by Rick Shelley
“Very well,” the elf said, “it may not be a dragon at all—but notice the stress on the auxiliary verb.”
“Okay, stress noted. But if it’s not a dragon, what is it—Dumbo?”
“I’m not familiar with the reference, but don’t bother to explain. I’m sure I’m not interested. I simply meant that it might be one of the defenders of the shrine waiting to reclaim that which you wear around your neck. It is even conceivable that it is the Great Earth Mother herself, in disguise, waiting to decide how best to deal with, uh, our effrontery.”
“Do you consider either possibility likely?” I asked, watching the circling dragon as I spoke.
“The first, perhaps. The second, probably not. They are merely off-chances to consider.”
“Long shots,” I said. “Consider them considered. And I’m getting a sore neck from it all.” It wasn’t my intention, but that comment shut the elf up. He was sensitive to talk about necks, sore or not.
“Folks at Thyme won’t be happy at us bringing a dragon by,” Lesh said. “They think they got troubles enough, I’d guess.”
“You know anyone who doesn’t think he has troubles enough?” I asked.
“I reckon not, lord,” Lesh admitted.
“We can’t do anything about this dragon, or whatever it is, as long as it stays up where it is. And, quite honestly, I hope it does keep its distance. I’ve already bagged my lifetime quota.”
I was wearing the gold chain and ruby under my chain mail, and it was uncomfortable, a constant irritant like a pebble in a shoe. But even if the jewel was only a precious stone and not really what it was cracked up to be, I would have put up with the discomfort. A ruby that size had to be worth a fortune. I didn’t want to put it in a pack or pocket, afraid that I might somehow manage to lose it.
“We’ll be in and out of Thyme quickly,” I said a few minutes later. “That should end the matter. Once the dragon loses track of us at the passage, it should lose interest in Thyme.” It sounded like a good thing to say. If the thing was something other than a dragon, it might even work that way.
I was looking forward to getting home and unwinding for a few days before we started out to steal the other jewel of the Great Earth Mother. Since we got out of the mountains and back on the plain of Varay, I had thought of little else but spending a little time with Joy. I knew it wouldn’t be much time, but I wanted to savor however many hours or days we might have before I had to leave again.
But the dragon overhead kept me from fully enjoying my thoughts of Joy. It was great that the dragon wasn’t attacking, but it also posed a continuing threat. For all the elf’s theorizing, it might be a real dragon. Why it might be following us the way it was, I couldn’t explain, and I couldn’t be certain that it would head back to its normal haunts when we disappeared through the passageway from Thyme. It might savage the village, even the castle. But on the other hand, if we stayed on the road and took the long way back to Basil, it might savage Basil Town. I couldn’t tell what it might do and I couldn’t do anything about it in any case. We could only do what we had originally planned to do, go to Castle Thyme, take the passage through to Basil Town, and climb the rock to the castle … regardless of what the dragon might do. I couldn’t fight it if it didn’t come down, and if it came down after I left, I still couldn’t fight it.
The villagers of Thyme were not as happy to see me as they usually were. But then, I didn’t usually bring a dragon in my wake. We hurried past the village and straight into the castle, where I had put in a gateway to the town of Basil. Folks nodded and greeted us politely enough, but they kept looking up at the distant dragon. We didn’t linger. I opened the doorway to Basil, we all got through with our horses, then we mounted again and rode up the rock to the castle.
There was no dragon flying over Basil.
As soon as we reached the courtyard of Castle Basil, we turned our horses over to the grooms from the mews and went into the keep with our elf. We headed straight for the great hall, needing food after our time on field rations. At least, all of us needed food except Xayber’s son. The elf had no stomach to satisfy anymore. I didn’t bother to look for Parthet or Kardeen. They would hear of our return quickly enough and come looking for us. And as soon as we took the edge off our hunger, Lesh, Timon, Harkane, and I would be off to Cayenne, to regroup, refit, and pig out until our guts were ready to burst—unless Kardeen or Parthet had news so dire that we couldn’t afford but one night and the meals on either end of it.
