lliant flash of lightning.  "I'm going to need help with the pack horses!" Tarrin shouted over a sudden howling gale that tried to drown out his voice, but Faalken's nod and wave told him that he'd been heard.  Tarrin waited just inside the entrance as the others led their horses into the narrow passage one by one, forcing the unwilling animals to enter the confining space as Tarrin sawed and yanked on all three sets of reins to calm the horses down.  Faalken and Walten reappeared quickly, and the three of them led the remaining horses into the narrow passage with Faalken leading and Tarrin in the middle.
	The chamber at the end of the chokepoint was indeed large.  It was almost the size of the stableyard of the Road's End Inn, nearly a hundred spans long.  There was an obvious place set up on the north end, the end holding the entrance, for horses.  There was even a water trough and fodder laid in neat stacks.  The walls of the cavern were very rough and irregular, meandering this way and that, but the chamber was still rather wide at its widest point.  The ceiling was also irregular, but at its lowest Tarrin could just barely scrape his fingertips across the stone when he raised his arm.  The south end of the chamber had a sand-covered floor, with a firepit neatly laid out directly under a very small hole in the ceiling.  The hole didn't open directly to the outside.  Tarrin looked up there and saw that it was pretty badly slanted, but that didn't let the rain just fall it.  Instead, there was a pretty steady stream of water that fell from one side of the hole and dropped into an area where the sand had washed away, creating a loud splashing.  There was another white flash from the hole, and the whole cavern shook with the ear-splitting crash of thunder that followed it up.  They all took down the packs, and pretty quickly a well organized campsite had been set up.  Tarrin laid out the bedrolls as Walten set up wood for the fire, moving the stones forming the firepit a bit to get the fire away from the waterfall pouring from the chimney hole.  Tiella and Dolanna were taking out food for dinner and cooking utensils.  Faalken had taken a large piece of tarp, probably one of the tents, and was securing the entrance to the chamber with it to form a door of sorts.  He then ducked through it to do something outside.  Tarrin doubted he would be long, for it was raining like the furies out there.
	Tarrin was sitting to one side of the fire, back to the wall, checking his arrows one by one in a methodical fashion, as Walten sat beside him.  Faalken was stirring a stew that had been set over the fire, and Tiella was talking with Dolanna in hushed tones across the cave.  "Not such a great start to an adventure, is it?" he asked.
	"Adventure?"
	"That's how I see this," he said.  "Getting out of stinking Aldreth, getting a chance to travel with a knight and a Sorceress, going to see Suld.  This beats making cabinets any day of the week."
	"I'd be eating dinner at home about now," he said.
	Walten gave him a strange look.  "You know, there's alot of rumors that fly around about your family," he said.  "Tel Darlik used to say that all you did over there was train to kill people."
	"Not quite," he chuckled.  "I did learn how to use weapons, and hunt and all, but how do you think we got our food?"
	Walten laughed.  "We never thought about things like that," he admitted.  "I've never even been out to your farm before."
	"It's a farm," he shrugged.  "We have a house and a barn and a toolshed and such.  Father has a brewhouse where he makes his ale, and we have fields out behind the house."
	"Sounds like you miss it," he said.
	"I do," he replied.  "I've been preparing to leave Aldreth for two years now, but now that I'm really gone, most of me wants to turn around and go home."
	"Preparing to leave?"
	"Since I was a boy, I've wanted to be a knight," he said.  "Well, mother and father trained me with that in mind.  Two years ago, I decided that that's what I was going to do.  I'd earn a chance to test for it, and go to Suld.  If I got in, great.  But if I didn't, well, there was always the army, or fletching, or something that I could do to earn my way."
	"Everybody always used to say that you didn't do anything," Walten said.  "You weren't apprenticed to anyone.  All you seemed to do was hunt.  My mother used to say that you were a shiftless, lazy freeloader.  But that's her," he said quickly.
	"Words are words, I guess," he said.  "Besides, the rest of the village really didn't understand.  Most of them couldn't see past my mother."
	"She is a bit strange," Walten said defensively.
	"Only to you," he replied.
	Walten laughed.  "I guess you're right."
	"She's Ungardt.  Of course she'd do things differently than everyone else," Tarrin told him.  "Ungardt ways aren't much like Sulasian ways."
	"How do you mean?"
