
I had never felt so alone in my life. Wherewas I? Where had my fall left me?
The sky overhead turned blue, the deepest, purest azure I had ever seen, without a single wisp of
cloud. I gaped up into the vastness of it all.
At last, forcing my gaze back down to land, I sighed and resigned myself to work. My first job
would be rescuing myself. I had to get off this Shadow - if Shadow it proved to be. If nothing else, I had
begun to feel the first gnawing pangs of hunger.
I took a quick inventory. Sword, knife, boots, deck of Trumps - all where they belonged. All my
limbs; all my fingers. I had not so much as a single bruise. My mental faculties seemed as sharp as ever.
If the Trumps still worked, I could use them to call any of my half-brothers or half-sisters for a
way out. Or I could use one of the Trumps that showed a place, such as the Beyond or the Courts of
Chaos, and bring myself directly there. The only problem was, I didn't know how safe any of those
places would be. Too many people were trying to kill me right now to go blundering off to unknown
destinations. At least, not without taking proper precautions - an army, for instance.
Removing the deck of Trumps from the pouch at my belt, I flipped through them until I came to
the image of Aber. I liked Aber best of all my siblings; he was the only one who seemed to have a sense
of humor, and he had been the only one to really take me in and make me feel as though I belonged. I
hesitated. Should I contact him and ask to be rescued?
No… not Aber, not yet. I liked him, but I didn't quite trust him. He had his own problems and his
own agenda. He had betrayed us to King Uthor of Chaos, though under duress. I could forgive him for
that… but my trust would have to be earned back.
Moving his card to the bottom of the deck, where I could find it again easily, I kept going. My
dead brother Locke… he couldn't be of any help now. My brother Conner… my sister Blaise…
Then I came to our father's card. It showed a dwarf dressed in a ridiculous jester's outfit, with
bells on the toes of his pointy purple slippers and an idiotic grin on his face. Aber had painted Dad this
way on purpose. He never missed a chance to secretly mock anyone who slighted him, our father most
especially.
Raising Dad's Trump, I concentrated, envisioning him before me. But his image failed to come to
life. I didn't sense so much as a flicker of consciousness when I concentrated on it. Dead? Unconscious?
Just ignoring me? All seemed equally likely, and I had no way of finding out the truth right now.
It also could be that my Trumps no longer worked. Dad had destroyed the Pattern they were
based on, after all. No, I'd have to assume they worked. Dad could easily be unwilling or unable to
respond. I'd try another card.
Who was left? Just my other siblings, and I didn't know most of them well enough to decide how
much I could rely on them. Any of them could be in Lord Zon's employ. Someone in Juniper had
deliberately let an assassin into the castle to kill me. The plot had failed, but I still didn't know who the
traitor had been.
Putting Dad's card on the bottom of the deck, next to Aber's, I pulled out my sister Freda's
Trump. I trusted her more than most of the family. She might be a mystic and have visions of the future,
but she had always been honest about her scheming: she wanted to be in charge of the family.
As painted by Aber, Freda looked gorgeous and sexy, with her red hair up, accentuating her high
cheekbones and pale skin. Her shimmering reddish-purple evening gown accentuated her dark eyes. She
had a cat-with-bird-in-mouth expression, which I found somewhat intriguing.
As I stared down at her, the stars behind her began to twinkle, and I felt a stirring consciousness.
Good - the Trumps still worked. Then her picture moved, but oddly, with jerky movements. I couldn't
quite see her face clearly. A veil seemed to hang between us.
"Who… it?" sheasked. Words seemedto be missing. "I… see-"
"It's me - Oberon," I said.
"Who?" she cried. " ...again !"
Before I could reply, the ground trembled underfoot. An earthquake? I leaned on my staff for
support and tried not to lose my balance. The vibrations grew stronger. Pebbles on the ground began to
hop and jiggle. Rocks slid, and when the ground gave a sharp convulsion, I almost fell.