wall, breaking his ribs and his right shoulder. Screaming defiance, he twisted away from the rock, pouring the strength of the Ebon-gray into his body as he plunged back into the center of the wild mingling of forces.


Just as the other Eyriens dove into the Run, he caught the Red thread and began the headlong race toward the Sleeping Dragons.


Instead of cutting in and out of the looping, twisting Winds within his range of strength to make a run as close to the canyon center as possible, he held to the Red, following it through narrow cuts of rock, pulling his wings tight to arrow through weatherworn holes that scraped his skin off as he passed through them.


His right foot hung awkwardly from the ripped ankle. The outer half of his left wing hung useless; the frame snapped when a gust of wind shoved him against a rock. The muscles in his back were torn from forcing his wings to do what they could no longer do. A deep, slicing belly wound pushed his guts out below the wide leather belt.


He shook his head, trying to clear blood out of his eyes, and let out a triumphant roar as he gauged his entry between the sharp stones that looked like petrified teeth.


A final gust of wind pushed him down as he shot through the Dragon's mouth. A "tooth" opened his left leg from hip to knee.


He drove into swirling mist, determined to reach the other side before he emptied the Jewels and his strength gave out.


Movement caught his eye. A startled face. Wings.


"Lucivar!"


He pushed to his limit, aware of the pursuers gaining on him.


"lucivar!"


The other mouth had to be. ... There! But . . .


Two tunnels. The left one held lightened twilight. .The right one was filled with a soft dawn.


Darkness would hide him better. He swung toward the twilight.


A rush of wings on his left. A hand grabbing at him.


He kicked, twisted away, and drove for the right-hand tunnel.


"luu-ci-vaarrr!"


Past the teeth and out, driving upward past the canyon rim toward the morning sky, pumping useless wings out of stubborn pride.


And there was Askavi, looking as he imagined it might have looked a long time ago. The muddy trickle he'd flown over was now a deep, clear river. Barren rock was softened by spring wildflowers. Beyond the Run, sunlight glinted off small lakes and twisting streams.


Pain flooded his senses. Blood mixed with tears.


Askavi. Home. Finally home.


He pumped his wings a last time, arched his body in a slow, painfully graceful backward curve, folded his wings, and plummeted toward the deep, clear water below.


2 / The Twisted Kingdom


The wind tried to rip him off the tiny island that was his only resting place in this endless, unforgiving sea. Waves smashed down on him, soaking him in blood. So much blood.


You are my instrument.


Words lie. Blood doesn't.


The words circled him, mental sharks closing in to tear out another piece of his soul.


Gasping, he choked on a mouthful of bloody foam as he dug his fingers into rock that suddenly softened. He screamed as the rock beneath his hands turned into pulpy, violet-black bruises.


Butchering whore.


Nooooo!


"I loved her!" he screamed. "Ilove her! I never meant her harm."


You are my instrument.


Words lie. Blood doesn't.


Butchering whore.


The words leaped playfully over the island, slicing him deeper and deeper with each pass.


Pain deepening anguish deepening agony deepening pain until there was no pain at all.


Or, perhaps, no one left to feel it.


3 / Terreille


Surreal stared at the dirty, trembling wreck that had once been the most dangerous, beautiful man in the Realm. Before he could shy away, she pulled him into the flat, threw every physical bolt on the door, and then Gray-locked it for good measure. After a moment's thought, she put a Gray shield on all the windows to lessen the chance of a severed artery or a five-story uncontrolled dive.


Then she took a good look at him and wondered if a severed artery would be such a bad thing. He'd been mad the last time she'd seen him. Now he looked as if he'd been sliced open and scooped out as well.


"Daemon?" She walked toward him, slowly.


He shook, unable to control it. His bruised-looking eyes, empty of everything but pain, filled with tears. "He's dead."


Surreal sat on the couch and tugged on his arm until he sat beside her. "Who's dead?" Who would matter enough to produce this reaction?


"Lucivar. Lucivar'sdead!" He buried his head in her lap and wept like a heartsick child.


Surreal patted Daemon's greasy, tangled hair, unable to think of one consoling thing to say. Lucivar had been important to Daemon. His death mattered to Daemon. But even thinking of expressing sympathy made her want to gag. As far as she was concerned, Lucivar was also responsible for some of the soul wounds that had pushed Daemon over the edge, and now the bastard's death might be the fatal slice.


When the sobs diminished to quiet sniffles, she called in a handkerchief and stuffed it into his hand. She'd do a lot of things for Sadi, but she'd be damned if she'd blow his nose for him.


