“Just another conquest to the glory of the House Timuran,” Drakis said. “Look, if you don’t mind, I’ll take the dwarf back-there are some questions I need to ask him.”

The manticore looked suddenly relieved. “Gladly. How the gods put so many words into so short a soul, I’ll never know. Better you listen to him than me.”

“Then off with you. . I’ll see you at Devotions.”

The manticore was already padding quickly back around the garden toward the north hall and the chakrilya beyond.

Drakis kept his eye on the dwarf. His figure seemed almost comical now that it was shaved and branded. This short, ugly creature had done more than bring them back to a world that was horrifying; he had predicted its horrors long before they had become fact. Drakis knew that the ways of the gods were strange and unfathomable to the mortals with whose fates they played, but he could not deny that this dwarf had conjured questions in his mind that he had to ask and have answered.

Drakis stepped up to the dwarf, and with a quick glance down the hall, spoke rapidly in hushed tones.

“Are you a god?”

The dwarf turned his chubby face toward the human. “What did you say?”

“I said,” Drakis spoke with only a slightly raised volume, “are you a god?”

The dwarf smiled in return, “Ah. . you want to know if I am a god?”

“Yes,” Drakis replied.

“I see. . well, that depends,” the dwarf said, turning back once more to examine the picture-writing carved into the wall in front of him.

Drakis stammered for a moment before he could continue. “What is that supposed to mean?”

Jugar turned back to the human, his pleasant smile still fixed between his round cheeks. “Oh, Drakis, my dear friend. . if someone ever asks you if you are a god, the only appropriate answer is-that depends!”

Drakis felt the warmth of his frustration rising into his face.

“Here, come walk with me for a while and I’ll explain,” Jugar said, turning to face back down the hall away from the garden. Drakis straightened slightly and fell into slow step next to the dwarf who still had his hands clasped in thought behind his back. “Let us assume that someone asks you, Drakis, if you are a god. If you were to answer them at once with a ‘no,’ then you would disappoint anyone who might have supported you, and, being embarrassed at their mistake and suddenly feeling you are much less than they expected of you. . well they would lose respect for you and not follow you at all. If they are your enemies and ask that question, then saying ‘no’ is just an invitation to have your land invaded and your people slaughtered. You follow me so far?”

“I think so,” Drakis said anxiously, “but I don’t see what this has to do with. .”

“On the other hand, if you were to answer ‘yes’ right away and all your supporters were following you based on your word that you were a god-and then it turned out that you weren’t a god but just some fellow who didn’t want to disappoint everyone by not being a god. . well, they’d probably stone you right there on the spot and end your career rather abruptly. Then your enemies would come in and invade your land anyway and slaughter your people, so the result would be much the same, right?”

“Yes, but. .”

“So the only reasonable answer is, ‘that depends,’ ” the dwarf concluded. “It doesn’t commit you to performing like a deity and lets anyone who might follow you do so with a clear conscience. It also keeps your enemies guessing. . an altogether reasonable outcome for everyone involved.”

“But you see the future. . know it before it happens,” Drakis said under his breath. “Or do you cause it to happen-determining my fate?”

Jugar stopped, looking up earnestly into Drakis’ face. “No! No one determines your fate but you!”

“But you. . you knew!

The dwarf let out a great sigh. “Yes, I knew, Drakis-and I am sorry for it, my boy.”

“But how? How did you know?”

The dwarf looked around them once more, gesturing as he did. “Have you ever been here, Drakis? Do you recognize the place?”

Drakis glanced around. “Of course. It is the Hall of the Past.”

“Do you know what it is for?”

Drakis shook his head, “Why can’t you just answer my question?”

“I am answering your question,” the dwarf continued. “Do you know what it is for?”

Drakis looked around him. Pictographs and hieroglyphics ornamented the walls, each set in various sized framing cuts making a mosaic on the wall. There were the figures of elves, larger than the rest and more prominent. There were smaller figures of manticores and chimera as well as humans. There were other creatures, too, which he thought mystical for he had never seen them in battle. “They are the histories and honors of the House of Timuran after the manner of the elven language.”

“That is right,” Jugar nodded. “Can you read them?”

“Read them?” Drakis scoffed. “You are a fool!”

“I may be a fool,” the dwarf replied, “but I can read these. Here, for example,” and he pointed three-quarters of the way up the slope of the wall, “here is where a Timuran participated in the expedition to the God’s Wall and slaughtered ten thousand humans in their native kingdom. And here,” his fat finger pointed a little to the left of the previous frame, “is where two brothers of the Timuran line were killed as they fought a dragon.”

“A what?” Drakis asked.

“A dragon,” the dwarf continued. “It is a creature of power and majesty not seen among breathing dwarves or men in three hundred years. They are, in fact, the source of the song that has troubled you of late. See, over here,” and the dwarf once more shifted the direction of his pointing finger, “is where the humans of the royal line were all called to their doom by the betrayal of the dragons that once had served them so well. It is written here that they sing this song now in lament.”

“Foolish nonsense,” Drakis spat.

“And this wisdom from a slave who cannot read.” Jugar sighed once more, shaking his head. “I knew your fate today, Drakis, because I could read you as I read the markings on these walls.”

Drakis shook his head in disbelief.

“Your back, Drakis. . I read your back,” Jugar continued sadly. “When we were in the baths. Those scars were too deep and the markings too regular to be anything but the firereed whip of an elven House Master. Combat scars would have been more varied and, truthfully, would have killed you had they come on the field. But they were also knitted back together with both elven skill and the power of Aether. That meant that someone in this household had saved you from death before and many times.”

“Many times?” Drakis shook his head. “This is the first time my master has ever beaten me!”

“This is the first time you have ever remembered your master beating you,” Jugar corrected.

Drakis paused. “Then how did you know about. . about. .”

“About your House mistress?”

Drakis glanced shamefully away once again.

“Those same scars-they were healed with elven powers of the Aether, too clean and regular to have been otherwise. . and it had to be someone who cared not only about how you healed but how you looked.” Jugar shrugged. “It happens in elven households-especially those of the higher estates. It is forbidden, of course, but the practice has gotten about among the younger generation of the elves that a warrior’s-well, attentions-will bring more power to their use of the Aether. So now it has become a common, dirty little secret practiced in most households between elven youth who have too little else to occupy their time and the warrior slaves who have no choice but to submit or die and be forgotten. Elven society goes on turning its blind eye to the practice and is content to pretend it does not exist. By the looks of your back, this has been a cycle going on for some time.”

“Shebin. . Timuran. . I don’t remember anything like this.”

“But you can remember,” Jugar said earnestly. He reached up and grabbed Drakis

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