daily life; she was shocked to learn that other faces,
other names, could take up so much of her attention that she had little
to spare for her oldest friends.

But she was tired and out of sorts.  In a day or two, when the Edori
sailed away, she would revert to her ordinary self.  The Manor would
not look so strange, as if the rooms had shrunk down or the furniture
had been wrongly arranged; the accents of her neighbors would not sound
so provincial and unmelodic.  Everything would be the way it should be,
as she remembered it, as it had been before she'd left.

And the next day she did feel much better.  She had gone to bed early
and slept late, and not stirred once the entire night.  She woke to the
smell of Emmie's pancakes and bacon, and aroma was so delicious and so
familiar that she instantly felt like she was home.  And was swept with
a great nostalgia for this place that she had known most of her life,
and missed more now, at this instant, than she had for the whole time
she was away on her journey.

She bounded into the kitchen and had breakfast, chattering with Emmie
the whole time.  Yes, it was true, Timothy and Gia were marrying but
the real secret was that Gia was already with child and if Gia's
parents ever found out, she would be banned forever from Angel Rock. 
As for Parker, he had been saying for five years that he would leave
the island, but Emmie herself would believe that when she saw his ugly
face grinning at them from the railing of an outbound ship.

"But who cares about any of those people?"  the housemaid said
impatiently, clearing off a place at the table and sitting beside
Lucinda.  The two were nearly the same age and had bth been raised on
Angel Rock; neither could remember a day they had not known each other.
"Who is that gorgeous man?  And how long is he going to stay here?"

"You couldn't possibly be referring to poor sick Maurice.  now could
you?"  Lucinda teased.

"No, I couldn't be.  I meant that other one--Reuben, I think your aunt
called him.  He's enough to make you want to be sailing off to
Ysral."

"Don't think it hasn't crossed my mind."  Lucinda sighed.
"Although--Edori sailors.  You're the one who told me not to trust
them."

"Well, and I had good reason to tell you that," Emmie said firmly.
"That Yacov!  Well, and I  didn't have much luck with Amos, either,
although he was a beautiful man to look at and said sweeter things than
I have ever heard coming from a mouth.  But this Reuben looks like an
intelligent, thinking person. So tell me about him.  Did you get to
know him on this journey?  And how is it you come to be traveling on an
Edori ship, anyway?  I thought your aunt wouldn't consider it."

But the trip home was the very last part of a very long story.  and
Lucinda was just as glad to turn the talk away from Reu ben's manifest
charms.  There were many other tales to tell Emmie, of the Gloria
itself, of Bael and Jared and the other angels, of Cedar Hills and
Luminaux.  And Emmie listened intently to it all, easily remembering
names and events and interjecting the occasional shrewd comment on
Gretchen's probable reaction to events.

"But the Edori boat," the housemaid said at last, toward the end of the
narrative.  "What in the world changed her mind about that?"

Lucinda shook her head.  "One day I was at Cedar Hills, having lunch
with Omar--"

"The Archangel's son."

"Right.  And the next day we were scurrying off to Port Clara, bound
and determined to take the next ship out.  I have no idea what set her
off.  You know my aunt.  It could have been anything."

"No, not quite anything," Emmie said, frowning.  "She has strange
reasons, sometimes, but once you know them they always make an odd kind
of sense.  Someone must have said something to her that made her feel
like she'd overstayed her welcome.  Or made her feel like she was in
some kind of danger."

"Danger?"  Lucinda repeated incredulously.  "In Cedar Hills?  It's true
someone may have made some comment that she took amiss--"

Emmie leaned forward.  "Did you ever ask her," the girl said, "why she
left Cedar Hills in the first place?  When she brought you here?  Did
you ever wonder what made a middle-aged spinster bring a small child to
the most isolated spot in the whole world?  Did she kidnap you?  Was
she afraid someone would take you away from her?  If she just wanted to
raise you away from the hold, couldn't she have found a nice little
house outside one of the small towns in Jordana?  Why Angel Rock?  Why
did she have to run away?"

"I don't know," Lucinda said blankly.  "She never said.  It's never
come up."

Emmie sat back in her chair.  "If I were you, I'd want to find out. And
I would think whatever it was, that's the same thing that sent you away
from Samaria so fast that you ended up on an Edori boat.  With the most
handsome man I've seen walking around live in all my days."

After the meal, Lucinda carried a tray up to Maurice's room where she
knew her aunt had spent much of the night.  She was surprised to find,
instead of a comatosed man and a sleeping woman, two wide-awake Edori.
Maurice was sitting up in bed and Reuben was standing over him,
grinning.

"You're awake!  You're better!"  Lucinda exclaimed, laying her tray
aside and coming forward.  "How do you feel?"

"Like five horses rode over me in the dark, and a sixth one kicked me
in the head," the captain replied promptly.  "But not so bad,
considering.  Reuben tells me your doctor has recommended three more
days in bed, but says there's no reason I shouldn't heal completely."

"Well, that's good news.  Are you hungry?  Are you allowed to eat?" She
glanced around.  "Where's my aunt Gretchen?"

"I sent her off to her bed when I came in this morning," Reuben said.
"I don't think she would have gone but she didn't have the strength to
protest."

"She must think he's really better, or she wouldn't have left anyway,"
Lucinda said.  She was considering the bacon and pancakes on her tray.
"Not for you just yet," she decided.  "Reuben may eat this breakfast,
if he likes, and I'll bring up some porridge for Maurice."

"But I like bacon," the hurt man wheedled.

"I don't think so," Lucinda said.  "But maybe if you do well with
porridge, we'll let you have some beef tonight."

She hurried back to the kitchen and returned to the sickroom twenty
minutes later, carrying a fresh tray of porridge, tea, and fruit.
Maurice ate like a starved man, so she relented and fetched him two
slices of bacon.  Emmie was still cooking; the other guests had begun
to stir and ask for their breakfasts.  At the Manor, breakfast was
served until every last hungry person had been fed.  Dinner, however,
was served promptly at six, although anyone who happened to miss this
meal could easily cajole one of the women to fix him a cold plate.
Gretchen could not abide the thought of anyone going hungry under her
roof, though her sense of hospitality warred with her desire for order.
Hospitality always won.

"Reuben tells me you've baths out back," Maurice said.  "If it wouldn't
be too much of an imposition--"

"Jackson can help Reuben take you down there.  It's something of a walk
and you're still so weak."

So that was quite a procession, the three men limping through the halls
and out through the garden, into the sauna--and then, half an hour
later, reversing the process.  Maurice looked pale and drained after
the excursion, and it was no surprise to anyone when he opted for a nap
as soon as he'd made it back to his bedroom.

"And you."?"  Lucinda asked Reuben as they closed Maurice's door and
stood for a moment in the hallway.  "Has all this activity tired you
out as well?"

"Not at all," he said promptly.  "In fact, I was just wondering what I
might do to entertain myself.  You, no doubt, have a list of chores
fifteen pages long--"

"I do," she interrupted, "but I've been gone for weeks and the world
hasn't ended while they remained undone.  I can give you a few hours.
Would you like to see the island?  Or have you been here before?"

"I've been, but I don't believe I've set foot outside the harbor," he
said.  "I was hoping you'd have time to show it to me."

"Well, then," she said, "before Aunt Gretchen finds me.  Let's go."

They strolled out into the cool spring afternoon and walked at a
leisurely pace down the cobblestoned road leading from the Manor to the
harbor.  "There are really only two roads on Angel Rock," she said.
"The hotels and the general store and a couple of the houses are along
Harbor view, and as you can tell, it's quite short--you can stand at
any point and see from end to end.  Here," she said as they came to a
gravel road intersecting the main one about a quarter mile from the
harbor, "is Old Crossing Lane, and most anyone who doesn't live on
Harbor-view has a cottage somewhere along this road.  Well, Parker has
what you might call a shack and it's about a mile off the track, but
you get to it by following the road all the way south and then turning
left."

"How many people live here?  And what do they do?"  the Edori asked.

"Twenty-four, including me.  Almost everyone works at one of the hotels
or in the shipyard or at Cobum's.  Coburn's is the general store but
you can get everything there--fabric, machinery, grain.  Most of us lay
in our own supplies, of course, and trade with all the ships that come
in, but Coburn picks up things none of us think we'll ever want, and
then one day we want it and he has it.  He's amazing."

"When was the island wired for electricity?"

"About ten years ago.  It was such a controversy!  Because of course
some of the residents came here to get away from all that 'newfangled'
technology--Foster and Parker and all the old-timers were bitterly
opposed to it.  Celia and Hammer came from Luminaux, where of course
there is every luxury, so they were delighted at the idea of installing
a generator and powering everything up.  But James Sauverne--Timothy's
father, you know--he thought electricity was evil and would end in us
all being fried in our beds.  I'm not sure if he thought the
electricity itself would destroy us or if Jovah would be so incensed
he'd send thunderbolts rolling down from the heavens, but he was the
worst of the whole group.  Now, of course, he's got every room in his
house wired and he wants to have his own generator installed, except he
can't afford it."

"Where did your aunt Gretchen stand?"

She smiled at him sideways.  "On the side of progress, oddly enough.
She's so conservative that I thought she'd vote against change, but
she's also a businesswoman.  And she'd had enough mainland guests
complaining about poor heating and insufficient light, and it just
galled her to think there were luxuries that she couldn't offer.  She
wants to consider the Manor as grand a hotel as anything in--oh,
Semorrah, I guess--and so she had to argue for change.  Actually, I
think it was her opinion that swayed the others, because she's a very
strong-willed woman, my aunt Gretchen.  People find her hard to
resist."

"I like her," he said.

"So do I."

They had arrived in the center of town.  The harbor was before them,
the three hotels at their back.  Lucinda pointed to the half a dozen
buildings, identifying each one--the harbormaster's home, Coburn's
store, the house where Gia and her parents lived and where they made
candles, curtains, bedding, and all sorts of domestic items.  Those
were the shipyards, that was the house Emmie shared with her mother and
sister, back there was the cottage that was empty now that Dora and
Vestry had moved with their three children to a large empty lot at the
north edge of Old Crossing Road .... And that was it.  No more sights
in the harbor.  Lucinda paused blankly, not sure what else to point
out, and then she gave a slight laugh.  "You must feel sorry for us, so
few of us living in such a small place--" but he interrupted.

"Not at all.  The Edori mostly live in small clans of no more than
thirty," he said.  "And know each soul as well as they would know a
brother's.  And count themselves happy and fortunate to have such a
close connection to so many.  But the Edori also have a great need to
come together at least once a year and see all their brothers and
sisters and cousins and uncles five times removed, and so we have an
annual Gathering that everyone attends.  And then we are really happy,"
he said, smiling broadly.  "For we like nothing so much as living
practically on top of one another in one big communal heap."

"I've heard of this Gathering, I think," she said.  As she spoke they
both unconsciously turned and headed slowly away from the harbor.  As
they approached Old Crossing Road she headed northward, and he followed
her.  "I always thought it was like the Gloria.  A celebration to
Jovah.  But it's not?"

"Well, certainly there is much singing, and we direct many of our songs
to the god--asking him for livable weather, you know, and good health
in the coming year--but I wouldn't say that praising the god is the
real motivation for our celebration.  Mostly it is a chance to see old
friends and family members who have joined with another clan, to tell
each other the events of our lives in the past year.  Edori have
remarkable memories.  Most anyone can recite you his clan history for
five generations and every event of significance in the life of every
living Edori.  So the Gathering is as much a time of sharing
information as it is a time to worship the god."

"I know that when the Edori lived in Samaria, they were wanderers,"
Lucinda said.  "Are they still?  In Ysral?"

"Some are, some aren't.  It's very interesting," Reuben replied.  They
were walking more slowly now, since Old Crossing Road was steeply
pitched and not particularly well graded.  It would eventually peak on
the highest point of the island, then meander down toward sea level
again, gradually petering out about a mile beyond Dora and Vestry's
place.  "There are actually two pretty good-sized towns, not unlike
what you've got here, only a bit bigger.  Not the size of Luminaux, of
course--more like Cedar Hills.  And the Edori who live there seem quite
happy.  They have their businesses and their crafts and their homes and
their gardens and their friends and their families.  They don't seem to
want for a thing.  But the more traditional Edori--the ones who are
still wanderers--have a certain scorn for these town folk."

"Allali," Lucinda said with a smile.

He smiled back.  "Not quite that bad, but you've got the general idea.
The wanderers refer to the city dwellers as the elli--which means,
roughly, someone who loves safety, who is afraid to take chances.  And
it's true that most of the corelli Edori who emigrated to Ysral long
after the first shiploads came over to explore.  The corelli were born
in the Edori sanctuaries on Samaria, they were not brought up wandering
from Gaza Breven and hack again in a single season.  They grew up
liking the comforts of the same roof over their heads night after
night.  They didn't see any reason life should have to be harder than
it already was."

"I can't tell," she said.  "If you were corelli or not."

"My mother's people were," he said.  "But she fell in love with my
father, and chose to follow him as his clan drifted through Ysral.
Every summer we would return to Covallah visit her parents for two
months.  So I got a taste of both lives."

"And which did you prefer?"

He smiled again.  "Well, you see, I have chosen to wander" even farther
afield," he said.  "But if I were to stay in Ysral, I think I would be
corelli.  I might journey off from time to time, spend a few weeks with
friends in a traveling clan.  But I am a man who likes his comforts.
And I am lazy enough to not want to work any harder than I have to."

They had arrived at the highest point of Old Crossing Road, and Lucinda
came to a halt.  From this vantage, most of the island was laid out
before them, a patchwork of cool green and misty gray that came to a
sudden shocked halt at the lavender expanse of the sea.  The sky
overhead was an insistent turquoise, and one billowing white cloud rose
voluptuously over the far horizon.  There was nothing to see but
color.

Reuben took a deep breath, surveying the landscape for a long time in
silence.  "Well, now, that's a pretty view," he said at last.  "The sea
changes colors like a child changes moods, but I've rarely seen it just
that shade.  Is it always like that, or only on sunny days?"

"Mostly that color.  Sometimes, on gray days, a little darker. The
color it is farther out."

"And at sunset?"

"The sea and the sky are both on fire, and all of Angel Rock seems like
a tiny piece of kindling that is about to be dropped into the blaze."

"Well, that is the danger," he said absently.  "To be consumed by
beauty."

They stood awhile, Reuben turning slowly to take in whatever part of
the vista he may have missed, Lucinda noting that a few of the more
impatient bushes were beginning to uncurl their spring buds.  Soon
there would be washes of vermilion and lilac and canary to decorate the
pure emerald and stone of the island.

Reuben pointed down to the rocky strip of land that separated the
island from the sea.  It was low tide; in a few hours, that whole
stretch would be underwater.  "Can we get down to the shoreline?"

"Not on foot," Lucinda said.  "There's no path.  I can get there."

He turned his attention to her.  "And can you take me there?"  She
lifted her chin.  "I can.  If you trust me."

He spread his arms; an invitation.  "Why would I not trust you?  Don't
angels have the strength of five men?  If you say you can carry me, I
will feel safe with you."

She felt a rush of--something--excitement, panic, terror; but she
nodded with dignity.  "Certainly I can carry you.  And it is not very
far, after all."

"I do not expect to be dropped even over short distances," he
retorted.

"No, and you shall not be."

Before she could think about it too long, she stepped behind him and
wrapped her arms around his chest.  It was like embracing an oak, solid
and sturdy and unlikely to break, except that he was warm and muscled
and scented more like cedar ... She shook her head once, tightened her
grip, and drove her wings in short hard sweeps against the air.

Hard to take off from a standing position, carrying a burden nearly
twice her own weight, but she was determined to do it gracefully, and
she managed.  She was aware of the steady, rhythmic beating of her
wings, the tensing and relaxing of the sinews across her back, but
nonetheless she felt like she was floating through the air.  She and
the Edori drifted peacefully across the broken terrain, silent and
light as milkweed, circled once over the rocky margin of the shore, and
settled easily a few yards from the sea.  Their feet were on the ground
a good twenty seconds before she remembered to drop her arms, and he
had not made one movement to free himself or step aside.

But.  She released him and instantly bent to retrieve a shell, an
opaline fist with spiky knuckles.  "Isn't this pretty?  You so rarely
find them whole down here.  The sea comes in too roughly."

"Very pretty," he said, his voice sounding as distant to her ears as
her own had, as though he spoke through some formal curtain of
restraint.  "Do you ever hold one to your ear to listen for the sea?"

"Why would I have to?"  she said.  "The sea is right here."

"In case you're ever gone from it," he said.

She looked out at the shifting purple water, rising and falling as if
it breathed.  "I don't think I'd ever be gone from it for long," she
said.  She looked over at him directly for the first time.  "Do you?"

He was bemused.  "Do I what?"

"Do you carry mementos of places--and people--that you've left behind
forever?"

He answered slowly.  "I haven't left that many things behind for what I
consider forever," he said.  "That's one of the benefits of being a
wanderer.  You can always wander back to what you miss."

"What if it doesn't miss you anymore?"

"That's a risk," he acknowledged.  "And maybe there haven't been that
many people--or places--I really expected to miss me."

She began walking along the shoreline, watching her feet because there
were so many rocks and hazards.  He fell into step beside her.
"Mother--family--clan members," she suggested.

She could hear the smile in his voice, though she did not look at him.
"They're happy to see me go.  Happy to see me return, I'm sure, but not
grieving when I set sail again."

"And of course they know you'll be back."

"They know it.  I tell them so.  I never made a promise like that I did
not keep."

"And to how many others have you made that promise?"  she asked before
she could stop herself.

"Not as many as you might think," he murmured.  "The Edori reputation
has been somewhat exaggerated."

"Well," she said.  "I don't know much about Edori.  I don't know much
about anything off this island."

He came to a halt and she followed suit.  He stood for a moment gazing
out at the ocean, as if he had not seen it every day of his life for as
long as he had been at sea, and then turned his head so he could survey
the short, sharp cliffs that sealed off this tumbled shore.  "It's a
nice island," he said, as if he had assessed it and found it
'acceptable.  "I'll want to return.  Often.  Though I would not want to
come so often that anyone found me intrusive."

"I can't imagine that would be the case," Lucinda replied.  "You know
that Aunt Gretchen lives to make every guest welcome."

"And you, Lucinda?"  he said softly.  "Would you welcome me?"

He had left off examining the beauties of the island and was staring
soberly down at her.  Her heart had grown so big that there was no room
left in her chest for air, and so she was taking short, shallow breaths
and finding them insufficient.  But she managed to return his look
steadily and serenely, and her voice sounded calm, even to herself.

"I would," she said.  "Anytime you arrived at our harbor."  He put a
hand to her cheek so lightly that it was more a sensation of warmth
than an actual touch.  His eyes were so dark.  night-dark, secret-dark,
the dark of forgotten dreams.  His skin was the color of old wood,
polished by hundreds of loving hands.  He was more beautiful than she
had imagined a man could be.

"Then I will be back here," he said, "as often as the tide."

"As often as the sea brings you, you mean."

"More often than that.  You shall see, mikala.  You shall see."

Dinner and the quiet interaction of the evening were much more prosaic
but infinitely easier to live through.  Maurice had a tray in his room,
but Rico, Joe, and Michael joined the rest of the Manor's guests for
the six o'clock dinner--for which Lucinda and Reuben had to hurry home
in order to be on time.  Gretchen knew how to do up a meal in grand
style, and for certain pampered guests she offered every elegance, but
for ordinary meals, everyone sat down to the table in democratic
fashion--guests, innkeeper, even Emmie and Jackson, and all the food
was handed round the table.  No one had ever complained about this, and
the Edori were certainly not going to be the first.  The other seven
guests were full of questions for their hostess and her niece, wanting
to hear all about their trip to the mainland, and so conversation was
general and lively.  The food, of course, was excellent.

Afterward, some of the guests departed, and the others drifted into the
music room, looking for mild entertainment.  Lucinda sat in a corner,
quietly talking to the young Luminauzi girl who was here with her
parents, but she waited patiently for the inevitable request; and it
came.

"It's so rare mortals like us get to hear an angel singing," said an
older man who appeared to be on a pilgrimage to Ysral with his wife. At
a guess, he was a businessman in one of the smaller Bethel
towns--well-to-do by his own standards and not embarrassed in any
company, but not as sophisticated as a Man-adavvi, either.  "If Lucinda
would be willing to offer a song or two for the glory of Jovah, we
would be most delighted."

"Oh, do sing, Lucinda, please do," the young girl begged.  Lucinda rose
to her feet, smiling pleasantly.  "Of course," she said.  "But I don't
have to sing the sacred masses if you'd rather hear something else.
Although I do know the masses!  It's up to you."

A quick murmur running around the room revealed that most people would
prefer to hear a contemporary tune, if the angel did not believe that
was sacrilege.  She nodded and went to the harpsichord.  Reuben, she
noticed, casually rose and circled the room till he came to rest right
across from her, where he might have an excellent view of her face.
Well, she had sung for angels at the Gloria; she would not be nervous
of a few Edori.

Accordingly, she picked her favorite songs, the ones most perfectly in
her range, and let her fingers dance lightly down the narrow keys.  She
could feel her voice rise, giddy and true, over the remote, tinny music
of the harpsichord; she sounded happy, as if she laughed over every
note.  She could not help smiling.  Around her, the audience smiled in
response.

Gretchen came over to stand beside her as she finished her second
selection.  "That was very nice," she said approvingly, flipping
through the pages of a book of music.  "I was think-ing--here, I
haven't heard you sing this one in a long time."

It could be sung as a solo, but the harmony was sweet.  "if you'll sing
it with me," she replied, smiling up at her aunt.  "Oh, heavens!  I
haven't sung in months."

"Just once.  Just the first verse."

"Well--" Gretchen glanced at the music again, then nodded briskly.
"Well, why not.  Scoot over."

So Lucinda made room for her on the edge of the seat, and Gretchen
reminded herself of the descant by tapping out her part very softly on
the upper registers of the keyboard.  They sat side by side, Lucinda
playing the accompaniment, and sang the whole song straight through,
all four verses, their voices blending in well-rehearsed harmony.  They
had sung together their whole lives, they knew each other's strong
notes and missed phrases, and their voices moved silkily beside each
other like images in a mirrored glass.  When they finished, Lucinda
pounding out a few dramatic chords for emphasis, the small audience
erupted into spontaneous applause.  Gretchen sat there a moment,
wreathed in smiles, then leaned over to kiss her niece on the cheek.

"You're a sweet girl," she said, and got up from the bench.  Despite
the requests of the others in the room, she refused to perform again.

"Too much work!"  she said, quite gaily for her, and sailed out of the
room toward the kitchen.  She was still smiling.

Lucinda sang one more song, a quieter number to induce guests to start
thinking about their beds, and then closed the lid.  "I think I've had
enough performing for the evening," she said with a laugh when the
businessman asked for one last number, and came to her feet.  They were
too polite to protest for long.

Soon after that, everyone dispersed, seeking their various rooms.
Lucinda moved mechanically around the parlor, pushing pillows back in
place and closing the curtains for the night.  She was tired herself,
though she should not be.  What about the day had been so hard--?

"Your concert tonight reminded me of something I meant to show you when
we were aboard The Wayward," Reuben said from the doorway, and she
whirled around a little too quickly.  He should not startle her so; her
heart was absolutely racing.

 "But then the Jansai came calling, and I didn't have time."

"I can scarcely remember any life before the Jansai arrived.  firing at
us," she said, summoning a careless smile.  weren't we discussing
treason just about then?"

"We were discussing the Jacobites, yes, and machines that are tuned to
music," he said, taking a seat on the plush flowered sofa.  "Come.  Sit
here and let me show you this."

She could not sit on such a piece of furniture; her wings would not
allow it.  Instead, she pulled up a hassock before hin.  and let the
feathers tumble behind her.  His eyes wandered froH wing tip to
shoulder blade as if he liked the white spill of quill and down, and
then he looked at the object in his hand.

"A music box," she said.  It was a small silver case with tiny scrolled
legs; the top was glass painted with the face of a singing angel.  It
was held shut with an ornate clasp in the shape of a rosebud.

"Of a sort," Reuben said, holding it out to her.  "Can you open it?"

She took it from him with an inquiring glance.  "I suppose not," she
said, and gently tried to twist the flower.  It did not budge.  "Maybe
it doesn't open?"  she guessed.

"Oh, it does, and there's a treasure inside," he said, smiling.  "A
ring that I bought in Luminaux one day when I had no business
squandering my money on trinkets."

"Then you probably shouldn't have bought the box, either," she said.
"For it looks quite expensive."

"Well, it was, but at that time I had more money," he excused himself.
"Besides, it was made for me by a friend of mine."

"Who sealed it with a lock only you could open."

"Anyone can open it," said Reuben, "who knows the key."

"Holds the key?"

"Knows it," he corrected.  "For, listen."

And he sang a sweet, wordless melody in a honey~smooth tenor that made
her briefly absentminded to hear.  The song was maybe twenty notes
long, and when the last note sounded, she heard a sharp metallic click.
She looked down at the music box in her hand.  The rosebud had flicked
to one side.

"Did that--did your song unlock it?"  she asked in a wondering voice,
holding the box away from her body as if it were an enchanted thing. "I
heard a sound--"

Reuben nodded.  "Open it.  See what's inside."

"How can a song undo a lock?"

"It's an electronic lock.  It responds to aural cues."

"I don't understand what that means."

"Well, I couldn't duplicate it myself, but there's a tiny receiver in
there that picks up sound.  And it responds to the song you just heard.
And that song breaks the circuit that wires the lock in place.  I'm
told that it's a very simple principle, though I admit I found it
amazing the first time I saw it."

"I find it a little terrifying."

"Open it," he said again, and when she did not, reached over himself
and swung the painted lid upright.

The inside was lined with black velvet and on the velvet lay a silver
ring set with an unbroken band of emeralds.  The stones alternated in
cut, a square gem beside an oval one, all the way around the band.

"Oh, how pretty!"  Lucinda exclaimed, instantly forgetting her unease
over the lock.  "May I try it on?" "Certainly."

It did not fit the first finger she tried, but slid smoothly over the
ring finger of her right hand.  In the muted light of the drawing room,
the emeralds looked sleepy and content, rich with thoughts and dreams
of their own.  She turned her hand this way and that to see what
secrets the light could uncover.

"I can understand why you did not try to resist buying this," she said,
"though I do have to wonder if you had a lady in mind when you made
your purchase."

"Well, I did," he said, smiling, "but I changed my mind before I saw
her again.  When I realized I  would rather never see her again than
part with my emeralds, it seemed like a good time to make my
farewells."

"Are you sure those Edori tales have been exaggerated?"  she
murmured.

He laughed.  "Well, some of them."

Regretfully, she took the ring off and laid it back in its case. 
"Where did you get it?"

"Luminaux, of course.  The most beautiful things in the world are to be
found there, though we try to make them elsewhere as well.  But nothing
I've found in the mainland or Ysral compares with the treasures I have
come across in the Blue City."

"Thank you for showing it to me."

 He picked up the box once more and held it at his eye level.

"Now, how do you suppose I lock it up again?"

"I would think you sing another song?"

He nodded.  "Good guess.  But not quite right.  I sing the same
song--backward."

"The same notes in reverse order?"

He nodded again.  "Listen."  And he sang again in that delicious,
offhand tenor, the same few notes that he had sung before' but arranged
in the opposite direction.  The silver rosebud slipped into place as
his last note sounded.  Reuben looked over at her and grinned.

"Isn't that clever?  Who would have thought of such a thing?"

"Let me try," she said, and took the box from his hand.  "Do I have to
be on exactly the same pitch as you?  Or do I just have to have the
intervals of the notes correct?"

"I assume the pitch doesn't matter.  I don't pay much attention when I
unlock it, I just start singing."

She nodded, then sang.  She was a quick study, and the melody was very
simple, and she had been paying attention.  She got it right, first
try, for the lock snapped open under her fingers.  She laughed
softly.

"I'm impressed," he said.

"I want to try something," she said.  "If I sing it deliberately wrong,
what will happen?"  So, a little more haltingly, she ol'fered the song
in reverse, but changed the last note.  The rosebtd did not move.

"A true key in a real lock, with only one correct fit," she said.  "I
am still amazed."

"I will have to commission him to make a box for you," he said.  "And
have it programmed with some impossibly complex song that will take you
days to master.  Not to mention how hard it will be to learn the song
in reverse."

She had stopped listening; she was gazing down at the painted angel on
the lid and remembering something.  "You know, this is so strange," she
said slowly, still looking down.  "I'd almost forgotten.  A few months
ago we had a spell of dry weather on the island.  It's so cloudy here,
especially in winter, that we all love sunny days.  But at this
particular time we were running low on fresh water, so we all agreed
that a few hours of rain would be welcome.  So I went aloft and prayed
for storm.

"There are many prayers for weather," she went on more slowly, "and the
prayers that call for snow and those that call for thunderstorms are
very different, but in each there is a passage that is identical.  Just
a couple dozen measures--maybe a page of written music.  What comes
before and after varies radically from song to song.  But there must be
some combination of notes that tells Jovah we want precipitation, and
the kind of precipitation is determined by the rest of the music.

"So the rains came, and we all filled our cisterns and barrels and cook
pots.  And after a few hours we agreed that we had had enough, and I
went aloft again.  And I sang the prayer for sunshine, for the
dispersal of clouds.  And in the middle of that song I realized there
were about twenty-five measures that were identical to the ones in the
song for rain.  Except they were in reverse order.  I had never sung
the two prayers so closely together before, and so I had never realized
it."

"Even so, I'm surprised you noticed.  A song sung backward sounds
nothing like the composition as it was intended."

She smiled faintly, finally looking up at him.  "I am good with music,"
she said.  "I remember notes and phrases.  If an artist saw one image
on a canvas and in a mirror, wouldn't he instantly recognize it as the
same piece?  That is how it is with me."

"So Yovah perhaps operates on the same principle as this little box,"
Reuben said.  "The prayer for sunshine reverses the prayer for rain.
What other prayers might be mirror images of each other?"

She spread her hands.  "There aren't many other prayers you would want
to reverse.  If you asked the god for medicines, you would not then ask
him to scoop them back up again.  The same for grains and seedlings.  I
suppose, if you had begged for a thunderbolt and then no longer wanted
it to fall, you could sing that song backward--" She paused a moment,
then laughed.  "Although, to be frank, I don't believe that is one I
could do in reverse without a lot of practice.  It's a very complicated
piece."

"And how often have you prayed for thunderbolts?"  he asked, smiling.

"Never," she said, smiling back.  "In fact, that is the danger of
learning such a song.  You have to practice it in pieces, and sing
something else in between, so the god does not really smite you when
you are just learning your lessons."

"Ah," he said, nodding wisely.  "I always wondered how that was
done."

She was about to describe to him the days she had spent learning her
prayers, Gretchen tirelessly and exactingly going over every note,
every song, teaching the young angel prayers she herself would never
offer to Jovah.  Gretchen believed that no one but an angel could call
directly upon the god; but she knew the songs, every one.  She never
had to look at the music to correct a missed note.

But Gretchen herself entered the room before Lucinda could say another
word.  "Goodness, Lucinda, are you still up?  Don't you realize how
late it is?  I'm sure you've taken up quite enough of Reuben's time
today, now let him go to bed, and you be on your way, too.  Go, now. No
argument.  I'll see you in the morning."

And in fact, she was tired, so tired that thoughts and disconnected
bits of song were floating through her mind in no particular order.  So
tired that she could barely marshal a good night for her aunt or a
smile for Reuben, who rose to his feet but did not follow her through
the door.  As she left the room she heard him ask after Maurice.  In
three minutes she was in her own chamber, undressed and lying under the
covers.  In four minutes she was sound asleep.

Three days later The Wayward sailed from Angel Rock.  In those three
days Lucinda had almost no opportunity to speak alone with Reuben.
Gretchen kept her busy, cleaning out the recently vacated rooms, going
over the storage bins with Jackson, dragging out the spring linen with
Emmie's help, and generally running errands.  Soon enough she began to
suspect that Gretchen's desire for her assistance really masked her
determination to keep her niece from spending too much time with the
attractive Edori sailor.  Not that she blamed Gretchen.  If she'd been
the aunt, she would have found much more time-consuming tasks for her
niece to perform.

And she was not sure it was a bad thing to find herself separated from
a man who would be sailing away any day now, to return who knew how
often, if ever?  But she sighed as she buried her face in the clean,
cedar-scented folds of the spring sheets, and her steps were slow every
time she left the inn.

But the morning Reuben and Maurice packed up their scarce belongings
and carried them to the ship, Lucinda abandoned all pretense of
scrubbing the kitchen pantry, and accompanied them down to the harbor.
Jackson had come with them so Maurice could lean on his arm if need be,
but the captain seemed perfectly able to navigate the street on his
own.  He was paler than an Edori should be, but quite cheerful, and he
seemed delighted to be returning to his ship.

Lucinda skipped along beside them, carrying two baskets.  "This is
bread, Emmie and Aunt Gretchen baked it this morning, so it's quite
fresh.  And this is roasted salmon, but it will spoil soon, so you have
to eat it tonight, Aunt Gretchen says.  But there's dried beef in here,
too, that will last a few days.  And there are oranges and limes,
although they aren't very good this time of year, but better than
nothing.  Is there anything else you need?  I could run back to the inn
and fly to the ship in no time."

"This is plenty.  This is generous.  You'll have to thank your aunt for
us," Reuben said gently.  "She has been most kind."

She was chattering, and she knew it; but he was leaving, and how would
she say good-bye?  and so she couldn't stop.  "And she says anytime
you're near Angel Rock, you're to come stay with us, even if you all
want to sleep on the ship, you're to come have meals with us.  And she
says if you want to stay at the inn, there will always be room--"

"Ship's good enough for a whole man," Maurice said with a smile, "but
next time I've been shot by Jansai, be sure I'll take her up on her
hospitality."

And that was it, they were at the harbor, Joe and Rico had come ashore
to help the captain carry his things on board.  In a few minutes they
would be gone; she might never see any of them again.  Reuben had
promised to return, but what did an Edori's promises mean?  This might
be the last time she ever laid eyes on his beautiful face, saw the sun
send white streaks down the sleek black braidAnd she was, somehow,
alone on the cobblestoned street with Reuben.  Jackson had disappeared
with the Edori, and none of the usual onlookers seemed to be present on
the dock this morning.  Reuben was looking at her intently, his
expression more sober than normal, as if he was finding this farewell
no easier than she was.

"It's a week or two to Ysral, depending on the weather-and the Jansai,"
he said, with a small grin.  "And a week or two there.  And a week or
two back.  So you may see me again in as little as three weeks, and
certainly before two months ar out."

She kept her eyes on his, afraid to look at him, too closely afraid to
look away.  "Maurice might not want to come back soon," she said.  "And
he's captain."

"Ah, Maurice had visits from half the people of Angel Rock.  while he
lay there pretending to be sick.  Your doctor was asking about some new
medical machine that he thought they wer building at the Augustine
school, and your harbormaster wanted some tool he'd heard about that
only the Edori craftsmen make.  Maurice has a dozen commissions on the
island.  He'll want to come back."

"I look forward to seeing you again," she said, because she didn't say
it straight out she would never say it, and maybe he didn't know? "I'll
miss you while you're gone."

"Well, I'll think of you while we're away, and that way I won't miss
you quite so much," he said, smiling a little.  "And here--you take
this, and it will help you remember me."

He had caught hold of her hand and now pressed a rounded metal object
into her palm.  She knew without looking that was the music box.

"I can't take this," she protested.  "It's so special--it was made for
you by a friend--"

"It's so special," he said, smiling broadly now, "that I promised
myself I would only give it to the girl who could learn the key."

"The key--to the box?"  she said, stammering a little.

He shook his head slowly, smiling still, and laid a fist against his
heart, but he made no other answer.  She felt herself blushing.  From
the ship, someone called his name in a loud, impatient voice.

"You must go," she said.  "I'll look for you.  In two months."

"More likely less," he said.  And without another word, he bent down
and kissed her quickly on the mouth.  Then he sprinted for the ship,
leaped up the gangplank, and called something to whichever sailor was
already hauling on the ropes.  In a matter of moments The Wayward began
to move, idling out toward open sea like a girl coyly slipping away
from her guardian's notice.  Reuben and, she thought, Michael stood at
the railing and waved to her so vigorously that she finally lifted her
free hand and waved back.  But she did not want to.  Her heart was
leaden, her whole body was cold; even her lips, where she could still
feel the pressure of his kiss, seemed icy and bloodless in the playful
spring air.  He was leaving, he was leaving, he was gone.

She watched for another thirty minutes as the sails of the ship grew
smaller, indistinct, and finally invisible against the hazy blue of the
eastern horizon.  She should return to the inn; Aunt Gretchen would be
wondering where she was.  (Aunt Gretchen knew very well where she was.)
She had a dozen chores to do, and the activity could not but do her
good, wake some of her shocked, abandoned blood, prod her heart into
motion again.  She was a fool to be standing here, forlorn and bereft,
watching the waves swallow the shadow of a vanished Edori boat.

She gave one long sigh, shook her head, and made herself turn back
toward the inn.  She had not taken three steps when she felt a faint
shift and roll inside the silver box.  So she stopped in the middle of
the street and softly crooned the short melody that would turn aside
the silver rose.  The lock slid back, and she lifted the painted glass
lid.

Inside was the emerald ring.

He would return as he had promised.

CHAPTER TEN

Tamar had two strokes of luck as she fled from Ileah.  One came almost
immediately, twenty minutes after she snatched up a few bundles and the
rest of the dried beef and hurried west down the road.  She had gone
less than two miles along her way when she heard a dull rumble behind
her and, looking back, saw a big farm transport vehicle bearing down.
She scrambled out of the way (in her experience, the drivers of the big
trucks weren't always careful about keeping faithfully on the road) and
slowed her pace to watch the track pass.

She was surprised when it came to a growling idle beside her.  A man
riding high on the elevated driver's seat waved down at her; she saw
heads pop up in the windows of the mammoth cabin behind him, children's
faces, children's eager, indiscriminate waves.

"We're on our way to Semorrah!  Looking for a ride?"  the man called
down to her.

It was almost outside of her experience that anyone could extend such
kindness to a complete stranger, but then, she had heard many tales of
the friendly midland farmers who picked up wayfarers just for the
company.  The presence of children on the truck was reassuring; even a
man who offered assistance so he could eventually turn to assault
seemed unlikely to do so in the presence of little witnesses.  Even so,
had she not been desperate, she probably would have refused.

"I don't think I can pay you," she called back up to him.  He waved a
hand in a dismissive gesture.  "No, no, I don't want your coins.  Just
wanted to save you a few hot, weary miles."

The angel would be back in half a day; on foot, she was unlikely to get
far enough to elude him.  It was a gamble, but she was running out of
safe choices.

"Then, yes, thank you very much," she said.  "How do I climb in?"

Three giggling boys swarmed out of the back of the truck and
demonstrated for her the footholds and handholds built into its thick
metal sides.  She hauled herself aboard and tumbled into the cavernous
cabin, a huge, rattling, odoriferous compartment that seemed stocked
with all manner of mysterious cargo.  She could smell leather goods and
what might be grain; in addition, there were boxes that could contain
anything.  The track roared into its traveling mode again, and Tamar
felt the vibrations enter her bones from every part of her body in
contact with the metal--her feet, the palms of her hands, her hip
against the interior wall.  The droning ricocheted through her head and
set up a steady quiver in her back teeth.  It was instantly too noisy
to hear anything except the roar of the motor.  She could not imagine
how she would endure this for more than five minutes.

But it was a hundred and sixty miles to Semorrah.  They might be
traveling at a rate of thirty miles an hour or so (she had no aptitude
for judging the speed of a motor vehicle).  She had a day of this to
endure.

Two of the boys made their way to her side, nonchalantly navigating the
piles of merchandise and bracing themselves against the unsteady sway
of the track.  One of them carded a sheepskin rug in his hands, the
other what looked like an oversized feather pillow.  They offered these
to her silently.  When she stared at them blankly, they went into a
pantomime routine: the one laid the rug on the jouncing floor, the
other placed the pillow on top of it then sat himself squarely in the
middle, crossing his legs under him.  He grinned up at her as if to
say, "See how comfortable?"  and she could not help smiling in return.
He jumped to his feet, almost fell over when the truck took a rapid
turn, then held his hand out to indicate that she should now sit
down.

So she did, and was relieved to find that the padding substantially cut
down the awful vibrating sensation.  In fact, if she was careful, she
could lie on one side, half curled up but comfortable enough, and still
remain within the shelter of the pillow.  She gave the boys a big smile
of thanks and they laughed back at her.  She was glad it was too noisy
to talk.  Otherwise, she was sure they would want to sit and visit with
her, and she had no conversation to offer young farm boys whose lives
were so serene that they could so joyously welcome grim strangers in
their midst.

So she rearranged her body, piling all her bundles under her head to
further cut the vibration, and lay completely supine.  The boys watched
her till she closed her eyes.  She did not hear them rise and leave her
(she couldn't hear a thing), but when she peeped out through
half-closed lids, they were gone.

She sighed and turned to her other side, punching the pile of clothes
under her head to make it more comfortable.  She had Evan's jacket, one
of Dawn's sweaters--she had run to the storeroom cabin and just grabbed
anything that looked useful, anything that she could fit into one
fairly tight bundle.  She had left Peter's pallet unmade, the breakfast
dishes scattered on the floor, the well uncovered, the laundry on the
line ....  Well, of course, it was not laundry at all.  The red shirt
was a warning signal, a message of danger, a sign that said TROUBLE
LURKS HERE; PASS BY.  All Jacobites carried a bit of red clothing with
them and never wore it--unless they had been taken prisoner, unless
they were in the company of enemies and did not want their friends to
unwarily approach.  The angel had asked her if she expected any more
Jacobites to arrive at lleah.  She did, but she expected them to take
one look and turn back the other way.

He would think, if he knew, that she was Warning them of Jansai
predators.  But she considered the angel a danger just as great.  All
this talk of helping her to look for the Alleluia Files--!  As if she
would trust an angel with such a task!  With anything.  Everyone knew
that angels had nothing to gain, everything to lose, if the spaceship
Jehovah was exposed for the combination of machinery and fraud that it
was.  She had no idea what his plan was or how he expected her to help
him betray her friends, but she was smart enough to know no good could
come of colluding with an angel.

She punched her makeshift pillow again and turned over, trying to find
a position that was comfortable for even five minutes.  He had not
seemed as indiscriminately evil as she would have expected.  He looked
neither debauched nor cruel, and he had certainly been kind enough to
her and Peter.  He had reasons to be kind, she reminded herself, for
naturally he wanted to win her over.  Thus the courteous manner, the
helpful acts, the gift of flowers which she could not, to this hour,
fathom.

It would be easier to hate a man--an angel--who was coarse or abusive.
This angel, this Jared, had seemed sincere enough and, actually,
good-hearted; but of course it was all a facade.  A shame that a man
with such a pleasant face should use it as a mask for malevolence, but
there it was.  An angel was only good to propagate lies; how many times
had she heard Conran say that?  "The only favor an angel will grant is
the favor of a quick death."  It was not like one pair of sympathetic
eyes could overcome all her bitter training.

She rolled to her back and stared at the shaking ceiling overhead.
There were half a dozen small windows near the top edge of the truck's
walls, and these let in a little light and even less wind.  Not that
she needed to see, and she was getting resigned to breathing only
tainted air.  But it was a way to judge the hours of daylight left.

How far were they from Semorrah?  How fast were they traveling?  Would
they drive straight through to the merchants' city or stop for the
night somewhere along the road?  There might be any number of small
villages along the way, offering cheap inns and poor food, but Tamar
doubted she had enough money in her pockets to pay for even the least
expensive room.  She would prefer driving straight through, or even
camping out for the night.

Although, as usual, her desires were not to be consulted.  When the
driver did halt, about two hours after he'd picked her up, they took a
quick break for an afternoon meal.  Tamar found herself feeling oddly
shaky and disoriented as she carefully climbed down.  The driver stood
with his back to her, shouting directions to the children.  Beside him
was a woman, most likely his wife, whom Tamar had not noticed before.

The woman smiled at her sympathetically.  "I know just how you feel,"
she said.  "It's so noisy in the back of the tracks, and say what they
will, I'm convinced there's something in the fuel that swirls around in
your head and makes you feel sick.  If I've been on the road all day,
riding in back like that, there are times I sit up and retch all night.
Truly.  But you'll feel better if you walk around a few minutes now."

"I'm fine," Tamar said faintly.  "Why are we stopping?"

 "Well, the boys get terribly wound up if we don't let them out every
few hours," the woman said with a laugh.  "And I had some personal
needs to tend to.  And I thought we might as well all have a snack. Are
you hungry or is your stomach too queasy from the ride?"

Tamar thought about it a moment and was surprised to discover she had
an appetite.  "I could eat a bite," she said cautiously.  "I have a
little food with me--"

The woman waved her hand.  "Oh, heavens, no, I've brought enough to
feed half the merchants in Semorrah!  It's a good sign that you're
hungry.  I don't think you'll suffer too much."

"And I don't want you to think I'm complaining," Tamar said earnestly.
"It was so good of you to offer me a ride."

The woman smiled again.  "Arthur loves to help people out.  He was so
poor growing up, you know, and as he tells it, so many people were
doing him favors, giving him odd jobs so he could earn a little extra
money, helping his father on the farm when his dad got sick--well, he
says he could never pay back to others all the things people did for
him.  I always thought that was such a positive way to look at life,
don't you think?  Because most people are always complaining about how
others have done them wrong.  It's one of the things I like most about
him."

I don't care about this.  I don't know you people, Tamar wanted to say,
but despite herself, she was a little intrigued by the story.  To have
met with so much kindness in your life that you felt you could never
repay it; there was a new thought.  Of course, she had had some
experience in that area, for she had been taken in and cared for by
people upon whom she had no claim at all.  But their affection had
bound her only to them; it had not opened her heart to the world at
large.

Perhaps the fault was in her, and not in her mentors.  She was too
suspicious and unforgiving by nature to expect good from everyone
around her.  Or perhaps she was right and this Arthur was wrong, and
someday he would offer succor to the wrong fellow and be murdered for
his pains.  Now there was a dour thought to nurse on a sunny day.  She
shook her head to clear out the melancholy.

"I'm Tamar," she said, just to have something to say.  She rarely
offered anyone her name first.

"Gena," the woman replied.  "The boys are--well, I'll tell you their
names, but I won't expect you to remember them!"

And indeed, Tamar forgot them as soon as Gena reeled them off, but she
smiled politely and made sure to glance at each cheerful young face.

Then she helped Gena spread out a blanket on the grass and cover it
with plates and cups and baskets of food.  The boys came yelping up and
plopped themselves on the checkered cloth; their father followed a bit
more sedately.  For a while everyone ate in virtual silence.

"So, Tamar, what's taking you to Semorrah?"  Arthur asked after he
learned his passenger's name.

"My cousin may have a job for me there," she said.  "And you came from
where?"

"Stockton."

"All that way on foot!"  Gena exclaimed.  "You must be exhausted!"

"I had a ride partway.  I don't mind walking."

"What kind of job?"  Arthur wanted to know.

Tamar smiled.  "Well, my cousin works at a hotel, and I said I'd take
anything.  I can cook, I can clean, I can even tend horses--and I
understand they have a lot of horses in Semorrah, since they don't
allow motor vehicles inside the city."

"It's good to know horses," Gena said approvingly.  "Arthur thinks
machines are the answer to everything, but my father always relied on
horses and they served him well."

"Mark my words, another fifty years, you won't see a workhorse in the
country," Arthur said.  "Some people may still ride them for pleasure,
but I say, it's not that much pleasure to ride a horse."

"Well, it's not exactly a pleasure to ride in your smelly old truck,
either," Gena replied with a sniff.

He laughed.  "No, but it's twice as fast!  And ten times as strong and
can carry a hundred times more.  The days of the horse and the ox are
over, I'm afraid."

"What hotel does your cousin work at?"  Gena asked.  "One of the big
ones?  They have such lovely hotels there--so fancy!  For myself, I see
no reason to waste good money just to stay in a pretty room twenty-five
stories over the city, though I will say I like the view from some of
those big public towers.  But if all I'm going to do is lay my head
down on a pillow and sleep, well, I'd rather save my money and settle
in someplace a little less expensive.  As long as it's clean.  I will
not abide a filthy room."

"I don't exactly remember the name of the hotel," Tamar admitted.
Actually, she was hoping for a little guidance from her hosts.  "She
said it was a nice place, not too fancy but the kind of place a woman
would feel safe in if she was traveling alone or a man would feel free
to make a business deal in.  Only about fifty rooms, she said, but big
enough to have its own taproom and stable.  I think it was called
the--"

"The Berman House?"  Arthur interjected.  "I've often thought about
staying there, but I've always had such good Luck with the Greystone
that I've never bothered to change."

"The Berman House?"  Tamar repeated.  "That sounds---where is it
located?"

"Oh, it's a few streets over from the River Walk.  Still in the
fashionable part of town, but not quite as pricey," Gena said.

"It's Cathedral and Market streets, isn't it, Arthur?"

"Yes, exactly," he agreed.

"That's it!"  Tamar exclaimed.  "Cathedral and Market!  I kept thinking
she said Market and Church street, but then I thought, no, there isn't
a Church Street in Semorrah."

"Not that I ever came across.  Must be the Berman House, then.  Good
for you," Arthur said, beaming.  "Not a bad place to work."

"So when will we get to Semorrah?"  Tamar asked.  "I'm not sure how far
away we still are."

"Oh, not till tomorrow morning," Gena said.  "We could drive
licketyosplit all day and make it there by tonight, but it would be
dark, and of course we can't bring the truck into the city, so we'd
have to find the warehouse on the east side and then still try to cross
the bridge tonight and find our rooms, and frankly, it's just too much
work.  Better to arrive fresh in the morning and deal with all the
details then."

Arthur was nodding.  Tamar felt her heart sink; Gena did not seem like
the kind of woman interested in camping out for the night.  "And do you
plan to stay somewhere along the road, or just sleep in the truck
overnight?"

"Oh!  My!  The truck!  No, no, there's a town not twenty miles from
Semorrah.  The cutest little inn you ever saw.  We stay there every
time we go to town.  They always have room.  I'm sure you won't have
any trouble getting accommodations."

"No, I hope not," Tamar said, but of course she could not afford to pay
for luxuries like a room for the night.  Well, she'd talk to the
proprietor, quietly, when she arrived.  He might be willing to trade a
few hours' labor in the kitchen for a pallet in the stables.  That had
worked for her in the past.  She would see what arrangement she could
make.

But then she had her second stroke of luck.

They had climbed back into the truck and taken off at what seemed a
faster pace with increased volume.  Or maybe the strain of the past few
weeks was finally catching up with her.  Tamar squirmed on her pallet,
punching the jacket one more time to improve its possibilities as a
pillow--and her hand encountered a crumpled wad somewhere inside the
coat.  Frowning, she sat up and dragged it across her lap, turning it
inside out and looking for a way inside the lining.  If it had been
ripped open, it had been neatly sewn shut again; but that just made it
more likely that something had been deliberately hidden inside.
Documents, maybe; incriminating papers.  Evan had been notorious for
keeping maps and personal letters that most Jacobites had trained
themselves to destroy.  She found a weak hem and tugged.  The threads
gave way with a quick, silent spiral.

She stuck her hand inside the ragged tear and pulled out the balled-up
papers.  Not letters and maps, oh no.  The indiscreet Evan had amassed
a sizable sum of money, all new dollars of various denominations,
currency good across the three provinces.  She stared for a moment,
hardly believing her eyes, and then quickly counted the bills.  Not a
fortune, not by any measure, but enough to see her to Semorrah and keep
her from sleeping in any barns along the way.

Like Arthur, she was benefiting from the kindness of good friends and
chance acquaintances.  Maybe she could learn from this a lesson of
generosity in return.

They made the inn before nightfall and were all assigned rooms.  Tamar
agreed to join her benefactors for dinner, although she would have
preferred an hour of solitude; but they had been so nice to her that
she hated to appear aloof.  She ate quickly, pleaded a headache, and
went straight up to her room.  Even the muted clink and buzz from the
taproom below her sounded like blissful silence after the ordeal all
day in the truck.  She washed up, climbed into bed, and was asleep in
five minutes.

 The next day, the ride did not seem quite so torturous, but that
might have been because she knew it would be brief.  And sure enough,
before they had been on the road an hour, she felt their speed slow
enough for her to make herself heard over the noise.

"Are we there already?"  she asked one of the boys.  "In Semorrah?"

"In Eastgate," he replied.  "But there'll be a wait.  There's always a
lot of trucks lined up trying to get to the warehouses.  This is the
boring part."

And indeed, it took nearly another hour, moving at a crawling pace, to
navigate the crowded roads into the industrial city that serviced
Semorrah on this side of the Galilee River.  Tamar thought she would go
mad with the inactivity, though it was certainly a relief to have the
noise and vibration cut down so dramatically.  She was even reduced to
playing cards with the boys, who taught her a simple gambling game. She
promptly lost every hand.  Feeling magnanimous and giddy, she gave them
the copper coins she'd gotten in change from the innkeeper when she had
paid for her room last night.

At last, the truck came to a wheezing halt--somewhere indoors, because
the level of light had filtered down to almost nothing.  The boys were
instantly climbing down the outside of the track, and Tamar was only
seconds behind them.  Arthur was in earnest conversation with someone
who looked like a dock official, and they appeared to be discussing the
quality and quantity of cargo in the track.  Tamar looked around to
locate Gena.

"I think I'll be heading on now," she said as politely as she could.
"All I have to do is find my way to the bridge and I'm in Semorrah,
right?  So I don't think I'll wait."

"Oh, I was hoping you--but I know you're in a hurry to see your
cousin," Gena said.  "Remember, we'll be at the Greystone for three
days if you want us for anything."

"I think my cousin can get me everything I need," Tamar said.

"And maybe next time we come to town, we'll stay at the Berman House,
and we can visit you," Gena said a little more happily.  "That might
not be for a few more months, but look for us, all right?"

Tamar could not imagine how, in less than twenty-four hours, this woman
could have formed enough of an attachment to her to care if she ever
saw Tamar again.  "Certainly," she said.  "Enjoy your visit to the
city!"

And she finally escaped, quickly walking out of the warehouse and not
once looking back.  It was sunny outside, and this close to the river,
everything had a haloed, misty appearance.  Although even that asset
did little to make Eastgate attractive.  The district reminded Tamar of
the grimiest parts of Breven, all blocky buildings, oily cobblestones,
and noxiously fumed air.  Tracks lurched down every street or rumbled
at idle before every warehouse door.  Men dashed from doorway to
doorway or shouted orders down from unwashed windows.  Everything was a
productive, graceless bustle.

Tamar wove her way down the sidewalks and streets, aiming for the river
edge of town.  It was impossible to mistake her direction.  From every
point of Eastgate, she could see the two bridges that spanned the
Galilee River--the broad, serviceable, unadorned bridge that carried
the majority of traffic, and the slim, elegant bridge that was the
city's most famous link to the Jordana coastline.  It was to this
second structure that Tamar made her way through the cluttered streets
of Eastgate.  White, lacy, and spider-thin, it was the first thing of
true beauty that the traveler to Semorrah encountered, and it was
impressive indeed.

She remembered this bridge.  She had been here once with Conran and two
others, maybe ten years ago.  She couldn't remember why; she thought
Conran had had some contact in the city he had wanted to meet with, and
he had brought the others as camouflage.  Yes, Elinor and Dawn had
traveled with him, posing as his wife and sister; Tamar had been his
daughter, and they were a farming family in town for a holiday.  Conran
had never said much about the actual meeting with his friend, but in
their free time, they had done a lot of sightseeing.  It had been
fun.

But instructive, of course.  Conran had made several points about the
idleness of the rich and the contrast between the wealthy and the poor,
and he had shown them the abandoned slave markets where, centuries
before, Jansai had sold their captured Edori.  She had always suspected
that Conran was part Edori, for he knew every detail of the tribe's
history and often made references to Edori values or lifestyles.  She
had never had the nerve to ask outright.

 So she had a collection of visual memories in her head, of the
fabulous bridge, of the delicate, marvelous, impossible architecture
that made the whole city one extended fairy-tale castle.  And now, as
she crossed into Semorrah, the memories came clearer, snapped into
sharper focus.  She paused as she reached the center point of the
bridge so she could gaze down at the water foaming below her, and then
look up at the milk-white spires and dainty towers of the city itself.
She knew it was an evil place, everyone said so; but certainly it was
magnificent.

She spent her first hour in Semorrah merely wandering around.  She
paused at a street vendor's to buy a meat pie and ate it as she walked.
Not only the city, but the people in it seemed steeped in a gorgeous
opulence; their clothes, their scents, their conversation seemed rich
with useless but beautiful adornments.  She had been feeling fairly
unkempt before; now she felt positively filthy.

Although she had cleaned herself thoroughly back at the little inn, she
found the public baths and paid the fee to spend an hour in a private
room.  If she was going to get a job at a fairly high-class
establishment, she needed to look a little less like an urchin.  Once
she had washed herself vigorously, she checked herself in the mirror.
The brown coloring was fading from her spiky hair, leaving it streaked
with gold, but she decided that wasn't particularly bad.  She could dye
it again before she left Semorrah.  Her face looked weary and pinched,
and her clothes were definitely motley.  Those details she would have
to attend to.

So she shopped the street bazaars till she found a stall of cheap but
fashionable clothes, and she bought an embroidered emerald dress that
made her eyes look painted on by a wide brush.  She also bought a
handful of inexpensive cosmetics and applied them as she stood before
the mirror in the vendor's booth.  She didn't know how it was she had
acquired this skill, but she had always been good at making herself up,
enhancing the features she wanted to emphasize, downplaying the
others.

"Well, now, you don't look half so much the starved rat you did as you
walked in," the vendor said approvingly when Tamar turned away from his
mirror.  She supposed that was a compliment.  "My wife can do the same
thing.  Look like death one moment, take a little rouge and mascara,
and look like an angel of mercy the next minute.  I admire a woman who
knows her assets, that I do."

Tamar practiced a smile on him.  "Would you hire me?"  she asked.

"If I had need for a worker, I would," he said promptly.  She nodded.
"Good.  Thanks for the mirror."  And she left.  She'd already walked
past the Berman House once, just to make sure it was the kind of place
she had described to Arthur and his wife.  But from the outside, it
looked perfect: respectable, a little old-fashioned, in good repair.
Not the kind of place to attract wild young men out for a good time, or
the haughtiest of clientele always looking for fault with the hotel
staff.  Or Jansai.  Or angels.

Now she returned to the Berman House and made her way to the back.  The
man who answered her knock was older, stately, uniformed, and
authoritative; she knew at once he was the steward who oversaw the
whole staff.

"I'm looking for work," she said.  "Are you hiring?"

He examined her for a moment in silence, and she endured the scrutiny
without flinching.  She had worked at enough big establishments,
encountered enough housekeepers and butlers like this man to know they
prized their talent at judging human nature above almost everything
else.  A fidgety woman looked untrustworthy.  A slouching woman looked
slovenly.  A young girl looked flirtatious.  An old woman looked weary.
It was best to be neutral, indeterminate, and serene.

"We have a few positions available," he said at last.  "What are your
skills?"

He didn't look like he would favor a jack-of-all-trades, so she skipped
all mention of horses and detailed her experience in the kitchen and
bedchambers.  She mentioned a few of the places in Luminaux where she
had held jobs, giving the names of the people she had worked under; he
nodded twice, which was a good sign.

"Can you serve?"  he asked when she was done.  "Wait tables?"

"I haven't done it often," she said promptly.  "Only at taverns, where
there was not much need for formality.  But I didn't spill anything and
I didn't mix up my orders."

It was the right answer; it showed a willingness to work but didn't
claim skills above her ability.  He nodded again.

 "We have housing available to the employees who wish it."  he said
next.  "It is not required that you stay there, but it is preferred, so
that you can be instantly called upon if there is a need.  Would this
suit you, or would you be looking for other lodgings?"

It would, in fact, be perfect.  She had only worked one other place
that offered this arrangement, and she hadn't dared hope the Berman
House would provide the same amenities.  "I'd like to see the room,"
she said, so she didn't sound too eager.

That pleased him, too; she had a little discrimination.  "Certainly,"
he said.  "When would you be willing to start?"

"Tonight, if you need me," she said.  "Later in the week if that is
more convenient for you."

"Tomorrow morning," he said.  "You may move in tonight, if you wish.
Let me show you the room."

And as easily as that, she found employment in Semorrah.

The next month was as close to contentment as Tamar had come in a long
time.  Until this year she had enjoyed her life in Luminaux, but the
last few months had been so marked with terror and grief that she had
forgotten what those easier days were like.  The trip to Breven and
back--the horror in Ileah--all had been brutal, bloody, awful episodes.
She felt like she had been running, hiding, and fending off fear for so
long that she might never remember how to unclench her stomach and
relax again.

But life in Semorrah, life at the Berman House, was easy, easy, easy.
Oh, certainly, she worked hard every day, and the hours were long, and
the physical demands were severe.  Jasper, the steward, saw to it that
she was trained in every aspect of cooking and serving, so every day
she was lifting heavy pots, stirring thick stews, carrying laden trays
into the dining area.  He also came to quickly trust her to go to
market, so he sent her every other day to purchase potatoes,
vegetables, spices, fruit, bread, and other staples.  (He himself
oversaw the selection of wines, while only the head cook was permitted
to buy meat.) She loved the responsibility, loved the diversity of
duty; she had never minded menial work, and she liked to stay busy. She
knew that he liked her, and it pleased her more than she had thought
possible.  She had not realized that anyone's good opinion mattered to
her, especially the good opinion of someone she doubted she would know
more than a few months.

Then again, perhaps she would stay in Semorrah forever.  She could not
return to Ileah, she was afraid to return to Luminaux, and she had no
idea where to look for the rest of the scattered Jacobites.  They must
be somewhere, and someday she would seek them out again.  But for now,
Semorrah would take her in, give her shelter, peace, and purpose.  For
now, Semorrah was a haven.

On her free afternoons, she strolled through the city.  It offered any
number of diversions.  She most often went to the concert halls and
live theater productions (there were cheap seats in the back, good
enough for her) and watched and listened in amazement.  There were
three art museums in the city and one historical museum, and she
wandered through each of these slowly, gazing intently at every
painting and sculpture, reading every word of each descriptive card. 
She went once to the science museum, but it confused her, all the
electrical wires and generators and demonstrations of light, sound, and
motion.  She preferred the gentler contributions of humankind.

She also found the book fairs and the student exchanges where books on
almost any topic could be purchased for pennies.  She could have
borrowed books for free at any of the city's four libraries, but she
did not want to put down her name and address on any application and so
leave behind a record of her existence.  But she did make herself go
back to the main branch, at least one day a week, and ask for
admittance to the old manuscripts room.  Here, in carefully controlled
cases, were a few of the documents left behind by the original
settlers, composed in the old language that had died out six centuries
ago.  No one could read it anymore, except the oracles, a few learned
angels, some of the engineers who studied the ancient texts--and the
odd, natural linguist like Tamar.

One of her schoolteachers in Luminaux had discovered T-mar's aptitude
for language and mentioned it to Conran, who had thereafter insisted
she spend an hour a day learning the settlers' difficult, archaic
phrases.  She had hated it, aptitude or no, but she had learned it to
please Conran.  It had been five years or more since she had had a
chance to look at any of those old texts, and every now and then she
had wondered if she had forgotten the language.  But here in Semorrah,
as she puzzled over the words of the first Samarian visitors, she was
reassured.  She remembered enough of the language to understand their
references to weather, plague, and planting; and so all Conran's
insistence had not been in vain.

Though she still could not understand what value such a skill could
have.

Although she went to the Semorran library every week, she much
preferred the hours she spent reading other material--mostly badly
written novels about unlikely lovers.  Tamar had never had much time
for reading in the past, though Conran was a great book lover and
sometimes would entertain them all for hours by reading out loud from
his favorite authors.  Now she found entertainment and company in the
historical romances he would have despised.

