m," she answered.  "I've yet to find the other two, but I've yet to give up hope.  The youngest are taking a very long time to come out of the shock returning to our true forms induced.  The oldest of us were starting to regain ourselves before we even returned to our true forms.  That was why I got smarter and learned to speak, little friend," she told him.  "The younger ones are still like that, just beginning to remember their pasts.  In a few days, even the hatchlings should have regained their memories, and we'll be moving back to where we belong."
	"If you started out in Saranam, how did you end up on that little island out in the middle of nowhere?" Tarrin asked.
	"I have no idea," she replied with a smile.  A very chilling smile.  "I can't remember what happened after I enacted the magic to confine me into the drake form."
	Auli strode forward a few paces.  "Honored dragon, may I ask a favor?" she asked.
	"What is it, small one?"
	"Could you come down here and let me see you up close?"
	Sapphire said nothing, but lowered her head to where she was just in front of and above Auli.  The Sha'Kar reached out with a trembling hand and put it on Sapphire's snout, over the lips but under the nose, touching her small diamond scales tentatively.  "Her scares are very smooth," Auli told them.  "And they're warm.  They feel nice."  She traced her finger along the seam between two scales, and that made Sapphire snort and flinch away slightly.  That act made Auli stagger back in sudden fright, into Tarrin, who grabbed her and steadied her so she wouldn't fall down.  The Sha'Kar finally showed fear.
	"Sorry, but that tickled," the dragon told her with an amused look.  "I didn't mean to startle you."
	Auli laughed ruefully.  "Well, I almost wet myself, but it was worth it!" she told her with another infectious laugh.
	"This is Wizard magic, Sapphire?" Dar asked, who was literally climbing up onto the book to look at what was in it.
	"It is," she answered.  "Your Wizards would be able to read these pages, young human.  It is written in the same language as theirs.  Even though we dragons use it a slightly different way, Wizard magic is still Wizard magic.  If you weren't a Sorcerer, you may even be able to learn it yourself."
	Tarrin and Auli climbed up onto the cover of the book and peered over huge pages that looked to be made of stiff leather and looked over the page.  The pages were written in glyphs that were two spans long, large glyphs that the dragon could read easily.  Tarrin realized that as big as Sapphire was, if she could even manipulate a human-sized book, the writing in it would be so incredibly tiny to her that she probably wouldn't be able to make it out.  The humans and Sha'Kar were like small dolls to her, easily fitting in her forepaw, and anything smaller than them would be very hard for her to scrutinize.  It was like sand.  Tarrin could see a grain of sand, but Sapphire probably would not be able to do so.  Sand seemed grainy to him, but to someone like Sapphire, it would be as fine as the most powdered dust, almost as fluid as water.  Even now the dragon's massive bulk loomed over them.  From nose to tail, Tarrin realized that the dragon was about five hundred spans long.   Over half of it was tail, and about another sixty or seventy was head and neck, but that still left about a hundred and fifty spans or so worth of body.  Her legs had to be at least thirty spans long each.  Probably closer to forty.  Everything about her was massive.
	Tarrin, Auli, and Dar climbed down off the book, and the dragon entertained them with a story about her five dragon children and her home back at the border between the desert and Saranam.  She told them all about how they studied magic and enjoyed their existence, about her duties as shazil to watch over the clans in her territory and keep them from fighting too much with the copper dragons that shared their preferred territories, and how they would watch the Selani when the nomadic peoples filed through their range.  The dragons knew that the Selani knew that they were there, but they were very good neighbors.  They respected the dragon's territory, moving through it quickly, and never trying to find their lairs or bother them when they did see them up on the mesas sunning themselves.  Because of their amiable nature, Sapphire and her clan discouraged humans from Saranam from trying to invade the desert, as they had a penchant for doing.
	"Where is your male dragon?" Auli asked.  "You know, the father of the babies?"
	"Males live more or less alone, Sha'Kar.  Female blues don't take permanent mates.  When we are ready to mate, we make it known, and allow the males to compete for our favor.  The one that proves himself strongest, most intelligent, and most magically experienced earns the right to sire my clutch."
	"That sounds fun," Auli said with bright eyes.  "At least your kind's advanced enough not to limit yourself to the same old male all the time."
	"I've had the same mate for the last few centuries, Sha'Kar," Sapphire answered.  "Tenshale is the oldest, wisest male in the eastern marches.  Every time I want to raise a clutch, he proves most worthy.  I've grown quite fond of him," she admitted.
