Until he fell again.
Saara heard the thunk, followed by a small weary whine like that of a child. All her anger melted away.
“Don’t get up,” she told Gaspare, and she lowered herself beside the young man. “And don’t talk. Give me a minute to think.”
Damiano ran through Saara’s memories like a bright but tangled thread. Her powers had been his, for a while, and his powers had been hers, for another while. Bodies, too, had shared as they might.
For a short time. Such a short time.
But surely Damiano’s favorite magic should be accessible to her. To make a fire without anything to burn…
She fished into the unsorted depths of her mind and came up with brown eyes. A lot of curly brown hair, in snarls.
There was a dog, an angel (in all this she mustn’t forget Raphael), a girl’s face with blue eyes, a wonderful face with braids and green eyes (oh no, put it back, put her own face seen through Damiano’s eyes at the bottom of the blackness), a plow horse with raw and pussy shoulders, seen once outside of Avignon…
There. There it came, with the image of the abused, fly-bothered beast. Hot anger welling up out of the floor of her mind…
“Lady Saara!” yelped Gaspare, scooting across the floor away from the smoldering woman.
“Hush,” she chided him, and she turned down all the vents of her emotions. Her dress—last of the two she owned—was discolored, and it smelled of burning hair. She sighed.
But at last Saara raised one hand like a torch.
“There, Gaspare. Behold the world around us!”
“Wonderful,” replied the redhead, staring not at the cave but at the flame itself. “Though Delstrego’s was blue and did not flicker.”
When they found their way under sky again, the sun was already descending. A path worn into the mountainside led away from the tunnel, treeless, grassless, winding up to a broken tooth of a peak above.
So high had they come that the air was thin and it tasted of ice. Gaspare began to shiver.
“There is steam ahead,” murmured Saara, who rarely felt the cold. “Hot springs, maybe. Either that or someone is boiling a kettle.” She peered narrowly at the single fang above them. It was a bit familiar-looking; seen from farther to the west, it might become quite familiar. She examined it keenly for any sign of entrance. Blood rushed to Saara’s cheeks, not entirely because of the wind.
“Does—does not the Devil… have cauldrons?” stuttered Gaspare in her ear. “Could it be?”
She shrugged. “If so, it means we have come the right way.” With a sigh and a stretch, she strode forward.
The steam wavered in the frozen air. One more rock and they would see it. Hot springs? There was no smell of brimstone in the air. Cauldrons? She herself had spoken of the Liar’s cauldrons of steam, but they were part of the world of Lapp children, not of grown witches who themselves had a power of hot and cold.
She stepped carefully around the last rock.
No cauldrons. No hot springs. Just the glistening length of black serpent with floral head and eyes like miniature suns and the hot, moist air of his body hitting the cold.
Something else black was amidst his coils.
“I could not help but notice that you produce fire, too, madam. I could see your spark down the length of the passage. You are a remarkable human in all ways!” chuckled the dragon. He greeted her with a white and steaming smile. “I believe, however, that you left something behind.”
It was Festilligambe the dragon indicated. The horse stood spraddled with head and tail drooping, ears flat out sideways, and made no move.
“You found him!” Saara padded up and began to climb over the smooth-scaled sections of dragon. “I didn’t think anyone would ever find him again, the way he ran when he saw you.”
“He was nervous,” drawled the huge creature, revealing his canines further.
Saara came up to the gelding and stared into his black, blank eyes. “Well, he is not nervous now,” she commented. “Is he alive?”
“I believe so,” replied the dragon, and he, too, turned to examine Festilligambe, but he did not let his armored head get too close.
Saara lifted the horse’s unresisting chin with professional interest. “A spell?”
The dragon wiggled, causing Saara to sit down hard. “Please, madam! Do I look to you like a wizard, that I should be casting spells hither and yon? It is only that I am a dragon—that alone produces such an effect on certain animals.”
Saara spared him an eye as she got to her feet. “You ask me what you look like quite a lot,” she said. “Don’t you know what you look like?”
