 down the huge passage.  They all watched her go, and when she turned a corner and disappeared, Dar sighed.
	"Is it just me, or is this place completely overwhelming?" he asked, looking up at the stained glass window.
	"The Sha'Kar were said to love beauty," Dolanna said, looking over one of the sculptures.  "In this place, they have brought that love to life, it seems."
	"It's almost too much," Camara Tal grunted.  "It seems like decadence to me.  That, and that girl's attitude.  I don't like it."
	"I think we found something we can agree on, my dear," Phandebrass said seriously.  "Notice that she didn't even so much as look at anyone but Tarrin, Keritanima, and Dolanna?  It was almost as if the rest of us don't exist, we don't."
	"She called us Tarrin's servants," Miranda recalled, putting a finger to her short muzzle and looking down the grand passageway.  "It could be her excitement, but I'm not sure."
	"Excitement about what?" Azakar asked.
	"About Tarrin.  Remember, Zak, he's something of royalty among Sorcerers.  There are supposedly only seven sui'kun, and they were very, very important back in the Age of Power.  If they've kept their customs from back then, it may explain why she seems to fixated on him."
	"What do you think, Kerri, Allia?" Tarrin asked.
	"I think you're rushing to judge," Keritanima told them. "Let's learn more about them before we start with the blanket accusations."
	"Our sister is right," Allia agreed.  "Let us give them a chance.  Their ways are not ours, and we may have as much trouble understanding them as they will have understanding us."
	"Well said, dear one," Dolanna nodded.  "Given the diversity of this group, I am surprised that some of you are so willing to see the Sha'Kar in a darker light."
	"Maybe it is cultural," Camara Tal said.  "There's just something about them that gnaws at me."
	They quieted when Allyn and Iselde reappeared in the hall, each of them holding the hand of a taller, more slender Sha'Kar male.  He was rather tall, taller than Allia, but was very, very thin.  Everything about him was thin, from his skinny arms to his long-fingered hands to his narrow face.  He had white hair that flowed from his head in waves.  He wore a white robe that almost radiated light, it was so pristine and clean, and the two youths were dragging him forward excitedly.  He stopped dead when he saw the visitors, gaping at them, and then Tarrin sensed something magical ghost over him.  He could feel the pull the man had on the Weave; he was a very strong Sorcerer.  He must have probed them with his senses in some way.  Once Tarrin felt the wave pass him over, the man almost made his children--if they were his children, for neither looked anything like him--fall down as he surged forward with surprising speed.
	"Goddess preserve me, you are sui'kun!" the Sha'Kar said in a lilting, surprisingly feminine voice.  "Dear me, dear me!  Please, allow me to welcome you to my humble home!  I am Arlan Ai'shar, the patron of this humble estate," he introduced with a deep, sweeping bow.  "You honor my home with your presence, honored one!"
	Tarrin was starting to get a little irritated with how all these Sha'Kar seemed to fawn over him.  First Iselde, now this one  Allyn seemed too dumbstruck to do much more than stare at them all.  "You are Iselde's father?"
	"I'm her uncle, honored one," he said with another bow.  "Unfortunately, her father died during the ceremony of ascendance."  All three Sha'kar made a little gesture, tapping their fingers over their hearts.  "May the Goddess bless his soul," he added.  "Please, come in!  My home is yours, honored one!  Please, come in and be comfortable, and I'll send for the Council of Elders and Grand Syllis!"
	"Iselde mentioned this Grand Syllis.  He is your leader?"
	"He leads the Council," Arlan replied.  "He is the one named Keeper without a tower, but we felt uncomfortable with that title, so he decided to use the title of Grand."
	That made Tarrin mull it over.  Just like Sulasian, Sha'Kar was a language where a word could have more than one meaning.  Tarrin had been thinking of the word as grand, for it was the most common use of the term, but they were dealing with Sha'Kar who probably thought differently.  That word also meant top, above in a social sense, and also, rather archaicly, Prince.  But only if one was using the most extreme forms of formal speech.
 	"Please, come in.  I'll have your servants bordered in my servant house, and--"
	"I have no servants," he said immediately.  "These are my family and friends.  They will be treated as you treat me," he said deliberately and with great weight.
	"I--well, yes, yes of course, honored one," he said with a bow.  "Your friends will be treated with all my hospitality.  Please, come in, come to my sitting room and make yourselves comfortable.  I'll have my staff bring you refreshments, and you can tell me what miracle brings you to us while we wait for the Council and the Grand to summon you."
