he did that much for us, and Gamine and Cynara are friends. We forgotâwe all forgotâthat Adricâs allegiance belonged to Narabedla first. Until he vanished.â I heard the brooding heaviness in Narayanâs voice. These men had been friends. Narayan went on, âI sent Brennan today, to find out. He didnât come back.â
I lowered my head and miserably told him what had happened to Brennan. Narayanâs face in a flicker of firelight looked drawn and haggard. âHe was aâbrave man,â Narayan said at last. âBut I donât blame you. After the interchange, I think, there was a time when you went on living Adricâs life. Thinking his thoughts. But now, I think, he will grow weaker in you. I hope . Youâwho are you, in your own world?â
I shrugged. The words would have meant nothing to Narayan. âMy nameâs Mike Kenscott.â
âMi-ek,â Narayan repeated, turning the strange word on his tongue. âThe men will call you Adric. Iâd better, too. Laterââ he shrugged. I didnât say anything; I was still convinced that I hadnât seen the last of Adric. But I didnât want to tell Narayan this. I liked the man.
Without warning, Narayan switched on lights. âItâs near dawn, and you must be worn out. Weâve taught them to stay clear of the forests at night, so weâre safe enough here. They canât do much till theyâve been to the Dreamers Keep, in any case.â With a sudden boyish friendliness he put out his hand and I took it. âIâm glad youâre not Adric. He might be hard to handle nowâif heâs changed so much.â
As if the lights had been a signal, fat Raif came without knocking into the room. Narayan crossed his hostile stare at me. âHeâs all right, Raif,â the Dreamer said. The fat face broke into a sudden, elephantine smile. âIâd better apologize, Adric. I had orders.â
âFind him a place to sleep,â Narayan suggested, and I followed Raif up a flight of low stairs into an inner room. There was a bed there, clean, but tumbled as if it had had another occupant not long ago. Raif said âKerrelâs gone with Cynara. You can sleep here.â
I kicked off my boots and crawled between the blankets, suddenly too weary even to answer. I had been two days without sleep, and most of that time I had been under exhausting physical and mental strain. I saw Raif cautiously finger his weapons and sensed that whatever Narayan said, he was reserving judgment. He didnât take chances, this outsize lieutenant of Narayanâs. Sleepily I said âYou can put that up, my friend. Iâm not going to move till Iâve had a good, longââ
I didnât even finish the sentence to myself. Instead I went to sleep.
I had slept for hours. I came abruptly out of confused dreams to hear a shrill voice and to feel small hands pulling me upright. Cynara! âWake up, Adricââ she wailed, âKaramy and Evarin are riding todayâhunting you !â
I sat up, dizzy-brained, far from alert. âCynara! Howââ
âOh, never mind thatââ her voice was impatient, âWhat can we do ?â
I didnât know. I was still stupid with sleep, but I put a reassuring arm around her shoulders. âDonât be afraid,â I told her, then, releasing her, bent and began to pull on my boots. I heard the swift pound of steps on the stairs, and Narayan shoved open the door, dragging a brown tunic over his head as he came. He stopped short at the door, staring at his sister. âCynara, what are you doing here?â
She repeated her news, and he sighed. He looked as if he hadnât slept at all. âWell, never mind,â he told her, âThe game was almost over, anyhow. Sooner or later they would have broken through the Illusion; Rhys is too old now for that. You were lucky to get away.
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