“Mere rhetoric.” The dragon used the Italian word, since the Lapps had none fit to the purpose, but he glanced at Saara sidelong, as though he suspected her words to him of having more than the obvious meaning.
Saara put her hand on Festilligambe’s withers and shook her head with regret. “I don’t know what we’re going to do with him,” she said. “What good is a horse, for attacking a fortress at the top of a mountain? Especially this fortress.”
The jeweled eyes met hers, and in a moment Saara understood what the creature had meant by “that alone produces such an effect on some animals.” For a long moment neither the green eyes nor the gold eyes blinked, and at last the creature laughed softly. “I think,” he said, “that we should leave the horse here and come back for it later.
“Along with the little flame-head.”
“We?” Saara stepped back and sat down on a length of swart tail, moving the spines out of the way.
“We. You and I, woman,” added the beast. “Who else has a hope of succeeding against the fallen Star of Morning?”
Saara grinned at the huge, expressionless mask of a face. “And have we a hope, Black Dragon?”
A red split tongue played over the teeth. “Perhaps not.”
“Then why do you want to come?”
The dragon turned his head away, to where a tiny and very brave Gaspare was struggling up and over his outermost coil. “Because you freed me. I owe it.”
“I release you from the debt,” Saara said formally.
The head twisted back along its own neck. “You cannot,” the dragon hissed. “It is MY debt. “Mine!”
Gaspare acceded with surprising grace to the scheme; perhaps it was because it was the dragon, rather than Saara, who explained it to him, saying that he should take the horse and explore farther along the road, while Saara and the dragon prowled the air.
Gaspare did not feel comfortable throwing temperaments in front of a ninety-foot-long steaming creature with teeth like scimitars. But he had enough boldness left in him to inquire how the dragon was to fly, lacking wings.
The great creature curled his tongue once around his muzzle before answering. “That is a reasonable question, little naturalist. I don’t fly like a bird, you must understand. I swim. I ride the wind. And I can do this because I am hot.”
Gaspare frowned thoughtfully into the gaudy, metallic face. Having endured heat, cold, devils, and a shape-changing witch, there was little that one dragon, however well equipped, could do to overawe him. “Delstrego had a power of fire,” Gaspare remarked, “but I never saw him fly.”
Curiosity lit the amber eyes. “Delstrego? Delstrego you say? Who or what would that be?”
“Never mind,” Saara broke in. “If you stay around Gaspare, Dragon, you will hear a lot about Delstrego. But now is not the time. Let’s go.” In another moment there was only a dun-colored dove on the cold stone path, its wings lifted for flight.
The dragon peered at it closely, as a man might focus on a flea. “More magic,” he breathed in tones of disgust, then added more politely, “I fear that in that shape I will fry you without even knowing it, woman of the north.
“Besides, you might have difficulty keeping up with me.”
Saara blinked back. “Then how?”
The dragon slid his chin along the ground. Scales rippled in the light of
the setting sun. “Behind my head,” he hissed.
Using the corona of spikes for footholds, Saara hoisted herself up and looked. There, directly behind the last crimson starburst was a length of smooth neck which did not support a dorsal spine. It fitted Saara like the back of a very round horse. To her surprise she found two small raised scales with handholds cut into them. She fit her fingers with difficulty into them.
“You have been giving rides to… children?”
He raised his head off the ground. Saara, used as she was to flight, felt her stomach lurch. “No. Not a child. A small man. A man of India. A little ugly man with a face like a frog’s.”
Coils scraped by Gaspare, not touching. The dragon oozed a short way down the mountain slope, head elevated. Saara was no more than one more spine on the spiny head. Suddenly the air wavered strongly. As the smell of hot metal reached Gaspare’s nose, the beast was aloft.
It squirmed in the air, like the flecks of paper ash tumbling out of a chimney. Gaspare’s heart was in his throat as the black tail sliced the sky over his head. The whip shape in the air loomed even closer, perhaps it was out of control and would crash with Saara, crushing himself and the dazed horse in the process.