She herself was a little horrified to learn that her taste was so low;
she could not stop herself from reading an entire series of love
stories built around mortal women who had won the affections of angels.
There was something so fantastical, so unreal, about the events
depicted in these novels, that they took her completely away from her
own dull, circumscribed life.  And there was so much detail about daily
life in the angel holds, an existence which heretofore she had not
wasted a minute trying to imagine.  After she had read the first six or
so, she was sure she could behave with the correct etiquette at a
dinner party at the Eyrie or sing the angelica's part at the next
Gloria.

One day, as she sat reading in the small garden behind the Berman House
during her break, she was accosted by a young girl named Jenny who
worked beside her in the kitchen.  She didn't think to close the book
and hide the cover in time, and Jenny exclaimed aloud at the title.

"Oh, that's my favorite!  Susannah the Stolen.  It's so romantic!  And
it's based on a true story, you know, which most of them aren't.  But I
have to say, I never thought you were the type to read books like
this."

Tamar liked Jenny.  She was a farmer's daughter who had come to the
city to escape the advances of a neighbor boy and "learn more about the
world at large."  She was buxom, brunette, worldly, but unspoiled, and
Jasper was training her to become assistant to the housekeeper.  At
times Tamar thought Jasper had a secret desire for the lively Jenny,
though she doubted he would ever indulge it since she was at least
thirty years his junior and he seemed far too proper.  Still, it had
crossed her mind that the match might be good for both of them.

Clearly, she was reading too many romances.  In the past, such a
thought would never have popped into her head.

"I never knew I was the type to read them, either," Tamar said a little
ruefully.  "But I really, really like them."

"Have you read Edori Angelica?  That's about Gabriel and Rachel, and
it's so good.  Maybe that's my favorite.  That or Susannah the
Stolen."

"Edori Angelica?  No, I'll have to look for it."

"I've got a copy, I'll lend it to you.  But I know once you read it,
you'll want a copy for yourself."

They talked books awhile longer, then regretfully came to their feet;
time to return to work.  At the door, Tamar impulsively turned to Jenny
and said, "I have the day off tomorrow.  If you're not scheduled, maybe
we can go into town together and shop.  Or go to a concert.  Or
something."

"Oh, that would be great!  I need a new blouse, I spilled gravy all
over my good pink one, and I just can't get it clean.  I have to work
the evening shift, though, so we'd have to be back early."

"Fine with me," Tamar said, smiling.  "Let's do it."

And it was amazing how such small things--a conversation in the garden,
a plan for entertainment the following day, an assignation with a
friend--could make the pleasant world that much more enjoyable.  Tamar
felt herself smiling all evening as she worked, caught herself humming
that night as she went to bed.  Anticipatory elation.  For such a small
joy ... But the next day, she and Jenny laughed their way through the
bazaar, bought more clothes than either one had intended, ate more rich
foods than was good for them, and generally had a splendid day.  When
Jenny returned to the Berman House, Tamar accompanied her, too tired to
stay out the rest of the evening on her own.  Instead, she lay for
hours in her bedroom, reading Edori Angelica and dreaming over the
stern, sculpted beauty of the Archangel Gabriel.

Over the next couple of weeks the friendship between the two young
women prospered.  As it turned out, there were many things Jenny knew
that Tamar did not: how to flirt with strange men in public cafes, how
to identify rich men over poor ones, who the most prominent merchants
of the city were, and the names of their wives and children.  When they
stood on the more well-traveled street corners of Semorrah, Jenny would
point them out to her and name them off; she even knew the names of
visiting Manadavvi and a few of the Luminaux celebrities who came to
town.  It did not occur to her that she would ever meet and mingle with
these people.  She was merely fascinated by their wealth and their air
of royalty.

"Though I will go to the Gloria someday," she told Tamar one evening as
they worked in the kitchen preparing to serve the evening meal.
"Anybody can go, you know, and everybody who matters is there.  Bael
and Mariah, Omar, Jared, Mercy--all the great angels, and then of
course Christian Avalone and Ben Harth and all the Manadavvi--"

It had given Tamar a start to hear Jared's name drop so casually from
Jenny's lips; it made him seem real, substantial, alive, and that made
him seem dangerous.  But she could not bring herself to ask about him,
could not admit she had met him.  How could she ever explain those
circumstances in Ileah?  Best to forget the meeting ever happened.

And yet, not ten minutes later, he was to seem even more alive and more
dangerous than ever.

Jasper had come into the kitchen, a rare event, and gravely watched
them a moment to make sure they were hard at work.  "We have angelic
guests tonight," he said finally.  "They must be served with particular
dispatch and courtesy.  Which of you wishes to wait on them?"

"Oh, me, me, please, me," Jenny said instantly, then quickly gave Tamar
a guilty look.  "I'm sorry, of course if you want to, you can take the
tray out.  it's just--"

Tamar smiled and shook her head.  "Please.  You.  The thought of
serving angels terrifies me."

Jasper nodded.  "You must take great care to step around their wings,
as their feathers will trail on the floor by their chairs," he said.
"On no account brush up against their wings, for they hate their
feathers to be touched.  Other than that, treat them with the same
degree of civility you would give any guest."

Jenny was almost dancing in place.  "I will--I know--I won't touch
anybody," she promised.  "Oh, this is so exciting!  Tamar, is my hair
in place?  Are my eyes smudged?"

"And try to behave with dignity and calm," Jasper added.

Jenny nodded, her attention on Tamar.  Tamar reached out to pat some of
the brown cuds in place, but really, there was no fault to be found in
Jenny's bright eyes or eager smile.  "You look perfect," she said.

They loaded up the tray and Tamar helped her through the door, then
turned back toward the kitchen.  But curiosity made her pivot again and
slip into the hallway that led to the dining room.  If she was careful,
if they were sitting at just the right table, she could get a glimpse
of these majestic visitors and still remain in shadow herself.

Yes, there they were, at the best table at the far end of the room,
closest to the fire.  The first person she recognized was Christian
Avalone, who sat facing her, though he was looking at one of his
companions.  The angels sat in profile to her, a man and a woman; Jenny
was bending over the man, so she did not immediately see his face, but
the woman looked kindly and amused.  Not the expression Tamar would
have expected on any angel's face.  Her wings were small enough to
imply that she was short, and they were flecked with spots of amber,
beige, and copper.  She looked, Tamar thought, well-worn and
comfortable, and at the moment she was smiling broadly.

And then Jenny stepped back and Tamar was staring at the angel Jared.
Who appeared engrossed in conversation with his host and not interested
in inspecting the shadows for lurking Jacobites.  Nonetheless, her
heart had immediately exploded inside her rib cage; her throat closed
down in astonishment.  She backed quietly into the hallway till she was
invisible from the dining room, and then ran into the kitchen.  And
there she stood, gulping for air and trying to think, till Jenny burst
into the room.

"It's Jared!  Did you see?"  Jenny exclaimed, practically throwing her
tray to the counter and waltzing around the stone floor.  The cooks
working over the steaming stove looked over in astonishment at her
antics.  "He's the most handsome of all the angels, and so polite!  He
thanked me every time I laid a piece of silverware on the table.  His
eyes are as gray as storm clouds.  He's wearing his emerald bracelets,
the ones he always has on in formal pictures.  I can't wait to take out
the second course."

He had not seen her, of course; he had not come here looking for her.
There was no need to panic, no need to run.  "Who is with him?"  Tamar
managed to ask, amazed that her voice sounded so steady.

"Well, Christian Avalone, of course.  And the angel Mercy, who leads
the host at Cedar Hills.  She's really the nicest angel of them all, so
everyone says, and she comes to Semorrah all the time. She and
Christian Avalone are great friends."

"I'm glad you're enjoying this so much," Tamar said, now producing a
smile.  Her heart was slowing; she was feeling a little calmer.  He had
not seen her.

"Well, but I feel guilty.  Do you want to take out the salads?"

"Oh, no!  Angels make me nervous.  I'd be sure to step on their
feathers or drop the spoons in their laps.  You do it, and then tell me
everything they say."

They seemed to stay at the inn forever, Christian and his divine
guests, debating the god knew what policy or trade agreement.  It was
exquisite torture to Tamar to have the angel so close, to feel so at
risk, for such an extended period of time.  Yet she knew she was safe. 
He was unaware of her existence.  He would be gone in a few hours, and
then all would be well again.

The angels left the inn without encountering the Jacobite, but the
incident left Tamar deeply shaken.  It had been stupid to think she was
safe in Semorrah.  It was one of the great cities of Samaria; at any
point it could be filled with visiting angels or touring Jansai.
Perhaps there was no reason to think they would recognize her--even if
Zeke had been captured and forced to betray his friends, how would they
know her face?  But if she was filled with this much fear every time
she saw a pair of arching wings, she would be in for a miserable
existence in the river city.

Accordingly, and with great reluctance, she made plans to leave.  She
found herself unwilling to walk off in the middle of the night, leaving
Jasper and Jenny to wonder at her whereabouts, so she wrote herself a
letter and mailed it afternoon when she was running errands.  Jasper
himself brought it to her when it arrived at the Berman House the
following day.

He looked, even for Jasper, unwontedly serious.

"I hope it is not bad news," he said.

Of course it was.  She opened it and read it in the kitchen, right in
front of them, and felt her face grow pale.  "My sister has taken ill,"
she said.  "They don't know if she--and she has three babies, and
there's no one to take care of them--"

"Oh, Tamar, do you have to go?"  Jenny wailed, but Jasper silenced her
with a look.

"I must.  As soon as I can, I think," Tamar said.  She put her hands to
the bow at her back that held her apron in place, as if she would strip
if off now and flee from the house.  Then she dropped her arms, took a
quick, indecisive pace around the kitchen, and came to an abrupt halt.
"I must check the bus schedules.  Maybe I can leave in the morning."
She gave Jasper a pleading glance.  "That is--if it's all right that I
leave so soon.  I know this isn't much notice--"

"Do what you must," he said, in such a kindly voice that she felt even
more wretched for leaving.  But she had to.  She had no choice.

That night, as she packed her sparse belongings, Jenny came to the door
and asked mournfully what she could do to help.  Tamar was edgy and
weary and just wanted to sleep, but she was touched by Jenny's obvious
sadness and did not have the heart to send her from the room.  They
stayed up most of the night talking.

Therefore, when Tamar left the Berman House early the next day, she was
exhausted and a little depressed.  She took a ferry to West gate on the
Bethel side of the river, because she had decided to explore that
province; she wanted to be as far from Breven as possible.  West gate,
almost a mirror image of its sister city, offered few amenities but
Tamar wanted only one: a bus station.  She found it quickly enough, and
spent a few minutes studying the roster of schedules.

Not that it helped her; she knew very little about Bethel, and none of
the destinations sounded familiar.  She wanted a town that was small
and sleepy, a place where angels were unlikely to drop by and news of
the world was infrequently reported.  The town of Shepherd's Pass
sounded promising, and when she checked its location on a nearby map,
it seemed perfectly suited to her needs.  It was situated in the heart
of the province's rich farmland and appeared to be miles from any major
crossroads.  She would buy a ticket to Shepherd's Pass.

During the two-day bus trip, she mostly slept, although she did read
one of the books Jenny had insisted she take.  It did not hold her
interest as much as she had hoped; perhaps she had outlived the brief
phase of her life when she could read for mindless pleasure.  When she
could neither sleep nor read, she stared out the window at the gentle
green countryside and tried not to brood too blackly.

Shepherd's Pass was everything she'd hoped for, half a dozen
intersecting streets lined with the requisite grocers, bankers, and
general stores.  There appeared to be two hotels, and she chose the
least prosperous-looking one.  She had saved most of the money she'd
earned, but she was by no means rich; a few weeks of idleness would see
her bankrupt.  She must spend wisely, and find work again
immediately.

Therefore, the next morning she made the rounds of the shops, looking
for employment.  To her dismay, she found that there wasn't much need
for labor in Shepherd's Pass, not even at the stables where she could
almost always count on a job.

"But they're hiring at Isabella Cartera's spread, so I heard," a groom
told her.

"Hiring for what?  Who's Isabella Cartera?"

"She owns the biggest farm holding in Bethel.  Inherited it from her
husband, but she's done a fine job of running it.  Must be a hundred
people working there, house and fields, but they're always looking for
more hands."

"I've never farmed," she said.  "Do they use machines?"  He nodded. 
"To plant and harvest.  Big and scary.  Give me a horse any day.  But
she's got stables, if you truly want to work with horses, and the house
is huge.  They must need cooks and chambermaids.  I'd go out to
Cartabella and give it a try."

He rented her a horse and gave her directions, and she rode out to
Cartabella that afternoon.  He was right; the place was monstrous.  The
house itself was palatial and gracious, but most of the other buildings
looked industrial, efficient, and impersonal.  She counted two dozen
barns, stables, milking sheds, warehouses, and other unidentified
structures before she gave up.

And one woman owned all this.  Wealth, indeed.

She rode straight to the section of property where the livestock
appeared to be quartered, then dismounted and tied her horse to a
convenient fence.  She had decided that, this time around, she would
avoid the kitchens and the living areas where there would be the
greatest concentration of people.  If there was work in the stables,
that was what she would take.  Animals were less likely to recognize or
betray her; and she would not feel any rush of sadness if she suddenly
had to leave them behind.

The first person she saw was a young man, a boy, really, who said sure
he could direct her to the head ostler and that wasn't much of a horse
she was riding, was it?  No, she agreed, it had been rented, but it had
gotten her here in one piece and that was all she asked of it.  He had
his own horse, he confided, a two-year-old gray mare, though he didn't
have much time to ride.  Still, he was allowed to stable her here for
free, so he could visit her every day and bring her an apple from the
dinner table.  Tamar cared very little about his joys and grievances.

"The head ostler?"  she reminded him gently, and he led her into the
maze of corrals and stables that had to cover a full square mile of
property.  The head groom was deep in conversation with another man,
but ended that conversation soon enough and came over to inquire
civilly about Tamar's business.  He looked only slightly taken aback
when she said she was looking for work (some men, she had found, were
reluctant to hire women for the stables) but admitted that he could
always use another pair of hands.

"You'll have to give me a demonstration," he said.  "Saddle and
unsaddle, hitch and unhitch, show me you can ride, pour a measure of
grain, show me how you'd wrap a sprain.  Don't mean to doubt you, but
there's plenty say they know horses that don't know horses."

She wasn't offended in the least.  She was always glad to have a chance
to prove herself, because she knew she was good enough to win over
anyone but a confirmed misogynist.  And, despite her intentions of
maintaining her distance from her next employer, she could not help
liking him.  He was a bluff, weathered, middle-aged man who seemed both
powerful and at ease.  Then again, she had liked most of the people she
had met who worked with horses.

"Tell me what you want done," she said.

He put her through her paces with three separate horses, one a skittish
filly who seemed to resent any handling at all, and nodded wordlessly
each time she finished a task.  She knew she was doing well; she felt
confident and in control.  So she was not surprised, though pleased and
grateful, when he shepherded her out of the stables and offered her his
hand.

"I'm Gene," he said.  "I'll be your boss.  Can you start today or will
you need a few days to get settled?"

 "I've got to return my horse to Shepherd's Pass," she said.

"I can be back in the morning."

"Good enough."

"I take it there's a bunk here for me?"

"Dorm," he said.  "Small room, but all to yourself.  Food' good.  Not
much entertainment."

She smiled.  "I don't require much."

"People in trouble rarely do."

Her smile faded and she gave him a swift, arrested look.  He shrugged.
"Not my concern," he said.  "You do your work.  that's all I want. 
I'll go tell Isabella you're on the payroll."

She nodded and turned away without another word.  But during the whole
ride back to the city, and during much of the night while she lay awake
in her hotel room, she wondered.  Was that why Jasper had been so kind
to her--and Arthur and Gena, and even Jenny?  Had it been so obvious,
so stark on her face, that she was running from terror or persecution?
She had thought she was solitary and self-sufficient, hiding her
trouble and relying on no one but herself, and all along, people had
been extending their helping hands.  She was not sure she would be
willing to take in a fugitive, offer her a job, and ask no questions.
Why had these people been so ready to give her a chance?

The speculation, which should have comforted her, made her shiver
instead.  She did not want to rely on the goodness of strangers; that
would lessen her own strength, dull her wits, lull her into security.
She was not safe here, would be safe nowhere that she could imagine,
even once she was with the Jacobites again.  It would not do to let
down her guard.  She would take this job, because she needed it, but
she would not stay for long.

CHAPTER ELEVEN

Spring in Bethel was lovelier than spring in Gaza, because it came
sooner and more rapturously.  In Gaza, the landscape altered overnight,
it seemed, from winter brown to summer green, without the exotic riot
of flowers that changed the Bethel terrain to a pastel candyland during
this most playful of seasons.

Still, Jared would have preferred being anywhere in Bethel but the
Eyrie.  And even the Eyrie wouldn't have been so bad if he hadn't had
to spend his time there with Bael and Mariah.

It was entirely his fault, of course, since he had come here of his own
free will, but he had not expected to be stuck for three days or more.
Mariah had practically greeted him with the news that they were
planning a dinner party that he simply must stay for, and while he was
here he could renew his friendship with Annalee Stephalo, surely he
remembered her?  He almost felt as if Mariah had been lying in wait for
him anytime these past three months, plotting how she could enmesh him
in her social schemes and force him to make an extended visit.  He had
not thought quickly enough to manufacture an important engagement back
home, so he agreed to stay till the party, and then cursed himself
roundly every hour for the next seventy-two.

It was not that the Eyrie was a bad place.  On the contrary, it was
quite the most beautiful of the angel holds, and the one gorged with
the most history.  Built atop the steep Velo range, it was carved from
the glowing rosy stone of the Velo Mountains and therefore possessed a
warm, eerie incandescence even in the deepest tunnel.  It was a
labyrinth of levels and corridors that only the residents were required
to navigate; the main public area was a broad plateau that anyone could
reach by climbing a massive, serried stairway cut from the mountain
itself.  This stairway was lined with shops and vendors' booths and was
always crowded with noisy, excited visitors, and Jared found it a
little tedious anytime he had to use it.  Mostly, of course, he just
used the public landing spot at the top of the compound and made his
way inside from there.

The most distinctive feature of the Eyrie was its constant music.  At
all hours of the night and day, rotating shifts of singers gathered in
a small chamber in the uppermost reaches of the hold and offered
harmonious prayers to the god.  The singing could be heard from any
point in the Eyrie, and it could, Jared knew from experience, calm a
man in a rage or cheer an angel in despair.

Although, on this trip, not even music was enough to improve his
spirits.

Truth to tell, he had been in a fairly black mood when he arrived here,
though such a humor was alien to one usually so sunny-tempered.  He
could not believe he had lost the Jacobite woman.  He had not been
entirely surprised to find her missing from Ileah when he returned from
Stockton, but he couldn't imagine how she had escaped him so
completely.  She could not have gotten far on foot, and he had scoured
the area nearby, looking for likely hiding places: cliffs hanging over
the river dense stands of trees.  But he could not locate her.  It
seemed likely someone had picked her up as she hurried along the road,
but he could hardly stop all the tracks and transports traveling the
routes fanning out from Ileah.  And he had no idea in which direction
she might have run.

So he had left Ileah in a pretty foul temper indeed--although he wasn't
sure why he should be so angry.  It was not as if she had been at all
cooperative.  It was not as if she had supplied him with any good ideas
for continuing his search.  Still, she was a Jacobite and he had
thought he could make use of her, and now she had disappeared.  And he
wasn't entirely certain where he should next turn his efforts at
finding the Alleluia Files.

So he had come to the Eyrie, not because he really expected to find the
files there, but because he had promised himself he would search all
the possible hiding places.  He had expected to stay half a day, maybe
overnight if courtesy demanded it; he had not expected to be roped into
Mariah's entertainment plans.  "Once a year, we plan a dinner for the,
shall we say, upper echelon of Bethel society," she told him.  "As the
highest taxpayers in the province, it's only fair that they get some
recognition for the wealth they have poured into the Eyrie's coffers. 
And of course there is no higher honor than being invited to sit at a
table among angels as among equals."

Jared thought perhaps some mortals would be less impressed by that
equation than others, but he preserved his silence.  Despite the fact
that she had been married to Bael for nearly thirty years and lived at
the Eyrie most of her adult life, Mariah still seemed to possess the
sort of blind hero worship for angels that Jared expected to find only
in the very young and the very unsophisticated.  In his experience,
angels had at least the same number of flaws and vices as the average
mean-spirited mortal, and Bael could probably multiply that figure by a
factor of one hundred.  But still, Mariah seemed besotted; and that was
probably just as well for her.  Better to adore your husband than to
despise him.

Bael had greeted the news of Jared's extended visit with hearty
approval.  "Always glad to see you here, my boy, always a pleasure to
talk with you!"  he declared in his booming voice.  "And how were
things in Monteverde when you left?  All well, I trust?"

It seemed like years since he had left Monteverde.  "All well," Jared
replied pleasantly.  "It is colder there than it is here, of course."

"Ah, but spring will not lag long, even in northern Gaza," Bael said.
As always, the very tenor of his voice made everything seem like a
divine pronouncement; Jared half expected his command to make the
flowers open a month sooner and the ground to amaze itself with
greenery.  "But you are welcome to enjoy our spring while you are here.
We must find other ways to entertain you as well."

"I thought I'd take a look around your archives, if you didn't mind,"
Jared said boldly.  He'd had a moment to give this some thought; he
believed he could pull it off without arousing suspicion.  "One of Ben
Harth's daughters was at Monteverde a few weeks back, doing research
for some school paper.  Some history class.  She was asking about the
Archangel Delilah, about whom I found myself surprisingly ignorant.  I
know that she ruled from the Eyrie, and that there was some short
interruption of her tenure, but I couldn't tell her the whole story.  I
thought you might have some biographies of her here?"

"Yes, we do, I'm sure we must," Bael said.  "The archives would be the
place to look.  Make yourself free of them.  Myself.  I've never been
able to locate a single thing I wanted there.  The place has not been
organized as well as it could have been.  But look all you want."

So that was dangerous ground lightly skated over; he had not even
mentioned Alleluia's name.  He spent some time that afternoon poking
through the bookshelves and boxes of the archives, but it wasn't like
his hopes were high.  As Bael had said, the place was so badly
organized that it scarcely had any logic at all.  He would be lucky to
find a couple of volumes about the flamboyant and much-beloved Delilah,
let alone any information about the reclusive Alleluia of the brief
period of glory.

In fact, he did find two histories on Delilah, both of which devoted
entire chapters to the temporary Archangel, but did not heap her with
praise.

"During Alleluia's reign," said one, "the storms and the tempests grew
in frequency and fury.  While it was true that Alleluia herself was
able to fly to any site and calm the storm, no matter how violent, she
was not able to successfully mobilize the other angels, which was
perceived as a distinct failing on her part.  Not until Delilah
regained her ability to fly and was once again on the seat of power did
the storms abate and the god again choose to listen to the voices of
all the angels."

Well, that didn't make it sound as if Alleluia had transported herself
to the deck of the spaceship Jehovah and conversed with the machine who
controlled the weather and the fate of Samaria.

Jared laid the biographies aside and continued to search through the
mayhem, but since he had no idea what he was looking for, his search
was hardly systematic.  Merely, he picked up books, glanced through
them, put them down, opened cartons, poked inside, shut them again.  He
was looking for anything that looked like it might hold sound.  In his
experience, recordings were always put on small silver disks or larger
black disks that could be inserted in specialized machines; but in
Alleluia's day, perhaps, other mediums had existed.  Still, a random
search through the cabinets and cupboards of the archives yielded
nothing promising.  And he had not thought it would.

Sighing with frustration, Jared swept his wings behind him and sat on
the dusty stone floor.  If he had been the Archangel Alleluia,
possessed of a dangerous but important secret, where would he have
hidden evidence?  If he had been married to an engineer of some genius,
he thought he might have recorded his memoir on some highly customized
equipment and kept it close to his side.  After her brief stint as
Archangel, Alleluia had been the oracle at Mount Sinai for nearly forty
years (according to this unsympathetic chapter on her life, which also
noted that such a quiet, regulated existence had seemed more suited to
her temperament and her talents than a great role in the public eye). 
True, the oracles, like the angels, received a steady stream of
visitors looking to offer petitions to the god: but the oracles'
retreats were much more inaccessible and sternly guarded than the angel
holds.  And the Augustine school had been built at the very foot of
Mount Sinai, so Caleb Augustus's equipment would have been easily
available to her.  And she would have felt safe there; the oracles'
retreats were famous for creating auras of shelter and haven. All in
all, it seemed like a good bet for a hiding place.  Sometime in the
next few weeks he must go to Mount Sinai.

He had barely reached this conclusion when he heard delicate footsteps
cross the stone floor and a sweet, hesitant voice call out his name.
"Jared?  Are you in here?  Jared?"

He came to his feet just as Annalee Stephalo drifted into his line of
vision.  She was a small, frail blond girl, who dressed always in
diaphanous pinks and melons and wore her hair in a wild cloud of cuds.
She had the tiniest hands and the biggest eyes Jared had ever seen. Her
father owned a mining concern in southwestern Bethel, and she had been
living at the Eyrie for more than a year.

Jared couldn't stand her.

"Oh!  There you are!"  she said in her breathy voice as she rounded the
corner and saw him waiting there.  "My!  In these shadows you look so
tall."

"Are you looking for me, Annalee?"  he said coolly.  A stupid question
since she obviously was.

"Yes, it's nearly time for dinner and Mariah thought you might need to
be reminded," she said.  She was looking around the room with a small
frown on her dainty face, as if trying to comprehend where she was.
"There are certainly a lot of books here, aren't there?"  she said at
last.

"Indeed, there are.  History books, mostly.  Accounts of the hold. 
Tales of past angels and Archangels.  Are you interested in history?" 
he added maliciously.

"Oh, no!  Reading gives me a headache."  She paused for a moment, her
eyes trained on the floor, then lifted her face to give him a single,
soulful look.  It was a trick she repeated often, and it was generally
effective; her eyes were so enormous and so blue that every time you
saw them again, full force, you were shocked at their depth and
brilliance.  Even if you didn't like her.  "I'm sure you're a great
reader, Jared.  You're so clever."

"Well, not clever enough to make heads nor tails out of half the stuff
in here," he said briskly.  He bent over to retrieve the two books on
Delilah (even though no one at Monteverde really wanted to read them,
he may as well pretend so, and take them back).

"You didn't find what you were looking for?"

"Not exactly.  How soon is dinner?  Do I have time to clean myself up
beforehand?  I'm a little dirty."

Unexpectedly, for she was generally a demure girl, she came a few steps
closer.  "I don't think so.  Here, let me dust you off a little."

And she proceeded to brash her hands lightly across the front of his
shirt, down the smooth hips of his leather pants, and across the very
tips of his wings.  Despite himself, as her soft fingers touched his
feathers, he felt himself shiver and almost flinch away.  He was
astonished.  Angels hated to be fondled, could not abide any except the
most intimate touch on their sensitive wings.  More than one mortal had
discovered this to his rue as an angel had reacted violently to some
invasive contact.  Annalee had grown up among angels--she knew
this--and yet here she was, intently stroking the edge feathers of his
wings with a slower and more deliberate motion.  Each fingertip left a
trail of fire; his whole body leaped with unwilling response.  She
touched a finger to her tongue and reached for him again as if to
smooth down a wayward quill.

Jared took a deep breath and stepped backward, out of reach.  "I think
not," he said.

Again, she gave him that upswept look, a world of heavy meaning in her
eyes.  "I think I've improved you as best I can."

Jared tilted his head back, eyeing her haughtily, but she gave him no
time to reply.  "We must hurry," she said in her breathless voice, and
turned for the door.  "I believe Mariah is waiting."

And so he followed her from the room into the tunnels of the Eyrie, and
wondered if he had misread the whole incident.  Had she meant something
by it or not?  She seemed too childlike to be attempting to seduce him
(and she had certainly chosen a bad time for it if they were expected
at dinner in five minutes), but no mortal familiar with angels ever
initiated such casual contact.

Unless she meant something by it.  And there was no reason to think
Annalee Stephalo wasn't on the lookout for a liaison with a well-known
and potentially powerful angel.  Her father had planted her here in the
Eyrie, after all, a place where ambitious parents often sent their
daughters for extended visits.  Even if these girls did not succeed in
marrying an angel, it was no disgrace to take an angel for a lover,
especially if the union produced an angel child.  Such good fortune
could settle a young girl for life, for she and her child then became
the responsibility of the hold; and the honor of being an angel's
mother was one that profited her entire family.

Still, Richard Stephalo had position and wealth enough of his own; he
didn't need angel grandchildren to secure his status in life.

And perhaps she had only been trying to be helpful, making him look
presentable for Mariah's little dinner.  He was too suspicious, he
disliked too many people; and he was too irritable at being stuck here
in the Eyrie.  He should not be attributing manipulative motives to a
simple act of kindness.  He sighed again, silently, and caught up with
Annalee as she preceded him down the hall.

Dinner was formal but not as much of an ordeal as Jared had anticipated
(that would come in two nights, when all the landowners of Bethel were
gathered for their annual banquet).  As ranking guest of honor, he was
seated by Mariah, but she spent most of her time talking to the young
man on her left.  Jared was too far from Bael to be forced to converse
with the Archangel, but of course it was impossible to miss any word
uttered in those silver, gorgeous tones.  Jared tried not to listen,
but he took in some impression of the conversation--something about
wheat tariffs and land taxes.  He'd had the same discussions himself
over dinner at Monteverde.  He sighed again, and naled the servant for
another glass of wine.

Two more tedious days to go.  He did not see how he could possibly bear
it.

He escaped into Velora the next morning before anyone could find him. 
Velora was the small town situated at the foot of the Velo Mountain; it
had served the Eyrie since the hold was founded.  The grand stairway,
that conduit of commerce .... connected the hold with this bustling,
merry little city, but ~ was much to be preferred as a place to do
business or an afternoon's shopping.  Jared spent most of the day
sitting at outdoor tables of sidewalk cafes, thumbing through his
history of Delilah, and wishing he had better reading material.  He did
look through the bazaars, just for something to do, and bought a
handful of shirts and gloves simply to have something to show for his
day.

In the afternoon he returned to the Eyrie and found himself in an
unexpected tete-a-tete with the Archangel.

He had decided it would do him no actual harm to see if the Alleluia
Files could be found on one of the disks left in plain sight in the
Eyrie's music rooms, and so he was on the lower level of the compound,
looking for an empty chamber.  Bael opened the door to leave the very
last one just as Jared had lifted his hand to knock.

"Oh!  Sorry.  Thought it might be empty," Jared said, stepping back a
pace.  Although Bael was considerably shorter than he was, the
Archangel's pure physical presence was so forceful that he exuded an
air of power even in the most casual situation.

"Nonsense!  Don't apologize.  I'm quite through," Bael said, beaming up
at him.  "In fact, wait.  I'm not.  I'm glad you're here.  I've a new
piece of music I'd like you to listen to, if you've got a moment.
Perhaps you're in a hurry?"

"No, no hurry," Jared said, and the two men stepped inside.  Bael shut
the door.  The room was small, acoustically perfect, and barely
furnished; the singer, or the listener, was supposed to concentrate all
his attention on the music, not the decor.  Still, there were two
stools, and Bael gestured for Jared to take one.  Jared sat while Bael
fiddled with the controls on the cabinet in the wall.

"There!  Isn't that nice, now?"  the Archangel said, coming over to sit
by Jared.  The music issuing from the hidden speakers was a duet, male
voice over flute, and Jared listened critically a moment.  Dark music,
melancholy and brooding.  Not quite Jared's style.  "He does have a
talent, does he not?"

"Omar's new piece?"  Jared guessed.  Bael nodded.

"He brought it to me this morning.  I told him I would critique it with
my usual harshness, but I find it hard to judge my own son.  I think
he's a maestro."

"He's very good," Jared said.  "I take it he's come in for your dinner
party a day early?  That must make you happy."

"Yes, it's always a treat to see my son.  As you will know, when you
yourself marry and produce children."

"The day seems far away," Jared said, amused.

"You're not so young that you can afford to be putting off the
inevitable for long," Bael said with a quick frown.  "It is good for
any angel to breed, but for one in your position, it is essential.  I
tell you this not only as your friend, but as your Archangel.  It is
well past time for you to marry.  May I suggest a proper girl such as
Annalee Stephalo, who is even now visiting at the Eyrie?  She has
attractive manners and a desirable background.  You could do worse than
turn your eyes her way."

So that answered that question.  Not the girl's father, but her
Archangel, had encouraged her to dally with the visitor from
Monteverde.  "I do not find my affections leaning in her direction,"
Jared said softly.

Bael nodded.  "Fine.  Then some other girl.  There must be plenty of
eligible young women among the Manadavvi who would not look upon your
suit with disgust."

"Thank you," Jared said faintly.  "I will bear your advice in mind.  I
assume you give the same to your son--who is my age and older, and
unmarried himself?"

"He is not angelic, so his responsibility to reproduce is not as high
as yours--but yes, we have had this discussion," Bael said seriously.
"It is the duty of every righteous, intelligent, and devout man to
marry, and marry wisely.  I have a special interest in Omar, of course,
and am keenly desirous of seeing him settled well.  And I have ideas on
that score, and he is not loath to entertain them.  But his case is
entirely different from yours."

Jared was conscious of a sudden overpowering desire to fly to Cedar
Hills and repeat every word of this conversation to Mercy.  He could
hardly wait to hear her caustic comments on Bael's attempts to pair off
the world to his own specifications.  But, he was by now ruffled enough
to let some of his own ire show.  "Marry him off to an angel," he said
flippantly.  "Then she can be named Archangel, and he'll still have the
power, if not the position."

He was shocked when Bael turned those wild prophet's eyes on him with a
fanatic intentness.  "Such a plan might please Jovah," the Archangel
agreed.  "And my son is such a man as could be expected to appeal to
any woman, even an angel girl who has her pick of suitors."

I was not serious, Jared wanted to say, but Bael clearly was.  It was a
wholly new thought to Jared, but he realized instantly it had been a
scheme long gestating in the Archangel's mind.  And why not?  From
Bael's perspective, it made a great deal of sense.  It put his son in
power; it kept him deeply connected to the rule of Samaria.  It allowed
him to continue whatever political and religious policies he had
instituted over the past nineteen years ...  "Tell me," Jared said
slowly, "does Omar feel as you do on most topics that concern the
realm?"

"We discuss most of my important decisions before I make them," Bael
said.  "I have found my son to be a clear-eyed adviser.  At times we
disagree, but he has most often conceded later that I have been
correct.  At other times I have allowed his opinion to sway me and have
not been sorry.  He has gifts for statesmanship that are very great,
and which many do not appreciate because he stands in my shadow."

Not an entirely straightforward reply, though clearly the Archangel had
answered Jared's question in the affirmative.  "On the Jacobite issue,
for instance," Jared said, very quietly, "he concurs with you?"

"Anyone who holds dear the safety of Samaria and its continued
existence must concur with me on the Jacobite issue," Bael said
sharply.  "The Jacobites are extremely dangerous.  They are seditious
both politically and theologically, and those who believe in them court
destruction by the hand of Jovah."

"I have heard," Jared said, still softly, "that you have been at some
pains lately to--drive the Jacobites from the shores of Samaria.  I
confess I had not realized you were so passionately against them.  But
perhaps I have heard wrong, and you do not direct violence against the
rebels?"

He was not sure Bael would answer, for it was an accusatory question,
but the Archangel nodded his silver head.  "I wish them gone from
Samaria, yes," he said.  "Think about it, Jared!  Do you not see the
risk they pose?  To be telling people that the god does not exist--!
The god who nurtures us, watches over us, saves us from flood, delivers
us from famine--the god who, with a single thunderbolt, can destroy our
entire world!  Is it not dangerous--is it not terrifying--to anger such
a god?  Do you not realize that no one in Samaria is safe if a single
Jacobite remains to preach of heresy?"

Sweet Jovah singing, then everything Christian had told him had been
true.  This was a zealot speaking, a man who felt his goal was so just
that he could not envision setting any limits to attain it.  And yet,
and yet ... "I agree, the hazard is great," Jared said cautiously. 
"But I do wonder how you plan to usher them from Samaria.  I suppose
you could shepherd them all to Edori boats and ship them off to
Ysral--"

"Jovah hears every whisper uttered in Ysral as clearly as he hears
every word spoken here," Bael said sternly.  "We are no safer if they
emigrate.  They must be eliminated--or converted."

"Eliminated?"  Jared repeated.  Surely Bael would not admit ...  The
Archangel turned his mad eyes to his visitor.  His face burned with a
righteous fever; he lifted his hands as if to invoke the will of the
god.  From the speakers around them, Omar's voice suddenly burst free
of the flute in a dark and portentous solo lament.  "They must be
executed," Bael proclaimed.  "They must be cleansed from the face of
Samaria.  Their blood must be spilled so that the blood of innocents is
not shed.  They have betrayed their god, and they must die."

Jared stared at him, too stunned to say another word.  Bael stared
back, his face alight with passion, and stabbed his finger suddenly in
Jared's direction.

"And all who do not agree with me must be questioned.  And all who do
not see the truth must be enlightened," the Archangel continued.  "Who
knows how far the heresy has spread?  Who knows how many the poison has
tainted?  Look to your devotions, Jared.  Jovah sees all, and judges
all, and avenges all.  And no one is safe until we are all back in
Jovah's arms."

 After that, the visit to the Eyrie ceased to be merely tedious and
began to seem almost dangerous instead.  Jared was miles from embracing
the Jacobite theories--though he did concede that they had a certain
logic to them--but by Bael's criteria, he was most certainly a heretic.
 Which made him suspect.  Which put him at risk.

Seeing Omar that night over dinner did nothing to improve his sense of
security.  The Archangel's son approached him the few minutes before
the meal when they all milled about in the drawing room.

"My father told me you had honored the Eyrie with a visit," Omar said
with his usual suave smile.  "How long are you here?"

"I've been persuaded to stay through the party tomorrow night," Jared
replied.  "But then I must get back to Monteverde.  I've been gone too
long."

"Oh?  Where else have your travels taken you?"

To Ileah where I consorted with Jacobites, Jared thought about saying.
He cursed himself for his unwary tongue.  "I was in Cedar Hills a while
back, and then in Semorrah with Christian Avalone," he said easily.

"Business?  Pleasure?"

"Wanderlust.  I never stay still for long."

"I like Christian, but I wonder at some of the company he keeps," Omar
said idly.  He was studying his glass of brandy as if it was a scrying
crystal, filled with visions.  "Solomon Davilet, for instance.
Christian knows how opposed my father is to rapid technological
advances, and yet he insists on encouraging the very men who are
investing all their resources in such development."  He looked up
quickly to catch Jared's frown.  "I don't know if he's aware how much
this has displeased my father."

So, another warning, or so it looked to Jared.  "Christian's a
businessman," Jared said lightly.  "He's looking for the profit.  I
don't think you have to ascribe to him any more ambition than that."

"Well, Christian is a smart businessman," Omar said.  "He sees that my
father has only one year left of his tenure, and he thinks the next
Archangel may view his projects with more leniency."

"But he has no idea who the next Archangel may be."

"No," Omar said.  "That is why it would behoove him to move slowly with
his developments."

The supper bell rang just then, which Jared was grateful for, till he
went into the dining room to find himself directed to sit by Annalee
Stephalo.  She gave him that dramatic look, suddenly raising her eyes
to his face, as he took his seat next to her.

"Good evening, Jared," she said in her soft voice.  "I haven't seen you
all day.  Have you been keeping busy?"

Worse and worse and worse.  He knew it would be best to keep his head
clear, but at this moment he couldn't bear the thought of getting
through dinner entirely sober.  He signaled the servant for a glass of
wine, and drank half of it with his first swallow.

But the morrow brought a welcome respite.  Jared had just emerged onto
the central plateau, preparatory to flying down to Velora for the day,
when he happened to investigate the commotion of a new arrival coming
up the grand stairway.  It was a cadre of liveried servants carrying
boxes, luggage, and cartons; beside them, holding up her skins with one
hand and looking very cross, toiled Isabella Cartera.  Jared broke into
a grin and paused, waiting for her to arrive at the top of the
stairwell.

"Isabella!  Invited to the Eyrie to partake in the grand banquet, I
see!"  he greeted her, clasping her hand and helping her up the last
few steps.  "I'm glad to know you are still considered part of the
upper echelon of Bethel society."

"Why is it," she fumed, "that two of the most-visited places in all of
Samaria require you to arrive on foot?  You can travel by private bus
all the way to Breven, and through it, if you choose.  You can ride up
and down the streets of Cedar Hills or Monteverde in your truck, and
Luminaux can be navigated by any means possible.  But to get to
Semorrah you have to leave all your vehicles behind you on the banks of
a river and ride a horse into the city--and to get to the Eyrie, you
actually have to walk!  You have to climb!  This is not the life to
which I have been accustomed, I assure you.  If it were not for the
honor of the invitation, which has been growing paler as the day
progresses, I would not be standing before you now, hot, windblown, and
in a temper."

"Next time you must arrange to have an angel meet you in Velora so you
can be flown into the hold in style," Jared said, amused.  "Had I known
you were coming, I would have been your escort myself."

She put back the lace confection that had shaded her head from the warm
spring sun.  "Yes, and had I known you were here, I would have sent for
you," she said, gazing up a him.  "Which reminds me to ask, why are you
here? Surely not for Mariah's little dinner party?"

He grimaced.  "I made the mistake of dropping by two days ago and have
been coerced into staying.  I leave with the day, tomorrow, I promise
you."

"Well, I am very glad to see you," she said decidedly.

I cannot bear any of the others who will be present.  You sit by me in
the drawing room and flirt with me all night.  It will make Mariah so
angry. She does not approve of my morals at all."

Jared grinned; Isabella was fast recovering her customery good humor.
"If you wish, I will take you down to Velora with me now, and we can
commence the flirting right away," he suggested.

She laughed up at him.  "I have just come from Velora," she
protested.

"This trip will be much easier.  I will carry you."

"Very tempting.  I should--but all right.  Give me twenty minutes to
find my room, change my clothes, and rejoin you out here."

"You must greet Mariah, too, of course.  I should give you half an
hour.  Maybe an hour."

She grinned.  "I will not trouble Mariah just yet.  Twenty minutes.  It
is good to see you, Jared."

Therefore, his second afternoon in Velora passed much more pleasantly
than his first.  Isabella could not resist dragging him back to the
bazaars he had frequented the day before ("Say what you will about
Velora being the most provincial of the angel towns, it still has a
market that far exceeds the merchandise at Shepherd's Pass"), but he
didn't mind that.  He didn't mind carrying her purchases for her,
either, or allowing her to hold up a sweater to his chest to determine
if it might fit her son ("For you're about the same size, though you're
a little more muscular").  Isabella was like a chores of harmony after
a month of dissonance, and he was glad to be in her company.

Later, they sat at one of the outdoor cafes and sipped iced drinks
laced with alcohol.  "So tell me the grim roster," she said.  "Who
besides me is expected at this dismal dinner?"

He laughed.  "I'm not sure of the entire guest list.  But I did hear
Mariah mention a few names."  He reeled them off; Isabella alternated
between nodding agreeably and grimacing sharply.  "And of course, we
have the usual assortment of Bael's court--Omar is here, and Annalee
Stephalo, who has been my particular bane this visit."

"Has she really?"  Isabella asked with her throaty laugh.  "Throwing
herself at you, is she?  You've been a friend of mine for fifteen
years, Jared, but if you marry her, I'll never speak to you again."

"Glad to hear it.  Now at least I have a reason to give Bael when next
he proposes her as my bride.  Sorry, can't do it, Isabella Cartera will
drop me from her list of friends."

"Although Bael is right.  It is time you married.  Or at least took a
lover or two."

"I have had my share of lovers, though I thank you for this interest in
my life," he replied, amused but a little discomfited.  "As for
marriage--"

"I know, it is a wretched business, and I was much happier after my
husband had the good sense to die," she replied.  "But you do have a
position to uphold.  And there are people who might think you a little
less--flighty--if you were settled with some sober girl, raising your
family and staying home of nights."

"From you of all people!  Bael, yes, or even Mercy, but you--!"

"I have always been respectable, Jared, whatever my other failings.  It
is good advice.  Though I do not blame you for rejecting Annalee
Stephalo or any other bride of Bael's providing.  But surely, among
your own people--the Manadavvi must have produced some charming young
women who are only too eager to share your bed and your fortune."

"Dangerous to dally among the Manadavvi," he told her.  "They're too
near Monteverde.  Too much ill will is created if nothing comes of it.
You must see that."

"Yes, unless there was some great and overwhelming attraction ... But I
know!  You must come to me at Cartabella.  I am having my own party in
two months--one which I trust will be much more pleasant than the one
we are suffering through now.  I am hosting a wedding for my niece, and
there will be all sorts of young women present.  Girls from good
families, too--bright, educated girls who have been schooled at
Luminaux and Semorrah.  You might find one there who is a little to
your liking.  How does that sound?"

At present, one more social engagement---even at Isabella
Cartera's--sounded dreadful, but the offer was a kind one and he knew
he should not refuse.  "It sounds most delightful," he said.  "Tell me
exactly when it is, and I shall be there."

She laughed at him.  "You must try to feign more enthusiasm when you
arrive," she said.  "Don't worry, I shall entertain you royally.  And
who knows?  Perhaps you will find yourself a romance."

They stayed in Velora until the last possible moment, then flew back to
the Eyrie in time to change for dinner.  Isabella told Jared that she
could only bear these events by dressing in the most outrageous manner
possible, and true to her word, she appeared in the drawing room
attired in a flimsy white gown that was almost transparent.  She had
also bedecked herself with ropes of diamonds around her throat and her
wrists, and in the braided coronet of her hair, so that she glittered
wickedly when she made the smallest movement.  Mariah stared at her
wrathfully and almost could not bring herself to cross the room to
greet her, but Omar, Bael, Richard Stephalo, and most of the other male
dinner guests were by her side in moments.  She laughed delicately,
extended her hand to each man in turn, and sipped from her wine while
keeping her eyes on the face of whoever happened to be talking.  Jared,
watching from a distance, couldn't help smiling.  To such heights of
sophistication Annalee Stephalo could only aspire.

He had been resigned to having Annalee as his dinner mate, and he was
right, but when he arrived at the table, he was pleasantly surprised to
find the oracle Jecoliah seated on his other side.  She was peering
about in her usual shortsighted way, but smiled at him cheerfully when
he sat beside her.

"Jared!  I thought I heard your voice across the room, but since I
could think of no reason you would be here--" "Ill luck," he responded,
which made her laugh, though she tried to strangle the sound.  "How are
you, Jecoliah?  I have not seen you since the Gloria."

"Well, and happy to have spring here again," she said.  "Quickly,
before the others are seated.  Who is sitting near us and on my other
side?  I see very poorly these days and I am too embarrassed to ask for
the names of people I should know."

So he obligingly sketched in the composition of their table and pointed
out the luminaries at the other tables.  Then, while the meal was
served, he took advantage of this rare chance to have an extended
conversation with the oracle.

"You might be able to answer a question for me," he said, leaning back
in his chair and sipping his wine (Manadavvi vintage, unless he greatly
missed his guess, and very good).  "Someone questioned me about the
oracle Alleluia the other day, and I found I knew little about
her--except that she was Archangel briefly, and oracle forever--"

"And the Jacobites have taken her up as their patron," Je-coliah added
calmly.

Jared started violently, then glanced around quickly to make sure no
one was paying attention.  "Well, yes," he said, in a lower voice, "but
here that's a word that it isn't even wise to whisper."

Jecoliah rolled her milky eyes but obligingly left off discussing
Jacobites.  "She was truly a great oracle," she said.  "Any question
she put to the god was answered immediately.  Anyone who came to her
for advice left knowing exactly what to do.  She trained hundreds of
acolytes and priests, and she had a great reverence for the power of
Jovah."

"You sound as if you knew her."

She smiled.  "No, she died before I came to Mount Sinai.  But her
successor was the oracle Deborah, who had known Alleluia her whole
life, and Deborah trained me.  And so I heard all her reminiscences
about Alleluia's greatness.  And of course, had it not been for
Alleluia, neither Deborah nor I would have been acolytes, let alone
oracles."

"How so?"

"In those days, as today, acolytes were most often chosen from the
wealthy families--it has always been considered an honor to have your
son or daughter serve the god for a year or two.  But Alleluia felt
acolytes should be culled from the poor as well as the wealthy--and
from those who were disadvantaged in other ways.  Deborah was almost
completely deaf, you see, as I am almost completely blind.  In fact, we
both came from the village of Chahiela, where people with disadvantages
such as ours can live in comparative freedom."

"Chahiela," Jared repeated.  "It is in southern Bethel, is it not?
Almost on the ocean."

"Exactly," Jecoliah confirmed.  "It is quite a prosperous little place
now, though when it was founded, it was very small.  Ad it still boasts
a large community of the deaf and the blind, in what is the older part
of town.  As I say, Alleluia brought Deborah in from Chahiela, and when
I was a girl, Deborah brotgh me to Mount Sinai.  I myself have made it
a practice to bring in acolytes from the school in Chahiela--and had a
great deal of success, I might add.  I find that a child who is deaf
can somehow concentrate more intently on the words of the god, and
someone like me who can scarcely see a man's face can with ease read
the words the god prints on the interface.  I do not know why this
would be so.  But I am thankful for it."

"Very interesting," Jared said, and he meant it, though he didn't see
how any of this benefited him in his search.  "Though I can't imagine
how you or anyone can read the words of the god.  I have been to the
oracles' retreats and seen the holy language written on your screens,
and I have not understood a thing."

She smiled.  "That is because it is written in the divine
language,which common men have forgotten," she said primly.  "You must
study a long time to learn it!  Although most of those who are to be
oracles simply one day look at the words and understand.  It is one of
the ways we know we have been chosen by Jovah."

"And you have been oracle--how long now?"

"For nearly thirty years."

"You must have been fairly young when you assumed your duties."

She nodded.  "No one expected Deborah to die as she did, so quickly.
She was nearly eighty, of course, but she had always been in good
health.  But then--she had a partial failure of her heart.  One day she
was fine, the next day she could not speak or walk, though it was clear
that she could still understand-and think.  Her last few days were
terrible to witness.  It was obvious that there were things on her
mind--things she wanted to tell--and over and over again she asked for
me to come to her room.  And I would come, and I would send everyone
else out, and she would take me by the hand and draw me down to the
bed.  And no words would come from her mouth, though she tried and
tried to speak.  She moved her hands in that strange language of the
deaf--which I did not know--but when I brought her pen and paper, she
could not write a word.  I stayed with her as much as I could, hoping
she would regain the power of speech.  But three weeks later her heart
stopped entirely, and she died in the night.  It made me very sad." She
paused, shook her head, and smiled away the ghosts.  "But it also made
me very busy!  For I had overnight become the new oracle, and there was
much to do."

"I wonder what it is she wanted to tell you," Jared said.

"So do I, sometimes.  But no great mysteries have arisen that I could
not solve--no locked cabinets that I could not find the key for, no
dreadful events that she could have forewarned me aboutt.  I think she
was afraid, and looking straight into the face of death, and wanted the
assurance of the god's love.  And that I gave her.  So I don't worry
about it anymore."

"Do you think--" Jared began, but was stopped by a small, speculative
touch on his arm.  He turned instantly to find Annalee smiling up at
him with a wistful, plaintive expression.

"Oh!  I'm sorry!"  she said in her soft, exclamatory whisper.  "I
didn't realize you were still talking."

"What is it, Annalee?"  he asked with an edged calm.

"It's just that, after dinner, I know Mariah is going to ask for
entertainment.  And I thought--if you had no objection--you would be
willing to sing a duet with me?  Something simple, of course, I know my
voice is no match for yours, but Mariah made me promise that I would
get up and sing, and I am shy to be singing by myself in front of all
these strangers.  But if you were beside me, well--"

He let her go on for a few more tangled sentences, mentally consigning
Mariah to eternal damnation, before nodding sharply three times.  "Of
course.  I am happy to serve as Mariah's amusement," he said.  "Did you
have a song in mind?"

Well, she had several, all silly love songs with preposterous lyrics,
and all equally distasteful to him.  "Choose what you will," he told
her.  "I am familiar with each of them."

As soon as he could, he turned back to finish his conversation with
Jecoliah, but she had become engrossed in a discussion with the miner
on her other side and showed no indication of ending it soon.  In
frustration, he addressed himself determinedly to his food, not looking
up till he had cleaned his plate and finished his third glass of
wine.

As he had expected, the soiree following the meal was even worse than
the dinner itself, highlighted by his own performance with the wispy
Annalee.  He did his best not to make eye contact with Bael, Mariah, or
Richard Stephalo while the painful duet was in progress, for he could
not bear to see the satisfaction on their faces; likewise, he could not
look at Isabella, because he knew she would be laughing.  The applause
that followed the song was extravagant, but not enough to make him
agree to an encore, and he swept the assembled company a bow before
stalking away from the pianoforte.  He went straight to the servant
holding a tray of wineglasses.

"You'll be too ill to leave in the morning, if you keep drinking all
night," Isabella murmured in his ear, and he turned to give her an
idiot's grin.

"Nothing will make me too ill to leave in the morning," he informed
her.  She took the glass from his hand, deliberately sipped from it,
and handed it back.  He added, "I'm considering making my exit now, in
fact."

"But you've been so gracious all evening!  You can manage another hour
or two."

"I wouldn't be so sure."

"I hope you plan to be in a better mood when you arrive at Cartabella
in a few weeks."

"I hope you plan to provide me better diversions."

She stretched to her tiptoes to kiss him on the cheek.  "Oh, yes!"  she
murmured in his ear.  "And if you don't like the youthful ones, I'll
amuse you myself, in any way you care to name."  She drew back and
favored him with a brilliant smile.  "Now how's that for a rash and
breathless promise?"

He wished suddenly that his head was clearer; but surely she was just
flirting.  "I think I'll find myself tolerably well amused, thank you
very much.  I'm looking forward to the visit, in fact."

The smile still lurked in her eyes.  She could probably read every
thought in his head.  "You're not," she said.  "But I assure you it
will be better than this."

"I've no doubt of it.  In two months, then."

"In two months."

He stayed till the first of the guests began filtering out, and then he
made his farewells to Mariah and Bael.  He slipped up to his room, fell
instantly into bed, and slept the sleep of the reprieved man.  In the
morning, he was up with the dawn, packed in five minutes, and hurrying
through the corridors before anyone else was awake.  At the public
landing space on the Eyrie's highest level, he flung himself from the
mountaintop as if he was fleeing from doom, his wings working mightily,
his face straining toward the skies.  He could not get high enough fast
enough; he flew at top speed, straight north from the Eyrie, for as
long as his wings could bear the exercise.

He would never go back to the Eyrie as long as he lived.

CHAPTER TWELVE

 "Well, Jared, it doesn't sound so awful to me," Mercy said mildly
three weeks later.  "You had two boring dinners and half a dozen
conversations with people you didn't like.  No worse than your average
Gloria."

Christian was laughing.  The three of them had come together,
unexpectedly, in Semorrah, and the merchant had insisted on taking the
two angels out to dinner.  So now they were seated in the
well-appointed dining room of a quiet little inn called the Berman
House, sharing one of the best meals it had been Jared's privilege to
eat in a long time.  And the company was better than he had had since
he left the Eyrie, too.

Jared had only been back in Monteverde for a couple of weeks before he
had felt compelled to leave again.  He had wanted to apprise Christian
of the results of his quest so far.  And Monteverde had been so
peaceful that he did not feel he needed to stay--and so chilly that he
did not want to.  Mercys presence in Semorrah had been a delightful,
unplanned bonus.

"Well, I commiserate with him on the Annalee Stephalo question,"
Christian said.  "I don't know what it is about her that is so
off-putting, for she's a pretty enough girl, and her manners are for
the most part acceptable."

"She' sstupid, but she' sharmless," Mercy said briskly.  "And I
wouldn't want to see Jared entangled with her, but he's a grown man,
after all!  He ought to be able to have a civil conversation with
someone he doesn't much care for, and not let it ruin his life.  I hate
to say it, Jared, but it's time you grew up and acted like an adult."

"And this is the reason I was so happy to see you when I arrived in
Semorrah," Jared said, smiling at her lazily.  "Because you always make
me feel so good about myself."

"Nothing like Mercy's tender love," Christian agreed.  "She spent the
morning telling me I was a wicked father, and that if I didn t intend
to raise my own sons, I should marry a woman who'd do it for me."

"Matrimony seems to be the theme on everyone's mind," Jared murmured.
"I know the nicest Bethel girl.  She's currently staying at the Eyrie
as the guest of the Archangel--"

"I didn't say you were wicked," Mercy informed Christian.  "But you are
neglectful.  And your boys are adorable creatures whom you should enjoy
spending time with."

"I do enjoy them," Christian said mildly.  "But by all means come to
Semorrah as often as you like and we can parent them together.  They
like you.  They'd be overjoyed to have you round more."

"It's not me they need more time with, Christian, but you."

"I give them as much time as I have.  And I think I'd prefer to discuss
Jared's failings, if you please."

"I'd prefer to discuss Bael's," Jared said.  He nodded over at the
merchant.  "I don't know how much Christian has told you of what he
discussed with me last time I was here," he said to Mercy.  "But from
him I learned that Bael has undertaken a systematic plan to eliminate
the Jacobites from Samaria.  Frankly, I didn't believe him--but Bael
all but confirmed it for me while I was there.  It was very chilling. 
All this time I have merely believed him to be obstructive and
narrow-minded.  But now I think he might be--" He paused, searched for
a word, and reluctantly found it.  "Evil."

"Oh, come now, Jared!"  Mercy exclaimed.  "Misguided I'll allow, but
nothing stronger than that."

"I agree with Jared," Christian said coolly.  "I think Bael has misused
his power, and done it deliberately, and knows that his motives would
not bear close examination."

"His motives!  The safety of the realm!"  Mercy replied.  "I am not one
of these radical thinkers who believes that every lunatic with some
view to propose deserves to have his hearing in the public market! 
Like Bael, I believe the Jacobites present some risk to us and to our
society--"

"But would you have them murdered out of hand?"  Christian demanded.

She stared back at him.  "Well, no.  I would perhaps try to reeducate
them--and I would not willingly allow them a forum for their views, but
I ... Well, the Librera tells us that every life is sacred.  I would
not take one without the direct mandate of the god."

"I believe Jovah has given Bael no such mandate," Christian said.

There was a moment's silence while Mercy glanced uncertainly between
the two men.  Christian and Jared had agreed before they set out for
the Berman House that they would not discuss the validity of the
Jacobite claim with Mercy--she was too devout to entertain even a
philosophical doubt about her god--but they had felt reasonably secure
in discussing the fate of the rebels themselves.  They were sure Mercy
would not consign anyone to a brutal death.

"What is your proof?"  she asked suddenly.  "What is it you have seen
or heard that makes you think he is actually committing executions?"

Christian nodded at the other angel.  "I believe Jared has the most
recent firsthand knowledge."

So Jared told them about his adventure in Ileah and his conversation
with Bael at the Eyrie, and saw Mercy's face grow lined with worry and
Christian's mouth grow taut with anger.  "I cannot believe it," Mercy
said, more than once, but it was clear she was beginning to.  And then
Christian filled her in on rumors he had heard about the Jansai, in
Breven and in Luminaux, sweeping through on the Archangel's orders to
flush out Jacobites and bring them to justice.

"Some of this I had heard, but not the details--I thought they were
just being harassed, relocated--" she murmured.

"Relocated where?"  Christian demanded.  "If he wants to eject them
from Samaria and will not allow them to emigrate to Ysral--"

"And yet--they are a danger.  They do put Samaria at risk," she said
faintly.

Christian threw his hands in the air.  "Then we are done with this
conversation!  You clearly side with Bael--"

"I do not!  I believe his principles are right but his methods are
completely wrong!"  she fired back.  "If he is truly doing these
terrible things, he must be stopped!  And we must pray to Jovah that
whoever succeeds him as Archangel can solve this riddle in a more
humane fashion."

The men exchanged glances.  "But who will replace him as Archangel?"
Christian said softly.  "The god has not spoken.  And Bael has his own
ideas."

"What can you possibly mean?"  she asked sharply.

"It's no secret he'd like to hold on to power," Jared said.  "How
better than through his son?  Find a compliant angel to wed with Omar,
convince the god that this angel would be a suitable candidate, and--"
Jared snapped his fingers.  "That quickly she takes over his post. That
quickly Omar steps into his father's shoes.  And believe me, the son
adheres to his father's teachings."

Mercy stared at him.  "But that's absurd.  There are no compliant
angels.  All have minds of their own."

"Do they?"  Jared said a little grimly.  "I can think of half a dozen
young angels who might be the suitable age to marry Omar.  And all of
them are half in love with him already.  He's an attractive man, is
Omar.  More attractive if he can offer someone that kind of power."

"But he can't!  Jovah has never named an Archangel at the behest of the
angels before."

"How do you know?  How do you know how he picks his candidates?  The
god exists to offer counsel to men, but how do we know he doesn't
appreciate a little advice from mortals now and then?"

"Jared.  That's blasphemy."

"All I'm saying is, Bael seems to think he can convince Jovah that his
son should wed the next Archangel.  And I wonder why Bael thinks that
if he hasn't done a little research and discovered some compacts that
were worked out in the past between the Archangel and the god."

Mercy rubbed her temples with her fingers.  "But if that's so ... Then
what are we to do?  How can we stop him?  From killing the Jacobites,
from putting Omar in his place?  What can we possibly do?"

"Well, first, I think we must spread the information around a little,"
said Christian briskly.  "You and Jared must let your angels know what
Bael is doing, and that you don't like it.  You must talk with the
Manadavvi and your privileged land holders-and even, if you're up to
it, Mercy, to the Jansai--and let them know that Bael's actions do not
meet with your approval."

She was frowning at him.  She looked anxious and a little afraid.  "It
will cause no end of dissonance," she said hesitantly.  "When there is
disagreement among angels--"

"I know.  But is there not dissonance created even now by Bael, as he
murders helpless men and women?  Does not the Librera instruct all of
us to live in harmony?  All of us--Edori, Jansai, Manadavvi, angel,
mortal--Jacobite?  And is not that harmony even now being destroyed?"

"Yes, yes, you're right, it's just that--it will be hard.  But it will
be done."

"We need to make sure we stay closely in touch," Jared added.  "The
three of us.  We need to let each other know anything we find out."

"Ah!  I'm glad you brought that up," Christian said.  He leaned over to
retrieve a leather bag he had brought with him, and he resettled it on
his lap.  "I have lately invested in a small mechanical marvel which I
think you might find useful.  Here.  I procured one for each of you."

And he reached in his bag and pulled out two thick black cylinders,
maybe five inches long, studded with mysterious buttons and switches.
He handed one to each angel.  Mercy took hers gingerly, but Jared
examined his with interest.  It weighed about half a pound, featured a
small grill on one blunt end, and smelled like chemicals.

"I cannot even imagine what this might be," Jared said.

"Long-distance communications device," Christian said.  "Its
transmission travels along a sound path that very few other machines
can intercept, so it's virtually a dedicated line.  It can be
programmed to contact up to ten different receivers, but I couldn't
think of who else you would want to contact except each other--and me. 
So that's all I programmed them for."

"What are you talking about?"  Mercy demanded.  "Sound waves and
communication devices--"

"Unless I miss my guess, I can be sitting in Monteverde and use this
little contraption to talk to you while you're sitting in Cedar Hills,"
Jared said.  "Am I right?"

Christian nodded.  Mercy set her communicator on the table with a snap.
"That's not possible!  And if it was possible, it would be--it would be
wicked!  Yes, it would, Christian, don't you laugh at me!"

"Why wicked?  How can something this innocent be considered harmful?  A
device that makes it possible for friends to converse even if they're
not in the same room?"

"Because technology in and of itself is harmful!  Because it leads to
war and destruction!"

"The whole Gloria was broadcast across Samaria, and we haven't slipped
into war and destruction yet," Christian reminded her.  "Technology is
not always to be feared.  It can have repercussions, yes, but these
little communicators offer no hidden terrors.  They are just a way for
you to keep in touch with Jared and me."

