Volume two of the series picks up shortly after the conclusion of book 1. Miranda, Spiritualist (and again I find that such an odd word choice for the people in this series who have a rule-following relationship with spirits, when the spirits here are those of inanimate objects or aspects of nature), and her ghosthound Gin, return home after the events in book 1 only to face prosecution for supposed treason. Hern, one of the Tower Keepers, is an enemy of her mentor, and the head of the Spiritualists, and seeks to strike against him through Miranda, favoured pupil who Hern fears is being groomed for eventual succession. Hern and his paid cronies twist everything around to make out that she broke the rules, which forbid dominating or otherwise putting spirits under duress in return for their service. Even the testimony of Mellinor, the inland sea spirit whom she saved in book 1, and who now resides inside her body for most of the time, cannot clear her name. And so Miranda and Gin go on the run, eventually being recruited by a mysterious character, who acts on behalf of one of the Great Spirits, to go to the Duchy of Gaol and investigate strange goings-on.
Eli and his friends, meanwhile, go to see a master Shaper (yet another kind of wizard) to commission a new coat for Nico: urgently required to obscure her demonseed aura from the spirits who would otherwise go into a panic at sensing the evil presence within her. The Shaper who agrees to make one does so on condition that they bring to him a special sword, one of several made centuries ago from a special bone metal, which he hopes to forge into bracelets for his wife who is also a demonseed, but who has been fighting its takeover of her mind for ten years. The silver wrist and ankle bracelets, similar to those Nico wears, are becoming less effective in helping her to hold back the demon. Coincidentally, the nearest place rumoured to have such a sword is the same Duchy where Miranda is headed.
This book developed the back story of certain characters such as Nico, just hinted at in book 1. It also went to darker places with the whole demonseed element and also the tortures dealt out by the evil Duke of Gaol, although Eli remained the wise-cracking person who irritated me in book 1. There was more of a hint though that some deep-seated trauma, connected with his rejection of his father's hidebound devotion to the ways of the Spiritualists, has had a part to play in the formation of his character, as has his involvement with the Shepherdess, the mysterious being whom other spirits worship as if she is a goddess. Unfortunately we don't really see this in the character.
There were a few places in this where I was jolted out of the story. The author seems to describe things after the event. The worst was nearest the end of the book where a character I had envisaged throughout as being middle-aged at most, was described during a climactic fight scene as an old man. That threw my whole picture of the character up in the air.
As before, Miranda and Gin are my favourite characters but even they are only lightly sketched. For this and the reasons stated above, this is again a light-hearted but unmemorable 3-star read.