My room had a spartan but pleasing decor relying on natural wood and stone to achieve a warm attractiveness, or that was the way it was when I fell asleep that night. I woke the next morning to a riot of colour blazing forth from flounces and frills and preposterous ornamentation; a richness of absurdity and lunatic juxtapositions that brought forth a gasp of reluctant laughter from me.
I was still smiling when my maid, an ex-slave called Caleh, came in with my hot water and tea. The girl was so astounded she almost dropped the tray.
‘I thought perhaps it wouldn’t be such a surprise to you,’ I said. ‘Doesn’t this sort of thing happen all the time?’
‘Well, yes, sometimes. But not quite like this in someone’s bedroom.’ She looked around in bewilderment. ‘I mean, this is wild.’ She reached up to touch a tumble of glass wind chimes that glowed with colour. The music they played was tuneful, a delightful gaiety of notes. Indicating the mobile bouncing on the other side of the room, she added, ‘I’ve never seen hanging chamberpots before.’
I waved my hand helplessly. ‘Why, do you think?’
Caleh considered. ‘I think it was to make you laugh, Magoria.’ And that was perhaps the best explanation I was ever to receive.
I thought back to my time inside the sands of the Shiver Barrens. There, the Mirage Makers had not seemed to be entities given to humour, but the Mirage itself did seem to be a collection of the amusing, the absurd: the bridges that crossed nothing, the road that went nowhere, the street that became a river. Perhaps the Mirage Makers had been touched by my desolation, the bleakness of my lonely, dream-haunted night.
I dressed and readied myself to meet this new world, this new life.
It was Garis who told me, just after breakfast, that the first thing I had to do was to take part in a dedication ceremony, a ritual of allegiance all Magor had to undergo, usually around puberty. ‘But you sort of missed out then,’ he said cheerfully, ‘so Temellin has arranged it for you this morning. That is—’ He gave me a sharp look. ‘You don’t look so well. Would you rather wait till some other day?’
I was touched by his concern; he was only eighteen—still partly naive boy, still partly feckless adolescent and quixotic romantic—but partly responsible adult too, with an adult’s understanding. I liked his exuberance and humour, his eagerness to make something of me.
‘I’ll be all right,’ I said. ‘What do I have to do?’
‘Oh, nothing much,’ he said vaguely. ‘Just wait in your room for the time being. I’ll fix it all.’
He must have spoken to Caleh, because fifteen minutes later she came in with five or six borrowed anoudain over her arm. ‘You have to wear something nice for your dedication ceremony,’ she said. ‘It’s a very important day for one of the Magor.’
Thankfully, I reflected that at least I wouldn’t look as ridiculous in a ceremonial anoudain as I did in a ceremonial wrap. The green outfit I chose was plain, but it hung softly and, although the Mirage Makers had neglected to supply my room with a mirror, I suspected it made me appear more feminine than usual. I also wore my sword, in a borrowed scabbard sent around by Garis, for the first time. It felt strange hanging there at my hip and had a tendency to get in the way. As a compeer I’d always relied on a knife for protection, preferring the stealth possible in its use and disliking the cumbersome obviousness of a sword. Besides, Tyranian women did not wear swords, and the last thing I had wanted to do in Tyr was draw attention to my oddities.
Shortly afterwards, Garis escorted me down to the main meeting hall where all the Magoroth were waiting for me. The moment I entered the room, they drew their swords and held them aloft in salute so that the hall blazed, the light so bright I found myself blinking like a night bird in sunlight.
Temellin stepped forward out of the crowd to smile at me, a gentle smile of encouragement and support. ‘We, the Magoroth of Kardiastan, have come to escort you to the Chamber of the Tablets of the Covenant,’ he said formally. He indicated I should take his arm, but he was careful not to look at me as I did so.
We walked in procession, Temellin and I in front, the Magoroth behind, their swords still drawn and held aloft to light our way. No one spoke. In Tyr, at any ceremonial procession, there would have been rose petals strewn in our path and horn fanfares as we passed—but this was Kardiastan, and the emphasis was on the solemnity of the occasion rather than any grandiose display or pointless ritual.
Within minutes, I was lost. We proceeded along one passage after another, many of them sloping downwards, others passing through tunnels or crossing bridges or leading down steps—and still more steps—until I was sure we must be somewhere under the ground. I wanted to ask, but faced with the funereal silence around me, I didn’t dare. Finally we halted in a large windowless hall. At one end there were massive wooden doors, now closed.