"I don't like them," she said flatly.

"I understand that," Christian said gently.  "And I do respect your
feelings.  And you don't have to use them.  But will you allow me to
show you how they work in case an emergency arises and you find you
need to get in touch with one of us right away?"

She eyed him mutinously for a moment, clearly unsettled, but unable to
marshal any convincing arguments.  This had been a difficult evening
for her.  All the things she believed in were being challenged, all the
things she abhorred were being forced upon her; and yet she was too
honest to deny that times were growing desperate and dire measures were
called for.

"May I show you?"  Christian asked again.  She looked over at Jared,
who gave her a sympathetic smile.

"I don't like them," she said again, but she picked up her cylinder.

Christian took Jared's.  "It's very simple," he said.  "This yellow
button turns it on.  These ten buttons are the ones you push when you
want to contact someone.  I am number one.  You, Jared, are number two,
and Mercy is number three.  I'm Jared and I want to call Mercy.  So l
flick on the yellow switch, and then I punch the third button."

Instantly, the cylinder in Mercy's hand emitted a soft peeping sound.
She gasped and dropped it, but Christian caught it before it rolled off
the table.

"Now I'm Mercy and I want to see who is contacting me.  I

push in the red button."  The beeping stopped.  "I put the grill end to
my mouth and I say, "Jared, is that you?"  Then I push the green
button, and put the grill end to my ear."

Jared took his own communicator back from Christian.

"What do I do now?"  he asked.

"You push the green button again.  It toggles you between transmit and
receive.  You speak into the grill now."

Jared put his lips to the end of the cylinder.  "Hello?  Mercy?  Are
you listening?"  He turned the grill to his ear.

"No, you must push the button again.  All right."  Christian spoke next
in a high, squeaky falsetto.  "Why, Jared!  You gave me such a fright!
Don't you know it's past midnight?"

Mercy grabbed it from him.  "Give that to me.  Hello, Jared? How can
you tell if this stupid thing works?"

"Push the button.  Put it to your ear."

Jared spoke back into the microphone.  "You can hear it coming out of
the speaker.  It's a little creepy."

Her eyebrows flicked up.  "I can hear your voice!  Right out of this
little tube!"

"And you'll be able to hear it over a distance of a thousand miles,"
Christian said.  "There might be some static from time to time,
especially if the weather's bad.  And sometimes if you're deep in a
mountain range, the transmission isn't too clear.  But essentially you
should be able to talk as easily as you are right now."

Jared gave Christian a big grin.  "I like it!"  he said.  "What other
fun stuff have you merchants been hiding from the Angels?"

"Everything else Bael has put a moratorium on," the other man replied
promptly.  "You'd be surprised at some of the prototypes that exist.
And next year--if Omar is not Archangel-you will begin to see some
amazing machinery make its way onto the open market."

"Christian--!"

He smiled over at Mercy.  "Well, you will.  None of it anything to
alarm you, dear heart.  But machines and technologies that will"--he
spread his hands to indicate a canvas of rich, incredible beauty--
"color every inch of your world."

"My world is quite bright enough as it is, thank you."

"And let us not be sidetracked from the issue at hand," Jared
interposed.  "We are not concerned with the influx of new technologies
sometime in the uncertain future.  We are concerned with keeping in
touch with each other, now, during this crisis.  Mercy, do you
understand how the cylinders work?"

She gave him a frosty look.  "They seem simple enough."

"Fine.  I take it we should keep these by us at all times, in case
someone is trying to contact us?"

"If you can," Christian said.  "I'm sure there will be times that won't
be convenient."

"And perhaps we should plan to meet again in--a month?  to see what any
of us has learned or done."

"That sounds agreeable," Christian said.

Mercy smiled with what appeared to be an effort.  "You do not have to
wait a month to come see me, or talk to me only on this little
machine," she said.  "Either of you."

"Very well, then," Christian said, smiling back at her much more
warmly.  "Then I won't."

Jared was so surprised by the tone in the merchant's voice (and minutes
after he'd called her "dear heart," too!) that he yawned and stretched
his arms above him, just to distract himself with motion. Come to think
of it, they had been sitting here for hours.  He was starting to feel a
little cramped in the back of his legs, in the upper muscles of his
arms, his right arm particularlyMercy was looking over at him with a
frown.  "Jared.  That's odd.  Look at the colors in your Kiss."

He lowered his arm quickly to see the glass heart of his Kiss dancing
with small impatient flames.  "Huh," he grunted.  "Did the same thing a
few weeks ago when I was sitting by firelight.  Must be a reflection.
Never noticed it before."

"Nonsense, I'm sitting right here and my Kiss is as pale as a chip of
ice," Mercy said.  "Do you feel any pressure?  Any pain?"

Well, he did, but he was not about to admit it to Mercy.

"No," he said.  "I think it's just the firelight.  Every Kiss is
unique, you know.  Each one probably responds to a different set of
stimuli--light, color, motion, heat."

"The presence of your true lover," Christian added.  "Isn't that what
the legends say?"

"The legends that only the young girls believe," Mercy said with a
sniff.  "Jared, I think maybe you should go see a priest, or even one
of the oracles."

"Mercy, I'm fine!  Thank you for your concern.  Anyway, I think it's
the firelight.  Look, Christian's Kiss is filled with just as much
color as mine is."

And Mercy glanced over at the merchant, whose glowing amber Kiss could
be glimpsed through the fine white lawn of his shirt.  And then she
looked sharply into his face, where a faint smile and a fainter blush
made him appear both self-conscious and a little amused.  And then she
herself colored deeply, and caught her breath, and looked away; and
nobody could think of a word to say for at least two minutes.

"Well, I think I'll tell our host that we're ready to pay our bill,"
Christian said at last, in the most calm and pleasant voice imaginable.
"It looks like we're all through here."

So that was a strange ending to an otherwise fairly productive day, but
Jared made no comment to Christian as they retired to the merchant's
home.  Mercy, who had come to Semorrah on other business, was staying
elsewhere, and planned to leave early in the morning.  They made brief
enough farewells, then separated for the night.

Jared lay awake a long time in the elegantly appointed room that
Christian always reserved for him, and stared up at the ceiling
watching the white lights of Semorrah flicker across the tile.  Well.
Christian had always been fond of Mercy---everyone was--but Jared could
not believe that the suave, sophisticated businessman could actually
have fallen in love with the matronly angel.  And, since the last of
her children had been born nearly fifteen years ago, Mercy had shown
surprisingly little inclination to take on lovers, something most
angels did as a matter of course.  She had seemed content, fulfilled,
and energetic, running Cedar Hills, raising her three daughters, and
overseeing the lives of all her friends.  She had not seemed to want
for anything.

Jared turned to his side, spreading his left wing over his body like a
quilt.  But it had been startling indeed to see the amber lights
sparking in Christian's Kiss, moments after the merchant had spoken of
true love.  Mercy was right; most people believed that the stories of
sympathetic kinship between Kisses were romantic fairy tales designed
to appeal only to the young and foolish, and yet... There were enough
stories about predestined lovers brought together by their flaming
Kisses that you almost had to give them some credence.  Susannah and
her Archangel lover--that was the most famous tale.  Come to think of
it, didn't the legends say that Rachel's Kiss would light every time
she heard Gabriel sing, and that his took fire every time she was hurt
or in danger?

Jared shifted irritably.  He could not get comfortable, though
Christian's expensive furniture was not at fault.  His own Kiss had
glowed with secretive, insistent colors tonight, and he had felt its
dull ache deep in his arm before it had occurred to him to check for
the source.  He had seen the colors, but not felt the pain, one time
before, and then in the ransacked camp of Ileah when he heard the
Jacobite girl singing ... According to myth, of course, the Kiss would
light only for your true love, your soul mate; it should not respond at
random to the presence of dozens of possible candidates.  Surely Jovah
did not think the young rebel girl was Jared's one true love.  And even
if the god had so decided, it seemed ludicrous to think that the
fugitive Jacobite was staying at the Berman House, ordering room
service and haughtily directing the staff to wait upon her.  Surely it
was nothing more than a reflection of the firelight and a chance
pressure on his arm.  No matter what Christian said.

But he did wonder where Tamar had gotten to.

He wondered even more late the next day, when Christian freed himself
of his other duties and met Jared for a late meal on the rooftop
patio.

"Good afternoon, angelo, I trust you are enjoying yourself," Christian
greeted him before directing three servants where to place various
trays of refreshments.  "I know how easily you get bored, so I'm
pleased you've curbed your impatience long enough to join me for
lunch."

"I know that the food here will only be tolerable if I eat it in your
company," Jared retorted.

Christian seated himself and waved the servants away.  "True," he said,
unfolding a napkin and spreading it over his silken trousers.  They
looked very expensive.  "It's a little trick I have for encouraging my
guests not to linger.  You should try it at Monteverde."

"None of my guests ever linger.  In fact, I rarely have guests, because
I am never home.  My mother and my sister complained of this delicately
last time I was there.  So my plan is to return immediately and not
stir outside my doors until I leave for Isabella Cartera's."

"Give la Cartera my love."

What you have to spare, .lared was tempted to say, but did not.  "So!
You said you might come back from your meeting with news."

"Yes, and so I did, though I don't know how valuable it is. I told you
I have--a contact--who feeds me information on Bael's activities."

"Yes, and I wish you would tell me--"

"I cannot.  If I have no discretion, I have nothing.  But I trust this
source."

"Very well.  And you learned?"

"Up till now, Bael has been operating pretty much at random--going to
the known Jacobite hideouts and hoping to roust a few dissidents.  He's
also given the Jansai license to raid Edori ships on the open sea."

"That's new," Jared commented.

"He says not.  I think the scale of the attacks has been stepped up a
little.  But, anyway, till now they have just been looking for
potential Jacobites, not anyone in particular."

"And now they have names and faces?"

"A few," Christian confirmed.  "They've always known the name of the de
facto leader, a man named Conran Atwell.  He's pretty much run the
group since Fairman died.  But apparently now they've put together a
list of eight or ten of the Jacobites they consider the most dangerous
or the most persuasive, and they've found somebody who's willing to
supply descriptions as well."

"Which I assume you have copies of."

Christian nodded.  "Even better.  Apparently some artist in Bael's pay
sketched up portraits based on these descriptions, and so we have
pictures.  Would you like to see them?"

"Of course.  Just so I'll know them when I come face to face with any
escaped Jacobites."

Christian laid aside his fork and took up a small leather portfolio
that he had brought with him.  "This is the key one.  Conran.  Looks
like any old man you might meet on the street."

Jared took the paper and studied it a moment.  True enough, but even in
this badly rendered sketch, the man possessed a certain force of
personality.  He had been ~limned with high cheekbones, dark eyes, and
a full mouth; the thinning hair, lightly shaded to indicate gray, must
once have been black.  "Is he Edori?"  Jared asked.

"I don't know.  Does he look Edori?"

"A little.  He has that--undomesticated expression."

"All the Jacobites do.  At least in these pictures."

Jared glanced at the next three and heard Christian pronounce their
names, but none of these portraits conveyed the same sense of intensity
as the first one.  Two of them were men; the third was a woman.  Jared
forgot their features immediately.

"I confess I'm not sure I'd recognize any of them if I passed them on
the street," Christian said.  "So I don't know how the Jansai will. 
But I suppose--"

"Jansai?"  Jared repeated.

"Oh, yes.  Copies of these have been circulated to all the interested
Jansai.  There's a reward for their capture, too.  Not much for your
run-of-the-mill Jacobites, mind you, though for Conran Atwell I believe
the sum is fairly substantial.  As it is for this woman, for some
reason.  She doesn't look like she'd be particularly ferocious, now,
does she?"

And Christian handed him a portrait of Tamar.

And Jared felt the Kiss in his arm explode in a painful burst of
fire.

"I know this woman," he said carefully.

"Really?"  Christian sounded amazed.  "During what unlikely social
function did you make her acquaintance?"

"In Ileah.  I told you.  There was a Jacobite there.  This is her."

The shape of the face was not quite perfect, and the expression of the
mouth was too serene, but it was Tamar; there was no question.  "I
can't imagine that she could be on anybody's list of criminals most
dangerous to the realm.  She scarcely had enough strength to keep body
and soul together."

Christian took the picture back to study it more closely.  "Per haps
she has unsuspected depths.  She looks here like she's fairly
determined."

"Indomitable," Jared agreed.  "But--powerless.  I have never seen
anyone who looked so alone and friendless."

"Well, she'll certainly be friendless if Bael's Jansai catch up with
her," Christian said.  "Where do you suppose she disappeared to?"

"I wish I knew," Jared said.  He took the portrait back.  "Could I get
a copy of this?  Of all of them, when it comes to that?"

"Certainly.  I'll have copies made immediately.  So you plan to look
for her again?"

"For any of them.  Although, based on my luck with Tamar, I don't know
that I'll be able to convince them that I am not the enemy."

 "Well, they must come to trust us, and you're as likable as any
angel," Christian said.  "Though that's not saying much.  Where do you
plan to look?"

"You're the one with the mysterious connection to infomation.  Where do
you suggest?"

"Ysral," Christian said promptly.  "That's where many of them are
thought to have sought refuge.  And the Edori, of course, have welcomed
all of Samaria's castoffs for the past hundred years."

"All right, then.  That's where I'll try.  Right after Isabella's
party."

"I'd love to join you for the fete," Christian said with a grin.
"Unfortunately, I have other plans that weekend.  I was invited.  you
know."

"Well, Isabella promises to introduce me to any number of respectable
and charming young women.  I have to admit dreading it."

"For a man with your gifts and attractions, you seem remarkably eager
to escape romantic coils."

"With respectable young women," Jared said with a grin.  "I do not mind
entanglements with the reprehensible kind."

"Mercy was right," Christian said.  "It's time you grew up."  Jared
considered his friend for a long moment.  "Since you brought up her
name," he began, but Christian forestalled him with a laugh.

"Spare me the fatherly advice.  From you it would be ludicrous."

"She'll never leave Cedar Hills," Jared went on unheeding, his voice
slow and serious.  "And she's not likely to jeopardize a friendship
that means as much to her as yours does.  And--you know--"

"And I don't believe I expressed an interest in your opinion, anyway,"
Christian interrupted.

"We've spent the past two days discussing my love life."

"Which is of some interest to the realm.  Mine is not.  Besides, I have
already produced two fine heirs.  I appreciate your concern.  But I've
no wish to discuss it."

Jared hesitated, shrugged, and finished his meal.  "How quickly can you
get me the copies?"  he said at last.  "I'd like to leave today if
possible."

"Within the hour.  You will let me know as soon as you discover
anything--or anyone?"

Jared patted his hip and grinned.  Christian had devised a waist sling
for carrying the' communications device, and Jared had made a point of
wearing his around the merchant's house all morning.  "I'll contact you
immediately.  Good enough?"

"Good enough.  Good luck."

In the afternoon, Jared left for Monteverde, though it was impossible
to reach the hold before dark.  Still, he was impatient to get back,
and he actually enjoyed flying at night.  He liked the way the ground
slowly disintegrated beneath him and the blackness of the night
intensified around him; he especially liked the sensation of being
suspended in a net of starlight, cold and brilliant.  Some angels
complained that they grew dizzy or lost their way when they attempted
to fly after sundown, but Jared always felt his mind hone down to a
diamond-hard clarity; his bones were suffused with exhilaration.  It
was like breathing the god's air, clean and intoxicating, Jared loved
it.

It was past midnight when he arrived at Monteverde, so it was late the
next day before he was up and making the rounds.  His mother greeted
him with her usual affectionate sarcasm--"Is that my son?  Have you
remembered my existence.  Catherine more helpfully filled him in on
events that had transpired in his absence.  But Monteverde had been
quiet.  No Jansai, no Jacobites, no predatory women.  He could use a
spell of quiet reflection.

Except all his meditations led him back to Tamar.

Where could she be?  Was she in danger?  How could he find her?

Why had his Kiss lit once in her presence, and once when she was
nowhere nearby?

Or had she been nearby?  Had she been in the Berman House?

Not that she could have been a guest there, but perhaps she had come to
the door while he sat there, selling something or asking for
information.  Or perhaps--stupid man not to have thought of this before
!--she had sought employment there.  She had seemed like a woman who
would not be afraid of hard work, and she was certainly presentable
enough to be hired at a place like the Berman House.  He should have
investigated.  He should not have so cavalierly dismissed the
significance of the agitated Kiss.

If she was still at the Berman House, he could have Christian seek her
out immediately.  His hand went to the cylinder at his waist, and then
he paused.  But she didn't know Christian and would be suspicious of
any wealthy merchant who came asking after her.  Of course, she knew
Jared and was suspicious of him, anyway, but somehow he felt this was a
task that was supposed to fall to him.  He could not redirect it to his
friend.

Therefore, two days after his return, he sought out his sister.  "I
have to go to Semorrah for a day or two," he told Catherine, who rolled
her eyes in resignation.

"Didn't you tell me yesterday that you would be here until Isabella
Cartera's grand dinner party?"

"I did, but I lied.  But I'll be back in a day or two.  Promise.  And
this time I'll stay.  Well, a few weeks.  Until the wedding."

"I don't believe you.  But go.  Go.  Have fun disporting with Christian
Avalone and the Semorrah girls.  We do just fine without you."

He felt like he should justify himself, but when he opened his mouth to
explain, he found that it was too complicated.  Therefore, he smiled,
shrugged, and let her think what she would.

He left that morning for Semorrah and arrived in the city by early
evening.  Without even stopping at Christian's, he made his way to the
Berman House and, after a few inquiries, found his way to the steward
who oversaw the entire staff.

"I was wondering if you could tell me if you had ever employed this
young woman---or seen her anytime this past month," Jared asked.  He
unfolded the portrait of Tamar that Christian had given him.
Mysteriously, the merchant had been able to produce a copy in minutes
but would not explain how that had been possible.  "She's fair, with
short, light brown hair and green eyes, and she's called Tamar."

The steward had taken the portrait just as Jared pronounced the name,
and he started visibly, shaken either by the word or the picture.  He
studied it for just a few moments before handing it back.

"I know her," he said quietly.  "Is she in trouble?"

Jared considered.  "She could be in danger," he said.  "But not from
me.  Please believe I mean her no harm.  I could have Christian Avalone
vouch for me if that would reassure you."

The older man made a brief, quickly repressed gesture of negation.  No,
no, I need no character references.  "I could not betray her to you
even if I would," he said.  "She left two days ago, somewhat
abruptly."

"Did she tell you where she was going?"

"To her sister, who had fallen ill.  She did not leave an address or
anything personal behind.  My own opinion was that something had
frightened her and she felt the need to run away.  I was sorry she did
not trust me enough to confide in me."

Jared refolded the paper and slipped it back in his vest pocket.  He
was cursing himself for failing to heed the pressure of his Kiss that
night he had dined here with Christian and Mercy.  She had been here,
not fifty feet away, and he had sensed it some how ... "Do you think
she might come back someday?"

"I hope so.  But I doubt it."

"Would you get word to me if she does?"

The steward considered.  Jared had to like him for it, though his was
the soul being weighed; but he was glad to see Tamar had won at least
one friend during her sojourn in Semorrah.  "I would be willing to tell
her you want to speak to her," the old man temporized.

"Fair enough.  Tell her that I think she is in danger, and that
Christian Avalone will give her sanctuary.  She won't believe you, but
tell her anyway.  I appreciate your willingness to help."

The steward inclined his head.  He had a certain majestic dignity; he
probably led a much more productive, demanding existence than Jared had
even contemplated.  The thought was somewhat lowering.  "It is a
privilege to serve the angels."

"And you don't have a clue where she might have gone?  You don't know
this sister's name or what province she lives in?"

"I believe the sister was fabricated.  Had she given a direction, I
suspect it would have been false."

All too likely.  "Thank you again for your assistance," Jared said.  He
added impulsively, "And for your kindness to her.  I will look for her
elsewhere."

But as he left the Berman House, feeling completely dejected, the
question remained: where?  It seemed unlikely she could have made it
from Semorrah back through Jordana to Breven and thence to safety in
Ysral, particularly if Jansai were looking for her and knew her face. 
So she was probably in Bethel somewhere, taking odd jobs and trying to
avoid drawing attention to herself. There were any number of places to
hide in Bethel--small towns or farming communities, for instance, and
there were literally hundreds of those--and he did not know how he
would begin to comb through them all.

Well; it was back to Monteverde now, because he had promised.  But he
would leave early for Isabella Cartera's and make a few unscheduled
stops on the way.  Maybe he would get lucky.  Maybe he would find the
Jacobite where he least expected her.

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

Lucinda had never known time to pass so slowly.  During the first three
weeks after The Wayward's departure, every day seemed a thousand hours
long; the sun seemed to crawl toward its unreachable zenith of noon,
then descend hesitantly, reluctantly, toward the indifferent bed of the
sea.  Night was interminable, rubbery, each minute stretched to
accommodate ten.  No dreams could speed the passage of the hours, and
sleep, of course, was unattainable.  When--impossible to delay any
longer--the next dawn made its unwilling debut, there was no need to
look forward to any hope of relief.  There was no diversion, no
employment, engrossing enough to nudge a single hour into a faster
pace.

Well.  If this was how it felt to be in love, Lucinda could not imagine
why the poets praised the state so exultantly.  She found it a wretched
business all in all.

She did not speak a word of her unhappiness to Gretchen, who most
assuredly would not approve of romances conducted with Edori sailors.
Nonetheless, the older woman sensed that something was wrong, and eyed
her niece often with a measuring glance.  Several times during those
three dreary weeks, her aunt would surprise her with a quick, pouncing
question: "Do you have a headache?  ... Are you suffering your monthly
distress'?  Is your stomach bothering you?  I have a potion you could
try."  To all inquiries Lucinda answered firmly, "I'm fine."  She was
fine.  She was just heartsick.  And lonely.  And terrified of never
seeing Reuben again.

And more terrified of having him sail back into the harbor at Angel
Rock.  Every night before she went to bed, she softly sang the notes
that unlocked the silver box, and she took out the emerald ring Reuben
had given her.  She wore it while she slept (on the rare occasions she
actually slept), and it gave her a peculiar, bitter comfort to wake in
the middle of the night and feel its weight around her finger.  Each
morning, she replaced it in its case and sang the measures in reverse,
and then she hid the box under a pile of clothes in the bottom drawer
of her dresser.

But still she wondered if she would ever see him again, and what she
would say to him, and if he would remember what he had said to her.

But it was stupid to brood over an absent Edori lover.  There was much
to do here, and she threw herself into work with a desperate frenzy.
Fortunately, this was the beginning of their busiest season, and all
the innkeepers were preparing for the influx of summer visitors.  Every
room had to be cleaned from top to bottom, curtains washed and
repaired, bed quilts changed from winter wools to summer cottons, every
window washed, every floor waxed.  The garden needed to be planted, the
cellar needed to be cleaned of last year's dried potatoes and jars of
old fruit preserves.  There was enough work that no one's hands needed
to be idle, and no one's brain needed to be set in the same miserable,
unproductive whirr.

During the middle of that third week, the inn began to fill up, and
Lucinda became the most attentive hostess imaginable.  She could not do
enough to feed the guests, prepare them special meals, show them around
the island, entertain them in the evening.  She was perfectly willing
to play cards, learn board games, sing, engage in charades or any other
activity someone might dream up.  And when the guests retired for the
evening, she instantly returned to the kitchen to help Emmie finish the
night's dishes and organize for the morrow's breakfast.

And still the days dragged by.

She tried to avoid gazing out toward the harbor more than twenty times
a day, looking for familiar sails.  Every day, driven by a restless
energy, at some point she flung herself aloft and flew as far as she
dared from the safety of the island.  But inevitably, as she circled
back, she made one pass over the open sea that stretched between Angel
Rock and Ysral, counting the ships she could see plowing through the
dense lavender waves.  There were more this time of year than any other
time, and some of the ships were Edori-built, but none of them was The
Wayward.

While she flew she sang, for she was practicing new music and did not
particularly want Gretchen to hear it.  She had spent a good portion of
her free time scoring the prayer for thunderbolts from the god--note
for note, in reverse of the proper order.  She had selected it because
it was the most complex of the prayers and she had figured it would be
the most challenging, swallow up the biggest chunk of her time.  She
was surprised to find that, performed backward, it was an eerie,
haunting piece, with its own distinct melody that lingered in her mind.
She scored the reverse harmony for it as well, though she had no one to
perform it with, and learned the descant once she had memorized the
notes to the prayer itself.

But even singing could not take up whole days, even flying could not.
She could take every prayer in the angels' hymnal and write it
backward, forward, medley and fugue, and still the days would idle by
like lovers on their way home from a dance.  There was no joy in the
world anymore.  And every day was a hundred years long.

But at the end of that third week she got a letter from Reuben.  He
sent it with an Edori sailor, who approached her one afternoon with a
broad smile on his face.

"I'm an observant man, I am, and it looks to me like you're the only
angel living on this little island," he greeted her, and the familiar,
lilting Edori accent made her welcome him with a smile.  "So it occurs
to me your name must be Lucinda."

"It is," she said.  "Can I help you?"

"i've all I need, thank you kindly," was the prompt response.

"But I've brought something for you that I'm hoping you'll be glad to
see.  It was sent with many instructions to guard it carefully and make
sure it was delivered safely, and I cannot help but think the sender
was most anxious that it come to your hand as soon as might be
possible."

"Oh!  Is it--did Reuben send it?"  she stammered, feeling her face wash
over with heat.  "I mean--is it from another Edori?"

"Aye, Reuben sia Havita himself.  He'll be sorry to hear that you were
not more pleased to be receiving news of him."

"No, I am!  Don't you say that!"  she exclaimed, before she realized he
was teasing her.  She felt her blush intensify.  Ten tatively, she
smiled at him.  "Please, may I have the letter'?"

So he handed it over, still laughing, and she hurried down to the edge
of the harbor, where Aunt Gretchen was least likely to see her.  Then
she carefully snapped the seal, unfolded the single page, and devoured
its contents.

It was relatively short, for, as he noted, he had learned just five
minutes ago that Horizon was heading for Angel Rock and so he had
little time to put pen to paper.  "In the future I'll be smarter!  I'll
start my next letter the instant I hand this over to Marcus, and by the
time I find a ship to take it to you, it will be a thousand pages long.
At least that is how I feel--that if I wrote a few words every time you
crossed my mind, I would fill about a hundred pages a day.

"I know I told you it could be as little as three weeks before I saw
you again, but now I think it will be three weeks more than that, for
we have set sail directly for Breven without a pause at Angel Rock. Yet
we will not tarry on the mainland, and Maurice has already promised me
that we will pause a day or so on your island, and so you see I will be
able to keep my word to you.  Maurice is nicely recovered, by the way,
though he has made dreadful demands on our sympathy and hopes to
receive more coddling from your kind aunt when we make our way back to
the island.  I tell him that he must reinjure himself if he hopes to
get any special attention, for I was there four days and never got more
than a reproving glance ... "I miss you more than I can put into words,
Strange, is it not?  For if you count the hours we spent together, they
were not so many.  But I remember each one.  And I tell myself that I
did not delude myself and that you remember them as well, each hour,
each minute.  Well, I shall find out soon enough.  Look for us before
another three weeks are out.  Reuben."

She read the letter five times before she even looked up.  Then she
closed her eyes, touched the letter to her heart, opened her eyes
again, and read it a sixth time.  Three weeks.  She would see him again
in three weeks.  Such a short period of time, after all!  The days
would fly by!

As it happened, the days were filled with enough incident that they did
hurry by--but they left Lucinda feeling uneasy and a little bewildered.
And they left Aunt Gretchen in a most peculiar state of anxiety.

For they had a distinguished guest come to the island: Omar, the
Archangel's son.

He arrived a week after Reuben's letter, and he made his way
immediately to the Manor.  Lucinda was on the front stoop sweeping away
debris when he walked up, his baggage in his hand.

"Lucinda?"  he called when he was still a few yards away, and she
looked up inquiringly.  When she recognized him, she dropped the broom
and hurried forward, her hands outstretched.  "Omar!  What brings you
to Angel Rock?"

He set his suitcase hastily on the road so he could take both her hands
in his, and he smiled down at her intently.  "Part vacation, part
investigation," he said lightly.  "It has been a hectic few weeks since
you left, and since I have heard such restful things about your island,
I thought I would give myself a little respite and check it out.  And
when my father heard where I was going, he told me that he has
considered coming here for a week or two of relaxation, but he would
await my report before making any plans.  So you see I come as emissary
for the Archangel, and you had best treat me well if you want the
chance to entertain so august a personage."

It was wonderful to see someone from Samaria, even someone she scarcely
knew, and the light, teasing note in his voice chased away her
ever-present melancholy.  Lucinda felt herself grow giddy with
pleasure.  "Well, I like to think we would treat you kindly for your
own sake, and not your father's," she said gaily.  "But now you put us
on our mettle."

"I did not write ahead for a room," he said.  "And the sea captain told
me these are busy days on the island.  Is there room for me here?  Or
must I look elsewhere?"

"You're in luck, because we have only one room open--and it's my
favorite," she replied.  "How long do you plan to stay?  Do you
know?"

"Not more than a week, I think," he said, picking up his suitcase
again.  "But I am on no particular schedule."

"So how is everyone in Samaria?"  Lucinda asked over her shoulder as
she led him into the inn.  "Your father?  Mariah?  Mercy?"

"I haven't been to Cedar Hills, but when I stopped at the Eyrie
everyone there was well and expressly told me to give you their good
wishes."

 They were inside now, and Lucinda began pointing to doors and
stairways.  "That's the parlor.  Many of the guests gather here in the
evenings, and we sing or play games.  There's the dining room.  We
serve meals promptly at eight, noon, and six, but you can generally
convince Emmie to feed you at any time of the day.  That door leads to
the back where the water rooms are.  Up here," she continued, starting
up the stairwell, "are the guest rooms.  Yours--should you find it
satisfactory, sir--is the one at the very end of the hall.  We have
guests in all the other rooms, so I do hope you like this one!"

She flung open the door as soon as they reached it, mid they both
stepped inside the room.  It was fairly small but nicely appointed,
with a lovely view of the harbor through thick lace curtains.  The
four-poster bed was plush with a satin quilt; the desk, the armoire,
and the chest of drawers were all constructed of a warm honey wood that
glowed in the white morning light.  On the walls were two paintings of
Angel Rock done by some visitor more than a decade ago.

"But how charming!"  Omar said, pivoting slowly to take in the
furnishings, walking across the room to gaze out at the harbor.  "I
wonder that you don't keep such a pretty room for yourself!"

Lucinda laughed.  "My room is smaller, crammed with things, and has no
view to speak of, but since I'm rarely in it, I don't really mind.  So
you like it, then?  You'd like to take it for the week?"

He turned back to smile at her.  "At least a week."

"There's not much to divert you in Angel Rock," she warned him.  "A
week is about as much as most people can stand."

"And what are the entertainments?"  he asked.  "So I can work up my
enthusiasm in advance."

"Well, many of our male guests like to fish," she said.  "A few of the
residents maintain fishing boats, and they'll take you out very early
in the morning and stay out with you as long as you want.  Have you
ever fished?"

"Not in the ocean.  In lakes and rivers.  I like it.  Do you?"  Lucinda
laughed and shook her head.  "Not at all!  I don't mind eating fish, or
even boning it and cooking it, but the idea of actually taking a live
thing and sticking a hook through its mouth or its gill--awful.  I
can't do it.  Besides--" She flicked her wings delicately.  "I'm not
much good on a small fishing craft. I don't exactly fit."

"You could trail your feathers in the water as bait," he suggested.

She laughed again.  "Yes, and have eel nibbling at my wings! I don't
think so!  So I mostly stay away from the fishing expeditions."

"What else is there?"  he asked.

"Well, in the summer months, some people go swimming off the north
beach, but it's really too cold for that now," she replied.  "There are
a few pretty walks around the island--but it's not a very big island,
and the walks don't take very long."

"And for entertainment in the evenings?"

She felt the laughter bubbling up again.  Strange, she didn't usually
find it this amusing to describe the charms of the island--but she knew
where Omar came from, she knew how sophisticated his pleasures usually
were, and Angel Rock could in no way match them.

"Well, lately the Jomarsons--who have been with us for six days--and
Mrs.  Temple, who has been here for three weeks--have been writing a
play which they hope to perform in a few days for whoever can fit in
our parlor one night," she said.  "I'm sure they'd be delighted to have
you contribute your wit to the composition of the play, or your acting
skills to the performance.  I've also learned how to play some pretty
complex board games, which I could teach you if you don't already know
them.  And sometimes Hammet and Celia invite us over to the Gablefront
Inn for an evening with their guests.  Generally then people take turns
singing, or reciting poetry, or telling funny stories.  Usually it's
quite enjoyable."

"Yes, it all sounds delightful.  Why are you laughing at me, you silly
child?  Do you think I'm too jaded to enjoy simple pleasures?"

"Well--yes!  After the Eyrie, and Luminaux, and Semorrah--"

"The Eyrie and Luminaux and Semorrah are the very reasons I have come
to Angel Rock," he said firmly.  "I find their pace too taxing.  I must
have quiet!  Or I shall go mad!"

This last was said very dramatically, in obvious jest, and Lu cinda
laughed again.  "Well, you shall have it here," she observed.  "Come
along downstairs.  We'll tell Aunt Gretchen you've come to stay
awhile."

They returned to the ground floor to look for Gretchen, whom they
finally discovered in the orchard that grew some distance behind the
house.  She was frowning up at the riotously blossoming apple trees.

"Aunt Gretchen!  Goodness, why are you looking so fierce?"  Lucinda
exclaimed.  "I think the trees look gorgeous."

"Dory said she saw insects boring into her peach trees this morning,
and I was just wondering if I would need to spray," Gretchen replied.
"I don't see any evidence of trouble--but then, better too much
prevention than a season ruined.  What a bother!  Well, I'd best go
tell Jackson the glad news.  You know how he hates spraying for
bugs."

"Aunt Gretchen, we have a new visitor from the mainland," Lucinda said,
since it seemed possible that Gretchen could stalk right by them,
intent on ruining Jackson's day.  "Do you remember Omar?  Bael's son?
You met him at the Gloria."

Gretchen did a strange, abrupt halt, spin, and stare, so that she
seemed to be jerked from one plane of existence to a wholly different
and less pleasant one.  She dragged her eyes once from Omar's face to
glance at her niece, and then she returned her attention to the
Archangel's son.

"Yes.  Of course I remember you," she said in a completely uninflected
voice.  "I just did not expect--what brings you to Angel Rock?"

Mystified by Gretchen's odd response, and hoping Omar didn't notice it,
Lucinda spoke in a quick, bright tone.  "He's come to rusticate for a
few days and escape the grueling pace of the mainland.  He says Bael
may come to Angel Rock sometime in the future when he needs a vacation.
Won't that be nice?  Has he ever been here?"

"Not that I know of," Gretchen said, still in that strained voice.  "l
don't recall that any of the Archangels have ever come to the
island."

"Lucinda has been telling me of all the pleasures in store for me,"
Omar said.  "She laughed, but I confess, I did not expect so much!  If
I go out fishing and I'm successful, what do I do with my catch?  Bring
it back to the Manor for cooking?"

"Oh, yes!  Emmie loves to make fresh fish.  But you have to catch
enough to feed all the guests, because we wouldn't want anyone to feel
slighted," Lucinda said.

"So if I only catch two, I should throw them back before we head for
land."

"Unless they're two very big fish," she said solemnly, and then the two
of them laughed.  Gretchen gave them the smallest, unhappiest smile.

"Yes.  How enjoyable for you," Gretchen said, seeming to speak almost
at random.  "Excuse me, Omar.  I must go find Jackson.  Lucinda, I'm
sure you'll do what you can to make our new guest comfortable."  And
she hurried off.

Omar looked after her with a small frown.  "Well!  She seems very upset
about her destructive bugs."

Or something, Lucinda thought.  "Aunt Gretchen gets very focused on
something, and that's all she can think about," she said lightly.  "But
she's a wonderful hostess.  Let's go back to the house so you can
unpack.  Lunch will be ready in another two hours.  Are you hungry'?"

"Starved."

So Omar was settled in and introduced to the rest of the guests at the
noon meal, where he managed to charm even the prim Mrs.  Temple.
Lucinda didn't see him again until dinner, because she got swept up in
the orchard frenzy, and spent the entire rest of the day under the
apple trees with Jackson and her aunt.  They sprayed all afternoon,
covering themselves with a noxious, choking chemical residue, and she
never saw a single bug.

But she had cleaned herself up by dinner, which she looked forward to
for the first time in nearly a month, and a very pleasant meal it was,
too.  Omar enthralled every guest with tales of the Eyrie and
descriptions of the Gloria, painting vivid pictures of the great events
and popular angels, and fielding all the questions the others put to
him.

Except one.  "And who's to be the next Archangel?"  Mrs. Temple asked
as dessert was being served.  "Has that been de cided?"

Omar looked grave.  "The god has not yet spoken on that issue, which
concerns my father greatly.  All the oracles have been consulted, but
Jovah has chosen not to answer this particular question."

"And what happens if no Archangel is named before the next Gloria?  It
is next year that the new Archangel should sing for the first time, am
I not right?"

"Indeed you are.  My father, of course, is willing to carry his duties
as long as is necessary--but he has served nineteen years, and grows
weary.  He is as eager as anyone to see the next man--or
woman--chosen."

"Do you think it might be a woman?"  Ed Jomarson asked.  "Historically,
the Archangel has been female roughly a third of the time," Omar said.
"We have had several male Archangels in a row, so---yes, I think the
chances are good that the god will select a woman."

"Mercy?"  Lucinda asked.

Omar spread his hands in a diplomatic gesture of denial.  "Mercy is not
an old woman, but she would be by the time she had been Archangel for
twenty years," Omar said.  "Most often, the Archangel is in the prime
of life, thirty or thirty-five, often young enough to still bear
children.  Delilah, of course, was barely twenty-five when she took
over the role.  But I do not remember any Archangel who was older than
forty when he or she was named to the office."

"Then who?"  Lucinda asked.  "Are there many female angels between the
ages of twenty-five and thirty-five living in Samaria?"

"Oh, there are several---quite lively, intelligent women, too.  We'll
just have to see what Jovah decides.  It may be months before he lets
us know.  And it may be tomorrow."

"This is quite intriguing," Mrs.  Temple said, quivering a little in
her seat.  "It makes it seem so much more exciting when you hear about
it all firsthand.  Now I cannot wait to see who is chosen."

That conversation ended the meal, and they all moved by common consent
to the parlor.  The Jomarsons and Mrs.  Temple instantly went to work
on their play, arguing in low voices over the wording of a line of
dialogue.  Three of the other guests got out a board game, and four
others dealt out a hand of cards.

"That appears to leave you to entertain me," Omar said to the angel. "I
spy a harpsichord in the corner.  Is it too much to hope that you are
allowed to play music at night, or will we disturb the others?"

"No, no disturbance!"  Ed called out.  "In fact, we consider our
evening quite mined if Lucinda doesn't play for us at least an hour."

"Will you?"  Omar asked her again.

"Gladly.  Unless you would rather play?  We have music, if you
neglected to bring any."

"I'm not good on a keyboard," he said, following her over to the
instrument.  "A flute I have mastered with some gracefulness, I like to
think, and I've been practicing on a lyre, but I don't have either with
me."

"Well, you could sing," she said, seating herself on the bench.  "For I
know you have the skill for that."

He had picked up a book of music and was flipping through it.  "Let's
see.  I know this piece, and this one, and--here.  One of my favorites.
Do you know it?"

He set the open book before her.  "But this one is so sad!" she
exclaimed.

"No, no, sweet and wistful.  You don't want to play it?"

She ran her fingers over the opening chords, minor and dark.

"I'll play it.  You take the melody."

She let him sing the first verse solo, playing the accompaniment very
softly, and she had to admit the piece was more moving than she
remembered.  Or perhaps she was swayed by the power of his voice,
gorgeously grieving over the words of heartache and loss.  In any case,
she felt like crying before the chorus was reached.  She added her
voice in ghostly treble counterpoint, and the room instantly seemed
haunted by echoes of sadness.  She continued singing harmony through
the second verse, and the third, and when they finally wrapped up the
final chorus, the mood in the whole room was one of profound
dejection.

Lucinda herself sat a moment with her hands on the keyboard, recovering
her good temper and quite unable to speak.  Omar sat beside her,
seemingly lost in a reverie of his own.  It took a voice from across
the room to break the silence.

"But, Lucinda, can't you play something happier?"  Mrs.  Jo marson
asked plaintively.  "You're making my heart break!"

Murmured assents from the others caused Lucinda to toss her hair back
and summon up a smile.  "You see?"  she said to Omar, and without
consulting him, offered up the chords for a completely different song.
This one was lively and fun, full of looping melody lines and a tricky
harmony.  He laughed, but joined in, and allowed her to pick the next
few selections as well.

"I see we have completely different styles," he said several songs
later when she paused.  "I have been accused before of having a sober
turn of mind, but you're the first one who's forbidden me to choose any
of the music."

"And it seems so unlike you," she said, allowing her fingers to wander
at random over the keyboard.  "For you seem to be such an amusing,
entertaining man.  But your music--!  I remember now.  At the Gloria
you did a very solemn piece as well."

"They say a man's true nature is revealed in his poetry and his song,"
he said lightly.  "Whatever else he conceals about himself is
inevitably revealed in verse."

"And is that true of you?"  she said, looking at him sideways.  "Are
you a sad man in your secret, concealed heart?"

"Sad?"  he repeated.  "I would not say that.  Serious, yes.  These are
serious days.  A man needs to be earnest and sober"

She thought of the voyage to Angel Rock on The Wayward, the attack by
the Jansai, Reuben's contention that the Archangel encouraged such
piracy.  She thought of the Jacobites, hounded from Samaria at Bael's
instigation.  She wondered what the son thought of the father's
policies.  Serious days, indeed.

But she smiled at him.  "But you must meet grave challenges with a
serene heart," she said.  "You must seek happiness where you can.  A
joyful song floods my whole body with delight.  That makes me
stronger."

He gave her a deep, deferential nod, almost a bow.  "You seem formed
for joy," he said.  "That makes you delightful to be near."

She surveyed him a little more speculatively, but her smile lingered.
"And you have a very graceful way of flattering," she observed.  "By
week's end, I shall be so under your spell, I shall begin to believe
you when you say things like that."

"Why wait that long?"  he murmured.  "Believe me now."  She laughed
aloud, pleased despite herself.  Before she could make an answer, some
stray movement at the corner of her eye turned her attention to the
door.  Aunt Gretchen stood there.  seemingly rooted in place, staring
across the room at the couple by the harpsichord.  Her angular face
seemed bony with worry; her dark eyes were sharp with concern.  Her
hands twisted in her apron, furling and unfurling it with completely
uncharacter istic disregard for an item of clothing.  But she was not
looking at Lucinda.  Her gaze was fixed on Omar.

Lucinda glanced again at the Archangel's son.  And what could Aunt
Gretchen possibly know about Omar that would make her stare at him as
if he was bad news direct from Jovah?

Onar had opened a book of music and was idly flipping through its
pages.  He did not seem to notice the intense, despairing gaze that was
trained on him from across the room.  He found a selection that pleased
him and offered it to Lucinda with a smile.

She played it, but this time her heart was not in it.  She could not
imagine what, but something was greatly amiss.

Yet Gretchen said nothing to her the next morning, by which time most
of Lucinda's odd uneasiness had evaporated.  Omar had elected to spend
the morning on one of the boats (promising to bring back a basketful of
fish), so he could not disturb them with his presence.  By the time he
returned, sunburned and happy, Lucinda had managed to forget her aunt's
strange reaction of the night before.  She welcomed him into the
kitchen, she incorporated his fish onto the night's menu, and she
shooed him out of the house so she and Emmie could finish preparing the
evening meal.

Which was delicious, and everyone said so.  Afterward, the Jomarsons
and Mrs.  Temple cornered Omar to see if he'd be willing to take a part
in their play, to which he agreed.  He spent the rest of the evening
huddled with them, discussing his part and the rehearsal schedule. 
Lucinda was surprised to find that she was a little disappointed--she
had enjoyed his company the day before--but she amused herself playing
card games with the other guests.

And two whole days were gotten through in this manner; and she had only
thought of Reuben three or four hundred times in those two days; and
she would see him again in as little as twelve days, perhaps.  So she
was not unhappy.

The next day, all the cast members commandeered the newly sprayed
orchard and practiced their lines and argued over stage directions.  No
one was allowed close enough to overhear a word of dialogue, so Emmie
and Lucinda took lunch out to them, left it a hundred yards away, and
scampered back to the house, laughing.

That evening after dinner, Omar did manage to break free of the
playwrights and join Lucinda at the harpsichord again.  "They're
charming people, but do give me an hour's mercy!"

he whispered in her ear.  "I really cannot abide one more discussion
about Jack's proper pronunciation--my character is named Jack, you
see---or why he simply wouldn't say such a thing, though I think he
would.  Had I known how grueling this would be, I would never have
agreed to take part."

"Nonsense, I'm sure you'd be completely bored if you weren't doing the
play."

"I wouldn't be bored, I would be exploring the island with you," he
said promptly.  "Do you realize I have scarcely said a word to you for
a whole day?  I didn't realize that was the bargain I would be required
to make."

"When do you perform?"

"Tomorrow night.  Here in the parlor, I believe.  I suppose we can seat
twenty or so in the audience, though it will be a tight fit."

"Yes, we're supposed to invite everyone from the Gablefront to come for
dinner and the theater.  I think it will be fun."

"And the day after tomorrow?  Can I have your complete, undivided
attention?"  he asked.

"Well, I don't know about that," she demurred.  "But I can show you
around the island."

"Good.  It's a promise.  Save the whole day for me."

They sang two songs together, a compromise of styles, for they chose
some of the familiar folk songs that everyone loved despite their sad
themes.  Not wishing to alarm Gretchen again, Lucinda closed the
instrument after the second song and suggested they join the others in
a card game.  And so the evening passed with a pleasant conviviality,
and Gretchen, when she looked in, appeared to be content.

The next day the actors spent completely in seclusion while the staff
of the hotel prepared for the evening's entertainment.  Jackson, under
Gretchen's direction, rearranged all the furniture in the parlor to
create a makeshift stage and three rows of seats.  Emmie and Lucinda
cooked, baked, marinated, and grilled for what seemed like hours. Celia
sent over two trays of desserts with a note promising ten people for
the evening's festivities.  Lucinda caught herself wondering what she
should wear.  Such excitement over a silly amateur play!

But the evening was fun.  Celia, Hammet, and their eight visitors
arrived promptly at six, and the expanded dinner table was quickly
alive with conversation and laughter.  Everyone lavishly praised the
meal, and the wine flowed freely.  The actors perhaps imbibed a little
more than the others, for a few of them declaimed their lines over
dessert, causing Ed Jomarson to leap up and clap his hand over his
leading lady's mouth.

"I think it's time to raise the curtain!"  Hammet called out, so the
whole lot of them rose to their feet and jostled into the parlor.  Ed
had spent some time that afternoon rigging up dramatic lighting, and
this elicited cries of "Very nice!"  and "Isn't this impressive!"  as
the members of the audience found their seats.

The play itself was thoroughly bad, a comedy of manners involving a
wealthy Bethel burgher who unknowingly insulted his neighbor's wife,
and none of the actors could speak a convincing line.  But no one in
the audience was minded to be critical, and all the more outrageous
insults were applauded wildly--including, Lucinda suspected, a few that
were improvised on the spot.  Omar and the Jomarsons' daughter had a
love scene that had probably been more sedate when rehearsed in the
orchard; but here, egged on by catcalls from the audience, the two
actors indulged themselves with a prolonged embrace and many meaningful
glances.  Lucinda could not help noting that Omar's attentions to the
Jomarson girl--his expressions, his tone of voice--seemed very similar
to those he had used with her.  Perhaps the man was both a flirt and an
actor by nature.

The final scene had been written as broad satire and was played as
grand farce, and everyone in the parlor was laughing helplessly as it
drew to its ridiculous conclusion.  On Ed's signal, Jackson cut all the
lights.  In the sudden darkness, Hammet could be heard calling out,
"More!  More!  Author!"  The houselights came back on to a standing
ovation.  Even Gretchen, lurking watchfully in the back of the room,
was on her feet and smiling.

"Oh, the good god love us," Celia said, fanning herself with her hand.
"That's one to go down in the history books.  I can't remember the last
time I've laughed so hard."

"Anybody interested in a little more dessert?"  Gretchen said loudly,
speaking up above the clattering crowd.  Everyone answering in the
affirmative, they all trooped back to the dining room.  The day ended
on a note of high hilarity and sweet confections, and everyone went up
to their rooms that night full and happy.

And everyone slept in the next morning except Lucinda and Omar.  They
met early in the kitchen, packed a day's worth of food, and took off on
foot before anyone else had crept down for breakfast.

"It wasn't nearly as awful as you'd led me to believe," the angel
chided the reluctant actor.  "Or--well, it was, but it was more fun
than I'd thought it would be."

"Thanks to plenty of wine and an audience hungry for diversion," he
said.  "But I thank the great god watching over all of us that no one I
know was here to witness my humiliation.  And you cannot tell a soul
what you once saw me lower myself to do."

"But you were very convincing," Lucinda said.  "Particularly in the
love scenes.  I thought surely you had developed a passion for Ed
Jomarson's lovely daughter."

Omar groaned and then he laughed.  "If I thought you really believed
that, I would go out in the next fishing boat and fling myself into the
sea.  But enough about that wretched play!  Tell me about the island.
Where are you taking me?"

So she showed him the main roads and took him on the long, winding path
that circled the island.  But she did not lead him to the beach she had
shared with Reuben; she did not offer to take wing and fly him to any
of the remoter peaks of Angel Rock, although she had done this for many
guests in the past.  But not this guest.  She was not sure why.

They ate their lunch sitting on a short cliff that teased the ocean to
furious spray twenty yards below them.  The sun 'as warm enough to make
them drowsy but not hot enough to make them cross.  The wind was
playful and surprising, stealing of Lucinda's linen napkins before she
could catch it, and brushing the brisk, damp sea air through their
hair.

"Isn't this a beautiful day!"  Lucinda exclaimed after a long moment of
contented silence.  "Do you see why people come to Angel Rock?  Do you
see why I love it here?"

"I do see," Omar said after a pause, and replying in a more serious
voice than Lucinda expected.  "And I'm glad to think that you've been
so happy here.  But I think it's time you considered coming back to
Samaria.  Permanently.  This is no home for an angel."

Lucinda stared at him, taken completely by surprise.  "What? But this
has always been my home.  Why should I think of leaving?"

Omar spread his hands.  "It's a rock in the middle of the ocean.  There
is nothing here--nobody here.  You see a few odd Edori every other
week.  Maybe a Manadavvi boatload now and then. Where is your
companionship?  Where is your society? You're an angel, Lucinda! 
You're one of Jovah's elect!  You were put on the earth to help carry
out the god's commandments and to bring him the petitions of the
voiceless mortals.  How can you serve humankind if you are so far from
them they do not even know your name?  How can you serve the god if he
never hears your voice raised in prayer?"

"I raise my voice in prayer," she said, though at the moment her voice
was strangled with disbelief.  "I've asked for sunshine and for
rain--I've prayed for medicine and received it.  There are people here
who need me, and I've served them--"

"But, Lucinda!  There are--what, twenty people living on this island'?
On Samaria, you could serve thousands.  You could live the true life of
an angel, with all the reverence and adoration that commands.  You
could be part of the life of a hold, which is exciting and fulfilling
and demanding.  You could join other angels to sing masses to the god.
You could lead the Gloria!"

"I thought only the Archangel led the Gloria," she said sharply.

"And how do you know the next Archangel will not be you?"

She simply stared at him.

"We wonder why the god has not named the next Archangel," Omar went on,
more slowly.  "Could it be because he is not familiar with her name? 
Because he is not familiar with her voice?"

"He knows my voice," Lucinda whispered.  "He knows my name."

"He has not seen you function in Samarian society.  He has not seen if
you can command the respect of angels and the adoration of mortals.  He
has not been able to judge you.  But if you return with me to
Samaria--"

Lucinda laughed in amazement.  "You think to promise me the role of
Archangel, which no one but the god can bestow, if I will only return
to the mainland with you?  I think you go a little too far."

"I make no promise.  But I tell you the truth.  The god has chosen no
one and we do not know why.  But it only makes sense that he is
observing us all, looking for clues, looking for weaknesses.  How can
he choose you if he cannot observe you?  Do you not want to be
considered for the greatest honor any angel can achieve?"

"Well, frankly, I've never given it any thought," Lucinda replied.  She
was still shocked and more than a little bewildered, but alert now and
not ready to be outmaneuvered by Omar.  "But offhand I would say I
would be the last angel Jovah would name to the post."

"And why?"

"Because--" She stopped, at a loss for words.  Omar leaned closer.

"Because you live remote and isolated, unused to the ways of angel
society."

"Well--perhaps."

"But if you came with me to Samaria--"

"But I don't want to go with you to Samaria!  I'm happy here!"

"For how long?  For the rest of your life?  To live and die solitary,
unknown and unsung?  Come to us for one year--for six months.  Discover
if you like the life, or if you hate it.  Then decide if you want to
return to Angel Rock forever.  If at all."

She wanted to refuse outright, to tell him she had no interest in the
gaudy, frenetic life of the mainland, but the words would not come. She
remembered her weeks in Samaria after the Gloria, the color and
pageantry of the cities and the holds.  Well, she had enjoyed herself
then.  She had felt more alive and excited than she ever had.  And she
had wanted to go back--for a visit, nothing more!--though not right
away.  As a special treat.  Once every few years.  For a month or
less.

But to live there?  To make that her permanent home?

To be considered for Archangel--?

She scrambled to her feet, hastily brushing crumbs and seeds from her
lap.  "I don't want to talk about this anymore," she said rapidly.
"Angel Rock is my home.  These are my people.  The god--or you or
anyone else who looks for me---can find me right here."

And she flung herself forward off the edge of the cliff, diving
straight toward the ocean before pulling herself up in a close, sharp
curve, driving her wings hard against the heavy sea air.  She flew
high, higher, straight toward the clouded outline of the sun, so high
that Angel Rock shrank to a black stone in the ocean below her, and she
could not see Omar at all.

She avoided her guest for the next two days, and he wisely made no move
to approach her.  To her extreme irritation, she could not stop
thinking about what he had said.  Oh, not the business about being the
Archangel--that was a lure he had no right casting.  But about Samaria.
Living there.  At least for a while.  A few months.  To determine if it
would be the right place for her after all.

Aunt Gretchen would rage against such plans, she knew. Would resist
them with all her considerable strength of will.  But if she decided to
leave, simply take wing one day and fly toward the mainland, there was
no way Aunt Gretchen could stop her.  Though she would not want to part
that way, secretly or in anger.  She would want her aunt's blessing. 
Which she would never get.

Although she could ask.

If she wanted to go.

Which she didn't.  Not really.  Although, for a month, or maybe two,
could it really be such a bad idea?

She tried to think of other things, but could not.  Even counting the
days till Reuben's arrival (seven now, or so she thought) did little to
distract her.  She wondered what Reuben would think of her moving to
Samaria.  She thought he would not like it, especially if The Wayward
did not go often to the mainland.  But if it did... Well, he might have
an opinion to offer her; she would listen to his advice.

And then she would make up her mind.

All the soul-searching left her abstracted and a little fretful, though
she tried to hide her preoccupation behind her usual light cordiality. 
Nonetheless, she caught Gretchen's eyes on her more than once, sharp
and considering, and Emmie asked her a couple of times if she was
brooding over something.

"If it's that Edori sailor, though, I don't want to hear about it,"
Emmie added.  "Because I warned you!  Don't be thinking about him."

 At dinner that second day Lucinda made a point of sitting by Omar and
engaging him in idle talk.  He slanted her a quick, sideways look but
easily joined in the conversation, relating a funny story about an
adventure at Coburn's general store that had everyone at the table
laughing.  Afterward, in the parlor that she had shunned for two days,
Lucinda sat at the harpsichord and softly played a few sweet melodies.
Omar joined her within five minutes.

"Am I to take it that I have been forgiven for suggesting the
unthinkable?"  he said, seating himself beside her.

"If you promise not to say another word about it, yes," she said.  "Are
you in the mood to perform tonight?  What would you like to sing?"

"Songs of farewell," he said.  "I leave in the morning."  She was
conscious of an unexpected jolt of some unidentifiable emotion--regret?
relief?--but her hands did not falter on the keys. "Your week is up,
then.  It seemed to go quickly."

"Too quickly.  But I'll come back in a few months, if I may."

"We'd be glad to have you."

She selected a few ballads, a little mournful but completely to Omar's
taste, and they sang duets while the other guests murmured in the
corners.  Between selections, they talked quietly of inconsequential
things, and the hours passed without any unpleasant interchanges.

But late that evening, as Omar rose to go to his room, he paused to
look at her intently.  "Think of what I said," he said soberly.  "Any
hold would welcome you.  For any length of time.  And the Eyrie would
be honored to have you."

She did not reply, but she nodded once, her eyes still on her music. He
lingered another moment, but when she did not look up, he made her a
brief bow and left the room.  In the morning, when she emerged for a
late breakfast, he was gone.

That afternoon, as Lucinda lay napping in her room (she had gotten very
little sleep the past two nights, for there was so much on her mind),
Gretchen burst in without knocking.  "Open the drapes, we need a little
light," her aunt said without preamble, stalking to the closet. Lucinda
sat up in bed, marveling.  Gretchen threw open the closet doors. "What
will you want'?  Summer clothes, I suppose, but you'd best take a few
warm things.  You never know about weather."

"What--?  Aunt Gretchen, what in the world--"

Gretchen was pulling out shirts and vests, tossing them on the bed when
they suited her, and jamming them back in the closet when they did
not.

"You won't really need your nice clothes--maybe one dress, and the rest
can be those sturdy trousers you like so much.  Here, do you want to
bring this?  It's rather pretty."

Lucinda came to her feet, sure she must still be dreaming.  As
instructed, she drew open the curtains and let the room flood with
afternoon sunlight.  But even by this illumination, nothing seemed
clearer.  Gretchen was still rooting through her hangers, looking for
acceptable items.

"You may as well take this blouse.  I've never liked it, but I know
it's one of your favorites.  And shoes!  Well, I suppose you should
bring your boots and then those sandals you like so much."

Lucinda crossed the room, took her aunt by the arm, and pulled her
forcibly away from the closet.  "Aunt Gretchen, what are you doing? Why
do you think I'm taking a trip?  Where do you think I'm going?"
Samaria?  she wanted to ask, but she couldn't think that was possible.
But then, where?

Gretchen faced her, her expression stony and set, her eyes wild with
anger or conviction.  "Ysral," she said.  "By the next boat out."

Lucinda dropped her hand.  "Ysral!  But--this is ridiculous.  Stop a
minute.  Tell me what's going on."

"I think you need to get away from Angel Rock for a while.  A few
months perhaps.  I have friends in Ysral.  You can visit them."

"You do not have friends in Ysral!  You've never mentioned them if you
do.  And why do I need to go away from Angel Rock?  For Jovah's sweet
sake, sit down and tell me what is going on here."

A moment longer Gretchen stood ramrod stiff, and then all the energy
seemed to leak suddenly from her thin body.  She sagged forward,
drained and exhausted.

"I don't think you're safe here anymore," Gretchen said in a low voice.
"I never should have taken you to the Gloria."

Which made no sense either.  Lucinda shook her head once as if to clear
it, then took Gretchen's arm again, and led her to the bed.  She pushed
her aunt down to the mattress and took her own seat in a nearby
chair.

"Start at the beginning," she said.  "What's wrong?  What are you
afraid of?  What does it have to do with me?"

Gretchen sat shapelessly where Lucinda had set her, starin before her
at sights distant from this room and this time.  "Bael," she said at
last.  "He has remembered you exist.  And he has taken an interest in
you again.  And I want you as far from him as possible."

"And why?"

"Because he killed your mother and your sister.  And he is an evil,
evil man."

Delirium, delusion, madness; and yet she spoke so calmly.  Lucinda felt
a cold, chilly hand spiderwalk down her spine.  "My mother died on the
side of the road, my sister in her arms," Lucinda said gently.  "Bael
had nothing to do with their deaths."

Gretchen nodded, her eyes still fixed on some point in the wretched
past.  "Before Bael was named Archangel, he spent much of his time at
Cedar Hills.  He had been Michael's foster son, you know, and they were
very close.  He was almost as outraged as Michael was when
Rinalda--your mother--joined the Jacobites, and he concurred with
Michael's decision to keep her imprisoned at Cedar Hills.  Although, in
fact, he recommended harsher punishment for her.  But Michael was not
in the habit of condemning young women to death."

Lucinda caught her breath sharply, but said nothing.  After a moment
Gretchen went on.  "When you and your sister were born, no one was more
horrified than Bael.  He made no secret of the fact that he considered
it an abomination that an angel should have been twinned in the womb
with a mortal.  He even claimed that Jovah had warned him that the
arrival of such twins signaled the end of Samarian society as we knew
it.  Now, how would Jovah have told him such a thing?  I asked the
oracle Deborah if she had received that message from the god, and she
said Jovah had commented on the arrival of the twins but she had not
interpreted his remarks in just that way.  It was Bael's own great
hatred that led him to concoct such a lie."

Gretchen paused a moment, but Lucinda absolutely could not think of a
word to say.  Gretchen's voice dropped a few notes lower, and her next
words came more slowly.  "It was a miserable winter that year.  Colder
than I have ever seen it, anywhere, at any time.  You know the story--a
few weeks after you were born, Rinalda escaped from her locked room
into the icy winter night, carrying your sister in her arms.  And was
found two days later, frozen to death.  And everyone at Cedar Hills
thought it was sad, but probably for the best."

Gretchen raised her eyes suddenly, and they were fierce with an old
torment.  "But I know Bael helped her escape, because I saw him lead
her down the corridor.  I saw that baby in her arms.  And I know, as
surely as I am sitting here today, that he chose that night, that
winter night, to set her free--with no coat, with no boots, with no
haven anywhere for miles.  Because he wanted her to die on the side of
the road, and he wanted that baby to die with her.  And I have known
from that day on that Bael is a murderer, no matter that he is the most
revered angel in Samaria."

"But--did you tell anyone?  Michael?  My father?  Anyone?"  Gretchen
shook her head.  She had dropped her eyes again, and when she spoke,
she addressed the floor.  "There was no one to tell.  There was nothing
to say.  Rinalda was dead, and a day later, so was your father.  But
three years later the god announced that Bael would become Archangel
when Michael's tenure was ended.  I knew then that you were no longer
safe in Samaria.  And I brought you to Angel Rock, and raised you as
best I could, and kept you from Bael as long as I was able.  And I was
a fool to allow you to return to Samaria, for he has remembered you,
and sent his son to court you, and you are no longer safe if he knows
where you are."

Melodrama; nonsense; and yet ... She could not deny that Omar had been
courting her, in a peculiar, unsettling way, and he had been very
attentive to her at the Gloria.  Lucinda remembered suddenly that Omar
had come to visit her at Cedar Hills, and that the very next day,
Gretchen had abruptly insisted they return to Angel Rock.  Gretchen had
been so eager to leave Samaria that she had agreed to travel on an
Edori ship.  Had she feared Omar even then?  Feared Bael?

Lucinda leaned forward and put her hand on the older woman's arm. "Aunt
Gretchen, I do not want to run away, from Angel Rock and from you," she
said softly.  "I am not afraid of Bael--"

"Well, you should be!"  Gretchen exclaimed, suddenly frenzied.  "For he
has killed Jacobites other than your poor mother, and he is willing to
stop at nothing to erase them all!  He is dangerous, he is ruthless,
and his son is power mad.  And if you do not realize that, you are in
even more danger than I thought.  You must be gone from here as soon as
possible."

"But I don't want to go to Ysral!  I don't know anyone there, I
don't--"

"I have a friend there.  He'll take care of you.  He can be trusted."