	"Sapphire isn't your real name, is it?" Tarrin asked suddenly.
	"I've grown fond of it," she smiled at him.  "Before they called me Midnight because of my dark scales," she said, unfurling her wings and letting them marvel at how handsome her scales were, "but called names are changed easily.  Since I keep my given name a secret, I choose how I want others to address me.  When I get back, I'll let it be known that from that day forth I am to be called Sapphire, and that will be that."
	"Why keep your name a secret?" Dar asked.
	"A name is a powerful thing, Arakite," Sapphire answered seriously.  "Especially for beings of great power, like myself.  You can control someone if you know their true name and the right spells.  A Wizard that knew my true name could use it as a weapon against me.  No dragon will take that risk, so the only time a true name is voiced is the day we give it to our hatchlings.  We then give them a called name and use that from that day forward."
	"I didn't know that," Dar mused.
	"Then your trip here wasn't in vain," Sapphire said, looking down at them.  "No journey is for vain if you gain knowledge in the course of it."
	"You're really wise, Sapphire," Tarrin said appreciatively.
	"After two thousand years, I would hope so," she said with an amused look.
	"Auli!" an enraged voice came from Auli's amulet.  It was Ianelle, her mother.  "Aulienne, you come back home this instant!" she raged.  "And while you're coming back, make yourself useful and see if you can find Tarrin!  Kimmie's frantic!"
	Auli looked at Tarrin and laughed.  "I think it may take me a while," she said with a wink.  "I just can't seem to find you anywhere!"
	"Why aren't you answering her, Auli?" Dar asked.
	"Because I never do," she told him with a mischievious grin.  "She knows I won't.  That's why she just yells at me."
	"Well, at least tell her that Tarrin's alright," Dar said.  "Kimmie's worried.  You can do that without giving yourself away, can't you?"
	She shook her head.  "If I use the amulet, my mother can track it right back and pinpoint where I am.  Then she'll Teleport here so fast I won't have a chance to get away.  I made that mistake once before, Dar," she grinned.  "I learn from my mistakes."
	"You are here without permission?" Sapphire asked intently.
	"Well, we didn't think we'd need permission to visit you, honored dragon," Auli said with innocent eyes.  "After all, doesn't Tarrin have the right to come see you whenever he wants?"
	"You talk fast, Sha'Kar," Sapphire said with amusement.  "Almost as fast as Skulker, my youngest and an endless handful for me.  Always getting into trouble.  You two seem cut from the same cloth."  She rose up a little.  "But you received orders from your mother, and you will obey them," she said bluntly.  "I will see that you get back to the town."
	"B-Back?" Auli stammered.  "You're taking us back?  You mean you're going to fly us there?"
	"No, child," she said with a smile.  "You are going to answer your mother, and she will get you back to town."
	Auli looked a little crestfallen, but even she wasn't crazy enough to defy the dragon.  She put a hand to her amulet sullenly.  "Tarrin's with me, mother," she answered.  "Me and him and Dar were out walking, and we decided to come visit with the honored dragon.  We'll--"
	Whatever they were going to do would remain a mystery, as Ianelle, tall and regal and with her blond hair and handsome face reminding Tarrin that she was definitely Auli's mother, simply appeared not three steps in front of them.  Her eyes were very cold, very hard, and she had her hands on her hips in an aggressive posture.  "What are you three doing over here?" she demanded.
	"I told you we were going to get in trouble," Dar muttered under his breath.
	"I wanted to come visit Sapphire, Misterss Ianelle, and Auli knew the way," Tarrin said quickly to deflect the formidable Sha'Kar's anger.
	"Of course she would know the way," Ianelle said scathingly, glaring at her daughter, who now looked a little sheepish.
	"They did not bother me," Sapphire announced, seeming to startle Ianelle a little.  Ianelle had her back to the dragon.  She turned and looked up at her over her shoulder, seeing that the blue dragon looked a little amused.  "In fact, I found their visit quite enjoyable.  But it sounds like they are needed at home, so you may take them home now."  She fixed those huge eyes on Tarrin.  "Be sure to come again, little friend.  At least if we stay here much longer."
	"We will be leaving tomorrow, honored dragon," Ianelled told her politely.  "We will be able to carry you as well as the rest, as promised."