	"That's fine with me, Arlan," Tarrin agreed with a nod.  "Lead on."
	The three Sha'Kar started into the great passageway, looking back to make sure the twelve visitors followed them.  Tarrin led his friends and sisters deeper into the house, a sneaking suspicion growing in his mind.  He had the feeling that Camara Tal was right.  There was indeed something about these Sha'Kar he wasn't quite sure he liked.  But then again, he wasn't used to being gaped at and fawned over as they were doing to him, and he figured that that had to be what it was.
	At least he hoped so.  Aggravating the Sha'Kar, who probably had all the information they needed, would not be a good idea.  He needed their help right now, and if that meant that he had to endure their almost worshipful attention to him, then so be it.  The only thing that mattered was that he left the island with the Firestaff.
	It was all that mattered.
 
Chapter 12

	The sitting room in which Tarrin and the others had been placed was absolutely palatial.  Keritanima looked decidedly jealous as they sat in a massive room with a ceiling that had to be twenty spans high, the ceiling painted in a starry sky portrait.  Live plants, some kind of broad-leafed ivy or clinging vine, climbed up one wall, flanking a fountain that bubbled happily on the wall which the majority of the furniture faced.  Soft light radiated from the walls to light the room, a room with no windows, a room that smelled strangely fresh to Tarrin's keen nose.  There were more sculptures in the sitting room, to the sides of the fountain, which seemed to be the centerpiece of the room.  The walls not devoted to its living display had art hanging from them.  One was a portrait of five Sha'Kar, a portrait so stunningly done that the people on the portrait literally looked alive.  Tarrin recognized Iselde and Allyn on that portrait, as well as Arlan, the two children much younger than they looked now.  There was a female adult Sha'Kar with red hair, of all things, a very beautiful female with soft blue eyes and a warm expression.  She had the two children on her lap, who were but cubs when the portrait was painted.  A Sha'Kar male with blond hair had his slender hand on her shoulder, and the resemblence made it clear that this one was the father of the children.  He was a handsome fellow, not effeminately beautiful the way other Sha'Kar males seemed to be.
	This was the second room they'd seen so far that seemed almost overwhelmingly beautiful.  It was the same thing that the Palace in Wikuna tried for, but where the Palace bowled one over with dispays of ridiculous wealth, this place assaulted one with the inescapable taste and beauty of its architecture, decoration, and feel.  What this place gave up in quantity to Keritanima's Palace, it more than made up for in subtle taste.  Tarrin didn't think that it was wrong for the Sha'Kar to want to surround themselves with beautiful things, but in a way, it almost seemed decadent, as Camara Tal put it.
	And the way Iselde talked, this house was poor compared to some of the others.  Dar was right...he didn't want to see anything else if this place was supposed to be crude.
	There was that, and then there were the servants.  Arlan had five human women waiting on them, literally hand and foot, all of them dressed in very simple silk black dresses that had skirts that ended at their knees, and dipped low enough to show off each girl's attributes.  All five of them were very lovely young women, the oldest probably barely more than twenty, and they went about the business of serving their guests with exuberant, almost drowningly effective zeal.  They tried to get Azakar and Camara Tal out of their armor, they tried to take everyone's shoes--Tarrin recalled that everyone here wore soft slippers, and most of his friends were wearing hard-soled boots--and they nearly smothered everyone with endless offers of food, drink, pillows, pipes, anything at all.  And they meant anything.  When one of the women caught Dar looking at her bosom, she gently yet boldly asked him if he wanted to take her into another room and have his way with her.  That made the usually outgoing Arkisian blush to the roots of his hair and stammer out a disjointed, polite refusal.
	What Tarrin and Azakar both noticed almost immediately that all the servants they'd seen so far had been human.  The men and women outside, and now the five maids in the house.  The five maids were all very lovely, almost as if no one that was not handsome or pretty would be allowed into the house to spoil its appearance.  Azakar whispered his observations to Tarrin in Arakite as two of the maids were trying to get the Vendari to hand over their weapons and take something to eat and drink, and Tarrin had to agree with him.  The two of them hadn't been very close since they'd been reunited, but both of them had an enduring, almost blind hatred of slavery and servitude.  Both of them had suffered under the yoke of a master in different forms, and it was a tie that bound them together.
