word. Ciarra sat at my side, undisturbed by the strange boy, absently petting the dragonâs skull as if it were the head of one of the keepâs dogs. I shifted until I was between her and the stranger.
âSilver eyes,â the boy said, âand a song that made many a manâs heart beat faster. He should have let her alone. I told him so.â His voice was breathless, shaking a bit.
I watched him, doubtlessly with the peculiar witless look on my face that drove my father thrashing mad. But I was thinking. I was in the depths of the keep, and a boy Iâd never seen before was here, too. The last dragons had disappeared seven or eight generations ago, and yet this boy claimed to have spoken to the man whoâd done this.
I knew who he was.
The boy who was looking at me with great, wounded eyes was the family ghost. Oh, we all knew about him, though we didnât say anything to outsiders. There wasnât a one of the family who hadnât had something inexplicable happen.
If the ghost liked you, he could be helpful. My motherâs maidâs knitting needles were always in her bag when she looked for them, though on several occasions Iâd just seen them elsewhere. If he didnât like you . . . well, my aunt hadnât visited again since sheâd slapped the Brat.
No one I knew had ever seen him, though there were family stories about people who had. Iâd expected someone more formidable, not a lad with the air of a dog that had been beaten once too oftenâa Hurog dog, though. If his features were more refined than mine, I could still see a similarity in the shape of the cheekbones. Except for his coloring, he looked a lot like my younger brother, Tosten, and his eyes, like Tostenâs and Ciarraâs, were Hurog blue.
He watched me with the still alertness of an unhooded falcon, waiting for my response to his speech.
âThis is desecration,â I said deliberately and touched the fragile-seeming ivory bones. Magic pounded at me through my fingertips, and I hissed involuntarily.
âThis is power,â replied the boy in a soft voice that raised the hair on the back of my neck. âWould you have resisted the chance to harness it? You are a mage, Ward, crippled though you are. You know what the power here means. It means food for the people, wealth and power for Hurog. What would you have done if your people were starving, and the power was here for the asking?â
Caught by the force of the pulsing magic, I stared into his eyes and couldnât speak; I didnât know what answer I could make. Ciarraâs hand clamped on my forearm, but I didnât look at her. In his eyes I read desperation and terrorâthe kind of fear that holds rabbits immobile before the fox. Iâd never seen that look in a human face before.
He waited.
At last I said, âI could not have done this.â
He turned away, and my fingers dropped away from the skull. I didnât know what answer heâd been searching for, but it wasnât the one Iâd given him. âGlib answers from a simple man,â he said, but there was more sorrow than taunt in his voice.
I said, âYou wouldnât have had to tell me this was stupid.â I reached over and caught the chain that led from the thick iron muzzle to an eye hook bigger than my fist screwed into the ground. âBut desperate people do stupid things all the time.â
I turned back to him, half expecting him to disappear or back away, but he stayed where he was, though the fear had not left his eyes. In spite of the magic heâd used on meâif it had indeed been his magic and not the dragon bonesâin spite of knowing he was centuries older than I, I felt sorry for him. I knew what it was like to be afraid.
When I was younger, I used to be afraid of my father.
âI have something for you, Lord Wardwick,â he said,holding out a closed hand. His fist was white