	"Very good then.  Let me know when to arrive, and I will do so."
	"We will," Ianelle nodded, then turned a steely eye back on the three youths.  "As for you three," she said in a stern voice, pointing at the ground at her feet.  "Here.  Now.  Join hands with me and form a ring."
	They did so, Auli looking very sullen, and the most amazing thing happened.  Tarrin felt that strange feeling whenever anyone used Sorcery around him, and they were suddenly somewhere else.  There was no sensation to it.  One second he was looking at Sapphire over Ianelle's shoulder, then he was looking at the manor house where they'd been staying.  Ianelle let go of Tarrin's hand, but Auli, who was holding his other hand, did not let go.  Tarrin was thinking of saying something, but her hand was warm and very soft, and he rather liked the way that it felt.
	"Alright, Tarrin, Kimmie wants you back in your room," Ianelled told him calmly.  "As for you," she said, turning on Auli with a dark look.
	"Can we wait for Kimmie with him?" she asked quickly.  "It must be lonely in that room by himself.  We can keep him company until she comes back."
	Ianelle gave her a searching look, then nodded. "As long as I know you're not out causing trouble," she said.  "But mind you, if you're not back as soon as Kimmie returns, you'll get a serious punishment.  And I'll be calling over here to make sure.  Fail to answer me once, and I'll lock a tracking spell on you so fast you'll think you were born with it.  Understand?"
	"Yes, mother," Auli said with a slight frown.
	"You still need to pack your room, girl," Ianelle told her.  "Remember, one trunk.  Everything else you leave behind.  So you'd better decide what you're going to take."
	"I know," she said with a pout.  "I don't think it's fair."
	"It's all we have room for," she said bluntly.  "Outside of books and cultural artifacts, everyone only gets one trunk.  Even me, and I'm First on the Council.  If I get one trunk, everyone gets one trunk," she declared adamantly.
	"But we can just come back for the rest," Auli protested.
	"We could, but we must leave these indulgent ways behind, daughter," she said.  "We have much to do.  We simply don't have time for wasting days with parties and gossip any longer.  We have to return to the katzh-dashi, return the order to its former glory, and that's going to take time.  Silly possessions and frilly things are not our way."
	"They're my way," Auli growled under her breath.
	"Now go on.  I'm sure Kimmie will be back soon.  We have people out searching for her."
	"Where is she?" Tarrin asked.
	"Out looking for you," Ianelle replied.  "She was having quite a problem with it.  It seems someone knows about her kind, and intentionally wiped the traces of your passing so she couldn't follow."
	Dar blushed and turned away from Ianelle, hurrying towards the house.
	"Well, get on, you two," she said, shooing them.  "Remember Auli.  Back home as soon as Kimmie returns.  And I'll be checking up on you."
	Auli and Dar did go with him back to his huge room, and he was glad they were there.  They sat on the divans and talked about their journey, laughing like old friends.  Dar found it especially funny when Auli told them about touching the dragon's snout, and how it flinched away from her.  "I thought I left a dark spot on your trousers, Tarrin," she said with a self-deprecating laugh.  "I've never been scared like that before in my life!"
	"I'd better go see Dolanna and let her know we're alright," Dar said, slapping his knees.
	"She probably already--" Tarrin began, but Auli cut him off.
	"That's a good idea, Dar," she told him quickly.  "Besides, you never know, she may have something for you to do."
	"Probably," he agreed.  "I'll see you two later.  I did have fun, even if we did get caught," he admitted with a laugh, then he walked towards the door.
	Tarrin was a bit wary now.  Auli obviously wanted to get rid of Dar, and now they were alone.  She was sitting on the divan across from him, not looking like she had anything on her mind, just smiling amiably. "Do you know how to play chess?" she asked him.
	"No, not really," he answered.
	"Well, we can't have that!" she said with a grin.  "There's a chessboard on that dresser over there.  I'll teach you how to play."
	And so, they sat down on the floor, on a very thick, soft fur rug near the pedestal that held the bed, and she showed him how to play chess.  It was a strangely complicated game, with six different kinds of pieces that all moved according to their own specific rules.  She'd started on her side of the board when she started showing him, but then scooted around to sit beside him, showing him the rules of movement from his side of the board, saying that it would make a little more sense to him to see it from his own side of the board.  Tarrin found Auli's nearness just a little disconcerting, for she was sitting with her hip touching his leg, propping herself up with a hand that was placed behind him.  He found it a little hard to concentrate on the rules with her so close to him.  He forgot which piece was the one that moved diagonally, and she had to show him again.  "Now this is the queen," she said, touching the second tallest piece.  "It's the most powerful piece on the board, because it can move in any direction, as far as you want it to move.  It's the strongest piece, but it's also the piece you have to take the most care to protect."