We were too early for supper, but there’s always food available, and we soon had a couple of pages hauling it out for us—cold meat and fried potatoes, bread, cheese, and plenty of beer. The beer was right there in the great hall, so we started on that first, which suited me just fine.
I was still building my first sandwich—more or less a submarine, a whole loaf of bread split down the middle that I stacked with just about everything the pages fetched from the kitchen, ham, beef, cheese, onions, a tomato-based sauce that no one could ever mistake for ketchup, lettuce, and pickles—when Baron Kardeen arrived and sat at the table across from me. I paused in my culinary construction long enough to pull the ruby out from under my mail and let it hang down in front.
Kardeen stared at the jewel.
“That’s what we went for,” I said, and he nodded.
“Have there been any more strange happenings here?” I asked before I bit into my sandwich.
“Everyone has tales of strange happenings,” Kardeen said. He shrugged and continued to stare at the jewel. “Most are things that always happen and no one pays attention. Until now.”
That was something I could have anticipated if I had thought of it. I nodded to give me time to swallow. “But is any of it really odd, ominous?”
“We’re still getting a few dragon eggs every day, not nearly as many as that first time, maybe one in four dozen. There were snow flurries around Arrowroot. And we had one peculiar sighting of something in the air that was big and noisy. Not a dragon.”
“It was an airplane,” Parthet’s voice said from behind me. I turned and looked. He had sounded as if he were right at my ear, but instead he had just entered the great hall, some forty or fifty feet away. That was a trick I had heard before. I got down a couple of quick bites of food before he neared the table and reached around me to get the jewel and hold it up so he could see it better.
He didn’t try to take the chain off my neck.
“You see this airplane?” I asked.
“No, but I questioned the people who did, and believe me, it was an airplane, possibly a military jet, flying low enough that I got a description of numbers on the bottom of its wings.”
“Any reports of a crash?”
“Not yet. The engines were apparently still running when our people saw it. They heard it first.”
“And I can’t even get a butane lighter to work here.”
“We have a ship waiting for you at Arrowroot,” Kardeen said when I went back to eating. “It’s not the largest or fanciest craft that plies the Sea of Fairy, but it is seaworthy. I looked it over myself. It carries a single sail for when the wind is with you and eight oars for when it isn’t.”
“Eight oars?” I asked around my food.
“And the sailors to man them. They’re all soldiers, but they’ve all had at least some previous experience with boats and they’ve been drilling together for two weeks now. So they’re ready to go whenever you are.”
“I guess we can leave the day after tomorrow,” I said, giving us an extra day to shove calories down our throats. “That leave enough time to stock the boat with food and such?”
“Time enough,” Kardeen said. “Either Parthet or your mother can open the passageway for us here. I assume you’re going on to Cayenne?”
“Right now,” I said, getting up as I crammed the last of my sandwich into my mouth.
“We’ll have everything ready for you,” Kardeen said.
I washed down the last of the sandwi
ch with beer. “How is Grandfather doing?” I asked. If the news had been really bad, I would have heard it already.
“His Majesty is much the same as he was before you left,” Kardeen said, and his face got a little longer. “He has never remained so ill for this long before.”
I looked at Parthet.
“I’m doing everything I can, and your mother has brought Hank McCreary over twice to help,” Parthet said, very softly. I nodded.
I knew that I should go up to see Pregel, but I wasn’t up to that yet. I needed to get more food into me, and I needed to get back to Joy, hold her in my arms.
“I’ll stop back tomorrow, maybe even later tonight,” I said. “I’ll see grandfather and tell you about this trip, and catch up on everything else. Right now, I have to get back to Joy.” We had been gone more than a month. August had ended, September begun.
“Of course,” Kardeen said. He escorted us to the doorway back to my place, and I told him about the dragon we’d left circling over Thyme.