Temellin released my hand. ‘Beyond those doors are the Tablets of the Covenant,’ he explained. ‘You are to read them all. Once you have done so, you will return here. We will not enter with you, but it is customary for whoever enters to select someone of the Magor to accompany him or her, someone who will testify you have read all the tablets and understood their meaning. Who would you like to accompany you?’
Over his shoulder I saw Pinar looking at me, eyes smouldering. ‘Garis,’ I said.
If Temellin thought I had slighted him by naming another, he did not let it show. He inclined his head and beckoned the youth forward. Garis stared at Temellin in consternation, then, as the Mirager did not react, looked in my direction with a pleased smile, before finally managing a more solemn demeanour as he remembered the seriousness of the occasion.
‘Unbuckle your sword and leave it with me,’ Temellin said. ‘It will only be returned to you if you take the oath to obey the terms of the Covenant.’ I did as he asked, and felt a pang as I surrendered up the weapon; I had felt it was already rightfully mine.
Then Garis and I turned towards the door at the other end of the hall. It swung open as we approached, although no one had touched it, to reveal an immense cavern beyond. Just over the threshold I paused, momentarily unable, in my awe, to move. While I stood rooted, the doors swung shut behind us.
The cavern itself appeared to be a natural chamber of rock and, although large, there was nothing spectacular about it; what caught my attention was what it contained. At its centre a number of shapes glowed with a gentle silver light, a glow as beautiful as starlight, and each of the shapes was as large as a man. Five of them rising up out of the sandy floor of the cavern like moonlit standing stones on a moor.
I walked forward, Garis beside me.
The shapes were tablets, not—as I had expected—of clay, but of light; of starlight if that were possible. And the texts on each of them were etched with the blackness of a lack of light, as if the letters had been written with the darkness of night.
‘Holy shit,’ Garis said at my side, with a distinct lack of reverence, ‘the Mirage Makers have been mucking about with things again. When I came to read the Covenant a couple of years ago, it was carved on ordinary stone tablets—now look at it!’
‘I’m sure this must be much prettier.’ I peered at the first of the tablets. ‘I’m not sure it’s going to be easier, though. Garis, this is all written in Kardi.’
‘Of course! What did you expect?’
‘I didn’t expect anything,’ I confessed. ‘But I don’t read Kardi well, and this stuff is archaic—’ Laboriously, I began to spell out the words, hesitating and stumbling over unfamiliar letters. ‘And where is—no, whereas thou who shalt thine eyes—It’ll take me a week to read all this, and then I’m not sure I’ll understand it.’
No sooner had I made the complaint than the language on the tablets changed, and I was reading good modern Tyranian. ‘Ah, now that’s more like it,’ I said. ‘And you who read this—’
Garis looked taken aback. ‘I hope the Mirage Makers remember to change it to Kardi again,’ he said finally. ‘Korden would have a fit if he ever found out the Covenant was written in Tyranian!’
I read silently on.
Part of what was there—the reasons for the necessity of such a covenant—I knew already because Temellin had told me. The first tablet related the story of how the Mirage Makers and the Magor had been hurting one another with their different forms of mirage-making, and how this Covenant had been drawn up to solve the problem.
It seemed to me, as I read the second, third and fourth tablets, that the Magor had been the recipients of the better end of the bargain: they’d acquired the Magor swords and, through the swords, the cabochons, which enhanced their power. At the same time, the Mirage Makers promised they’d take every care their mirage-making would not harm people, whether Magor or not. In order to ensure there were no accidental deaths as a result of their mirages, the Mirage Makers would withdraw to the land beyond the Shiver Barrens. In return, the Magor promised not to indulge in mirage-making anywhere in any form, and not to cross the Shiver Barrens. And they were to take a solemn oath, generation after generation, that their powers were not to be used for personal gain. They were to use their enhanced abilities to better the life of the non-Magor or to heal those in need; they could use their powers to protect their land, but never in the pursuit of wholly selfish motives. The Mirager was to be obliged to take an additional oath that he would always act with the consensus of the majority of his Magoroth peers.
