
The atmosphere was dark and heavy, cloying with the sweetness of exotic, honey-laden flowers. A
lantern threw its smoky light across the room, but it did not reach the shadowy corners. Ornate tapestries
covered the walls: sombre hunting scenes full of screaming coursers, the raw colors of wind-whipped
banners, ancient weapons and trampled earth stained with the rich blood of the wounded. Hide-covered
furniture, savage in its heavy elegance despite carved woodwork and gilt decorations, filled the room like
a gathering of prehistoric animals. The doorway was set in a wide, wooden frame of fantastic running
beasts where each creature swallowed the tail of its leader in an endless predatory race. A floor of black
wooden tiles shone with polish and the passage of many feet. It reflected everything set upon it with the
murky distortion of swamp water. Ornaments were scattered throughout the chamber: a clear glass wine
goblet, a[12] great circle of sabers hung on the wall like a wheel with countless spokes, a wealth of
jewel-encrusted sculpture.
Spoils, thought S’Talon. This was not the room of a warrior at all. A dragon perhaps, sitting on its
hoard. Yes, a dragon, he thought, looking into the Praetor’s eyes.
The Praetor was seated in the largest chair. He was a handsome, heavy-set man whose leonine features
already sagged under the weight of a life devoted to dissipation. Silver hair framed his face in short,
elegant curls. His hands, heavy with jewelry, rested on bowing lizard’s heads carved in black wood. He
lounged in the chair, but there was no relaxation in his pose. S’Talon watched the Praetor’s hand curl
around a carving. The dragon’s claw was poised and ready to strike. Involuntarily he braced himself.
“... so, S’Talon, you have been selected.”
As he had thought. Again he had been graciously granted the opportunity to die.
“It is the chance of a lifetime.” Greed glittered in the hooded eyes. “If you serve the empire well, it will
serve you. The risks are high, S’Talon, but the rewards are great. Go with the Emperor’s blessing.”
I will need it, thought S’Talon as the Praetor’s unctuous voice faded into the darkness.
“I am honored, my Praetor,” he said tightly.
The Praetor inclined his head as S’Talon saluted and backed from the room. He smiled a small and
private smile, aware of the commander’s unyielding anger. S’Talon was an annoying ache in his side. To
be frank, he could not stand the man. Nobility angered him, angered him twice over because in this case
it was genuine. Yet opportunity rises to the surface like oil on water. He had found a solution to more
than one problem in S’Talon’s assignment. The mission was necessary and profoundly dangerous. If, by
some[13]miracle, he survived, S’Talon’s already overdeveloped reputation would grow even more ...
but he would not survive. Still, it would never do to let him attempt such an important task unsupervised.
He was too intelligent to be predictable.
The gentle sound of a latch opening recalled the Praetor to the matter at hand.
“Come in, Nephew,” he said to the shadows, and a tall, slim young man appeared from behind a
tapestry. Despite the elegant cut of his tunic and the style with which he wore it, there was a dangerous
expression around his mouth, an enjoyment of injury—rather like a weasel after chickens. He smirked.
“Old S’Talon is angry enough to bite someone’s head off,” he commented.
“Take care that it is not yours,” snapped the Praetor. “It is never wise to provoke combat when you are