	Another thing that Tarrin noticed about the women was that none of them were Sorcerers.  So far, everyone they'd met that was not a servant was a Sorcerer.  Of course, they'd only met three Sha'Kar, but Tarrin had seen some of the others on the very short walk between the edge of the forest and the front gate of Iselde's estate.  He'd seen about twelve of the other citizens from relatively close distances, and that was close enough to sense their potential.  But these five had no inherent talent for Sorcery.  One of them, the tall redhead with the pale freckled skin and the large bosom, actually had the potential to learn Druidic magic--he could feel it in her clearly--but not Sorcery.  That one, Tarrin marked mentally to come back and revisit the issue.  There were so few Druids, he was positive that Triana would want him to try to do something about it.
	Triana.  He hadn't talked to anyone in Suld since they entered the void.  Jesmind must be going absolutely crazy, he mused, and making life miserable for everyone around her.  He'd bet that Triana would only give him a couple more days, and then she'd contact him with her magic.  He knew that she could tell through her ability to keep tabs on him through the bond she once held that he was well, so she wasn't quite ready to tip her hand that she was worried quite yet and break down and talk to him.  It was already sunset or close to it in Suld by now, so there was no sense doing it today.  He'd get in touch with them tomorrow morning, when it would be around noon or so there.
	Tarrin stood by the fountain, which had a small relief of a nude woman holding a pitcher, from which the water poured, sensing the magic about the fountain.  It was Sorcery, but it was a lingering effect, something that Tarrin had thought very hard to accomplish.  But then again, Spyder only taught them a mess of spells, not little tricks like sustaining a magical effect after the Sorcerer stopped concentrating on it.  High Sorcery could render some spells permanent, linking them directly to the Weave where the spell would draw its power out of the strand on its own, but he didn't sense anything quite so drastic used here.  The little fountain was self-contained, recycling the water in the bowl at the bottom to gurgle it from the pitcher at the top.  He picked through the weave used on it, and realized that it was a lingering spell, but not permanent.  The spell would slowly unravel as it lost the power that had been charged into it, like a candle slowly burning down to the nub.  When it exhausted the extra power woven into it, it would unravel, and the spell would have to be cast again.  That was a trick that Tarrin hadn't considered using in average weaves.  He used it in powerful spells, like summoning Elementals--in fact, it was required to do that for an Elemental, for that power was the magical energy that sustained the Elemental after the Sorcerer finished weaving the spell.  He'd never thought to use it in a spell so simple.  He thought of any number of ways to use that, like a gentle breeze that would blow by itself and keep someone cool, or a fire that would burn by itself without fuel for hours, maybe even days.  That would be handy in Keritanima's steam engine.
	He wondered why Spyder hadn't taught him this trick, and it made him realize that these Sha'Kar were not to be taken lightly.  He already could tell that they knew many of the oldest secrets of Sorcery, and they could be lethal adversaries if they decided to fight with them.  Tarrin was stronger than any of them, but he was just one male, while they were five hundred strong.  Even he could be overwhelmed if seven of their strongest Circled and confronted him.  And if they did have human Sorcerers living on the island, then they could get around the limit of seven and come after them with a Circle as large as one hundred thirteen.  Two branches of seven human Sorcerers acting as buffers between forty-nine Sha'Kar each, and one Sha'Kar merging the two branches together to act as buffer between the humans, who would also be leading the combined effort.  That kind of directed power, it made Tarrin shudder to even consider it.  That many Circled may very well have made the incredible dome that protected the island, or the wind that pushed all ships away, or the magical effects that had caused Keritanima's crew to mutiny.  That was the power that the stories said was legendary, the mythical power of the katzh-dashi, the power to part the seas, sink islands, move mountains, or stop the moons.
	With that many Sorcerers combined into a single Circle, all of them da'shar and sui'kun, they very well may have been able to do it.
	That worried Tarrin.  What if the Sha'Kar were here to defend the Firestaff?  What if they were the final guardian?  If they could bring that kind of power to bear against him, he wouldn't be able to defeat them.  But, as Allia would say, if you can't steal the goat, then you trick the goat into coming to you.  He could work around the Sha'Kar if it was needful.  Just so long as they didn't oppose him when the time came to get the Firestaff.  But that may be tricky.  If they did know where it was and were here to protect it, it may get tricky getting that information out of them.  But he'd find a way.