"Who is this friend you have never mentioned?"

"His name is Conran.  He knew your mother."

"He knew my mother!  I didn't realize the two of you had any friends in
common."

"A few, but Conran is the best of them.  I have not seen him in nearly
thirty years."

This was more and more like an unsettling dream, full of disconnected
words and images.  Lucinda ran a hand through the snarls in her hair,
wishing she could untangle her thoughts as easily.  "Then--how do you
know where he is?  How do you know he can still be trusted?  How do you
know anything?"

"I hear from him now and then.  For Rinalda's sake, he has always had a
great deal of interest in you.  So I have sent him letters from time to
time.  He'll be happy to see you."

"And he's in Ysral?  Is he Edori?"

"No," Gretchen said sharply, for of course she did not like Edori.
"He's a Jacobite."

And Lucinda stared at her aunt, and her whole world disintegrated
around her, foundation, form, and essence.  For if her aunt was a
secret Jacobite, and had been for twenty-five years, then nothing
Lucinda had believed in was solid or could be relied on.  And nothing
made sense or conformed to any rules.  And there was no safety in
Ysral, or anywhere.

Five days later The Wayward pulled into Angel Rock, bound for Ysral.
And Lucinda boarded, half her belongings in her hands, and sailed away
from the island toward the cautious.  unpredictable welcome of
strangers.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

Life at Cartabella was not nearly as enjoyable as life in Semorrah, but
it wasn't bad, either.

Gene was a strict boss when it came to treating the horses properly and
keeping the stables clean, but other than that he left his workers to
their own devices and had little commentary to offer on their lives or
personal habits.  The other grooms were an odd assortment of misfits,
mostly taciturn older men who dealt with animals much better than with
people and were just as happy to be left in solitude. Gregor, the young
boy who had first greeted Tamar upon her arrival, was the most tiresome
of the lot, always looking for entertainment, conversation, or
distraction; but most of the other grooms ignored him, so Tamar found
it safe to do so, too.

She ate in the common mess hall, where all the ostlers, gardeners, and
field-workers took their meals, and there was a constant stream of
visitors into the stables, but it was possible to pass an entire day
without having more than a brief exchange of words with anyone.  At
night, Tamar retired to her tiny room, spent five minutes reveling in
the blessed privacy, then read for an hour before falling into a deep,
exhausted sleep.  Working in the stables was hard, demanding labor, but
she welcomed the physical challenge.  The more strength required of her
body, the less energy she had left to funnel to her mind.  She was glad
to have a couple weeks of simply not thinking.

Although she would have to think again, someday.  She could not spend
the rest of her life in seclusion on Isabella Cartera's well-run farm.
She would go mad, that was one consideration; but it was a waste of her
life, that was another.  She must find her friends again, take up the
search again, once more have the courage to tell Samaria the truth
about Jovah and the Alleluia Files.

The more she thought about it, the more she thought Conran and the
others must have gone to Ysral.  It seemed the only safe choice for the
long term.  So she must join them there, but it was insanity to try to
leave from Breven, Kiss or no Kiss.  Perhaps there would be ships
departing for Ysral from Port Clara or one of the other harbor cities.
She would work here a month or two, save all her wages, then travel in
careful stages to one of the other ports and see if she could book a
passage out.

That much she eventually decided, over a fortnight's attempts to avoid
thinking at all; she could come up with no other solutions for her
life.  So for now she would just exist.

The only really disturbing part of her life these days was the music in
her head.  It was the oddest thing.  She still had bouts of the strange
vertigo that had troubled her since she had had the Kiss installed, but
for whatever reason, these had ceased to worry her.  Actually, at
times, when the day was particularly dull, she welcomed those dizzy
sensations of whirling above the earth in giddy, looping patterns.  If
she closed her eyes (and wrapped her hands around the railing of a
corral or some other convenient hold), she truly felt as if she was
flying, climbing straight into the cloudless blue sky, plummeting
downward in a terrifying free fall, then spinning back upward in a
whirling climb of cartwheels.  She wondered where these fantasies came
from (some head injury she had suffered in the past, perhaps, though
she could not remember any this serious), but somehow the sessions did
not seem as alarming as they had at first.  She enjoyed them; she
actually looked forward to them.

But the singing, at least at the beginning, did unnerve her.  It had
begun while she was in Semorrah, but in that bustling city, it was easy
to believe the faint, indistinct music was coming from an outside
source--someone in the next house practicing a melody, a street vendor
trying out a song.  But after she had spent a few days in the quiet
confines of Cartabella, the music became clearer--and more internal--as
if it originated inside her head, somewhere at the back of her skull,
and vibrated in the space between her ears.

She could not shake away the sweet, liquid notes; she could not clap
her hands over her ears and shut out the music.  More than once she
stared wrathfully down at the Kiss in her arm, convinced that it was
some kind of receptor picking up the music on a frequency tuned only to
her brain, and narrowly broadcasting on a band only she could hear. For
she had never had this experience before she had been Kissed by the
god.  Surely that was not a coincidence.

Yet mistrusting the Kiss did not stop the music--nothing did--and she
had no choice but to listen to it.  Eventually it was so clear that she
could distinguish every note, every nuance, every catch of the singer's
breath.  After a while she could sing along.

For her personal muse sang one piece over and over again, an eerie,
complex melody that seemed neither sad nor exultant, though it had a
peculiar power that made it a hard song to ignore.  And then, for
several days in a row, the singer performed what seemed like a
different number, though within a few measures Tamer was convinced it
was merely the harmony line to the first song.  She experimented,
humming the melody she knew beneath the descant in her head; yes, they
fit exactly.

Thereafter, whatever part the singer took, Tamer took the other,
whistling or humming along with the disembodied voice; and in this way,
over time, she lost her distrust of the music as she had lost her fear
of the vertigo.  She knew she should hold on more tightly to her
outrage and suspicion, but she could not.  She did not have the
strength.  And for some reason, she was not afraid.

It was like having a secret companion, here on this friendless farm, a
voice to listen to in the dark.  She thought she might actually be
sorry if the singer ever abandoned her abruptly and she was left once
again in silence.

But it was not to be expected that her period of calm would last
forever, and inside of three weeks it began to fray.  Isabella Cartera
was hosting a wedding, a grand event, and dozens of guests began to
arrive at the compound.

"These are the rules," Gene told his staff the morning after the
carriages began pulling up at the house.  "There's always at least one
ostler waiting at the front door.  Most of Isabella's guests will come
in some kind of motorized car, but a few of them will arrive by
carriage, and some will arrive on horseback.  We must be ready to take
the horses instantly and stable them.

 "Some of the guests will want to ride in the mornings.  More will
want to ride in the afternoons.  Any guest who wants to borrow a horse
may do so.  If any guest is riding alone, offer to accompany him.  If
he declines, note when he leaves and make sure he returns.  If he has
not returned by the time your shift ends, notify me.  If he returns,
but the horse looks abused or mistreated, notify me.  Every time one of
our horses is returned to the stable, check it thoroughly for burrs,
soreness, lameness--any problem a novice rider might overlook.

"We will not let Isabella's horses out before dawn or after dusk,
unless it is a special ride authorized by Isabella.  However, guests
may take out their own horses at any time, and some of them may wish to
ride at odd hours.  One of you must sleep in the stables at all times
so someone is available to serve the guests at a moment's notice.  You
will take turns sleeping here--we'll make up a schedule.

"Isabella's guests are to be treated with unfailing politeness.  Call
them lord, lady, sir, madam, angelo, or angela as the case requires.
Some of them may be a little arrogant, but I expect you to overlook
that.  If someone is actually rude to you, or unkind to the horses, I
expect you to report that to me immediately."

He continued talking for a few more minutes, but Tamar's mind had
disengaged.  Angelo?  Angela?  Were angels coming to Isabella
Cartera's?  That had not previously occurred to her, although she
should not be surprised; Isabella's wealth was such that she
undoubtedly moved in the highest circles of Samarian society.  Which
was composed mostly of angels.

Well, but angels never rode horses.  They were notoriously inept in the
saddle, their great wings creating all sorts of problems for themselves
and their beasts.  None of them would have any reason to come to the
stables.  She was safe.

Nonetheless, the days leading up to the wedding at Cartabella were
filled with other disagreeable incidents.  For instance, the visiting
nobility were not always as noble as their lineage might suggest.  And
some of them found it quite curious--and intriguing-that a woman would
be employed in the stables.

Tamar had her first taste of this only two days after the guests began
arriving.  Three young bloods--from southern Jordana, she guessed by
their accents--found her alone in the stables and began pressing for
her personal history.

"Say.!  Last time I went to fetch a horse, the groom was old, ugly,
smelled of tobacco, and fondled himself with his free hand while he
held my bridle in the other," said the tallest one, dressed in clothes
that were perfumed like money.  "I much prefer a pretty girl like
you."

She schooled her features into neutral stiffness.  "Which are your
horses, sirs?  I will bring them from the stalls for you."

"And will you ride with us if we ask you nicely?"  said one of the
others, a small blond with a handsome face but close-set, narrow eyes.
"We're unfamiliar with the land around Isabella's farm.  We might get
lost."

"I have been instructed only to ride with the ladies," she said
woodenly.  It was not true, of course, but she suspected Gene would
back her up.

"Ah!  And were you imported just to service the ladies?"  the tall one
said, unmistakably stressing the word "service."  "For I do not recall
you being here the last time I visited Isabella."

"No," she said baldly.

"And how long have you been a groom?"  he asked.  He seemed to be the
leader of the group; in any case, he was the one who kept edging closer
to her no matter how she attempted to sidestep him.

"Long enough.  Which are your horses, sirs?  I will bring them out for
you."

"I'm afraid my mare may have pulled her right foreleg," her tormentor
continued in a soft, silky voice.  "Will you put her through her paces
for me so I can see how she handles?  I'm sure you've got a gentle
touch that she'll respond to, though normally she only allows me to
ride her."

"Perhaps one of your friends can oblige you," Tamar replied.  "I have
work of my own to attend to."

He was beginning to get testy.  "I assure you, I am asking what I would
ask of any groom," he said coldly.  His other companion, the one who
had not yet spoken, touched him gently on the arm.

"Oh, let it be, Devon," he said in a calm voice.  "Let the girl go to
her work, and let's get on with the ride."

Devon jerked his arm away and stalked across the stable to where
arestive, high-strung palomino pranced nervously in her stall.  "Fine,"
he snapped.  "I'll take care of my mare myself."

Tamar nodded gravely and turned to the other two noblemen, who appeared
slightly embarrassed by their friend's fit of temper.  "Sirs?"  she
repeated.

"The black is mine," said the third man, pointing.  "And Alan's is the
bay with the white nose.  We'll await you outside."

That was the most chilling of the incidents, but more than one of the
other visitors expressed a great deal of interest in her presence, her
appearance, and her ability to perform her job.  She treated them all
with a noncommittal courtesy, rarely made eye contact, and never
allowed herself to come close enough to be touched.

She mentioned none of this to Gene until the skirmish with Devon, and
then she felt it best to speak up before one of the noble lords
complained to the head groom.  "If I behaved wrong, tell me," she
finished.  "I'll do what you say."

But she had gambled correctly.  He frowned, and nodded thoughtfully.
"Hadn't thought about it before," he said.  "You hear stories about how
lads like that treat the maids and the upper servants, but as I haven't
had too many women working for me in the stables, it didn't occur to me
... "His voice trailed off.  He studied the pattern of halters hanging
on nails in the far wall.  "Well, we'll take you off the night shift.
There's one worry done away with.  Could make you point person at the
front door all day--you might get a few comments still, but there'd be
too many people about for anyone to corner you and try a mischief."

Yes, but at the front door she'd be highly visible to anyone who
happened to drop by Cartabella--angels, noblemen, anyone.  "You could
put me in charge of exercising the estate horses," she said.  "That
way, I'd mostly be out of the stables but I'd still be working."

He nodded slowly.  "That's fine with me.  Still might run into a few
hotheads now and then who think any woman is fair prey."

She gave him a quick, demure smile.  "But if I'm exercising the
horses," she murmured, "I can just ride away."

He grinned back.  "Fine.  Your call.  Something else comes up, let me
know, and we'll work it out.  But don't be afraid to tell me about it.
I know the gentlefolk.  Not so gentle."

So that comforted her, though she wondered if her coworkers might
resent her for getting preferential treatment.  If they did, they did
not say so.  Gregor did comment on her new duties ("Better you than me.
I'd rather feed them than take them out for exercise"), but didn't
seem to feel she'd received any privileges.  All in all, she felt she
was surviving Isabella Cartera's influx of visitors relatively well.

Although, the next day, she was not so sanguine.

She had risen early to give special attention to Lunacy, a two-year-old
filly that Gene had recently acquired.  The horse had picked up some
bad habits from her previous trainer and didn't like to be handled by
women, though she was small-boned and delicate and clearly destined to
be a lady's mount.  Tamar wanted to accustom the filly to a woman's
voice and touch before she attempted to take her on a long ride--or
turned her over to Isabella Cartera.

Lunacy backed from Tamar's hand before she had even opened the stall
door, and whickered plaintively as if to call for help.  "You have no
idea how this hurts my feelings," Tamar told her in a low, steady
voice.  She always talked incessant nonsense to the nervous horses; it
usually calmed them.  "To have you reject me in this way.  I'll have
you know I've never abused a horse.  Never will.  You're completely
safe in my hands."

The dainty ears flicked forward, and the big, intelligent eyes watched
her warily.  Tamar could not help smiling.  Lunacy was irritating, no
question, but Tamar felt a certain kinship with her.  Just so she
pictured her own reaction--to anyone, male or female--if she was
suddenly transmogrified into a horse.

"Now, I know you've been fed already.  Come out with me to the corral.
We're going to see how you take the saddle and bridle this time.  Don't
you want to learn how to behave prettily enough to have Isabella choose
you as her favorite mount?  She's quite the most important person on
the farm, you know.  Everyone will admire you if she's your rider."

Eventually, Lunacy allowed herself to be bridled and led from the
stall.  Once outside in the golden spring morning, she pranced a
little--nerves, maybe, but Tamar thought it might be a small
celebration of her delight in the lovely day.  She smiled.

"All right.  Let's walk once around the corral.  I'll just hold the
bridle, like this, and you can walk beside me, and you can see how easy
it is, just walking, just having a nice little chat."

They circled the corral twice, Tamar talking all the while, and
Lunacy's initial skittishness quickly evaporated.  Tamar considered
trying to mount for a brief ride, but thought she'd wait a day or two,
till the horse was used to her voice and her presence.  Then she'd see
how Lunacy reacted to a saddle and a rider.

"See.  Wasn't that easy?"  she said, coming to a halt and patting the
filly's nose.  "Would you like a little sugar?  Would that make you
like me better?"

"Doesn't take sugar to make me like you better," said a smooth voice
behind her, and she whirled so suddenly that the horse whinnied and
tried to jerk the lead rope from her hand.  It was Devon and his blond
companion Alan, and they were both smiling at her in a menacing
fashion.

"She's a beauty, now, isn't she," Devon said, coming closer to run his
manicured hand down the horse's nose.  Tamar tried to step away, but
she didn't want to let go of the bridle.  She kept thinking there must
be some way to spin around, leap onto the horse's back, and gallop
away.  "Not too well trained, though.  Is that your task--to break her
in?"

"My favorite kind of work," the towhead drawled.  "Breaking in a new
filly."

Both men laughed.  Devon was already as close to Tamar as he could get;
now the blond stepped forward, crowding her against the horse.  Lunacy
neighed and backed away, but Devon's hand was on the halter, and his
iron grip forced her to a standstill.

"I like them spirited," the tall man observed, "but not so stubborn
they can't be taught."

No way to get on the horse and ride off.  Tamar stood frozen in place
for five seconds, then lunged forward and ducked under Devon's arm.
There was a flurry of motion as the horse reared backward, both men
yelled, and someone dove after Tamar.  She felt hands close on her arm
and jerk her back; she whirled around with the motion and lashed out
with her free hand, making solid contact with someone's chest.  Alan's.
She heard his small grunt of surprise, and his clutch on her arm
loosened.  But before she could do more than think of running away,
Devon's arms snaked around her from behind, and he crushed her to his
chest.  She could feel his heart pounding, hear his sudden ragged
breathing, smell his mixed scent of cologne, leather, and finely
starched linen.

"I think we deserve a little more courtesy than that," he murmured in
her ear, drawing her even closer.  She felt her ribs protesting the
strain, and there was a terrific pain building up in her right arm.
Perhaps Alan had bruised her when he grabbed her.  "Alan, show the
young lady how we prefer to be treated."

She could not back up but she whipped her head from side to side as the
blond leaned closer, clearly intent on kissing her.

"Feisty," he said with a laugh, and placed his hands on either side of
her face, holding her still.  She kicked out furiously, missing his
groin but connecting with his knee, causing him to howl and hop
backward.  Devon was laughing; she could feel his chest shake.  As soon
as Alan regained his balance, he rushed forward and slapped her
viciously across the cheek.

"Stupid bitch!"  he exclaimed.  "Would you like to see what we could
really do to you if we wanted?"

She pursed her mouth to spit at him.  But before she could act, before
either man could speak again, the air around them suddenly changed.  It
grew both shadowed and iridescent, as if the sun were filtered suddenly
through a vibrant, translucent awning.  The air ruffled around them; a
rapid, muffled rhythm seemed to offer up the heartbeat of the wind
itself.  All three of them gaped upward.  All three of them grew loose
and stupid in a moment's quick shock.

It was an angel hovering barely ten feet above them, looking like
Jovah's wrath personified.  He blocked the light with his outstretched
wings; his arm was extended in an accusatory gesture.  The bracelets on
his wrists glittered with baleful emerald light, and just below his
shoulder, the Kiss in his arm blazed like a miniature sun.

"And this is what noblemen consider a fitting pastime for their idle
hours!  Devon Malpasson and Alan Parlair--I recognize both of you. Who
are you troubling now with your ugly faces and your ill-bred
desires?"

Not until the angel spoke their names did Tamar's attackers actually
release her.  "Let's get back to the house," she heard Alan mutter. 
Devon snarled, "What mix is it of his?"  but she could feel him
slinking past her with much less of his usual arrogance.  For herself,
she could not.  move a muscle, not to retrieve the drifted horse, not
to run to the stables, not to cover her face in mortification.  For the
angel could just as well have called out her name--he knew it.  She
knew his.  The angel Jared, leader of the host at Monteverde.

He waited till the other two had stalked away, then canted his wings
and came down for a noiseless landing.  He looked not at his feet or
the terrain beneath him, but straight at her; and while he watched her
she could not turn her eyes away.

She had remembered the tangled brown hair, the shape of his face, even
the timbre of his voice.  She had forgotten the color of his eyes, gray
and stern as a father's reproach.  She had to force herself not to open
the conversation with an apology.  He came a step closer, still staring
at her, and she stiffened her backbone and stared right back.

"So.  You made it safely from Ileah, I see," he said.  the sarcastic
edge very faint in his voice.

"I did," she said.  "How was Peter when you left him?"

"In good hands.  I did not linger to watch his recovery.  I wanted to
hurry back.  In case I was needed."

She winced a little; but she would not be cowed.  "You did not rush
back because you feared for my safety," she retorted.  "You wanted
information--secrets about my friends.  I left before you could try to
force that information from me."

"Wrong on all counts," he said, and now his voice showed a certain
grimness.  "I wanted--I still want--to help you, and possibly help your
friends.  And even if I was after information, I never would have
resorted to the tactics those two fellows tried.  You were safer with
me than you have been at any time since."

Tamar did not exactly sniff, but the sound she produced was fairly
close.  "I have been in no danger."

"Well, you will be," he said soberly, and reached inside a pocket on
his leather vest.  It had not escaped Tamar's notice that he was very
casually dressed, in tight leather leggings and a sleeveless vest; and
he was, by any standard, more appealing than the last two men she had
just viewed.  Not that it mattered, not that she cared.  "The
Archangel--who, as you know, is not fond of Jacobites--has managed
somehow to come up with a portrait that resembles you.  And this he has
passed along to all the Jansai and any other mercenary souls who might
be willing to make an easy dollar by bringing you to the Eyrie.  Not a
great likeness, but a passable one, don't you think?"

He handed over a piece of paper.  She looked down at her features,
ill-drawn but unmistakable, and felt a chill hand wrap bony fingers
around her heart.  "You drew this," she whispered.  "To frighten me."

"It is not a skill I have," Jared replied coldly.

She looked up at him, blindly now, seeing not his face but her own,
chalky and blurred on the much-folded paper.  "But--I don't--why?"  she
stammered.  "There is no reason--I am not someone Bael should care
about one way or another."

"Oh, he has other portraits, which I've got copies of.  A man called
Conran--I can see by your face you've heard of him--a couple of others.
But you and Conran seemed to be the two he was most interested in.
Don't ask me why.  I wouldn't have pegged you as the dangerous type,
myself.  Stupid, maybe, but not dangerous."

The epithet cleared her mind and restored her vision instantly.  "Just
because I don't trust you is no reason to call me stupid," she said
fiercely.  "At least I'm alive, which is more than I can say for many
of my friends.  And who knows if trusting angels isn't what killed
them?"

A strange, reluctant smile crossed his face.  "I have to give you
credit for spirit, if nothing else," he said, almost as if he spoke to
himself.  "What can I do to make you believe me?  For you have to
believe me.  We need to leave Isabella's the day the wedding is over. I
must take you to Ysral.  I don't think you'll be safe anywhere else,"

"Ysral?  Why should I go to Ysral?"  she demanded, though she had
decided just a few days ago that was her ultimate destination.  But she
would not travel anywhere with this man, not a mile, not an inch.

"Because it's not Samaria, for one thing.  And because I believe the
rest of the Jacobites are there, for another."

"How would you know anything about the Jacobites' plans?"  she said
suspiciously.  "How do you know about these--these portraits?  Where do
you get all your information?"

"I have a friend.  Christian Avalone, do you know of him?"  She nodded,
"He's a merchant who has no love for Bael.  And because Bael has no
love for the Jacobites, Christian has decided to help the Jacobites
where he can.  Also, I suspect that in his heart Christian likes the
idea of a mechanical god instead of a real one.  Christian has only a
very small heart, you know--most businessmen do--and that would
simplify his life considerably."

"You talk in riddles," she said.  "And nothing I have heard about
Christian Avalone makes me trust him any more than I trust you."

"Then it appears we are at a standstill," he said lightly.  She waited,
but he said nothing more, which was very annoying.  She had quite
enough anger left to counter everything he said with a good, hard
insult, but she felt ridiculous just standing there looking at him when
he did nothing but stand there in return.

"Did you come here searching for me?"  she asked, just something to
say.

"No, I had another reason for coming to Isabella's.  I am as astonished
to see you as you are to see me.  Though not surprised to find you in
trouble."

She scowled at that, but even through her narrowed eyelids she could
see the residual opal glow on his arm.  "And why in the world is your
Kiss all lit up like that?"  she said irritably.

He glanced at it, as if he hadn't noticed, and then gave her the most
peculiar smile.  "And why is yours?"  he asked in return.

Quickly she checked, but it was true.  The pain she had taken for
Alan's mishandling was the result of a pulsing, swirling fire in the
depths of her Kiss.  She felt both bewildered and very, very wary.  She
looked back at the angel.  "Why does it do that?"  she asked.  She
remembered the stories she had heard--but Ezra had told her they were
fairy tales--surely the angel was not about to tell herHe was still
smiling.  "Legends say your Kiss will light when you meet another
person with whom you have some--bond," he replied.  She had the sense
that he was editing.  "There appears to be some sort of link between
us.  For instance, I know you were working at the Berman House in
Semorrah."  She could tell that her face showed her astonishment; he
nodded.  "The night I had dinner there, my Kiss flared just like this.
I didn't figure it out till later, then I returned to Semorrah looking
for you.  Jasper told me you had gone to visit your sick sister."

He had the story right; he must be telling the truth.  "And now?"  she
breathed.

"Minutes after I arrived on the farm, I felt a kind of pressure in my
arm.  I couldn't believe it--after all the time I've spent looking for
you, could you possibly be here?  And then, a few hours later, the
pressure became intense.  Painful, actually.  They say that the angel
Gabriel felt fire in his Kiss when his angelica Rachel was in danger.
All I know is that the pain in my arm sent me out of the house in a
hurry, looking for you."

She stared bleakly down at the Kiss again.  Yet another reason to hate
it!  First dizziness, then music, and now an uncontrollable,
undesirable link to the angel Jared.  "I should never have had this
installed," she muttered darkly.  "It has caused me no end of grief."

"And will not serve its intended purpose of hiding you from the
Jansai," he added.  "For they will not be looking at your arm, but your
face."

"There are no Jansai at Cartabella."

"Do you plan to stay here your whole life?"

She did not answer.

"And anyway, I know for a fact that Isabella trades with the Jansai,"
he went on.  "Just because you haven't seen any doesn't mean they won't
show up.  And then how will you defend yourself?  Isabella is not the
type to ruin a good relationship with a Breven merchant just to save a
nameless servant."

"I don't think you need to concern yourself," Tamar said evenly.  "I
have taken care of myself so far without your help."

"But things are much more risky for you now," he said urgently.  "Your
life has taken a very hazardous turn."

"And what do you know about the hazards of my life till now?"  was her
furious reply.  "What do you know about the deaths I have witnessed or
the indignities I have suffered?  What do you know about my terrors or
my dreams?  What do you know about me at all?"

He was silent a long moment, watching her, this time not responding to
her anger with a flare-up of his own.  "Very little," he said at last.
"But I would like to know it all."

Which was not the reply she had expected.  She flung her head back,
taken by surprise, but there was really no answer to that.  Not saying
another word to him, she stomped across the corral to retrieve Lunacy,
and led the horse none too steadily to the stable.  The angel let her
pass in silence.

Once inside the aromatic dimness of the stable, she paused to catch her
breath and marvel over the events of the past half hour.  Menace on all
sides; hard to know what to fear most.  Oddly enough, she felt as much
exhilaration as fear, at least in regard to the angel.  She didn't
trust him, of course, but somehow she did not hate him as she should. 
Something to do with that damned Kiss, no doubt.

Only after she had stood there a moment or two and her eyes had
adjusted to the relative darkness did she realize that Gene was
standing there, watching her.  The soberness of his expression made her
realize that he had witnessed at least some part of her adventures.

"None of my business," he said diffidently, "but if that angel was one
of the ones bothering you, I'm not afraid to go to Isabella even so.
Some of the angel folk are no better than the gentry."

"No," she said quickly.  "He had some advice for me that I didn't want
to take, but I'm not afraid of him.  I didn't mean to worry you."

He nodded slowly, thinking it over.  "You know him, then?  The angel
Jared?"

"I've met him before.  Very briefly."

"They say he's the best of the lot.  But I just wanted to let you know
that if there was something to complain about, you shouldn't let the
fact that he's an angel stop you."

"No.  No complaints," she said.  "But thank you anyway."  And she had
stabled Lunacy and led out one of the other estate horses before she
realized she had barely exercised the filly at all.  So she was not
succeeding particularly well even at the specialized job she had been
assigned; but somehow she did not think it was entirely her fault.

Jared came out to the corral the next morning to watch her work.  She
was leading Lunacy around on a halter, talking nonsense words, when out
of the corner of her eye she spied the angel approaching.  Tamar made
no attempt to acknowledge him, but it was a little hard to overlook him
when he swung himself up to the top railing of the fence, swept his
wings behind him, and hooked his feet over the bottom rung.  The day
was hot, and Tamar felt her hair beginning to stick to her forehead as
the sweat built up along her scalp.  She was covered with bits of straw
and no end of horsehair, so all she needed to look really attractive
was to have perspiration malden her face and flatten her short hair.

Not that she cared how the angel viewed her.

Jared watched her in silence for perhaps half an hour while Tamar did
her best to ignore him.  But finally his presence goaded her to such
supreme irritation that she wrapped the reins around her hand and
hauled the horse over to his perch.  "What?"  she exclaimed.

Jared merely raised an eyebrow.  "What what?  I'm just sitting here
enjoying the fine day."

"You are not.  You're trying to distract me."

"I didn't say a word."

"Well, you're staring at me."

"I will endeavor to turn my eyes elsewhere," he said.  And suiting
action to words, he let his gaze wander past her, to the maze of
buildings that housed the granaries, the dairies, and the machinery.

Tamar almost stamped her foot.  "Have you come to frighten off Devon or
any of his friends?  Is that it?"

"No, I told you, I'm just enjoying the sunny day."

She pushed her hair back with her free hand.  "Perhaps you'd like to
ride?  Not Lunacy, of course, because she'd throw you, but one of the
other horses?"

"I don't ride, thank you.  But I appreciate your thoughtful offer."

This time she did stamp her foot.  Without another word, she stalked
off, practically dragging the horse behind her.  Once inside the
stables, she settled Lunacy in her stall and chose as her next subject
a great, spirited bay stallion that Isabella loved to ride.  He hadn't
been exercised in a day or two, though, so he needed a good hard
gallop.  Quickly, Tamar saddled him and led him out into the daylight.
She mounted and headed off toward the acres of open parkland that
constituted one of the main attractions of Isabella Cartera's land.
There were a number of riding trails here, some more challenging than
others, with a few low jumps thrown in for good measure.  She would
ride as far and as fast as the horse would go.

They had been out only twenty minutes or so, taking the empty trails at
a good clip and clearing the ornamental hedges with room to spare, when
once again Tamar realized she had company.  The angel was following
them overhead, making lazy loops back and forth over the pathways she
had chosen, wings outstretched in an easy, untroubled glide.  It did
not take much cogitation to realize that no matter where she took this
horse--or any other horse--the angel planned to follow.

Either he was stubbornly desirous of rousing her to fury, or he really
did believe she was in danger.

That night after dinner, Tamar went to Gene.  "I heard you telling
Gregor that Isabella's new saddle arrived in Shepherd's Pass," she
said.  "I could ride to town and fetch it, if you'd like.  I know
Gregor hates to leave the farm when there's this much excitement going
on."

Gene looked at her long and consideringly.  Tamar kept her face empty
of any expression except neutral helpfulness.  "That would be fine," he
said slowly.  "Take Harmony, though.  Isabella's planning a hunting
party tomorrow and she won't want any of the good horses to be
missing."

Harmony was a swaybacked old mare with a sweet disposition but very
little energy.  The least valuable horse in the stables.  So Gene had
read her right despite her innocent face.  "I'll leave in the
morning."

"Should be able to make it there and back in a day, but if something
holds you up, you should stable the horse at Gwier-son's," the head
groom went on.  "Saddle's been paid for, but I could give you a little
cash in case there's a problem."

"I wouldn't think there'd be a problem," Tamar said.  Her throat hurt
her to speak.  He was being so kind.  He shrugged.  "Suit yourself.
Leave as soon as you're ready."  So that night she packed up as many of
her meager belongings as would fit in an inconspicuous bag that might
seem appropriate for a day trip into the nearest town.  She'd already
gotten three weeks' worth of wages, and she counted out the money.
Enough to take her to Port Clam easily; enough, she hoped, to buy
passage to Ysral.

She slept badly and woke with a headache before dawn had really opened
its lush eyes.  No reason to lie here any longer, fretting, so she rose
and dressed and hooked her duffel bag over her shoulder.  When she
arrived in the stable that was Harmony's home, she was surprised to
find Gene there before her.

"Just wanted to look her over quickly before you set out," was his
explanation.  "And I remembered last night.  Still a down payment on
the saddle.  So here's enough money to cover it."

Impossible to refuse when phrased that way, so helplessly she accepted
the roll of bills he offered her.  The outer denomination was almost as
much as the small stash she'd managed to accumulate.

"I can't--what if I lose it?"  she stammered.

He shrugged.  "It's not much.  Don't worry about it.  Ride carefully.
Remember--Gwierson's is the place."

She nodded.  "Thanks."  She shrugged, because she wanted to say more
and could not think how.

He gave her one of his rare grins.  "And if any of those boys asks me
where you went, I won't tell," he said.

She smiled back.  "I'm sure they'll miss me."

"Won't we all."

She nodded, murmured her thanks again, and freed the horse from the
stall.  Too much weighted conversation like this and she would be in
tears before she could get out the door.  Gene followed her outside but
had no other comment to make.  Once on horseback, she waved good-bye
and he returned the gesture.  Then she was off into the sweet, fresh
coolness of morning.

On her own again.  Running again.  Would she ever come to rest?

Shepherd's Pass was even sleepier than usual, as Tamar discovered after
dropping off Harmony at Gwierson's.  The clerk at the bigger of the two
hotels, which also doubled as the bus terminal, was not sure when the
next transport was due in or where it might be headed.

"Will it come in sometime today?"  Tamar asked impatiently.  Oh, yes,
there was always at least one bus a day.  He just couldn't remember
which one it would be.  "Can anybody tell me?  is there a schedule
anywhere I can look at?"

Now, he might have a schedule for her.  Hold on just a minute.  She
waited in gathering irritation while he rummaged through some old
papers and an assortment of maps.

"Except I don't think this is still the right timetable," he told her
as he finally handed over a creased and faded slip of paper.  "I'm
pretty sure the schedule changed a year or so ago."

So that was fairly helpful.  Tamar glanced at the days and numbers on
the chart he'd given her, but it was pointless to try to plot a route
based on obsolete information.  "I'll just hang around for a while,
then," she said, "and see what comes in."

While she waited she bought a little road food and filled her canteen
with fresh water.  She was resigned to spending the whole day lurking
outside the hotel, but she cheered up immensely when, two hours after
her arrival, a big, odoriferous bus rumbled through the town's quiet
streets.  She waited till the single passenger disembarked, then
crowded up to the doorway to address the driver.

"Where are you headed?"  she asked.

"Azolay," he replied.  It was a river city south of Castelana, not
nearly as important as either that city or Semorrah, but a sizable
place nonetheless.  From there she should be able to find a bus
anywhere.

"How much for a seat?"

"Twenty."

"When do you leave?"

"Five minutes."

"Let me get my bag."

She slept most of the way to Azolay, a trip that took the rest of the
day.  Whenever the bus stopped for more than ten minutes, she
disembarked to walk off the kinks in her legs or refill her canteen.
Practically no one, it turned out, wanted to ride from Shepherd's Pass
to Azolay, so the bus was almost empty and she had a whole row of seats
to herself.  She didn't feel like reading, she was not in the mood to
talk to strangers, and she refused to let herself think, so sleep was
the only option.

They arrived in Azolay a little before sunset.  Like Semorrah, Azolay
derived all its income from commerce.  In the past fifty years it had
expanded rapidly, serving as a market for much of southern Bethel.  It
was not nearly as pretty as Semorrah, however.  For one thing, it had
none of Semorrah's graceful, harmonious architecture, but instead was
built of a hodgepodge of brick, stone, marble, and granite in a
completely unplanned manner.  For another, it still had a raw, new edge
to it, because its wealth and prominence had been so recently achieved.
But all its energy and its random structure gave it a certain constant
charm.  You were never quite sure what you would encounter anytime you
turned a corner: a new theater, an old mansion, a freshly paved street
leading down to the docks.

Jansai driving through town in one of their big transports, whistling
at the girls and throwing fruit rinds into the alleys.

 Tamar drew back sharply when the first truck passed, melting into the
shadow of the nearest building.  Damn.  That had been so careless.
Because she had seen so few Jansai in Semorrah--and none at all near
Shepherd's Pass--she had forgotten how far the gypsies loved to roam.
Of course they would be in Azolay, or even Castelana and the other
river cities.  All that kept them out of Semorrah were those narrow
streets that would not accommodate their massive tracks.

She had best remain invisible tonight and be on her way first thing in
the morning.

She already had her ticket for Port Clara.  She had picked it up before
leaving the bus terminal where she had been dropped off, and it had
cost her far more than twenty dollars, too.  She would be grateful yet
for Gene's gift, which she still hadn't had the nerve to count.  Would
she really have enough money left to pay for passage to Ysral?

With that in mind, she chose the cheapest hotel she could find that
still looked like it had passable standards of cleanliness.  Another
restless night; seemed like these days she could only fall asleep on a
bus.  She tossed and turned until the sky had lightened enough to make
it reasonable to get up and dress.

She had a quick breakfast at an outdoor cafe right on the river's edge,
then strolled along the pier for a while, watching the barges go by.
She had asked Jasper once if you could sail from Semorrah all the way
to Ysral and he had laughed at her.  Then he had explained the
differences between riverboats and oceangoing vessels, although frankly
the distinctions weren't all that clear to Tamar.  Too bad, though.  It
would save her some time and grief if she could board a ship now and
close her eyes till she arrived at her destination.

She had just brushed the crumbs from her lips when she heard running
footsteps behind her, and sudden alarm made her whirl around.  Too
late; hands closed on her arms and harsh shouts called reinforcements
over from two streets away.  She was surrounded by three men, though it
seemed like thirty.  She lashed out with her feet, with her fists, and
the Jansai struck back with what seemed like hundreds of gloves and
boots.  Someone clouted her on the head, knocking her momentarily
blind, and she heard a voice shout out, "Stupid!  He wants her alive!"
Another attacker was trying to bind her wrists, but she snaked her
hands away from him and ducked low, butting her head into his stomach. 
There were cries and grunts all around her, and voices coming closer. 
Panic made her insane.  She clawed her way down someone's bare forearm
and, for a moment, felt the deathgrip on her arms lessen.  She broke
free.

She ran flat out down the cobblestoned street, sobbing breath into her
lungs, feeling her legs nearly wrench out of their sockets with each
huge, desperate stride.  Behind her, angry shouting; before her, a few
early-morning risers, staring and pointing at this amazing sight, a
wretched woman fleeing from a horde of Jansai attackers.  If she could
reach a shop door, a clump of friendly onlookers, anything that could
pass for safety ... Eager footsteps pounded up beside her.  She felt a
hand clutch a fold of her blouse and heard the material rip as she
lunged away.  Her lungs were on fire; her legs were lead.  Her head was
about to burst with pain.  Again the hand reached out from behind, this
time closing on her arm with a sharp, merciless grip.  She cried out
and almost tumbled over backward as she was dragged to a halt.  The
Jansai slapped her once, hard, and received calls of approval from his
companions, racing up a few yards away.  Tamar summoned every last
ounce of strength and punched him in the chest as hard as she could. He
struck her again with a blow so vicious it sent her reeling, falling,
somersaulting into the river or into the air or into that well of
vertigo that was so deep now she did not think she would ever climb out
... But there were arms still wrapped around her from behind, hands
gripping her crossed wrists, she could not be falling, she could not be
flying, she must only be dreaming the battered, brainsick dreams of the
dead.  Oddly enough, she felt no fear, now that she was comatose or
possibly even killed; she felt relieved, serene, but very, very dizzy. 
It was pointless to try to open her eyes, so she did not, but she
almost started to relax.  to enjoy herself, to give up the constant,
impossible fight.  She probably was dead, then; she could not imagine
that mere loss of consciousness would be enough to make her surrender
to the Jansai.  To anyone.

"Are you all right?"  asked a worded voice in her ear.  "He hit you so
hard.  Have you passed out?"

It was Jared's voice.  Astonishment made her open her eyes after
all--very widely as she took in the diminutive landscape below her,
shrunken river, miniature boats, tiny trees.  The vertigo rushed back,
and her hands twisted in his hold to clench on his wrists.

"We're .flying," she whispered.

"What did you think we were doing?  Are you all right?"  All sorts of
words rose to her lips, but none of them were answers to his questions.
She still could not fathom how he had come to be here, how he had
scooped her up and carried her aloft while her senses were too
shattered to process the information.  He had saved her--again--he had
found her every single place she had run to.  She did not even need to
ask where they were going, but her mouth shaped the words anyway.
"Where are you taking me?"

"Ysral."

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

It had been with a certain amount of dread that Jared winged his way to
Cartabella for Isabella's grand event.  If he had not promised, he
would not have gone.  The lure of possible bed mates--lifemates?
what-ever--had not been strong enough to make him anticipate the trip.
But it served one good purpose: It had been his deadline.  After the
wedding, he had decided, he would go to Ysral.  For that reason alone
did he greet the wedding with any anticipation.

And then, to arrive at the estate and feel that peculiar, urgent
pressure in his arm.  Jovah rejoicing, was it possible that Tamar was
anywhere in the vicinity?  If so, it was a stroke of luck so unexpected
as to be stupefying.

But it was true; and he had found her; and she still had no use for
him.  But he had her measure now.  He was not surprised that she
refused to believe him, was still less surprised when she disappeared
from the farm two days after he made his appearance.  And pleased,
rather than disappointed, when the head groom refused to divulge her
whereabouts.  She had the knack of winning unlikely supporters, this
proud, lonely ragamuffin.  If the man would not tell an angel Tamar's
whereabouts, he would not betray her to less savory individuals.

But this time Jared refused to let her slip through his fingers.  Armed
with the portrait and the sure knowledge of her danger, he felt
justified in tracking her down--it was for her own good, after all, and
not merely a selfish, almost incomprehensible desire on his part to see
her again.

It was not hard to pick up her trail.  She would have had little choice
but to head for Shepherd's Pass, and a few inquiries there elicited the
information that she had escaped via bus.  The hotel clerk was not
particularly clear on which bus, but the driver of the next vehicle
that pulled through was able to give the angel a much better rundown of
the schedules.  Azolay seemed the likeliest choice.

Jared reached the river city late that night and rose early the next
morning to see if he could discover his tiresome, elusive Jacobite. The
minute he had arrived in Azolay, he had seen the Kiss in his arm
flicker with an unsteady light and felt a faint, even tremor against
the bone.  She was here, then.  He had guessed correctly.  The
realization filled him with a sense of elation out of all proportion to
the significance of the triumph.

He had trouble sleeping, so when, at dawn, he decided it was futile to
stay abed any longer, he rose and dressed.  The streets were barely
light, so it seemed pointless to go out hunting Jacobites.  Instead, he
pulled out his cylindrical communicator and punched in Christian's
number.

"Do you know what time it is?"  were the first words out of Christian's
mouth.  Not quite the cheery greeting he had used the only other two
times Jared had contacted him.  "This better be awfully damn
important."

"Not really.  I just couldn't sleep."

"Where are you, anyway?  You sound very close."

"Azolay."

"Why did the god bring you there?"

"Chasing an escaped Jacobite, and I think I've found her.  That's what
I wanted to tell you."

"Good.  Thanks for keeping in touch."

"No, don't switch off!  I also wanted to let you know that I'll be in
Ysral for a few days.  In case you were looking for me."

"I thought you would have gone there sooner."

"I was at Isabella's.  Actually, I should still be at Isabella's and
she'll be furious when she realizes I'm gone.  If she complains to you,
tell her it was important."

"I'll tell her I hate you myself for waking me up at this hour.  Just
so you know, from now on I'm turning off my communicator while I'm
sleeping.  You won't be able to wake me up again."

"I already apologized for that."

"No, I don't believe you did."

"Well, I'm sorry, then.  I'll talk to you some other time."

"When you have news.  Good-bye, Jared."

"Good-bye, Christian."  But the merchant had already disconnected.

Time to leave, anyway.  Jared headed down to the hotel restaurant and
ate a quick breakfast.  He had planned to go to the bus terminal and
wait there most of the day, since it seemed logical that Tamar would
head out on one of the big, anonymous transports.  But over his meal,
he started getting restless and edgy.  What if she found a farmer with
a big truck or a family in a horse-drawn gig who seemed friendly and
harmless and offered her a ride?  What if she rented her own horse,
paid for passage down the river on a barge, or found some other
conveyance out of Azolay?  What if she slipped out of the city limits
before he had located her, while he was foolishly hanging around the
bus station, hoping she would arrive?  There were too many variables.
He could easily lose her again.

So he paid for his meal, stepped outside, and instantly flung himself
aloft.  He could patrol the whole city in something under ten minutes,
flying in low circles over the colorful assortment of houses, office
buildings, schools, shipyards, bakeries, theaters, and parks.  He was
too high up to get a good look at people's faces, but close enough, he
thought, to trip the sensor in his Kiss that would alert him to Tamar's
presence.

He was right about that, as he discovered on his second pass over the
city.

He was flying over the edge of the river, swinging back toward Azolay
proper, when a sudden sharp stab in his arm made his whole body flex
with adrenaline.  Sweet Jovah singing, how could she have fallen into
danger again so quickly?  He banked and descended, looking around madly
for any disturbance on the ground below him.  Within a few seconds he
had spotted the battling Jansai and the struggling woman, and he angled
as fast as he could in their direction.  He nearly cheered in relief
when Tamar broke free, but he had to alter his course to intercept her
as she ran, and he lost a minute readjusting.  He felt terror pump
through his heart when the Jansai pursuer caught up with her and struck
her that blinding blow.  He accelerated his pace, dove low over the
grappling figures, and plucked the woman from the arms of her Jansai
attacker.  A few more deft wingbeats and they were above the river,
across the river, arrowing into Jordana, and headed for the eastern
coast of the continent.

Except for that one brief exchange when she asked where he was taking
her, neither the angel nor the Jacobite volunteered much conversation
for the next few hours of the flight.  Once or twice Jared shifted his
grip on his passenger so that she rode a little more comfortably; she
did not resist, but lay passively against his chest.  At first he
thought she might be sleeping, for she was as motionless as a child
dreaming in her father's arms, but then it occurred to him that she
might have suffered a concussion from that final blow.  Which worried
him deeply enough that he brought them in for a landing an hour or two
before weariness would have dictated that he take a rest.

He touched his feet to the ground and sank to his knees all in a single
motion, so that he could lay Tamar on the grass without requiring her
to stand.  Until all movement ceased com-pletely-until she was half
sitting, half lying on the ground, supported by his arm--she did not
open her eyes.  When she did, he was struck again by their pure,
undiluted green innocence.

"Why are we stopping?  Are we in Ysral?"  she asked.  Which alarmed him
further.  "No," he said sharply.  "It will take us two days to fly
across the ocean, and we aren't even at the coast yet.  I thought you
might want something to eat or drink."

"I don't have any food," she said.  "And I lost my canteen."  He had
never seen Tamar helpless or even at a loss, and it filled him with an
almost uncontainable anxiety to see her so dazed and disoriented.

"How's your head?"  he asked abruptly.  "You're acting so strangely.  I
think that Jansai must have injured you when he struck you."

She put a hand to her temple as if checking to make sure that her skull
was still intact.  "Maybe," she said uncertainly.  "I don't think I'm
bleeding."

"You don't have to be bleeding to be hurt."

"I think I'll be fine." "Are you hungry?"

"No.  Thirsty, a little."

He helped her swallow from his own flask and then wondered if he should
have.  If she really had a concussion, shouldn't he keep her from food
and water?  And if she had been seriously injured, shouldn't he get her
to a doctor?  But they were in Jordana now, not four hours' flight from
Breven, and there could be Jansai at every small town and oasis they
came to from here to the coast.  It was hard to know how far her
picture had been circulated. He hated to take unnecessary risks.

"Does your head hurt?"

"A little.  The flying makes me dizzy.  Just like it did before."  Now
she was talking nonsense.  Worse and worse.

"Before?"  he said cautiously.  "But you've never flown with an angel
before, have you?

She shook her head once, then stopped abruptly as if the motion pained
her.  "Not real flying.  I told you.  Sometimes I get dizzy.  Ever
since I had the Kiss put in, I would feel like I was floating in the
air. And that's just how it felt while you and I were flying.  And then
sometimes I hear music."

"Just now you heard music?  When we were flying?"

"No," she said impatiently.  "Before.  In my head.  Like someone was
singing.  I was afraid at first, but after a while I liked it."

None of this made any sense; clearly she was delirious.  Whether or not
he liked it, he was going to have to get her to shelter and a doctor's
care, the sooner the better.

"Listen, Tamar," he said, speaking slowly and distinctly.  "We're going
to rest here for a few minutes.  Then, when you feel well enough, we'll
fly on a couple more hours.  There's a little town about fifty miles
south of Breven.  I think we'll be safe enough there for the night.
Then tomorrow morning we'll head for Ysral."

"Over the ocean," she said drowsily.  "Flying and flying for two whole
days."

"Well, no.  We'll fly for a day, then find a trading ship headed for
Ysral and take shelter on it for the night.  Then we'll fly on to Ysral
the next morning.  It usually wouldn't matter what kind of ship we
chose--Jansai, Manadavvi, Edori--but you being who you are, I think
we'd be safest with the Edori."

"I think so," she murmured.

He could not keep his worry to himself anymore.  "Tamar, are you all
right?"  he said sharply.  "You seem so--lost.  I'm afraid you were
seriously injured back there.  I've never seen you so--so--"

"I can't fight anymore," she said.  "I can't.  My head hurts.  I can't
think straight.  Do what you want.  I can't fight you."

Without another word he slipped his flask back in his pocket, scooped
her up in his arms, and carefully levered them both back into the wind.
She nestled her cheek against the soft leather of his vest and curled
her hands against her chest like a child.  She was asleep before they
had even reached flying altitude.

The town of Marquet boasted only one doctor, who looked to be about a
hundred years old and not likely to go running off to Jansai with tales
of suspect new arrivals.  Tamar was awake while he examined her, though
barely, but she was able to answer all his questions in coherent
sentences.  She admitted to a headache, said it was not severe, and
told him without a moment's hesitation that she had slipped and fallen
that morning, cracking her head against a wooden bench.

"Don't feel a bump," the old man muttered, poking under her hair with
the tips of his fingers.  "Couldn't have hit it too hard.  But the
brain's a tricky thing.  You can shake a baby hard enough to kill it
just by scrambling up its brains.  Fact.  Doesn't take much of a blow
to make an adult woozy for a few days."

"So is she all right?"  Jared asked for the tenth time.

The doctor was repacking his kit.  "Hard to say.  It's a good sign that
she can walk and talk and remember her name and what she had for dinner
yesterday.  All her reflexes are good.  It's a bad sign that she wants
to sleep so much.  It would be a very bad sign if she started vomiting.
If that happens, let me know."

And then you'll do what for her?  Jared wanted to ask, but did not.
Brain injuries were notoriously difficult to treat; he had heard that a
long time ago.  "Can she eat?  Drink?"

"Moderate food intake.  No alcohol.  If she goes twenty-four hours
without vomiting, she can eat pretty much what she wants."

"And all this sleeping?  That's bad?"

"Try to keep her awake for a few more hours.  Till nighttime, at least.
Then wake her up every couple hours all night.  If you can't rouse her,
get in touch with me."

"We're leaving in the morning.  Unless you think that's unwise."

The doctor shrugged.  "You're flying?"  Jared nodded.  "High altitude
might increase her headache.  Try to stay as low as possible.  If she
gets worse, land as soon as you can."

"All right.  Thanks for your help."  The doctor left.

 By this time it was early evening and the sun was dipping
flirtatiously below the horizon.  They had taken a single room in the
small hotel, because Jared wanted to be near Tamar if she needed
attention during the night.  He stood now at the small window, looking
out toward the vast darkness of the sea.  Common sense told him he
should stay in Samaria another day, making sure Tamar was healthy; fear
told him they could not linger a minute longer than they had to, not
this close to Breven, not with Tamar apparently such a magnet for
trouble.  Either way, she was at risk.  And he felt safer in the air.
They would leave tomorrow morning, and see how well she did.

He turned to face her, smiling with an effort.  "Are you hungry?"  he
asked.  "You haven't eaten since breakfast."

"I could eat a little," she said cautiously.  "I think."

They went down to the hotel's dining room and ordered a simple meal.
Tamar had nothing more than soup and half a roll, but the food seemed
to revive her a little.  Jared could not help watching every bite she
took.  "How's your stomach?"  he asked when she pushed away her dishes.
"You don't feel like you're going to throw up, do you?"

"Why?  Am I supposed to?"  she asked.

He smiled.  "No.  Very bad sign if you do, the doctor said."

"Well, then I'll try very hard not to."

He hurried them back up to their room, not eager to have strangers walk
into the restaurant and catch sight of them.  But it was still
relatively early and the doctor had told him to keep Tamar awake as
long as possible, so now he was faced with the task of entertaining
her.

"We could play cards," he suggested.  "Board games.  I'm sure the
innkeeper could lend us something."

She wrinkled her nose.  "I don't know many games.  And I don't think I
could concentrate on learning."

"You could tell me the story of your life."

"Too much effort," she said with a yawn.  "You could tell me yours."

"Too dull," he said with a quick smile.  "You'd fall asleep for
sure."

"You could sing to me," she said.  "I'd like that."

He almost couldn't believe she'd said it.  It would never have occurred
to him that Tamar would consider his singing mesmerizing enough to hold
her complete attention.  But, "Certainly," he said.  "Let me know when
I hit on something you particularly like."

So--keeping his voice soft enough to avoid disturbing any sleepers in
the nearby rooms--he offered her a selection of brisk, upbeat marches,
a few comic ballads at a breathless pace, and the tenor part to one of
the sacred masses that had been written in the heroic strain.  She
seemed to like the music more than he would have predicted.  At any
rate, she listened fairly closely and did not fall asleep.

"I know a song," she said suddenly when one of his selections came to a
rousing close.  "I just learned it.  Maybe you'd like to learn it,
too?"

She was going to sing for him?  Heat danced across his Kiss just in
anticipation.  "Of course.  Is it very long?"

She seemed a little puzzled.  "No--well, parts of it repeat.  I'll just
teach you the main part.  See how you like it."

So in a soft, sweet soprano, she crooned a wordless melody for him,
hands clasped before her, serene and unselfconscious as a young girl
singing for her family.  He felt the fire in his Kiss intensify; he
felt a skittering uneasiness run along the base of his hairline and all
the way down his spine.

"I know that song," he said slowly when she had finished.  "Or at
least--I don't know it.  I've never heard it before.  But it sounds so
familiar ... Where did you say you learned it?"

"It's the song in my head.  I told you," she said.  "The one I hear
when I feel like I'm flying."

Now the prickle spread to his elbows, underarms, and knees.  He felt
spooked and uneasy, in the presence of some eerie phenomenon that he
could not identify or understand.  "You learned that music--from a
voice in your head?"  he repeated.  "That doesn't make any sense."

She nodded emphatically, her eyebrows raised in agreement.  "Tell me,"
she said. "I didn't like it much when I first heard it, either.  But
I've gotten used to it.  And the song is pretty.  Would you like to
hear it again?"

And he stared at her and felt the chill creep through his whole body.
She was mad or delirious or touched by a strange, uncomfortable gift,
and the latter possibility seemed the least likely.  Yet he was filled
with a desire to shield her, restore her--even believe her--so fierce
it made him a little insane in return.  He did not move a muscle; if he
approached her, he thought, nothing would keep him from taking her
protectively in his arms.

At any rate, nothing would prevent him from guarding this frail woman
with his life, not until she was recovered, not until she was Tamar
again, whole and spirited and unafraid.

"Sing it again," he said softly.  "I'll listen closely, then next time
I can sing it with you.  I'll learn it before the night is through."

In the morning, she was better, though still not the feisty, suspicious
Tamar Jared was accustomed to.  He had slept badly, waking up every few
hours to make sure she was still breathing, but she seemed to have made
it through the night untroubled even by a nightmare.

"How do you feel?  How's your head?"  he asked her over breakfast,
where she put away more food than he had ever seen a woman eat.

She gave him a look of exasperation.  "What did I tell you the first
time you asked me that?  And the second and third and fourth time?"

He smiled reluctantly.  "You said you were fine."

"Well, the answer hasn't changed.  So stop asking me.  Now eat your
breakfast and let's go."

They had lingered in Marquet long enough to buy her a change of
clothes, a simple tunic and pair of leggings that would be comfortable
enough to travel in, and then they took off.  Within an hour they were
over the ocean, vast, mysterious, and multicolored, and Tamar stared
down at it with an unwavering fascination.  The air over the sea was
cooler, heavier, laced with scents and vapors found nowhere else in the
world.  Heeding the doctor's instructions, Jared flew as low as he
could, though it would have been easier to cruise through the thin air
higher above the water.  So they had not made it as far as he would
have liked by the time he started to grow weary, and he began watching
the waters below them for a likely ship to take them in for the
evening.

He had seen plenty of Jansai traders as they made their way above the
ocean, and a few Manadavvi ships--even one bearing the Semorran flag,
though he hadn't realized the river merchants ran their own cargo
across the ocean.  Edori vessels were scarcer, and it only belatedly
occurred to him that those ships were following a different route,
specifically to keep clear of the Jansai traders patrolling the waters
between Breven and Ysral.

Yet, before sunset, he spotted something even better than an Edori
ship: a Luminauzi pleasure boat, stately, luxurious, six decks high. It
plowed through the ocean at a deliberate pace, in no hurry to arrive
anywhere; its passengers were the jaded, bored elite of a wealthy
society, and for them, the journey was the entertainment.

"Jovah watches over us," he murmured, spiraling down toward the massive
ship.  Its sixteen blue flags whipped smartly in the ocean breeze,
flying from every protuberance and railing.  "We'll get a royal
treatment here."

Tamar, watching the great ship grow larger and larger, seemed less
sanguine.  "Are you sure?  What if they have no room for us?"

"They'll find room."  For a moment he took his eyes off his target and
glanced down at her.  "Angels are welcome everywhere, didn't you know?
Just because you hate us, you do not realize that everyone else in
Samaria considers us precious and lucky."

She rolled her eyes in disbelief but made no comment.

But he was right, of course; the whole population of the ship, or so it
seemed, turned out to greet them as they landed.  Tamar (who would have
thought she was shy?) fell a little behind him, taking shelter in the
shadow of his wings.  Jared, on the other hand, gaily greeted the
captain, the crew, the passengers who crowded up to ask where he'd come
from and where he was headed, and could he stay the night?  Could he
sing for them?  They had a little theater built right on the ship, they
had been taking turns presenting their own skits and melodies, but to
have an angel aboard, well, that would really be something special!

That easily was everything arranged.  The captain led them to a grand
stateroom, larger by half than the hotel room they'd been in the night
before, and fitted with more amenities.  Tamar wandered around it for a
full ten minutes, touching the silk of the bed hangings, the porcelain
of the sink, the highly polished wood of the furniture.

"Even in Luminaux, I never stayed in a place so fine," she said
wonderingly.  "Is this how ordinary people live?"

"Well, not ordinary ones," Jared replied.  "But more than a few of the
wealthy, yes.  And this is nothing compared to the luxury the Manadavvi
can muster up.  It's a little wasteful, I have to admit, but it does
feel wonderful."

She nodded wordlessly.

He was disappointed, but not surprised, to learn that she did not want
to accompany him when he joined the rest of the passengers for dinner
and the evening's entertainment.  "Are you all right?  How's your
head?"  he asked, because he couldn't help himself.  But she seemed to
have forgotten she had laid a prohibition on those questions.

"My head hurts a little.  I'm tired," she said.  "If I could get
something to eat, I think I'd just like to go to sleep."

"I'll have food sent down to you."  He hesitated, standing halfway
between her chair and the door.  "Would you rather I stayed here with
you?  I'd be happy to do so."

She smiled somewhat maliciously.  "Your public awaits you," she said.
"You can't disappoint them or they'll throw you off the boat."

"I don't want to leave if you want me to stay."

She laughed at him.  "Oh, Jared, oh please, I'm so afraid when you're
not by me," she exclaimed, her hand pressed to her heart.  He had to
grin.

"All right," he said.  "I'll see you in a few hours."

If not for the nagging (and surely unnecessary) worry about Tamar,
Jared would have enjoyed himself pretty thoroughly for the rest of the
evening.  The meal, served to him at the captain's table, was the best
he'd had in weeks, and the dinner conversation was quick, witty, and
light.  Afterward, nearly three hundred people adjourned to the theater
built into the very heart of the shipa professional stage,
velvet-covered seats, acoustics as good as anything he'd heard in a
Luminaux music hall.  The angel sang for nearly an hour, a mix of
sacred and secular songs that seemed to please his audience equally.

"Well, this has been the best part of the trip so far," a young woman
named Mira told Jared afterward.  She and a much older escort had been
seated at the captain's table with him; she was slim, chic, bored, and
beautiful.  She had smiled at him covertly all during dinner whenever
her friend had become engrossed in conversation with someone else.
Jared suspected she was not an angel-seeker in the classic sense, but a
woman who had no qualms about trading her youth and beauty for status
and ac quisitions.  "The rest of the entertainment has been quite dull
by comparison."

"Thank you," Jared replied gravely.  "I am so rarely able to outperform
wealthy amateurs and the retired Luminaux musicians who sign on with
cruise ships such as this."

Mira narrowed her eyes at him, trying to decide if he was jesting or
chastising her, but the captain interrupted them before she could
reply.  "Everyone has been raving about your singing," the man said.
"And those who couldn't cram themselves into the theater are
complaining loudly about what they've missed.  Would you be willing to
stay on board another day and sing again tomorrow night?"

Jared thought quickly.  The ship cruised at a rate much slower than he
could fly, yet it did go forward toward their destination.  And the
rest could not hurt Tamar, even if she insisted on staying cooped up in
their cabin for the next whole day.  And they were in absolutely no
danger from Jansai, here on a pleasure boat in the middle of the ocean.
"I hate to impose," he said.  just to make sure the offer was
sincere.

"No imposition!  An honor!  A favor to me and my guests."

"Then we'll be glad to stay another day."

After that, it was impossible to leave without tarrying for a drink or
two, so all in all it was much later than Jared had planned before he
returned to his stateroom.  He crept in quietly, thinking Tamar must be
asleep already, and she was.  She had considerately left a small
sidewall light on for him.

He trod silently to the bed and gazed down at her still form.  Now he
could study her with an intentness he was not rude enough to attempt
while she was awake.  Asleep, she was relaxed and unguarded, her face
open and serene; there was none of that fierce suspicion that colored
her every waking expression.  She looked so young.

She looked so familiar.

The first time he had seen her, back in Ileah, he had thought hers was
a face he should know, though he had put the thought down to a wayward
fancy.  Now he frowned, studying her more closely, running his eyes
over the angle of her cheekbones and the shape of her closed eyes.  She
looked like someone he should remember, but he could not place the
features.  He watched her till she turned restlessly in her sleep,
almost as if embarrassed by the continued scrutiny, and then he
shrugged and moved away.

There was a plush curved-back chaise lounge and a couple of armchairs
in the attached sitting room, but neither of these would accommodate a
sleeping angel.  With a sigh of resignation, Jared plundered the
pillows from the chairs and arranged himself as best he could on the
carpeted floor, gathering his wings close about him for a blanket.  He
did not expect to sleep well but, drugged by exhaustion, he did; and it
was full morning before he even stirred.

To find Tamar standing over him, arms akimbo, fully dressed.  "That
can't be very comfortable," she said.  "Why didn't you wake me up last
night and tell me to sleep on this little curvy couch thing?"

"I didn't want to wake you," he murmured, rubbing his eyes and stifling
a yawn.  "You looked so peaceful."

"Well, I bet you have a horrible ache in your neck from sleeping like
that all night."

Jared sat up.  Shoulders and arms a little stiff but the hard floor had
done him no harm.  "No, I'm all right.  How are you?  How's your
headache?"

"I feel fine, thank you for asking," she said very precisely, as if, by
pronouncing the words very clearly, she could impress the answer on his
brain and prevent him from asking again.  "How was your little concert
last night?"

"Everyone loved me," he said, hauling himself to his feet.  He felt
unkempt; he needed a quick shave and shower.  "So much so that they
invited me--us--to stay over another day."  She gave him a darkling
look.  "And you said?"

"We'd stay.  No reason not to."

Tamar grimaced and shook her head.  "Great.  So we're stuck here
another whole day?"

"Are you in any particular hurry to get to Ysral?"

"No, but--"

"Then stop complaining.  Try stepping outside of the cabin for a couple
of hours.  You might enjoy yourself."

She glanced down at her tunic and leggings, now wrinkled from a day of
travel.  "I don't feel like I really fit in."

Jared grinned.  This was the first time he had seen her show an
interest in her appearance.  "I've no doubt," he said solemnly, "that
there is a boutique on board that will be able to satisfy your every
fashion requirement."

She scowled.  "Well, I don't have enough money to spend on such silly
things and I refuse to let you spend any more of yours."