The fifth tablet made it clear that if any of the rules mentioned on the preceding three tablets were broken by the Magor, then future generations would not receive their swords or cabochons—which raised an interesting conundrum: the Magor now not only lived in the Mirage, but had brought ordinary Kardis here. Why, then, were the newly born still receiving their cabochons; why were the adolescent Magoroth still receiving their swords? The Covenant had been broken from the moment Solad had sent the ten Magoroth children and their teachers across the Shiver Barrens—yet the Covenant was still in force.
I stood for a long while in front of that tablet, and the conclusion I came to was as unpalatable as it was inescapable. The Mirage Makers had needed something further from the Magor, something they knew the Magor would normally deny them, something they needed so badly they had struck a new covenant with Solad to get it. Paradoxically, in so doing, the old covenant had doubtless been broken a second time: Solad had acted without the consensus of his peers. And the Mirage Makers had done nothing about that, either…
I knew then that my reasoning had been right. Temellin knew what the new covenant was. And so did I. An unborn child in exchange for safety. Nothing else made sense.
I turned away from the tablet, afraid.
At least, I thought cynically, I could tell Brand that what kept the powerful Magor from the kind of corruption found among the rulers of the Exaltarchy wasn’t entirely the kind of altruism he may have imagined. The Magor were scared that their children—that all future generations of Magor—would be denied cabochons and swords if they, the parents, misbehaved. Human nature being what it is, there would always be the odd individual who would misuse his or her powers, but the cost was high enough that others would soon unite against them. Not such a bad idea; the Mirage Makers had been deviously clever.
I turned to Garis. ‘Let’s go,’ I said. ‘I’ve read it all.’
‘And do you understand it?’
‘Yes, I think so. Seems fairly straightforward to me.’ It wasn’t the Covenant that was confusing; it was the events of recent years concerning it.
Back in the hall beyond the cavern, the Magoroth were waiting for us. When the doors swung open again, we faced Temellin once more. He looked not at me, but at Garis. ‘Has the Magoria read and understood the Tablets of the Covenant?’
‘She has,’ he replied.
Temellin turned to me. ‘Then do you solemnly swear not to indulge in mirage-making, and not to use your powers for personal gain or in pursuit of selfish motives? Do you solemnly swear to use your enhanced abilities to protect the land of Kardiastan and to better the life of the people you serve? Do you solemnly swear that once it is safe for us to leave the Mirage, you will do so, never to return, and you will do everything in your power to protect the Mirage from violation? Do you swear to uphold the decisions of your Mirager, as sanctioned by the majority of his peers?
‘If you are prepared to swear these things, place your left hand on the hilt of your sword and say: I do so swear.’
It should have been easy to say. I’d made up my mind, hadn’t I? I’d chosen Kardiastan over Tyrans, Temellin over Favonius, the Magor over the Brotherhood.
But now, faced with Temellin’s love, the ache I saw and felt in him as he stretched out my sword to me, the words were hard to enunciate. There was an irrevocability about them—and I, who had once found it so easy to utter a falsehood or practise a deception, knew this time I could only speak the truth, although it might not have been quite the same truth everyone else in that hall envisioned.
I stretched out my hand and closed it about the hilt. My cabochon slipped into its place and the sword flamed; I could feel the power throbbing.
‘Yes,’ I said, and committed myself to a land, to a new way of life. ‘I do so swear.’
And the Magoroth, as one, cried, ‘Fah-Ke-Cabochon-rez! Hail the power of the cabochon!’
I had thought it would be easy enough to tell Temellin the truth about my life in Tyrans.
It wasn’t.
For a start, I never seemed to have the opportunity. I saw him often enough, that day and in the ones that followed. I usually ate in the dining hall with the other Magoroth; I attended all the Magor meetings held to discuss the strategies to be adopted against Tyrans and he was always there—but I never saw him alone. He was always surrounded by others, listening to what they had to say with his head cocked to one side in a way now so familiar to me; or talking, moving his hands to illustrate a point; or laughing and carrying others along on his amusement. He spoke to me often, asking my opinion, including me in the discussions, inquiring after my progress with my study of Magor skills.
But never alone.
When I went to him to let him know I wanted a private conversation, he turned from me and draped a friendly arm around Pinar’s shoulders. ‘Do you know Pinar is a cousin, Shirin?’ he asked, not looking at me. ‘Her mother and our parents were siblings. We intend to marry as soon as the necessary arrangements are made.’
Pinar smiled pleasantly. ‘I hope we’ll be friends, Shirin.’