	"Well, women aren't just wives and mothers," he said.  "Most women are as big as men there, so they can learn to fight if they want.  They crew the sailing ships like men, they fight in the clan armies, they do about anything that men do.  And men don't mind all that much, cause they're used to it."
	"That is different," Walten said, taking out his knife and a chunk of wood and starting to work on it.  "You ever meet your mother's father?"
	"A few times," he replied.  "His name is Alrak, and he's about twice as big as me.  He's very nice.  He came to the village to visit with mother."
	"Oh, yes, I remember that now," he said.  "The last time was, what, five years ago?"
	Tarrin nodded, putting away his last arrow and securing the quiver cap.  The rain sounded like it was beginning to taper off outside.  "I don't think I'll ever understand that," he said.
	"What?"
	"That you hate carpentry, but you like woodcarving."
	"Nailing boards together is boring," he said defensively.  "This is alot more fun."
	"Whatever you say," Tarrin said with a grin.
	The storm passed quickly after that, so they ate with general silence, then went to sleep.
	The next day dawned clear and warm, and they set out again.  The forest showed signs of the ferocity of the storm, for there were limbs and even a few trees littering the forest floor, and Tarrin spotted one tree that was split in half with its insides blackened and charred.  It had been struck by lightning.  The road was damp but not muddy, having mostly dried over the night, but Tarrin found that he rather liked it, for it eliminated the dust that had been swirling in the wind the previous day.  Dolanna pulled them up for a moment as she considered the area.  "If we move a a good pace, we can reach Torrian some time after nightfall," she said to Faalken.
	"Aye," he agreed.  "We made good time yesterday, even with the storm."
	"It was the extra time we had, from when we left after the fire,"Walten surmised.
	Dolanna nodded.  "We get no closer standing here," she said.  "Let us move on."
	They rode rather hard most of the day, stopping only for very brief rests and eating lunch in the saddle.  The pain of the saddle had begun to creep into Tarrin's legs and backside again, and about midafternoon he saw that he wasn't the only one.  Dolanna had stopped them when Walten began to slow down, then did her healing work on them all again.  After that, they returned to the brisk canter that had propelled them so far.  They encountered five or six other travellers on the road, all but one of them groups of merchants riding to Watch Hill.  The last was a party of King's Men patrolling the Torrian road to discourage bandits.  They rode past the armed party without a word.
	It was well past sunset, riding by the light of three full moons and the brilliant Skybands, when they topped a hill and looked down into the shallow valley that held Torrian.
	From what he could see of it, Torrian was a large city, surrounded by a stout wall of huge logs sharpened at the tops.  The hazy sight of buildings could be seen inside the walls, as well as occasional points of light that marked a torch or other light source along the streets.  It was about ten times the size of Aldreth.  Tarrin wasn't the only one to gawk at the size of the place; he'd never seen something quite so large before.
	As they started down the hill towards the city gate, Tiella looked fretfully at the wall.  "Won't they have the gates closed?" she asked.
	"Yes, but there will be a guard at the gatehouse, over the gate," Dolanna replied.  "That guard will order the gates open."
	"Good," she said.  "I'd like to sleep inside tonight."
	"What is the matter?" Dolanna asked.
	"I don't know," she said, looking around, "but I have the feeling that something is going to happen."
	The gate was a large pair of wooden slabs bound with iron, with a large room of some sort built onto the wall above it.  A single light oulined a small window, and at that window a silhouette appeared.  "The gates stay closed til sunrise," the man called down.
	"I am Dolanna Casbane," she called back.
	"I don't care if you're Sheba the Pirate," the man said back.
	Dolanna reached into her bodice.  "I am not she," she said in a level voice.  "But I am a  katzh-dashi.  By law and the agreements between the Tower and the King, you must obey my request to open the gates."  She held the amulet up, and Tarrin saw that it started to glow with a milky white light.
	There was a span of silence after the silhouette disappeared, and then it was back.  But it was a different voice.  "He's a new man, Mistress," an older voice called.  "They're readying to open the gates now.  Please step back a bit."
	"My thanks, sir guard," she said as they moved back.  "It has been a long day, and we require food and rest."
	"Most of the inns are full, Mistress, but the Duke is at home," the guard called down as the gates began to creak and groan.  The left gate pulled away slightly, moving at a slow, loud pace.  "I'm sure you can get hospitality from him."
	"I know Duke Arren," Dolanna said.  "He is a most kind and generous man, and one of the best stones players I have seen in many years.  Yes, I would like to pay him a visit."