"Trust me," he said.  "It will be free, and given with delight.  A
small price for the shipowners to pay for the privilege of having an
angel aboard as a special guest.  Give me twenty minutes to make myself
presentable and I will prove it to you."

Tamar made a small sound of contempt but said nothing as Jared slipped
inside the luxurious bathing room.  Breakfast first, the angel decided
as he shaved, and then they would see how the Luminaux merchants would
outfit this vagabond girl.

The day that followed was one of the most pleasant Jared could remember
spending in the recent months of his life.  While Tamar commented in a
constant, sarcastic undervoice on the superficial wasteful life of the
Luminauzi elite, she could not help but enjoy some of the pleasures
wealth could bring.  She thought the food was marvelous, for instance,
and ate heartily; Jared suspected that at many times in her life she
had not had enough to eat, which explained both her slender figure and
her appetite now.  She was vociferously disdainful when they found not
one but three boutiques on the lower levels of the cruise ship
(although one catered exclusively to men).  That didn't stop her from
going in and trying on fifty different outfits, by Jared's count.  The
clerk at the second store tried to convince her to buy two complete
ensembles---one for day wear, one for evening--but she resisted
mightily until the woman came over for a whispered conference with
Jared.

"Is she afraid of the cost?"  the salesclerk asked the angel.  "For the
captain has assured me this is his gift to you in recompense for your
wonderful concert last night."

"They're free, Tamar," Jared called out to her.  The word felt peculiar
and delicious on his tongue.  Tamar.  He had only addressed her by name
once or twice before.  "The captain's gift to you.  You'll offend him
if you do not accept at least two outfits."

"I am not so greedy," she shot back at him, but as she spoke she stood
in front of a tall mirror, admiring herself in a gown of dark green.
She had already chosen an embroidered silver tunic and trousers (for
casual wear, of course), but she seemed to be having difficulty parting
with this number.

"We'll take them both," Jared told the salesclerk.  "She'll wear the
silver now, and you can have the gown sent to our cabin."  He gave her
the stateroom number while the saleswoman beamed with pride.

"We're taking advantage of these kind people," Tamar told him a few
minutes later as they strolled around the upper deck and watched the
ocean unroll beneath them.

"The only payment they want is a little graciousness from you," Jared
replied.  "Do you think you can manage that?"

"Well, I'm not sure," she growled.  "I don't think it's in my
repertoire."

"Shall we practice before dinner?  I'll be the captain and you can
be--well, you can be yourself.  Can you give me a big smile and say
thank you?"

She instead gave him a black scowl but was unable to hold the frown in
place.  Instead, an infectious laugh broke through.  "Why, Captain!  I
do so much adore the beautiful new clothes!  How can I ever thank you
enough?  Shall I come to your cabin in the middle of the night and show
you the depths of my appreciation?"

"I don't think you need to go quite that far."

"No?  Good thing we're rehearsing this in advance or I would have
committed a terrible social error."

They were interrupted frequently by passengers coming up to thank the
angel again for his concert and ask for an introduction to his lovely
friend.  Tamar never did more than smile and murmur a quick thank you,
but that was good enough since the visitors really wanted to talk to
the angel.  She could not contain her edged remarks as soon as they'd
drifted out of earshot, however, and her acid observations had Jared
laughing helplessly more than once.

When Mira and her companion paused to say a few words, Tamar dutifully
engaged the older man in conversation while Mira delicately flirted
with the angel.  As soon as the two had moved off, hand in hand, Tamar
gave lared a wicked sideways glance.

"I just had the best idea," she said.  "If you're too uncomfortable
sleeping on the floor tonight, I can think of a bed on this ship that
would give you a very warm welcome."

"I think there's already two in that bed," he said.

"How much would you like to bet," she said softly, "that if you wanted
a place on her pillow, she'd be the only one in that bed?"

"You'd lose," Jared replied.  "He paid for the cabin."

"She'd still find a way.  I'll wager if you will."

"You don't have a dollar to bet with.  Besides, the only way to find
out is for me to try to seduce her, and I don't want to."

"Don't let me hold you back," she said, a trace of malice in her voice.
"I'd rather sleep in the room alone, anyway."

"I can't think of circumstances," he said in clearly enunci ated words,
"under which she would be my type."

"But I know so little about you," she purred, and she had gotten Mira's
inflection exactly.  "What exactly is your type?"

Lost souls with the courage of heroines, he wanted to say, but did not.
"Why, Tamar, I didn't know you were so interested," he said softly
instead, as much for the pleasure of using her name as for the chance
of provoking her.  "You've never seemed too fond of angels, so I'd
abandoned hope long ago, but if you think you'd like to please--"

"It would please me to see you dumped into the ocean," she snapped, but
then she burst out laughing about two seconds after he did.  The
laughter changed her face utterly, made her glow with an unsuspected
radiance.  This was Tamar as she was meant to be, he thought; how many
times in her life had she had the chance?

After they strolled around the deck, Jared took her below to show her
the theater, and then they investigated the game rooms nearby.  These
were half-full with passengers pursuing every imaginable entertainment.
There were card games, board games, and athletic contests, and two
harpsichords had been set up in a corner for those who wished to
practice their music.  There was a library for the readers, a buffet
for the eaters, and a guided tour for the curious.

"What's your pleasure?"  Jared asked.

"I've never played any of these," she said, eyeing the board games and
their army of chips, marbles, and counters.  "Are they hard to
learn?"

"Oh, for dull, silly girls like you, they might be," Jared said
offhandedly.

"Fine!  Then I won't ask to learn!"

 "No, no, only joking.  Here, Devil's Hand is one of my favorites. 
You start with ten colored marbles lined up on each end of the
board--"

It was a game simple to learn, though nuanced with complex strategies,
and Tamar delighted him by learning it rapidly.  He had thought she
might take to a game like this, for it required quick wits, a lively
sense of self-preservation, and a streak of pure though theoretical
ruthlessness which he'd had no doubt she'd be able to muster.  On the
fourth game, she almost defeated him; on the fifth one, she did.

"Oh, I like this," she exclaimed.  "Let's play again."

"Let's make it more interesting," he said.  "Let's play doubles."

There were two older, unalarming men sitting nearby, playing their own
round of Devil's Hand.  Invited to join the angel and his friend, they
assented with alacrity, though they refused to play on the same team.

"I'll take the young lady, though, if she'll have me," said one,
smiling over at Tamar in a friendly way.  Jared was relieved to see her
smile back.  "I've been watching you.  You learn fast."

"Well, I've never said no to an angel before," said his friend.  "I
think we're all set."

So they played four more matches, splitting the victories evenly. Tamar
was jubilant when they finally left the room, though Jared cautioned
her not to be an unbearable winner.

"I will be if I want to be," was her instant response.  "Let's go back
and play tomorrow."

"Tomorrow we'll be on our way to Ysral."

"Even better."

Dinner was a little more of a strain.  Mira and Tamar had a hard time
covering their dislike of each other, though Mira made no ill-natured
remarks and Tamar said almost nothing at all.  But it fell to the men
to make most of the conversation, a task they were not used to with
pretty women at the table, so talk was disjointed and frequently
clumsy.  Everyone was just as glad when the meal was over and it was
time for the angel's performance.

The concert went well again this night.  With Tamar in the audience,
Jared didn't mind singing a little longer, so he took the time to
perform all the requests that listeners called out to him.  He enjoyed
singing, and he felt a strange, liquid elation at the knowledge that
Tamar was listening to every note, every word.  It did not escape his
notice that while he sang his Kiss hazed over with a muted golden
light.  He would have given a lot to be close enough to see if Tamar's
Kiss also reacted to the stimulus of his singing.

But, "You have quite an impressive range" was all she said as they
finally headed back to their cabin.

"You liked the concert?"  he couldn't help asking.

She unlocked the door and preceded him inside.  "I imagine everyone
did," she said.

This night, she insisted he take the bed while she slept on the chaise
lounge, where, as she pointed out, her body was more likely to fit.  He
agreed only when she told him she would sleep there whether or not he
lay on the floor, and he knew she was stubborn enough to do so.  So he
got a good night's sleep, and she claimed that she did, and the next
morning they resumed their interrupted trip to Ysral.

It was somehow more awkward and more intimate, this flight over the
eastern half of the ocean.  Jared had carried this particular bundle
from Azolay to the Samarian coast, and from Mar-quet to the middle of
the ocean without feeling quite this degree of self-consciousness.
Maybe because, during those first legs of the journey, Tamar had been
half-sick and fainting, almost oblivious to her surroundings--and now
she was alert, interested, and very animated.  It was hard to overlook
or ignore her.

Not that he wanted to.  But they were suspended over the ocean, by the
god's great grace, and she was completely helpless to free herself from
him.  It did not seem like the courteous time to begin a campaign of
flirtation.

So he took her in his arms, cradled her against his chest, asked
civilly if she was comfortable, and did not give in to the impulse to
hold her tighter than necessary.  And flew across the great, variegated
sea with as much speed as he could generate.

She wanted to see everything; she wanted everything explained. 
"Where's that boat from?  Why is the water different colors?  Why is it
so much colder up here?  How fast can you fly?  How many miles can you
cover in a day?  How fast do the boats go?  Is that an island?  Could
we land there if we had to?  When will we be in Ysral?"

 She did not seem to be nearly as self-conscious as he was, so by and
by his initial awkwardness wore off.  And yet, despite the brisk ocean
breeze, despite the mingled odors of salt and fish and seaweed that
laced the heavy air, he never lost the fresh-washed smell of her hair
or the sweet, unidentifiable scent that he thought must be the natural
perfume of Tamar's skin.

After an hour or two she fell mostly silent, speaking only at rare
intervals, and eventually she began dozing with her head propped
against his chest.  Jared flew on more rapidly now that he could
concentrate on the task, and he watched the miles melt away below them.
The ship captain had told him they were only three hundred miles from
Ysral; it would be an effort, but they could probably make it that far
by early nightfall.

And then they must seek out the Jacobites and then ... well, Jared had
not thought beyond that.  Getting Tamar to safety had become his only
concern.

They were possibly another hundred miles from the coast (two or three
hours' flying time) when Jared became aware of Tamar growing limp and
heavy in his arms.  It was like she had crossed from sleep into coma,
and her bones increased their weight and her muscles lapsed into
elasticity.  It reminded him of how she had felt on the first part of
the flight, between Bethel and Marquet, and he was instantly alarmed.

"Tamar," he called to her over the noise of the wind and his own
wingbeats.  "Tamar?  Are you awake?  Is your headache back?"

She did not answer, did not stir.  Her mouth had fallen open and
bruises seemed to have appeared, magically, under her eyes.  Quickly,
Jared dropped down, losing altitude, hoping the thicker air closer to
the water would revive her, but she did not shift position.  He
tightened his grip, shaking her a little, but nothing made her
respond.

Now in a virtual panic, he cruised as close to the water as he dared.
He continued speaking her name in low urgent tones, hoping the sound of
his voice would penetrate her guarded dreaming.  He wished there was
someplace he could land--the smallest rock, a mere foothold--so he
could throw cold ocean water across her face and shock her awake.  But
there was nothing.

He must find a ship, and quickly.  Jovah guide them, now as never
before, for this must be a safe ship, a place he could land with the
sleeping Jacobite.

He altered position again, gaining a few hundred feet of altitude so he
could command a better view of the sea.  The sudden shift in pressure
seemed to register on Tamar's consciousness, for she tossed her head
and drew her hands against her chest.

"Tamar!"  Jared exclaimed in great excitement.  "Tamar, can you hear
me?"

"What?"  she asked groggily.  "My head hurts.  Where are we?"

"Over the ocean.  I'm looking for a ship."

"My head hurts," she repeated.  "I just want to go to sleep."

"No, talk to me.  Stay awake.  Talk to me."

"I don't feel like talking," she said pettishly.  "Why won't you let me
lie down?  Why are you hurting me?"

"Hurting you?  What's hurting you?"

"My head," she said, and then she began to cry.  Sweet Jovah singing,
she broke his heart.  He could not even pause to comfort her; he could
not squeeze her hand or brash away her tears.

"Don't cry," he whispered, pushing his wings harder, trying to go
faster, feeling the strain from the joint at his back to the very
feather edge of the tip.  "Tell me what you were dreaming."

"I wasn't dreaming," she said, but then she began to recount for him a
series of disconnected, fragmented tales and images.  Jared did not
bother listening closely.  Was that a shadow on the horizon, a patch of
cobalt blue against the ultramarine of the sea around it, or was it the
outline of a ship a dozen miles away?  He veered in that direction,
silently praying.

It was a ship.  And merciful Jovah, it flew the white falcon flag of
the Edori.  It was headed away from Ysral, not toward it, but that
didn't matter now.  Jared's arms tightened convulsively on the girl.

"And then the room changed colors, and somebody else was in the room
with me and it was an angel but it wasn't you--"

They were above the ship now and Jared circled once to make sure any
lookout would have time to spot them.  Yes, there were two men--no,
three--on the deck, shading their eyes and gazing upward.  One of them
was waving his hand in a gesture of welcome, while another one headed
toward the narrow doorway that led to the lower reaches of the ship,
presumably to tell the news.  Angel overhead; company for dinner.

Jared landed on the pitching ship as gently as he could, coming to his
knees.  Almost without his volition, Tamar slipped from his hold to lie
half on the deck, half in his arms.  Her eyes were open but she gazed
around unseeingly, and she seemed both bewildered and afraid.

"Where are we?"  she whispered to Jared.  "This isn't Ysral."  Most of
the crew hung back from the new arrivals, but one, a dark good-looking
young Edori, came over and gazed down at them gravely.  "Your friend
looks ill.  What can we do to aid her?"  he asked.

Jared was immensely grateful for the instant offer of help.  "I think
all she needs is a place to lie down.  She suffered a head injury four
days ago, but yesterday she seemed perfectly fine.  I'm sorry to
trouble you--"

"No trouble," the Edori said.  "I take it you were on your way to
Ysral?"

"Yes, but I realize you were sailing west.  Please don't alter your
route for us.  All I want is a bed for the night."

The Edori gave a brief, private smile and tossed his waist-length braid
back over his shoulder.  "I was not so eager to leave Ysral.  I would
not mind a quick return," he said.  "But we will see what the captain
says.  Where in Ysral are you headed?"

Jared laughed weakly.  "I'm not sure where.  I would like to return
this one to her friends."  He hesitated, but the Edori were notorious
sympathizers.  He added, "Who are Jacobites."

The Edori lifted his eyebrows, glanced at the angel's wings which so
obviously proclaimed him anything but a friend to the Jacobites, and
nodded neutrally.  "Many Jacobites have settled in Ysral," was all he
said.  "I'm sure you would not find it hard to locate them."

"I swear you can trust me," Jared said.  He had never been around so
many people who regarded him With suspicion; as a rule, an angel had
the entree anywhere.  "She will tell you so herself."

"When she can speak," the Edori said, sinking to his knees in one
graceful motion.  Tamar had turned on her side, facing toward Jared,
and she seemed to be crying softly.  "I have a little skill in
healing," the Edori said.  "What is her name?"

"Tamar," the Edori said in a firm, insistent voice impossible to
ignore.  "Tamar.  I am Reuben.  I will help you.  Tamar.  Turn and look
at me, and say my name."

To Jared's surprise, Tamar straightened a little, seemed to pull all
her bones and muscles back into their accustomed places, and shifted
position to face her questioner.  "Reuben," she said obediently.

But now he was staring down at her as if an apparition had unrolled
itself here on this ship in the middle of the ocean.  "Yes, I can see
you belong with the Jacobites," he said softly.  "And there is someone
with them that you will very much want to meet."

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

Life in Ysral was not, Lucinda had found, much different from life on
Angel Rock.  For one thing, the accommodations in both cases were
comfortable but hardly grand; in the small town of Sahala, she lived in
a modest six-room, two-story house that she shared with five other
people.  For another, the communities were both small and
self-contained.  Sahala was bigger, of course--about a thousand souls
to Angel Rock's twenty-four--but it had no greater level of activity or
commerce.  A few traders arrived every day, a few left, but the town's
core community of Edori and Jacobites remained basically unchanged.

Lucinda's arrival had created an uproar.

The resident Edori had been the first to greet her with that
unselfconscious warmth and directness that, in anyone else, would have
seemed rude or overwhelming.  "Look, Martha, it's an angel!  ...  Well,
look at you, child.  Have you come to live in Sahala with us?  I've
never spoken to an angel before.  I've never been this close to one."
"Jonathon, have you said hello to the angel?  What's your name, young
lady, I didn't catch it."

So that had been odd enough, though Lucinda had answered as pleasantly
and openly as she could, but then there had been the cold, strange
greeting of the Jacobites.  They had not come immediately out from
their stone houses, but gazed at her from behind shuttered windows and
half-opened doors.  She could not blame them for feeling a profound
hostility toward an unknown angel visitor, but still it made her feel
awkward, humble, and lonely as she stood in the center of the small
town, stared at by everyone.

But Reuben was still at her side.  He motioned to one of the young
Edori boys who had crept close enough to touch Lu-cinda's wing.  She
flicked it nervously from his curious fingers.  "Go tell Conran I'm
here," he said.  "Tell him I've brought a friend who needs shelter.
Tell him she is to be trusted."

The boy nodded and darted off.  Lucinda managed to slant a smile at her
escort.  "I didn't know you were well enough acquainted with the
Jacobites to call them by name and have them trust you," she said.

He grinned back.  He seemed completely at ease, not worried in the
slightest that he and his companion might be repulsed.  "Didn't you say
your aunt wanted you to seek out Conran?"  he answered.

"Yes, but you spoke just now as if you know him."

"Everyone knows Conran.  He's that kind of man."

"I'm afraid," she said suddenly.

Reuben reached out and took her hand in a warm, unbelievably comforting
clasp.  "If they won't take you in, we'll put you with the Edori," he
said.  "My family's tribe is traveling just now, but they'd gladly take
you in.  Neither Bael nor Omar would be able to find you if you were
with them."

In a few minutes the little boy returned, scampering in front of a
small delegation.  These must be the Jacobites, Lucinda thought, for
they certainly were not Edori.  They did not have the Edori's unvaried
dark coloring and smiling faces; this group, three men and two women,
were mostly fair and uniformly suspicious.  The leader appeared to be a
stocky older man with grizzled hair and a look of lively intelligence.
At any rate, the others let him precede them, and the Edori fell back
to admit him through their ranks.  Lucinda could not help herself.  She
edged behind Reuben and peered out at the Jacobites from behind his
shoulder.

"Well, Reuben, this had better be good," the leader said, coming to a
halt a few paces from the new arrivals.  His voice was clear and
ringing, but he did not sound angry.  Astonished, maybe, but not at all
unprepared.  He seemed like the sort of man who was never caught
unprepared.  "Bringing an angel to Sahala is much like setting a hawk
among the rabbits."

"Ah, Conran, you were never a frightened rabbit running for your life,"
Reuben drawled in his usual lilting tones, and Conran's face relaxed
slightly into a grin.  "Besides, I have a message from a lady who
advised me to bring this angel to your very doorstep.  And I've never
yet known you to scoff at news that came from a woman's mouth."

"A lady?  Conran repeated, but his whole face had sharpened into
anticipation.  He tried to peer at Lucinda's face, but she drew farther
back behind her human shield.  "And where have you just sailed from, my
friend?"

"You've heard of the place, I'm sure," the Edori said.

"Angel Rock," Conran said.  "And this particular package came from a
lady named Gretchen."

"You've guessed it," Reuben said.  "So now will you be willing to take
her in?  For that's the request I'll be making.."

Conran reached out a hand to draw Reuben to one side.  Reuben was tall
and well muscled, but the Jacobite had considerable strength, for his
push dislodged the Edori.  "And you must be Lucinda," Conran said as
the angel came into view.  "I have wanted to meet you for a long time.
Twenty-eight years, to be exact."

He was strange and intimidating, but he exuded a powerful charisma for
all that.  Still nervous, but much more hopeful, Lucinda extended her
hand.  The Jacobite took it in a crushing grip.  He studied her face
with an unnerving intentness that slowly gave way to a sort of
incredulous wonder.

"Yes," he said at last.  "You look very like her.  There would be no
mistaking you."

Lucinda remembered suddenly that this man had known Rinalda in her age
of wild passion.  "My mother?"  she said shyly.  "I look like my
mother?"

For a split second she thought he looked surprised.  Well, who else
could he have thought she resembled?  "Yes, that you do," he said.

"Did you know her well?"

"I did.  A long time ago.  I had heard that she bore two daughters. 
ters, and I am pleased to meet this one at last."

Lucinda sighed, inexplicably saddened.  "Yes, two daughters, but my
twin sister died."

"She did?"  Conmn asked sharply.  "I did not know that."

"Oh, yes.  As an infant.  The story is very tragic."

"Ah."  Conran looked briefly hopeful, then his face clouded over again.
"Yes, I suppose she is dead, at that.  A tragedy, indeed.  But to have
saved one of Rinalda's girls--that is a tri umph in any case.  Have you
come to join the Jacobites, young lady?  Or why are you here?"

"She is here because her aunt fears for her safety," Reuben interposed.
"Gretchen is afraid that Lucinda has drawn the attention of Bael and
his son Omar.  She wanted Lucinda away from Angel Rock."

"Well, she can stay here as long as she likes," Conran said.  "We are
not likely to deny refuge to anyone hunted by the Archangel."

"And I want you to tell me everything," Lucinda said.  "Everything you
know about my mother.  Everything you know about the Alleluia Files.  I
want to understand it all."

"I will tell you," he said.  "And if you become a believer, like your
mother, I will count myself a fortunate man."

He turned away to shout to four others who had followed him, waving
them forward to meet the angel.  Reuben added in a voice only Lucinda
could hear, "He is fortunate anyway, merely to have you near him.  That
much I could tell him for myself."

But once she had settled in to Sahala--and once Reuben was gone--her
life did not materially change.  There was no mysterious initiation
into the Jacobite fraternity.  She felt no sudden access of belief, no
zealous devotion to the cause.  Conran explained what she did not
already know about the Jacobites, and the information intrigued her,
but did not wholly win her over.

The most interesting piece of news was what Conran considered
verification.  Jacob Fairman, according to Conran, had long believed
Jehovah to be a spaceship, not a god, and he claimed that the oracle
Deborah had once assured him he was correct.

Lucinda frowned at this revelation.  "An oracle also knew that the god
was really a spaceship?  That seems very unlikely."

"Jacob said that Deborah had been charged by Alleluia to guard this
secret with her very life and not to impart it until she, too, was on
her deathbed.  Because it was imperative that someone know the truth
about Jehovah, but that the knowledge was too inflammatory for the
whole world to learn.  So Alleluia told Deborah, and one presumes that
Deborah told Jecoliah--al-though, if that were so, I would have
expected Jecoliah to have spoken up before now.  Although perhaps she
does not see the slaughter of a few hundred Jacobites as significant
enough to break a silence of a hundred years."

"Why was it imperative that someone know the truth?  If Alleluia found
the truth so shocking, why not let it die with her?"

"Jehovah is a man-made piece of equipment.  I don't know how much
experience you have with technology, but it always breaks down.  I will
grant that Jehovah must be more sophisticated than the trucks and radio
transmitters our engineers have cobbled together, but no doubt it, too,
needs periodic maintenance.  So someone needs to know what it is so
that someone can make sure the machine gets fixed."

Lucinda was still frowning.  "If I was an oracle who had guarded such a
secret for most of my life, I don't know that 1 would be sharing that
information with any wild-eyed radical who showed up at my door.  And
then watch him stir the whole country into bloody controversy and not
say a word to anyone else."

"As to why she would have told him--well, Jacob Fairman was a very
persuasive man.  If anyone could have charmed confidences from an old
spinster, it would have been Jacob.  If you were to meet him today, I
venture to guess you would be telling him your most cherished secrets
within ten minutes.  It was the effect he had.  As to why she told no
one else--she died shortly after this conversation took place.  She was
not in a position to tell anyone anything."

"What made him think to ask her in the first place?  Why did he even
begin to wonder about the god?"

"There had been speculation in the scientific community for years about
the true nature of Jehovah.  Thirty years before Jacob Fairman began
proselytizing, there were two young graduates of the Augustine school
who postulated the idea that 'Jovah' was really a machine, based on
their largely unproven theories of flight mechanics and weapons
systems.  Their ideas created quite a stir among the scientists and
intellectuals of the time and were violently opposed by the angels.
Nothing really came of their speculations, but from time to time,
students would come across their papers and start the debate all over
again.  Jacob Fairman had been a student at the Augustine school, of
course.  so he'd heard all the theories.  He just came to believe in
them more devoutly than most."

"And how did you come to believe?"  Lucinda asked.

"I went to the Augustine school.  I heard the whispers.  And I had not
been a particularly faithful man to begin with.  Engineers, as a rule,
are not.  They look for the logical explanation behind the mystical
event.  For instance, we have spent some energy trying to determine why
angels can fly."

"We have wings," Lucinda said with dignity.

"Ah, but in so many other ways you are completely human.  In fact,
current biological thinking says you're mutants, but not naturally
occurring ones.  Someone tampered with your physical makeup some seven
hundred and fifty years ago, and you've bred true ever since."

"No one tampered with us," Lucinda said coldly.  "Jovah selected a few
trusted men and women, and fitted them with wings.  Back when the
colonists first settled Samaria."

"That's what the Librera says," Conran agreed.  "But there are very old
texts, written in the ancient language, that say otherwise.  That talk
about how the original angels were created by the scientists and
biologists among the settlers.  That even describe how clumsy the first
angels were as they learned to fly."

"How could you read such texts, even if they exist?"  Lucinda demanded.
 "Only oracles know the old language."

Conran grinned again.  He radiated energy and confidence, and did not
seem at all annoyed by her questions.  Rather, he enjoyed knocking
aside her skepticism with feasible answers of his own.  "Ah, but one of
the courses taught at the Augustine school is linguistics," he said.
"Some of the ancient engineering manuals that can be found even today
in the archives of the angel holds are written in that tongue.  And old
Caleb Augustus, he got his hands on these books, and it just killed him
that he couldn't read them.  So he had his wife the oracle teach him
the words.  And he set up a class to teach them to others."

"That doesn't seem right," Lucinda said.  "That's holy knowledge."

"All knowledge is holy," Conran replied.  "And all knowledge should be
shared, or it becomes profane."

Lucinda rubbed her temples.  She was not entirely convinced, of course.
As an angel, she had some responsibility to her god and to her people;
she could not rashly abandon them for a few facile theorems.  And yet
Conran was even more plausible than Reuben, although he had not, she
realized, given her any more concrete evidence.  He just had such a
compelling voice that everything he said sounded true.  It was hard not
to leap to her feet and cry out, "Yes, I believe!"

"It's all interesting," she said at last.  "And some of it makes a
great deal of sense.  But I would need more proof than this before I
became a convert."

"Fair enough," he said amiably.  "But it is good of you to ask--and to
listen."

She had not asked her questions of the other Jacobites.  She was rather
shy of them, for they were a strange, passionate, suspicious, and
ill-kept lot.  They looked like they had lived hard, lean lives,
managing to survive by the scarcest combination of wits and luck.
Despite Conran's welcome, they all mistrusted her; and they had a
peculiar habit of staring at her face as if they could not believe the
precise arrangement of her features.

There were, in addition to Conran, about fifty Jacobites living in
Sahala--the only survivors, he told her, of a band that used to be
about four times as strong.  She was shocked to learn of Bael's
campaign of extermination, though she found this easier to believe than
tales of orbiting spaceships.  Gretchen had hated Bael, though she had
managed to conceal that violent emotion for most of Lucinda's life, and
Reuben also had ascribed terrible crimes to the Archangel.  Lucinda did
not doubt that Bael had ferociously hunted down the Jacobites; he would
have considered it his duty.

It was not surprising that those fifty survivors looked at her askance,
and so Lucinda made little effort to get to know them.  Oh, once or
twice at Conran's invitation, she joined them when the whole group
assembled in the evenings, but she was fairly uncomfortable at these
events.  They spoke ardently about their beliefs, contemptuously of the
complacent Samarians who were too thickheaded to listen to reason,
idealistically of how they would bring the truth to every last soul on
the mainland.  Lucinda left these meetings even less in sympathy with
their cause than she had been before.  They were zealots, or possibly
madmen; she trusted them very little more than they trusted her.

On the whole, she felt more at ease with the Edori.  The house she
lived in was an Edori house, owned by people who were in some remote
manner relatives of Reuben.  Then again, from what she could tell, all
Edori considered themselves kin, so perhaps they did not in fact have
blood ties.  She had not completely figured out how the inmates of the
house were related.  There were two older women who appeared to be in
their sixties; a young woman about Lucinda's age, who had a baby boy;
and a young man who did not seem to be brother, son, or lover to any of
the others.  They treated each other with great affection mixed with
hilarity.  They loved nothing so much as a joke at another's expense,
though none of the tricks were ever cruel.

None of them were ever in the house if they could help it.

They spent most of their time in the garden, in the town commons
visiting their friends, or off on pursuits Lucinda had not yet
identified.  Though constructed solidly enough, the house had an
impermanent feel, as if at any point its residents might dismantle its
stones, cart its components along with them on some impromptu journey,
and rebuild the whole thing somewhere else on a more satisfactory site.
The furnishings were exotic, colorful, and completely unplanned, so
that a red print sofa warred with the blues and grays of a handwoven
rug.  No one ever gave a thought to mealtime until someone in the house
admitted to hunger, and then two or three of them would throw together
a dinner from whatever ingredients happened to be in the cupboard.

But none of this discomposed them or made them add a little foresight
to their days.  On the contrary, Lucinda had never met such happy,
carefree, spontaneous people.  They made her laugh.  They made her feel
welcome.

They reminded her of Reuben.

He would be gone at least two weeks, he had told her the evening before
the day he had to depart again.  The Wayward had stayed in port a week
while Maurice gathered his next cargo, but that time had gone by
wickedly fast.  He hated to leave her among strangers, especially since
she had been whisked so abruptly away from home, but he knew she would
be cared for here.  He would not worry while she was among his people.
And he did not say, but she heard the unspoken words, the warning
behind his farewell: I am a sailor.  I am Edori.  I will always return
to you, but I will always sail away again.  If she were to love him,
she would have to expect to be left behind over and over again.

And it seemed obvious that she loved him.

Nights, when the manic fervor of the Jacobites had left her cold and
the cheerful charm of the Edori had failed to warm her, she lay in her
bed and dreamed again of the hours she had spent with Reuben.  They had
been a week on The Wayward, traveling between Angel Rock and Ysral, and
during that week Lucinda had learned what it meant to take an Edori
lover.  She had not often lain with a man, for it had not been possible
to take casual bed mates from the small population of Angel Rock, but
she had a little experience gained from likable strangers who had
visited the port.  But those encounters were nothing like making love
to an Edori.

There had not been room enough for both of them on the narrow bunk in
the ship's cramped cabin.  So Reuben had spread layer after layer of
blankets on the hard floor, creating a mattress of quilt and cotton.
And he had pulled her down beside him and covered himself with her
white wings and buried his face in the blond fall of her hair.  She had
thought she would be shy or nervous, but she was neither.  She ran her
fingers through the black silk of his hair and laughed when he murmured
incomprehensible endearments in the Edori language.  Then caught her
breath as he began to run his hands slowly, intently over the curves
and hollows of her body.

No, nothing in her past had prepared her for the utter annihilation and
rebirth of making love to an Edori.  Or perhaps, more truly, nothing
had prepared her for the ecstasy of being in love.

And the complete desolation of seeing the loved one walk away.

When she could think about anything besides how much she missed Reuben
and how little she understood the Jacobites, she turned her mind to
speculation about what she should do with the rest of her life.  Much
as she liked the Edori, she did not envision living in this little
house forever.  And she had a hard time picturing herself gradually
succumbing to the illicit allure of the Jacobite enterprise.  Could she
return to Angel Rock?  And when?  And if she did, what then?  Would she
spend the rest of her life mooning over Reuben, violently happy on the
few days a year that The Wayward was in port, dreamily depressed every
other hour of her life?  How would she occupy her time?  Running the
Manor, cooking and cleaning for mainland guests?  Perhaps Reuben and
Maurice and the others would allow her to travel with them from city to
city, continent to continent--but how would that be any more
fulfilling?

It seemed unlikely that she could return to Samaria, at least as long
as Bael and Omar were in power.  And what would she do in Samaria,
anyway?

What would she do anywhere?  What was her purpose in life?  It was when
her thoughts reached this tangled conclusion that she could stand it no
longer.  She flung herself into the cerulean sky and flew until she was
dizzy.  She thought she could outrun her thoughts, but they inevitably
kept pace beside her, until she had exhausted herself so much that she
could no longer think.

But one thing she did have to say for Ysral: It was simply beautiful.

Of course, legend had long described the small continent as rich, warm,
and exquisite, and in this case, legend had not lied.  It was situated
on a slightly more southern plane than Samaria, and so, summer and
winter, it was wrapped in idle, sultry breezes.  Its soil was fertile
and imaginative, and everything seemed to grow there, from the standard
crops that could be found on Samaria to flowers and grains of the most
amazing hue and variety.  The Edori, of course, were lazy farmers, most
of them preferring to live off the largesse of the undomesticated land,
but even their haphazard attempts at raising corn and wheat and
soybeans were met with fabulous success.  The rivers ran with water so
sweet that even the children preferred it, and nowhere was there hunger
or need or want.

But there were the marks of man's presence, a thing which, Reuben had
told her, had caused bitter dissension among the Edori.  For centuries,
the credo of the Edori had been to live in harmony with the earth, in
harmony with man, and for that reason they had failed to build
permanent structures and turned their backs on farming.  But in Ysral,
the corelli had built cities-small ones, to be sure, but immobile
nonetheless--and altered the landscape to suit them.  And the renegade
scientists had moved the Augustine school to Ysral, and evidences of
scientific advancement were everywhere.

For instance, Edori in Sahala could communicate via a mysterious
transmitter with their families not only in nearby Covallah but with
those traveling throughout the remote sections of the continent.  They
could drive mobile vehicles that were quieter, smaller, and faster than
anything Lucinda had seen on the mainland.  They had developed
remarkable recording equipment that caught her voice one night in an
impromptu concert and played it back for her the very next minute.

"All of this takes energy and creates waste," Boyce told her gloomily
one evening when she asked about a swift little car she'd seen racing
away from the city.  Boyce was the young man who lived in the house
with her.  He seemed both attracted to and repelled by the new
technology, though he had been able to explain to her every single
thing she'd asked about.  "We have always prided ourselves on offering
no hurt to the people around us--or the land.  But to power our
vehicles, we use fuel that we dig from the earth, doing who knows what
harm to the soil beneath?  And everything we manufacture has left
behind some residue--some gas, or toxin, or pile of burned waste. 
There is not much now, but if we continue at this rate, what then? 
What kind of evil will we have created?"

Lucinda nodded soberly, though she was not really clear on the problem.
She had asked him to take her to the Augustine school and he had said
he would, but not for another week or two.  It was, she learned, almost
a daylong ride away (and that if they borrowed one of the fast little
cars), and Boyce had other projects under way at the moment.  But soon,
he promised.  Lucinda had sighed.  She had learned very quickly that
the Edori had no concept of haste.  She supposed she would be older
than her aunt Gretchen before Boyce finally escorted her to the
university.

A small voice at the back of her head gave her a brief, chiding
lecture: You have scarcely been here two weeks, and already you're
bored and looking for entertainment, it said.  You will have to learn
how to amuse yourself better than this.

But then, the very next day, diversion arrived in a form she would
never have dreamed possible.

She had been with Boyce and two young Jacobites who were friends of
his, helping them go through some old history books Conran had found.
Conran had wanted to know if the books had any value, if they should be
shipped to the Augustine school, kept here, or thrown away, and he had
suggested Lucinda be invited to help catalog them.  She couldn't
imagine why, except she supposed her view of history was very different
from the Jacobites'.  Obediently, she had spent most of the day with
the other three, leafing idly through page after page of rather dry
historical renderings, and listening to the other three talk about
electronics.  It had not been the most exciting afternoon of her
life.

And then suddenly a young Jacobite woman burst into the room, flushed
with excitement and important news.  "Did you hear?  They've found
Tamar!  They've just brought her to Conran's house."

"Who's Tamar?"  Boyce asked a second before Lucinda could voice the
words, but the Jacobites were on their feet.

"Where did they find her?  How did she get here?"  one of them
demanded.

"Tamar!  Conran thought she was dead!"  the other said.

"No, she's here, she's fine.  Although she hurt her head a few days
ago, Reuben says, and she--"

"Reuben/" Lucinda and Boyce exclaimed in unison.  Now they, too, were
on their feet, and all four of them had impatiently pushed aside their
books.

"Is Reuben back?"  Lucinda asked breathlessly, while Boyce said, "How
did she end up on The Wayward?"

"I don't know the details, I just came up to tell you," the girl said,
turning for the door.  The others came hurrying after her.

There was a small, agitated crowd outside of Conran's house, growing
larger by the minute.  Whoever this Tamar was, she was certainly
popular, Lucinda thought.  Not that she cared about missing Jacobite
women returned from the grave.  But if Reuben was back a whole week
early, that was miraculous news indeed.

He was there; she could pick out his tall, well-balanced body even from
a distance, even in a pack of Edori.  She was so focused on him that
for a moment she did not take in an even more astonishing sight: an
angel, standing a little to one side of the main knot of people,
explaining something to one of Conran's friends.

What strange coincidence would bring two angels to the Jacobite
stronghold of Sahala within two weeks of each other?

As she drew closer she was able to identify the angel, although she did
not know him well: Jared, the leader of the host at Monteverde.  She
could think of no reason he would be here.  She increased her pace to a
run (it was too short a distance to reasonably fly) and made it to the
edge of the crowd before Boyce or the others.

 Reuben saw her.  He looked straight at her and held her eyes with a
gaze that might have been speculation and might have been warning.  In
any case, it was not the expression of joyful welcome she expected, and
it stopped her cold.  But then his face softened and he motioned her
forward, and she gently pushed her way through the crowd to his side.

But when she arrived, he was not looking at her.  Like everyone else,
he was watching a painfully thin young woman who was improbably dressed
in an exotic silver outfit and speking in a low voice to Conran.  She
had her back to the angel and so Lucinda could not see her face, and
she looked inquiringly back at Reuben.

"Tamar," the Edori said, and the mortal turned his way.  And Lucinda
stared at a young woman with her own eyes and her own face, who stared
back at her as if she had been knifed in the heart.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

If Conran had not taken her arm, Tamar knew, she would have fallen
backward onto the hard stone of the walkway.  Vertigo again; but this
time caused by the shock of an unbelievable vision.  That was her face,
that angel' sface.  That was the outline of her cheek and the color of
her eyes.  That was her very expression, stupefied and incredulous. 
The angel put a hand to her mouth in a mirror image of Tamar's own
gesture.

No one spoke for what seemed like hours.  Of all the people who could
have stepped forward to offer explanations, it was the angel who first
gathered her wits into a coherent sentence.  "So you did not die when
our mother did," the angel said slowly.  "I wonder who it is, then,
that they found in her arms that night."

More madness; the words made utterly no sense.  Perhaps she was
dreaming again.  She had had such dark, fantastical dreams ever since
that Jansai had struck her on the head at Azolay.  They would come over
her, waking or sleeping, and sometimes she had a hard time
distinguishing nightmare from reality.  That must be what was happening
now.

But Conran was speaking.  "She knows nothing about that," he said
sharply.  "She was never told who her mother was or that someone like
you existed."

The angel spoke again in that same slow, marveling tone; she had a
voice like liquid copper, molten and glinting.  "Well, I was told that
she was dead.  And all this time ..."  The angel stepped forward, hands
outstretched; Tamar would have flinched backward, but Conran's body
held her in place.  "Tamar?"  she asked.  "That's your name?"

 Tamar nodded.  It was impossible to speak.  She had heard this voice
before, over and over, singing in her head.  The more the angel said,
the more certain she was.  "I'm Lucinda.  I'm your twin."

Everyone had wanted to speak to Tamar at once, but she was so exhausted
she could do no more than pass from figure to figure, submitting to
brief, fierce hugs, and whispers of gladness.  Tired as she was, she
could not keep herself from doing a mental tally, noting who was
present and who was not, and guessing from that who had fallen at the
Jansai's hands.  But maybe not.  They must have thought she was dead,
and here she was, weary but alive, coming face-to-face with her double
in the most bizarre encounter imaginable.

Within minutes, Conran shooed everyone away.  "Tomorrow, when she's
rested," he said in that voice that was never countermanded.  "She'll
talk to you all then.  For now, let her regain her footing and have a
moment or two of privacy."

Except it was not privacy, of course.  Conran allowed three others to
follow them into his house: the Edori Reuben and both angels.  Tamar
was so disoriented and dumbstruck that she still felt dizzy, and she
was comforted when Jared took her hand as they walked through the
narrow hallway.

In a few minutes they were all seated on dilapidated furniture set up
in a small living room.  Lucinda, Tamar could not help noting, had
gravitated toward the Edori.  He had ensconced himself in a wide,
battered armchair and she squeezed herself beside him, wrapping her
wings around her shoulders so the edges trailed on the floor before
her.  It did not look at all comfortable, but the angel did not seem to
mind.

Tamar seated herself at random on the edge of a plaid sofa.  Jared at
once pulled over a stool and settled beside her, shaking his wings out
behind him.  He immediately took her hand again.  Conran straddled a
straight-backed chair and laid his arms along its top.

"First, I'd like to hear the story of what happened to you," he said,
addressing Tamar.  "I went to Ileah.  I knew you had gone there.  When
there was no sign of you or the others--"

"I arrived a few days after the others, I suppose," she said.  She was
trying to keep her voice even, but to her own ears it sounded dreary
and strained.  "The Jansai had arrived a day or so before me.  There
were twelve dead and one gravely injured.  I buried the dead and nursed
the living."

"Who?"

"Peter.  He's still alive, I believe."  She looked over at Jared, who
had his eyes trained on the floor.  "This angel took him to Stockton to
seek medical attention."

Conran, too, glanced at Jared but instantly returned his attention to
Tamar.  "And then?"

"I moved on to Semorrah.  And from there to a wealthy farm outside of
Shepherd's Pass.  Where I found Jared again."  Again she looked at the
angel.  This time he met her eyes, a faint smile on his lips.  Well, at
this exact moment she was not ready to go into all her dealings with
him, all her fears and suspicions.  "He told me that Jansai were
looking for us--you, me, Duncan, a few others--they had portraits that
someone had drawn of us."

"Where did they get these portraits?"  Conran asked sharply.

She shrugged.  "From a Jacobite traitor, I suppose.  I've been thinking
about that.  Zeke seems the most likely."

"Zeke!  What makes you think he's fallen into the Jansai's hands--or
the angels'?"

"He went with me to Breven," she said baldly.  "I watched him try to
board an Edori ship.  I watched him get taken by Jansai.  If he wasn't
killed outright, he probably found a way to buy his life.  Zeke did not
have much stomach for torture, you remember.  And he was always a
passable artist.  He could have rendered our likenesses well enough."

"So Zeke--or someone--gave our pictures to the Archangel," Conran said
evenly.  "And we all suddenly became much more at risk than we
believed."

Tamar nodded tiredly.  "Jared told me I was one of the ones they were
particularly looking for.  I could not imagine why."  She glanced at
Lucinda.  "Till I saw her.  Bael must have realized who I was, although
even I did not know."

The angel leaned forward.  She had not, since they seated themselves,
once taken her eyes from Tamar's face.  "What did they tell you, then,"
she asked, "about your mother and your birth?"

Tamar rubbed a hand across her forehead.  "That she and my father had
been Jacobites, devoted to the cause.  That they had both died in the
raid that killed Jacob Fairman.  I never learned many details, but
somehow I had come to believe that one of them at least was a
Manadavvi.  I take it that wasn't true.  I take it none of the stories
were true."

"She was the daughter of an angel, and she lived in Cedar Hills,"
Lucinda said.  "She left the hold to join the Jacobites, but she was
captured a few months before the raid that killed Fairman.  My
father-our father--was an angel at the hold, and he had always adored
her.  So I was told.  While she was kept prisoner there they became
lovers.  And you and I were born."

"Twins.  Angel and mortal," Jared said, speaking for the first time.
"It had never happened before.  And has not happened since."

"They took me away from her instantly," Lucinda continued.  "One night,
a few weeks after we were born, she managed to escape with you in her
arms.  But the night was bitterly cold, and she found no shelter.  Two
days later they found her dead at the side of the road, a dead baby in
her arms."  Lucinda took a deep breath.  "Apparently, however, the baby
was not you."

All eyes in the room turned expectantly toward Conran.  He looked
astonished.  "What makes you think that I--"

"Tell us," Tamar said shortly.  "You have lied to me for twenty-eight
years.  I think I deserve to hear the true story of my life."

"I told you what your mother wanted you to know," Conran replied.

"My mother is dead.  Now tell me what I want to know."  He nodded and
spent a moment looking down at the floor, as if he was organizing his
thoughts or remembering an old tragedy he had long since managed to
forget.  "It was the coldest winter anyone could remember," he began,
in the low, emphatic voice of the born storyteller.  Everyone fell
silent to listen.  "Even in southern Jordana, where the seasons are
usually not so harsh, it was colder than a man could stand to be
outside for longer than an hour.  The Jacobites were still stricken
from the loss of Jacob Fairman, and no one was sure what to do next.
Most of us had scattered to the homes of friends and family members who
were tolerant of our incendiary politics.  Elinor and I were staying in
Luminaux in the house of her other brother's son.

"News came about Galena, one of the Jacobites, who was spending the
winter at her sister's house near Cedar Hills.  Her sister was some
sort of domestic who was employed by the angels, and she had only
begrudgingly taken Galena in because Galena was about to have a baby. 
Galena had written to Elinor asking if she could come when the baby was
due, and now, during the worst winter of the century, it was her
time.

"So Elinor and I traveled to Cedar Hills.  But by the time we arrived
on Galena's doorstep, tragedy had already come to visit.  The baby had
been born amid much bleeding, strangling on its own cord, and unable to
draw more than a single breath.  And this baby had nearly killed Galena
in the process.  When we walked in the door, the sister began
screaming, blaming us and our heresies for the baby's death and her
sister's desperate condition.  She ran from the sickroom and locked
herself in her own bedchamber, and would not emerge to watch her sister
die.

"Elinor and I turned to tending Galena, but we knew we had come too
late.  Within an hour Galena died in Elinor's arms.  I was still
ripping the mortuary cloths to use for wrapping the body when there was
a furious clamor outside.  Someone pounding at the door, someone crying
to be let in.  I ran to the door and threw it open, and on a frigid
blast of air, in tumbled Rinalda."

He paused a moment, rubbing his hands together; he seemed, even in this
close, warm house, to be suffering again from that freezing air and a
chilling discovery.  "Elinor and I dragged her to the fire and began
stripping her body of wet clothes.  She did not have the strength to
weep or speak, though we pelted her with questions.  We were stupefied
to find, as we pulled back the sweater nearest her skin, an infant girl
swaddled in rags and strapped to Rinalda's chest.

"The baby was rosy and warm, kept safe from the bitter air by the heat
of the mother's body.  We had heard, through Galena and her sister,
that Rinalda had given birth to twin girls, one angel, one mortal.
Elinor held the child in her arms and exclaimed, "Rinalda, is this your
baby girl?"  And Rinalda gathered up every last bit of strength she had
and whispered back, "Keep her safe.  Guard her from all the angels.
Never tell her who her father was or who I was.  Never let her seek out
those who have betrayed me--and will betray her.  Never!  Promise me
this!"  Elinor protested, but I promised for both of us.  Only a few
hours after this Rinalda died."

Again, Conran paused; again he seemed to shiver from a remembered cold.
"We had other friends in Cedar Hills," he said slowly.  "While Elinor
watched that baby, I ran out into the awful night to the house of a
friend who had use of a horse and cart. He and I took Rinalda and
Galena's baby and threw their bodies into the back of that cart, and we
drove as far from the lights of Cedar Hills as we could stand.  And
then we dumped those corpses on the side of the road, brutally
unprotected from the malice of winter, and left them there for anyone
to discover.  And may I say that I have not, since I was a boy,
believed in the existence of the god, but that night for the whole
drive back to Cedar Hills, I prayed for those two wretched, abandoned
souls.

"When I returned to Galena's sister's house, Elinor was gone.  She had
taken the baby to another friend and left Galena for me to prepare for
burial.  This I did.  It was while I was sorting through Rinalda's
clothes one last time that I found a roll fifty gold coins sewn into a
pocket.  I put them aside to give to her baby girl at a time that would
seem appropriate.

"The next morning, when Galena's weeping sister finally emerged from
her room, I told her that we had wrapped the dead baby in the dead
woman's arms.  I remember that she nodded and seemed pleased.  "Good.
Galena will keep her warm," she said to me.  I thought of that frozen
body out on the Jorda:na highways, and said nothing.

"Elinor and I stayed for the funeral and left for Luminaux as soon as
we could, the purloined baby in our arms.  It was two days before we
thought to give the child a name.  I wanted to choose something
rebellious and wild, for Rinalda would never have given her daughter a
traditional name culled from the Librera.  But Elinor was adamant.  "We
will call her Tamar," she said.  "For the Tamar of legend was also a
seditious mortal born to angels.  It is a name that will serve her
well."  And Tamar she thereafter became."

He fell silent again, now reviewing a more recent history, and then he
sighed.  "We did what we could for that baby," he said.  He still had
not raised his eyes to look at Tamar, or any of them.  "We gave her
whatever love we had.  We taught her the things we knew.  We raised her
on what we still believe is the truth.  But it has been a hard life for
her, as it has been for us, and I have wondered more than once what
would have happened to her had Rinalda not stolen her away from her
prison in Cedar Hills."

He sighed deeply and finally looked at his audience, glancing from face
to face as if gauging how deeply each listener had been struck by the
story.  Tamar herself was numb.  Her head was pounding, her eyes felt
oiled in acid; she could not move, she could scarcely think.  She did
not want to hear one more word of this terrible story.

"And I wonder," Conran said with a little more passion, "why she picked
that night of all nights to flee from Cedar Hills.  Surely there had
been other opportunities to run--or would be again.  Why the night so
cold that no one could survive it?"

A small voice spoke from the other side of the room.  Or at least the
voice seemed small.  Perhaps Tamar's ears had merely shrank down.
"Because that was the night Bael chose to help her."

"What?"  That word was much closer, much louder, leaping from Jared's
lips.  "Who told you that?"

"My aunt Gretchen.  She says she saw Bael sneak into my mother's
chamber that night and usher her from the hold.  She says Bael wanted
her to die in the winter night.  She says that's why she took me away
from Cedar Hills."

Conran nodded soberly.  "It is about what I would expect of him, to
murder a helpless girl in a cruel and clever way.  And it makes me glad
to think that we have fooled him all these years by keeping Tamar alive
and whole.  Would that we could have saved a hundred more just like
her."

Tamar shut her eyes.  She could not keep the room in focus; Conran
spoke awhile longer but none of his words registered.  She heard
various voices call out her name but she did not have the strength to
respond. Her head expanded and contracted with a slow, painful rhythm,
and all she wanted to do was sleep.

"There's a room upstairs," Conran said, and suddenly she was swept up
in someone's arms--Jared's, she knew, for she had become quite familiar
with the feel of his arms around her.  He climbed a short stairway and
within minutes had laid her on a narrow bed.  She had a confused
impression of shapes and shadows around her, and she caught fragments
of whispered consultations.  "Let me stay with her," a woman said, and
a man protested.  Tamar did not care if all of them camped out on the
floor or abandoned this room, this house, this village utterly.  She
turned to her side, and she slept.

 Dreaming again.  Or perhaps not.  It was hard to tell sleep from
reality, nightmare from memory.  Light and dark fenced and feinted,
gleaming thrust and parry; figures bulged into menace, then melted into
sweet brilliance.  More than once, someone held fiery liquid to her
mouth, and she drank, spilling droplets down her cheek and into her
collar.  When she cried out in her sleep, someone was instantly at her
side, cool hand on her forehead, low voice chasing away terror.  She
never saw this person's face, but she was not sure; it could have been
a parade of people, dozens of hands, or it could have been the
disembodied spirits of her imagination.

Once in a while she was sure she woke, fevered but lucid, and then she
opened her eyes.  Somewhere in the room there was a low, electric light
that threw all the shapes into unwavering relief: the tall dresser, the
cracked cheval mirror, the straight-backed chair placed a few feet from
her bed.  Every time she woke, she felt a moment's surge of panic, a
desperate sense of desolation, till she looked over at that chair and
saw the familiar sight: angel wings draped across a sleeping body,
white feathers drifting across the floor.  Only then did the fear
subside, only then could she sleep again.

And has it come to this?  she thought crossly during one of those brief
clearheaded periods.  That I cannot sleep without an angel by my side?
But these past few days she had grown so dependent on Jared's strength
that now she could not sleep unless he was there to guard her.  She
woke; she craned her neck till she could catch a glimpse of those sleek
wings; and then she slept again.

It was morning before she woke again to the instant sensation of
health.  Her body felt light, hollowed out but clean, no longer
harboring pain or the mysterious clouds of the brain.  She shifted
position under the bunched sheets, testing the resilience of her
muscles, and the bed creaked beneath her weight.  She heard the angel
in the nearby chair rustle to his feet.  She pushed herself to a seated
position and turned to smile at him ruefully.

But it was not Jared who stood there watching her, half hopeful and
half afraid; it was not Jared whose presence had calmed her in the
night and watched over her fretful dreaming.  Tamar stared unsmilingly
at Lucinda, and her sister stared back.

The mortal woman was the first to speak.  "Was it you here all night?"
she asked in a neutral voice.

Lucinda did not come a step nearer; she appeared to be waiting for an
invitation.  She twisted an emerald ring on her finger as if she could
not check the nervous gesture.  "All night," she said, "though the
others came by often to check on you.  Jared came to the door almost
every hour.  He was extremely worried."

Jared.  And there was a problem she would have to consider very soon,
for how had it happened that he had become so essential to her peace of
mind, so necessary to her happiness, that his was the first face she
looked for when she woke?  "I think I feel better," she said
cautiously.  "Someone gave me some medicine."

"Conran.  He thought it would help you.  Jared says you were hit on the
head."

"Well, I've been hit on the head before and it never knocked me
senseless for five days," Tamar said irritably.  Lucinda smiled, then
tried to hide it.

Tamar studied the face so like her own, truer than a mirror image.  Of
course the hair was not a ghastly shade of half-dyed brown, as hers
was, and the eyes were not shadowed with a week of delirium, but it was
her nose, her chin, her own hesitant, questioning expression.  "I don't
like angels, you know," she offered.  "None of us do.  I have been
taught that they are the source of all the wretchedness in the
world."

Lucinda allowed her smile to grow, and she came two steps closer to the
bed.  "Well, I wish I could say that I've heard only dreadful things
about the Jacobites, but to tell you the truth, I never heard much
about them on Angel Rock.  So I have no long-standing prejudice against
you."

"I still cannot quite believe it," Tamar said.  "No one ever told me I
had a sister."

"They told me you were dead," Lucinda said earnestly.  She had gathered
the courage to push her chair closer to the bed, and now she sat beside
the invalid.  "I used to ask my aunt Gretchen to tell me the story over
and over again, till finally she refused to repeat it one more time.  I
think I was always hoping it would have a different ending.  Not until
last night did my hopes come true."

"I can hear you, you know," Tamar said abruptly.  "Singing. And I can
feel you flying.  At first it frightened me, it made me dizzy, and I
didn't know what was happening.  But after a while I grew to like it
even when I  didn't know what it was.  Then Jared took me into his arms
and flew across the river, and I recognized the sensation.  Flying.  I
must have felt it every time you took wing."

"I think I have been having your dreams," Lucinda said in a quiet
voice.  "Dark and violent, full of despair and bloodshed.

I would wake sad and wondering in the middle of the night."

"Some of them were not dreams," Tamar said.

Lucinda nodded.  "That's what I was afraid of.  That makes it even
worse.  But how could this be?  I never dreamed of you before."

"Not until the Gloria," Tamar said.  "That's when I had the Kiss
installed in my arm.  I hoped it would make me invisible to the Jansai,
which it did not.  All it did was make me dizzy with your flying and
put your singing inside my head."

"My singing?  Surely you could not hear my voice."

"Oh yes, I could," Tamar said.  "Things without words.  One song over
and over again."  And she hummed the first few bars of the music she
had been hearing for the past two months.  Lucinda grew very still.

"That's impossible," the angel whispered.  "No one knows that melody
but me."

"And the descant," Tamar added, and hummed a few notes of that for good
measure.  Lucinda appeared almost stricken.

"I believe you," she said, still in that low, amazed voice.  "But I do
not see how it can be so."

"The first time I heard you was the morning of the Gloria," Tamar said.
"I was standing on the streets of Breven and your voice came from some
transmitter, broadcast all the way from the Plain of Sharon.  I
couldn't move.  I couldn't think.  My Kiss actually ached in my arm.  I
thought it was because I had only had it installed the night before.
But it must have been responding to the sound of your voice."

Lucinda was shaking her head as if shaking away the doubt, and when she
spoke, there was the barest teasing edge to her voice.  "And does that
make you more likely to believe in the existence of Jovah, that he
could make your Kiss respond to the sound of your sister's singing?"

"It makes me more convinced of the existence of the computer Jehovah,"
Tamar retorted, "for only a machine could track the lives of separated
siblings."

Lucinda laughed aloud, a sound both rare and familiar to Tamar; so,
too, did she laugh, on the infrequent occasions when she had cause.
"You Jacobites have an answer for everything, as I have been learning,"
she said gaily.  "But it will take more than a little plausible
scientific theory to make me discard my god."

Tamar smiled back.  "I am willing to try to convert you," she said.  "I
am willing to tell you all about the life of a Jacobite--and then I
suppose I must ask you to tell me all about the life of an angel."

Lucinda's smile faded, and she grew instantly sober.  She gazed at her
sister with a serious, intent expression.  "I am afraid of you, a
little," she said in a quiet voice.  "Because your life has been so
hard, and my life has been so easy.  Because you have no reason to
trust me or Jared or any of us.  And because I want you to like us--to
like me.  I have only known you for one day and already I am afraid to
lose you.  You have no reason not to walk away from us, from me, and I
don't know how to make you stay.  I don't know how to tell you how much
it means to me to have found you--after all this tragedy, after all
this time."

Tamar was not in the habit of adopting strangers; she was not used to
making room for newcomers in her heart.  But this woman, this stranger
...  All Tamar's habitual wariness deserted her.  All her defenses
undid themselves of their own accord.

don't know that I could leave you behind even if I wanted to," she
replied slowly.  "Even if I crushed this Kiss in my arm, I think I
would still hear your voice.  I have become attuned to you.  Jehovah
woke the bond, but I think it is a bond past breaking.  I am afraid,
too, but not of losing you.  I am afraid of what it means to have found
you."

Lucinda flowed to her feet and threw her arms around her sister.
Neither was Tamar used to indiscriminate hugs from chance-met
acquaintances, but she did not draw back.  This felt familiar, this
felt right.  Even when those delicate wings came curving around her
shoulders, wrapping her in a texture that was half lace and half sinew,
she did not pull away.  It was as if she was embraced by her own soul,
insubstantial but indestructible.

 She felt her bones give up their accustomed fight and her blood go
dancing backward in her veins.

The sisters talked without pause for the next two hours.  It was not
until a voice outside the door offered the enticement of food that they
were willing to allow a third party to disturb their long reminiscing.
They had been right to keep the door closed long, Tamar thought with
disfavor as the room was suddenly filled with an army of well-wishers:
not only Conran and Jared.  but Reuben and what must be half the
Jacobites living in Sahala.  Two of them swept her off the bed into
energetic embraces, then began to interrogate her about the details of
her last three months.  Tamar sighed, smiled, and submitted.

She caught Jared's eyes on her from across the room, but could do no
more than nod when he raised his eyebrows at her in a questioning look.
Yes; much better.  To prove it, she ate more food than she had managed
in the past forty-eight hour's, and for the first time in twice as long
did not feel nauseated when she had finished her meal.  Some wonder
drug in Conran's potion, but that was hardly a surprise.  If there were
such a medicine available, Conran would know about it and have some at
his disposal.  Conran knew everything.

Except the location of the Alleluia Files.  None of them knew that.

It was another hour before Tamar was able to convince them all to leave
the room so she could bathe and dress herself.  Of course, no one left
until Conran ordered a general exodus, and even then two or three of
the Jacobite women were indignant to learn that he had included them in
the general retreat.  The two angels also left the room, both with
regretful backward glances, and Tamar luxuriated in the first solitude
she had known for what seemed like months.

But she was back among her people, ready to take up the fight again.
She cleaned herself and put on fresh clothes and rejoined them, feeling
lighthearted and happy as she had not felt since she left Luminaux for
Ileah.

The instant she descended the steps she was caught up in their fervor
again.  "Tamar, Duncan says the Edori engineers have found a way to
communicate over long distances with a simple transmitter device.  It
works over a thousand miles, can you imagine?  ...  Tamar, Horace says
there is a merchant in Semorrah who is sympathetic to the cause.
Christian Avalone, have you heard of him?  They say he is a very
powerful ally."

"Tamar, how many were killed at Ileah?  Jani wants to record the
flames."

This was the community she remembered, urgent and speculative and
knocked about by dreams.  Whatever kindness she had been shown by
well-meaning strangers in Jordana, in Se-morrah, in Bethel, these were
the only friends she could remember.  She answered their rapid-fire
questions when she knew the answers and shot back questions of her own
when she did not; she laughed when the remarks were outrageous and grew
sad when the news was grim.  She knew the cadence of every voice and
the history of every last soul, and she rejoiced to be among them
again.

But as she talked with one eager group and waved to another, her
attention was caught by a still, waiting figure in the back corner of
Conran's living room.  It was Jared.  He watched her without intruding,
without reaching out a hand to separate her from her comrades, without
questioning their doctrine or railing against their heresy.  And she
thought, almost at the same time, He has returned me, against his
deepest principles, to the circle of my friends and I would leave them
all for him.  And the thought made her shudder and turn away from him,
because she could no longer withstand his grave and searching look, and
she did not want to go to him before all her friends and take his hand
in hers.

Not until late that evening did Tamar have a chance to speak to Jared
privately.  As she had expected, Conran had turned her homecoming into
an occasion for a celebration, and so the whole Jacobite population of
the village turned out that evening for a bonfire.  Horace had gone
hunting with some of the Edori and brought back two deer and the
carcass of an unidentified beast whose cooked flesh tasted much like
rabbit.  These were roasted over the fire ("specifically," Tamar
overheard someone say, "so that half will be burned and half will be
raw and the whole will be inedible").  The meat was supplemented with a
marvelous array of fruits, potatoes, breads, and sweets, and Tamar ate
to the point of pain.  Some of the food was wholly unfamiliar to
her--raised, she supposed, in this strange and fertile terrain.  It all
tasted wonderful.

 As darkness fell and spirits rose Tamar was able to slip from the
close attention of her Jacobite friends.  Over on one end of the
campground, Conran was telling stories by the magical yellow light of
the fire; a few yards away, others were standing in a group, gossiping.
It was not hard to spot the angels, their wings making distinctive
silhouettes and menacing shadows against the uneven illumination of the
fire.

"So odd," Jared was saying to Lucinda as Tamar strolled over.  "At any
other gathering I've ever been to, this would be the point at which
someone would come up to me and ask for the favor of a song."

"Yes!  I was just thinking that!"  Lucinda exclaimed.  "Even on Angel
Rock, everyone considered it such a treat to hear angels sing."

Jared laughed softly.  "Well," he said, "I think we must concede that
we are out of favor here."

"Not entirely true," Tamar said, and they both turned to welcome her.
"They are pleased to have me back among them, and they thank you for
that.  But no one really knows what you want with the Jacobites or how
long you plan on staying."

"That's a question I've pondered myself," Lucinda said with a sigh.
"Not that everyone hasn't been extremely kind to me but I cannot hide
in Sahala the rest of my life.  And I doubt that the Jacobites would
want me."