But no, the writhing of the body continued, but the head of the beast was stable, erect…
Riding the wind.
Warm rushes of air bathed Gaspare as Saara and the dragon shrank into the blue sky.
“I never was close enough to see the portal itself,” spoke the beast. Saara felt the deep voice through her legs and seat. “Lucifer met me on the mountainside, whereupon I played the part of the credulous fool!
“It had been so long, you must understand, since any creature had dared attempt mischief upon me…”
“I can well believe that,” screamed Saara into the wind that buffeted her face. Her words swept behind her, but the dragon appeared to hear. “But didn’t you sense that he was evil, not to be trusted?”
The beast snorted a gout of flame. “To which sense would I be indebted for this information, madam?
“Sight, possibly? I tell you he looked like a man of substance. Sound? His voice was good enough. Smell? All mammals—forgive me my bias—smell rather strongly to me.”
Saara only laughed. She was finding the sense of flight without work quite exhilarating, and the dragon’s upwash made the air around her comfortably warm. “I mean the sense of your power— the magic sense.”
A shudder passed along the dragon’s length and the scales under Saara roughened slightly. “I know nothing of such, and wish to know no more.”
“But you’re a dragon!” the woman blurted.
From the splash of flame at his mouth, it appeared the creature had cleared his throat. “I am a natural being,” he replied with forced control, “possessing (I have it on good authority) the imperishable essence of truth.
“Magic, on the other hand, is illusion. Delusion.”
Saara, feeling an argument in the making, kept her mouth shut, and as they floated up beside the nameless peak of rock, and the dragon continued his story.
“He said he could direct me to Signor Alighieri—the man whose teaching I sought—but that it was necessary for me to delve a tunnel through a certain rock.
“Sages have asked their devotees for stranger things, so…”
“So you created that hole in the mountain?” Saara was impressed.
“Such as it is, yes. With no attempt at aesthetics, and not with the idea I was to live in it for twenty years, but I did cut it.”
Suddenly a wave of breath-stealing heat washed over Saara. “I cut it and then, when the trickster betrayed me, I cut it in two, letting in the sun. But I could not break the delusion that held me there.”
And then the dragon laughed, causing Saara’s body to tremble on its hard seat. “Trapped in delusion. Such an old story!”
It was intoxicating for both the long-prisoned dragon and his rider: swooping at the gray tooth of rock, swirling great loops in the thin freezing air. But Saara did not forget to watch, either for a tall window in the surface of the peak or for some sign of its deadly householder.
“Perhaps it would be better,” she spoke into what she hoped was the dragon’s ear, “if we landed and worked from the rock itself. We would not be as easily seen.”
“Crawling over stone like a lizard?” the dragon drawled. He wrapped his tongue around his muzzle once again. “All very well if you’re not in a hurry.” And he continued his sailing progress.
At the top of the peak there was no fissure of any kind in the rock. They worked their way down in great circles.
The sunlight failed and the flat blue sky deepened with that immense suggestion of distance that stars give. Instead of darkening, the peak went white.
Saara felt a touch of dizziness, for though she was used to flying, she was not used to being carried. The long whip-body swung lower and lower, faster and faster. They were almost back to the road.
Suddenly Saara felt it; something bad was below. Something cold and bad. She leaned out over the dragon’s neck, hoping she was not about to be sick.
“I see it,” replied the great creature, though Saara had not had time to speak. “A bar of light. And more.”
Now Saara was horribly dizzy: dizzy as a mote spinning on the end of a string. She felt around her a touch of invisible, filthy fingers.
“It is he. The Liar,” she whispered through her nausea.
Beneath Saara the black dragon was like so much steel cable. He said nothing more, but sank swirling down upon the road, not fifty feet from the soft-lit window in the rock. Elegantly, insouciantly, Lucifer stood at the lip of his tall window and watched the dragon’s arrival.
