It is that change that renders you powerless until you regain your touch on the Weave.  As I said, it is why you should never Transmute yourself.  The effects are very unpredictable, and the chance you lose your powers is very great."
	"I'll make sure that doesn't happen," Jenna said fervently.
	"Do Da'shar gain the immunity to heat?" Tarrin asked curiously.
	"Yes, but it doesn't aid them as much as it aids us," Spyder replied.  "Since Da'shar can't access High Sorcery, it doesn't benefit them the same way it benefits us.  It does increase their powers, however, just as it did for us," she added.  "It increases the amount of magical power they can contain, allowing them to exceed the body's old limit and achieve the limits of their own powers, and it also vastly increases the contribution they can make to a circle."
	"I didn't realize there was a distinction in limits," Jenna said.
	"There is.  There is the limit the body can tolerate, and there is also the limit your power will allow.  All Sorcerers have a magical limit higher than the tolerance of their body.  That is why there is a danger of being Consumed.  Crossing over eliminates the body's limit and allows the da'shar to achieve the limit dictated by his or her magical powers."
	That explained a great deal.  If the body couldn't handle what the Sorcerer's power was capable of drawing, it fully explained why Sorcery could be dangerous to the user.  And it explained why da'shar crossed over, to eliminate that physical limitation and allow them to achieve their maximum power.  It also eliminated the danger of being Consumed, since the body could handle any amount of power that the Sorcerer was capable of drawing.  "If they can't access High Sorcery, how do they face crossing over?" he asked curiously.
	"There is more than one way to lose control of your powers, Were-cat," Spyder told him.  "Da'shar cross over when they lose control of a spell, or draw in more power than their bodies can tolerate, usually at the prodding of the Goddess.  When it is time, the Goddess ensures that it will happen."
	"There'd be no avoiding, it," Jenna chuckled.  "She'd know the instant the candidate touched the Weave."
	Spyder nodded, then her expression became quite business-like.  "Alright then, enough chattering.   We're wasting time.  So, on to the lessons.  Let us begin with a weave Tarrin is so fond of using.  The Sunbolt."
	"I never realized it had a name," Tarrin chuckled, realizing that that was the name of the chaotic weave he was so fond of using to rearrange the local geography.
	"It does.  Some call it the Goddess' Wrath.  It is a very powerful, very destructive weave.  That may be why you're so fond of using it," she smiled at him.
	"It works," he shrugged.
	And so it began.  Spyder showed them weave after weave, showing them and then forcing them to duplicate her weave.  Then she would explain how to manipulate the flows to gain different effects from the weave, make them practice, and then move on to the next spell.  They were there for hours and hours, as evening passed to night, and night to midnight, and midnight to morning, endlessly weaving spells for Spyder as she taught them.  Tarrin didn't notice the time fly by, even as the sun began to rise the next morning, for he was utterly engrossed in what the Urzani was teaching them.  Jenna too showed no signs of even being drowsy as the sun rose the next day.  They had learned a veritable onslaught of attacking weaves, from weaves to stun a single man to weaves to lay waste to entire city blocks.  They had learned just as many defensive weaves, spells that stopped weapons, nullified sound, protected one from harm, caused enemies to not be able to see them so long as they were hostile (Spyder called that one the Selective Invisibility weave, easy to weave and not too demanding to sustain, much preferable to a real spell of invisibility), and many, many more.  She didn't dwell long on Wards, only explaining that they could be created in nearly as many forms as one could make up, and they could range from making the target victim itch and sneeze to killing them instantly if they crossed it.  Then she taught them utility weaves, things from as simple as mending shirts to powerful spells of Healing.  After that, she went on to Illusions, showing them how to make Illusions so large they were almost unbelievable, and then she taught them the new realm of Phantasms, spells of Illusion that could affect the physical world.  The main one she taught them was a Phantasm that could actually kill onlookers, if they believed the Phantasm was real.  "The mind can kill itself and the body along with it if it truly believes that it has been struck a mortal wound," she explained, calling the spell a Phantasmal Killer.  "That is why the power of the mind is one of the greatest powers in the world."  Tarrin didn't doubt it after that, and what was lucky for him, there was no race restriction as there was with Mind Weaves where Phantasms were concerned.  The weaver of the spell merely formed the parameters, and the mind of the victim filled in the blanks with images from its own deepest fears and caused the victim to see what it feared most.  That was the way the Phantasmal Killer worked, and Tarrin could tell that it would be devestatingly effective.  Few had the moral fiber or raw willpower to face his greatest fear.