"They probably don't want me, either, but I'm staying," Jared said. "I
came here to learn about the Alleluia Files, and I'm not leaving until
I learn where they are and what they say."

Tamar laughed.  "Nobody knows that," she said.

"Then I suppose I'll be staying for a very long time."

Tamar laughed again, but Lucinda's attention had wandered.  "There's
Reuben," she said.  "I'll catch up with you two later."

"Edori angelico," Tamar murmured, for they had had time, in that long
afternoon discussion, to cover such topics of interest as handsome
angels and Edori lovers.  Lucinda appeared ~finstered, then she
laughed, and then she slipped away.

"Well, she seems happy," Jared said.

Tamar looked at him curiously by the shifting light.  "How well do you
know her?"  she asked.

He shrugged.  "I'd only met her a couple of times till this week.  She
lived a very sequestered life, as she may have told you--"

"Yes, on Angel Rock."

"In fact, until she came to the Gloria, I'd never met her or heard her
story.  Why?"

"I just wondered.  If you'd known Lucinda, it seems you should have
recognized me immediately.  Reuben did."

"Reuben appears to have known Lucinda much better than I did," Jared
replied dryly.  "And Bael must have memorized her features as well, for
he seems to have instantly connected the two of you once he saw your
portrait."

"That still makes no sense to me," she said, shaking her head.  "Even
the fact that I am Rinalda's daughter--Lucinda's twin--makes me no more
dangerous to Bael than any other Jacobite.  I cannot imagine why he
would want to hunt me down."

"I'm sure he has his reasons," Jared said with a smile.  "I'll ask him
next time I see him."

Tamar smiled, but quickly grew serious again.  She said, with some
difficulty, for she was not trained in gratitude, "I never got a chance
to thank you."

"For what?"  Jared said flippantly.  "For hounding you all over Samaria
and stealing you from your home?"

"For saving me from death at the hands of Jansai," she said soberly.
"Or the hands of Bael"

"It was self-interest, of course," he said.  "I thought the Jacobites
would be more pleased to see me if I had you in my arms."

She was irrationally disappointed; she felt all that splendid food turn
to spiky granite in her stomach.  "Well," she said shortly.  "You did
save my life.  And I appreciate it."

She turned away, back to the fire, back to her friends, but Jared
stopped her with a hand on her arm.  "I was only joking," he said
quietly.  "Had I arrived a minute later--too late to save you--I don't
know what I would have done to those Jansai.  Called down lightning
bolts, I think, that would have burned all of Azolay to ashes.  I don't
remember the last time I've been so frightened.  I suppose I've never
before seen someone I cared about in danger."

But that was worse; now the stone in her stomach had erupted into
flames.  She felt heat rise in the unlikeliest places, up her elbows,
across her brow.  "Well," she said, and she could hear that her voice
was grooved with panic.  "Well, I don't suppose, I guess the Jansai
don't usually go around attacking your friends.  You wouldn't have
those kinds of friends, I mean."

Now he was smiling, and even by this light she could see the mischief
in his face.  "Jacobite angelica," he murmured.  "You do know that, in
some quarters, I am considered the odds-on favorite to be the next
Archangel?"

"I can think of no one more ill-suited," she snapped, and he laughed
out loud.

"No, neither can I," he agreed.  "But the field of candidates is
woefully thin."

The dangerous moment seemed to have passed.  Tamar was both relieved
and sorry.  "Won't your friends miss you if you stay too long in
Ysral?"  she asked.  "Won't they wonder where you've gone?"

"Some of them know.  Most of them wouldn't worry, I have a reputation
for being a little irresponsible, you know.  A little undependable."

"Oh, yes, an excellent Archangel," she murmured.

"So, anyway, no one guards my whereabouts too closely, and people are
quite resigned to doing without my valuable presence.  Even at
Monteverde, where I am supposed to be in charge of everything, my
mother and my sister have accustomed themselves to taking over my
tasks.  I don't think anyone will miss me."

She tilted her head to one side and regarded him.  "So what do you care
about?"  she asked.  "You blithely abandon your duties at your own
hold, and it's obvious you don't want to be Archangel, and apparently
nothing can keep your attention for more than a day or two.  Don't you
have any passions?  Any convictions?  Anything you would risk your life
for?"

"You said that to me once," he said suddenly.  "In Ileah."

"Did I?  I don't remember."

"I'm not sure I know too many people who would risk their lives--for
anything," he said.

She gestured broadly with both hands.  "Everyone at this campfire
tonight," she said.  "For their ideals.  For the chance to express
their beliefs.  For their friends.  All of us would hazard our
lives--all of us have already done so.  I don't think you can truly say
you've lived until you know what you'd die for,"

"You're too young to talk about dying a martyr."

"And you're too old not to have found a cause,"

He smiled a little bitterly.  "Why is it that every time I talk to you,
I end up feeling like a wastrel and a rogue?  Most people like me, you
know.  I wish you did."

"I do," she said quickly, too quickly.  She liked him too much, and
that was a tendre that would come to no good.  Jacobite angelica,
indeed.  "And I did not come here to censure you.  I came to thank you
for saving my life."

He nodded majestically.  "It was an honor," he said, his voice grave.
"I would say that I would gladly do so again, except that I would not
gladly see you in danger again.  But you worry me.  You do not seem
like the kind of woman who sees much value in keeping herself safe."

"I am cautious enough most of the time," she said.  "You don't need to
be anxious on my account."

He smiled again but looked wholly unconvinced.  "Something tells me,"
he said, "that I shall live to see you made a liar."

She laughed.  "Then I hope you will be with me," she said, "so you can
rescue me from my folly."

"So do I," he said, not laughing at all.  She could not hear the words
he added under his breath, but she thought they were, "And I plan to
be."

Even if she had had an answer to that (which she did not), she had no
chance to make it.  A group of Jacobites suddenly swirled around her,
enveloping both Tamar and Jared in an enthusiastic eddy.  "Back to
Conran's--he's got some Edori wine!"  someone called out as the crowd
swept by, and Tamar allowed herself to be caught up in the general
merriment.

There were too many of them to fit comfortably into Conran's small
parlor, but they managed it anyway, women perching on men's laps,
children sitting cross-legged on the floor, a few restless souls
lurking in the doorway or pacing back and forth between the kitchen and
the living room.  Tamar found herself wedged into an oversized armchair
next to Jani, with Horace balancing himself on the padded arm. He had
one hand braced against the wall, one arm wrapped around her
shoulders.

"So when do we go back to Samaria?"  someone asked, and everyone in the
room raised their glasses to toast that venture.

"Can't stay here the rest of our lives like whining dogs run out of the
house," someone else called out.  "Our place is in Samaria.  That's
where our mission is."

"Yes, but if we all die trying to accomplish this mission, who's left
to tell the truth about Jehovah?"  Conran asked reasonably.  "Everyone
in this room has had a narrow escape from death in the past three
months.  Shouldn't we wait till the furor dies down?"

There was a general outcry at that, most of it vehemently opposed.  "I
say, let's go right back at them!"  Duncan said very loudly, and half a
dozen of the other young hotheads cheered.  "Head straight to Breven
and take out a few Jansai to pay them back for the Jacobites they've
murdered."

"I'm on the first boat back!"  Horace cried, jumping to his feet.  On
the instant ten more followed suit.

Conran stood patient and inflexible at the front of the room and waited
for the uproar to calm down.  "Go to Breven.  and most certainly it
will not be the Jansai who end up dead," he said when the noise had
faded enough for him to be heard.  "I say again, why not wait?  I am
not talking forever, you understand, but a few months, less than a
year--"

"Why wait?"  a woman called out, and a few others echoed her.  "Wait
for what?"  someone else asked.

"Wait till the next Gloria, perhaps," Conran said.  "When the new
Archangel is chosen."

"The Archangel--" Twenty voices spoke in stupefied unison.  "Why do we
care who the Archangel is?"  Jani wanted to know.

"Because we don't know who the Archangel will be," Conran said calmly.
"And it may be someone who is--not favorable toward us, perhaps, but
more tolerant.  More open-minded.  Someone who might rein in the Jansai
and allow us to live in peace.  Is not that a possibility that merits
the wait of a few unimportant months, mikele?  Is it not?"

As always, his use of an Edori word (this one meaning "children" or
"young boys") brought a rippling laugh from his fellow Jacobites.  "But
what shall we do in Ysral for nine months or more?"  someone demanded.
"Farm?  Raise cattle?  I don't think so!"

"And why not?"  Conran said.  "Are you too good to work with your
hands, doing honest labor?"

"I would rather carry the truth to the unbelievers than dig holes in
the ground for corn to grow, yes!"

"Well, whether you are preaching or whether you are merely biding your
time, you have to eat, so you will work and I will work and everyone in
this room will work, and I don't want to hear a single word of
complaint from any of you."

That would shut them up for a minute, Tamar thought with a private
smile, but of course it didn't.  Duncan flung out a new question almost
before the words were out of Conran's mouth.  Tamar let her attention
stray as she looked around the room.  Again, against her will, she was
counting heads and tallying up the losses.  She could not entirely
sympathize with the fanatics who were so eager to rush back to Samaria
and engage in a hand-to-hand struggle with death.  She would not mind a
few weeks, or a few months, to recover from her own encounters with
that dark and powerful warrior.

Her eyes wandered to Jared, who was leaning against one wall with his
wings held as compactly to his body as possible.  She wondered what he
thought of all this, if he secretly despised the passionate but aimless
Jacobites, if he envied them for their conviction--or if, as she had
thought long ago, he was really here as a spy and a traitor, and was
even now gathering evidence against them.

But she did not believe that.  It could not be true.  Even if her own
heart could not be trusted, Conran was not a man easily deceived, and
Conran seemed to have no quarrel with the angel.  It was a small
comfort, but she would take whatever portion she was served.

Talk had turned now, as it always did, to the elusive object of their
obsessive quest.  "But what of the Alleluia Files?"  a woman asked, and
again the crowd was unanimous in its murmuring response.  "Yes, we must
keep looking."

"Dawn had no luck breaching Mount Sinai, did she?  I thought not."

"But if they are really at the angel holds, as we all believe, how
shall we find them?  I don't think there is a disguise good enough to
get one of us into the Eyrie."

"The Alleluia Files are not in the Eyrie," Jared said, speaking for the
first time and drawing every eye.  Most of the Jacobites viewed him
with mistrust, Tamar saw, and a few watched him with actual dislike.

"And may I ask how you come by this information?"  Duncan asked with
sarcastic politeness.

Jared shrugged so slightly that his wings barely shifted.  "I looked
for them," he said.  "In the music rooms and the archives of the hold.
I also searched for them at Monteverde.  It's possible that I
overlooked them somewhere, but the holds seem like unlikely hiding
places, anyway."

"And where would you have stored them, if they had been yours to hide?"
Horace asked.

Jared regarded him coolly across the room.  He might be accustomed only
to open-armed welcomes, as he had told Tamar earlier, but he was not in
the least cowed by snarling hostility.

"If I was the oracle, I would most likely have secreted them in Mount
Sinai," the angel replied.  "I take it you've looked there and been
unsuccessful?"

"We've never gotten past the outer rooms," Conran said briefly.  "Dawn
tried to gain admittance to the inner chambers a few months back but
was not able to manage it."

"We need a young girl we can offer as an acolyte," Jani said.  "Or a
young boy.  One who can be sent to the oracles to be trained at Mount
Sinai or Mount Egypt or Mount Sudan.  Then we will have a sympathizer
at the very heart of Samarian society.  We will learn all the 'holy'
secrets--and we will find the Alleluia Files, if they are there."

"Not a bad plan," Jared said.  "But most of the acolytes are chosen
from the gentry.  How would you pass off one of your Jacobite children
as a Manadavvi daughter or a river merchant's heir?"

"We will think of a way," Jani said, raising her chin defiantly.  "And
without the help of the angels."

Jared laughed at her.  "Lest you forget," he said, "your precious
Alleluia was an angel, too."

Jani looked angry enough to toss back an unforgivable insult, but
Conran intervened before she could speak.  "Manners, mikele, manners,"
he said.  "If you would be better than the allali, you must start with
your behavior.  Besides, this angel has been a friend to us.  Why would
you want to abuse him?"

"I'll see his friendship proved," Horace muttered, but no one else
dared to offer a retort.

"Back to the files," said someone in the back of the room.  Tamar
thought it was Wyman.  "What if they're not at Mount Sinai or one of
the other sanctuaries?  What then?  We must have an alternate plan.  We
must look in every possible hiding place."

"I agree," said Conran, but before he could continue, voices called out
from around the room.  "The ruins of the Augustine school!  ...
Luminaux!  ...  Hagar's Tooth!  ...  Semorrah!  Well, why not?  You can
buy anything else you want there."  "The Plain of Sharon." 
"Breven--it's the last place anyone would look."

Conran held up his hand for order.  "Chahiela, my friends! Chahiela! 
If anyone is to be heard, everyone else should be silent."

Tamar was as startled as everyone else to see Jared practically jump
away from the wall.  His wings swept back and he looked somehow taller,
suddenly imposing.  Actually, it was not at all difficult to see why
some might want to name him Archangel.

"What did you just say?"  he demanded of Conran.

The Jacobite leader lifted his eyebrow.  "In the Edori tongue, I called
for silence," he said.  "I did not mean to be so rude as to exclude you
from the conversation."

Jared shook his head impatiently.  "No, no, not rude ... The word you
used--'chahiela'?  Isn't that a place, as well as an Edori
expression?"

Conran nodded.  "Yes, it is a town on the very southern tip of Bethel.
It was founded, oh, a century or so ago, as a school for the blind and
the deaf."  He smiled.  "That is why it was named Chahiela.  After the
Edori word for silence."

Jared stood with his chin tilted slightly toward the ceiling, in a pose
that made the skin tighten across his cheeks.  Tamar was sure his
stance looked like arrogance to some, but to her it looked like he was
merely trying to contain excitement.  Mystified as the others, she sat
up straighter in her chair.

"Chahiela is where the oracle Jecoliah was raised," the angel said
slowly.  "She told me so herself.  She is nearly blind and she was sent
to that school to receive an education."

"Doesn't sound like she was the child of a Manadavvi lord ling," Jani
said with a little sniff.

Jared nodded absently.  "You're right.  She wasn't.  And neither was
the oracle before her, who was named Deborah--who also came from
Chahiela.  Or the oracle before her--who was born in Chahiela, at the
school her mother founded."

"But the oracle before Deborah--" someone said, and there was a long,
strained silence, as all the untutored Jacobites struggled to recall
their sketchy history lessons.

Conran was the one who remembered it first.  "Was Alleluia," he said.

After that, there was not enough chahiela for anyone to speak more than
two sentences together before someone else interrupted.  Almost before
Jared could finish his next sentence ("Where better to hide something
you wanted no one to find than in a place where no one can see?") there
was a babble of voices raised in speculation and excitement.  Tamar
felt it, too that curious melting flutter at the center of her abdomen,
but it her case it was augmented by equal parts wonder, pride, and
fear. The angel is my friend, I brought him here, she wanted to say,
shaking her finger in the faces of all those who doubted him; but in
fact she did not move a muscle.  He might not be correct, of course,
though his solution had that seamless ring of rightness that you would
sometimes get when you filled together two broken pieces of china after
trying for half an hour to get the edges to match.  Right or wrong, in
any case, his was a better idea than any they had come up with in the
past years, and she felt rosy with his reflected glory.

But she was afraid, too.  Afraid because, before the first person in
the room yelled out the words, she knew what the next motion would be
for: an immediate visit to Chahiela to look for the hidden files.  Back
to Samaria, back to the haunts of the angel and the lairs of the
Jansai. And there was no way she could stay behind if all of her
comrades were going.

"When can we set sail?"  Duncan was saying.  "Tomorro, Is there a ship
in port?"

"The Wayward," someone replied.  "But it will only hold about ten of
us."

"Ten is all we need."

"And who will volunteer to stay behind?  Not me!  We need a ship big
enough to carry all of us."

"We need no such thing," Conran said firmly enough to get everyone's
attention.  "I agree, we must get to Chahiela quickly as possible, but
there is no need to be stupid about it.  Some of us must be left behind
in case this mission somehow goes awry.  Ten is plenty.  Ten is more
than enough."

"Who will go?  Shall we have a lottery?"

"We shall choose based on need," Conran said.

"You need fighting men," Duncan said instantly.  "So you must have
me."

"And me," Horace chimed in.

"What we must have is a translator," Conran said.  "Because the oracles
use the old language to communicate with Jehovah.  And there's no
reason Alleluia would not have made her memoirs hard to decipher if she
would make them hard to find."

"Does anyone in your group know the old language?"  Jared asked.  "I
thought only the oracles were taught it."

"Many of the Augustine engineers have learned it so that they can read
manuals printed in that text," Conran said.  "A few of the Jacobites
have also learned it, but most of them are dead.  I myself could never
master the words.  At the moment there is only one linguist among
us."

Somehow he had guessed, for Jared looked straight at the Jacobite he
had rescued from certain death.  "Who is it?"  he asked.

"Tamar."

She met the angel's eyes as if that was the hardest thing she had ever
done, as if his gaze had a weight and a pressure that she could not
lift with all the strength in her body.  If he only knew how much she
wanted to recuperate here in Sahala, give up her place on that Edori
boat, frolic here in the forgiving Ysral sunshine and let her mind
graze absently over unimportant things.  But.  She was a Jacobite and
this was the grail Jacobites had sought since before she was born.  If
it was within their grasp and only she had the key to decoding it,
there was simply no choice.

"When do we sail?"  she asked.

Jared was shaking his head.  He was still staring at her as if there
was no one else in the room, no one else in the world.

"She can't go," he said.

Conran looked over at him in mild shock.  "And why not?"

"She just barely escaped from Samaria a few days ago!  And she was
half-dead then!  Her picture is in the hands of every Jansai on the
continent--"

"So is mine, so is Duncan's, so are the faces of half the people in
this room," Conran said dismissively.  "Tamar is in no more danger than
the rest of us.  And if she is too sick to leave tomorrow, well, then
we will wait until she is recovered.  A week or more will not hurt us
when we have waited decades."

"She can't go," Jared said flatly.

Conran laughed at him.  "I don't know that you have too much to say
about it," he said genially.

 "I have a lot to say about it."

"I mean, that will do any good," Conran added gently.

Someone laughed, and then everyone was talking at once.  No one paid
attention anymore to the angel or Conran, still arguing over the rising
tumult of voices--and they scarcely paid attention to each other,
either, so eager were they to share their own opinions and excitement.
Chahiela!  But of course!  They should have thought of that before, but
it didn't matter now.  The Alleluia Files were within their grasp, they
were days away from hearing the words that would validate their lives
and change the whole face of Samaria.

Tamar remembered similar times, similar epiphanies, when they had
thought they had uncovered the miracle and then found that all their
speculations were wrong.  But that had not stopped them from trying,
from hoping, from believing.  And if they were wrong this time, so be
it; that would not end their quest or make them lose their faith.  Till
we find the Alleluia Files.  That had been their credo for so long that
it was their only absolute.  Nothing would keep them from Chahiela
now--not angels, not Jansai, not Jovah himself, should he manifest
himself before them at this very moment and claim to be a deity after
all.

But Tamar was afraid to go.  And although nothing--certainly not this
furious angel even now engaged in a shouting match with the unyielding
Conran--nothing would prevent her from boarding that ship whatever day
they decided to sail, she could not shake off a cold sense of prescient
dread.  Whatever awaited them in Chahiela, she thought, would change
them forever, unless it destroyed them utterly.  And though she tried
to join in the revelry of her ecstatic friends, she could not shake
that conviction from her heart, and she could not truly rejoice.

Tamar successfully avoided Jared that night and the next day, but there
was one angel she was anxious to say good-bye to before The Wayward
sailed.  Conran had met with the ship's captain (Mario?  Tamar could
not quite remember, but then, she had been hallucinating for most of
her voyage on that vessel).  They had determined not only that the
Edori captain was willing to make the trip but that he could
accommodate eight Jacobites as passengers.  "Nine if Reuben agrees to
stay behind," the captain had said with a smile.  "And something tells
me he'll be more than willing."

There was no tree port at Chahiela, but there was a natural harbor not
far from the town that smugglers and Edori and most ship captains in
dire need knew how to find.  The Wayward would drop anchor there, and
the Jacobites would be able to find their way to Chahiela in a matter
of hours.

Conran had chosen the seven Jacobites who would accompany him on this
mission and high-handedly refused to listen to the petitions of those
who would be left behind.  Besides Tamar, he had selected Duncan,
Horace, and Jani, as well as an eighteen-year-old girl named Loa and
two young men named Sal and Wyman.  It was clear to everyone that,
except for himself, chosen for seniority, and Tamar, chosen for special
abilities, his criteria had been health, strength, swiftness, and
skill.  If they really were overtaken by the Jansai, he wanted to give
his little band a fighting chance.

As the captain had expected, Reuben had readily agreed to yield his
place to a Jacobite passenger, but that ninth slot had been ferociously
bespoken by Jared, and Conran had reluctantly ceded him the honor.
Tamar's reaction to the news of Jared's inclusion was beginning to feel
familiar: a mixture of elation, terror, and dread.  In such cramped
quarters, it would be hard to avoid the angel entirely, and she did not
particularly want to hear what he had to say about the folly of young
women who continually exposed themselves to danger.

On the other hand, it was hard to imagine returning to Samaria without
him.  Going anywhere without him.  Existing with out him.  But of
course, that day would come.

And she was finding it harder than she had imagined to leave another
angel behind.

"But I have only just found you!"  Lucinda wailed when she heard the
news.  It was the morning after the fateful meeting, and the Jacobites
were engaged in a frenzy of packing.  "Can't you stay behind?  Can't
someone else translate these stupid files?"

"Maybe.  Maybe not.  Not if they're in the old tongue."

"I can't bear to have you leave so soon."

"I'll come back as soon as I can.  I promise."

Lucinda sighed and tried to shake away her blues.  "I feel like I
should give you a talisman for luck," she said.  "I don't have--I know!
 My necklace.  The perfect thing."

"I don't need any good-luck charms," Tamar said, but the angel had
already leapt up and crossed the room.  They were sitting in her
bedchamber in the Edori house (Tamar thought Jared was less likely to
find her there), so all Lucinda's possessions were close at hand.

Lucinda returned to Tamar's side carrying a small silver box with a
painted glass lid.  "I keep the necklace here when I'm not wearing it,"
she said.  To Tamar's amazement, the angel crooned a short wordless
melody over the treasure box, and a tiny click sounded in her cupped
hands.

"What in the world was that?"

Lucinda was holding out the silver casket.  "See?  The song unlocks the
box.  And the same song sung backward locks it again.  Isn't that
clever?  Reuben gave it to me."

Tamar took it gingerly from her hand and peered inside.  On the black
velvet lining lay the emerald ring that Lucinda usually wore, a silver
necklace coiled around a fiat oval pendant, a blue wing feather from
some Ysral bird, and a smooth quartz rock that looked to have been
salvaged from a riverbed.  A diverse array of treasures, indeed.

"That song you've heard me sing?"  Lucinda went on.  "in your head?
That's really the backward version of one of the angels' prayers."

Tamar looked up with a grin.  "So?  Does that mean I can countermand a
prayer if I sing that?"

"I suppose so, but it's not a prayer that's ever sung, as far as I
know.  Instead I could teach you the reverse version of the prayer for
rain, and you might have some use for it."

"I don't care if it rains," Tamar said, and turned her attention back
to the silver box.

"The necklace," Lucinda instructed.  "Put it on, That's what I want you
to have."

"I don't need your jewelry.  I won't forget you."

With an impatient exclamation, Lucinda took the box from her sister and
extracted the necklace from the pile.  She looped the chain around her
finger and held up her hand so the delicate woven strands glinted in
the afternoon light.  "The finest rectal from the Luminaux
silversmiths," she said softly.  "When you run your finger down the
chain, it's as if you're touching glass.  Put it on."

Reluctantly, Tamar took it.  She was not used to expensive gifts or
tokens of affection; it was not something she felt she had a right to. 
"Did your aunt give this to you?"

"When I was old enough.  It was our mother's, though Gretchen told me
no one ever saw her wear it.  It was around her neck when they
discovered her body."

"Is there anything inside the locket?"

"Open it."

Tamar pried her fingernail between the tightly clasped halves of the
oval, and silently they fell apart.  Inside, each half of the locket
was engraved with a single elaborate letter, a D on the left and an R
on the right.

Lucinda was peering over her arm.  "David and Rinalda," she said.  "He
must have given it to her while she was imprisoned in Cedar Hills. 
It's the only thing of value she had on her when she died."

Tamar felt a rush of sadness make all of her muscles turn inward as if
to cocoon her heart.  "I can't take this," she said in a choked voice.
"If it's all you have of your mother--"

"Your mother, too," Lucinda said.  "I want you to have it so you
remember you're not alone in this world--you have a family, a history,
a genealogy that goes back to the Archangel Delilah.  You aren't alone
now--and you weren't born alone.  I was with you then, and I'm with you
now."

Tamar nodded once, and then burst into tears.  The angel instantly had
her arms around her twin.  It was strange to Tamar that, after only two
days, this woman's touch would seem as familiar to her as Elinor's, as
Dawn's, as the casual, absent-minded hugs she had received now and then
from all of the Jacobites.  She allowed herself to be comforted, and
then she allowed herself to be persuaded, and when she finally left the
Edori house, she was wearing her mother's locket.

And when The Wayward set sail the next day, and the Jacobites on the
shore waved good-bye to the lucky few embarking on the most glorious of
all quests, Tamar clutched the pendant where it hung around her neck
and waved good-bye in turn.  There were forty Jacobites and maybe a
dozen Edori gathered at the port to see them off, and Tamar cared
deeply for most of them and knew them all by name; but it was Lucinda
she waved to and Lucinda she hated to leave behind.

"Sing to me," she had whispered in her sister's ear as they hugged
good-bye on the wharf.  "I will listen for you."

"Be careful," Lucinda had whispered back.  "Don't do anything too
dangerous.  And be kind to Jared."

That had made Tamar laugh shakily as she pulled away.  "It is not in me
to be kind to angels," she said loftily, though she spoiled the effect
by scrubbing away a few undisciplined tears.

Lucinda held up two fingers.  "Just me and Jared," she said.  "The rest
you can scorn your whole life long."

Tamar held up one finger, then touched it to Lucinda's cheek.  "We'll
be back in a little less than three weeks, is what I think Conran said.
I'll see you then."

One more quick hug good-bye, then run up the gangplank onto the Edori
ship.  Then crowd along the railing with all the others, shouting out
farewells and promises.

Then run back toward the main deck of the ship to find herself
face-to-face with the angel Jared.

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

Jared had not realized he had such a deep capacity for anger.  He could
not remember ever in his life feeling more than a quick flare of
irritation that evaporated in a minute or two, no matter what the
provocation.  Well, in general not much provoked him.  People didn't go
out of their way to throw obstacles in his path or show him small,
annoying discourtesies.  His hold was well run, and any minor problems
that came up from time to time were things his mother and sister could
deal with efficiently and gracefully.  He was aware in a vague way that
injustices existed in the world, and had he been present at any blatant
example of one, he would have done what he could to correct it, but for
the most part he was not a witness to suffering or cruelty or despair.
And so, very little upset him.

But this.  Tamar's incredible stupidity, ignorance, stubbornness,
self-destructive willful blindness, had roused in him such a storm of
fury that to contain it he had had to build an iron wall around his
temper.  He had had to construct an amiable mask and place it over his
face; he had had to force himself to behave with all his normal charm
and poise, or the anger would have swept over him like a typhoon and
carried him away.

This was the first time he had seen Tamar in two full days.  She had
obviously been at some pains to keep clear of him, and he had not made
much effort to track her down.  They would be aboard this ship at least
six days, as the captain kicked up its speed to full power, and Tamar
would have to talk to him sooner or later.  He could bide his time.

And the time had come.

"You've grown quite close to Lucinda in a few short days, I see," he
began, civilly enough.  "Have you thought how you will stay in touch
with her once this adventure is over?"

"I haven't given much thought to anything beyond getting to Bethel and
back," she said warily.  She had edged as far from him as the railing
would allow.  They had barely pulled beyond shouting distance of the
shore, but already the Jacobites had scattered to other parts of the
ship; they were virtually alone here on the stern of the upper deck.

"You should not even be on this trip, you know," he said
conversationally.

"I know nothing of the sort."

"Oh, I think you do," he said, and though he kept his voice calm, he
could feel that anger rising, boiling up, flaming through him like
exhilaration or fear.  "If you didn't realize you had no business on
this ship, you wouldn't have gone to such great lengths to avoid me in
the past two days."

"I knew you thought I shouldn't go, and I didn't feel like having an
argument about it," she said swiftly, in that tough, contemptuous voice
he knew so well.  "But I certainly consider my presence necessary."

"It's not and you know it," he said.  "Even if they find these precious
files--even if they are recorded in some arcane old language--even if
you're the only Jacobite in the whole damn pack who can understand the
oracles' words, you don't have to go to Samaria to do it.  Won't they
bring the files back to Ysral?  Certainly Conran won't leave them
behind in Chahiela."

Tamar shrugged and turned away.  "Unless the files are inscribed on
some tablet that can't be moved.  Unless what we find in Chahiela is a
map that leads us to the place where the files are really stored, and
that map is written in the old tongue.  There are dozens of reasons why
I should go--but only one really matters.  I want to go, and it's my
life.  What you think doesn'l matter."

He had never in his life laid a finger on anyone in anger, but now he
put a rough hand on her shoulder and jerked her around to face him.
"It's your life, but I saved it, and I have some right to it now," he
said grimly.  "And I tell you at this moment that I refuse to see you
waste it in some foolhardy stunt--"

Her laugh was really a gasp of sheer amazement; she yanked herself away
and stood there staring.  "Foolhardy--!  The search for the Alleluia
Files?  It's the most important--and what do you mean, you won't see me
waste my life?  What do you think you can do about'it?  You can't stop
me from going--you can't stop any of us from going--"

"I could, and I'm still thinking about it," he said, his voice even
harder.  "I could snatch you up right now and fly back to Ysral, and
there would be nothing you or anybody else could do to stop me.  I
could--"

"You wouldn't dare."

"Why wouldn't I?  Why shouldn't I?  To keep you alive?  What do I care
if you hate me, as long as you're safe?"

"Who in this world is ever safe?  Are you?"  shebroke out in a voice as
passionate as his own.  "I can't remember a day of my life that didn't
pass in some kind of fear.  Fear of starvation, fear of discovery, fear
of capture.  Fear of death.  You think I've only been in danger since
the Jansai got my picture, but I've been in danger since the day I was
born.  So have you--so have we all.  You could die of disease or a
misplaced thunderbolt.  You could die if a big transport truck came
roaring down and you couldn't get out of the way in time.  You could
die if a storm blew up unexpectedly when you were flying and you got
thrown to the ground.  Who is keeping you safe?  And why do you think
you have to guard me?"

He leaned close enough to make her eyes widen in alarm, close enough so
that his wings, falling forward over his shoulders, made a white wall
on either side of her, though not a single feather touched her skin.
"Because I can," he said softly.  "Make no mistake, you are only on
this journey as long as I consider it relatively free of hazard.  The
instant a Jansai ship pulls into view, or a Jansai caravan heaves over
the horizon, I will seize you and carry you back to Ysral.  I don't
care if every one of your comrades goes down in flames or dies with a
Jansai dagger in his back.  You will survive this quest."

"Just because you saved my life?"  she said in that sarcastic,
disbelieving voice.  "You think you own me, because of that?"

"Because I love you," he said.

It was as if he had struck her a blow across the mouth.  The words
startled him almost as much as they had startled her, and the well of
his anger in a single pulse transformed to an inferno of white-hot
fear.  Because I love you and you could die.  The most primitive of all
emotions, and the most powerful.  He had used a smiling face to
disguise his anger from the world, but he had used anger to hide his
love even from his own heart.

 He said it again, this time aloud.  "Because I love you and you could
die."

He was not surprised when she had no reply for that.  Straight-armed,
she shoved him in the chest and ducked outside the protective circle of
his wings.  In two running steps, she had reached the doorway that led
belowdecks and disappeared.  It seemed unlikely that she would speak to
him again for the rest of the trip.

Jared spent the next six days in the air.  Even though The Wayward was
traveling at a rate about twice its usual pace, Jared was still faster;
he could easily catch up after ranging twenty or thirty miles away to
check for unwanted company.  He spotted Jansai ships more than once,
and returned to the Edori vessel to advise Maurice on how to avoid the
raiders.

"Wish I had a lookout like you every time I sailed this ocean," the
captain said the second time Jared came back with a warning.  "If you
ever get bored with your Gloria and your sacred masses and all your
other angel duties, you just come on over to me and I'll sign you up as
a member of my crew."

"Could happen," Jared said with a smile.  "I'll let you know."

He would have patrolled the waters in any case, on this journey, with
this frail human cargo, but since the argument with Tamar, the Edori
boat seemed too small to comfortably hold both of them.  For himself,
he felt stifled and starved for breath during those few waking hours
that he stayed on board the ship; and anytime his feet touched the
deck, Tamar disappeared to the rooms below.  He could only imagine how
claustrophobic she was beginning to feel.

To make matters worse, it was a small ship, with nothing resembling
privacy.  All the crew and all the Edori had cabin mates, sometimes
crowding three to a room, and no one could walk across the deck or down
to the galley without tripping over half a dozen fellow passengers.
Only when Jared was soaring above the ocean did he have a moment to
himself.

Although, in one sense, he was never alone, since thoughts of Tamar
were with him constantly.  In his mind, he said it better, phrased it
more romantically, explained to her how through impossibly small
degrees she had become ingrained in his heart, part of its shape and
rhythm.  In these conversations, she listened sympathetically, shyly
spoke of reciprocating sentiments, then melted into his arms and lifted
her face to be kissed.  Despite the fact that he had never yet seen
Tamar in a tender moment (except possibly when she was hugging her
sister farewell and even then she had seemed fairly fierce), this scene
seemed quite realistic to Jared; he imagined it on an hourly basis for
the whole six days of the trip.

How his friends would smile, if they could see him lovesick for a wild
young Jacobite.  How Isabella Cartera would stare, then laugh and laugh
until she had to sink into a plush, overstuffed chair, drained by
hilarity.  His mother--his sister--everyone who was used to treating
his light romances with amusement and tolerance--all of them would gape
with astonishment to see the careless and insouciant Jared snared by a
rebel siren.

He couldn't think what to do about it.  Impossible to imagine her
tamely tending to hold matters back at Monteverde.  Impossible to
picture himself setting up household with her in some stone cottage on
the edge of Sahala, debating religious philosophies with Conran and the
other heathens.

Impossible to imagine life without her.

Well, he would finish out this adventure and then he would force a
reckoning with Tamar, and then ...  Well, Jovah alone knew what then.
All Jared knew was that it would not end here.

They dropped anchor at midnight in a rocky cove that was no more a
harbor than Conran was an angel.  The Wayward was a small ship, but too
big to ease close enough to the shoreline to throw down a gangplank, so
Maurice and two indistinguishable crew members lowered a dinghy to the
water by the light of three small lamps.  Not enough light to see by,
of course, but that was the point.  They didn't want to draw attention
from anyone on land or sea.

It took two trips to ferry everyone from the ship to the soil although
Jared needed nobody's transport.  He would have offered to carry one of
the Jacobites to the shore except he was pretty sure they all would
have declined with loathing.  Well, Tamar would have, he knew, and she
was the only one he really wished to carry in his arms.  So he just
took care of himself, and awaited the others on the dark beach.

Maurice had come briefly ashore with Conran.  "We'll wait a few miles
off the coast for three days.  Send the angel back to get us, and we
can be here in an hour.  If you're gone longer than three days, you'll
have to find another ship home, because we can't hover in these waters
too long without drawing attention."

The Jacobite leader shook hands with the ship's captain.  "You've done
a great deal for us already," he said, adding some phrase in a language
Jared couldn't understand.  Probably that godless Edori tongue again.
"Do not endanger yourselves.  With any luck, we'll see you again in
three days--or a few weeks, back in Sahala."

When the little dinghy was once more in the water, moving soundlessly
toward the ship, Conran gathered his band together.  "We'll camp here
for the night and head for Chahiela first thing in the morning."

"Here?"  Jani said with distaste, looking at the damp, shifting sand.
Conran grinned.

"No, not in this precise spot, mikala.  Half a mile inland on dry
ground, I hope.  We should be safe enough, but just to be sure, we'll
all take a turn on watch.  Anyone who's not sleepy can take first
shift."

Jared would have volunteered except, again, he didn't feel like anyone
in this circle valued his skills.  Damned if he was going to offer any
service that they would reject with disdain.  Although he would never
forgive himself if he was snoring away when the Jansai arrived ...  He
shivered slightly.  Maybe he would just take care to sleep very, very
lightly.  Close enough to Tamar to smuggle her out of harm's way should
it come roaring up in the middle of the night.

They trudged up from the beach and found firm, dry land almost
immediately.  They appeared to be in the middle of nowhere, miles from
the trade road or any farming community; there weren't even any
memorable features to the landscape around them, at least by the light
of the half-moon.  Not that any of them spent much time looking.  They
were all tired and a little cross.  The hothead Duncan demanded the
first watch.  The rest of them dropped where they stood, made whatever
pallets they could from their duffel bags and cloaks, and fell
instantly asleep.  Jared waited long enough to note Tamar's position,
and then he closed his eyes.

Morning came far sooner than he had expected, beating down a them with
a merciless cheer that was infinitely irritating.  Conran roused
everyone by stalking through the camp and slap-ng his hands together
briskly. "On your feet, time to get moving!"  Even zealots, Jared
observed from his own jaundiced ~,es, found it hard to be enthusiastic
after four hours' sleep on a wretched bed.

They ate fruit, dried meat, and bread rolls as they walked steadily,
following the coast.  Conran was in the lead, but Duncan, Horace, and
Sal were only half a pace behind him.  Wyman, who was probably the best
built of the lot and could have outdistanced even Duncan had he put his
mind to it, was loitering behind with the women to dally with Jani. 
Tamar made half-started conversation with Loa when she wasn't skipping
ahead to chat with Conran.  Jared brought up the rear.

What in Jovah's name was he doing on this enterprise?  Looking for the
Alleluia Files in the company of criminals who would be executed by the
Archangel if Bael could ever catch up with them?  And despite the fact
that Jared had been the one to suggest this site as a hiding place, it
seemed wildly unlikely to himt the secret documents would really be
there.  Since it seemed ~ally unlikely that they even existed.

His mother and his friends wouldn't laugh at this quite so rrily.  Only
Christian, who had sent him on this bizarre chase, would take him by
the hand and say, "Well done."  Even Mercy, who had so reluctantly
agreed to practice mild treason against Bael, would find this mad
venture incomprehensible.

Though she might forgive him for love.  If everyone else in the world
laughed at him for that, Mercy would not.  That aght least gave him a
little comfort and allowed him to tramp on and the others, mile after
weary mile.

Angels hated walking.  Lucinda was the only angel he'd ever known who
would stroll down a city street rather than fly from end to end--but
Lucinda, on so many counts, was hardly common.  Most angels would
rather forgo the most exquisite pleasure you could name than walk a
block to see it.  It was a game with angels to compare the soles of
their feet, tender and uncallused as a baby's cheek.  Jared was no
exception.  But he walked with Jacobites. He did not want to be even
three wing spans away from Tamar if the Jansai suddenly appeared.  He
was here to keep her safe and, by the god's great grace, he would do
it.

At noon, bowing to the pressure of many complaining voices, Conran
called a brief halt for lunch.  It was more of the and they ate
quickly.  The women disappeared for a moment behind a stand of trees,
though Duncan called after them, girls, what are you hiding?"  When
they came back, Loa threw a rock at him, and everybody laughed.

After this stop, they turned almost due north and about three more
miles.  They could see Chahiela half an hour before they actually
crossed into it.  It looked like any other small town on the edge of a
trade route.  There was a collection of squat new buildings lining the
main road, and two distinct neighborhoods on either side of the
highway, one belonging to the passably wealthy and the other devoted to
the struggling poor.  At the very western edge of the town stood a
disorganized cluster of older buildings that had probably been there
even before the road.

Where now?  Jared wondered.  He didn't think even Conran had the nerve
to stroll up to total strangers and start inquiring after the Alleluia
Files.  For himself, he was stymied.

But Conran kept on walking and the others straggled behind.  The
Jacobite leader bypassed all the new homes, all the recent warehouses,
and headed straight for the original buildings that must have housed
the school when this little community was first haphazardly put
together.  Even now, Jared realized, the school still existed: As they
approached the older outbuildings, he saw young children leading others
by the hand and older youths navigating the streets with the aid of
canes and deep concentration.

Conran came to a halt outside a large communal building and looked
around indecisively.  Jared, trying to reason like a Jacobite, wondered
what he might say to the first person who approached and asked their
business.  The angel couldn't think how anyone could frame the
essential questions.

He didn't have long to speculate.  Within three minutes, as the
Jacobites stood in an uneasy cluster, a middle-aged woman with a
pleasant expression stopped in front of Conran.

"Can I help you?"  she asked.  "Are you looking for someone?  Is
someone in your group looking to become a student with us?  I am
Aria."

"Conran," the Jacobite replied with the big warm smile that most people
found irresistible.  "Actually, I'm looking for information.  Perhaps
you can supply it.  Which of these houses is the one where the angel
Alleluia grew up?"

"Oh, the Wellin house!  But none of her family owns it any more, you
know.  Alleluia never lived here after her mother died, and the house
passed into the hands of one of Hope Wellin's closest friends.  Her
name was Mara Lanette, but of course she's been dead since before I was
born.  It's her granddaughter that lives there now, and I believe her
granddaughter lives with her.  She's quite old, you know.  Can't hear a
word.  All the Lanettes have been born deaf--except this youngest
granddaughter.  Now, she can hear, though it's my belief she reads lips
as much as hears the words.  Sometimes if you call out to her when
she's walking down the street, she passes on by as if you haven't said
a word."

A lot of stupid gossip that no one could care about, Jared thought. But
Conran was nodding wisely, as if all this talk of deaf women and
great-granddaughters was precisely what he had come to Chahiela to
hear.  Jared was amazed that the woman would volunteer so much
information to a total stranger, but then again, maybe she was not used
to having a listening audience.  Not everyone in Chahiela was blind,
after all; it had been named silence for another reason.

"This woman who lives in the Wellin house now," Conran said.  "What's
her name?  Do you think she'd mind if we came by to visit?"

"No, she'd be delighted to have company.  She's the nicest lady.  If
you want to talk to her, you'll have to ask her granddaughter to
interpret, of course, but she's a good girl.  She won't mind."

"And their names?"

"Maretta Lanette--she was named after her grandmother and Caley Boster.
Caley's mother married that Boster boy, but it didn't really work out.
But it worked out for Maretta, because now she's got Caley living with
her and it's made everything so much easier for her."

"And the house?  Can you point it out to me?"

"Why, it's right over there."  And she indicated a small, two story
stone house with a painted white fence and a meticulously maintained
lawn.  Maretta and her devoted granddaughter certainly spent a lot of
time in their yard, Jared thought cynically.  Of course, they didn't
have to waste all day listening to the inane chatter of their
neighbors, so no doubt they were able to accomplish more than most of
the residents.  He admired Conran for his undiminished cheerfulness and
the seeming sincerity with which he thanked their informant.  After two
more interminable exchanges, they were on their way again, all nine of
them, to the house where the oracle Alleluia had been born.

The woman who answered the door was slim, dark, exhausted, and young,
so Jared assumed she was the long-suffering granddaughter and not the
elderly Maretta.  She seemed startled to see so many strangers
appearing on her doorstep at once, though she couldn't summon the
energy for true astonishment.  "Can I help you?"  she asked
doubtfully.

"My name's Conran.  These are my friends.  We wanted to ask your
grandmother some questions."

"All of you?  Who are you?"

"We are researchers looking for biographical information about the
angel Alleluia.  The oracle Alleluia.  We understand this is the house
she was born in, and we thought there might be some--artifacts--here
that would be useful to us."

"Well, there are lots of old boxes and things in the cellar," Caley
said without enthusiasm.  "I suppose you could look through those."

"We were hoping to talk to your grandmother.  She might know where to
find what we're looking for."

"Oh.  Well.  I guess that would be all right."  She surveyed their
little group again, and some of their tension must have communicated
itself to her, for a little briskness came to her voice.  "Why don't
you come into the parlor and I'll go fetch her?"

So they tumbled in after her into the narrow hallway, Jared wondering
how any angel could have endured living in such close quarters.  His
own wings brushed the walls on either side.  The parlor was clean but
sparsely decorated with somewhat worn furnishings; Caley and her
grandmother certainly did not live a lavish life.  There were not
enough places to sit, and none of the chairs would accommodate angel
wings.  Jared and the other young men stood; Conran and the women
sat.

Five minutes later Caley returned, with a smiling old woman in tow.
Maretta Lanette was everyone's vision of the perfect grandmother, with
curly gray hair, rosy cheeks, a knitted shawl thrown over her shoulders
to ward off whatever chill the air might hold.

Caley led the old woman straight to Conran, who got rather stiffly to
his feet.  "My name's Conran," he said.  "My friends and I are
researching the life of the oracle Alleluia."

Maretta continued smiling, but her eyes had gone to her granddaughter's
hands.  Caley was weaving her fingers in the air, repeating Conran's
message in the silent language of the deaf.  Jared watched with
interest because, although he had heard of such communication, he had
never seen it performed.  When Caley was finished, Maretta asked her a
question in the same language.

"My grandmother says, what do you want to know?  What are you looking
for?"

"Can she read lips?"  Conran asked the girl.

"If you look straight at her and speak very slowly.  But she usually
likes to have me interpret anyway."

Conran nodded and stared at Maretta.  "We are looking for memoirs that
Alleluia may have left behind here when she was an old woman. Something
she would have wanted your grandmother to keep for her safely. 
Something she would not want many people to see.  We don't know what
form these memoirs are in, but we think they were recorded somehow. 
They are very important to us."

Maretta watched him intently, nodding once or twice, then looked over
at Caley, who quickly sketched in the details.  Mar etta's hands asked
a question; Caley repeated it.

"But if she left them here to keep them safe, is there any reason I
should give them to you now?"

Conran grinned broadly.  "She has been dead sixty years," he said.  "It
cannot possibly matter to her now what we may learn about her."

"They say she was a secretive woman," Maretta said through Caley's
mouth.  "But my grandmother adored her,"

"Learning some of her secrets now may save a number of lives," Conran
said gently.  "Do you know where we might find these memoirs I have
described to you?"

"In her old room.  There is something--I cannot describe it a piece of
equipment.  It might hold the information you're looking for."

"A piece of equipment?"

 "We found it eight or nine years ago when we had to do repairs to
that room.  It was behind a false wall.  Caley guessed that it was
meant to play music, but as I cannot hear it, I have never turned it
on.  It may have belonged to Alleya."

"Alleya?"

"That is what the people here called the angel Alleluia," Caley said.

"Charming," Conran said.  He had spoken slowly and calmly till now, but
Jared could sense his excitement building.  "May we see this equipment?
May we listen to any recordings that are there?"

Maretta gazed at Conran for a long time while Caley watched
impassively.  Had Jared been the one to undergo such a searching gaze,
he would have tried to make his eyes limpid and his expression saintly,
but Conran stared back at her with all the intensity at his command. It
was as if he was willing her to acquiesce, winning her over by the
strength of his desire.

Finally, Maretta nodded once, sharply, and everyone from Conran on back
let out a sigh.  "This way," Caley said, and everyone turned to follow
her back into the cramped hallway.  Maretta made no move to join them.
Conran held out his hand to her.

"Won't you come with us?"  he asked, but she shook her head.

"She can't hear what the machine says, so she sees no need to come,"
Caley said.

"You could interpret for her."

Caley smiled briefly, a pretty flash of mischief across her tired face.
"She doesn't like secrets.  She says no secret revealed ever did
anybody good."

"This one will.  That I am sure of."

Caley led the way upstairs and into a small, featureless room with a
single window and drab decor.  Faded wallpaper covered three walls; the
fourth, once presumably hidden behind the false front, was of rough
brick.  There were really only three pieces of furniture in the room: a
narrow bed covered with a thin coverlet, a rickety old chest of drawers
with a cracked mirror leaned on top of it--and a bulky metal box
studded with gauges and knobs.

A clench of unbearable excitement tightened Jared's stomach almost to
the point of nausea.  Recording equipment.  It looked nothing at all
like the sleek black transmitters he had seen in Luminaux and at
Christian's, but in an odd way it resembled the machinery in the music
rooms at the angel holds.  And when Caleb Augustus built this piece of
equipment--for who but that rogue engineer would have constructed such
a thing?--the only recorders he had encountered had been those ancient,
mysterious systems brought in by the original colonists.

Caley gestured at the metal box.  "Is this what you're looking for?"
she asked.  "I have no idea how it works."

Conran was on his knees before it, and Duncan and Sal hovered behind
him, but it was young Wyman who was the only mechanic of the group.  Or
so Jared surmised.  When Wyman said, "Let me see," the others fell
back.  He bent over the box and studied the controls.

"Hunh," he said, and began touching dials and switches.  Everyone tried
to remember to breathe, but clearly the room was airless; they were all
pale from lack of oxygen, from excitement, from fear.  There might be
nothing inside this old, bulky music box; there might be everything.

"Ah," was Wyman's next pronouncement, and the lid of the contraption
flew open and almost struck him in the chin.  Everyone jumped back a
pace.  Jani stepped on Jared's wings, which caused him to bite back a
yelp of pain and move hurriedly to the back of the room.  Strange
clickings were emanating from the old equipment; it sounded like a
piece of metal heating up to a sizzling pitch.

"Well.  I see.  If that.."  no, that one," Wyman said, and his voice
was laced with satisfaction.  "Okay.  Hold tight.  I think this may be
the 'go' button."

He turned a knob, and the room was filled with the sound of a woman
speaking.  Jared was caught first by the utter sweetness of that voice,
chime-sweet, child-sweet, beguiling as birdsong on the first day of
spring.  There was nothing this woman could have said to him that he
would not have believed absolutely; nothing she would have asked from
him that he would not have gladly done.  He had heard of speakers
blessed with hypnotic voices but he had never, till this moment,
encountered one, and certainly would not have expected any recorded
voice to have such power, divorced from the speaker's spirit by six
decades of death.

It was therefore a few sentences into her speech before he registered
what she was saying--and the words were just as astonishing as the
voice.

"... Such knowledge, while important, has such calamitous and
far-reaching effects that I fear to share it with the rest of Samaria.
Our society lives by the rules set down by our god--our world maintains
its graces and its civilities primarily because these have been
ordained by Jovah.  If the god were to be removed from our
calculations, I do not know how our society would continue to function.
I do not know.  I am afraid to find out.

"And yet, having been taught to revere truth, I cannot in conscience
fail to correct a lie.  I will tell only one living soul what I have
learned, but I will leave this record for future generations who may
deal more hardily with knowledge than my own.  If Jovah has taught me
one thing, it is that a truth will be revealed when that truth is
desperately needed, and so I hope this secret becomes known when the
time is right.

"The god Jovah is in reality a space-going vessel called the Jehovah.
It ferried us here from Eleison more than six hundred years ago, and it
still orbits above us today.  It is built from unimaginable technology
and stocked with priceless commodities-seeds, chemicals, potions--that
the ship can release to us upon request.  It is also armed with
powerful weapons, weapons so terrible and so precise that they can
strike down a man standing in a crowd of men or destroy the whole world
we call Samaria.

"It is voice-activated.  It hears the angels' prayers and responds to
the cadence of our songs.  When we sing for rain, it sprays chemicals
into the clouds to make them gather overhead.  When we pray for
medicine, it releases drugs that we do not even know how to decode.

"When we gather every year to perform the Gloria, it counts our voices
and calculates our numbers.  If we were to remain silent, it would
smite us with all the destructive power at its command.  It has no
malice for us.  It has no love for us.  It is programmed to act in this
way.  It is a machine.

"But it is a machine that controls our lives.  One of the great
engineers of my time has said he cannot see a way to dismantle it. Thus
we cannot disregard it.  We cannot, for instance, cease singing the
Gloria simply because we do not raise our prayers to a god.  In fact, a
god might be more merciful than Jehovah.

"But Jehovah is also a wonderful, fabulous thing.  It has stored in its
memory banks all the knowledge of the universe.  it has taught me more
than I could ever record here, and I have not asked it
one-one-thousandth of the questions it could answer.  It can tell us
how our bodies are formed, how our minds work, where our ancestors were
born, and where people just like us live on other planets orbiting
other stars.  It can tell us how to build machines just like it, that
would carry us elsewhere, to new worlds beneath different suns.  It
would tell us all this, but we are not yet ready to understand the
answers.  Or so I believe.

"How do I know all this?  How can I be so sure?  Because I have stood
face-to-face with Jehovah.  I have traveled to the interior of this
ship, and heard the voice of its electronic brain speak to me as I am
speaking to you now.  I have touched its keyboards and controls--I have
walked its vast white halls.  I have stood there and despaired, because
my god was a machine.  And I have stood there and rejoiced, because I
learned the truth.

"There is a way--a simple way--for any man or woman to transport
himself to the interior of the spaceship as I have done.  I have left
those instructions elsewhere, in other trusted hands.  Forgive me if I
am being too careful.  I have guarded this secret with my life, for so
much of my life, that I am afraid to have said as much as I already
have.  But I believe that if you are meant to find the rest of the
puzzle, you will find it.  And if not, you can do very little harm.

"I have asked Jehovah, who is wiser than any human I know, when the
time might be right for Samarians to learn the truth about their god.
He gave, as he sometimes does, a cryptic reply.  He said, "That day
will come when the twinned destinies of angel and mortal become one."
Perhaps that answer will mean more to you than it does to me.

"I have no more to say, but I beg you to use the knowledge you have
gained only for the good of the world.  I am the oracle Alleluia, and I
bid you farewell and amen."

The recording ran for another full minute, making a quiet little
whirring noise in the heart of the machine, but there was not another
sound in the room.  Jared felt heat at all the junctures of his body, a
breathless pressure across his chest, and he had not spent his life
looking for this very revelation.  He could imagine how stunned the
Jacobites were, how elated, how their very blood must be reveling in
their veins and whirling their brains into ecstasy.

Caley was the first to speak, and her voice was amused and a little
ironic.  "She must have given quite a speech.  I  don't believe one of
you has breathed since she started talking."

All the Jacobites looked at her, still too choked to reply, and Jared
said, "You could not hear her?"

Caley shook her head.  "Isn't that strange?  They say almost everyone
could hear Alleya, even those who had been born deaf and never heard
another voice in their lives.  But my great-great-grandmother Mara
never heard Alleya's voice, and I cannot catch it either.  I can hear
you.  I can hear most others, But ,of Alleluia."

"You have missed--an incredible performance."

"That's what he said, too."

"That's what--who said that?"

Jared saw Conran's head whip around, although the other Jacobites did
not seem to be paying attention.  They had begun to move now, in
careful, fractional gestures, and to speak in voices scarcely above a
whisper.  They appeared to be shaking themselves loose from near-fatal
comas and describing their experiences in awestruck tones.

But Conran stepped a pace closer to Caley and repeated Jared's
question.  "Who said that?  Someone else has heard this recording?"

Caley nodded.  She appeared surprised.  "Oh, yes.  About five years
ago.  It took him much longer to convince my grandmother to let him up
to this room, though."

Conran and Jared shared glances of alarm.  "Who was he'?  What was his
name?"

"I don't remember his name," she said.  "He was an angel, though.
Older.  With--" She fluttered her fingers around her head.  "Silver
hair, kind of wild.  And a silver beard.  He had the most beautiful
voice.  I could hear every word he said."

Jared felt his lips mouth the word but he could not say it aloud.
Conran was staring at him, shaking his head very slightly.  It was not
possible.  Was it possible?  Had the Archangel been here five years
ago, successfully solving the riddle the Jacobites had puzzled over for
decades?  Had he heard the oracle Alleluia proclaim that the god was a
spaceship, swear it in a voice so calm and so convincing that no one
could disbelieve it?  Had he not believed her? Had he believed her?

Was that why he had so venomously attacked the Jacobites?

Had he, ruthlessly and with complete knowledge, set out to exterminate
the reckless band of rebels who sought to shed a searing, terrible
light on their entire world?  Had he done it to save Samaria, to
protect it from the confusion and turmoil that would overturn every law
of their society once the truth was made public?

Or had he done it because he alone wanted the power that would come
with knowledge?  If there was no god, how could the god care who was
Archangel?  Why could Bael not remain Archangel for another
year--another ten years--for the rest of his life?  Who would stop him?
Who would limit him?  Who would challenge him?

The Jacobites ...  Oh, Bael had known very well what he was doing.  He
had styled himself a prophet in the service of the god, but he was a
cold-blooded killer eliminating any threat to his own bid for glory.
Christian had said the Archangel was an evil man.  He did not know the
half of it.

"Was it who I think?"  Conran asked in a very quiet voice.

Everyone else in the room was still ignoring them.

"It was Bael," Jared said.

"Then we are in even more danger than we thought."

"I agree," Jared said.  "I think we should get back to Ysral a soon as
we can."

"We must bring the equipment with us."

Jared shook his head.  "You can try.  My guess is that it's immovable.
Or why else is it still here?"

"Why does it still exist at all?"  Conran shot back.  "Why didn't he
destroy it before we found it?"

Jared spread his hands.  "Unfathomable.  Unless he thought he might
someday want proof, and this was the only proof he had.  He must not
have thought you would ever find it.  He must have believed it was safe
here.  And that no one would be able to remove it."

Conran stared at him a moment and then, eyes still on the angel, barked
out, "Wyman."

"Yo."

"This machine.  Can you detach it?  Take the recording out?"

"Just what I've been wondering," the young engineer said to Conran and
the angel turned to find him still kneeling on the floor before Caleb
Augustus's unique piece of equipment.  "I can't figure out where it's
connected or how to loosen the bolts.  See, here's where it looks like
it screws into the wall, but when you twist that--"

"Then the answer is no," Conran said impatiently, and Jared read a
rising anxiety in his voice.  "Everybody listen to me.  We need to
leave here.  Now.  Instantly.  Make our way back to the rendezvous
point.  If something unforeseen happens, abandon the group, do you hear
me?  Abandon the group.  Flee as fast as you can back to Ysral and take
this information to the others."

There was a babble of questioning voices ("What's wrong?"  "What did
Wyman say?  ...  "I'm not abandoning anybody!") but they all seemed to
catch some of Conran's edginess.  At any rate, when the Jacobite leader
pointed a finger at the door and said "Go!," Jani, Loa, and Horace
instantly ducked out and clattered downstairs.  Caley went with them.
Duncan, Sal, and Wyman followed less willingly, and Tamar lingered even
after the others had left.

"What was that girl telling you, Conran?"  she asked, but her eyes were
on Jared.

"That we are not the first to seek this recording.  Go.  Down stairs.
Run for it."

"But we--"

"Conran!"  The frenzied shout came from downstairs, a heartbeat before
someone shrieked.  The air outside was suddenly alive with whoops of
celebration and the small thunder of running feet.  In the distance,
but rapidly coming nearer, Jared heard the grumble of big transport
trucks roaring down the quiet Chahiela road.

"Jansai!"  Conran whispered, and grabbed Tamar by the arm when she
would have hurtled downstairs after her friends.

"No," he hissed.  "Stay here and hide."

"But they--"

"Hide."  he repeated in that fierce undervoice.  "What you know is more
important than who you can save."

Below them was tumult: more screaming, the sound of a few solid blows
landing across rebellious flesh, Caley's voice uselessly demanding,
"Who are you?  What do you want?  Get out of my grandmother's house!" 
Conran forced Tamar toward the small bed and jerked her to her knees
when she still resisted, shoving her head toward the floor and under
the rickety frame.  Jared stood tense but indecisive.  There was really
no place for an angel to hide--in one of the other bedrooms?  in some
huge closet where he could draw close his wings?--and the window was
far too narrow to allow him to escape.

And there was no time.  Despite Caley's wild assurances--"There is no
one else in this house, I swear to you !  "--booted feet were pounding
up the stairway so quickly that Conran whirled to face his attackers
before he had pushed Tamar all the way under the bed.  She immediately
sprang to her feet and so they 'all were standing there, stupid,
empty-handed, when four Jansai burst through the door and yowled with
triumph.

"Her!  That's her!"  cried one of them, his vest spattered with the
blue crescent moon that was Bael's emblem.  "And by the god's own
grace, that's Atwell!  Grab them--damn it, out of my way!"

Conran and Tamar closed with their enemies, fighting in fierce silence.
Jared sprang toward Tamar, but two of the Jansai were upon him,
muscling him back against the wall, pummeling him in the stomach,
blinding him with blows to the head.  He kicked out at them and writhed
in their hold till he felt the cool, wicked tip of a knifepoint jammed
under his right wing.  He could help no one if he was crippled by a
slashing blade.  Violent despair washed through him, but he could not
save her, could not save anyone, not trapped in this small room in this
little house.  He paused in his struggles, panting for breath, wildly
trying to guess what he should try next.

And then a fifth man entered the room.

Jared stared, too breathless and too outraged to speak.  It was the
Archangel's son.  He sauntered up to where Conran stood, his hands
bound cruelly behind his back, and smiled in the Jacobite's face.

"That was really very stupid," Omar said in his rich voice, wearing his
customary satiric smile.  "We have been watching this place for five
years at least.  We have always had guards outside of Chahiela.  You
were dead the minute you crossed the town border."

"Kill me, then, and stop gloating about it," Conran said bluntly.  Omar
laughed.

"Oh, no, I think my father has something a little
more--exemplary--planned for you.  All of you.  Something that will
discourage the rest of the Jacobites from ever spouting their dreary
doctrines again."

"Think again," Conran said.  "We have seen death and betrayal before
this, and it hasn't held us back.  The more you try to destroy us, the
stronger we will become."

Omar shrugged.  "Boring doomed theatrics," he murmured, and turned his
back on Conran.  He stood for a long time gazing at Tamar, running his
eyes with insolent familiarity over the contours of her face.  "Well,
well, well.  So you are the missing child so long believed dead.  You
have no idea of the trouble you have caused us, my father and me, but
it scarcely matters now."

Tamar said nothing, but stared stonily back at him.  There was a bruise
forming on her left cheek, and a trickle of blood pooling at the corner
of her mouth.  Like Conran, she had her hands tied behind her back.
Jared could see her muscles working as if she was trying to free her
wrists.

"You look very like your sister," Omar went on.  "Although you do not
quite have her sweetness of expression.  She is very fond of me, you
know."

"That's interesting," Tamar replied in a hard, steady voice.  "She has
told me about all her friends and lovers, and I don't believe your name
ever once came up."

Omar laughed lightly.  "Good try, my dear, but I would wager a great
deal on the bet that you have never met your sister.  You do
not--forgive me--run in the same circles."

Not intending to, Jared let out a soft, amazed laugh.  This piece of
the puzzle, at least, had suddenly fallen into place.  he said,
quoting, "The day has come when the twinned destinies of angel and
mortal are one."

Slowly, infinitely disdainful, Omar finally turned to confront Jared.
With the same thoroughness he had used to examine Tamar, he let his
glance wander over the angel, taking in his two assailants, the knife
to his wing, the travel-weariness in his face and the defiance in his
eyes.

"Jared," he said at last.  "I hardly dare ask why I find you here."

"I couldn't figure out," Jared said, ignoring the question, "why it was
so important to you to find Tamar.  She was no more and no less
valuable than any other Jacobite, yet she had somehow moved to the head
of your list.  Why could that be?  Why did you want her?"

"Tamar," Omar repeated.  "We didn't have a name for her before.  I hate
to do an anonymous execution."

"The prophecy," Jared said.  "Jovah told you.  Jehovah--whoever.  He
said the knowledge would be revealed when the angel and mortal twins
were reunited.  And they have been.  And if I know anything of Jovah's
ways, once he has made a pronouncement like that, there's nothing any
mortal or angel can do to change the course of events."

