"Where did you get those?" Alun asked. He reached up to grab the bag.
But Drewish pulled them just out of his grasp. "The blood metal is everywhere. No big trick to having someone make a few forcibles for you, if you know who to talk to. The big trick now will be finding someone who is willing to give you an endowment. Take your pick-wit, stamina, grace? Who will give you theirs? What coin can you offer to get it?"
"I don t know," Alun said, mystified.
Certainly, Talon thought, no one would give Alun an endowment.
He must have thought the same. "What are you offering?" Alun asked. "Do you want my endowment?"
"Not yours," Drewish laughed. "Your dogs. A dog can give up an endowment as easily as a man. You want strength? Those mastiffs of yours have it. You want stamina, speed? There s a dog for that. Scent and hearing too. But we need the dogs to give up those endowments. We need their master to coax the gifts from them. That s where you come in. The dogs love you. You re their feeder, their handler. They re completely devoted to you, not to us."
Drewish took out a pair of forcibles. "One forcible for every six dogs," Connor said, "that s what I m offering. You ll be a Runelord if you take me up on it."
Alun considered.
Talon knew that it was tempting. Alun had fourteen dogs. If he sold Connor and Drewish a dozen endowments, he d have a pair of forcibles and could take two endowments himself.
He d be a Runelord. Perhaps with some strength and stamina, he could become more of a warrior, raise his own lot in life.
But Connor and Drewish would both still be far more powerful than he. Right now, they loomed over him, subtly threatening.
And where would Alun go to get endowments from humans once his dogs had all been used up? No one would give them to someone like him.
It wasn t much of an offer, Talon decided.
Petty bribes and threats, that s how the Madocs led.
She wondered if she might buy the endowments from Alun herself, but she had little coin to offer. There were a few treasures in her dowry box, but she d been forced to leave that back in Cantular. Doubtlessly, her pair of fine gold rings would end up decorating some wyrmling lord s nostrils.
From the council chamber, she heard Daylan cry out in anguish, "There is no law against compassion. It is true that I broke your laws, but I did it only to obey a higher law. How can we serve society if we do not serve the individual first?"
There was a brief moment of silence, and Daylan cried out again. "If you would resist evil, you cannot just stand idly by and watch its dominion spread. You must thwart Despair s every design!"
Both Connor and Drewish turned to glance into the council chamber.
Talon realized that Daylan was in the other room searching for a way to save the world, while she, Connor, and Drewish were plotting how to overthrow it.
I don t want to be like them, she told herself.
And suddenly she knew that she could not let the likes of Connor and Drewish get control of those dogs-or take endowments from any other man or woman.
He is a fool who empowers his enemies, Talon thought. It was something that her father used to say.
Connor and Drewish were rotten to the core. Their father, despite all of his talk of serving the people, had been no better than his sons, and in the end, when Talon had watched him fall to his death from the parapet at Caer Luciare, she had felt no more loss than if she had ground a cockroach under her heel.
"How can we do this?" Alun asked the Madocs. "How can we grant you these endowments? People will see what we re up to. Some will object."
"We will do it with their permission," Connor said. "The jewelers and smiths are already at work making the forcibles, putting the runes in them. Daylan Hammer and the emir plan to lead a team to Rugassa to free Areth Sul Urstone and that runt of a wizard Fallion. I want to go with them. I want to be among the heroes that helps free them." He hesitated for a moment, as if Alun might object, but Alun held his tongue. "So when the time comes, I want you to offer your dogs as Dedicates, and suggest that we be granted those endowments. It will sound better coming from you."
Talon wondered. She could think of no good reason why the Madocs would make such a grandiose gesture as to join the rescue.
Connor was rumored to be an outstanding swordsman, but in raids against the wyrmlings, neither he nor Drewish bloodied their weapons. They consistently failed to prove themselves in battle.
They preferred to stand back from the front and observe the engagements, as if they were superb strategists who were studying wyrmling tactics so that they might use their knowledge to great advantage to win some future war.
Meanwhile, Talon thought, Alun has risked his neck and cut down the wyrmlings in a haze of rage.
Even that runt Alun is better than them, Talon thought. They might have the breeding for war, but they don t have the heart for battle.
No, she did not trust the Madoc clan.
Talon began to suspect the Madocs of darker motives. Neither of the Madocs would want to see Prince Areth Sul Urstone take the throne.
It would be far better for them if he died, along with Fallion, the emir, and anyone else who took that journey.
Talon suspected that she understood precisely why Connor and Drewish hoped to join the rescue party.
But Alun could not deny them, not without incurring their wrath-and risking retribution.
"I ll do it," Alun said. Connor reached out a hand to shake. Alun shook at the wrist, as was the custom with warriors. Moments later, the Madocs stalked away.
"You can t help them," Talon whispered when they were out of earshot. "Those men are up to no good. You can t empower your enemies."
"What else can I do?" Alun asked.
"Offer the dogs to the emir," Talon said.
"What? And wind up with my throat cut in my sleep? No thank you."
"I ll protect you," Talon said. She meant it.
"What, a girl-protect me? I d rather you let me die."
Talon suddenly realized that he had never seen her fight. In fact, on his world, he d never seen a woman warrior.
It was hours later when the council finally broke up.
Erringale led the way from the darkened council chamber, with the emir, Daylan Hammer, the Wizard Sisel, and the rest of the Bright Ones behind. The Glories had departed.
Talon could see from the smile upon Daylan s face that the council had gone well. Inside the great hall, Erringale climbed a short landing beside the river, and began to speak in his strange tongue, the words filling Talon s mind.
"The White Council has spoken," Erringale said. "The Bright Ones and Glories of our world have all been consulted, and a consensus has been reached."
Talon wondered at those words. Certainly these few Bright Ones in the sanctuary couldn t be "all" of the Bright Ones in the world.
So Talon could only imagine that Erringale had spoken to their minds, as he spoke to Talon now.
"The people of Luciare are free to remain here for three days, to rest yourselves, recover from your injuries, and refresh your spirits. But at the end of those three days, you must return to your world."
At that, the people around Talon gave a cheer. Erringale raised his hands for silence and in a few moments, the people quieted. "Daylan Hammer has petitioned our help. He hopes to free your prince, Areth Sul Urstone, from the wyrmling horde, along with our Torch-bearer.
"We also wish to see them freed.
"But our people cannot lightly interfere in the affairs of the shadow worlds. Therefore, we offer aid in the form of counciclass="underline" we urge you to do harm to no man, be he human or wyrmling. To do violence to another is to injure your own soul.
"Still, we recognize that it is not always possible to remain free from another s blood."
New thoughts struck Talon as Erringale spoke, strange notions that she had never considered. It was as if a great argument had been raging for eons among the Bright Ones, and now a thousand thoughts came swirling into her head.