Magodor tossed the goddess-golem back into the street. "I'm not strong enough to push it any farther." She was surprised.
The dibbuk headed for the house again.
People were aware that something weird was happening. The street was clearing fast.
I whimpered about the damage to my door until I saw smug Mrs. Cardonlos staring, grinning because she'd just found fresh ammunition to use in her campaign to condemn me.
"What do you think, Old Bones?"
Wholly on an intuitional level, I suspect we would find no Adeth—not this Adeth—on any roll of gods.
Intuition, for him, is filling gaps in already chancy information webs by applying his several minds. He is very good at filling gaps with plausible and possible gossamers. But he won't betray his thinking until he has everything nailed down, beyond dispute. He hates being wrong way more than he hates being dead.
"You're that sure? That you'll tell me now?"
No. There is a matter of probabilities and risks and their comparative magnitude. If I am correct, time wasted filling the remaining gaps is time we can ill afford to waste. Particularly now that the villains must face the possibility that I suspect the truth.
Only the Dead Man would think enough of himself to fancy himself a threat to the gods.
"Better come out with it, then."
Relay this. I cannot reach the others all at once.
"Listen up, folks. His Nibs has a big story coming out."
The Adeth dibbuk was created specifically as an instrument by which you could be manipulated, Garrett. You were chosen because you were certain to become a focus for conflict. You were intended and expected to become a continuous provocation.
"Little old me? Broke their hearts, didn't I?"
Enough, Garrett. Listen. You can do your tongue exercises later.
The reprimand seemed to get through to everyone else.
Behind the contest for the last place on the Street of the Gods, behind the feminist schemes of Imara and her allies in several pantheons, beyond even Magodor's secret ambition to anoint herself the senior power of a grim new all-female religion, there has been a manipulator whose sole mission has been to provoke clashes like those at the Haunted Circle.
Wait! he snapped as Magodor started to snarl something in reply.
The ultimate cause behind the conflict is not that animating Imara and her sisters. Garrett. You told me that numerous gods not of Godoroth or Shayir provenance joined the fighting. But there is no reason they should have favored one cause above another. Revenge amidst confusion, of course, makes sense. But they would have needed to be primed and ready for sudden opportunity. Having followed the road this far, the questions I come up against are Who? and Why? And the why comes easier than the who.
"I'll bite," I told him. Magodor and the owl girls, even Cat and Fourteen, were intrigued, too.
Your dream, in which Magodor showed you the home of the gods, indicates that at some level it is possible to communicate between this world and that. I am going to strut out onto a limb now. I am going to postulate that the Great Old Ones over there have seduced someone here into opening the way. He or she has failed a few times. Another effort will be imminent. Even the dullest conspirator would have to be concerned that enough random evidence is loose to suggest the truth to anyone interested enough to put the pieces together.
Add the fact that I am known to be involved, and desperate measures are sure to follow.
The Dead Man lacks nothing in his confidence in his own significance.
I thought maybe he was reaching a little, but I couldn't think of any reason to reject his big picture. It did not contradict any known facts, nor did I notice any left over. That wasn't the case with any of my theories.
"Maggie?"
"Garrett, I weary of your familiarities. But I will restrain my ire. There may be substance to what you say. It illuminates many strangenesses of recent times." She became introspective. Her appearance deteriorated. She developed a bad case of too many arms and fangs. Body odor began to be a problem, too.
I started to say something. She raised a hand. "Wait." She thought some more. "I cannot guess who is at the center. But I am sure that someone knows or soon will know whatever the Adeth thing learned here. There will be an effort to silence us."
Oh boy. What a promotion. I always wanted to be the dot at the center of a really big target. "Ah... "
"Word must be spread, even if it isn't believed. Fast. Everywhere, like a tree spreading a million seeds. So that one takes root somewhere. You. You. You." She seized the owl girls and Fourteen. She glared into their eyes. They shuddered, whimpered, disappeared. For an instant I feared Magodor herself might be the mole of darkness.
"I scattered them, Garrett. Sent them to deities I know well, armed with tokens guaranteeing that I sent the message. I asked for help, too. I will stay here. Adeth will come here."
"I applaud your confidence."
"I am Magodor the Destroyer. I deal in violent confrontation."
"I know, but... "
"Reinforcements will be welcome."
"Witnesses, too."
I looked at the Dead Man. He sent, I am trying to fathom the identity of the traitor. There is insufficient evidence.
I relayed that to Magodor, said, "There isn't any evidence. But at this point I don't think it much matters. We just don't turn our backs on anybody who might be a holy shapeshifter."
In a tiny voice Cat suggested, "It must be my mother."
I hadn't seen a lot of Imara, but I felt comfortable saying, "No. She isn't smart enough."
The Dead Man offered his own opinion. Not impossible, Garrett. If the genuine Imara has been displaced. You said it yourself. Adeth is a shapechanger.
I saw something then. "The plan wouldn't have been for Imara to replace Cat. It would've been for Adeth to. Cat has a real history, even if it's been secret. And a mortal is easier to do away with and dispose of. Cat's demigoddess nature would cover a lot of questions about her replacement being odd. And the whole imposture would only have to last till the breakthrough came."
My guesses meant it had to be an old, old plot, reaching back for decades, always pointed toward the moment when pantheons like the Godoroth and Shayir could be brought into conflict. But the gods have time to unwind protracted schemes.
Cat was in a bad spot emotionally. I was willing to bet that she'd entertained similar suspicions for quite a while. Like everyone dealt a cruel hand, she had trouble facing the truth squarely.
The tears started. I held her. She shook violently with the hurt, with the grief.