Omar took a step closer to Jared, and in his eyes was the glittering
conviction of madness so like his father's.  "Jovah is not a god," he
purred in the angel's ear.  "Jovah is a machine, and he makes
calculations based on the best available data.  He may have foreseen
the existence of your friend Tamar and her twin angelic sister, but he
could not foresee what circumstances would separate them or what fate
might await them.  I am not afraid of a machine's proclamations.  I
know how to circumvent a prophecy.  And this young woman--and all her
friends--will die on the Plain of Sharon in two days' time."

"No," Jared said.

"Oh, yes."

"No."

"And neither you, nor your heathen friends in Semorrah, nor any of the
stupid Jacobites we have not yet managed to catch in our nets will be
able to prevent that death."

"Set her free," Jared said, offering a rash, unworkable bargain.  "Set
her free--put her in my care.  Take the others.  I will watch over her.
She will not trouble you or your father again."

Omar actually laughed.  What Conran and Tamar, tensely listening, might
be thinking, Jared could not guess and had no time to wonder.  "She is
dead, Jared, and no pleading on your part will change that fact.  But
you can still walk away.  I am not overeager to send angels to their
annihilation--and you, I think, could still have some value to us, if
you wished.  Your choice.  Walk away now--or die with your questionable
friends on the Plain of Sharon."

There was a long moment of silence while Jared stared at Omar's
handsome, fanatic face.  If he left now, flew straight for Semorrah, he
could rouse a force of merchants and angels, storm the Plain of Sharon,
and prevent Bael's bloodthirsty demonstration.  If he arrived in time,
if the Jacobites weren't all murdered en route, if he and Christian and
Mercy and the others could stop whatever dreadful vengeance Bael
intended to put in motion ...  He raised his eyes and looked straight
at Tamar.  Her unreadable gaze was fixed on him, but there was no
emotion to be deciphered in her face.  Not fear for her life, not
contempt for him, not hope, not surrender.  But her eyes did not waver
and her body did not in the slightest degree tremble.  He had never
seen anyone so brave, so proud.  Even Conran, growling beside her,
could not compare to her.  Nothing else in the whole world held an
ounce of worth.

"Tell your man to withdraw his dagger," Jared said coolly, and Omar
jerked his head.  Reluctantly, the Jansai lowered his knife hand and
retreated.  Jared shook his wings back as a vain girl might toss back
her gorgeous golden hair.  Tamar's eyes dropped to the floor as if she
could not bear to watch him defect.

Jared took two long strides to Conran's side, pushing aside the Jansai
holding him.  He felt Tamar's eyes follow him but he did not spare her
a glance.

"I stand with the Jacobites," he said.

"Then you will die with the Jacobites."

Jared nodded.  "So be it," he said, adding very softly Alleluia's
benediction: "Amen,"

CHAPTER NINETEEN

As delighted as Lucinda was to have Reuben to herself for as long as
The Wayward was gone, she learned quickly enough that these next few
weeks would not be simply a blissful lover's holiday.  For one thing,
she couldn't help fretting about Tamar, nearly every minute of the
day--ridiculous, of course, to worry about a sister she had never even
known she had until a few days ago, but the concern was there
nonetheless.  She kept her promise, and when no one else was around,
she sang cheerful, hopeful melodies that might make a weary traveler
smile as she pressed on in her uncertain adventure.  And she watched
the gliding colors in her Kiss, hoping to see--as Tamar had
seen--evidence of her twin's existence in its capricious depths.  But
it yielded very few secrets.  And she listened to the cadences of her
own heart, and watched the pantomimes of her dreams, for by these signs
if no others she was convinced she would be able to determine the state
of Tamar's well-being.

So that was a preoccupation; and she was not the only one left behind
who kept her attention focused on the voyage to Samaria.  The Jacobites
could talk of nothing else, and even the calm Edori seemed excited
about the news that the travelers might bring back.  Well, not excited.
Interested.  Intrigued.  Willing to hear the details.

But all this might have been bearable if Reuben had not been so
restless.  Sleeping beside Lucinda in the stone Edori house, he tossed
and turned and called out names every night, balling up the covers into
one hopeless knot on the nights he did not throw them all to the floor.
During the days he paced along the seashore, watching the incessant
billowing of the waves, or begged his Edori brethren and Jacobite
neighbors for some chore.  He was, it turned out, a skilled enough
mechanic to fix most anything that was broken--the axle of one of those
small, sleek cars; the wires in some discarded piece of recording
equipment; transmitters; receivers; unidentifiable objects.  He had
been trained at the Augustine school, he admitted to Lucinda, but
wanderlust and a desire to see the world had lured him away before he
had completed two years of study.

"And I was good!  That's what they all told me," he said with a brief
self-deprecating grin.  "One of my professors said to me, "If you stay
two more years, I swear to you you'll be building boats instead of
sailing them," but that was hardly an incentive to me.  Who wanted to
stay behind building boats?  I wanted to be out on the ocean, sailing
from port to port, seeing everything.  I still want to be."

Lucinda wondered if he had ever been on shore more than a week since
the day he had first set sail.  Clearly he could not stand the
inactivity for long.  She would remember this, if ever it crossed her
mind to try to convince him to live with her, on Angel Rock or wherever
she eventually made her home; she would remember that this man could
not stay in one place long without driving himself and everyone around
him to the verge of lunacy.

Those first three days, she tried to come up with diversions, so they
explored the nearby countryside and visited all the notable landmarks.
It was breathtaking country, alive with color and scent, and Reuben was
a knowledgeable and entertaining guide.  But that palled on him quickly
enough, and Lucinda had to admit that there were only so many lovely
vistas and fields of exotic vegetation that she could admire with any
sincerity, and so she racked her brains to come up with other
excursions.

"You could take me traveling through Ysral," she suggested at the end
of that third day.  "We could meet up with your clan and I could see
how Edori live on the road."

"Too far," he said briefly.  "Take too long to get there and back."

He did not want to be a yard away from the harbor when The Wayward hove
back into view, Lucinda knew.  He was not going to let that ship set
sail without him again.  But: "If we fly," she said persuasively, "we
could cross Ysral in a couple of days, don't you think?  We wouldn't be
gone more than five or six days."

"Some other time," he said.  "When it's less risky."

She spread her hands, sighed softly, and turned aside, wondering what
else she could suggest.  She had never seen the sanguine Reuben so
edgy--had never, as far as she could remember, seen any Edori out of
temper.  But even as she was frowning over her options, Reuben let out
a small laugh and took her hand.

"Ah, and I should be apologizing for being such a crabby old bear," he
said, smiling down at her, albeit with an effort.  "It was I who
volunteered to stay behind, not you who volunteered to entertain me,
and I should be happy for the free days I have with you.  And I am
happy.  It is just that I am not used to so many days of uncontested
happiness in a row."

She could not help smiling at that.  A sweet apology.  "But I had an
idea," she said.  "Couldn't we go to this Augustine school?  It's not
too far, is it?  Boyce said it took a day each way in one of those
little cars.  Or we could fly--it would take almost the same amount of
time."

On the instant he brightened; the prospect of action always cheered
him.  "Yes, excellent thought!"  he exclaimed.  "I could introduce you
to some of my old teachers, and you could see the campus.  You won't
believe some of the things they have there!  Motors smaller than my
hand and bigger than this house!  And the whole building set aside for
electrical experimentation--it's extraordinary, the lights and colors
they produce in some of those rooms--"

He went on in this fashion for a few more minutes.  Lucinda, glad to
have hit on something that lit his enthusiasm, only listened closely
enough to know when it was appropriate to nod or murmur her amazement.
She was thinking about how much lunch she should pack and calculating
exactly how long the trip would take and wondering what she should
bring for a change of clothes.

"Let's leave first thing in the morning, then," she said, when Reuben
finally paused for breath.  "I think it will be fun."

And it was an enjoyable journey on one of those golden, serene days for
which Ysral was famous.  Reuben had elected to drive, which was fine
with Lucinda since she thought he would enjoy the journey even more if
he actually got a chance to feel each mile as it passed beneath him. 
They had borrowed a car from one of his Edori friends--a racy little
two-seater with three wheels and incredible power--and Lucinda found
herself wondering if she could, in fact, have kept pace with this
vehicle.  Technology would soon outdistance the angels, she realized,
whether or not the god was revealed to be a machine.  The thought made
her a little frightened and a little sad.

As so much did these days.

They arrived at the Augustine school in early evening.  It was not,
Lucinda thought, the most beautiful collection of buildings she had
ever seen.  What appeared to be the main structure of the campus was a
huge, two-story building that covered five acres at least and offered
no interesting detail to break up the flat, honey-beige expanse of its
stone exterior.  Surrounding it in a somewhat haphazard array were a
collection of smaller buildings, some of them sporting all manner of
antennas, transmitting towers, and other odd features from their roofs
and windows.  One building was constructed entirely of some black,
volcanic stone, and offered no windows and (from what Lucinda could
see) only one door.  At first she thought it was the burned hulk of
some classroom destroyed by fire, but no, it was meant to look that
way; she saw a handful of students exiting by that single door, talking
and gesturing in great excitement.

Well, she hoped that they were, in fact, magnificent engineers, because
as architects they were complete failures.

"What do you want to see first?"  Reuben was asking.  "The electrical
engineering building?  Or maybe we should save that for last.  Those
are the dorms, they aren't interesting, but you might like the
transmitting stations.  Or the music rooms.  You could record
something.  The engineers would fall on their knees every day thanking
you for such a service."

"Then let's go to the music rooms," she said.

Since the day was practically over, she expected most of the classrooms
to be empty, but she was soon proved wrong.  The engineering students,
it seemed, were a dedicated breed, working on their theorems, their
models, and their chemical combinations late into the night. Everywhere
she and Reuben went, down each cluttered hallway filled with the
peculiar mixed smells of electricity and alchemy, they encountered
diligent students, arguing professors, excited interns, and abstracted
technicians.  Those who actually noticed the visitors nodded or smiled
in the most desultory fashion imaginable.

"Is there anyone here you still know?"

"Oh, many.  Once a teacher comes to the Augustine school, it's rare
that he leaves for another place.  Well, there's nothing like it, in
Ysral or Samaria, so where else would he go?  But it's been ten years
and more since I've been here for more than a visit.  They might not
instantly remember my face."

"Your face?"  she said, teasing.  "Such a beautiful one!  How could
they forget it?"

He grinned, and pushed open a doorway that led to a large,
high-ceilinged room.  In a semicircle around the far end there were
four smaller rooms, separated from the main chamber by panes of thick
glass.  Inside each room were banks of machinery that looked only
vaguely familiar to Lucinda.

"Recording equipment?"  she guessed.

Reuben nodded.  "Looks upgraded from the last time I was here. Probably
by now they've got the tones so rich they sound better than the singer
performing live."

"Well, we think so, but most of our singers have been so wretched that
it's hard to tell," said a cheerful voice nearby, and they turned to
find a young woman standing behind them.

She had wild hair pulled back in an inexpert bun, an array of tools and
marking pens stuck in her pockets, and several un noticed smudges
across her smiling cheeks.  Here was someone who loved her work more
than she loved herself, Lucinda thought.

"I'm Alina," she introduced herself.  "What can I do for you?"

"I'm Reuben, once a student in this marvelous institution but now
fallen to the lowly career of seaman," the Edori introduced himself.
Alina laughed.  "And this is Lucinda.  She's an angel."

"Really," Alina said.  "If you hadn't told me, I could not possibly
have guessed."

Reuben grinned.  "I was just telling her how superb your recording
equipment is, and how much you all would appreciate having a track or
two laid down by someone who really can sing.  Am I wrong?"

Alina became quite animated.  "Not at all!  We'd love to have an
angel's voice on disk.  In fact, I'm designing an experiment now that
would compare the relative trueness of three different recording media,
but I haven't found anyone whose seemed worth committing to posterity. 
Well, no, that's an exaggeration, and I had just about decided to go
with a voice, since after all it doesn't actually have to be a singer's
voice--but if you'd be willing to make a recording for three
recordings--"

"Delighted," Lucinda said, interrupting because she didn't particularly
want to hear all the details.  "The same song, three times?"

Alina nodded.  "Duplicating them as best you can."

"I can do that.  Where do I go?"

The next half hour was fairly tedious for the angel as the engineer set
up her studios and explained to Reuben what she was doing.  Lucinda
hummed to herself to warm up her voice and mentally reviewed her
repertoire. she had no idea exactly how these engineers might use her
recording, so it seemed unwise to perform, for instance, a prayer that
called for rain or sunshine.  Best would be a simple melody easy to
sing, easy to reproduce multiple times.

"All right, I'm ready for you," Alina called, and in a few moments
Lucinda was installed inside one of the small chambers, looking out at
Alina, Reuben, and a few had drifted in to watch.  She couldn't hear a
word any of them said, for apparently the room was soundproofed, but
she assumed they would all be able to monitor her performance.  She
watched Alina closely; when the woman gave her the signal to begin, she
launched into her chosen melody.

It was a pretty love song, one that the residents of Angel Rock
requested every time she gave a concert, so she knew it had the power
to please.  Nonetheless, she was a little surprised to see Alina stop
her busy writing, the other students pause in their chattering to stare
at her, and Reuben close his eyes as if to concentrate on every note.
When she finished, there was a long pause before anyone in the outer
room moved or spoke.  Then there was a brief flurry of spontaneous
applause, and a speaker inside her chamber clicked on.

"That was unbelievable," Alina's voice said, sounding a little tinny
over the closed circuit.  "Are you--I've never heard anything like
that.  Is that how all angels sing?"

"Pretty much," Lucinda said with a laugh.  "Some much better."

"I can't believe it," Alina said.  "Do you mind waiting while I play it
back?"

"Not at all."

In less than a minute her own voice recycled through the chamber, and
Lucinda listened critically.  No, nothing special; it was how she
always sounded, perhaps not as good, because she'd neglected her formal
rehearsals since she'd been in Sahala, As her recorded voice dipped
into the second verse, she began softly singing the high harmony, a
dazzling counterpoint that Gretchen had sometimes sung with her, but
only when she was in an approachable mood.

Alina abruptly shut off the music.  Lucinda closed her mouth.  "What's
that?  Are you singing along?"  the engineer asked.  "Sorry.  Habit.
I'll be quiet."

"No, it's beautiful.  Would you be willing to record a second track?"

"What do you mean?"

"The harmony to this music.  If I play this piece back, can you perform
your own harmony?"

"Oh, certainly.  Two or three different harmonies, if you want."

Even through the thick glass, Alina's face seemed to glaze over with
awe.  "Really?  Oh, would you?  You don't mind?  Oh, this is
wonderful."

So Lucinda spent the next half hour decorating the little ballad with
descant, mezzo, and contralto lines.  By the time she was done, the
outer room was filled with more than thirty people, all listening as
raptly as if they had never heard music in their lives.  Well,
mechanics.  She had always heard that they were strange and
unsocialized creatures, more tuned to their machines and their
mathematics than to basic human interactions.  Apparently it was
true.

By the time she was done singing the final part, she was famished.
"Would it be possible to take a break for dinner?"  she asked before
Alina could ask her to perform again.  "We've been traveling all day
and--"

"Oh!  Of course!  You'll eat with us, won't you, in the mess hall?  And
are you spending the night?  Where are you staying?"

Reuben and Alina worked out the details while a student freed Lucinda
from the glass studio.  "You have a magnificent voice,"

 he told her diffidently.  "Maybe you'll sing for us again after
supper."

"I believe I've already committed to that," she said with a laugh.
"Something about recording the same song on different machines.  I'm
willing to do whatever she wants.  But I'm really hungry."

A group of about twenty-five ultimately accompanied them to another one
of those nondescript buildings which proved to be a cafeteria.  The
food smelled heavenly and proved to be excellent.  Conversation at the
table all around them was lively but mostly impenetrable to Lucinda,
since it primarily revolved around scientific and experimental topics.
She concentrated on her food.

The shy young man who had released her from the studio was sitting on
her left.  "What is an angel doing at the Augustine school?"  he
gathered the courage to say.  "If you don't mind my asking."

She smiled at him to give him heart.  "I've been visiting friends in
Sahala," she said somewhat vaguely, not sure how much hard information
she should give out.

His shaggy eyebrows went up.  "Sahala.  That's where the Jacobites are
staying, isn't it?"

So perhaps it was not a secret after all.  "Well, some of them," she
said.  "The ones who are still alive, apparently."

He nodded.  "Two of them came here--oh, a month or two ago.  Conran, I
think his name was, and somebody else.  Later Alina told me that Conran
used to be a student here."

"So I understand.  What were they looking for?"

Instead of answering, he asked a question of the girl sitting across
the table from him.  "Rhea?  When those Jacobites came here, what were
they looking for?  What did they call it?"

"Oh, the Alleluia Files," she said.

Lucinda jumped, and her eyes flew to Reuben's.  It had not occurred to
her that anyone would seek the elusive papers here.  "And why would the
Alleluia Files be at the Augustine school?"  she asked slowly.  Nearly
everyone at the table had stopped holding their individual
conversations, it seemed, and all had started listening to this one.

"Because Caleb Augustus founded the school," Rhea replied.  "And he was
married to the angel Alleluia.  And they haven't found the files
anywhere else."

"And did you find them here?"  Reuben asked quietly.  Rhea laughed.
"Well, I didn't.  I didn't even know where to begin looking!  What is
this precious file, anyway?  A book?  A recording?  A cryptogram?  A
formula?  Does it even exist?  I poked around in a couple old books,
but I didn't find anything, and I don't think anyone else did,
either."

"Well," said the boy next to Lucinda, but he never had a chance to
complete his sentence.  Someone down the table called out another
question, which everyone attempted to answer at once, and the student's
voice was lost in the general commotion.  In a few more bites, Lucinda
had finished her food, and Alina led the way back to the recording
studio.

It took another hour to complete the tasks that Alina requested, and
Lucinda was starting to grow tired by the time they were done.  It had
been a long day, and she still was not sure exactly where they were
sleeping although Alina had made a few references to "empty rooms in
the dorm."  Which sounded a little uncomfortable, but it was only one
night, after all; and she was not used to luxury in any case.

"Great.  That was perfect.  You can come out now, and I'll play
everything back tonight.  Maybe tomorrow you can rerecord if there's
anything that didn't turn out right."

"Gladly," Lucinda said, and waited for the door to be opened.  She was
just as surprised as Alina was when the same shy young man appeared to
set her free.

"George.  I didn't know you were still here," Alina said.  "Well,
l--"

"Good.  You can show them to the room where they'll be staying tonight.
I've got a lot to finish here," Alina said, and turned her back on them
to begin consulting her notes.  Reuben grinned.

"Very single-minded, the engineers," he said in a low voice.  "George,
my friend, do you care if we stop at the car and pick up our baggage?
It will just take a minute."

In a few moments they were back outside in the perfumed night air,
under a sky so black that the stars looked humble.  Lucinda took a deep
breath and rolled her shoulders back.

"It never smells this sweet on Angel Rock," she observed.  "Not even in
spring."

"I was thinking," George said, and stopped.

Inwardly, Lucinda sighed, but Reuben spoke in a kind voice.   "Yes?
Something you wanted to tell us?"

"Well.  After those Jacobites came.  All of us did a little looking,
but no one found anything.  Not really.  But I was going through some
of Caleb Augustus's old papers."

He halted again, as if his speech was complete, as if he had told them
all he had to say.  But Lucinda felt a rising excitement prickle along
her spine, and she could tell by Reuben's sudden stillness that he,
too, was intensely interested.

But his voice was still soft, unalarming.  "Yes?"  he encouraged. "And
you found something?  Something that might lead us to the Alleluia
Files?"

"Well.  I'm not sure.  It was a very old piece of paper.  But I'm
pretty sure it's Caleb's handwriting.  We have plenty of examples of
that," he added.  "Old manuals.  Old notebooks.  Things like that?"

"I'm sure you do," Reuben said soothingly.  "But this paper you found.
It must have been very unusual.  What was on it?"

"Well, I'm not certain," George confessed.  "I couldn't read it.  No
one could.  It's not the old language, because there are about a dozen
people here who can read that.  It wasn't a language any of us knew.  I
thought it might be a code, you know, and I tried to crack it, but I
never could come up with the key."  He fell silent again.

"Well, I think I'd like to look at this mysterious piece of paper,"
Reuben said pleasantly.  "Lucinda?  Wouldn't you?"

"Indeed I would," she said.  All her exhaustion had evaporated, and she
felt as nervous as a child before her birthday.  "Could we go now or
must we wait until morning?"

"Oh, no reason to wait," George said.  "I can take you there right
now."

They carried their suitcases with them to a long, narrow building that
huddled close to the ground as if for warmth or comfort.  "Archives,"
George explained briefly.  The outer door was dense and heavy, and he
struggled with it until Reuben added his considerable strength. Inside,
the air seemed rarefied, scented, filtered of all personality.
Temperature and humidity controls, Lucinda guessed.  She was almost
afraid to exhale and poison the perfectly balanced atmosphere.

"Where did you find this paper?"  Reuben asked in a low voice.

George pointed, then led the way down the main hall.  "You don't have
to whisper," he said in equally subdued tones, "but everybody does.
There's something so ... quelling about this place."

In a few minutes they had found the storage room he was seeking.
Lucinda and Reuben seated themselves at a small table while George
foraged through a file drawer constructed of some unfamiliar-looking
metal.  Although the light was perfectly adequate, the room felt
shadowed; Lucinda kept looking over her shoulder for ghostly watchers.
The strange excitement had not left her, though she scolded herself
repeatedly.  An ancient piece of paper written in a made-up language.
There must be hundreds of such documents in this place.  And yet hope
and anxiety still played tag across her back.  She was breathing too
fast.  It was the air; it was the late night; she was being
ridiculous.

George sat across from them and handed Lucinda the paper.  "You see?
Makes no sense.  But maybe if you know the code ..."

His voice trailed off, but neither the angel nor the Edori was
listening.  Reuben had crowded closer to Lucinda, and she held the
paper so they could both scan it simultaneously.

Nonsense, indeed.  She felt the excitement receding from her toes and
fingers, withdrawing along each nerve route to make a clump of
disappointment in her stomach.  Vowels and consonants in no particular
order, grouped as if to form words, but there were no words.  None she
recognized, anyway.  She pursed her lips and silently tried to
formulate the sounds.  Mee... far.."  neeos..  . Hol..  . vetri..  .
lamecks..  .

Beside her, Reuben's body sagged from its taut posture.  "No," he said,
shaking his head and pulling back from Lucinda.  "Nothing I recognize.
And it couldn't be the Alleluia Files anyway.  There's less than a page
of text."

"Well," George said.  "I thought I should show you."

"And we appreciate it," Reuben said.  "But these aren't even words."

Lucinda spoke softly.  "They're phonetic."

She didn't lift her eyes from the page, but she felt both George and
Reuben quickly look her way.  "What do you mean'?"  George asked.

"In what language?"  Reuben said.

She shook her head.  "I don't recognize it.  But I think you're
supposed to read the sounds aloud and they'll become words, They just
don't look like words."

Reuben reached for the paper, but she held it away from him, turning it
so he couldn't see the printed page.  "No, you listen," she said.  "See
how it sounds."

And she read slowly, carefully, accenting nothing because she wasn't
sure where the emphasis of any word would fall.  "Mi farnios holve
trilamex yovasita merlaske--"

"That's Edori," Reuben said abruptly.

She felt the excitement punch through her again, but she kept her voice
level.  "That's promising," she said coolly.  "Is it Edori that makes
any sense?"

"Something about standing in the center of the great chamber--the god's
chamber?--some of the words have more than one meaning.  I'd have to
study it for a while before I could translate it accurately."

Lucinda turned to George, who was watching them hopefully.  "What do we
need to do," she said, "to remove the paper from here?  Is there
something we must sign?"

Now he was shocked.  "Oh, you can't remove it," he said.  "This is the
archives.  Everything must stay."

"Well, then, I guess we're here for a long night," Reuben said.

George was shaking his head.  "I could take a picture of it for you,"
he offered.

Lucinda and Reuben exchanged quick glances.  "Copy it over, you mean?"
the Edori asked cautiously.

The student shook his head.  "No.  It's a new process.  It produces any
visual medium in a matter of minutes.  Sometimes the copies are a
little distorted, but I don't think that should matter in this case. Do
you?  As long as you can read the words?"

"Shouldn't matter at all," Lucinda said with a smile, handing him the
paper.  "We'll wait right here."

As soon as George was out the door, Reuben leaped to his feet.  Lucinda
had never seen him so animated.  Like all Edori, he usually moved with
a slow, purposeful grace.  Now he paced around the room as if his body
could not contain its energy.

"I'm thinking these aren't exactly the files your friends have been
searching for," he said, and even his looping, lilting speech was
hurried.  "Part of the files, maybe.  A careful set of instructions."

Lucinda laughed at him, breathless though she was herself.  "And you
could tell that much from a few words?"

"Ah, but the words were formal, not conversational, which indicates
that the speaker would be teaching or instructing the listener.  And
the word yovasita.  It can mean so many things--a big room, even a big
natural site, a cave, for instance.  The root word is yova--Yovah, of
course.  Yovah's site, Yovah's chamber.  Sometimes the Edori call the
Plain of Sharon yovasita, because it is a huge place, and because it is
where Samarians go to worship the god."

"So is this telling us to go to the Plain of Sharon?"

He shook his head.  "I don't think so.  As I said, I'll need to be
studying the manuscript awhile before I can be certain of its meaning.
But yovasita is also a word the Edori use to refer to the sanctuaries
where the oracles commune with their god."

"Mount Sinai," Lucinda breathed.  She had not spent weeks in Sahala
without learning something from the Jacobites.  "Isn't that where
Alleluia was supposed to have been when she was taken up by the god?"

Reuben nodded.  "So I have always heard the story told.  And the words
you were reading could be interpreted to say, "Stand in the center room
of Mount Sinai and--"

"And what?"

He laughed.  "Well, that's all you told me!"

She couldn't sit still another second.  She jumped up to pace beside
him, her wings flowing over the pristinely kept floor.  "So what do you
think?"  she demanded.  "These are Alleluia's directions on how to
board the spaceship Jehovah?"

He shrugged.  He seemed to be growing calmer just as she was growing
more agitated.  "Well, we won't know that until we've read the whole
text," he said.  "But Caleb Augustus and his angel wife had plenty of
Edori friends who could have helped them prepare that paper."  He
laughed.  "And there have been plenty of Edori in the past century who
have passed through the gates of the Augustine school possessing both a
good sense of humor and plenty of time on their hands."

Lucinda felt as if her whole body contracted, head, chest, and feathers
deflating into husks.  "A hoax?"  she whispered.  "But who would do
such a thing?"

Reuben shrugged.  "Alleluia herself, for all we know," he said.  "Or
anybody in the world who came after her and had a command of Edori.
Alleluia may have been a madwoman.  She may have believed she flew up
to some great silver spaceship in the sky and conversed with Yovah, but
she may have been completely lunatic.  Or she never said it happened,
but somebody, at some time, took the opportunity to ascribe the
adventure to her.  Who knows?  We are dealing in pure speculation here.
Even if we decipher the manuscript tonight, we will not be able to
prove what it says is true."

"Unless we go to Mount Sinai--or wherever it tells us to go--and try
the directions for ourselves."

He laughed.  "Unless we do that.  Yes, mikala, then we will know."

"Well," she began, but the door opened and George stepped back into the
room.

"Sorry it took me so long," he apologized.  "It took the machine a
little while to heat to usable temperature.  Everything gets turned off
at night in the archives."

"Let's see this new technology," Reuben said, taking the original and
the copy and studying both.  "Very impressive, indeed!  You can read
every word on the reproduction."

George looked shyly pleased.  Lucinda wondered if he'd had some hand in
the invention of the machine.  "We're hoping to find a market for such
equipment in Samaria," he said.  "Christian Avalone already has one,
though it is still illegal there."

"It won't be for long," Reuben said absently.  Most of his attention
was on the page before him.  He had laid aside the authentic paper and
was poring over the copy.

"Really?  Why do you think that?"

"Because Christian Avalone is a man who knows how to translate his
desires into hard reality," Reuben said, looking up.  He bestowed his
warmest smile on the boy, and George beamed happily back.  "Thank you.
This is excellent.  May we take this copy with us as we leave?"

"Oh, yes.  It's yours.  Will it be helpful?  Does it have what you
want?"

"Maybe yes, maybe no.  I'll need to read the whole thing."

"Do we owe you any fee?"  Lucinda asked.

"Oh, no!"  George replied, shocked again.  "Knowledge is meant to be
shared!  Otherwise, how can we all learn?"

"The credo of the Augustine school," Reuben observed.  "As always, it
simplifies our lives.  George, my friend, you have been of great help
to us.  If you would now see us to our rooms, we would be happy to
release you for the night."

"Oh--yes--certainly!  But I--" He hesitated.

"We don't know yet," Reuben said gently.  "If we discover anything, we
will let you know in the morning.  You can be the one to tell the
others."

George blushed, smiled, looked away, and smiled again.  "You must be
tired," he said at last.  "Let me take you to the dorm."

It was well past midnight before Reuben had finally completed his
translation.  By this time, despite everything, Lucinda was nearly
asleep on one of the narrow dormitory beds that seemed unlikely to
accommodate one person comfortably, let alone two.  She had at first
perched upright on the edge of the mattress, but as the next two hours
passed, her body had gradually angled down toward a horizontal position
until she finally gave up and stretched out on the bed.  She had even
hiked up one of her wings to cover her face and block out some of the
harsh overhead light.

So she was actually dozing when Reuben said "Done!"  in a cheery voice
and laid aside his pencil.  She sat up, blinking rapidly and fighting
off the dizziness she always experienced when she was woken too
suddenly.  "Yes?  The Alleluia Files?  Yes?"

He laughed at her.  "Should this wait till morning?"  he teased.  "Are
you too sleepy to hear the greatest news of your generation?  It has
kept for a hundred years, it can wait one more night."

"No, I'm awake, I'm awake, tell me what it says."  She yawned mightily,
clapped her hand across her mouth, and begged him with her eyes.
"Please.  I swear I'm awake."

"Well, some of it's a little rough, but this is how I think the words
are meant to go.  "Stand in the center of Mount Sinai and look for
the--I think the word is 'pentagon' but I'm not sure.  The Edori don't
have a word for pentagon, but this says five-sided star.  Pentagram?
"Look for the pentagon on the floor.  Go to the--' I'm guessing again
here.  "Go to the blue--window?  screen'?  blue screen?--in the middle
of the wall.  Spell the word--' and here there's just a series of
symbols written very carefully.  Must be a word in the oracle's
language, and she didn't even try to find an Edori word to match. 
"Push the green button.  Go quickly back to the pentagon and stand
there.  You will be covered in a golden light.  You will feel your
body--I think she says 'evaporate'? Could that be right?  "When the
light fades, you will be in a room of white and silver.  This is the
place where Jehovah resides."

"She says that?  Jehovah?"

He nodded.  "Phonetically.  Hard to miss."

"And then what?"

"If you speak to Jehovah in your language, he will reply.  He will
answer any question you put to him.  When you wish to return to Mount
Sinai, simply ask for teleport."

"For what?"

Reuben shook his head.  "I'm just reading syllables here.  Te leport. I
don't know what it means."

"Then what?"

"That's all it says."

She fixed her gaze on him, a visual reference point to occupy her eyes
while her mind tried to assimilate the information.  Well, it sounded
simple enough; but then, Edori was a simple language, with very few
scientific terms.  The Edori who loved the new technology (and they
were many) had to discuss it in the Samarian tongue.  Alleluia had
deliberately used a very unsophisticated language to convey an
extremely complex process.  Another way to disguise her information, to
throw off her pursuers?  Or a way of saying, "This is not difficult.
Stand here, push this, say that.  There is nothing to alarm you"?

Or was it even Alleluia who had left this message behind?  "We have to
go there," Lucinda heard herself saying.

"To Mount Sinai?"  Reuben asked.

She shook her head.  "To Jehovah."

Reuben stared at her, and then burst out laughing.  "What?"  she
demanded, instantly defensive.  "Someone has to.  We have to see if
these directions are accurate.  Conran and Tamar are gone, or we could
send them.  They'd love a chance to come face-to-face with Jehovah."

"And I'm thinking they're going to be just as welcome on the gracious
continent of Samaria as you'd be.  Even more so," he replied.  His
voice, which had been cool and clipped while he attempted to translate
the paper, now resumed its customary lazy cadence.  "Aren't you here in
Ysral specifically because your admirable aunt Gretchen did not believe
you were safe near the other angels and their kin?"

"Yes, but we can be careful for a day or two," Lucinda said
impatiently.  "We'll be safe enough once we're in Mount Sinai.

I don't think Jecoliah is about to turn us over to the Jansai."

"Who?"

"Jecoliah.  The oracle at Mount Sinai."

"Yes, but will she allow us to draw pentagons on her floor and call
down great blazes of golden light?  I'm thinking that sounds like an
odd request from anyone, let alone a rogue angel and an Edori!"

"We'll think of something to tell her."

"And what then?  We stand in the middle of Mount Sinai and wait for
Jehovah to sweep us up to his famous white chamber?  And nothing
happens?  What do we say then to this very unhappy oracle?"

"Well, she'd probably be even more unhappy if we were swept up to
Jehovah," Lucinda said practically.  "She'd much prefer it if we
remained standing there, looking stupid."

He shook his head.  "I'm thinking it's too much of a risk."

"And I'm thinking," she said, mimicking him, "that you don't have to
come with me.  I can fly to Samaria on my own, thank you very much."

"But you would not do so, would you, to prove a very ten uous
theory?"

"I thought you wanted to know.  Just as much as I did.  I thought you
wanted to prove the existence of the Alleluia Files--or expose the lie.
 I thought you were excited about this.  Am I wrong?"

"You're right, mikala, and you know it.  I am just not certain that we
are the ones who should be doing the proving.  It is not our quest,
after all.  And I am not joyful at the prospect of putting you again at
risk."

She smiled at him, teasing him, deliberately provoking him.

"And I thought you were Reuben sia Havita, great Edori adventurer.
You've crossed oceans in a boat smaller than this bedroom.  And you're
afraid to take one more journey, travel to a place no one living now
has ever seen?  Were your Edori ancestors afraid to sail for Ysral,
never having laid eyes on it?  Would you have been afraid to make that
trip?"

Reluctantly he smiled back.  "It is not the same thing," he said.

"It is exactly the same thing."

"I think we should wait till Conran returns."

"You wait.  I'll go without you."

"You are a very stubborn mikala.  And you appear to be such a docile,
even-tempered girl."

"My aunt Gretchen always says much the same thing," she replied
serenely.  "How anyone with a face as sweet as yours could be such an
intractable child will be a mystery to me till I die."  Her very words.
Come with me or stay behind."

"I'll go with you.  When do you want to leave?"

"As soon as we've returned the car to Sahala."

A day later they took off for Samaria.  They had left the Augustine
school early in the morning, despite the fact that neither of them had
gotten much sleep.  They paused only to make a brief farewell to
George, telling him honestly what they believed the paper said.  He had
listened with his mouth agape and his eyes bleached with disbelief.

"And this is true?  It's genuine?"  he had demanded, choking the words
out with some difficulty.

"As to that, neither of us can say," Reuben had replied.  "These are
the words the documents contain.  We cannot verify more than that."

As they sped away in their little car, south toward Sahala, Lucinda had
asked, "Do you think that was wise?  Shouldn't this secret have been
kept a little longer?  Or at least until we've proved it?"

"Not if it's the truth," Reuben had replied, "What if Conran and all
his band are taken prisoner in Samaria?  What if you and I perish in
our flight across the ocean?  Enough people have died for the Alleluia
Files.  If they exist, it is time the secret was revealed."

"And if it's a hoax after all?"

Reuben shrugged.  "No harm done.  A few engineering students make their
way to Mount Sinai and cause the oracle great annoyance.  And the
watching god laughs.  And the world spins on."

However, they did not, in Sahala, tell the Jacobites exactly where they
planned to go.  It would be too unwieldy, Lucinda thought, to try to
discipline a horde of fanatic rebels who would all want to cram into
Mount Sinai at once to watch the miracle.  No, best to send a small
party first, and wait for news.

So they packed, slept, and took off early the next morning, giving only
the vaguest information about their destination.  The skies were clear,
and Lucinda settled quickly into her most efficient pace.  Reuben was
one of the few men she had ever encountered who seemed to enjoy being
carried by a woman, who took the opportunity to gaze around at the
world from this unique vantage point, who did not worry that he was too
heavy or too dependent.

Flying at top speed and barring any battering head winds, an angel
could cross the ocean in two days.  With a two-hundred-pound man in her
arms and a couple of packs strapped around her waist, Lucinda wasn't
sure she could meet that goal, so she planned to attempt the trip in
two and a half.  Which meant they would have to find two friendly ships
to shelter them overnight, which meant they had to look for Edori
vessels, which meant they had to follow a more northerly course than
the direct one between Ysral and Breven.

"And of course we can't stop at Angel Rock for the night," she murmured
in Reuben's ear.  "That would create a furor.  Aunt Gretchen would
never let me leave the island."

"Not a bad idea, perhaps," he replied, but she merely laughed.

They were lucky the first night: They spotted an Edori ship almost the
instant they decided to start looking.  Lucinda was not surprised, upon
landing, to discover that Reuben was somehow related to the captain and
one of the crew members.  Even had that not been the case, she was sure
they would have been welcomed just as warmly.

"Flying on to Breven, is that it?"  the captain asked them over dinner.
"We'd be glad to take you the whole distance, if that would suit your
plans.  No trouble at all."

"Actually, I like the flying," Reuben said with a grin.  "I wouldn't
have believed such a thing was possible, but it's even better than
gusting through the ocean at top speed just a mile ahead of a storm."

Plainly the Edori disbelieved him but, before the angel, hesitated to
mock him.  "Well, then," one of the sailors replied, "that's the favor
I'll ask from the god next."

 The next morning, they were on their way again before the first
fragile light of dawn skittered across the horizon to their backs.  And
for the first few hours of the flight, the day passed much as the one
before it had.  The heavy heat of the sun was brushed away by the
incessant spiral of wind rising from the restless sea; above them and
below, there were only shades of turquoise, cobalt, and celestine.  The
rush of wind, the call of seabirds, the slap of water, and the beat of
angel wings were the only sounds in a vast, immobile, empty world.  The
serenity was deeper than death.

And yet, as the afternoon advanced, painting both air and water with an
overlay of gold, Lucinda felt her arms grow tired and her breath pull
more laboriously into her lungs.  She felt the steady rhythm of her
heartbeat skip and falter, and dread washed across her like a blush.
She ceased replying to Reuben's idle comments and put all her energy
into gaining another mile, and another, without dropping her burden
into the ocean and sinking after him like so much blond-and-alabaster
stone.

It was not even sunset before she started searching the horizon for a
ship that could take them in for the night, but it was another half
hour before she spotted something suitable.  And even then it was not
ideal: an independent freighter out of Lisle, flying the green Gaza
flag under the standard of its merchant owner.  But as long as the
sailors weren't Jansai, Lucinda had little fear.  No respectable
tradesman would refuse to take in an angel.

And she was right, though the welcome here was civil as opposed to
genuine, and there was a lengthy wait before the captain was able to
clear out a cabin for their use.

"We ask a berth for just one night," Lucinda assured him.  "And we can
pay you."

"No, no, no payment is required," he replied stiffly.  "Of course, we
would be happy to have you join us for dinner."

"We have our own food, thank you," she replied, earning a quick
sideways glance from Reuben and a look of relief from the captain.  "We
will attempt not to trouble you again at all."

In a few moments they had been shown to their room, a meticulously
clean if astonishingly small chamber that probably belonged to the
first mate or some other officer.  Lucinda went straight toward the
bed, stripping off the packs around her waist and letting them fall to
the floor.  She sat on the edge of the bunk and stared sightlessly at
the porthole.

Reuben stood with his back against the door, gravely watching her. "Are
you ill?"  he asked.  "Is the strain of the long flight too much? They
will not like it, of course, but we could stay another day aboard this
vessel, until you have recovered your strength."

But she shook her head.  The tumult in her head was so raucous that she
almost could not hear his words, only the gray cacophony of panic and
fear.  Her whole body felt small, taut, braced for impact.  She had
never been so frightened in her life.  "Something's happened to Tamar,"
she whispered.

CHAPTER TWENTY

They jounced along the worst roads in Bethel in the worst trucks ever
soldered together, and not a single Jacobite uttered a complaint or a
curse.  All nine of them had been shoved inside the back of one of the
big transport vehicles, which consisted of a metal base enclosed by an
iron cage high enough for even Jared to stand upright.  They were
sharing a space about as big as a reasonably sized bedroom--but there
were nine of them, and there was no padding, and there was no privacy,
and there was death at the end of the road.  Tamar, who had traveled a
good deal, considered this the worst journey of her life.

The last journey of her life.

She could not quite believe it, although it was plain the others did.
Jani and Loa huddled together in one corner of the cage, crying
quietly, their arms wrapped around each other and even their hair wet
with their tears.  Horace, whose arm had been broken in a fast fight
with one of their attackers, lay in a trance-like state on the floor of
the truck, refusing water or comfort.  Duncan, Sal, and Wyman spent all
their energy examining every last joint of the bars and the truck,
looking for loose connections, looking for paths to escape.  When the
vehicle careened around a particularly bad corner and sent them flying
to the hard floor, they merely waited till they had caught their breath
or their balance, and climbed back to their feet, searching, testing,
hoping.

Not that it would do them a damn bit of good to pry the whole cage from
the shell of the truck, since their prison car was being followed by
two truckloads of Jansai, no doubt watching for just such an event. But
that was a Jacobite for you: never any idea of when to give up and go
home.

Of course, they couldn't exactly go home.  They could give up.  But
they wouldn't.

Conran divided his time between all of them, exhorting Horace to
attempt to sit up, cajoling the girls into weak smiles, slapping the
men on the back and telling them they would solve it yet, he had faith
in them.  Supreme faith.

Tamar sat with her back to the pursuing Jansai trucks, and watched
Jared.

He sat in the corner across from her, knees updrawn, hands linked
around his ankles, wings considerately curled tight to his body so that
he took up no more than his allotted space in these very small
quarters.  He seemed to be completely at ease, fully relaxed,
concealing neither chagrin nor alarm.  Certainly, he did not appear to
be contemplating a gruesome death in two days' time or ruing all the
actions of his life that had led him to this regrettable end.  So
perhaps he did not believe they would all be killed, either--or at
least, he felt certain he would be spared.

But Tamar had her doubts about that.  The smiling Omar had said flat
out that the angel could abandon the Jacobites or die beside them.  He
had made no provisions for people who suddenly recanted at the last
minute.

Why had Jared passed up his chance to leave?  Tamar could not get the
question out of her head, and she toyed with her mother's locket while
her mind worried over the problem.  Why had he crossed to her side,
defiant but calm, and stared back at the Archangel's son with
absolutely no ~moue of remorse?  He did not believe in their cause, did
not care if the Alleluia Files were hidden for the next century or
recited over broadcast wires to every ear in Samaria.  Why had he
joined them?  Why would he sacrifice his life?

Well, she would die before she asked him those questions--die within
the next two days, if Bael's son told the truth.  But she could not
stop herself from staring at Jared and wondering.

The caravan stopped twice during that first afternoon to give the
prisoners and their guards a chance to attend to personal needs.
However, it appeared they were not to be offered food, even though the
Jansai and Omar made a great show of eating their dinner in full view
of the Jacobites.  That was not a great concern; they had all gone
hungry before.  What was worse was the thirst, which, on this hot
southern day, grew more and more

 unbearable as the hours rolled on.  Between them, the Jacobites had
five canteens that had been slung over various shoulders while they
prowled through Maretta's house--but only three of them held any water,
and that supply was low.

But then, if you were going to die anyway, what did it matter what you
died of?  Tamar ran her tongue across her lips and tried not to think
of water.

After the second break, at what she judged to be about six in the
evening, Omar approached their truck at a languid pace.  He ran his
eyes comprehensively over the occupants of the truck, noting who was
weeping and who was scheming, and came to a halt just outside the bars
where Jared sat.

"Are you enjoying your trip so far?"  asked the Archangel's son.

Jared turned his head slowly to look at him, examining Omar as
thoroughly as Omar had examined them.  "It would be more pleasant if
you would offer us a few gallons of water," he said.

Omar raised his eyebrows.  "And why would I go to any extra trouble to
make a few miserable Jacobites comfortable?  Jacobites who are as good
as dead where they lie?"

"Well, they are not dead now," Jared replied coolly.  "And any living
creature in your care should be treated with decency, no matter how
much you despise it.

Omar laughed disbelievingly.  "I'd water a dog before I'd water a
Jacobite," he said.  "I hope you suffer the torments of the damned."
And he turned on his heel and stalked off.  A few minutes later the
trucks rumbled to life again, and they continued on their way.

North, to the Plain of Sharon.

Tamar forced herself to sit in her place for the next two miles, but
after that she could stand it no longer.  She pushed herself to her
hands and knees, and crawled past Horace and Conran to Jared's side. He
looked at her with the same undecipherable gaze he had turned on
Omar.

"There's a little water," she said.  "In Horace's canteen.  And in some
of the others.  If you're thirsty."

"There's not enough for us all," he said.

"Well, we're all sharing.  No one would begrudge you a mouthful."

He smiled at her strangely, almost kindly.  Not an expression of regret
or hatred, but she still could not read his face.  "More will be
provided," he said.

She doubted it, but she did not want to say so.  Having made the effort
to come to his side, after days of avoiding him, she found she could
neither speak casually nor bring herself to move away.  She could not
talk to him and she could not leave him.

Just as well, then, that she would die in two days.  She would not be
able to endure this agony for long.

"Do you think he will really kill us all?"  was the only thing she
could think to ask.  "Bael?  Do you think so?"

Jared nodded.  "Oh, yes.  He would, if he could, destroy every last
Jacobite on the planet."

Tamar nodded once, but she still didn't believe it.  Oh, she knew it,
the way she knew the sun would rise in the morning and no prayer of
hers could prevent it, but she didn't believe it.  She could not
imagine it happening.  "How?  Do you know?"

Again, that odd smile, distant and a little pitying.  "I have my
theories," he said, but did not elaborate.

"And why the Plain of Sharon?  Why not just do us all in right there in
Chahiela?"

"The Archangel wants an audience.  He wants to show anyone who might
not realize how serious he is just how much he dislikes Jacobites--and
anyone else.  who questions the existence of the god."

"But will there be an audience?  On the Plain of Sharon, I ~rrlean?"

Jared nodded again.  "There's a big fair going on this week.  A cattle
show, I think, or maybe pigs.  Farm animals.  But it's not just your
credulous yokels who show up for these fairs.  Half the Manadavvi
landowners are competitive breeders, and of course all the big farm
conglomerates in Bethel are run by rich landowners.  Most of the gentry
of Samaria will be present.  And all of them, I assure you, will get
the message."

"Are you afraid?"  she asked before she could stop herself.  For the
first time he appeared to look at her fully, and the depth and
brilliance of his gray eyes momentarily made her forgetful.  "A
little," he admitted.  "It is no pleasant thing to face your own death
and feel absolutely helpless."

"They'll let you go," she said, the words again coming without her
volition.  "If you ask them to.  If you tell them it was a mistake.
Omar will let you go.  Or Bael."

 He watched her a long time before he replied.  "I stand with the
Jacobites," he said.

"But why?"  she whispered.  Now her body, like her mouth, moved of its
own independent will.  She had laid her hand on his arm before she was
conscious of wanting to touch him. "Why did you not step aside?"

"You tell me," he said.

She shook her head wildly.  "Because I told you once--some-thing I
don't even remember saying !--because I said there was nothing in your
life worth dying for!  But you are not a Jacobite--this is not a cause
you have lived for your whole life.  It should not be something you die
for, either."

"Oh, I am not dying for the Alleluia Files," he said lightly.

"Then why are you on this truck?  Why did you come with us and follow
us when you could have run?"

"I came for you," he said, and his voice was completely steady.  "You
are the thing I will die for."

The shock went through her like electricity, like violence.  Every
muscle in her body burned, every vein ran with acid.  He had told her
before that he loved her, but she had managed to hate him for saying
it.  She had not had much luck explaining that alchemy to herself, but
she had used a great deal of energy believing it.  But you could not
even pretend to hate a man who would lay down his life for you.

"I wish you would not," she whispered.  "I don't want you to die."

He smiled, a little more cheerfully this time.  "Well, to tell the
truth, I don't want to, either.  And when darkness falls and I can be
reasonably certain none of the Jansai can see me, I'll attempt to
contact some of my friends.  Maybe they will be able to effect a
rescue."

"Contact--?"  she repeated blankly.  "Contact them how?"

"It's a communications device.  I believe the Edori invented it.  It
transmits sound to a designated receiver over a great distance.  At
least I hope it does.  It's been a while since I tried to use it."

She felt suddenly eager.  "Is there anything I can do to help?"

He regarded her again with that mysterious expression.  "Yes.  One
thing."

"Gladly."

"Sit with me and wait for night to fall."

That caught her by surprise, and she gazed at him doubtfully.

She could not love an angel; he could not love her.  The truth was so
self-evident that there was no need to explain it, to herself, to him.
Yet his face haunted her dreams and his voice spun through her mind
during every waking hour; to him, though not aloud, she had explained
every action of her life, recounted every adventure.  If he was
anywhere near her--in the same house, on the same ship, in the same
city--she knew exactly where he was at every hour of the day.  It was
as if some magnetic core smelted within his bones exerted a powerful
draw on her eyes and brain and heart.  Were she to live a hundred years
longer, she would not be able to escape the insistent drag of his
presence, no matter how far away she ran, no matter if she never laid
eyes on him again.

And yet, they would die in two days, and she did not even know what it
was like to feel the weight and shape of his mouth against hers.

He smiled at her again as if he could read the thoughts like signposts
in her head, and the kindness of that smile did her in.  he crept
closer and he stretched out his arm; she crawled beneath it as if it
were the only haven in the world.  His wing vrapped around her, light
and silken as a kiss, and he took one of her hands in his.

Oh, no, she could not die now.  Not if the angel loved her.

The trucks traveled on for another hour, until the light had completely
failed.  Once more, the prisoners were allowed briefly out then
shepherded back inside the truck, apparently to bed down for the night.
With sunset, the air had cooled considerably, and the Jacobites watched
with envy as the Jansai and the Archangel's son gathered around a
flickering fire.

"Lie together," Conran instructed the Jacobites, moving carefully
between the sprawled bodies and outspread limbs to check on everyone's
condition. "Find someone to sleep by and share your heat.  It will be a
cool night."

Duncan grunted.  "There will be no sleeping."

"There had better be," Conran replied soberly.  "For you will need all
your strength and all your cunning if you are to survive more than
another day."

Tamar, of course, had already found the body she intended to sleep
beside. Jared, she had learned during the past hour, was nowhere near
as relaxed as he seemed; every muscle in the chest she leaned against
was corded with watchful anticipation, and his arm was strung with
tension.

"Now would be a good time," she whispered.  "While the Jansai are still
laughing over dinner and will not hear you speaking."

He nodded.  "I agree.  Sit so you block me from view."

So she straightened her back and set her arms akimbo, while Jared
slouched beside her and fumbled for something in a pack at his waist. A
few minutes later she heard a series of sharp beeps, which drew the
attention of every occupant of the truck.  Of course, none of them was
so indiscreet as to call out, "What's that you're fooling with, Jared?"
Long before this, they had learned to rely on unlikely eventualities.
But every head turned slowly their way.

Jared ignored them all.  He seemed to be having some trouble getting
his communicator to work, for the beeping sounds repeated several
times, and twice he swore under his breath.  "All right, then,
Christian, let us see if another friend is home," she heard him say,
and the little chirps sounded again.

And, seconds later, Tamar heard a tinny, astonished woman's voice float
through thin air as if drifting down from a mountaintop.  "Hello?
Hello?  Which one of you is calling me at this hour?"

Jared spoke in a hard, rapid voice.  "Mercy.  It's Jared.  Don't ask
questions.  Omar and a band of Jansai have taken hold of me and a
truckload of Jacobites--"

"Jacobites!  Jared, what in the god's name--"

"Listen to me!  And they're hauling us to the Plain of Sharon.  I'd
judge we're in the vicinity of the Corinni Mountains right about now.
We'll be at the Plain of Sharon the day after tomorrow.  Mercy, he
plans to murder the lot of us.  You have to--"

"Murder!  Jared, stop, you have to explain to me--"

"There's no time!  You have to go to Christian, now, this instant. 
Tell him what I've told you.  Tell him there's to be an execution in
two days--me and all the Jacobites.  Go to him.  Bring your angels. 
Bring the angels from the Eyrie and Monteverde, if they can be reached.
Do not fail me.  Mercy, my life depends on this.  He will kill us all,
he truly will."

"I'll leave now.  What can we do to stop him?"

"I don't know.  My ~dendence is on Christian.  Jovah guard you, Mercy. 
My life is in your hands."

Abruptly, the connection clicked off; there was a sudden humming
silence, so faint that it would have been unnoticeable to someone who
had not been listening to the previous conversation.  Jared snapped
some switch, and even the humming ceased.  The angel slipped the
communicator back in his pouch.  The Jacobites, who had all frozen in
place, gradually relaxed.

"And do you think your friends will meet us on the Plain in time to do
us any good?"  Conran finally voiced the question in everybody's
head.

"I don't know," Jared admitted.  "They'll be there.  That I can
guarantee."

"So if nothing else, they will witness our murders."

"There is something to be said for an observed death," Jared replied
lightly.

"There is more to be said for a lived life," Conran growled.

"I have done what I can for now.  Let us all go to sleep."  Jared
stretched out, slowly and carefully, attempting to avoid kicking Horace
in the head.  ~T ~wted until he seemed completely arranged, and then
she uncurled beside him, fitting her body to his.  Again, his arm was
around her waist, comforting and his wing settled lightly over her
body, like lacy mist.  She butted her head against the join of his
shoulder and chest, just to feel those two inches of skin moving across
her temple, gliding under the tangled silk of her hair.  He bent his
head, brushed his mouth across her cheek.  She felt herself unknotting,
disintegrating, in his arms.  She could not remember the last time she
had trusted someone else enough to sleep beside him.

She could not remember the last time she had felt so safe.

The next day was hotter.  Unseasonable for this time of year,
especially as they traveled now through Bethel, but miserable all the
same.

"We need water," Jared had said imperiously to the Jansai who let them
out a few hours after they had resumed their trip.  The gypsy had
laughed at him.

"You got no need for water, nor food, neither."  He had sneered, and
just for emphasis he punched Wyman as he staggered down from the truck.
Duncan made a sudden movement, as if to leap for the Jansai and strike
his own blow, but Conran caught his arm.

"Let it be," the Jacobite leader croaked.  Tamar had not seen him take
a swallow of water since they were first thrown aboard the truck.  Not
Conran, not Jared.  "Save your strength for battles you can win."

Within fifteen minutes they were back in the cage, back on the road
north.  Now everyone but Conran, Tamar, and Jared lay prone on the
floor of the truck, too hot, too weary, and too thirsty to waste energy
in sitting or speaking.  Bael would not need to tie them to stakes and
torch them, if that was his plan; they would die wretchedly on their
own.

The truck picked up speed, rocking a little wildly from side to side
and causing Jani to spread her arms to keep from rolling across the
floor.  That was the moment that Jared chose to come to his feet.  He
steadied himself with a hand wrapped around one of the bars of the
cage, and he tilted his head back to watch the merciless sky brighten
above them.

And he began to sing.

The Jacobites all stared at him as if he had gone mad, even Tamar,
crouching at his feet like a starving beggar.  He had closed his eyes
but kept his face pointing upward, sightlessly watching the hard blue
heaven.  He seemed to sing to the sky itself, to the sun, pleading with
them to soften and darken and take pity on the poor traveling refugees.
His voice, despite hunger, thirst, and fear, was untroubled and
unfaltering, rolling through the heated air of the prison like a
scented breeze.

Or perhaps the air itself was cooling.  The vapors of the wind seemed
to be imperceptibly coalescing even as the Jacobites watched.  First
the sky grew dimmer, as if the sun covered its face with a thin gray
veil, and then an unexpected cloud boiled up from nowhere, directly
overhead. Another cloud raced up beside it, angrier and darker, and
suddenly the sky was nothing but clouds, nothing but temper.  A streak
of lightning sizzled to the ground, and the clouds exploded with
applause.

Jared continued to sing, not once opening his eyes.

His voice sounded in Tamar's head much as Lucinda's had; she heard him
not so much with her ears as with some receivers buried in her brain.
She could not have said if his voice was rich or thin, powerful or
pitiful, gorgeous or mistuned.  But it shaped itself to her thoughts
and desires; it snuggled into her cortex and her vertebrae.  Her heart
molded its rhythm to his beat, and she turned over her existence to
him.

And then the rain came, falling like jewels tossed from a king's hand.
Duncan yelped and scrambled to his feet.  Sal yanked Horace's canteen
from his limp hand, unscrewed the lid, and held it out between the bars
to catch the glittering water.  The other Jacobites copied him.  The
tempo and force of the storm increased; within minutes they were all
drenched, and still the rain poured down.  Now the Jacobites (all but
Horace) were on their feet, arms flung out for balance, heads thrown
back, trapping the delicious water in their open mouths.  The rain
sluiced down, plastered their hair to their heads and their clothes to
their skins, and washed away everything--thirst, dust, fear, despair.

As quickly as the storm had swept up, it dissipated.  The clouds
flattened out, wrung of all their water; the fractious wind skipped
once more around the caravan, then sighed and lay down to rest.  The
furious sun, throwing a tantrum of its own, shoved aside the bleached
clouds and glared at the sodden earth below.  Slowly, sullenly, the air
submitted itself again to that tyrant's will.

But they were cooled, and they had water.  When Jared, seeming almost
disoriented, opened his eyes at last, he swayed once with the skidding
motion of the truck and almost fell.  Tamar caught his hand and drew
him down beside her.  He put his arm around her shoulders as if, even
this low to the ground, he could not keep his balance.  She leaned in
and kissed him on the mouth.  The whole universe paused in its eternal
spinning; the very earth shook perceptibly with surprise.  Jared's arms
closed around her, drawing her wet body tightly against his.  If she
had not been soaked to the bone, she would have sworn she had been set
on fire.

Another night, another morning, traveling so many hours that the
minutes jumbled together, uncountable and indistinguishable.  Now that
their thirst had been appeased, all the Jacobites could think of was
their hunger.  It was better than contemplating their deaths.  Another
day of this and they would grow too weak even to care.

The land had changed slowly around them, from the lush emerald
farmlands of southern Bethel to the mountainous terrain that bisected
the province, to the flatter, browner land farther north.  They had
followed a northeasterly route until they neared the Galilee River, and
then they headed due north.  Past Semorrah, on and on till they
breached the ring of mountains that guarded the Plain of Sharon.

As the trucks grumbled and clawed their way up those rocky slopes, all
the Jacobites began to stir.  This was the end, of course, their final
destination.  Anxiety and adrenaline gave them back what two days of
starvation had drained away: a restless, unhappy energy that put them
back on their feet and had them clinging to the bars, looking once more
for escape.

What they saw before them on the Plain of Sharon was not promising.
None of the Jacobites, Tamar surmised, had ever been at this site when
a Gloria was being staged, so none of them was prepared for the
commotion of a grand event.  Tents, pavilions, booths, and pens were
spread over the level plain with as much precision and variety as a
small city, and the makeshift aisles were crowded with more pedestrians
than Semorrah on a market day.  The arrival of three additional trucks
caused no shopper to do more than turn an incurious gaze their way
before returning to his bargaining.  They could have roared right
through the fair, silent or shouting, and caused no furor at all.  No
one would have known, or cared, that the Jacobites had been brought
here to die.

But Omar was crafty.  Tamar would grant him that.  He halted the trucks
in what looked like the very center of the fairgrounds, and then he
hopped out and took a leisurely look around.  Some of the browsers knew
him, that was evident from the murmur of surprise that went up from
many of the bystanders.  Others turned their attention to the trucks
themselves, in particular the traveling prison crammed to the edges
with silent, defiant captives.  As if unable to help themselves--drawn
by the mystery or the misery--the fairgoers drew closer, slowly at
first, and then in droves, until there were fifty of them, a hundred,
two hundred, gathered around the Jansai caravan and wondering aloud
what was afoot.

"Is my father here?"  Omar asked finally in a carrying voice.  "Is the
Archangel present?"

"He's at the inn where he usually stays for the Gloria," someone
volunteered.

"Will someone fetch him?"

"I'll go!"  came from a dozen voices, and suddenly the footrace was on.
Ten fled toward the hotels, half a mile away; others ran for their
friends, still obliviously shopping the fair.  No one knew what was
going on, but clearly a drama was about to unfold; this would be
something too rare to miss.

The Jacobites waited in tense silence.  Bael, it seemed, was in no
hurry to come to them, and the minutes edged by at an excruciating
pace.  Now the crowd around the trucks was five hundred strong, maybe
more, men and women and bright-eyed children, staring in at them and
wondering what crime they could have committed to land them here in
such ignominy on such a beautiful day.  They munched their candied
apples, these watchers, and guzzled back their pints of ale, as if
prepared to settle in for the exhibition of their lives, and Tamar
hated every single one of them.

Finally, slowly, rolling back like a multicolored wave, those who had
raced off to find the Archangel returned.  With them came a couple
dozen others, roused from their afternoon naps or called from their
noisy recreation in the taproom.  In their midst, walking with a slow,
stately dignity, strode a silver-haired old angel dressed in flowing
purple robes and looking, even from a distance, as if the fate of the
world was his primary concern.

"That's Bael," Jared said, as if aware that few of the Jacoo bites
would know the Archangel by sight.  "With the silver hair and the long
beard."

"He looks sure of himself, that one," Conran said.  Jared gave a short
laugh.

"That he is.  Has always been."

The crowd made way for the Archangel, wordlessly opening up a passage
all the way to the prison truck.  All murmuring had ceased; even the
noises of crunching and slurping had died away.  The Archangel's
measured footfalls were the only sounds to be heard.

And they came to a halt three feet from the bars of the Jansai truck,
and Bael stared straight at the captured rebels.

"So," he said, and his booming voice was mellow and beautiful.  "So,
these are the Jacobites who have for so long troubled the realm."

Now the crowd briefly woke to astonishment ("Jacobites!"  "That's who
they are!  ...  I knew it!  Didn't I say it as soon as the truck
stopped?  Jacobites!") but quickly fell silent again to hear the rest
of Bael's words.  He had extended his right hand so that the
embroidered purple sleeve fell back to reveal a white silk cuff, and he
pointed at the occupants of the truck.

"You!  Conran Atwell, who have spread dissent and trouble throughout
Samaria for the last thirty years."

"Truth and knowledge," Conran replied cockily.  "That's me."

"And you.  And you.  Duncan, Horace, Wyman, Jani.  We know your faces
and we know your names.  We know the heresies you have spouted across
the three provinces."

Duncan spit at him through the bars, but none of the others made a
movement.  Bael did not step back or even react.  His accusing finger
had swung toward Tamar.

"And you.  The daughter of an angel.  How you could have fallen so low,
been so easily seduced by evil companions, I will never understand.
Your blood, your heritage, should have shown you the shining light of
truth."

"Perhaps if you hadn't sent me out to die with my mother on the coldest
night of the year, you might have seen to it that I was properly
raised," Tamar said loudly.  A gasp went up from the crowd; the
Jacobites around her burst into low laughter.  "So I blame you for my
being here.  Actually I blame you for everything--"

"Silence!"  the Archangel roared, and such was the power of his voice
that, against her will, Tamar shut her mouth.  "You will not speak lies
and treachery to my very face!"

"And why should she not?"  Jared said coolly.  "You have spoken nothing
else for the whole of your life."

"Silence?"  Bael cried again, and this time he addressed not only the
Jacobites, but the murmuring crowd as well.  For what accusations were
these?  From despicable, heathen Jacobites, such words could be
discounted, but from an angel?  Accusing the Archangel of treachery?
The mob could not be entirely quieted.