	After that, Tarrin Conjured a good meal for them as Spyder trained Jenna in Mind weaves, from simple ones to make people forget what they just saw, all the way up to the most powerful, which could utterly control a subject.  There were Mind weaves for experiencing the sensory input of a subject, literally seeing through his or her eyes, and weaves for sensing the mental energy left behind in an object, just enough of it to make out the appearance of the object's owner, or know where the item had been or how it had been used.  Spyder called that Psychometry, and she said it was an exceptionally useful weave.  It was also a weave that Tarrin could perform, for it didn't rely on affecting a living mind, only merely read the impressions left behind by that mind.  There were even Mind weaves for affecting emotion, digging out submerged memories, editing a victim's memory on a large scale, and making people see and hear things that weren't really there.  Spyder explained that it was commonly how people with little aptitude for Illusion made up for that lack of ability.  Mental images worked much like Illusions did.  Some of the Mind weaves, Tarrin could use against any person, or against objects; in reality, he could use all of it, and did indeed memorize those weaves, but some part of him considered it to be unfair to wield such an advantage over the other Were-cats.  Certain Mind weaves, he had to admit, would come in very handy, like the ability to see through the eyes of another.
	After that lesson, Spyder moved on to advanced Elemental magic, and that included spells to control the weather.  She showed them how they would look but did not release them, unravelling them so they wouldn't take effect.  "Listen to me closely, pupils," she said in a stern voice.  "Absolutely, under no circumstances, do you ever attempt to affect weather on a scale more than a few square longspans.  The power of weather is one of the most powerful forces on the planet, and when you begin to tamper with the weather on a large scale, you are meddling with forces you cannot begin to understand.  But it will never get that far.  If you try, the Goddess of the weather and the air, T'Kya, will strike at you for interfering with her work.  And believe me, if you manage to survive that retaliation, you will know to never try such a thing again.  Do I make myself clear on this?"
	"Very clear," Jenna nodded.  "Only local effects of weather."
	"Very good," she nodded.  "Now, let's move on to some advanced uses of elemental magic.  Such as summoning Elementals."
	Tarrin drifted off as she taught Jenna how to summon her own Elementals, and Jenna proved she could do it by summoning her very first, a Fire Elemental.  For some reason, all Weavespinners summoned a Fire Elemental first, Spyder confided to them.  He came back when she started showing them spells for manipulating Elemental material he'd never seen before, such as making stone melt into lava, or air actually become a liquid, turning so incredibly cold in the process that its merest touch was universally lethal.  After those spells, she moved onto Transmutation, and it was here where Tarrin learned a great deal more than in other subjects.  Spyder taught them spells for turning anything into just about anything, living or dead or in between.  She taught them a group of weaves she called polymorphing, the changing of one living thing into another.  There was another group of weaves for changing inamimate things into other inanimate things, spells to animate objects so they moved by themselves and obeyed the Sorcerer, and even spells for changing inamiate objects into living creatures.  Those were the hardest, for it intruded somewhat on the power of creation, a realm exclusively granted to Ayise, the Elder God of creation and the creator of the world.  Ayise permitted some delving into her realm, but she drew the line in some regards.  "You can't make what's already dead and extinct, it violates the balance of nature," she warned.  "You can't change an object into a sentient being, like a human, and you can't make it exist outside the normal boundaries for its species.  That means no changing stones into fifty-span tall mice," she told them.  "Whatever you make has to be possible in the bounds of nature, and when you make it, it can not be unmade.  When you change that rope into a lethal Sand-backed viper, you can't turn it back into a rope.  Once life is granted to the object, it can't be taken away.  If you want to get rid of the creature you create, you have to kill it the old-fashioned way."
	"That's why there's no weave for changing living things into inanimate objects," Tarrin reasoned.
	"Precisely why.  We can cause Ayise to breathe life into the animal we create, but she will not allow us to take that life back."
	"I never realized that other gods had so much say in our magic," Jenna mused.
	"They have much more say than in any other order," Spyder nodded in agreement.  "In truth, Sorcery is the most powerful and most versatile of all the orders of magic, even Druidic magic.  Because of that, the gods have a very great hand in where our powers are concerned."
	"I always thought Druidic magic was stronger, but with what I've learned tonight, now I'm not so sure," Tarrin admitted.  "I never dreamed you could do so much with Sorcery."