‘I’m sure we have no reason not to be,’ I replied, my voice smooth with deliberate blandness. They both heard my lie, of course, just as Temellin and I had heard hers. And when I turned away a little later, with my intended request still unspoken, I caught the look in Temellin’s eyes: pure, aching hunger—and I wondered how much Pinar would tolerate if she ever saw that look.
I knew my delay in telling Temellin the truth about myself was dangerous. The longer I left the telling of who I was and what I knew, the harder it would be to explain my delay in telling it. It wasn’t that the Mirage was in imminent danger from the Stalwarts—it would surely still be several months more before the legions arrived at the edge of the Mirage—but people would wonder at my reluctance to have given the information. How could I explain the truth: that I didn’t want Temellin to know of my past? When his eyes were on me, I was ashamed of having been a compeer; the thought he might despise me for what I had been was as unpleasant as his absence from my pallet. And I dreaded the poison Pinar would spread about the Legata Ligea; she might be able to turn Temellin’s trust into suspicion and contempt. Nor did I want to betray Favonius and his friends. I had found satisfaction and companionship in Favonius’s arms; the thought I might cause his death was lacerating. He didn’t deserve my betrayal.
Yet I also knew I must tell; if I didn’t, the invasion of the Stalwarts would come as a surprise with inevitably tragic results; if I didn’t, sooner or later someone would recognise and name me. Already Aemid might be talking to other Kardis, spreading a warning about Ligea Gayed. There would be other slaves arriving from Madrinya or Sandmurram who might know my face…
Unfortunately, with Temellin’s deliberate unavailability, it was so easy for me to keep postponing my confession. So easy to rationalise the irrational, to say it would be better to put it off until my fellow Magor had come to know and trust me more. Easy, and stupid.
Perhaps love makes cowards of us all.
It wasn’t easy to settle into my new life. I had thought that as a Magoria, as Temellin’s sister, I would have a position of power. I was soon disabused of that notion. I was included in the councils, but anything I said was largely disregarded; with the exception of Temellin and a few others, I was considered to be a pseudo-Kardi and therefore untrustworthy. I had returned the Mirager’s sword, and taken the oath of the Covenant, yet neither helped. It wasn’t hard to see Pinar behind most of the distrust, but I couldn’t counterattack without jeopardising my position and hurting Temellin.
Garis defended me every chance he got, even telling the Magoroth how the Mirage Makers had changed the Covenant tablets for me to make them both beautiful and more understandable. He’d thought that would help. Instead, it alarmed those who shared Pinar’s distrust, prompting them into pressing for more restrictions on what I was made privy to, or what I was taught. ‘We can’t rely on the Mirage Makers to protect us against treachery,’ they said. ‘We have to do it ourselves.’
I was humiliated by my powerlessness, but trapped in my own deceit and woefully ignorant of all things Kardi, there wasn’t much I could do about it. Temellin did try. He sensed my affinity for power and something in him recognised and sympathised with my need for challenge, but in the face of Pinar’s intransigence and the general prejudice against me, it was hard for him to offer me much.
I was also lonely. I hadn’t mastered the art of the two-level conversation the Magor took for granted. They spoke to one another as a matter of course in both words and quick flares of emotions. Sometimes they used words only as signposts, and conducted much of a conversation in cleverly differentiated displays of emotional reaction. They delighted in word plays where something was said, but immediately negated by the accompanying flash of a contrary sentiment, in a form of sardonic wit. In understanding their conversations, I was always a step or two behind, missing the nuances.
Worse, I was unable to utilise my emotions as speech. Having schooled myself always to hide the way I felt, I found it difficult to use deliberate emotional display in order to give another level of meaning to my words. In the end, the Magoroth spoke to me the way they did to the non-Magoroth: in ordinary speech. They were polite enough, but the end result was a subtle exclusion from their ranks.
The person who kept me from going mad with frustration was Garis. If he did use emotion to speak to me, he slowed it down so that I could understand. He took his duties to me seriously and wanted no misunderstanding between us. He’d come to me in my room immediately after the oath-taking ceremony that first morning and told me it was time for my first lesson. ‘We’ll start with the art of building wards,’ he’d said without preamble. ‘Now the first thing you have to be aware of—’
There were two kinds of power available to a wearer of the gold cabochon, I discovered. The first was power that came through the sword, the second was power straight from the cabochon. ‘All the most powerful wards are built with the aid of the sword,’ he said. ‘So these are not available to the two lower ranks of the Magor.’ He unsheathed his sword and fitted it into his left palm. ‘There’s one thing you must never do, and that’s put your cabochon into another’s sword hilt.’