Finally cried out, he sat next to her, saying nothing. She sat quietly and stared at the windows.


This backwater street was safe enough. She'd returned several times since Daemon's last visit, staying longer and longer each time. It felt comfortable here. She and Wyman, the Warlord Daemon had healed, had developed a casual friendship that kept loneliness at bay. Here, with someone looking after him, maybe Daemon could heal a little.


"Daemon? Would you stay here with me for a while?" Watching him, she couldn't tell what he was thinking, evenif he was thinking.


Eventually, he said, "If you want."


She thought she saw a faint flicker of understanding. "You promise to stay?" she pressed. "You promise not to leave without telling me?"


The nicker died. "There's nowhere else to go."


4 / Kaeleer


A light breeze. Sunlight warming his hand. Birdsong. Firm comfort under him. Soft cotton over him.


Lucivar slowly opened his eyes and stared at the white ceiling and the smooth, exposed beams. Where . . . ?


Out of habit, he immediately looked for ways out of the room. Two windows covered by white curtains embroidered with morning glories. A door on the wall opposite the bed he was lying on.


Then he noticed the rest of the room. The pine bedside table and dresser. The piece of driftwood turned into a lamp. A cabinet, its top bare except for a simple brass stand for holding music crystals. An open workbasket stuffed with skeins of yarn and floss. A large, worn, forest-green chair and matching hassock. A needlework frame covered with white material. An overstuffed bookcase. Braided, earth-tone rugs. Two framed charcoal sketches—head views of a unicorn and a wolf.


Lucivar's lip curled automatically when he caught the feminine psychic scent that saturated the walls and wood.


Then he frowned. For some reason, that psychic scent didn't repulse him.


He looked around the room again, confused. This was Hell?


A door opened in the room beyond. He heard a woman's voice say, "All right, go look, but don't wake him."


He closed his eyes. The door opened. Nails clicked on the wood floor. Something snuffled his shoulder. He kept his muscles relaxed, feigning sleep while his senses strained to identify the thing.


Fur against his bare skin. A cold, wet nose sniffing his ear.


Then a snort that made him twitch, followed by satisfied silence.


Giving in to curiosity and the warrior's need to identify an enemy, Lucivar opened his eyes and returned the wolfs intent gaze for a moment before it let out a pleased whuff and trotted out the door.


He barely had time to gather his wits when the woman pushed the door fully open and leaned against the doorway. "So you've finally decided to rejoin the living."


She sounded amused, but if the rest of her was anything to go by, the hoarseness in her voice was caused by strain, fatigue, and overuse. Painfully thin. The way the trousers and shirt hung on her, she'd probably dropped the weight far too fast to be healthy. The long, loose braid of gold hair looked as dull as her skin, and there were dark smudges under those beautiful, ancient sapphire eyes.


Lucivar blinked. Swallowed hard. Finally remembered to breathe. "Cat?" he whispered. He raised his hand in a mute plea.


She raised one eyebrow and walked toward him. "I know you said you would find me when I was seventeen, but I had no idea you would do it in such a dramatic fashion."


The moment she touched his hand, he pulled her down on top of him and wrapped his arms around her squirming body, laughing and crying, ignoring her muffled protests as he said, "Cat, Cat, Cat, oowww!"


Jaenelle scrambled off the bed and out of reach, breathing hard.


Lucivar rubbed his shoulder. "You bit me." He didn't mind the bite—well, yes, he did—but he didn't like her pulling away from him.


"Itold you I couldn't breathe."


"Do we need to?" he asked, still rubbing his shoulder.


Judging by the look in her eyes, if she were actually feline, she'd be puffed to twice her size.


"I don't know, Lucivar," she said in a voice that could scorch a desert. "I could always remove your lungs and we'd find out firsthand if breathing is optional."


The tiny doubt that she might not be kidding was sufficient to make him swallow the flippant remark he was about to make. Besides, he had enough confusing things to think about, not to mention doing something about the urgent, basic message his body was now sending. Hell's fire, he'd never imagined being dead would feel so much like being alive.


He rolled onto his side, wondering if his muscles were always going to feel so limp—weren't thereany advantages to being a demon?—and thrust his legs out from under the covers.


"Lucivar," Jaenelle said in a midnight voice.


He gave her a measuring look and decided to ignore the dangerous glitter in her eyes. He levered himself upright, pulled the sheet across his lap, and grinned weakly. "I've always been proud of my accuracy and aim, Cat, but even I can't water the flowers from here."