	Tarrin looked away from the fountain, and saw that Azakar had taken one of the servant girls aside.  She looked like a child standing beside the huge Mahuut, and he was leaning far down to talk to her in low tones.  She was blushing quite a bit and giggling.  Tarrin realized that he was sweet-talking her.  Azakar?  Talking to girls?  It seemed amusing, but then again, Azakar was a rather handsome fellow.  If someone didn't mind the fact that he was nine spans tall, anyway.  Dolanna was doing the same thing, talking with one of the maids pouring her some tea, and Keritanima and Miranda had another one cornered over by a sculpture, surreptitiously grilling her for information.
	Iselde and Allyn returned to the room quickly, and Tarrin noticed that all five servants stopped what they were doing and curstied in their direction.  The two Sha'Kar youths didn't even take notice of them, for their attention was fixated on Tarrin.  Iselde came over to him and curtsied herself, her eyes bright and with a smile on her face.  "Uncle Arlan went to escort the Council and Grand Syllis here," she announced to him.  "He wanted to talk to them in person before they got here."
	"I still can't believe that an honored one is in our house!" Allyn gushed, then he glanced at Allia.  And kept glancing over at her.  The young Sha'Kar seemed quite taken by the Selani, for some reason.  That, or he just couldn't help looking at one of the Lost, one or the other.
	"How long will it take for them to get here?" Tarrin asked the girl.
	"Not long, honored one," she replied.  "Once they hear that you're here, they'll come right away."
	"The other estates are starting to hear about our visitors," Allyn said to them.  "I saw alot of talking at gates when I went with uncle Arlan."
	"Would you like to sit down, honored one?" Iselde pressed.  "Have you been offered food and drink?"
	"I prefer to stand, Iselde," he said, bringing his tail around and waggling it.  "This makes some furniture a little uncomfortable."
	"We can bring you a stool if you'd like."
	"I'm fine," he said firmly.  He looked down at them, and realized that these two, so smitten with a sui'kun, just might be able to give him some information that he wouldn't have to drag out of the older, more experienced Elders.  He may have better luck with them then the others would with the servants.  "I'm still a bit surprised to find you out here," he told them.  "Why did your people come here?  Why not a larger island?"
	"Why, because of the Ward," she answered.  "Uncle Arlan said that the First Ones set it a long long time ago, to keep the mundanes away from this place.  He says that when we left the towers to wait out the Breaking, that this place would be the best place for us.  Without our magic, we'd be defenseless!"  She licked her lips.  "What's it like outside, honored one?  Is there magic again?  Is it safe for us now?"
	"There's always been magic, Iselde," he told her.  "Once the Breaking was over, it was safe for us again."
	"How did you survive it, honored one?"Allyn asked.
	"I wasn't alive when it happened," he told them.  "I was born afterward."
	"Oh!" Iselde gasped.  "You're one of the new sui'kun, the ones that the Elders talk about all the time!"
	"What do they say?"
	"That the Goddess will send her gifts back into the world, and that new sui'kun will be born to replace those who died.  That's what we've been waiting for.  They say when the seven are restored, the Ward protecting the island will fail, and that will be our sign to return."
	And that, he realized, was why the Goddess had sent him.  There were six sui'kun alive right now.  Spyder had been the original.  Then Tarrin and Jenna had been born.  Then Jasana.  The fifth had been born during the battle at Suld, and the sixth not long ago.  There was only one sui'kun left unborn, and if Iselde was right, then its birth would cause the Ward defending the island to fail.  It may also disrupt the other magical protections, leaving the Firestaff undefended.  Especially if the Sha'Kar left the island after the Ward came down, left to return to the outside world.
	That was why it was so important for Tarrin to get the Firestaff.  He had thought that the defenses were a bit too fearsome for the Goddess to worry about it, and in a way, he was right.  Only Tarrin, the Mi'Shara, could breach the Ward and gain entry to the island.  That was why he had the best chance of succeeding, because he could make his attempt before anyone else could try, and thusly face no competition during his attempt.  But if those protections were gone, then the Firestaff would be just sitting somewhere on this island waiting for someone to pick it up.  It may or may not be defended at that time, depending on if the Sha'Kar were the final guardians or not.  If they were, it would be defenseless.  If not, it would be guarded, but most of the other protective measures that protected it would be gone, thereby making recovering it a much simpler task.  That was the whole reason why the ki'zadun had tried to both kill him and control him.  If they controlled him, they would have first shot at the Firestaff.  If they couldn't control him, they had to kill him, thereby making it a dead race, a race they had a good chance of winning.  Only the Zakkites and the Wikuni would pose a real threat to their victory, for both were formidable naval powers.  Both had the capability of surrounding the island and blockading it against anyone else.
