The King of the Crags

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by Stephen Deas




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  ONE - THE RED RIDERS

  Chapter 1 - THE PROPHET

  Chapter 2 - TORCHLIGHT

  Chapter 3 - WHAT A DRAGON COSTS

  Chapter 4 - THE BLOOD-MAGE

  Chapter 5 - DROTAN’S TOP

  Chapter 6 - THE UNBELIEVER

  Chapter 7 - THE PRICE OF ASKING

  TWO - OF PRINCES AND QUEENS

  Chapter 8 - THE LOVERS

  Chapter 9 - A QUESTION OF PRIORITIES

  Chapter 10 - JASLYN

  Chapter 11 - LITTLE SISTER

  Chapter 12 - DIPLOMACY IN ALL ITS FORMS

  Chapter 13 - JUSTICE AND VENGEANCE

  Chapter 14 - A PRINCE HAS TO DO WHAT A PRINCE HAS TO DO

  Chapter 15 - THE DUTY OF KINGS

  Chapter 16 - THE SPEAKER ZAFIR

  Chapter 17 - UNWANTED ATTENTION

  Chapter 18 - THE KING OF THE CRAGS

  Chapter 19 - SILENCE

  Chapter 20 - THE COUNCIL OF KINGS AND QUEENS

  Chapter 21 - THE QUEEN IN THE TOWER

  Chapter 22 - THE EXECUTION OF HIS DUTIES

  Chapter 23 - WATCHING THINGS BURN

  THREE - THE WHITE DRAGON

  Chapter 24 - THE WORLDSPINE AND THE HILLS BEYOND

  Chapter 25 - STRANGE LANDS

  Chapter 26 - JEIROS

  Chapter 27 - USEFUL FOOD

  Chapter 28 - POISON IN THE BLOOD

  Chapter 29 - A TASTE OF HAPPINESS

  Chapter 30 - THE SECRETS OF THE ALCHEMISTS

  Chapter 31 - THE MAUSOLEUM

  Chapter 32 - THE HUNTERS AND THE HUNTED

  Chapter 33 - THE FORTUNES OF WAR

  Chapter 34 - ALL AT SEA

  Chapter 35 - THE HEART AND THE HEAD

  Chapter 36 - THE ISLANDS

  Chapter 37 - MOTHS AND FLAMES

  FOUR - JUSTICE AND VENGEANCE

  Chapter 38 - VIOROS

  Chapter 39 - JUSTICE

  Chapter 40 - THE WORDS OF THE DEAD

  Chapter 41 - THE QUEEN OF SAND AND STONE

  Chapter 42 - SILENCE

  Chapter 43 - METEROA

  Chapter 44 - THE DEFIANCE OF KINGS

  Chapter 45 - VIPER VIPER

  Chapter 46 - THE RED PRINCE

  Chapter 47 - THE ADAMANTINE PALACE

  Chapter 48 - THE SPEAKER OF THE REALMS

  EPILOGUE—THE GREAT FLAME

  Acknowledgements

  Books by Stephen Deas

  The Adamantine Palace

  The King of the Crags

  ROC

  Published by New American Library, a division of

  Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street,

  New York, New York 10014, USA

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  Copyright © Stephen Deas, 2010

  All rights reserved

  REGISTERED TRADEMARK—MARCA REGISTRADA

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Deas, Stephen, 1968-

  The king of the crags/Stephen Deas.

  p. cm.—(The memory of flames; bk. 2)

  eISBN : 978-1-101-47558-4

  1. Dragons—Fiction. I. Title.

  PR6104.E25K56 2011

  823’.92—dc22

  2010039714

  Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

  PUBLISHER’S NOTE

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

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  In memory of the Slayer of Strings

  and the Bringer of Death to Small Furry Things

  Rebel and Rasmus

  THE KINGS AND QUEENS OF SAND AND STONE AND SALT

  THE KINGS OF THE ENDLESS SEA

  KINGS AND QUEENS OF THE PLAINS

  THE KING OF THE WORLDSPINE

  PROLOGUE—THE DEAD

  The Worldspine surrounded them. Mountains like immense teeth, jagged and huge and white, reared up all around their little valley. Monsters overshadowing the dense dark greens and blacks of the pine forest surrounding a lake of glacier water, the brightest, purest blue that Kemir had ever seen.

  Very slowly, they were dying. Nadira couldn’t see it yet and Kemir didn’t have the heart to tell her, but it was true. He’d kept them alive for five days now, since Snow had vanished beneath the frozen waters of the lake, but it couldn’t last. The weather had been kind to them, but wind and rain were always fickle in the Worldspine. One day he’d run out of arrows, or his bowstring would break. Or one of them would get hurt or fall ill. He wasn’t catching enough food, and they didn’t have the clothes or the shelter to stay properly warm. A hundred things could go wrong, and sooner or later one of them would.