Bael now stabbed his finger in Jared's direction.  "And you--you whom I
have loved almost as a son, welcomed into my home and my life.  You, to
have joined this band of heretical liars, the very people that threaten
to tear Samaria in two--"

"You are the one destroying Samaria," Jared said.  "You are the one who
has known for five years that the Alleluia Files actually exist.  You
are the one who has hidden the truth, who has lied, who has murdered,
all because you did not want to give up the power you love so
dearly--"

"Silence him!"  the Archangel screamed, and the Jansai leaped forward,
beating the metal bars of the prison with pots and sticks and shovels.
Inside the cage, the din was so loud that they all shrieked and covered
their ears to drown it; outside, the surging assembly shouted and
questioned in their own riot of noise.  In the commotion, it was
impossible to hear what commands Bael gave to the Jansai warrior he
motioned over.  Two minutes later the truck rambled to life and slowly
inched its way free of the encircling mob.

"Where is he taking us?"  Tamar called to Jared.

"To the middle of the plain!  Clear of the fairgrounds!"

"Why?"

But the angel did not answer.

They traveled perhaps half a mile from the booths and tents to a level,
empty section of land toward the middle of the plain.  There they
stopped.  They had moved so slowly that the entire crowd was able to
follow on foot, still shouting out inquiries and insults and seeming to
grow more frenzied by the moment.  Yet for all its agitation, the whole
mob grew still as once again Bael approached the prisoners and spread
his arms for attention.

"Jacobites, pray, if you have any remnants of faith left in your god,"
the Archangel intoned.  "For you are about to die at that god's
hands."

Conran leaped forward, almost flinging himself against the bars.  "We
may die at your hands, but it is a machine you call to, and not a god!
Whatever kind of destructive power you can cause it to unleash, it is
still a machine, a thing to whom you send a prayer, and not a god!
Never a god!"

"Wait," Jared spoke, and for the first time his voice was strained,
uncertain.  Hi eyes desperately scanned the skies to the south, but he
did not see what he was looking for.  His friends, Tamar guessed,
arriving too late or not at all.  "You cannot so summarily convict and
execute us.  Give us a day--give us till sundown.  Let our arguments be
heard."

"Your arguments are worthless," Bael said contemptuously.  "I will not
listen to them."

"Wait till sundown.  Wait even another hour."

"Why should I?"  Bael demanded.

"You owe me that much for the life I have spent in service to you and
the god you say you love."

"You forfeited your life when you turned your back on your god.  I will
not give you even a minute more.  Move back!"  he cried, raising his
voice so suddenly that even the Jacobites jumped away, tumbling over
each other in the narrow confines of the truck.  They scrambled to
their feet in time to see the roiling crowd also stumble backward,
forced away from the truck by the power in that voice.  "Move back! For
the god will strike down any who stand too close to the unbelievers."

Now the fairgoers were tripping over each other in their haste to put
room between themselves and the Jansai truck.  Even so, their faces
looked mutinous, appalled, disbelieving, and more than one man shouted
out, "Wait!  We should listen to what the angel says!"  But the Jansai
had moved quickly, forming a menacing, impenetrable ring all around the
transport, shoving the crowd back, widening the circle more and more.

Only Bael now stood anywhere near the truck, oblivious alike to the
shouts of the throng behind him and the Jacobites before.  Again, he
swept his arms out, and this time he threw his head back, and he seemed
as rapt and ensorcelled as a madman in a seizure.  The sun shimmered
along his silver hair, his silver beard, his silver wings; he seemed
haloed with its munificent light.

And then he shook his fists twice at the listening sky, spread his
fingers as wide as they would go, and began to serenade the god.

For the past day and a half Lucinda had flown as far as her wings would
carry them both, and still they had not reached Sinai as quickly as she
had hoped.  They had left the Gaza ship half an hour before dawn and
continued on to Samaria, finally making their way to land a few hours
after noon.  And still had flown on, another fifty miles and then
another, before Reuben finally insisted they stop.  She was so worn out
with exertion and worry that she could barely stand once they came to
rest outside a modest hotel in a town neither of them had heard of.
Reuben negotiated with the innkeeper, led Lucinda to their room, went
downstairs to fetch a dinner tray, and returned to find the angel
sprawled facedown on the bed.  He forced her to eat before allowing her
to sleep.

And even when she slept, her dreams were haunted by terrors.  The
pressure of Tamar's fear weighted her own heart and made it hard to
breathe.  But there was something there besides the dread, a fugitive
sweetness, a joy so remote but so bright that Lucinda turned from side
to side in her bed, trying to glimpse it more fully.  Wherever Tamar
was, whatever was happening to her, she was not alone and she was not
completely without hope.  Only that realization allowed Lucinda to
sleep at all.

In the morning when she woke, she felt heavy and unre-freshed.  Reuben
looked exhausted, as though her tossing and turning had kept him from
sleep as well.  He had already risen and washed himself before she
opened her eyes, and he had brought up another tray for breakfast.

"Any better?"  he asked, coming to sit beside her on the bed.  Briefly
she leaned against him, drawing some strength from the heat and
structure of his body, then she pulled away.

"I can't tell what's wrong.  I don't know what to do," she said,
anxiety creeping back into her voice.

"Shall we return to Ysral?  Shall we fly down to Chahiela to look for
her?  We do not have to journey on to Mount Sinai now."

"She is not in Chahiela," Lucinda said tersely.

"How do you know?"

"I can tell.  She is--moving.  Traveling.  But I cannot sense a
direction.  She could be back on the ship.  She could be heading for
Breven.  I don't know."

"We can look for her."

Lucinda shook her head.  "We must go to Mount Sinai.  To ask Jovah.
Perhaps he will be able to track her Kiss and tell us where she is."

"Can he do that?"

"We'll find out."  She abruptly pushed him away and leaped to her feet.
"There is no time to waste."

"Enough time to eat breakfast, mikala," he said firmly, and so she
sighed and made herself swallow a few bites.  All she wanted to do was
fling herself into the air and fly as hard and as fast as her wings
would take her.  To Sinai, to wherever Tamar was being tortured, to the
god's back door, if necessary.  The need for action was a fever in her
veins.

"All right," she said, cramming a last piece of bread in her mouth.
"Are you ready?  Time to go."

They took off again, flying straight west.  They were less than two
hundred miles from Sinai, for they had flown farther than she thought
yesterday; they were almost at the Galilee River.  Good.  Another three
hours and they would be there, bursting in on Jecoliah and her acolytes
with an impossibly lunatic demand Well, she would worry about that when
they arrived.  Now there was nothing to occupy her but the disciplined
sweep of her wings, the weight of Reuben's body in her arms, the play
of sunlight along her cheeks, the machinations of the trickster wind
beneath her feathers.  Flying toward a mountain range was always
challenging, for the currents could shift so rapidly: if nothing else,
she must pay attention to them.  She must shut her mind to her fear for
Tamar.  There was nothing she could do now for her sister.

But terror drew a tighter and tighter string around her heart. 
Whatever doom awaited her twin crept closer even as the miles flashed
past.

"There," Reuben said suddenly, pointing.  "That's the range that houses
Sinai."

Lucinda straightened her wings and coasted downward toward the
clustered mountains.  She was so unfamiliar with Samarian topography;
she could have flown right by.  "Are you sure?"

Reuben smiled.  "I did not waste all my life crossing the sea between
Samaria and Ysral, mikala," he said.  "Like most Edori, I have spent
some time traveling through the mainland just to satisfy my curiosity.
And have you not learned by now that an Edori has a flawless sense of
direction?  That's Sinai.  Drop closer to the ground."

She obliged, losing altitude slowly as they approached the gray peaks.
"And which of these mountains holds Sinai?"  she asked.  "For they all
look impassable to me."

"I was never inside it," he said.  "I would guess there's a path up the
mountain to lead the petitioners to the oracle's doorway.  Look for
some kind of road, though I imagine it's a bad one."

"I don't see--yes, wait, there it is!  Do you see it?  It looks like a
dirt road and it's winding upward--"

She followed the track around the curve of the mountain, dropping even
farther to meet the path as it climbed.  Thus she was almost at the
proper level when they finally spotted a wide open door carved into the
mountain itself.

"The portal to Mount Sinai," Reuben said grandly.  "Just where I
thought it would be."

Lucinda laughed shakily.  She slowed her wingbeat even more.  barely
above hover speed, to position herself just so for the landing on the
narrow ledge before the door.  It would almost be safer to climb the
rough road than to attempt this maneuver.  She waited till the wind was
absolutely still, then dropped to her feet.  A moment of heaviness, as
her body accustomed itself to gravity, and then she released Reuben and
stepped away.

"Now the hard part," she said, heading inside.  "Explaining to the
oracle why we have come."

no one was there.

At first they thought they just had not penetrated far enough down the
gaslit hallways, had not peered into enough big, empty wailing rooms,
looking for visitors and acolytes.  But soon it became clear--by the
echoing, untenanted quality of silence, by the absence of any noise
they did not make themselves--that there was nobody at Mount Sinai at
all.  Not petitioners, not servants, not acolytes, not the oracle
herself.

"Where could they all be?"  Reuben wondered aloud.  "Is this some
holiday that we do not know?"

"Some emergency, more like," Lucinda replied, thinking again of Tamar.
Had whatever disaster befallen her sister also laid ~kw half of
Samaria? Had the oracles and all the angels been called together to
soothe whatever crisis had arisen?  Earthquake -plague--storm?  It was
hard to imagine a catastrophe so great.

"Well, whatever it is, it makes our task easier," Reuben said
practically.  "Now.  Where do you suppose this blue window is?  The one
we are supposed to write on?"

"In the center of the god's chamber, right?  So, I guess we go to the
middle of the sanctuary.  Perhaps it will seem obvious when we find
it."

She didn't really think so when she said it, but as it happened, she
was right.  They made their way slowly through the whispering silence;
even empty, Mount Sinai seemed so full of wisdom and experience that
the stony walls exhaled their murmured memories.  Clearly, they did not
seek the kitchens or the dormitory rooms, so they need not go all the
way down that corridor; and here was just another series of waiting
rooms, more luxuriously appointed, designed no doubt for the more
exalted of the oracle's visitors.  But here was a room that even from
the hallway looked bigger than the others--and once they stepped
inside, they knew at once they had found what they were looking for.

It was a spacious chamber, well lit with a soft, pleasing light, and it
was sparsely furnished with a few chairs, bookshelves, and tapestries.
But its central feature, the item that instantly drew their eyes and
then their bodies across the floor, was a glowing blue glass plate set
into the very wall on the far side of the room.  It was surrounded by a
wholly mysterious set of buttons, and it pulsed with an eerie, alien
light, but it was built into a shape that resembled a desk, and there
was a rolling chair set right before it.

"A workstation of some sort," Reuben said to himself.  "But what its
purpose might be I could only guess."

"I have heard that the oracles use amazing equipment to commune
directly with the god," Lucinda said in a low voice.  "Perhaps this is
it.  It has a holy appearance to it."

"It looks like a kind of console," Reuben replied.  "Something that
might transmit or receive signals."

They had walked slowly as they spoke, and now they were standing
directly in front of it.  The unvarying blue light was somehow
seductive.  Lucinda could not keep herself from putting her palm to the
glass itself.  She expected to burn her fingers, but the screen
remained cool beneath her hand.

"What kind of signals?"  she asked.

Reuben shook his head.  "I have not even the faintest idea.  But this
is encouraging, don't you think?"  He pointed to an arrangement of keys
on a shelf below the glass.  "These are the same letters as those
written in the Edori manuscript.  The ones we are supposed to write on
the screen."

"Then we have found the right place," Lucinda said, looking around.  "I
don't see any star on the floor, though, do you?"

"In the center of the room, it said," Reuben replied.  "A pentagon.  I
suppose it is not visible to the casual eye.  We must seek it out."

Lucinda moved away from him, bent half over, searching through the dust
and scuffs on the floor for anything resembling a pattern.  Reuben
followed her, dropping to his knees and searching the floor with his
fingertips.

"Here!  Maybe.  There's a groove in the floor just here, and it seems
to continue in a straight line--"

She hurried over to stand beside him, tracing with her eyes the route
his fingers traveled along the floor.  "I can see it," she said
suddenly.  "There--and there--there!  Yes, it's a star, a pentagram, I
guess, bigger than you'd think.  There, Reuben, do you see the
edges?"

He climbed to his feet and looked where she pointed.  "You're right, I
see it.  So we're supposed to stand here and wait for the golden
light--"

"We have to write that word first," she reminded him.  "On the blue
screen.  Then the light comes down."

He looked at her seriously, silent for so long that she felt the
excited race of her heart slow a little in response to his
contemplation.  "What?"  she asked.

"Are you sure this is what you wish to do?"  he asked.  "You don't know
what that golden light will do to us--dissolve us, maybe, in a
vitriolic haze.  Blind us, make us mad.  No one knows that we are here
and what we are attempting.  Should we wait a day and think it over?"

"No," she said without a moment's pause for thought.  "Now.  We must
find out.  We must take the chance.  A day from now will be too
late."

"Too late for what?"  he said, but she could not answer him.  She just
shook her head and crossed her arms like an intractable child.  The
Edori sighed.

"Very well," he said.  "You stand within the pentagram.  I will address
the blue screen and see if I can make it accept the letters I indicate.
And then together we will wait for the golden light to waft us away
into the arms of Jehovah."

She stood where he had left her, too determined to allow herself a
moment of doubt, even a brief speculation as to what they might find
once that iridescent light around them dissipated.  If it dissipated;
if it came.  Reuben, who had been bending over the blue screen,
straightened and sprinted to her side.  Absently, he put his arms
around her.

"How long do we wait?"  Lucinda asked.

He shook his head.  "No idea.  Not long, I would think, or the time
would have been specified in the document."

"Perhaps we should count, to pass the time," she said nervously.  "Or
sing."

He grinned at her, that slow, sleepy Edori smile that no crisis ever
seemed to completely chase away.  "Not so wise, do you think," he said,
"to be singing as you approach the god's ear? He might misinterpret and
think you were singing to him."

"Well, not a prayer, then, perhaps a lullaby or--"

The rest of the words scattered in her throat.  The world was a well of
burnished light; she could not see, or speak, or think.

One by one, the molecules of her skin broke apart, drifted away;

her flesh turned to whispering static.  She felt her lungs flatten and
her brain melt.  She forgot her name.

And seconds later--or years later--opened her eyes to find herself
reassembled, whole, animate, and in a wildly unfamiliar place.

She had somehow remained on her feet, though Reuben, be side her, had
fallen to a crouch.  She spoke his name urgently, and he stirred and
looked up at her, his face blank, his mouth opened as if to speak.  He
did not utter a word.

"Reuben," she repeated, tugging on his arm.  "Are you all right?  Can
you talk to me?"

"Dead I would indeed have to be if I were unable to talk," he wheezed
out, and she laughed.  "Give me a moment, mikala. That was a difficult
journey."

She slackened her grip and looked around.  They were, as the document
had forewarned them, in a room of white and silverbut such a room as
Lucinda would never have been able to imagine.  All around them were a
series of consoles similar to the one they had found in Jecoliah's
chamber, an array of brightly lit screens and mysterious activating
switches.  The air was alive with a punctuated buzzing, interrupted and
undercut by faint whistles, clicks, and chirrups.  The air was
completely unscented but somehow it felt very old.  It was paper-dry
against her cheek and stirred faintly around her as if surprised by the
motion of her breathing.

"Where are we?"  she asked in a low voice.  "Reuben, do get up and take
a look.  Is this a spaceship?  It looks like--it looks a little like
one of the rooms at the Augustine school."

Laboriously Reuben hauled himself to his feet and took a long, slow
look around him.  "Indeed it does, and no surprise, if Caleb Augustus
modeled his school after what he viewed up here," the Edori said.

"Caleb Augustus visited Jehovah?  I have never heard that."

"Only a guess that he, like I, followed an angel lover to this place." 
His voice sounded stronger with each word; curiosity was rapidly
restoring him.  "These are monitoring devices of some sort, I would
wager, and this--this looks much like the blue window we left at Mount
Sinai.  A communication console, it would appear."

So far, neither of them had ventured to move one inch from the place
where the great light had deposited them, but now Lucinda sidled
forward a pace.  As she was not struck dead, she stepped forward twice
more.  "Well, let's explore!  We must find some way to communicate with
the ship."

Reuben caught her hand to hold her in place.  "Try introducing
yourself," he advised.  "The document did say you could speak to
Jehovah and it would answer back."

She took a deep breath, keeping her eyes on Reuben.  She had not really
believed that part, and so she had allowed herself to forget it.
Feeling half-foolish and half-afraid, she said politely, "Hello,
Jehovah.  Are you listening?  I am the angel Lucinda from Angel Rock
and this is my friend Reuben sia Havita, an Edori sailor."

The voice, when it instantly replied, was so unexpected that she almost
tumbled over.  "Ah, an Edori," it said in deep, rolling tones that
reminded her a little of Bael's.  But even more powerful, even more
resonant.  "I could not identify him because he does not wear a Kiss.
It is unexpected to be visited by an Edori."

There were so many questions to ask following that short speech that
for a moment Lucinda stood silent.  Have you been visited by many
others, Edori or no?  Can you identify anyone who wears a Kiss?  Can
you track them?  Who are you?  What is this place we have come to? "Are
you really Jehovah?"  she asked instead, her voice scarcely above a
whisper.  "And are you indeed a spaceship?"

"I am an interplanetary space cruiser designed to provide life support
for no more than seven hundred individuals for as long as my systems
survive," the melodious voice replied.  "I was christened Jehovah many
centuries ago, when I first ferried your ancestors to this planet from
the world known as Eleison.  You may refer to me as a spaceship if you
like."

"Amazing," Reuben said under his breath.  "Simply amazing."  He had
lost most of his fear and was beginning to circle through the
equipment, examining the knobs and buttons and putting his hands
briefly to each glass monitor.  "What does this--ah, yes, I can see
that.  And then this must be a navigational-but how does it--or is this
where--ah, there.  Amazing."

"Feel free to examine any chamber you like," the voice invited them.
"There is much to see.  This room, as you may have guessed, is the
bridge, where most of the functions of the ship are centered and
monitored.  Elsewhere, you will find living quarters, self-contained
greenhouses which produce crops and grain, storage facilities, the
energy crystals that power the ship as well as the basic circuitry--"

"Yes, we'll look at all that later," Lucinda said somewhat sharply as
Reuben eagerly turned toward what appeared to be the exit.  "First, I
have some questions to ask you."

"Yes, Lucinda?"

"My sister, Tamar, appears to be in some kind of trouble.  Can you tell
me where she is and what's happening to her?"

"It is not in my power with accuracy to determine where any individual
is located.  I can tell you that she is in Samaria and she is alive.
More details are not at my disposal."

Lucinda felt a crushing weight of disappointment settle across her
shoulders.  Reuben turned to show her a sympathetic expression.  She
waited a moment, till the leap of panic subsided, and then began asking
all the other questions she knew should be addressed to Jehovah.

"Is it true that the angel Alleluia came here to visit you a hundred
years ago?"

"It was, more precisely, one hundred and three years ago, but yes, she
was here several times.  The engineer Caleb Au gustus was also here
during that time period."

"And others before them?"

"From time to time.  Not often, once the planet was colonized."

"And is it true that you control the weather?  And that you can
dispense seeds and drugs when they are asked for?  Is it true that you
can track the lives of all Samarians by the Kisses that we wear in our
arms?"

"I cannot precisely control the weather, but I have the capability of
altering weather patterns if the angels sing a certain combination of
notes that signal me to perform functions that will affect air
temperature and wind formations on the planet below us.  It is true
that, again when my reactors are triggered by specific sound patterns,
I can release my accumulated stores of grain and medicine.  It is also
true that I use the Kisses to follow the numbers of mortals and angels
being bred on Samaria, and they are a useful source of data to me."

She took a long, shaky breath.  "Is it true you will destroy the world
if the Gloria is not sung?"

"I am so programmed."

"And what does that mean?"

"Certain functions have been laid down unalterably in my circuits.  If
this occurs, I must react in this way.  I have no independent will.  If
an angel prays for a particular kind of rain, I respond with a
prescribed combination of chemicals.  If the Gloria is not sung, I
respond with a blast of destructive energy.  I cannot control these
functions.  Only you and the other angels can do so."

"Well, maybe, but it's nothing like control if we have to go along with
what you've already been programmed to do," said Reuben in his most
colloquial voice.  "What if the angels and the mortals living on
Samaria today decided they no longer wanted to come together to sing
the Gloria?  Could your circuits be altered?  Could those commands be
undone?"

"That is not a piece of knowledge I am equipped with," the spaceship
replied, sounding almost prim.  "As my circuits were programmed by men,
I assume those instructions can be reworked by other men.  But perhaps
there is a fail-safe device built in which would prohibit the circuits
from ever being tampered with.  I do not know.  I was not informed."

"Fail-safe.  That's just what you'd expect from the sort of men who
would design the likes of you in the first place," Reuben muttered.  "I
wonder where I might look to find that information?  Just for
curiosity's sake, you understand."

"In a minute," Lucinda said.  She was not through with her
interrogation of the spaceship.  "You can hear angels from any point on
Samaria, can you not?  For instance, you could hear me when I sang from
Angel Rock."

"Yes," Jehovah acknowledged.

"Then why must the Gloria be sung from the Plain of Sharon?"

"In point of fact, it could be sung from anywhere on the planet and I
would hear it.  But there are special receptors buried under the Plain
that carry voices to me most clearly, and your ancestors wanted to be
sure that, if I heard no other music, I heard the Gloria as it was sung
every year."

"And it sounds like music?  Like words?  Like the conversation we are
having now?  It is that distinct?"

"Yes.  If you like, I can open my receivers and allow you to overhear
what is transpiring on the Plain even now, so you can experience
exactly what I  hear."

"But there's nobody on the Plain right now, is there?"

"Indeed, some kind of commercial event is being held there this entire
week.  A farmer's fair, I believe.  There are many voices upraised,
though most of it is unimportant chatter."

"Yes, I would like to hear this," Lucinda decided.  "Just so I can say
I stood beside the god and heard the talk of mortals."

Almost before she had finished speaking, the chamber around them was
filled with an unbridled commotion.  For an agricultural fair, Lucinda
thought, the event seemed to have stirred a lot of tempers.  The noises
were so clear and so perfectly translated that she could catch the
sounds of running footfalls, squealing horses, and rumbling motors over
the confusion of angry discussion.  Lost in amazement, it took her a
moment to sort out individual voices, their words--and their
meanings.

"That's Bael," she said suddenly.  "Can't miss that voice.  And
he's--sounds like he's threatening somebody."

For over the ship's invisible speakers came the proclamation:
Jacobites, pray, if you have any remnants of faith left in your god.
For you are about to die at that god's hands.

"Wait--what is he saying?"  Lucinda demanded, aghast and disbelieving.
"Reuben, did he say--"

"Hush," said the Edori, listening intently.  Both of them heard
Conran's defiant reply.  We may die at your hands, but it is a machine
you call to, and not a god!"

Lucinda stared at Reuben, stark terror in her eyes.  "What's happening?
 Why are they all on the Plain of Sharon?  What is Bael going to do?"

"He's caught them," Reuben said, speaking more soberly than she had
ever heard him.  "I'd guess he's planning to kill them all now.  Right
there on the Plain of Sharon."

A sob caught in Lucinda's throat.  She felt as if her body was being
scorched, her brain seared.  "Tamar," she gulped.  "Sweet Jovah
singing, Tamar is with them--"

Another voice filled the chamber around them, rising over the muttering
of whatever crowd had gathered to witness the Jacobites' destruction.
You cannot so summarily convict and execute us.  Give us a day--give us
till sundown.  Let our arguments be heard.

"It's Jared," Reuben said suddenly.  "He's with them."

Lucinda felt a spasm of hope, so brutal it left her lungs bruised. "Can
he help them?  Can he save them?"

"I don't know, mikala," Reuben said very gently.  "It doesn't sound
like Jared is arguing from a position of power."

"But then--but--he can't kill them!  Reuben, he--dear god, dear god,
and Tamar is with them--"

Reuben stepped forward to put his arms around her, but she tore herself
away.  No comfort, not now, not ever again.  She had to hear every last
word, every plea, every pardon.  Surely there would be a pardon.

"Jovah," she whispered, for how could there not be a god, now when she
needed one most?  "Spare them, save them, Jovah teach me how to protect
them ..."

But of course there was no god.  She stood at the very heart of the
spaceship Jehovah, solid proof that the god she had always loved had
never existed.  If there was no god to intervene, Bael would kill them
all.  Beat them, burn them, run them through with bayonets, and she
could not say a word that would save them.

And then, eerie and magnificent in this sleek echoing chamber, the
Archangel's voice came pouring in, raised in song, raised in prayer.
Lucinda felt her heart stutter to a halt.

"What is that?"  Reuben demanded.  "What is he singing?"

"The prayer for destruction.  Thunderbolts--lightning.  The end of the
world ..."

"Can't he be stopped?  Jehovah, can he be stopped?"  Reuben called out.
"Can we countermand him?  Jehovah, tell us!"

 But the ship did not reply.  And its fussy, murmurous silence went on
and on.

Jared had believed till this very moment that something would save
them.  That Christian and Mercy would swoop down, snatch Bael away,
that the heavens would erupt with angels, vengeful and furious.  He had
believed he could reason with Bael, stall him, charm him.  He had
chosen death, but he had not believed he would die.

Until Bael began singing the prayer for annihilation.  Then his body
flooded with adrenaline, then his brain rioted with fear.  "Get down!"
he shouted at the Jacobites, and they all fell to the floor, hands
covering their ears, cowering before the awful might of that song, that
simple prayer.  Bael's rich, magnificent voice filled their cage,
liquefied their brains, ran through their arteries like silver flame.
Jared flung his body across Tamar's, covered her from head to toe with
the frail shield of his wings.  Not that it would save her, not that
anything could save her, Bael would murder her and every last one of
them.  Yet he clung to her for all that.  If the god miscalculated, if
the thunderbolt fell an inch too short, perhaps ared's bones would
deflect just enough of Jovah's rage so that Tamar would survive,
scarred and witless, perhaps, but alive, alive ...  And he had never,
at any point in his life, been so astonished as when she shoved him
away with all her strength and pushed herself to a sitting position.

"Sing," she said fiercely, and began to do so herself.

Jared stared at her.

It was the wordless, repetitive little tune she had taught him that day
in the Marquet hotel, the music she had said she could hear in her
head.  Even here, even now, the pure, untrained sweetness of her voice
caught at his heart and made him silly with wonder.  He felt the
erratic flicker in his Kiss and knew without looking that it trembled
with fire.

She had closed her eyes, as if she was listening, as if she matched her
voice, her tempo, to the unseen metronome of someone else's
performance.  For a moment Jared could only watch her helplessly,
marveling at the clean, devout contours of that upraised face thinking
she looked like a priestess, a holy woman an angel, on her knees in
supplication to her god.

And then, because he could not bear to do otherwise, he lifted his
voice and laid it alongside hers.  Instantly, she skipped upward an
interval, twining her harmony around his melody, decorating his voice
with her own.  They wove the notes back and forth, warp and weft,
embroidering the air with jeweled threads and fringes of gold.  He drew
strength from their braided voices and poured that power back into the
song.  Almost without his volition, he rose to his feet, pulling Tamar
with him, and the song ascended with them.  He felt his lungs filling
over and over with each separate, momentous note; he felt each one rush
through his throat, burst from his mouth, explode in the air with a
shower of sparks.  Choirs filled his head.  The heavens chorused back.
They would die singing this poem to a careless god, but they would be
gloriously extinguished.

But the thunderbolt did not fall.

Jared could not hear Bael's voice anymore, though he could see the
Archangel furiously delivering his prayer.  The god could hear Bael's
song, no doubt, and was even now shaping the lightning he would hurl to
the earth below.  Jared sucked in another great gust of air and plunged
into his melody again.

And still the thunderbolt did not fall.

The air was so still it seemed to have evaporated, drained pantingly
into the vacuum of the sky.  Jared's skin crackled as if he stood
before a fire; the hair on his arms was polarized with electricity. The
world seemed breathless with portent as if the skies overhead prepared
to convulse into destruction.

But the thunderbolt did not fall.  As if Jared's song had made the god
reconsider, as if Tamar's lilting harmony had pleased Jovah more than
the Archangel's malevolent request.  Nothing moved, nothing breathed,
the world did not even spin as the angels sang and the god weighed
their motley prayers.

Then suddenly the heavens were split with a great light, an opalescent
fireball swirling with amber and saffron.  Through this maelstrom an
angel burst forth as if born of that crystal blaze.  Her white wings
were tipped with crimson; a vivid scarlet nimbus flared around her
head.  Her outstretched hands dripped coins of flame, and her feet were
shod in fire.

Shock made Jared mute, and the Archangel fell to his knees with a
single heartbroken cry.  The fairgoers and the Jacobites all gaped
upward, struck dumb.  Into that eerie silence two voices continued to
rise and fall, twinned, inseparable, singing the beseeching, haunting
melody that Jared and Tamar had offered to the god.  It was Tamar's
voice, even now, joined with the voice of that avenging angel who
hovered above the plain in a slowly dimming sphere of light.  Two
voices, so similar they could have been one, descant against melody, a
harmony so perfect the brain could not divide it, and the god could not
help but prefer it.

Tamar ... and Lucinda.

Lucinda, whom they had left behind in Ysral, had appeared from nowhere
out of a golden cloud.  Singing a strange, unarticulated prayer that
had forced the Archangel to the ground and persuaded the god not to
strike.  Jared himself dropped slowly to his knees, speechless with
wonder, while the women repeated the song another time, and another.
Perhaps they would sing till the world ended.  He would not mind
listening for just that long.

But now fresh trouble was boiling up on the plain, for he could hear
the growl of high-powered motors and the shouts of new arrivals.  Above
them, the air was suddenly alive with angels, maybe a hundred of them,
crowding together in a kaleidoscope of overlapping wings and
gesticulating arms.  Lucinda and Tamar fell silent, but these fresh
spectators created enough noise to drown out any prayer Bael might
make, should he dare to raise his voice again.  Jared stared at them,
trying to make out familiar figures.  Was that Mercy?  Were those the
angels of Monteverde?

Before he had identified more than three faces, there was a sudden
tumult much closer to hand.  Raised voices, angry shouting, an invasion
of bodies pushing through the crowd of farmers and Jansai ringing the
Jacobite truck.  There was the smash of wood against metal, fist
against flesh, as fierce fighting broke out between the watchers, the
guards, and the rescuers.  More furious voices joined in the general
chaos.  Jared had thrown himself against the walls of his prison and
was clinging to the bars of the cage, straining to see who had arrived.
Bael had jumped up and whipped around to face this new onslaught,
calling out to his son and his Jansai raiders to form a circle of
safety around him.

But it was useless.  Five minutes later a band of rivermen wearing
Christian Avalone's livery broke through the mob of farmers and Jansai,
wielding clubs and knives.  Three of them descended on the Archangel
and forced him back to the ground, hands behind his back, face almost
in the dirt.  Two of them had captured Omar and dragged him, swearing
and screaming, around the side of the truck.  It was a coup so rapid,
ruthless, and effective that Jared had a moment's grave misgiving.  If
the prestige of the Archangel could be so swiftly overcome, could
Samaria ever return to faith in Jovah and his angels?

But so much of the world was overturned already.  How would it be
possible to put any of it to rights?

In a very few moments Christian himself came striding through the
milling throng, intense, focused, in control.  And if we have just
changed governments, here is the man we have no doubt elected, Jared
found himself thinking as his friend shouldered his way past the
cornered Jansai and came directly over to the truck.

"I see you were serious when you told Mercy she must contact me
instantly," were Christian's first words.

Jared could not help smiling.  "A few minutes sooner would have been
fine with me."

"You have news?  You have found the Alleluia Files?"

"We have.  Although we have not yet found a way to travel to the ship,
we believe those instructions are elsewhere."

"But you have proof?  Where did you find it?"

"Proof.  In Chahiela.  Where, I believe, Bael also found the same proof
five years ago."

"Bael ... Ah," Christian said on a soft, evil sigh.  "Then all his
fanatic behavior in the past few years ..."

"Exactly.  We must ask him, of course," Jared added dryly.  "For he has
been scrupulous with the truth so far."

"There are many things we must ask the Archangel," Christian began, but
before he could enumerate, a voice rang out that silenced every buzz of
conversation on the plain.

"People of Samaria," the voice cried, and every eye turned upward to
stare at Lucinda.  Even the angels who clustered in the air a few
meters below her twisted their heads and batted their wings to achieve
a better view.  "I have come to you directly from Jovah.  I have been
flung here by the god's hands.  And I tell you--your god is not who you
think.  People of Samaria, open your minds and prepare to hear the
truth."

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

They held the first of what Conran referred to as the "postapocalyptic
conferences" right there on the Plain of Sharon in one of the hotels
that the wealthy used during the Gloria.  Tamar thought Conran's
mocking title was very apt, for indeed, the Samarians she encountered
at the hotel looked shell-shocked, dumbfounded, heads knocked askew
with wonder.  No surprise; she and the Jacobites might have looked just
as stupefied and foundering if all their questing had resulted in just
the opposite revelation, that the god existed after all.  She blamed no
one for being bewildered.

There was not much decided at this first conference, anyway, except
that a second, more comprehensive gathering must be set up to discuss
the implications of their discoveries and to determine how to proceed.
In point of fact, people had only a handful of questions, but these
they desperately wanted answered.  Among them were: How did the angel
Lucinda manage to appear so dramatically overhead, materializing out of
nowhere at the most crucial moment?  and what was the song that froze
Bael's prayer in his throat, that caused the spaceship to reconsider
its thunderbolt and saved the Jacobites from destruction?

Tamar could have answered the second one but she did not bother,
because the person whom everyone wanted to ask was Lucinda.  She
watched with an odd, completely unenvious pride as her sister patiently
and lucidly explained the same events over and over again.  Lucinda did
not grow flustered or sullen, as Tamar would have; she did not become
angry at the constant expressions of incredulity and denial.  She was
poised, serene, gracious, and absolutely sure of herself, and everyone
who heard her walked away a believer.

Jared, who had listened politely to Lucinda's tale, later pressed
Reuben for more details.  "So you were aboard the spaceship, exploring,
and you just happened to ask Jehovah to let you overhear whatever was
occurring down on the Plain of Sharon--"

"Strange but true," the Edori replied with a smile.  He, Jared, and
Tamar had found a quiet spot on an outdoor patio in the rear of the
hotel, and they were drinking some wine Jared had fetched.  Tamar
sipped hers.  It was very potent.

"And you heard Bael threatening us, and he started singing--and then
what?  Lucinda burst into song herself?  Did you think she'd gone
mad?"

Reuben laughed comfortably.  "Well, the thought did take a moment to
meander across my mind, for she was distraught enough to be making
little sense.  But I was the one who had taught her how the same
melody, sung in reverse, can undo the effects of the original song.  I
quickly decided that she was singing the Archangel's song backward,
negating his prayer.  As it happened, I was right."

"And Jehovah could hear her?  Her voice was that much stronger because
she was right there on the ship?"

Reuben shook his head.  "I don't believe so.  As I understand the
technology, his cues must come from Samaria.  She could have sung her
heart out, and he would not have heeded her."

Jared glanced at Tamar, but she had already decided she was not taking
part in this conversation.  She was going to drink her wine, and she
was going to keep on drinking it until she got pleasantly intoxicated.
It had been longer than she remembered since she had felt safe enough
to entrust herself to liquor.  "So until Tamar and I began singing ..."
"Exactly."

"And because harmony is more powerful than a solo voice ..."

"As I understand it."

Jared returned his gaze to Tamar.  "Did you know when you started
singing what you were trying to accomplish?"

She shook her head, then nodded, then sighed.  She must explain after
all.  "No.  Well, in a way.  Lucinda had explained the concept to me
before we left Ysral, but it didn't really make sense.  But when I
heard her singing--"

"Heard her singing?"  Reuben interrupted.

Jared nodded.  "She hears Lucinda's voice in her head.  So she says."

Tamar gave him a minatory glance before addressing the Edori again.
"When I heard her, I guessed what she was doing.  So I started singing,
too."  She shrugged, Simple, really.  Though she had not thought it
would work.  They had been so close to death right then; she had been
able to smell the acrid, sulfurous buildup in the air.  She had sung
more from defiance than from hope, as she had done most things in her
life.  And won, this time.  She took another sip of wine.

"So our song stopped the thunderbolt," Jared said slowly.  "That part I
almost understand.  But then--from nowhere-Lucinda came exploding
through the heavens in this sort of golden mist--"

Reuben nodded wisely.  "She teleported," he said.

"She what?"

"Teleported.  It's the word Jehovah uses to describe the way he
instantly transports someone from one location to another.  It's how we
were brought aboard the spaceship from Mount Sinai.  It occurred to me
to ask him, while Lucinda was singing, if he could transport her to
someplace other than Sinai.  He said he could.  And so we attempted
it."

Jared was shaking his head.  "But--sweet Jovah singing!the risk!  She
could have plummeted to her death, you know.  To suddenly find herself
in midair, with no momentum or wingbeat to sustain her--she could have
dropped like a stone."

"Yes, I did think of that, and I tried to explain it all to her while
she continued to sing and continued to listen to all the clamor on the
plain.  Believe me, I was far from certain she would survive the
transfer.  But here we all are, safe and happy, so the story has a
bright ending after all."

Jared waggled his head from side to side, as if he was not sure about
that.  "I think the turmoil is just beginning.  We are about to tell
millions of people that the god they have believed in all their lives
does not exist.  We have just shoved angels from the seat of power they
have occupied for seven centuries.  What do we do with Bael?  What
about Omar?  What about the Jansai?  How will we deal with them?

"We are about to create a new government and a new religion all at
once--and you have a more blithe picture of human nature than I do if
you think all that will be accomplished without heartache," Jared
summed up.  "We have survived the crisis, yes, but that is all we have
done.  There is far more trouble ahead."

"Well, you are alive to confront it," Reuben said cheerfully.  "Which
you wouldn't have gambled on a day ago.  Pass the wine, that's what I
say.  Pass the wine and your troubles will miraculously melt away."

Tamar laughed out loud.  Reuben filled his glass again and raised it to
her in a toast of admiration.  Jared was still shaking his head, but
Tamar and Reuben clinked their glasses together and swallowed every
last drop.

Two days before the second, more decisive conference was held at
Christian Avalone's mansion on the River Walk, Lucinda's aunt Gretchen
arrived in Semorrah.  My aunt Gretchen, too, Tamar had to remind
herself; but she had had nobody, no blood relatives, for so much of her
life that even now she could scarcely credit the existence of a sister,
let alone a more distant connection.  And this Gretchen (as described
kindly by Lucinda and humorously by Reuben) sounded like such a
difficult, contrary, domineering woman that Tamar viewed her arrival
with a mixture of reluctance and dread.

She was alone in the lovely, airy bedroom Christian had assigned to her
and Jared when she heard voices in the hall.

"Where is she?  Where is that child?  Is this the room?"  "Here, let me
knock and see if--"

But Lucinda had no time to put her knuckles to the door before it was
swept open and a hurricane swirled in.  Tamar jumped to her feet,
fingers automatically closing around her mother's locket, feeling an
absurd leap of panic in her chest.  The woman who entered was thin,
graying, sharp-faced, and crammed with so much restless vitality that
it snapped around her as visibly as an aura.  Nonetheless, she came to
a dead halt just across the threshold, and stared at Tamar as though at
an apparition.

"Dearest, sweetest god, it is indeed you," she whispered.  "And you did
not die, after all.  He could not kill you.  Oh, child, if I had known
you were alive, I would have searched the earth and heavens for you.  I
would have taken you with me to safety.  Tell me you believe that, for
it is the god's own truth."

Tamar smiled with some difficulty.  "I believe you.  From the story I
was told, you could never have thought I was alive."

Gretchen came closer, still staring, still marveling.  "And the life
you have led.  It makes my blood go cold.  I will curse that devil
Conran till the day he dies for not telling me the truth, when for
twenty-eight years he knew it--"

"Don't curse Conran," Tamar said, smiling a little more naturally now.
"He did very well by me.  He kept me alive, and you must thank him for
that at least."

Another step closer, the faded eyes still searching every plane and
angle of Tamar's face.  "Well, the face is well enough, and of course
you've got fine eyes .just like your sister, but your hair!  Child,
couldn't you have found a better cut?  And you may have thought that
dye was attractive once, but it's nowhere near as pretty as your
natural color.  I think it's time to put a little more thought into
your appearance, especially with everyone arriving for this big
important meeting."

Lucinda burst into uncontainable laughter, sagging against the door
frame and cramming a hand across her mouth.  Tamar felt her own
laughter bubble up, more and more uncontrollably as Gretchen's face
began to simmer with irritation.

"Well, I don't think I said anything so funny, and you've got just as
much work to do with your hair and clothing."  Gretchen fumed, rounding
on Lucinda and shaking her finger.  "Running wild the way you have!  I
would never have sent you to Ysral if I thought you would forget
everything I'd taught you about manners and decorum, every single
thing--"

"Aunt Gretchen, I adore you," Lucinda said, stopping the older woman's
diatribe by enclosing her in a comprehensive embrace.  "Don't you ever
change.  Come.  Let's sit down and get to know Tamar."

So that had been much less alarming than Tamar had feared, though she
thought it would take her years to grow accustomed to Gretchen's close,
personal attention and forthright criticism.  Nonetheless, in an
instant she had been added to Gretchen's short list of people for whom
she would fight till the death.  It was strange, oppressive, and
wonderful to mean so much to another human being.  Something else it
would take years to grow used to.

Gretchen liked Jared, though.  She fussed over him as she would a
wealthy guest come to spend the summer at the Manor, or at least so
Lucinda said.  She looked after his comfort, deferred to his opinion,
and never lost an opportunity to tell her nieces how handsome he was
("in looks and behavior, because one means nothing without the other").
Jared accepted her homage with his usual flawless courtesy, and
laughed about it privately but never unkindly.

Gretchen was less pleased with Reuben, and Lucinda's news that she
planned to marry the Edori.  "Except that Edori don't marry, so perhaps
I just mean that I will be spending the rest of my life with him.  Or
at least, what portion of his life he isn't away at sea.  I don't have
the details worked out yet.  But he's the man I love."

"He's well enough for an Edori, but you'd be wasting your life to be
throwing it away on such a man," was Gretchen's reply, and the two of
them argued about it obliquely for the next several days.  Lucinda
remained completely unruffled about her aunt's disapproval, and
confided her suspicions to Tamar later.

"I think she was in love with Conran once, but he wasn't faithful," she
said sunnily.  "You can see it even now when she looks at him, that she
remembers this sort of bone-deep despair.  It's turned her against all
Edori forever, I think."

"Well, I don't think it's turned her against Conron, because I saw them
holding hands on the rooftop garden the other day," Tamar replied.

Lucinda bubbled over with laughter.  "Did you really?  I can't
imagine--but you know him better that I do.  Can you picture him with
Aunt Gretchen?"

Tamar thought.  "Well, all the Jacobite women are strong-willed, as a
rule, but he always seemed to be involved with the most hardheaded ones
of the group.  If you'd ever met Elinor Actually, Gretchen reminds me a
little of Elinor, and she was the love of Conran's life."

"What happened to her?"

"Died at the Jansai's hands, six or seven years ago."

"I'm sorry."

Tamar shrugged to avoid a direct reply.  "Anyway, I can't see him
mending his ways at this age and becoming a tame old house cat.  I
can't see him settling down on Angel Rock and helping Gretchen run the
hotel."

"No," said Lucinda, a bit regretfully.  "But however it turns out, I
think she's enjoying herself now."

 But Gretchen was one of the few guests at Christian Avalone's house
who had come merely for personal reasons.  As the days passed and the
house filled up, it became clear that the other visitors had arrived
charged with sober purpose: to decide the fate of the world.

Representatives from almost every group on Samaria had been invited:
river merchants, Manadavvi, Luminauzi, Edori, farmers, Jansai, oracles,
priests, angels.  They had constituted themselves a parliament of
sorts, and every member would need to vote on any referendums that they
drafted.  But the real work of mapping out a plan for the future lay
with a select group that met one day in Christian's elegant conference
room.  Christian was there, of course, and the Manadavvi Ben Harth.
Jared and Mercy spoke for the angels, Jecoliah for the oracles.  Conran
was the only Jacobite allowed in the room, if you didn't count Tamar,
who was only there because Jared insisted.  Reuben and Lucinda had been
invited because, as Christian said, "they can speak for Jehovah better
than the rest of us."  Everyone else was barred from the room.

"First order of business," Christian said once the group had been
called to order, "what do we do with Bael?  And what do we do with
Omar?"

"Kill them both," Conran growled, but Mercy hushed him impatiently, and
everyone else tried to ignore him.  "Kill them," the Jacobite repeated,
raising his voice.  "Between them, they' ve murdered hundreds of
innocent men and women.  They're criminals and assassins, and they need
to be tried as such."

"This is not a society that has ever condoned execution for any crime,
and we are not about to institute it as a punishment now," Mercy said,
swinging on him and speaking hotly.  "I understand your own life has
been full of brutality, and I regret that for your sake, but you will
not bring your bankrupt ethics into this meeting and expect us to
sympathize.  If you cannot say something constructive, then please do
not speak."

Well, that was almost entertainment enough to make Tamar glad she had
come to the meeting.  She had never seen Conran so wrathful or so
silenced.  She turned her head away to hide her grin.

"If we are to leave them living," Christian said dryly, "what are we to
do with them?  We could exile them to Ysral--"

"Poor Edori," Jared murmured.

"Ah, the Edori are very forgiving," said Reuben.  "They will welcome
the Archangel and his son and try to teach them the simpler joys of
life."

But Mercy was shaking her head.  "Bael has a powerful voice, and I
understand that Jovah--Jehovah--can hear all of us from any point on
the planet.  If Bael were to raise his voice in song and ask for
thunderbolts, for instance--"

"I agree," Jared said, speaking more soberly this time.  "I think he
must be incarcerated, and in a soundproofed chamber, much like the
music rooms we have at the angel holds.  There are engineers at the
Augustine school who could construct a comfortable prison for him."

"Comfortable!"  Conran exclaimed.  "Is this a man who deserves comfort?
Is this a man who--"

"I agree," Christian said, ignoring Conran.  "And what of Omar?"

"I would incarcerate him alongside his father," Jared said.  "I
sometimes think, even now, that Bael acted from belief--he had heard
the recording of the Alleluia Files, yes, but he could not credit its
veracity.  Or, if he did, he was afraid the truth would destroy
Samaria--a fear all of us must face right now.  But Omar acted out of
sheer power lust, and for that I do not think he can be forgiven."

Jared looked over at Mercy, as if expecting her to challenge him, but
she was nodding slowly.  "Much as it pains me to say it," she said, "I
agree with Jared.  Neither of them can be allowed to run free, or they
will harm us in some manner."

"Then we will have a place built for them," Christian said.  "And may
it be far from here.  Next item.  As we all know by now, the so-called
god is a ferociously powerful spaceship programmed to destroy Samaria
if certain events do not occur.  Must we live the rest of our lives,
and must our children and their children also live, in fear of the
destructive force of this machine?  Is there any way to reprogram it so
that it will not listen for the Gloria?  So that we can be free of that
annual requirement and the doom that hangs over us?"

Everyone in the room turned to look at Reuben, whose face had assumed a
thoughtful expression.  "I asked much the same question while we were
aboard," he said.  "And was not surprised when the ship replied that it
did not believe its circuits could be altered.  But we could not expect
it to help us out with that particular chore.  Can it be reprogrammed? 
Not by me.  Perhaps some of your Augustine engineers can work the
magic.  But I would guess that feat would be a generation or two
away."

"Very well, then," said Ben Harth.  "Say we are required to produce a
Gloria every year.  Can we not record it ahead of time and play it back
from the Plain of Sharon on the appointed day?"

"I wouldn't think so," Lucinda said, speaking for the first time.  "The
mass has to be different every year, doesn't it?  And it has to contain
the voices of people from all over Samaria, right?  And if you go to
the trouble to gather them all together to record the music, wouldn't
it be just as simple to gather them together to sing the Gloria?"

"And doesn't Jovah track the Kisses we wear in our arms?"

asked Jecoliah, glancing around the table with her milky eyes.
"Wouldn't he sense it if we were not actually on the Plain, performing
our required song?  Would he not consider that a breach of contract and
respond in kind?"

"It's a risk," Christian admitted.  "I am not eager to run it very
soon."

Mercy was glancing around the table and bridling in indignation.  "And
how does it hurt you--any of you!--to join together once a year and
prove that you can live in harmony?  If you were able to make these
recordings and trick Jovah, would you want to do so?  Would you want to
live in a world where Edori and Jansai did not have to try to live in
peace?  I think the Gloria keeps us civil--and even so, we are not a
peaceful people.  Without the threat of the world's destruction, would
we be able to live as harmoniously as we do?"

No one answered for a long moment, though Tamar heard Conran mutter a
few observations on how civil his life had been for the past thirty
years.  At last Jared lifted his eyes from contemplation of the
polished table, and he smiled somewhat crookedly at Mercy.

"You're right, of course," he said.  "But I find I am curiously
reluctant to sing my prayers to an entity that I know is only so much
metal and electricity.  I can sing mathematically calculated melodies
that will produce the desired physical response, but I cannot pray to
such a thing.  I cannot worship it.  I cannot give my heart to the god
when there is no god."

Mercy gazed back at him a long time, searching his face with her eyes.
"Jovah is not a god, we know that now," she said slowly.  "But I do not
believe that means there is no divine presence watching over us at all.
When our ancestors came to Samaria, they brought some divinity with
them--they taught us our words for worship and piety.  They believed in
a power stronger than themselves, which they could not outrun by
crossing millions of miles of space.  We have misinterpreted their god,
perhaps, but they had one, and it was not Jehovah.

"And even if they had founded Samaria, cynical and atheistic, I would
still believe there was a god," she said, her voice growing stronger.
"Who drew the patterns of the stars, if not a god?  Who designed the
marvelous cycle of cloud and rain and river, if not a god?  Who made
you--and you--and you--if not some god whose name we have forgotten?"

"Science could answer every single one of those questions," Conran
snorted.  "And has already begun to do so.  We can take apart your
flesh fiber by fiber and tell you why you have every bone in your body
and every mineral in your blood.  As for the dance of the stars, mass
and gravity will give you those formulas, and there is nothing easier
to explain than how the sea turns into storm."

"You are missing the point," she said to him calmly.  "If there is no
god, what is left but science?  What is left to endow us with any
grace?  You can tell me the chemical makeup of my skin and my brain,
but how can you explain away my soul?  And if there is no god to watch
over me, chastise me, grieve for me, rejoice with me, make me fear, and
make me wonder, what am I but a collection of metals and liquids with
nothing to celebrate about my daily living?"

"You have your friends for that!"  he exclaimed.  "They love you when
you're good and despise you when you're not.  Who needs more than
that?"

Mercy regarded him fixedly.  "Do you truly want to live in a universe
where you, Conran Atwell, are the highest achievement, the only moral
arbiter and the final judge?  I do not trust to your goodness enough. I
do not trust to any man's.  If we do not have a god, we have no limits.
 And a race without limits will become savage in a generation."

"I am not a savage," he muttered.  "And I need no god to keep me
moral."

"But if there is a god, how do we find him?  Where' do we look?" 
Jecoliah asked.  "Do we create him ourselves, from our hopes and our
desires?  We have been down that road before, and it was a blind alley.
 We do not want to delude ourselves again."

"Alleluia said that Jehovah has great stores of information about our
ancestors and their society," said Jared.  "Perhaps we could turn to it
for guidance, for it may hold the knowledge we seek.  And if not--"

"We can all live as the Edori do," Reuben interposed.  "Believing in
one great nameless god who watches over the entire universe, who is
everywhere at once but nowhere reveals himself.  He hears every prayer,
though he does not always answer-"

"Because he does not exist!"  Conran shouted.

"No, I believe he does," Tamar said, speaking suddenly when she had had
no intention of even opening her mouth.  She was embarrassed to find
all eyes upon her, but she plunged ahead anyway.  "I have been raised
to deny the existence of Jovah--of any god.  And yet, when I was at my
most desperate and most afraid, I prayed.  The words rose to my mouth
before I knew I was thinking them.  And help came.  I think we need a
god so greatly because some god has created us, and he left behind that
deep desire.  I don't believe in Jovah, but I believe in something."

"That's because you're a credulous, uneducated fool!"  Conran roared,
practically leaping across the table as if he would take her by the
throat and shake her.  Jared shoved him back with more force than the
Jacobite expected, and every other voice was raised simultaneously.
Christian had to call repeatedly for silence before the room
reluctantly quieted down.

"Among other things, it would seem that we need to form a commission on
the study of religion," the merchant observed when he finally had at
least half the attention of everyone in the room.  "And we can decide
who should head that commission after we have decided a few more key
questions.  Namely, do we still require an Archangel to lead Samaria?
And if so, who will it be?  And if not, how shall we run this
country?"

"We have had enough of Archangels, and angels, too," Ben Harth said at
once, clearly expecting Christian's instant agreement.  But the river
merchant surprised Tamar by cocking his head to one side and looking
extremely thoughtful.

"You and I may have--our friend Conran certainly has--but I am not so
sure the rest of Samaria is ready to be done with Archangels,"
Christian said slowly.  "Jared is right.  We have such a huge
transition ahead of us that I view the coming months with a certain
trepidation.  And how will the common people of Samaria feel to be
stripped of everything in a single blow--their god, their government,
their system of redress?  Even if the Archangel no longer serves the
god, don't we still need an Archangel to mediate between Jehovah and
Samaria?  Don't we still need an Archangel to lead the Gloria?  To
direct the angels?  To inspire the people of Samaria?  To serve a
civil, if not a divine, function?"

"I don't," Conran said, but most of the others in the room were
nodding.  Ben Harth looked coldly furious and spoke almost before
Conran had finished.

"I do not believe I need the intervention of an angel to tell me which
taxes are fair and how to administer justice to my tenants," he said in
measured tones.  "And many of the other Manadavvi will echo my opinion.
As long as we are threatened by the spaceship Jehovah, we may need the
skills of the angels, but we don't have to treat them like deities
themselves.  We don't have to honor them, or go to them in their
mountain holds like penitents and beggars--"

"You should honor the angels because you should honor every living
being," Mercy said in a steely voice.  "And that does not change
because the god has changed."

"Yes, but there may be a kernel of truth in what he says, Mercy,"
Christian said in a gentle voice.  "Perhaps it is time to take the
Archangel out of the hold and put him somewhere more accessible.
Luminaux, maybe, or Semorrah.  Make him--or her--part of a council of
officials who debate and decide policy.  For surely you would not
exclude angels entirely from our future system of government?"  he
added, turning back to Ben Harth.

"No, perhaps not," the Manadavvi said stiffly.

"But if we are to keep the institution of Archangel," Jared said, "how
shall that person be chosen?  By the god's--by the
spaceship's--recommendation?  He did not choose so well last time.  Yet
I am not sure we would choose any better."

"Surely we cannot leave Jehovah out of the process entirely," Lucinda
said.  "Bael may not have been a good choice, but for centuries Jehovah
selected wise leaders who have guided us well.  We must at least ask
for his advice, don't you agree?"

"I think so, yes," Christian said slowly, eyeing her intently.  "But I
have my own theories about who should be selected.  And among other
things, I believe that our next Archangel should be flexible enough to
break with tradition but sensible enough to avoid foolhardy crazes.
Someone who has managed to steer clear of the cliques and alliances
that have shaped Samaria for the past forty years.  Someone sympathetic
to Jacobites and Edori, who values the knowledge they have to offer. 
And it would not hurt, I believe, if this Archangel had a personal
familiarity with the workings of Jehovah."

Now everyone in the room was looking at Lucinda.  Her eyes had widened
with disbelief; shock had blanked her face.  Before she could speak,
Conran muttered, "Yes, well, she's the only one of the lot with a soul,
so you may as well have her if you've got to have someone," and Ben
Harth had said, "Acceptable, but barely."

"Jecoliah?"  Christian asked, still watching Lucinda.  "Do you think
you could propose Lucinda's name to Jehovah and receive a coherent
reply?"

"Actually," Jecoliah said, "I asked him the day before I left for this
conference if he had yet determined the name of the next Archangel."

"And he said?"

"That Lucinda should be given the office in one year's time."

"But--" Lucinda said, but other voices drowned her out.

"One year!  ... We cannot wait so long!  ... And in the meantime?" 
Christian raised his hands to call for silence.

"So we must find an interim Archangel to finish out Bael's term, is
that what Jehovah has suggested?"

"Not a bad idea," Mercy said.  "That will give us time to train Lucinda
in the ways of Samaria--for you may want her innocent, but you don't
want her ignorant, or there will be no end of trouble!"

"But," Lucinda said.

"And for interim Archangel," Jared said with a smile, "there can be
only one choice.  I think we are all agreed on that."

"Yes," Christian said softly.  "Mercy?  Are you prepared to move to
Semorrah for a year?  I will gladly house you here, or help you find
whatever accommodations suit you better."

Now Mercy looked as startled and uncertain as Lucinda.

"Me?"  she exclaimed.  "Well, I'll serve any way I can, of course, but
I don't think I--"

"You're the only one," Jared told her.  "We have a rough year ahead of
us, and we will need someone with bottomless resources of civility and
grace.  You are our old order.  Lu-cinda"--and he stretched a hand
across the table toward the other angel--"is our new.  If you cannot
keep us all in harmony for the next year, then no one can, and we will
have no world to turn over to Lucinda for safekeeping."

"But I--well, certainly you can put it up for a vote, and if this is
what the grand council wants--and I'll do what I can--but--"

"But I don't know why you think I should be the Archangel after Mercy,"
Lucinda finally managed to say.  "I know nothing about your politics or
your way of life.  And I have no interest in power, religious or
temporal.  I've never given it a thought in my life."

"Yes, and that's why it must be you," Jared said gravely.  "For nearly
twenty years Samaria has been in the hands of a man who did care
greatly for power.  And now we need someone who does not.  Someone who
can see clearly, eyes unclouded by prejudice, and mind unfettered by
fear.  If there is something you are afraid of, I have yet to see it.
And if there is someone you cannot tolerate, I have not met that man.
You are our fresh hope, Lucinda, as we enter a perilous new course.
Won't you agree to help us?  We will all be there to help you."

There was another moment of taut silence, which Conran broke with a
snort and a scowl.  "Well, I won't be," he said.  "You just damn well
better count me out."

And this time Tamar could not help herself.  That tense and respectful
silence was broken by the sound of her smothered laughter, which she
could not restrain and could not entirely muffle.  At first everyone
around the table tried to quell her with looks of reproof and
indignation, but one by one they gradually succumbed to the contagion
of her merriment.  First Jared, then Christian, then Mercy began to
smile, and soon everyone else grinned or chuckled along.  Lucinda was
the last to give in, for she still seemed more stupefied than
gratified, but finally she, too, began to smile shyly.  The room seemed
full of it, Tamar thought a few minutes later as she finally managed to
choke down her last giggles--not laughter, after all, but hope.

It was late that evening before Tamar had a chance to apologize for
that outburst to anyone, and when she did, it was to Jared.  He had
pried himself free from the formal dinner much later than he had
promised he would (but she had expected that; she had refused to
accompany him to the meal, since she simply could not bear another
discussion on the future of Samaria) and joined her on Christian
Avalone's rooftop garden.  They stood with their arms crossed on the
brick wall that formed the outer boundary of the building, and looked
down at the fantastical lights of the city.

"Sorry," she said, though she did not, even now, feel particularly
sorry.  "About laughing like that.  But it was funny, you know,
everyone so serious about the fate of the world and Conran, as usual,
thinking only of himself--"

Jared patted her absently on the back as if to accept her apology.  "I
like Conran, though," the angel said.  "Old bastard that he is."

"So do I," Tamer replied.  They observed a brief moment of silence
before she ventured a cautious question.  "And do you mind?"

"Mind what?"

"Being left out like that.  Not being named Archangel.  I know it's
something you wanted."

Eyes still fixed on the lights below, Jared said slowly, "No, I never
did want to be Archangel.  My name was brought up often enough as a
possibility, though, and I was never sure why.  Oh, I'm the right age
and I look the part, I suppose, and people like me, but--Archangel?
I've always been something of a dilettante.  I've never even carried
out the duties at my own hold with much fervor.  I would have made a
very bad Archangel."

"So what do you do now?"

"Now... I think I will start to become the sort of man who would have
made a good Archangel.  Pay more attention to Monteverde and Gaza. Take
up my responsibilities.  Become an ally to Mercy, and then to
Lucinda--a smart, well-informed, cunning ally.  I need to be more
deeply involved in the changing world around me, and to do that, I need
to be more anchored to my own home."

His words took him farther and farther from a vagabond Jac obite who,
suddenly, had no purpose in her own world.  Tamar felt an unaccountable
depression steal over her, a hopelessness she hadn't felt since that
day in the Jansai truck when this very same angel lifted his voice to
pray to the god for rain.

No god, of course; but there had been rain.  And since that day, she
had felt secure in the belief that the angel loved her.  But that was
on the verge of death and in the euphoria of reprieve.  She could not
imagine there was a place for her back in his very real world.  Not a
place for her anywhere.  To prevent him from asking the question she
had no idea how to answer-And what do you plan to do now?--she spoke
quickly and almost at random.

"Home.  That's something I haven't ever had.  Maybe now that all the
Jacobites are safe, I can return to Luminaux.  Or maybe go back to
Ysral.  I suppose that's where Conran's going."

But now Jared had turned to look at her, had shifted his body so that
his hip rested against the brick wall and he had a hand free to hold
out to her.  As he did.

"You have a home with me, Tamar," he said quietly.  "Even if the walls
of my hold tumbled down around us and all the other angels turned me
out, you would still have a home with me.  In my heart.  Anywhere I
happened to be.  I love you.  Come to Monteverde with me and be my
wife."

Her ears were ringing; her blood was shouting; this was delirium, or
this was joy.  But through the pandemonium, she managed to reply with a
sort of calm derision.  "Your angels and your family certainly would
turn you out of Monteverde if you came home with me as your bride.  A
Jacobite?  A heathen?  I don't think I would be very welcome."

"Nonsense," Jared replied, and a teasing note crept into his voice.
"You come from very honorable angel stock, after all.  And do you
forget that your sister will be Archangel in less than a year's time? 
A fancy enough pedigree for anyone, I should think."

"That's my sister," she argued.  "I'm much less presentable."

"Well, it's true that you're evil-tempered and unpredictable," Jared
said thoughtfully.  "And if I had to entertain your aunt Gretchen more
than once every six months, I'd consider gruesome forms of murder.  And
when your sister comes to visit, she'll no doubt bring along her
outlandish Edori lover, who's far less presentable than you.  But I
think I can bear all those trials.  Far more easily than I could bear
losing you."

He had dropped his hand on her shoulder and now he drew her nearer,
though she stubbornly resisted falling into his arms.  One more time in
that winged embrace and she would never be able to wrench herself free.
"Well," she said, her eyes on her feet and her voice very low, "I could
come for a while.  Stay for a little bit.  See how I liked it. And
leave if you--when you--if you got tired of having me around--"

"Splendid!"  Jared exclaimed, and pulled her emphatically against his
chest.  Her heart bounced against her ribs like a ball thrown down a
stairwell.  "Then you'll stay forever!  We'll set the wedding date as
soon as you've had a chance to meet my mother."

"But--" she said, but, like Lucinda, got no chance to finish her
protest.  Jared closed her mouth with a kiss and all her racing
thoughts, all her jumbled arguments, grew tame and docile with that
pressure.  Everything ended here, or everything began; the world was
made new.  She put her hands tentatively up to his shoulders, felt the
marvelous interplay of muscle and bone, resiliency and strength.  His
wings settled around her like so much tangible starlight, ice-white and
glowing in the dark, and for her, for the rest of her life, those would
always be the colors and textures of home.