	"I take it you know the way to his keep?"
	"Yes, I am familiar with the way," she told him as the gate came to a groaning stop, more than wide of an opening for them to enter.
	"The Gods be with you, Mistress," the man above called down.
	"May the light of the Goddess illumine you," she returned.
	They followed Dolanna as the three younger ones gawked and stared at the streets of Torrian.  The streets were narrow and a bit crooked, with large houses built so close together that they all seemed to be the same structure in the darkness.  There was an acrid pall that hung in the air, what his father had always called the "city smell", the smell of garbage, unwashed people, waste, and stone and wood.  The streets were not deserted, as people moved to and fro in small groups, or parties of city watchmen patrolled the city in search of thieves.
	It was obvious where Duke Arren lived.  It was a huge keep set on a small hill overlooking the river that flowed through the city.  It was a brooding structure, with impressive stone walls and a deep, steep ditch dug around the walls that were filled with sharpened stakes, the towers of the keep itself visible over the walls.  There was a drawbridge out over the staked ditch, down, with a gatehouse on the other side.  A portcullis hung threateningly at the top of the gatehouse roof, ready to drop down to protect the castle from invasion on a second's notice.  Four men stood at the other end of the drawbridge, and Tarrin could see about ten more sitting around a table set up in the courtyard beyond the gatehouse.  Dolanna stopped them at the edge of the drawbridge as two of the four advanced.  Tarrin could see that they were all wearing chain mail armor, and all four held pikes.
	One of the two, the taller, one, called out in a friendly voice.  "Mistress Casbane?" he asked.
	"You have a good memory," Dolanna smiled.  "I have not been here in many years."
	"I remember you," he said.  "You healed my broken arm.  Duke Arren is here.  Would you mind waiting in the courtyard while I send a man to let him know you're here?"
	"That would be very good," she said.
	The two men led them over the drawbridge and into a large courtyard, where they dismounted.  Like the castles that his father had described, this one had several buildings inside the impressive walls.  He couldn't identify all seven of them, but one was obviously a smithy and another a stable, and another looked like either a kitchen or a storehouse.  The ten men sitting at the table set up in the middle of the courtyard were the only men to be seen, and despite the many torches set in holders along the walls, the courtyard was dark and foreboding.  The main keep was on the far side of the courtyard, a massive construction of huge stone blocks that clawed its way well past the height of the city walls.  It had a tower on either side of the main structure, which was easily four stories tall.  There were a multitude of window, both arrow slits and larger, more conventional windows, but those larger windows were on the upper floors.  There was a balcony on the highest level that he could see; that, most likely, was the Duke's private bedroom.  Eron Kael had remarked to Tarrin once that Torrian Keep was over a thousand years old, and in all that time, it had never fallen to an enemy army.  He also said that if he ever had the chance to visit it, to go to the main hall and look for a small hole just to the right of the center on the wall where the raised dais was, where the old Duke of Torrian had been killed by a man who had used a bow so powerful that it had driven the arrow through him and so deeply into the wall behind him it had left a hole half the length of an arrow.  That had happened three hundred years ago, so his father said, and it had started the civil strife that had brought the present family into power in Sulasia, the kings of the Markas line.
	The front doors were massive, at the top of a steep staircase that made the entry level the second floor, and the ground floor a basement.  They were made of wood, but they had hammered bronze sheathing the wood, creating a burnished look that was more than visible in the light of the two torches to each side of them.  It was obvious that several servants polished those bronze covered doors fairly often.  The doors opened a bit, and a rather well proportioned man wearing a red doublet and hose exited.  As he approached, it was obvious he was a middle aged man, but still burly in the shoulders and spry of step.  Once he was near, Tarrin saw that he was a very handsome man, with a few wrinkles around his eyes and some gray peppering his black hair and beard.  Dolanna curtsied to the man gracefully as Faalken bowed, and Tarrin, Walten, and Tiella followed suit.  Just alot more clumsily.
	"It's good to see you again, Dolanna," the man said with a smile.  "Still roaming the countryside?"
	"When I have the chance, your Grace," she replied with a smile.  "Faalken you may remember, but these young ones you have not met.  May I present Tiella Ren, Walten Longbranch, and Tarrin Kael, pupils journeying to the Tower."
	"Pleased to meet you," the Duke said with a smile.
	"I know it is late, old friend, but do you have room for five more?"
