
"If you would rise, do so alone," she heard in her mind, and recalled the gold-bedecked woman at
Lord Dyran's side, watching the smith writhe in agony at her feet, her face impassive.
The lesson was there, and easy to read.
Rise alone and fall alone. If he had cared half as much for me as he did for the purity of his
blades—but I was less than a blade, and he had a replacement standing ready.
As she took each step, each breath in agony, there was a hotter fire burning in her mind. Once Lord
Dyran had grown tired of her, she was of less use than one of his pensioners. And he no longer cared
what happened to her.
The pensioners—once she had scorned them; the weak in power, or elven "lords" fallen on hard
times, who had lost too much in the ever-renewing duels. The duels were fought by their trained
gladiators, but they represented very real feuds, and the losses incurred when their fighters lost were
equally real…
Twice as pathetic were the sad cases whose magic was too weak to accomplish more than
self-protection. Though these "pensioners" could not be collared, they could be coerced in other, more
subtle ways. They often served as overseers, as chief traders, and in other positions of trust. They were
neither wholly of the world of the High Lords, nor pampered as luxuriously as the treasured slaves, such
as concubines and entertainers. Serina had pitied them, once.
No. Better to fall, she thought, than eke out a miserable, scrabbling existence like theirs…
Better to have reigned at least for a little while; to have stood at Lord Dyran's side, and answered to
no one but her master… to have feared only purely mortal trickery. Unlike the pensioners, whose every
action was a move in a game they did not understand.
"So," Dyran said, regarding the top of the trembling overseer's head, as the elven subordinate knelt
before him. "It would seem the quota cannot be met." He was all in black today, and the milky light from
the skylight overhead made his hair gleam like silver on his shoulders. He had a look about him that
Serina knew well, a look that told her his mood was a cruel one, and she hoped he would appease it on
the person of his overseer.
"No, my lord," the elven overseer replied, his voice quavering. There was nothing in his
appearance—other than his clothing—to tell a human of the vast social gulf between himself and Dyran.
His hair, tied back in a neat tail, was just as long and silky, just as pale a gold. His eyes were just as
green, his stature equal to Dyran's. Both had the sharply pointed ear-tips of their race, and both
appeared to be fighting men in the prime of life. The overseer wore riding leathers; Dyran fine velvet. But
there were differences between them not visible to the human senses; differences that made Dyran
master. "There have been too many injuries, my lord, to—"
"Due to your neglect," Dyran reminded him silkily. Serina saw that his goblet of wine had warmed,
and replaced it with a chilled one. He ignored her, all his attention bent on his victim.
The overseer blanched. "But my lord, I told you that the forge chains needed—"
"Due to your neglect," Dyran repeated, and settled back into his ornately carved wooden chair,
steepling his long, slender hands before his chin. "I'm afraid I'm going to have to teach you a lesson about
caring for your tools, Goris. I believe you have a daughter?"
"Yes, my lord," the overseer whispered. He glanced up briefly, and Serina noted that he had the
helpless, hopeless look of a creature in a trap. "But she is my only heir—"
Dyran dismissed the girl with a gesture. "Wed her to Dorion. He's been pestering me for a bride,
and his quota has been exceeded. We'll see if his line proves more competent than yours."
The overseer's head snapped up, emerald eyes wide with shock. "But, my lord!" he protested.
"Dorion is—"
He stopped himself, and swallowed suddenly, as his pupils contracted with fear."
Lord Dyran leaned forward in his seat. "Yes?" he said, with venomous mildness. "You were about
to say—what?" He raised one eyebrow, a gesture Serina knew well. It meant he was poised to strike, if
angered.
The overseer was frozen with terror. "Nothing, my lord," he whispered weakly.
"You were about to say, 'Dorion is a pervert,' I believe," Dyran told him, his voice smooth and calm,