  They had to move. He tried to break it to Nadira, to make her understand that Snow wasn’t coming back, that their only chance was to leave and head for lower ground. A boat, he thought. Or at least a raft. Water always found the quickest way down the mountains.

  She screamed in his face. Shrieked at him that Snow was coming back. He backed away. One more day, he promised himself. One more day and then he’d leave, with or without her. He could force her to come, he knew that, but he’d let her choose. She could stay and die if she wanted. That was what Sollos would have done.

  As that last day began to fade he made his weary way back to the lake, carrying with him what little food he’ d been able to hunt and gather. The forests here were harsh and hostile and yielded little. He was hungry. They were both hungry. They’d eat and they’d still be hungry.

  He reached what passed for their camp at the edge of the lake and the hairs on the back of his neck bristled. He couldn’t see Nadira. The forest was silent except for the wind and the ever-present creaking and groaning of the glacier. He stared out across the lake. And suddenly he felt th
e fire and iron of the dragon’s presence, a moment before the water began to churn.

  Little One Kemir, I am hungry.

  Kemir froze, rooted to the spot. The dragon was rising out of the lake as white as the glacier ice, clouds of steam billowing around her.

  And she was hungry. Five days lying at the bottom of a frozen lake would do that, I suppose.

  She was probably going to eat him, then. Somehow, he couldn’t bring himself to be properly terrified. In some ways it would be a relief.

  “Right. So you’re not dead,” he growled. It was just as well, he decided, that Nadira wasn’t anywhere nearby. As last words went, those definitely weren’t the best.

  That was when her absence hit him right in the chest. Nadira. Where was she?

  No.

  “Alchemist’s poisons didn’t kill you, then. Freezing water did the trick, eh?” Why wasn’t she there?

  Yes. And no, I do not intend to eat you. I am . . . grateful . . . to you for showing me this place.

  If dragons had expressions, Kemir hadn’t learned to read them yet. The dragon’s name was Snow, and as far as Kemir could tell, she always looked like she was about to eat him. Come on, woman, where are you? You should be here. Your dragon’s back.

  “Hurrah for me, then.” He sat down. “So you’re hungry. So go eat something.” He couldn’t keep it in anymore. “You didn’t eat Nadira, did you?” He felt almost stupid asking. Of course she hadn’t.

  There was a long silence. She was not your mate.

  “No! She’s not my mate! She’s my . . .” Yes, now that was a good question. She was his what, exactly? His friend? Don’t be ridiculous. His companion? He grimaced. That made him sound like an old widow.

  Your nest-sister.

  Which made him laugh. Since he couldn’t think of anything better, he nodded. “Yes. My nest-sister. So, did you eat her?”

  Yes.

  Kemir didn’t move. Snow was joking. She had to be. Even though dragons had no sense of humor, even though Snow had never said anything funny about anything, this had to be a joke.

  I was hungry. He could feel something in her, though. The same feeling as had been inside her when her Scales had disappeared. Shame, perhaps.

  No, she wasn’t joking.

  The rage started in his face. At the end of his nose. A heat that washed slowly into his cheeks. “And that’s what you do when you’re hungry.” Down his neck, growing hotter and stronger. He picked up a stone from the lakeside, jumped to his feet and threw it at the dragon in the water. It bounced off her scales.

  Yes. And I am hungry still, Kemir.

  Across his shoulders. “Whoever happens to be there. Whoever is closest. You couldn’t wait. You couldn’t hold it in. You couldn’t go hungry. You just . . .” Through his arms. He hurled another stone at her and then threw up his hands in exasperation. “Bang. Gone. Whatever happens to be there. She was your . . .” She was what? What could you be to a dragon?

  Food is food, Kemir.

  There weren’t any stones big enough to answer that. Or rather there were, but Kemir couldn’t lift them. “What?” Oh yes, that really told her.

  She was not your mate, Kemir.

  The heat reached his hands, oozing down his fingers like lava until it reached the very tips. Then it all came rushing back. From everywhere. From his fingers, from his toes, from his arms and legs and chest and exploded all together in his head. He roared with rage and loss and sheer disbelief and hurled himself into the water, clutching his hatchet. “Why did you do that?” He stopped. He had to stop. He was already floundering in freezing water up to his waist. Snow was too deep to reach. He threw the axe at her as hard as he could and watched as it it too bounced off her scales and vanished into the water. He screamed at her again. “Why? Why did you do that?”

  His words echoed off the mountainsides. Snow didn’t move. Kemir pounded the water with his fists.

  “Come here! Come here where I can reach you!”

  If it is any help to you, she did not particularly mind.

  “What? She didn’t . . . ? She didn’t what?” He clutched at his head and surged back to the shore, slipping, falling, lurching out of the water. There had to be something, somewhere. Anything. A weapon. Something to batter a dragon. He’d rip her apart with his bare hands if he had to.

  She did not particularly mind.