	"Dolanna, I'll make room," he said with a grin.  "I need to throw some of these lackeys and sycophants out anyway."
	"If it pleases you, your Grace, may we dispense with the visiting until tomorrow?  We have been on the road since before dawn, and we are all tired."
	"Of course, of course," he said.  "I'll have baths arranged for you, and some dinner, and some rooms with soft beds.  We can catch up on old times in the morning, over breakfast.  Tiv, have the hands stable the horses, and have their packs sent to their rooms."
	"Aye, my Duke, I'll see to it," one of the men behind them replied, as he trotted towards the stables, shouting some names.
	"Come along then, we'll go give my seneschal some work to do," he said.
	The entrance hall of the keep was massive, with vaulted ceilings and several suits of armor arrayed on posts to each side of the hall.  There was also a huge, well made tapestry hanging at the far end of the hall, where it opened into the main hall of the keep.  "Your Grace," Tarrin blurted, "my father told me a bit about this castle.  Is the hole still there?"
	Duke Arren chuckled.  "Yes, it's still there," he replied.  "You can look at it in the morning, if you like."
	"Maybe," he said, blushing at having said anything in the first place.
	"Your father's a historian?" he queried.
	"No sir, he's a soldier," Tarrin replied.  "He's retired now."
	"That's the best kind of soldier to be," Arren said.  "Kael?  Eron Kael's boy?" he asked quickly.
	"Yes, my lord," Tarrin said, a bit surprised.
	"I remember him.  Tall fellow with wide shoulders.  The deadliest bowman I ever saw in my life.  I hear he makes a living selling arrows now."
	"He brews ale on the side for something to do, my lord," Tarrin said, a bit startled at this bit of information.  "Pardon my asking, but how did you know my father?"
	"He was garrisoned here for a while," he replied.  "He had this wife, the tallest woman I ever saw, an Ungardt--" he looked at Tarrin a bit closer.  "Yes, that would be her I see in you," he mused to himself.  "Are they still married?"
	"Yes, my lord."
	"Amazing.  I was sure she would have killed him by now."
	Tiella giggled.
	"You have quite a family reputation in front of you, my boy," Duke Arren told him as they went up some stairs at the far end of the entrance hall.  "Eron Kael was a good man, the kind of man we like to have around.  His wife, well, she was quite a work.  She was the best fighter with an axe I ever saw.  If not for the law against women fighting in the army, she'd probably had been a good officer.  Karas knows, even I jumped when she barked commands at me."
	"I'm just surprised you knew my father, my lord," Tarrin admitted as they turned into a wide, well lit corridor that had a thick rug that went all the way to both ends.
	"He was the kind of man that's hard to forget," Arren told him.
	They went up another flight of stairs, and were in a large corridor much like the one below, again with a rug on the floor.  "Each of you pick a room," he offered, pointing down the corridor.  "People will arrive very soon and draw baths for you and bring up your belongings, and I'll have some roast venison and some soup brought up for you."
	"I'll take this one," Tarrin said, pointing at the nearest door.
	They all said their goodnights, and entered their respective rooms.
	Tarrin was shocked at the room.  It was very large, with a poster bed in the middle of the wall to his left.  There was a washstand with a basin and pitcher against the wall with the door, and a writing desk on the wall facing the bed.  A large footchest was at the end of the bed, and a nightstand flanked the bed on each side.  A large window was on the far wall, with a tapestry depicting a charging knight on the wall beside it.  All of the furniture was old, possibly antique, and it was all ornately carved with flowing leaf and vine designs.  He sat on the bed tentatively, feeling the soft feather mattress, as a woman in a plain brown dress entered.  "My lord, we're bringing in your bath," she announced.
	"Thank you," Tarrin said.  Two large men carried in a copper tub, and a procession of servants emptied buckets of steaming water into it.  Two more carried up his pack and his staff and bow, and then in a whirlwind of hasty activity, they finished filling the tub, handed him soap and a couple of large towels, and set a large platter of piping hot venison and a large bowl of soup on the desk, then put a mug beside it.  Then they were gone.
	Tarrin sank into the bath gratefully, scrubbing three days of dirt and sweat off of himself, then cleaning his hair.  Then he just soaked in the water langorously as he ate the dinner that was brought him--he didn't want it to get cold.  After his skin began to wrinkle, he climbed out and towelled off, and then dressed in a clean nightshirt and underdrawers.  Almost as soon as he pulled the shirt over his head, there was a discreet knock at the door.  "What is it?" Tarrin asked.
