least treat you like human beings.'
He stared into the fire, stunned, quite unable to move. It was a good thing he wasn't holding anything, or he'd have dropped it, his hands were so numb. He didn't even realize that Rubrik had excused himself and gone back to the inn for something, until the door closed behind him.
'Child, you look as if someone smacked you with a board,' Ulrich observed dispassionately. 'Are you all right?'
Karal rose to his feet, somewhat unsteadily, and stared at his mentor, trembling from head to foot in mingled shock and fear. 'Didn't you hear what he said?' Karal spluttered. 'He's one of
'I know, I know,' Ulrich replied, with a yawn. 'I've known all along. If that 'here I am, shoot me now,' white livery of theirs wasn't a dead giveaway, the Companion certainly is.'
'But you didn't say anything!' Karal wailed, feeling as if he'd been betrayed.
'I thought you knew,' Ulrich told him, a hint of stern rebuke in his voice. 'We
Karal just stared at him.
'Then
'But—' Karal began, wildly. 'He—'
'—is the same man he was a few moments ago, before you realized what his position in Valdemar was,' Ulrich pointed out, sipping his tea. '
Karal tried to get a breath and couldn't. 'But—'
'Does he eat babies for breakfast?' Ulrich asked, with a hint of a grim smile.
Karal was forced to shake his head. 'No, but—'
'Do he or his mount shoot fire from their nostrils, or leave smoking, blackened footprints behind them?' Ulrich was definitely enjoying this.
Karal wasn't. 'No, but—'
'Has he been
'No,' Karal replied weakly. 'But—' He sat back down in his chair with a
Ulrich picked up Karal's tea mug and leaned over to put it back in his hands. 'Child,' he said softly, 'he has heard the same stories of us that we have heard of the Heralds. The trouble is—I fear that the stories about us were partly true. We
'That—he's the same man whose company I enjoyed this morning,' Karal finally said, with a little difficulty. His mind felt thick. His thoughts moved as though they were weighted. And yet he could not deny the truth of what Ulrich had just said.
'I suggest that you relax and continue to enjoy his company,' Ulrich replied, leaning back in his chair. 'I certainly am, and I intend to go on doing so. In fact, after hearing his story, I am inclined to trust him to live up to every good thing that Her Holiness told me about Heralds.'