	"What these untrained wretches you call katzh-dashi know is less than what we taught our Initiates before graduating them," Spyder said scornfully.  "They embarass me, truth be told.  To think that our order has degenerated so far."  She actually bristled.  "But that won't be much longer.  We digress again, and it is getting very late.  We've been out here for nearly fourteen hours now, and I find myself tiring.  Let's try to finish the lesson, because I will have more to teach you later."
	And so they listened intently as Spyder went over a few more things, such as defeating the powers of Wizards and Priests.  Tarrin knew it could be done, but had never gotten around to learning it.  He was glad he waited for her.  Spyder taught the process in moments, showing them how their powerful influence over the Weave was so strong that they could actually manipulate it directly.  One of the forms in which it could be so influenced was causing it to stop transferring magical power that was not Sorcery.  By a mere thought, Tarrin or Jenna could rob any Wizard or Priest of his connection to his magic, rendering him powerless.  Spyder had been serious when she said that no Wizard or Priest should ever manage to blindside them with a spell, because they'd feel it forming in the Weave.  All they had to do was will the Weave to block the power, and it would be so.
	"By muffling the Weave, you can interfere with Sorcery as well," Spyder told them.  "But that depends on the relative power of the Sorcerer you're attempting to cut off.  Just to warn you," she said with a slight smile.  "Only that Wikuni would give either of you even the slightest bit of resistance.  And that resistance would last all of about two seconds.  Even da'shar can't resist the power of a sui'kun for very long."  Spyder tapped her finger to her chin.  "You are sister to the Wikuni, yes?" she asked Tarrin.
	"Yes," he replied.
	"Keep a careful watch on her, then," she warned.  "She is primed, Were-cat.  Just as you were.  She has reached the pinnacle of her power, and the Goddess will be testing her very soon.  It will be better for her if you are there to help show her the way."  She looked around.  "She's very close, Were-cat.  Very close.  If you whispered to her, I would not at all be surprised if she could hear it."
	"I'll watch her," he promised.  Spyder's revelation wasn't that surprising to Tarrin, who had made the same conclusion himself just a couple of days ago.  Keritanima's powers of Sorcery were far beyond the other katzh-dashi now, and were growing stronger.  He could tell, he could sense, that her powers had nearly reached their peak.  And because she was so strong, she was so learned despite her age, it meant that she would most likely face her power and attempt to cross over, to become da'shar.  The Goddess had told him that the time to cross over was when the Sorcerer had reached the limits of their power, when it would most greatly benefit the Weave.  He realized that that included da'shar as well as sui'kun.  When Keritanima did achieve her maximum potential, she would lose control of that power and face being Consumed.  And in that struggle, she could either find the Heart, find the Goddess, or she would die.
	"I'll help," Jenna said.  "I like Kerri.  She's funny.  I'd hate to lose her."
	"Amen," Tarrin agreed.
	"I think that's enough for one day," she announced, suddenly pulling her black-black cloak around herself.  "I will call you again soon.  Very soon.  We don't have much more time left.  Remember what I taught you this evening.  Especially you, Jenna.  What I taught you today is what you will teach the katzh-dashi when the time comes.  Be ready."
	"I will," Jenna said soberly, reaching down and picking up her book.  "I've figured out a way to write down how the weaves are formed so they make sense.  If someone read them and had a little help from a tutor, they could learn the spell."
	"Excellent," Spyder told her with a nod.  "You were surely the perfect person for the task, then."  She looked up into the sky.  "I will see you again soon.  Fare well."
	She pulled up her hood, and then, just like last time, she just vanished.
	Tarrin blinked, then Jenna chuckled.  "I really hate it when she does that.  I had about a thousand more questions."
	"That's probably why she did it," he said, suddenly feeling quite tired.  He yawned, showing his wickedly long fangs--both upper and lower sets of them--and then looked down at his sister.  "I'm suddenly tired, Jenna.  I think going to bed would be a good idea."
	"I think you're right," she agreed.  "I want to take a bath first, though, and get a bit to eat."
	"I'll tag along," he grunted as they started to make their way out of the courtyard.  "Goddess only knows, Jesmind is going to have a cow when I come back.  I'd like to put that off as long as possible."
	Jenna giggled.  "That bad, eh?"
	"You have no idea," he shuddered.  "I'd more than willingly fight a whole army of Demons before facing my mate when she's ticked off."