	"Are you finished with your bath, my lord?" came the woman's voice.
	"Yes ma'am," he replied.
	The door opened, and she stepped in.  "Would you like the tub removed?" she asked.
	"Yes, please," he said.  "I don't want to get up in the night and trip over it."
	Five men came in, and as three of them filled huge buckets with lukewarm water to lighten it, the other two picked up the tub and carried it from the room.  "Will there be anything else?" the woman asked as she picked up the empty dishes and damp towels.
	"No, thank you very much," he said.
	"You're welcome," she said with a smile, and left the room.
	Tarrin climbed into the bed almost excitedly, ready to get into some serious sleeping in such a nice bed.  He reached over and turned the lamp all the way down, and then pulled the hood so the tiny bit of light emanating from it wouldn't bother him.  Then he snuggled in and fell asleep.

	Wake up, something seemed to whisper to him.  You have to wake up.
	Again he woke up, for no apparent reason.  It was still dark outside; very dark, with only the light of the Skybands filtering into the window with the warm night breeze.  He looked towards the lamp.
	And saw the indistinct silhouette above him.
	Without thought, almost instinctively, Tarrin rolled out of the way even as the figure's arm smashed down against the pillow with so much force that the bed shook.  Tarrin felt hot lines of pain along the side of his neck as he twisted aside, rolling up into the blankets and he spun aside, falling off the bed.  He then immediately rolled in the opposite direction, under the bed, unspooling himself from the constricting covers.  He got free of them just as the bed sagged from the weight of his attacker.  Tarrin shimmied out from under the bed between the bed and the washstand and quickly got to his feet.  He saw the indistinct shadow across the bed, between him and his staff.  It hunkered down a bit, and then suddenly was flying towards him with shocking speed.
	With speed born of thoughtless reflex, Tarrin bent his knees and twisted, just like he'd been taught to avoid the pounce of a rock lion.  The shadowy assailant had aimed for his high chest, but Tarrin was now under that angle of attack.  He reached up and out even as something snagged his shirt at the shoulder.  It didn't register to him that the palm of his hand came into contact with a woman's naked breast.  His other hand came up under a flat, tight belly, and he helped the attacker along on its flight across the room, using its momentum to hurl it headfirst into the washstand.  There was a horrifically loud crack as the washbasin and pitcher shattered, spraying water all over the wall, him, and the bed.  The stand itself was crushed with a loud smashing crunch, splinters and shards bouncing across the carpeted floor as Tarrin quickly reached out and unhooded and turned up the lamp, then without even looking, jumped over the bed and ran to the far corner to fetch his staff.  He turned around armed, confident that that noise would alarm someone, but he was brought up short by what he saw.
	It was a woman.  Almost.   She was totally nude, but it wasn't her unclad condition that caused him to stare in shock.
	She wasn't human.
	Her arms and legs were covered with white fur, to just above the elbow and just above the knee.  Her hands and feet were oversized for her body, noticably so, and were an odd cross between a human's hands and an animal's paws, with wide, thick fingers and toes and feet sufficiently large and long so that she stood up on her toes.  Each limb ended with large, long, wickedly sharp claws on the fingers and toes.  One of those white-furred hands was stained with his blood.  She was standing with her back to him, shaking her head to clear the cobwebs of the impact, and he could clearly see that she had a long, cat-like tail growing from between the muscles at the very top of the cleft of her backside, covered in white fur.  She had red hair, this creature, so thick that it all but stood straight up at the top of her head, but not so tall that the back of triangular, cat-like ears weren't visible.  She turned around quickly, and Tarrin stared at what was probably the loveliest face he'd ever seen, but a face twisted into a snarl of animalistic rage.  She had high cheekbones, a small, pert nose, and  a sharp chin, but it was her eyes that captivated him.  They were nothing more that two slits of pure green, literally glowing from within with an unholy radiance that made his blood run cold.  Her body was tight and well defined; it was obvious that she was very strong the way her muscles rippled and shifted as she moved.  Tarrin did see that she was wearing a collar of some strange black metal around her neck.
