Ok, chapter 3. Sorry it's been a while but I've been really busy (getting married on Saturday!) so this will be the last you'll hear from me for a few weeks.
Typing as I go...
I would start this chapter with the "Please,
O Raetor" line, as the earlier stuff feels like preamble. I think you could get that stuff in throughout if you think it's necessary, but the line above feels more actiony (new word).
The early section feels very stand-off-ish. "A sardonic grin was bared, and Stephen's judgment fell." I think I know what you're going for here, but I would prefer it to be a little less passive. "Arrays of weaponry... ...exuded menace" and "Thumps rang" also fell into this category I think.
"The fat one's knees thudded to the ground." I liked that. You have a great way with these little details, as I think I've said before. I think it's especially effective when it's simple, direct and to the point.
Erland's indoctrination felt a little bit too easy... I know he's a mercenary, so he's probably thinking of work and money, but I would have thought a professional merc would be more wary of getting involved with religion. After all, will he be free to leave whenever he wants? I don't know the Enlightened very well by this point, so maybe my concern is not a problem.
The first conversation between Heath and Stephen was well done, it flowed naturally and Heath came across as a pretty intelligent guy.
"The gaunt, pallid thief stood with head bowed, his hands, unmarred by criminal's ink for employment's discretion only, pressed against the floor as if hailing a god incarnate" Wow, that's a long sentence, and I'm not even sure what it means

Criminal's ink? I'm guessing some kind of tatooing of crims to mark them, but employment's discretion is an odd phrase.
I'm starting to get a better feel for the politics, now. Previously I wasn't sure who Leo was in the grand scheme of things, but it's becoming clearer.
The part with the messenger was played out well, too. A real sense of shit happening left, right and centre, with his thoughts all cut off and jumbled, etc. And a sense of urgency came through when the name "Fehl" was mentioned.
"Death's endurance was infinite--what man could survive it?" Er, none?

I think this line is a bit of over-kill. The previous line was great and did the job well enough.
Interesting end to the scene. The drowning was very vivid, especially with the gurgling part. I liked how Stephen's last thought was that he'd failed the Great Lord, which shows (to me, at least) that Stephen was once a devout man, and maybe even believed he was all the way to the end... but somewhere along the line he had lost his way. I really liked that.
I did find it a little surprising that you spent all this time with Stephen just to kill him off, but I shall trust in your judgement
One last thing - I think Stephen swears a bit too much. I'm not a tree-hugging prude, but I think it was a little overboard.
This post has been edited by Yellow: 14 July 2009 - 09:41 PM