	"It can move anywhere?"
	"Well, in a straight line, yes," she replied.  "This way, this way, or this way," she displayed, tracing her finger on the checkered board diagonally, horizontally, and vertically.  "The knight is the only piece that can't move in a straight line."
	"Two in one direction, then one over," he repeated the rules for the knight.
	"That's right," she said, turning to look at him, but he was looking at the board. "You should always protect your queen, Tarrin, but sometimes it's worth it to gamble with it a little.  Take risks," she said in a slightly throaty tone, leaning towards him.  "It can throw your opponent off."
	And then, to his shock, she blew gently in his ear.
	He nearly jumped out of his skin, but he didn't have time to even look at her, because the door opened and Kimmie came in.  Auli looked towards the door and glared at Kimmie in a most hostile manner, but her face became all sweet and light again by the time the Were-cat noticed the two of them sitting on the floor on the far side of the room.
	"Where have you been, Tarrin?" she demanded in a cross tone.  "I've been worried sick!"
	"I needed some time outside, Kimmie, and you were busy," he said.
	"You shouldn't have done that!"
	"I'm not helpless, Kimmie!" he said in a loud voice.  "There's nothing on this island that's going to hurt me, and I didn't go alone!  Dar and Auli here went with me.  We went to go visit with Sapphire, that's all!"
	Kimmie gave him a long stare, but then finally nodded.  "I guess I wasn't paying enough attention to you.  I'm sorry," she apologized.  "But I'm only doing what I was told to do, Tarrin.  I'm not about to disobey Triana any more than you are."  She looked at Auli, and then back to Tarrin, and her eyes turned strangely suspicious for a moment.  "Learning how to play chess?"
	He nodded, and Auli smiled up at her.  "He's a fast learner," she said.  "We were about to start a game."
	The way she said it seemed strange to him.  It was throaty, slow, almost purring, and he realized that her words were a cryptic flirtation with him, one that Kimmie wouldn't understand.  "But mother said I had to come home as soon as you got back, so I'd better get going.  We can play some other time, Tarrin," she said as she gracefully got up.  Tarrin did so as well, and while her back was to Kimmie, she winked at him.  And it was not a wink in amusement.  "You'd better practice.  I play to win," she warned with a slow smile, then she sauntered out of the room like she owned it.
	Kimmie watched her going with narrow eyes, and when the door closed, she came up and sat down in front of the chessboard.  "If you need some company, I'll be happy to oblige," she said with a kind smile.  "I'm sorry I ignored you earlier.  I'll make it up to you.  Want to play?"
	"Well, alright," he said, sitting down.  "She showed me how the move, but I think there's more to this than just knowing how they move."
	"You're right.  While we're waiting for dinner, I'll show you," she promised, setting up the board.
	Tarrin looked over Kimmie's shoulder, towards the door.  Auli had been flirting with him, and alot more seriously than she'd been flirting with Dar.  What was she up to?  She was a Sha'Kar, and he was a human.  Didn't that make them too different for that kind of thing?  He had to suppress a flush when he caught himself hoping that they weren't.  Auli was very pretty, and very funny, and very nice...and she flirted with him.  What if she was interested?  What would he do about it?
	That wasn't the right question to ask, he realized, his eyes still on the door.  The question was, what would she do about it.
	Given where they were going, when he would meet Jesmind and his daughter Jasana, he had the feeling that if Auli was serious, she was going to cause some serious friction.  Kimmie seemed rather mellow, but from everything he'd heard, Jesmind was not.  Jesmind was supposedly a firebrand, and if she laid claim on him, she may be violently opposed to Auli's little games.
	Tarrin had a sinking feeling that things in the Tower were going to be very sticky.
 
Chapter 2

	It was one of those times when there just wasn't very much to do.