	"You're not fighting her the right way, brother," she giggled.  "I've learned a bit about Were-cats from Triana.  If she starts shouting, kiss her."
	"That's not a bad idea," he said approvingly after a moment of thought, as they disappeared through the choked entrance of the courtyard.

	The impending explosion he had been expecting didn't come when he got back, mainly because Jesmind wasn't there.  She had taken Jasana somewhere, probably to visit with Triana, and that suited Tarrin just fine.  It had been a very long time since he'd worked the way he did the night before, and it didn't hit him how totally exhausted he was until he got back to his apartment and sat down a moment on the couch.  Then it just rolled him under like a gardener planting a new flower.  He felt buried in weariness, and his entire body began to ache.  Sorcery was as much physical exertion as it was mental control, so whenever one practiced with Sorcery it inevitably left one both physically and mentally exhausted.  After sitting down on the couch, he struggled to get back to his feet, and then dragged himself straight to bed.  Never had a bed looked so inviting to him as it did at that moment, as he struggled out of his clothes and gratefully sank down into the soft feather mattress, letting its comfort drown him in delightful sleep.
	But Tarrin was surrounded by those who made the day their time of activity.  He had no idea how long he'd been asleep when sounds in the common room disturbed him, but even that wasn't really enough to wake him up until the scents of Keritanima, that massive Vendari Szath, and Allia invaded his dreams.  Those scents were a part of his deepest memories, and their presence was enough to rouse him from slumber.  He managed to open his eyes just as his two sisters filed into his room, and he paused a moment to take stock before moving.  He couldn't smell Jesmind or Jasana, but he did smell Jula.  He hoped they realized that if Jesmind caught them sneaking into their apartment without anyone's permission, she'd get very cross with them.  To a Were-cat, entering a home uninvited was the same as challenging the owner's claim on that territory.  He told himself to make that point clear to them before they left.  It would be very unpleasant for him to have to break up a fight between his mate and one of his sisters.
	But then again, Jula seemed to understand that, and she was objecting about every three seconds as they came into the room.  "Do you realize what Jesmind's going to do to us if she finds out we came into their apartment without knocking?" she declared.  "You don't just use magic to get past a locked door when you're dealing with Were-cats!"
	"Well, I knew he was in here, and he wouldn't answer the door," came Keritanima's defensive reply.  "Besides, it's just Tarrin.  I can come into Tarrin's rooms any time I want."
	"It's not just Tarrin anymore!" Jula snapped at her.  "Jesmind would rip off your tail if she knew you came in without being invited!"
	"Who's going to tell her?" Kereitanima said pugnaciously, and the sound of her voice told him that she had her hands on her hips, and was probably glaring at the Were-cat female.  "Jesmind is the sort that kills the messenger, Jula.  You brave enough to go up to her and say 'oh, by the way, we just snuck into your apartment without being invited in'?"  She huffed.  "Besides, this is important."
	"It better be," Tarrin said wearily, rolling over and sitting up in the bed.  "Listen to my daughter next time, Kerri.  If I don't answer the door, odds are I have a good reason not to.  And when you invade a Were-cat's home, you're issuing a very personal challenge to them.  I suggest playing by the rules from now on."
	Jula gave Keritanima a victorious look, crossing her arms beneath her breasts and assuming an erect posture, her tail lashing behind her.  Allia ignored them, sitting on the edge of the bed and putting her hand on the side of Tarrin's face.  "You look tired, deshida," she said to him.  "Are you well?"
	"Well enough," he said dismissively.  "Me and Jenna have been practicing Sorcery.  I think we just overdid it a bit last night, that's all."  He looked towards the window, which was covered by drapes.  "What time is it?"
	"About noon," Keritanima replied.  "We needed to talk to you, brother."
	"I can see that," he said, swinging his legs over the bed and scrubbing his face.  He hadn't felt this tired after waking up since the last time he'd been injured.
	"You want to put on a robe or something?"
	"Why?  It's not like any of you haven't seen me naked before," he shrugged.
	"It's not like you mind flaunting yourself, either," Keritanima said with a sly wink.
	"Well, if you have something to tell me, tell me.  I'd really like to go back to bed."
	"Well, if you want to be curt, then fine," she snorted.  "I just got in some reports from the Aeradalla.  They've reached Darsa, and they're about eight or nine days out."
