
Stiffly, Bramin turned. Fatigue and hopelessness wove a black curtain across his vision. As he retreated
along the carpeted walkway he stumbled, and the glares of courtiers sapped him of all remaining grace. It
seemed an eternity before he reached the far end of the hall. A guard swung open the carved oak doors,
and Bramin passed through them. The portals clanged closed behind him, silencing the whispered
condemnations of Ashemir's court as completely as death.
Outside, wind flung strands of matted hair into Bramin's face as if to mock him. Despair rose to self-pity,
then flared to righteous anger. His journey through the familiar streets of his childhood seemed as one
through a tunnel. The dirt roads blurred to the dark obscurity of disinterest. Peasants stared or scuttled
from his path, unnoticed. A horse cart driver hurled epithets at the dark sorcerer who paced the cobbles
at the center of the alley. But at a flick of Bramin's hand, the driver stemmed his tide of oaths and
swerved to a roadside ditch. They fear me. For the first time since he had left to kill the giant, Bramin
smiled with cruel satisfaction. My life aura has dwindled to nearly nothing, yet those who once scorned
me now shy from a gesture. Still, for Halfrija's love, he would weather the gibes of peasants gladly.
The setting sun lanced red light through the guttering remnant of Bramin's aura. Utterly alone in his fury
despite the dispersing throng of Forste-Mar's citizenry, he plodded to his mother's home. He opened the
simple plank door, stepped across its threshold, and slammed it closed behind him. Despite his effort, the
portal slid shut with an impotent click which betrayed his weakness. Rage flared anew.
Despite the death of Bramin's stepfather several months earlier, the cottage had changed little since his
childhood. The sod-chinked walls enclosed a simply-furnished room separated from his mother's
bedchamber by a patched, blue curtain. Silme sat before a blazing hearth fire, a tomcat nestled in the
folds of her robe, while a brother and sister begged stories of distant lands and Dragonrank training. As
Bramin entered, his mother rose from a chipped wooden bench, her youngest child cradled to her breast.
"Bramin?"
Bramin gave no explanation. He spared neither glance nor words for the mother and half siblings who
followed his march to the loft ladder with questioning stares. Anger lent the sorcerer strength. He caught
the lowest rungs in callused palms and climbed to his sleeping quarters with a deliberate-ness designed to
override fatigue-inspired clumsiness. Once in the loft, he pitched onto a pallet, oblivious to the bells and
balls left by the child who occupied this bed since Bramin's departure to pursue the skills of Dragonrank.
Tears burned his eyes. Repeatedly, his fist pounded the pillow, scattering straw among the toys.
Behind Bramin, the ladder groaned. Silme's sweet voice wound through the loft. "Brother, are you well?"
Bramin whirled like a cornered beast. Inappropriately, his malice channeled against the half sister who
had comforted him in youth, the one woman he knew would not condemn him. "Nothing's changed,
Silme! The citizens of Forste-Mar still hate me. Halfrija spurns my love." He struck the pallet again.