	They'd gotten him up early, perhaps a bit too early.  The night before had been relatively boring for Tarrin, since everyone else was getting ready for the big day today.  The day when the Sha'Kar were going to use powerful magic to transport all of them to Suld.  The Sha'Kar had been busy packing, and since Tarrin only owned one pack, for him it took about five minutes to get ready.  Triana had gone back to Suld to talk to Jesmind, so he'd been left with Kimmie most of the night...which in itself wasn't a very bad thing.  Tarrin chafed at them hovering over him, but Kimmie seemed to understand how it made him feel, and strove to make his forced restriction as entertaining as possible with stories, conversation, and even games and books.  Tarrin didn't understand what they were talking about most of the time, but he had the feeling that the Sha'Kar had some kind of ability to talk to the Sorcerers in Suld.  But just because they could didn't mean that it was a good idea.  He heard Triana telling Kimmie before she left that the Sorcerers back in Suld were still in shock that the Sha'Kar were alive, and the Sha'Kar had decided that it would be best for them to only communicate with the Sorcerers in charge over there.
	That had been quite a surprise.  Triana had told him rather curtly when she woke him up that because of poor health, the Keeper of the Tower, some woman named Myriam Lar, had stepped down from her position as ruler and given the position to his sister.  Jenna was only thirteen years old...what business did she have being the ruler of the katzh-dashi?  But then he remembered that she was actually fifteen, nearly sixteen, and she was one of those sui'kun people.  The Sha'Kar said he was one, and they all fell over each other to be nice to him and ask him what he wanted them to do.  They thought of these sui'kun people as kings or royalty or something, and some calculating part of him saw the advantage in making Jenna the Keeper.  If the Sha'Kar were as quick to obey her as they were to obey him, they'd need her in that position of power to legitimize her authority in the eyes of both the humans and the Sha'Kar.  There were bound to be some problems in bringing the Sha'Kar back to the Tower after a thousand years, so maybe the Tower was taking steps to make sure that thing went as smoothly as possible.  Maybe this Myriam Lar really wasn't sick.  Maybe that Goddess woman had told her to step down and stand aside for Jenna, for the good of the Tower.  If the woman had half the reaction to that Goddess that Tarrin did, she'd walk through fire at her request.
	Of course, thinking about that gave him a headache.  It delved into those areas where Tarrin's lost memory tried to bubble back up, and that invariably caused him pain.  Especially every time he thought of Myriam Lar.  Odds were, there was some kind of history between the two of them that the others hadn't told him about, but Tarrin couldn't remember it.  He only knew that for some reason, her name sent strange feelings through him that he couldn't explain, nor could he really identify them.
	There were other things to think about, though, things that made less sense and caused him as much a headache.  For some reason, he was of two minds about Auli.  He liked her alot, since she was alot of fun, but her blowing in his ear had completely scrambled his idea of her.  He'd only known her that one day, and he'd had a great deal of fun with her.  He thought of her as a good friend.  But when she flirted with him that way, she seemed to cross some kind of line in his mind.  He'd noticed that she was very pretty and had a very appealing figure, but hadn't thought of her that way until she went and advertised the fact that she was interested.  Once she had, she'd let the chickens out of the henhouse, and now he was thinking about it.
	And that was the core of his dilemma.  He felt he had some kind of an obligation to Kimmie, because of who he had been and how she felt about him.  But he wasn't that person anymore, and there was no guarantee that he ever would be again.  Kimmie represented who he was, but Auli's invitation urged him to continue on as he was, to not just stop in his life and try to regain what was lost.  From what he'd heard, he hadn't been a very happy or nice person, and he was just starting to consider whether or not he wanted to go back to that.
	He did want his memory back, though, and once he got it, he'd look back and decide what he wanted to do.  But until then, he wasn't just going to sit and wait.  There were many things to see, many things to do, many things to experience.  He had to keep living, keep going.  He didn't want to hurt Kimmie, but he didn't want to become stagnant as Triana wanted him to do, to just sit and do nothing, see nothing, be nothing until they could return him back to what they thought he was supposed to be.  He did want his memory back, he wanted to know who he had been, what he had done, and what kind of life he had been trying to build for himself.  He wasn't going to turn his back on who he was, because that would be dishonoring his own memory.  But on the other hand, he wanted to see things, experience things as he was now, and when he got back his memory, hopefully the combination of old and new could come together and make the best decision for his future.