	She growled at him, hunching down in an obvious preparation to lunge at him in the same manner she'd done so before.  Tarrin saw with dismay that she had fangs.  She may look human, he decided, but this was not a foe to take lightly.  A single swipe from those wickedly clawed hands could kill.  Tarrin held his staff at one end in the end-grip, getting ready to bat her out of the air if she tried it again.  She jumped up on the bed and hunkered down, almost on all fours, her growl lowering to an ominous rumbling in her throat, and then she lunged.  Tarrin brought his staff up and around with every bit of power he had.  The cat-creature put her feet on the floor and reached out with her hand, and caught his staff.  Tarrin's hands felt the shock of the impact; it felt like hitting a rock.  She grabbed hold of his staff and yanked, ripping it out of his hands, and threw it aside contemptuously.
	Tarrin hopped back, almost stunned.  This thing was strong.  It would have taken two grown men to rip the staff out of his hands the way she just did.  She stepped forward so fast he almost missed it, and missed getting his head ripped off by the span of a child's hand as he ducked under her open-handed swipe.  He stepped through her overswing, getting behind her, looped his hand around her neck, and then bodily hauled her over his shoulder in the classic Ungardt neck-throw.  Done right, it broke the opponent's neck before any part of him touched the ground.  It was a killing move, but Tarrin had quickly realized that only one of them would walk out of this room alive.  Not only did it not kill her, but she twisted in his hold and put her feet on the floor as she came over.  Before she could set herself, Tarrin lunged forward, letting his weight bull his lighter opponent.  But it was like trying to push a mountain. She'd dug her claws into the stone, and he was not about to move her.
	He cried out in shock when she picked him up around the waist with one hand, and then bodily threw him all the way across the room.  He impacted the wall with a bone-numbing impact, landed on the writing desk, and then fell with the writing desk as it collapsed under his sudden weight.  She was on him almost instantly, but he had presence of mind to kick out with his leg.  His shin impacted her foot solidly, and despite her strength, she wasn't able to defend against it.  Her legs were swept out from under her, spilling her to the ground on her side and back as she grunted in surprise and pain with the hard landing.  Tarrin grabbed a splintered leg of the desk and sprung up, holding the wood like a dagger, and tried to plunge it into the woman's face.  She quickly caught his wrist in her hand, stopping it as quickly as if he'd struck the floor, and her hand closed around his wrist.  Tarrin heard the bones snap audibly as her inhuman strength crushed his left forearm.  In a haze of pain, Tarrin gritted his teeth and fixed her with a baleful gaze full of hate as he let go of the wood with his right hand , falling from his limp hand and to the floor beside them, and punched her dead in the face.  Her head snapped to the side, and the grip on his broken arm eased, but he was motivated to keep it up.  He punched her again, and again, and once again, bloodying her nose and breaking one of her teeth.  She seemed disoriented, so he quickly got his feet under him and stomped deliberately on her belly.  Her breath whooshed from her lungs with a sound that was quite satisfactory to him.  He did it again, higher up, hearing her ribs break under the force of his bare foot smashing down on her.  But one of her feet suddenly was up and between his legs, and the heel of her foot smashed into his lower belly so hard he was catapulted into the footchest by the bed, crushing it underneath him, as his back slammed into the footboard of the bed.
	Tarrin wheezed for breath as the creature got to one knee, hugging a set of broken ribs with one arm as her other helped support her.  He felt like he'd fallen fifty spans out of a tree.  Tarrin got to his feet first, scampering around the bed and to the nighstand, where his dagger was sitting.  He drew it and advanced quickly as the creature gained its feet, still a bit wobbly.  He lunged at her as if to stab her, but she twisted to the side.  He was waiting for just such a move.  He quickly went to one knee even as her clawed hand swiped at the air where his face had been, then sprang up with every bit of power he could put behind his shoulder.  His shoulder slammed into her broken ribs with enough power to lift her up off the floor.  His broken arm reached around her and held her side as he ran as hard as he could, ignoring the hot lines of pain that he felt against his back and thighs, smashing her punishingly against the wall.  She again lost her breath as Tarrin rebounded off of her.  Tarrin slammed the elbow of his broken arm against her head, pinning her head to the wall, and drove the dagger into her heart.
	Tarrin felt hot blood wash down his hand.  She made no sound, only fixed him with a look so evil it chilled his blood.  But instead of limply losing her strength, she grabbed his broken arm in one hand as her other grabbed the forearm of his right.  Tarrin quickly twisted the dagger in her, making her shudder, but it did not stop her.
	She twisted her head around, pushed his arm slightly away, and then sank her fangs into his forearm.
	Tarrin screa