	"I know," he said absently.  "Have the Selani arrived yet?  They should be here any time now."
	That made Keritanima stare at him.  "How did you know about that?  They only just reached the city wall!"
	"I'll explain some other time," he said woodenly.
	"You certainly will," Keritanima bristled.  "There are a few people who've been screaming to see you, brother.  Sarraya, for one.  And uh, Var and Denai.  I wanted to say 'Dar'," she chuckled.
	"You woke me up to tell me about that?" he asked, his expression a bit tart.  "They could have waited until I got some sleep."
	"I didn't know you were asleep," Keritanima said defensively.  "Besides, that's only half the reason we're here."
	"What's the other reason?"
	"Well, we've been talking about what you said, about Were-cats and Sorcery, and also about what the Goddess told you to do.  We thought that you and Jula should try to see if you can circle.  If you can, then you and her can stay here in the Tower and act as a second line of defense in case anything gets past us at the walls."
	"I know we can circle," he said dismissively, waving a paw at her.  "I've circled with Jasana."
	"You didn't mention that before."
	"As a matter of fact, I did," he told her shortly.  "You just weren't paying attention."
	"I do not remember you saying that, deshida," Allia agreed.
	"Then you weren't paying attention either," he accused.
	"Or you think you told us when you didn't," Keritanima said smoothly.  "That's always a possibility."
	"Maybe," he acceded.
	"Is it any different than before?" Jula asked professionally.
	"Not that I can tell," he replied.  "Then again, I never circled as a human.  I have no idea if it's different or not."
	"Good point," Jula said mildly.
	"We've already worked out a plan for when they get here," Keritanima told him.  "Me and Allia are going to go to the walls with Jenna, the Council, and thirteen of the most powerful Sorcerers in the Tower.  Jenna's a Weavespinner, just like you, so we think the circle we can build with her leading it would be something to even make the Demons hesitate."
	"Probably.  Just make sure you have about ten Vendari with you.  Mother will fight that idea to her last breath, so you'll need a wall of Vendari to assure her that Jenna won't get hurt."
	The three of them looked at each other, then laughed.  "You know your mother very well," Allia told him.  "That was exactly what it took to convince her that we could keep her daughter safe."
	"I'm surprised she agreed to it at all," Keritanima admitted.
	"Mother may be protective, but she's also pragmatic," Tarrin shrugged.  "She knows that Jenna's magic is a foundation of the defensive plans you've made.  We need her.  Mother can understand it, but her heart won't allow her to let Jenna go out and fight without extreme measures taken to make sure she's safe.  Remember, Jenna is only fifteen."
	"That's easy to forget sometimes," Keritanima said.  "Here lately, she's been acting, well, mature.  Your mother thinks it's the stress of all this.  Says she's proud of her."
	Tarrin knew that it was more than just the situation that had changed Jenna's outward personality.  The information that Spyder had given her had had a dramatic effect on his little sister.  He suspected that that knowledge had been what made Jenna seem more mature.  Wisdom, either earned or imparted, couldn't help but have an effect on the recipient.
	"Was there anything else?" Tarrin asked impatiently.
	"My, I never realized he was so cranky in the morning," Keritanima said to Allia with a roguish grin.
	"Only when he is awakened from sleep he needs," Allia replied easily.  "Usually, he sleeps for sleeping's sake."
	"I noticed that we don't really need much sleep," Jula told him.  "Not half as much as I needed as a human."
	"Cats like to sleep," he told her.
	"I noticed that too," she chuckled.  "Any time I feel bored or indecisive, I want to take a nap."
	"I still have not gotten used to these," Allia told him, picking up his arm and grabbing a handful of fetlock.  "But at least the manacles are gone."
	"Looks like he traded one decoration for another," Keritanima chuckled.
	"I think they make him look distinguished," Jula said appreciatively.
	"If he stands up, he'll be distinguishable enough," Keritanima laughed.
	"If you're done making fun of my appearance, you can let me go back to sleep," he told them.  "Unless you have something important to tell me?" he said in a challenging tone.
	"Well, not really, no," Keritanima said.  "We kind of summed everything up already.  But if I think of something, I'll just run on down here and be sure to tell you, even if I need to wake you up again," she teased.
	"Wake me up again for no reason, and you'll find out how cranky I can get, sister," Tarrin threatened her, pulling his legs back into bed and laying down.  "Be sure to lock the door on your way out," he told them, pulling the covers back up and snuggling in.