	Auli.  He liked her, and he wondered just how interested she was in him.  From what Dar had told him about her last night, as the two of them played chess, Auli had been the island's hussy back when all the Sha'Kar were being mentally controlled.  Was her flirting just an echo of that past, or was she truly interested in him?  What level of interest did she really have?  She'd flirted with Dar too, was she only interested in playing with them, or did she want a relationship?  It was too much of a gray area.  Tarrin wasn't going to hold her past against her, since she couldn't help it from what he'd been told.  The mind control had made all the Sha'Kar act like Auli to one degree or another.  He could certainly see it in them when they went out.  The Sha'Kar would blush a little when they met members of the opposite sex, probably past romantic interests.  The Sha'Kar weren't half as morally strait-laced as the people in Aldreth were--after all, they did bathe in company and weren't quite as set against showing skin as where he came from--but some of them had seemed to cross some line in their culture that was not to be crossed back when they were under control.  He knew they were a bit embarassed about it, but he hoped they didn't dwell on it too much.  One couldn't beat one's self over the head over things over which one had no control.  They should just forgive themselves and others and then move on.  It would be best for all of them.
	Held against her or not, Tarrin couldn't deny an attraction to Auli.  She was very pretty and she had a very attractive figure.  But until he felt more comfortable with everything, he decided that maybe it was a good idea not to pursue things with her.  He'd be a friend to her, though.  She was too much fun to be with for him to avoid her.  Besides, he needed to talk with her, get to know her a little so he could figure out if she was just flirting for the fun of it, or if she'd been serious.  That look she gave Kimmie certainly looked serious, but then again, not only was she a girl, but she was a non-human girl.  Girls were mystery enough, but one from another culture?  One that wasn't human?  She'd be ten times harder to figure out.
	That seemed the best course of action.
	The boredom of waiting for the Sha'Kar to get up and get ready at least gave him plenty of time to think about all that.  They were all standing just outside the fences in a large open area on the outskirts of town, and they weren't alone.  Excited human servants were around them, gabbing excitedly at the times to come, when they would be free of the island.  All of them had agreed to serve in the Tower as they gradually adjusted to freedom, since none of them were prepared to deal with the radical shift in lifestyle that would come with freedom.  At least they were wise enough to understand that.  There were also many Sha'Kar there, gathered with their trunks stacked in the center of the mass.  The youngers looked extremely unhappy, since they were about to leave a life of pampered luxury for the demanding life that would come in the Tower.
	That had been a rather amusing little event.  Some of the youngers had actually tried to rebel the night before, stating flatly that the island was their home, and they were not going to leave it.  The elders among them had debated, argued, shouted, even ordered them to give up on the idea, but they were all adamant.  They were happy on the island, and they were not about to leave.  They would continue with their lives of parties and fun, and not an elder was going to tell them that they couldn't do it.  Ianelle, that clever fox, gave in to their demand and told them that they were more than welcome to remain behind, where they would be forever exiled from the culture of the Sha'Kar, and not be visited.  For any reason.  And then she told them quite absently that since the servants were technically still slaves, and they were owned by the patron or matron of each house, who all happened to be elders, that meant that all the servants would be leaving in the morning.  All the serving girls, all the cleaners, all the pages, all the farmers, all the food gatherers, every single human servant.  The youngers were more than welcome to remain behind, but they'd have to feed, clothe, and support themselves.  They could have their grand houses and their parties, but not much else.
	It had been a devastatingly effective tactic.  Faced with the prospect of having to grub in the dirt to feed themselves, the youngers had the wind sucked right out of their sails.  And the human Sorcerers that had sided with the youngers quickly jumped ship, knowing that any human left behind, Sorcerer or not, would be seen as a servant in the making.  That ended that rebellion faster than any other thing possibly could have done so.
	For that reason, the Sha'Kar around them weren't all that good company.  The youngest looked very put out and surly, and the elders all looked very aggravated with their children.  That gave the place a feeling of hostility that put Kimmie and Triana a bit on edge, making them pull in a little closer to Tarrin, which made him hostile.  The others with them hadn't come out yet, staying behind with Arlan, Iselde, and Allyn to make sure they'd gotten everything from their manor house that they wanted to take.  The only one there was Dar, who in the days since his loss of memory had become one of his closer friends.  He liked all the others, and Allia was probably the one he liked the most, but Dar was about his age, and he just felt comfortable with him.  Besides, Allia spent alot of time letting Allyn fawn over her.  Tarrin had never seen a man more totally en