  He picked up another stone. Snow was coming toward him, very slowly, one careful step at a time. He threw the stone, then another and another, as fast as he could until Snow reached the shore. Then he let out a mad shriek and ran at her, hacking at her legs and claws with his knife. But no matter how hard he stabbed, her scales turned his blade. He beat on her with his fists and howled. “Why? Why did you do that?”

  Because she was hungry. That was all. She didn’t even have to say it. And now she was just letting him vent his anger.

  Kemir backed away.

  “Eat me!” he roared, and threw down the knife. He stood in front of her head. “Come on, then! Eat me!”

  No.

  “Why not? She was all I had left. My last. Come on, dragon, eat me too!” He picked up another stone and then put it down again and reached for an arrow. “Curse you, dragon. She didn’t particularly mind being eaten?” He pulled back the bowstring. Maybe if I aim for the eye . . .

  No, Kemir, she did not.

  He looked down the length of the arrow to aim and met Snow, eyeball to eyeball, at the other end of it. What am I doing?

  I was wondering that myself.

  He took a deep breath. “You tell me, dragon—how do you know that she didn’t particularly mind? Did you ask before you ate her?”

  An arrow in the eye will hardly kill me, Kemir, but it would leave an unpleasant sting.

  Slowly, Kemir lowered the bow. He could almost believe it. Nadira had been the one who’d made them wait while Snow lay deep in the lake. If it hadn’t been for her he’d have left days ago. She’d made them stay because she couldn’t let go . . . And he’d seen her, after they’d failed, after Snow had vanished into the lake. He’d seen her curled up when she thought he wasn’t near, sobbing softly, talking to the children she no longer had as though they were still there, to the husband she’d seen murdered. The fight had gone out of her and with it all the light, all the life. Was that it? Were the memories too much? Was that why she wouldn’t let go? Were you just waiting to die?

  Waiting for her next cycle, Kemir.

  He had tears in his eyes now. Now he thought about it, he could almost believe that Snow was right, that Nadira really didn’t mind at all. “We don’t get a next one, Snow. We’re not like you.”

  And how is it that you are so sure, Kemir? She stretched her wings and looked up at the sky. She was thinking of leaving. Just like that.

  “What if I don’t want to come? Do I get eaten too?” The thought scared him. Not the thought of being eaten. The thought of being alone.

  Would you mind?

  “Yes, I’d fucking mind!” He put the arrow back in his quiver and then shuddered, shaking the dread and the emptiness away, back into the bottle he carried deep inside him. Anger was better, much better. He threw another stone at Snow instead, then another and another. “Why, dragon? Why did you kill her? Why did you do that? She wasn’t much, maybe, but she was all I had. She was the closest thing I had to a friend. Shit!” The worst of the rage was gone, though, and he couldn’t find the will to rekindle it. What was left behind was only sadness.

  Why?

  “She was your friend. Holy sun! That could have been me! What?”

  Why? Why would you mind, Kemir?

  “What?” He shook himself and then held his head in his hands. “Are you soft in the head, dragon? What sort of question is that? Why would I mind? Why would I mind if you ate me?”

  Yes. Why would you mind, Kemir?

  “Because it would fucking hurt !”

  It can be very quick.

  “Well, then because I’d like to be alive
, thank you.”

  And why do you wish to be alive, Kemir? What will you do with this existence?

  “I don’t know!” He turned away and stamped his foot. “Get shit-faced, fuck whores and kill dragon-knights, that’s what. Just as soon as I’m shot of you.”

  I know where your alchemists live, Kemir. I know how they make us weak. I will go now and I will consider how things should best be done. When I return, I will make a proper end of it. You will come with me. Your knowledge will be of use.

  “Uh-uh. You go, dragon. I can’t stop you but I’m not helping you. Not now.” Kemir pursed his lips. He looked around the lake, at the thick walls of snow-speckled trees, at the frozen glacier, at the whiteness of the peaks above. “I think I’d rather stay here and slowly die of cold while I mourn. Tagging along, waiting for the day when it’s my turn to be food? No, that’s not my choice.” Really though? Could I bear that? To be left out here? Alone?

  Do not pretend, Kemir. Remember that I see inside you. I see fear. I see horror and surprise and a great deal of vengeance. Mostly I see loneliness. That is something I understand, Kemir, for I too am alone. I do not see much regret. You will not mourn for long.

  Kemir sat down, shook his head and unstrung his bow. “That’s because I still don’t quite believe you did it,” he said quietly, as much to himself as to Snow. He sighed. “Do I have a choice, dragon?”

  There is always choice, Kemir. The Embers have shown you that.

  He spat out a bitter laugh. “Yeah. Right. I can help you burn dragon-knights or I can die.” He sighed again. “Well I’m not one for dying. So I’ll come with you. As soon as we’re out of the mountains, you do whatever you do and you leave me alone. Finished. Done. We go our separate ways. Find someone else.”

 

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