	Tarrin put that revelation aside for the moment, considering what else to ask.  "How did your people know to come here?" he asked.  "The Breaking happened so suddenly, there wasn't any warning."
	"My uncle told us that some of my people can read the probabilities of the future," she answered.  "It's not a gift of Sorcery, it's a gift of the mind.  Some of them foresaw the Breaking and convinced enough of our people and some of the humans to come here and wait for that day to come.  If it came and went without any disaster, then there would be nothing lost.  But if it did, then our people would continue on and our ways wouldn't be lost to the world."
	"Then your people were wise," he told her.  "The Sha'kar are nothing but myth and legend now.  Everything about your people has been lost and forgotten.  Even your language has been forgotten by the outside world."
	"If that's so, then how do you know it, honored one?"
	"Good question," he smiled.  "We found forgotten scrolls in a musty old cellar that held the key to learning the spoken form.  Have you ever heard of the Book of Ages?"
	Iselde gasped and gaped at him.  "You've read from the holy book?" she asked him in wonder.
	"I've held it in my paws, Iselde," he told her gently.  "It taught us the written Sha'Kar language.  We used that to piece together some things left behind after the Breaking, and that's what brought us out here."
	"What are you doing here, honored one?" she finally asked.  "If you're not here to come and get us, then why?"
	"We're searching for an ancient artifact called the Firestaff," he told her very carefully, watching her expression and her eyes and analyzing her scent.  When he said the word firestaff, he saw her eyes shift a little and her brow furrow, and her scent picked up a slight tang of concern.  It was a word she understood, and it caused her to react with slight anxiety.  "Ancient writings said that it was somewhere out here, and we've been looking for it.  We thought it might be here, so we came to check before moving on."
	"If you're sui'kun, then you know what it is, and what it can do," she said seriously.
	"I do.  That's why we're out here.  I'm here to stop that from happening," he told her adamantly.  "I was sent by the Goddess herself."
	Tarrin saw the conflict in her eyes.  Iselde knew something about the Firestaff, but she obviously wasn't sure if she should tell him or not.  Tarrin was about to press her, to use her awe of him as a weapon to make her tell him what she knew, but Arlan chose that moment to return.  And he was leading nine Sha'Kar, eight dressed in brilliant yellow robes that stood out against their skin and the ninth wearing a robe that almost looked to be made out of gold spun into cloth.  All nine of them looked mature, but not old.  Five were male, and four were female.  All of them had the pattern Sha'Kar beauty, a similarity of appearance that probably went through the whole race, with only minor alterations of that base beauty to disseminate between individuals.  Some had broader cheeks, some narrower.  Some had larger eyes, some smaller.  Some had larger ears or a sharper chin, some had a slightly narrower nose or more elegant brows.  But the commonality of beauty went through all nine of them.  Even Allia shared that same basic appearance, as did Var, Denai, and all the Selani he'd seen.  In a fleeting instant, Tarrin understood why the Wikuni gods changed their children, who were also descendents of the Sha'Kar and Urzani.  Those Sha'Kar had abandoned the Sha'Kar culture, but they still looked like Sha'Kar.  The Wikuni gods wanted that change to be a complete one, so they altered the appearance of their worshippers.
	All nine of them absolutely ignored everyone else in the room, didn't see the five human girls curtsy to them nervously.  All of them were looking right at Tarrin.  He could sense their power, and realized that these nine were not to be taken lightly.  They were all da'shar, and from the feel of them, they were alive during the Breaking.  These were people who lived during the Age of Power, beings whose command of Sorcery would seem almost godlike to the modern descendents of the old katzh-dashi.  They were at least a thousand years old, all of them, and they all had a similar sense about them that Triana did, a sheathe of wisdom and power that made them stand above those around them.  These, Tarrin realized, were Ancients.
	Ghosts of the past, resurrected into the future.  Now that dream made complete sense.
	"Honored one," one of the yellow-robed males said in awe, one with small eyes.  "I never dreamed I'd live to see the day the honored ones returned to us."