‘Why not?’ I asked, guiltily remembering I had done just that with Temellin’s weapon.
‘Once you have tuned a sword, any sword, to your cabochon, it can never be turned against you, even in the hands of an enemy. Nor can it be used to build a ward you could not break. Of course, none of the Magoroth would turn his sword on another Magor, but to deliberately tune another’s sword to your cabochon is to show your distrust of a fellow Magor, and that would be a terrible insult. It is never done.’
‘I’ll remember that,’ I said gravely, and he went on with the lesson. He showed me how to draw a square of protection around myself with sword and conjurations. Inside this, I—and anyone else—would be safe from intrusion. He also showed me how to achieve the converse: to confine a person, or people, within a warded area. ‘They are not actually as much use as you’d think,’ he warned. ‘You can’t make them too big, not much larger than this room, in fact. If you did, you’d be sick for a month. It takes health and strength to build wards. Moreover, protection wards for yourself only work if you stay within them, so you can’t use them while travelling. They won’t last forever, either; nor can you keep rebuilding them. You’d tire yourself out.’ Nothing was done without a price. Each time something was warded, each time conjurations were uttered, personal strength and sword strength were depleted, a depletion only time and rest would cure. Use magic too much and you could end up prone to illness, dying of anything from pneumonia to apoplexy.
‘Tell me about healing power,’ I asked him. ‘How effective is it?’ Can you save the life of someone who has a baby ripped from her?
‘It’s not as effective as we’d like,’ he admitted. ‘My mother has made it her speciality. She says that all we can do is heal something that has a chance of healing anyway. We make the chance a certainty. And we speed up the healing process.’
‘No miracles?’
‘No miracles.’
As the days went by, Garis progressed to more active uses of the sword. He taught me how to use it in a more conventional way, then how to supplement fighting strokes with its power. I learned how to send forth a narrow beam of cold light that could sear or melt anything in its path for three or four paces beyond the tip of the weapon, and I began to learn how to control the power so that it could be used for delicate tasks—such as breaking open a slave collar.
I was determined to learn it all. One day, I would put it to good use. If Pinar and others of the Magoroth thought I was going to be some kind of wall decoration, never actually doing anything except exist, they would have to rethink; I was going to be a power in this land.
In the meantime, I was glad to tire myself out. It helped me to sleep. It helped me to forget that somewhere out there the Mirage Makers might have an interest in my death because they coveted a child; that somewhere out there was the Ravage, which apparently loathed us all; that right here within the Maze, the man I loved was about to marry a woman who had tried to kill me.
And so I was grateful for those nights when I was so tired I would collapse onto my pallet and drop into an exhausted sleep that kept me insensible till dawn.
Inevitably, when I awoke in the first light of the day, it was to find a new room waiting for me. The Mirage Makers were trying everything in their repertoire—a whole gamut of humorous idiocies—to find something to drive away the hollowness inside me. I knew there was nothing that would help, but they went on trying. Far from making me happy, however, their attention sent shivers of dark fear through me. I remembered walking the Shiver Barrens; I remembered the visions. I touched the place where my child grew, and wondered if the Mirage Makers worked to please me because they wanted him healthy—for them to take. I tried to take comfort from knowing the Convenant forbade them to kill. In my more optimistic moments I thought perhaps they just wanted to show their benevolence so that I would never use my powers against them, never use my Magor sword to spill their lifeblood as one vision had shown.
I remembered it vividly. My hand clasping another that was the representation of the Mirage Makers. Then two images: one where the hands melted into one another in unity, the other where I severed the Mirage Maker’s hand in a way that suggested I killed him. Them. Killed them all…
The future wasn’t sure. I had a choice. I just had to work out which choice was best for me. For my son. The trouble was, how could I tell?
I saw little of Brand during those days. He had elected to join the troops the Magor were training, troops to be used against Tyranian legions. The ordinary Kardis were enthusiastic soldiers, and Brand was an apt pupil even though he was coming to it relatively old. He was soon promoted to officer rank, and was a popular leader, inspiring loyalty in spite of his foreign blood.
He no longer had a problem with the language. Ever since we’d arrived in Kardiastan, he’d been building on what he’d already learned from Aemid and me over the years, improving every day until now he was fluent. He never lost his accent, but as far as I could see, most of the Kardi girls seemed to think that was part of his charm.