“I’ll ask Parthet to check on it,” he promised. At the moment, Parthet was taking care of our elf. I wasn’t about to take Xayber’s son home with me.
There are two separate doorways between Basil and Cayenne. One connects my bedrooms in the two places. The other opens on the ground floor of Cayenne, in the stable. Since I had Lesh and the others with me, we took the lower route, just in case Joy might be up in the bedroom. It also gave us a chance to pass through the kitchen to make sure that the cooks knew we were back—and uncommonly hungry.
I had started loosening my armor and other gear before we left Basil. I finished getting rid of all my extra weight as I climbed through Cayenne, looking for Joy. None of the items would get lost. They would probably be collected and returned to their proper places within minutes. The staff at Cayenne was small, but it was efficient, sometimes too efficient.
Joy was all the way up on the battlements, just starting back down when I met her at the top of the stairs. We hugged and kissed and talked about taking time for ourselves before supper to complete the reunion properly, but ruled that out because it was already close to mealtime and I was still starving. Then I realized what was missing. Or who.
“What happened with your parents?’ I asked. “Didn’t you bring them over?” It spoiled the mood.
“I brought them,” Joy said. “Mom and Dad. My brother and his family couldn’t make it to Chicago that weekend.”
“What happened?”
Joy looked away from me. “It was terrible. They got to Chicago just before noon that Saturday. At first, they were upset that you weren’t there. That was before I could tell them anything about Varay or bring them here. And that was a real mess.” She paused and buried her head against my shoulder for a moment, hanging on. When she continued, her voice was muffled, the words coming in almost-separated groups.
“I tried to tell them about this place first, warn them, and they both thought I was crazy. Then Mother decided that she wanted to see our marriage certificate, like she still didn’t believe that we were really married, and she wouldn’t get off the subject. And Dad started grumbling because he figured he wasn’t going to get to the ballpark.” Joy pulled her face away from my shoulder and looked me in the eye.
“Then I opened the doorway here.” She stopped and twisted around in my arms, looking away from me again. “Scared doesn’t even come close to describing what they were like. It was all I could do to get them to even step through to look at the place. But I had to make sure they knew I was telling the truth, that I wasn’t on drugs or crazy. We came up here so they could look around and know that we weren’t still on the Chicago lakefront. I told them about you and Varay. They held on to each other and they listened and they looked.”
Joy stopped talking again, and we went on down to our bedroom. Sunset was near and there weren’t any lights on inside, so the shadows were thick, concealing. I waited for Joy to continue. She went to the window and stared out.
“Daddy didn’t say much of anything the whole time here, and nothing at all after we went up top. He looked kind of green around the edges. Mother was scared and didn’t hide it. She talked a lot, but not much of it made any sense. I showed her the marriage certificate you got from Baron Kardeen, and she carried on about how she couldn’t tell her friends that we got married someplace that doesn’t exist and all that.”
Another silence, this one shorter than the others.
“told them that we could get a place for them to live here, and a place for Danny and his family, because the other world might get even more dangerous than it already was, more nuclear bombs, more terrorists, maybe even all-out nuclear war. Daddy doesn’t think that nuclear war is even possible anymore, not with all the changes in Russia and everywhere. I’m not sure they believed one word I said about all that. They’ve never thought much of my opinions. They wouldn’t even consider moving here. Daddy had to be back at work Monday morning. Mother couldn’t cut herself off from all her friends in St. Louis. And what kind of place was this for Danny to bring up his kids? What kind of place was this for anyone? I talked until I was blue in the face and crying from frustration, but it didn’t do any good. Finally, I had to take them back to Chicago or just keep them prisoner here, and I couldn’t do that, no matter how stupid they were being. Then Daddy tried to drag me off home with them, get ‘help’ for me. If I hadn’t managed to slip through the doorway to your mother’s house, I think he would have made it. I called the apartment from Louisville. Daddy was mad. Mother was crying.”
