The courts of chaos
lie to you then,” she explained, “to get what I wanted from you.”
    “That being . . . ?”
    “Knowledge, of the family, the Pattern, the Trumps, of Amber. To gain your trust. To have your child.”
    “The truth would not have served as well?”
    “Hardly. I come from the enemy. My reasons for wanting these things were not the sort of which you would approve.”
    “Your swordplay . . . ? You told me then that Benedict had trained you.”
    She smiled again and her eyes glowed dark fires.
    “I learned from the great Duke Borel himself, a High Lord of Chaos.”
    “. . . and your appearance,” I said. “It was altered on a number of occasions when I saw you walk the Pattern. How? Also, why?”
    “All whose origins involve Chaos are shapeshifters,” she replied.
    I thought of Dworkin’s performance the night he had impersonated me. Benedict nodded.
    “Dad fooled us with his Ganelon disguise.”
    “Oberon is a son of Chaos,” Dara said, “a rebel son of a rebel father. But the power is still there.”
    “Then why is it we cannot do it?” Random asked.
    She shrugged.
    “Have you ever tried? Perhaps you can. On the other hand, it may have died out with your generation. I do not know. As to myself, however, I have certain favored shapes to which I revert in times of stress. I grew up where this was the rule, where the other shape was actually sometimes dominant. It is still a reflex with me. This is what you witnessed-that day.”
    “Dara,” I said, “Why did you want the things that you said you wanted-knowledge of the family, the Pattern, the Trumps, Amber? And a son?”
    “All right.” She sighed. “All right. You are by now aware of Brand’s plans-the destruction and rebuilding of Amber. . . ?”
    “Yes.”
    “This involved our consent and co-operation.”
    “Including the murder of Martin?” Random asked.
    “No,” she said. “We did not know who he intended to use as the-agent.”
    “Would it have stopped you had you known?”
    “You are asking a hypothetical question,” she said. “Answer it yourself. I am glad that Martin is still alive. That is all that I can say about it.”
    “All right,” Random said. “What about Brand?”
    “He was able to contact our leaders by methods he had learned from Dworkin. He had ambitions. He needed knowledge, power. He offered a deal.”
    “What sort of knowledge?”
    “For one thing, he did not know how to destroy the Pattern-“
    “Then you were responsible for what he did,” Random said.
    “If you choose to look at it that way.”
    “I do.”
    She shrugged, looked at me.
    “Do you want to hear this story?”
    “Go ahead.”
    I glanced at Random and he nodded.
    “Brand was given what he wanted,” she said, “but he was not trusted. It was feared that once he possessed the power to shape the world as he would, he would not stop with ruling over a revised Amber. He would attempt to extend his dominion over Chaos as well. A weakened Amber was what was desired, so that Chaos would be stronger than it now is-the striking of a new balance, giving to us more of the shadowlands that lie between our realms. It was realized long ago that the two kingdoms can never be merged, or one destroyed, without also disrupting all the processes that lie in flux between us. Total stasis or complete chaos would be the result. Yet, though it was seen what Brand had in mind, our leaders came to terms with him. It was the best opportunity to present itself in ages. It had to be seized. It was felt that Brand could be dealt with, and finally replaced, when the time came.”
    “So you were also planning a double-cross,” Random said.
    “Not if he kept his word. But then, we knew that he would not. So we provided for the move against him.”
    “How?”
    “He would be allowed to accomplish his end and then be destroyed. He would be succeeded by a member of the royal family of Amber who was also of the first family of the Courts, one who had been raised among us

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