Paran grunted. “My shadow's a crowded place, these days.” His eyes fell once again on the Hounds. The creatures watched him still, their eyes faint coals. I'll have you yet. As if fanned by his silent promise, the red glows sharpened.
The god resumed speaking, but the world had darkened around Paran, fading, dwindling, until the voice was gone, and with it all awareness but the faint, renewed spinning of a coin.
An unknown span of time passed in which Paran wandered through memories he had thought long lost-his days as a child clinging to his mother's dress and taking his first, tottering steps; the nights of storm when he raced down the chill hallway to his parents” bedroom, tiny feet slapping on the cold stone; holding the hands of his two sisters as they stood waiting on the hard cobbles of the courtyard-waiting, waiting for someone. The images seemed to lurch sideways in his head. His mother's dress? No, an old woman in the service of the household. Not his parents” bedroom, but those of the servants; and there, in the courtyard with his sisters, they'd stood half the morning, awaiting the arrival of their mother and father, two people they barely knew.
In his mind scenes replayed themselves, moments of mysterious import, hidden significance, pieces of a puzzle he couldn't recognize, shaped by hands not his own and with a purpose he couldn't fathom.
A tremor of fear travelled the length of his thoughts as he sensed that something-someone-was busy reordering the formative events of his life, turning them on end and casting them into the present new shadows. Somehow, the guiding hand: played. With him, with his life.
It seemed an odd kind of death. Voices reached him.
“Aw, hell.” A face bent close to Paran's own, looked into his open blank eyes. The face was Picker's. “He didn't stand a chance,” she said. Sergeant Antsy spoke from a few feet away. “Nobody in the Ninth would've done him like this,” he said. “Not right here in the city.”
Picker reached out and touched the chest wound, her fingers surprisingly soft on his torn flesh. “This isn't Kalam's work.”
“You all right here?” Antsy asked. “I'm going to get Hedge and Mallet, and whoever else has shown up.”
“Go ahead,” Picker replied, seeking and finding the second wound, eight inches below the first. “This one came later, right-handed and weak.”