A Lesson in Taxonomy

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by Unknown


  I found myself ambushed by a yawn and caught Amadi’s amused grin before he turned away, wary of my displeasure. I let out the next one with a roar and a broad stretch of my arms, crass as a porter. At that he laughed, and I felt the first moment of joy since Remigo’s departure.

  “Wake me when Gozreh answers your prayer,” I said before withdrawing to the relative comfort of my hammock. I fell asleep to a muted symphony of simian chatter.

  Human voices woke me.

  “Excellency, you must wake up,” hissed Amadi. “They are here.”

  “Who?”

  “Prince Kasiya,” he said. “And your man Remigo. The bearers have fled.”

  There was but one reason I could imagine for Kasiya’s arrival, especially if he were guided by Remigo. He wanted the bestiary for himself. I hastened to the table containing my journal and Amadi’s sketches. There was no place to hide them, nor did we have any avenue of escape from our treetop shelter. The platform trembled under the weight of men climbing the restored rope ladder.

  I could have torn my journal to shreds, or lit it on fire if I dared, but I could not bear to destroy my life’s work even to spite a thief who would present it as his own. There was little hope of arguing against his claim, even assuming he permitted me to live long enough to return to Absalom. The word of a prince outweighs the word of count.

  A wicked thought emerged from my imagination. I took a paper knife and lifted the labels from the dinosaur sketches, reversing them. The paste was still moist, and I completed the task just as Remigo rose up from the trap door opening.

  “I’ll have those, Jeggare,” he growled. I stepped away, wishing briefly that I had taken up my sword instead of the knife. Remigo followed my fleeting glance and put himself between me and my blade as Kasiya followed him up onto the platform. Behind him came two of his armored guards.

  A long smile creased his eel-like jaws. He began to speak, but something held him back. His cheeks darkened, and I realized he was blushing.

  “You would have let him flog me,” said Remigo. Hatred colored his face, and I needed no further explication of events. Remigo had traded his punishment for betraying my location.

  “Prince Kasiya has a strange sense of honor.”

  “Forgive me, Count Jeggare.” Prince Kasiya’s voice rang with sincerity. “Perhaps one day, when you have forgiven this offense, you will allow me to demonstrate my gratitude.”

  “Let me demonstrate mine first,” said Remigo. He jerked me toward the edge of the platform. The ground was so far below us that I could not make it out through the mist.

  “Unhand him,” ordered Kasiya.

  Remigo scoffed, but he sobered as he saw the deadly earnestness in the prince’s eyes.

  “You are a treacherous dog. Your hands are unfit to sully a noble person,” said Kasiya. “Await us below.”

  Remigo glowered at me before descending the rope ladder.

  “I must delay your pursuit.” Kasiya whistled a command, and one of his guards bound me to the guardrail. The other placed food and water within reach of my hands. “Once we have captured a specimen and have a good lead, I shall send a servant to release you.”

  “Most Great Highness,” said Amadi. “You must not approach the females. It is their season, and they are dangerous.”

  Kasiya looked to me for confirmation, and I let him see it on my face. The warning would do him little good, after my change of the labels.

  “Also,” added Amadi. “The labels on the drawings, they have been changed.”

  Two treacherous dogs!

  Kasiya bent to examine the drawings. He lifted the edge of one label with a long fingernail and saw the imperfect bond of paste beneath.

  “Very cunning,” said Kasiya. His expression darkened again, but not in shame this time. “And most wicked.” He stepped toward me and kicked the food and water over the edge of the platform. “I suddenly find that my gratitude for your labors knows bounds.”

  With that they abandoned me.

  My initial efforts to wriggle out of my bonds suggested that I would sooner starve to death than escape them. That was of course assuming that no predatory visitors found me first. The prospect of being devoured alive tempted me to implore Asmodeus for vengeance upon my betrayers, but I would not break the vow I had made to my late mother. Instead I prayed for some fantastic stroke of fortune.

  Amadi’s prayer was answered first with a glorious parting of the clouds and the evaporation of the mist. From my vantage I watched as Kasiya’s party traveled across the grassy plain to the river’s edge, where they carefully waited to approach a lone dinosaur.

  They had for some reason chosen a female. I watched in astonishment as Kasiya commanded his men to dab their spears in some dark toxin. Remigo was among them, holding his own spear cautiously away from his body as if whatever they had told him about the poison was more frightening than the dinosaur that became restless at their approach.

  As the men raised their spears, the dinosaur trumpeted her alarm. The “gills” upon her neck flared into thick, tumescent rills of brilliant color. From them radiated a deep, barely discernable sound. Its effects were more visible than audible, for the surrounding trees shuddered and shed their foliage. A moment later, I felt a horrific scrape along my teeth and in my sinus cavities.

  The soldiers’ spears bent and melted under the sonic wave. The bodies of the men leaped from the ground, their limbs jerking involuntarily into a hundred unnatural postures as their bones shattered and their organs burst.

  Behind me, Amadi panted as he returned to the observation post. He must have slipped away even before the ill-fated party approached their prey. He released a breathless torrent of apologies as he released me from my bonds, but I already guessed why he had done as he did.

  “You altered the drawings before I switched the labels.”

  Amadi grimaced. It was as beautiful as his smile, but more sad. Despite the treachery of Kasiya and Remigo, he mourned their deaths.

  ∗ ∗ ∗

  It required patience and swift running to retrieve the trampled remains of Prince Kasiya from the riverside. I hoped against all chance, and Desna rewarded me with the recovery of the Bestiary of Garundi. We left Remigo and the prince’s guards to the scavengers.

  Amadi remained with me all the way back to Kalabuto, and then to Eleder. His cheerful disposition had been diminished by the horrors we had witnessed, but still I felt a bond of affection had grown between us. The day before I embarked upon the voyage home, I offered him a place in my household.

  “You would make an excellent secretary,” I told him, meaning it. “I will send you to the finest schools.”

  “Your Excellency is most generous,” he said. “But I will remain here, in my homeland.”

  “Whatever for? Among the Sargavan colonists, you will never be treated better than a slave, and outside the cities, there is nothing but danger.”

  Amadi offered me a wan smile. “I have met many of your people before,” he said. “Even in your homeland, and in that of the prince, I would classify most of them as ‘dangerous.’”

  It was impossible to argue with that. Disappointment wrestled with admiration in my heart. “Farewell, Amadi.”

  “Farewell, Most Excellent Count. Do not feel too bad. You are not so much like your countrymen,” he grinned. “I am pleased to classify you as ‘docile.’”

 

 

 


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