	"I think we've been dismissed," Keritanima laughed.
	"That's alright.  I want to go find Kimmie," Jula announced, her voice changing, telling him that she turned away from him.
	"No respect, I tell you," Keritanima sniggered after Allia kissed him goodnight, and they left him.  "It's like I don't have a crown at all, I tell you, sister.  Nobody around here treats me with the respect I deserve."
	"Act like a queen, and we may treat you like one," Allia said as she closed the door to his room.
	"And miss out on all the fun?  Never!" Keritanima announced in reply, but he dropped off into sleep before hearing anything else.
	He slept peacefully for some indeterminate amount of time before being shocked awake by something hitting him on the face, something that got to him so quickly that it had no scent.  He sat upright so quickly the covers flew, his heart racing and adrenalin surging through him to prepare to fight off this surprise attacker.  But then the scent reached him, at the same time as a high-pitched, tinny little voice that squealed in delight.
	"Tarrin!"
	It was Sarraya.  She had gripped him firmly about the neck, hugging him in her own fashion, and it took him a moment to make out where she was and what she was doing.  His adrenalin eased at that realization, and it was replaced by a kind of relieved happiness, so relieved that he didn't even get mad at her for waking him up.  He pulled her off his neck and held her in his paw, smiling down at her.  "It's about time, bug," he told her gently.  "What took you so long?"
	"What took me so long?  Have you ever tried to herd a pack of Selani through hostile territory?  It was a nightmare!" she told him, sitting down on his palm.  "They kept wanting to wander off and kill things!"
	Tarrin chuckled, warm memories of the time they spent together fleeing Dala Yar Arak returning to him.  "They're not that bad."
	"Oh yes they are.  The entire clan wanted to chase down every Dal scout!  They even wanted to kill all the mosquitos that fed off Dal blood! I spent half my time showing them which way to go, and the other half rounding them all up so we could keep moving in the right direction!"
	"Well, you got them here, and in plenty of time," he told her, scooting back so he could lean against the headboard.  "Anything exciting happen?"
	"Not really," she said, a bit of disappointment in her voice.  "I'll give them one thing, they can fight.  It was never even close to a real battle, even when they were outnumbered two to one.  I think they killed twenty men for every one they lost.  Out of some five thousand Selani, I think they only lost about a hundred, total.  I've never seen such a tough breed outside Fae-da'Nar.  They're almost unkillable."
	"The desert breeds them tough, Sarraya," he chuckled, feeling the brands on his shoulders twinge in agreement.  "Besides, most humans can't fight a Selani.  They're just too fast."
	"I noticed that," Sarraya agreed.  "The Dals looked like they were standing still."
	"Did they pick up the Sulasian army?"
	"Yeah, but they're about a day behind us," Sarraya replied.  "The Seleni didn't want to slow down and wait for them.  How much time do we have?"
	"Eight, maybe ten days, depending on the weather," he replied.  "The ki'zadun just sacked Darsa."
	"Did they put up a fight?"
	"They evacuated the city before they got there."
	"Oh, well, that was the humane thing to do, but if they'd have had a city full of civilians to play with, it may have slowed them down a few more days."
	"That's cruel, Sarraya."
	"Sometimes you have to be cruel, Tarrin," she sighed.  "Given the penalty if we fail, when it comes down to it, in this case the end definitely justifies the means."
	Hard choices.  He remembered feeling that way when he heard about the Ungardt attacking the enemy army in Tykarthia, how they would be slaughtered, but it would buy them precious time.  He hated having to think in those terms, but she was right.  In this game, there was absolutely no rules.  They had to do whatever it took, anything, in order to win.  The stakes were just too high.  They may have to face a decision of sacrificing some to save the rest.
	"Maybe, but I don't like it."
	"I don't like it either," she assured him.  Then she laughed.  "Such a change from the old Tarrin I knew," she smiled.  "That Tarrin wouldn't have batted an eye at the thought of civilians."
	"Yes, well maybe," he said with an uncomfortable shrug.
	"You're a rare case, my friend," she smiled.  "I've never seen a Were-cat get so feral, and then come back so far from it."
	"I'm still feral, Sarraya," he sighed.  "But not as much as I used to be.  I'm just in familiar surroundings, where I generally control everything, and I'm surrounded by friends and family."
	"I know," she nodded.  "As soon as we leave here again, we'll see the old Tarrin start to peek out