"Kenash," he averred, not repeating the fact that he was, in fact, a knight. A fallen one, perhaps, more akin to the dark paladins of Ravok than the shining Syliran variety. But the knights of Kenash did not pretend to goodness or evil, merely honor, and the wildness, the primal nature of summer. This one, this noblewoman, spun words out like the rainbow refractions of her empty glass, baiting him as a cat might. He could play games, of course, but she sussed him out with an uncanny, unerring eye. A dangerous enemy, this one, but he had no need for enemies; he had a three person list and that was enough. "You mock a man for finding women fair?" he asked, ignoring the questions he didn't want to answer. Let her think him too simple a two-handed man to juggle so many questions at once. "The desert is lonely and harsh, so should a man not seek a variety of oases? What was meant to be a quick triptych of revenge has become a tiresome saga. One learns to enjoy the distractions that life presents along the way. You should feel admired, lady, that a man dying of thirst would rather bask in your presence than reach for the water so close at hand." |