	The one in the gold robe stepped forward and bowed.  "Honored one, I am Grand Syllis," he introduced in a nasal voice.  "It's been too long since we've been graced with the presence of one such as you.  Sha'Kari welcomes you with open arms.  Our homes are your homes, and our wine is your wine."
	"My name is Tarrin," he told them in a calm, almost gruff manner after glancing at Dolanna, who nodded.  Diplomacy wasn't Tarrin's strong suit, but it was obvious that they didn't even know that the others existed.  "I'll admit that we're surprised to find you here.  We didn't expect to find Sha'Kar on this journey."
	"He is the one," one of the females said.  "With the others."
	"The other two honored ones, are they perchance with you?" Grand Syllis asked.
	"They're in Suld," he answered honestly.  "How did you know about them?"
	"Delande is quite adept at travelling the Weave," Grand Syllis said.  "She's one of the few who can breach the barrier the Ward creates and travel back to the Heart.  She has been visiting there from time to time, waiting for the day da'shar and sui'kun reappeared.  She saw you in the Heart with another honored one, and she said she could sense yet another very close to you."
	Delande had to be the presence that Jenna and Jula had been sensing.  That mystery was solved.  Judging from Iselde's reaction, the news about the sui'kun was information the Elders didn't bandy about with the other Sha'Kar.
	"I'm sure we could chat back and forth about pleasantries, but I'm afraid I've come on business," he told them.  He saw Dolanna's slightly disapproving look, but he didn't feel like smalltalk at the moment.  He wanted to set things out right now and see how they reacted to what he said.  "Me and my friends are on a mission, a mission directly from the Goddess herself.  Have you ever heard of an artifact called the Firestaff?"
	That got their attention.  All ten of them--including Arlan--gave him a startled look, and almost as one, the Elders and Grand Syllis put their hands inside the sleeves of their robes.  The scents coming off of them were ones of trepidation and worry.  They did know about the Firestaff, and judging from the defensive reactions, they knew quite a bit about it.
	"The Goddess tasked us to find it, because the whole world is turning itself inside out over it right now.  She wants us to find it and take it away and hide it again so it can't be found."  He threw his braid over his shoulder absently.  "We know it's somewhere in this general direction.  When we started encountering all the obstacles, we felt that there was a good chance that it may be here, that the obstacles had been placed to defend it.  Now I see that the obstacles are there because you're here," he said with a slight sigh.  "I don't think it's here, but maybe, if you know where it is, you could tell us."
	There.  That set everything up.  They knew what Tarrin was doing, but Tarrin made a plausible reason not to think that it was on the island.  They knew something about it, something important.  Probably where it was on the island, but he could tell from the way they reacted that they wouldn't willingly tell him anything.  But Tarrin had set up the trap, and now he wanted to see if they were going to fall into it.
	"I'm sorry, honored one, but we can be of little help to you," Grand Syllis said with a sigh.  "I'm afraid we don't know where it is."
	He was lying.  Tarrin could smell it all over him.  He was nervous and a little upset, and he was lying.  Tarrin had to admit, he was a good liar.  He didn't blink or shift or do any of the normal things that humans did when they lied.  The Sha'Kar probably had no idea Tarrin's senses were so acute, that he could smell the change in the man's scent that was caused by his emotional shift when he had to lie.
	"Then I'm afraid I have no more need to be here," he said bluntly.  "Our mission is too important.  We'll leave you and visit again when we return to Suld."
	"Tarrin, what are you doing?" Kimmie demanded in the unspoken manner of the Cat.
	"Trust me," he replied to her.
	"Please!" one of the Elders cried out, a short thin male with blond hair.  "You only just arrived, honored one!  Surely you can spare a few days from your quest!"
	"Yes, honored one!  Please stay!" one of the females called, almost pleadingly.  "We hunger for news of the outside world!"
	Syllis looked visibly annoyed with his council of Elders as all of them, as well as Arlan, Iselde, and Allyn, pleaded with Tarrin to stay, even if only for a few days.  Tarrin let them plead and beg and cajole a moment, looking serious, then he turned and glanced at Dolanna.  She nodded, and he held up his paws.  "Alright, but only for a few days," he told them.
	"Thank you, honored one!" one of the Elders exploded, a very tall, willowy female.
	That same female stepped from the group and curtsied to him, holding up the hem of her dress, and introduced herself as Dalenne.  Then Grand Syllis stepped up and bowed, and then led Tarrin back to the Elders and introduced them one by on