I wondered sometimes why he elected to become a soldier. Boredom? Or revenge? Perhaps a little of both. Tyrans had made him a slave, now here was a chance for him to fight the Exaltarchy and help bring about a nation’s freedom. I wondered, too, why the Magor trusted him so much. I asked Garis that, and he laughed. ‘Brand may be able to hide his feelings from you, Shirin, and sometimes from us too. But he can’t hide lies. Temellin believes Brand is an honourable man.’
I watched the troops exercise one morning, and it was a revelation. Just to see his rapport with the men, the clever way he could manipulate the small squad under his command into doing better, and still have them admire him as a man. He wasn’t like Temellin—he had none of Temellin’s easy camaraderie—but he’d earned their respect and admiration in spite of being an outsider.
Yet as I watched, I felt sick inside. This man had been a slave for most of his life, deemed to be unworthy of my friendship, considered to be the property of others, with no recourse to the very laws that Tyrans considered its finest achievements. For twenty years he’d had the same rights as an animal: none. I could have had him whipped, or sold, or starved, or killed. I could have given him away to one of my friends to bed.
In Tyr, we referred to our slaves not as men or women, but as ‘speaking tools’.
And as I watched Brand, that memory made me sick with shame. Twenty years. What a Vortexdamned waste. And then another thought came, so obvious, yet revelatory nonetheless: how much untapped potential there was in Tyrans’s thousands of slaves…
Now, at least, Brand seemed content enough, and had taken up with my maid, Caleh: a vivacious girl with a kind heart. She had been badly abused during her time as a slave and had been man-shy, until Brand helped her, with infinite gentleness and complete lack of his usual cynicism, to forget.
Yet sometimes when he looked at me, even with his emotions shielded, I could tell his desire was as strong as ever.
The day before the scheduled wedding of the Mirager and his cousin, two incidents broke the routine of the previous days for me. The first occurred when I was alone in the training hall after Garis and I had been practising some swordplay. I put my weapon down on a bench and wiped my sweaty face and neck with a towel, thinking of a hot bath and a rest, trying not to think of the ceremony planned for the next day.
When I heard the sound of the door opening behind me I did not bother to turn, or even to reach out with my mind to see who it was—until a sudden pain shot into my hand from my cabochon.
I whirled to find Pinar standing there, smiling, her left hand fitting tight around the hilt of my sword. ‘First rule of a wise Magor, Shirin. Keep your sword in its sheath at your belt.’
I felt like a lump of mountain ice on sale along Tyr’s Marketwalk. She could have killed me, right then, and we both knew it. I said, ‘I did not think I needed to do so here.’
‘And I never thought I would need to protect myself by fitting my cabochon to another’s hilt.’
‘You have no need to fear me, Pinar. I would not hurt my brother’s wife.’ At least, I didn’t think I would. Not if she behaved herself…
‘You know the significance of what I have just done, I think. Your sword cannot harm me.’
‘I am more concerned I cannot build a ward to keep you out,’ I said and wrested the weapon from her hand. She didn’t resist. I took a deep controlling breath and raised my eyes to her face, expecting to see her aglow with triumph at what she had done, but there was no exultation there. Only a wrenching anxiety.
‘I can’t make them see what you are—’ she whispered. ‘You’re going to destroy us all, and I can’t make them see it.’ I think we both heard the unspoken words she could have added: and I can’t make him love me. For a moment I was touched by her tragedy. Then she turned on her heel and walked out.
My anger died, but I still loathed the woman.
I made my way out of the practice room just as Selwith and his wife Markess, two of the original Ten, came in. They were followed by their students, an unruly group of Kardi youths about to have instruction in the art of swordplay. I brushed by them rudely, still feeling the warmth Pinar’s hand had left on my sword hilt.
The second incident occurred that night, some time after I had fallen asleep. A sound awoke me and I opened my eyes, knowing someone had entered my room. My first thought was of Pinar, but an instant later I knew it was not the Magoria who stood just inside my door, no more than a black outline.
I did not speak and neither of us moved.
‘All you have to do is say one word, Shirin,’ he said finally. ‘Give me hope.’
I wet my lips, but even so, my whisper was scarcely audible above the sound of my breathing. ‘I can’t.’
He left without another word and the door closed silently behind him, yet the action was as final as the last breath of a dying man.