They had found him. Or had he found them? Saara knew a moment of worry on that subject.
The Devil had chosen to dress himself in white—white velvet— and his gold hair shone like coins. With both arms crossed over his slender chest, he leaned against the bald rock of the mountain peak and looked the dragon up and down.
“So. The watchdog has slipped its chain.” Then, stepping forward on his small (oddly small) feet, he added, “And it hadn’t even the wit to run away.”
When the dragon opened a long mouth, dim red light suffused the stones. “Base delusion!” he hissed, words muffled by fire. “How fitting that you dress in death’s color. You spawn of chaos by error! Begone!”
Then Lucifer laughed outright, supporting his chin in one hand and that elbow against the palm of the other hand.
“This is no watchdog at all, but a parrot!”
Perhaps this was a miscalculation on Lucifer’s part, or perhaps it was part of some long and subtle plan of his. Perhaps he wanted to induce the dragon to cover his head of gold curls and his clothing of white velvet in a deluge of liquid flame. But whether foresight or folly, the Devil vanished beneath a molten spew that burned the air and melted rock beneath him.
He vanished and reappeared, rising phoenixlike in a shape that mirrored the black dragon in length, shape, and deadly armament. But whereas the dragon was black, Satan was white: a stainless, powdery white, tipped with gold at every claw and spine.
These two beasts flexed metallic crowns as they stared at one another. The black dragon reared, rising as effortlessly as a bubble in water. So did the white. Together they lifted slowly: two marionettes on a single wire, two heads balanced on serpentine necks which rocked back and forth in time, keeping even the distance between them.
“Clown!” drawled the snowy dragon. “Wind kite!”
The beast of black iron showed its teeth. Saara crouched behind the dragon’s multicolored head shield, gripping the pierced scales with all her strength.
She was no more than a flea in a battle of armed and armored knights; invisible, powerless, ignored by both contestants. She suspected that the Devil did not even know she was there.
But she was not forgotten: not by the armored knight who carried her. For as the two dragons rose and the white spe
wed fire, the black dragon arched his head back, sparing his rider the force of the flaming blow.
At the same time his whiplike tail lashed forward, slicing at the ermine belly of his opponent. The Devil howled and struck again.
Saara closed her eyes, for the heavens were wheeling above her too closely. Her feet slipped from the dragon’s metallic sides and there was nothing holding her on except the grip of her fingers.
Whirling, twisting like two strands in a rope, the dragons rose. The sharp peak of granite fell away beside them. The air was lurid.
But though the black dragon was huge and ancient, he was a creature of the earth, with terrestrial limits. He bent back before the limitless onslaught of Lucifer’s flame. He threw back his head for a breath of air uncontaminated by his enemy’s reek, and at that moment the white beast struck, slashing with scimitar teeth at the iridescent black neck. The black dragon hissed pain and fury.
The floating rope of two strands bent, became a wheel: black-hubbed with a rim of shining silver. The white serpent emitted a blistering laugh and slashed again, using flame and tooth together.
Saara, though she could not see, could guess the deadly situation. “You can’t get close enough to use your own fire! Because of me,” she shouted thinly into the furnace-crackling air.
“No matter,” replied her mount quite calmly, though his mouth spattered flame as he spoke. “There are other weapons at hand.” And once more he slashed out at Lucifer, not with his tail alone, but with his whole length, from the base of the neck.
The air cracked like thunder as seventy-five feet of edged violence snapped through it. It caught Lucifer at the crease where his near hind leg joined the body, leaving a sharp pink line which darkened to red. Then as the white dragon pulled back, guarding the wound, the black released his bottled fires.
Blazing acids, not sulfurous but smelling of iron, spattered and stuck to the snowy scales. Wherever they touched, the stainless surface bloomed into whorls of color: red, green, and blue like oil spilled on rock. Then, as the flame went out, the circles darkened.
“Ho, Demon,” boomed the black dragon. “You have smudged your funeral whites.”
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