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lay quietly until they had finished; then they rose and left.
Thrall sat upright and was surprised to see Sergeant standing there, his hairy arms folded across his
broad chest. Thrall did not speak, wondering what new torment was coming.
I pulled em off you, said Sergeant quietly. But not before they d had their sport. Blackmoore had
some . . . business . . . he needed to talk w me about. I m sorry for that, lad. I m right sorry. You
amazed me in the ring today. Blackmoore ought to be prouder n hell o you. Instead. . . . His gruff voice
trailed off. Well, I wanted to make sure you knew that you didn t deserve what he did. What they did.
You did fine, lad. Just fine. Better get some sleep.
He seemed about to say something more, then nodded and left. Thrall lay back down, absently noting
that they had changed the straw. It was fresh and clean, no longer clotted with his blood.
He appreciated what Sergeant had done, and believed the man. But it was too little, too late.
He would not let himself be used like this any longer. Once, he would have cringed and vowed to be
better, to do something to earn the love and respect he so desperately craved. Now, he knew he would
never find it here, not as long as Blackmoore owned him.
He would not sleep. He would use this time to plan. He reached for the tablet and stylus he kept in the
sack, and wrote a note to the only person he could trust: Tari.
On the next dark moons, I plan to escape.
SIX
The grate above his head allowed Thrall to observe the moonslight. He was careful to give no hint, not to
the trainees who had beaten him, not to Sergeant, and certainly not to Blackmoore (who treated Thrall as
if nothing had happened) about his profound revelation. He was as obsequious as ever, for the first time
noticing how he hated himself for that behavior. He kept his eyes lowered, although he knew himself to
be the equal of any human. He went docilely into the irons, though he could have torn any four guards to
bloody bits before they could have restrained him without his cooperation. In no way did he change his
behavior, not in the cell nor out of it, not in the ring nor on the training field.
For the first day or two, Thrall noticed Sergeant watching him sharply, as if expecting to see the changes
Thrall was determined not to show. But he did not speak to Thrall, and Thrall was careful not to arouse
suspicion. Let them think they had broken him. His only regret was that he would not be present to see
the look on Blackmoore s face when he discovered his pet orc had flown.
For the first time in his life, Thrall had something to look forward to with anticipation. It roused a hunger
in him he had never known before. He had always concentrated so intensely on avoiding beatings and
earning praise that he had never permitted himself to really think long and hard about what it meant to be
free. To walk in the sunlight without chains, to sleep under the stars. He had never been outside at night in
his life. What would that be like?
His imagination, fueled by books and by letters from Tari, was finally allowed to fly. He lay awake in his
straw bed wondering what it would be like to finally meet one of his people. He had read, of course, all
the information the humans had on the vile green monsters from the blackest demon pits. And there
was that disturbing incident when the orc had wrenched himself free to charge Thrall. If only he could
have found out what the orc was saying! But his rudimentary orcish did not extend that far.
He would learn, one day, what that orc had said. He would find his people. Thrall might have been
raised by humans, but little enough had been done to win his love and loyalty. He was grateful to
Sergeant and Tari, for they had taught him concepts of honor and kindness. But because of their
teachings, Thrall better understood Blackmoore, and realized that the Lieutenant General had none of
those qualities. And as long as Thrall was owned by him, the orc would never receive them in his own
life.
The moons, one large and silver and one smaller and a shade of blue-green, were new tonight. Tari had
responded to his declaration with an offer to assist him, as he had known in his heart she would. Between
the two of them, they had been able to come up with a plan that had a strong likelihood of working. But
he did not know when that plan would go into effect, and so he waited for the signal. And waited.
He had fallen into a fitful slumber when the clanging of a bell startled him awake. Instantly alert, he went
to the farthest wall of his cell. Over the years, Thrall had painstakingly worked a single stone loose and
had hollowed out the space behind it. It was here that he stored his most precious things: his letters from
Tari. Now he moved the stone, found the letters, and wrapped them up in the only other thing that meant
anything to him, his swaddling cloth with the white wolf against the blue field. For a brief moment, he held
them to his chest. Then he turned, and awaited his chance.
The bell continued to ring, and now shouts and screams joined it. Thrall s sensitive nose, much more
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