I held Joy long enough for her to get her crying done.
“We’ll try again,” I said after a few minutes. I dried her tears with my hand. “They’ve had time to think about it. That’ll make it easier. Come on, let’s go eat. A meal will make you feel better.” In Varay, no one missed a meal voluntarily.
There was a huge fire in the hearth at the head of the great hall, and the heat was welcome. It made me remember the cold of the mountains. And halfway through supper, there was a pounding on the door downstairs. Lesh went to check on it. When he came back, he pointed at the ceiling and said, “There’s a dragon circling overhead.”
16
The Shadow
I looked at Lesh, then down at the ruby hanging from my neck. I don’t think that a light bulb went on over my head, but the realization came to me that fast. The jewel was actively calling dragons, somehow.
“What’s this dragon doing?” I asked, without any great agitation.
“Just circling above, like the other,” Lesh said.
“Sit down and eat,” I told him.
“Aren’t you going to do anything about it?” Joy asked.
“Not unless it comes down. I can’t.” I told her about the earlier dragons. “I guess that the one that followed us to Thyme has had time enough to fly here.”
“You mean that ruby is attracting dragons to you?”
“Like a magnet,” I said. “That has to be what’s doing it. I’ve seen more dragons since we got this than in all the time I’ve been around here.”
Joy had pushed her plate away when Lesh made his announcement, but when she saw that I wasn’t going to interrupt my meal for the dragon, she pulled her plate back and started eating again. But she didn’t have her heart in it. She nibbled and kept looking around. Some of the others at the table were just as nervous. At the moment, food was more important to me and my traveling companions than any dragon. Unless the beast came down and started causing trouble, I intended to fill my belly.
“The only way to get rid of the dragon is probably to take this jewel somewhere else,” I told Joy. “If I’m right and it’s the jewel calling the dragons. If this one is still overhead after we get done eating, we can step through to Chicago—no, better make that Louisville—for a while.”
“Why Louisville?” Joy asked.
“In case there’s someone looking for Aaron in Chicago,” I said. “By the way, I didn’t see him when we came through Basil today.
He’s still around, isn’t he?”
“Yes, and apparently he’s finally quit growing. He’s taller and heavier than you. If I didn’t know better, I’d say he was at least your age.”
“Uncle Parthet still working with him?”
“Every day, almost constantly. Aaron is convinced that he doesn’t have any choice but to become a wizard as fast as he can. I think Parthet did the convincing.” Joy looked around the table, then leaned a little closer to me. “And some of the people at Basil are worried. They’re afraid that because Aaron is black he’ll practice black magic.”
Varayans can be as superstitious as anyone, and they had more excuse. As far as I knew, Aaron was the only black to ever come to the buffer zone.
“That’ll change as they get to know him,” I said. “First time he does something special, all that will be forgotten. Varay doesn’t have the history to make people bigoted over color.”
We got through the rest of supper without any additional alarms. Before taking off for Louisville, I decided to go up to the ramparts to have a look at the dragon for myself. It was well past sunset, but I might still be able to catch a glimpse of the beast. I stopped upstairs to strap on my elf swords and to get the rifle that had misfired the last time I tried to use it on a dragon. I reloaded the magazine and carried the rifle up top with me.
The dragon was still floating around in lazy circles, more a silhouette than anything else, occulting batches of stars as it passed. I took the rifle, aimed, and fired. The gun actually worked for a change and the dragon flapped a few times to get even higher and started making wider circles, so maybe I hit it. I tried another shot but got nothing from the rifle. The third shot worked, but it didn’t seem to have as much recoil as it should have. The dragon scarcely reacted to that shot, maybe just to the noise.
“Guess it don’t want to be run off,” Lesh said.
“I guess not,” I replied. Harkane, Timon, and Joy had all come up to the battlements as well. Joy wanted to see a dragon for herself.