flat, with bulging yellow eyes and small pointed ears. Its face was dark purple. It also had a long forked tongue and, if it was like the other dragons, it could blow fire.

'It's incredible,' Evanna said. 'This is the first time I have seen one up so close. Our father excelled himself with this creation.'

'Mr Tiny made the dragons?'

Evanna nodded. 'He helped human scientists create them. Actually, one of your friends was a key member of the team – Alan Morris. With our father's aid he made a breakthrough which allowed them to be cloned from a combination of dinosaur cells.'

'Alan?' I snorted. 'You're telling me Alan Morris made dragons? That's total and utter…' I stopped short. Tommy had told me Alan was a scientist, and that he'd specialized in cloning. It was hard to believe the foolish boy I'd known had grown up to become a creator of dinosaurs – but then again, it was hard to believe Steve had become the Vampaneze Lord, or myself a Vampire Prince. I suppose all influential men and women must start out as normal, unremarkable children.

'For many centuries, the rulers of this world will keep the dragons in check,' Evanna said. 'They'll control them. Later, when they lose their hold on power – as all rulers must – the dragons will fly free and multiply, becoming a real menace. In the end they'll outlive or outlast all the humans, vampires and vampaneze, and rule the world in their turn. I'm not sure what comes after them. I've never looked that far ahead.'

'Why doesn't it kill us?' I asked, eyeing the dragon uneasily. 'Is it tame?'

'Hardly!' Evanna laughed. 'Normally the dragons would tear us apart. Our father masks this area from them – they can't see the Lake of Souls or anyone around it.'

'This one sees us,' I noted.

'Yes, but you're controlling it, so we are safe.'

'The last time I was here, I was almost roasted alive by dragons,' I said. 'How can I control them now when I couldn't before?'

'But you could,' Evanna replied. 'You had the power – you just didn't know it. The dragons would have obeyed you then, as they do now.'

'Why?' I frowned. 'What's so special about me?'

'You're Desmond Tiny's son,' Evanna reminded me. 'Even though he did not pass on his magical powers to you, traces of his influence remain. That is why you were skilled at controlling animals such as spiders and wolves. But there is more to it than that.'

Evanna reached out, her hand extending far beyond its natural length, and touched the dragon's head. Its skull glowed beneath the witch's touch. Its purple skin faded, then became translucent, so I could see inside to its brain. The oval, stone-like shape was instantly familiar, though it took me a few seconds to recall what it reminded me of. Then it clicked.

'The Stone of Blood!' I exclaimed. While this was much smaller than the one in the Hall of Princes, it was unmistakably the same type. The Stone of Blood had been a gift to the vampires from Mr Tiny. For seven hundred years the members of the clan had fed their blood to it, and used it to keep track of and communicate with each other. It was an invaluable tool, but dangerous – if it had fallen into the hands of the vampaneze, they could have tracked down and killed almost every living vampire.

'Our father took the brain of a dragon into the past and gave it to the vampires,' Evanna said. 'He often does that – travels into the past and makes small changes which influence the present and future. Through the Stone of Blood he bound the vampires more tightly to his will. If the vampires win the War of the Scars, they will use the Stone to control the dragons, and through them the skies. I don't think the vampaneze will use it if they win… They never trusted this gift of Desmond Tiny's – it was one of the reasons they broke away from the rest of the vampire clan. I'm not sure what their relationship with the dragons would be like. Perhaps our father will provide them with some other way of controlling the beasts – or maybe it will please him to let them be enemies.'

'The Stone of Blood was supposed to be the clan's last hope,' I muttered, unable to take my eyes off the dragon's glowing brain. 'There was a legend – if we lost the war with the vampaneze, the Stone of Blood might some night help us rise again.'

Evanna nodded and removed her hand from the dragon's head. It stopped glowing and resumed its normal appearance. The dragon didn't seem to have noticed any change. It continued staring at me, awaiting my command.

'Above all else, our father craves chaos,' Evanna said. 'Stability bores him. He has no interest in seeing any race rule for ever. For a time it pleased him to let humans rule this planet, since they were violent, always at war with one another. But when he saw them heading the way of peace during the latter half of the twentieth century – or thought he did; to be honest, I don't agree with his assessment – he set about overthrowing them. He will do the same with their successors.

'If the vampaneze win the War of the Scars and wipe out the vampires, he'll use the Stone in the future. He will lead humans to it and teach them to extract the blood cells and build a new army of cloned vampires. But they won't be vampires as you know them. Desmond will control the cloning process and meddle with the cells, twisting and re-shaping them. The new creatures will be more savage than the original vampires, with less developed brains, slaves to the whim of our father.' Evanna smiled twistedly. 'So yes, our father told the truth when he said the Stone of Blood could help the vampires rise again – but he kept a few of the less savoury facts to himself.'

'Then neither side can truly win,' I said. 'He's just setting the victors up for a later fall.'

'That has always been Desmond's way,' Evanna said. 'What he helps create, he later destroys. Many empires – Egyptian, Persian, British – have already learnt that to their cost.'

'Egyptian?' I blinked.

'Our father is a great fan of empires,' Evanna said. 'Cavemen hitting each other with sticks and bones were of very limited interest to him. He prefers to see people killing each other with more effective weapons, and in greater numbers. But for mankind to advance barbarically, it also had to advance in other ways. It had to grow socially, culturally, spiritually, technologically, medically. Only a nation which was great in all aspects could wage war greatly.

'Our father has had his hand in most of the notable architectural, technical or medical breakthroughs of mankind. He could never openly lead, but he influenced slyly. The only area where he had no real power was that of literature. Desmond is not a fictional dreamer. Reality is everything to him. He has no interest in the wonderful stories of mankind. Writers have always been alien to him – he does not read works of fiction, or take any notice of them.'

'Never mind that,' I grunted, not giving a hoot about Mr Tiny's choice of reading material. 'Tell me more about his meddling with mankind, and time-travelling. You say Mr Tiny goes into the past to change the present and future. But what about the time paradox?' I'd seen lots of science fiction movies and TV shows. I knew all about the problems associated with the theory of time travel.

'There is no paradox,' Evanna said. 'The universe keeps natural order. The key events of the past cannot be changed – only the people involved.'

'Huh?' I said.

'Once something important happens in the present – the universe, to give the higher force a name, decides what is important or not – it can never be changed,' Evanna explained. 'But you can alter the people involved. For instance, now that it has happened, you cannot travel to the past and prevent World War Two – but you could go back and kill Adolf Hitler. The universe would immediately create another person to fill his shoes. That person would be born like any normal person, grow up, then do what Hitler did, with precisely the same results. The name would change, but nothing else.'

'But Hitler was a monster,' I said. 'He murdered millions of people. Do you mean, if Mr Tiny went back and killed him, some innocent guy would take his place? All those people would still die?'

'Yes,' Evanna said.

'But then that person wouldn't have chosen their fate,' I frowned. 'They wouldn't be responsible for their actions.'

Evanna sniffed. 'The universe would have to create a child with the potential for wickedness – a good man cannot be forced to do evil – but once it did, yes, that person would become a victim of destiny. It does not happen often. Our father only occasionally replaces important figures of the past. Most people have free will. But there

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