by Paul Cook
“Yes. I want you safe.”
Beramun jumped up, eyes flashing. “Who said you could decide my fate? Those vipers out there wiped out my family. I will see them served the same!”
“Don’t shout,” murmured Duranix, eyes still closed. “They’ll hear you.”
She flushed, then snatched up Amero’s spear. “I’m hungry,” she declared more quietly. “I’ll bring back game.”
She stalked off, leaving Amero staring after her. Before he could speak his confusion, a low, bass rumble rose from Duranix’s throat.
Amero circled around to glare at the dragon face to face. “Are you laughing at me?”
“You’re making progress, boy. If we survive, she may give herself to you yet.” Hot puffs of air from Duranix’s chuckling stirred Amero’s hair.
“That’s not funny.” A smile crept across Amero’s face even as he said it. “Boy” indeed! Though he was thirty-eight, in
Duranix’s company Amero frequently felt like the thirteen-year-old he’d been when they met.
Soon, his laughter was mingling with his friend’s.
Beramun returned from her hunt empty-handed. The countryside was barren, she reported, everything chased away by Zannian’s mounted patrols. By then the eastern sky was blushing toward dawn. It was clear they would be dangerously exposed come daybreak.
Amero and Beramun cast about for some spot where they could make a stand. Hiding in the pit again was out. The sod was beginning to sag under the weight of the previous day’s rain. The sunken rim of the hole was a dead giveaway. The bottom of the hole was knee-deep with mud as well.
While the two humans traded increasingly desperate suggestions, Duranix struggled to his feet. He had feeling in his hind legs again, but they were still too weak to support him. Stretching his wings wide, he could tell by the pain in his shoulders he couldn’t take to the air, either.
He lifted his head as high as he could and surveyed the distant raiders’ camp. The sun, veiled by a lingering cloud, was rising behind the camp, and he could see the humans stirring. It was only a matter of time before their mounted scouts found his little group.
Duranix shifted slightly on his forelegs. Mud squelched between his claws. Looking at the viscous soil, a marvelous, far-fetched idea blazed through the fevered haze in his mind. Digging his claws into the mud, he bowed his neck until his jaw rested on the wet turf. From deep within himself, he summoned the fire inside.
Duranix’s brazen skin grew hotter and hotter. The mud on his limbs and belly dried to a gray powder and flaked off. Steam rose around him. He continued to pour his depleted strength into the damp soil, heating it until the previous day’s heavy rains were given up in the form of mist.
Amero was still searching for a likely place to hold off the raiders when he noticed the shallow creekbed was rapidly filling with fog. Already, all he could see of Duranix was the arch of his spine and the top of his bowed neck. Fascinated, Amero watched the mist fill the ravine, creeping up the hillside and flowing down the other side. A light breeze helped move the mist across the open plain. He was soon surrounded by one of the thickest fogs he’d ever seen.
“Amero? Amero, are you there?”
“Beramun! Over here!”
She appeared out of the murk like a black-haired wraith. “Duranix is weaving a mist to hide us from the raiders!”
They worked their way back to the creek and used it to guide themselves to the dragon. Golden morning light filtered through the fog, tinting it the exact color of Duranix’s scales, and they missed the dragon completely. They backtracked. In the end they found him only because Beramun walked directly into his chest.
“My ancestors!” she exclaimed. “He’s become fog himself!”
“Not quite,” Duranix replied. “But close enough for our purpose.”
“How long will the mist last?” asked Amero.
“It will remain only as long as the wind and sun allow. Once gone, I cannot renew it. My strength is used up.”
Amero grabbed Beramun’s hand. “Then we’d better get moving.”
Before breaking camp, the Jade Men left behind a macabre honor for their master: a mound of severed heads, taken from the slain prisoners. It stood higher than a man, and the green-garbed warriors forced the recaptured slaves to march past it. Nacris had not ordered the deed, but she approved it. The surviving captives trudged silently by the gruesome pile, their earlier pride in the escape completely gone. A few paces beyond the grisly warning, the mist swallowed them.
“Move on,” Nacris commanded. Four Jade Men hoisted her litter onto their shoulders and followed their comrades into the fog.
A dark shape passed overhead. Fog swirled, and Sthenn, in full winged form, landed beside the column of Jade Men. Nacris ordered her bearers to stop.
“Greetings, Master,” she called. “Queer weather, isn’t it? At sunrise the day was as clear as a mountain stream.”
“So it was.” Sthenn stretched his ancient limbs and preened. “This is no ordinary fog. It stinks of metal.”
Nacris regarded him blankly.
“Duranix, fool!” he barked.
“The bronze dragon lives? I thought he was poisoned.”
“He is. By this subterfuge he seeks to hide from my scouts.”
“I warned you not to judge him lightly.”
The green dragon cocked his misshapen head and snarled, “Have a care, old rodent! Task me with your warnings, and you may lose another limb.”
Nacris paled, the scar on her cheek standing out vividly. Her fear seemed to satisfy him.
“The air is drying,” he said, his angry tone gone. “The fog won’t last much longer. When it clears, I will find poor little Duranix.”
He was right. For the first time in hours, Nacris saw faint shadows appear.
“Have the Jade Men spread out,” the dragon told her. “If they find Duranix before Zannian’s men do, I’ll grant you a boon, my little cripple.”
With a few running strides, he took to the air. Amber mist spun behind him, quickly obscuring him from view.
“You heard the Master,” she said to the Jade Men. “Find that dragon!”
All but her bearers departed, and Nacris sat back in her litter. They were two days away from the Valley of the Falls. In two days, her revenge would truly begin.
She knew the favor she would ask of Sthenn. The Jade Men’s tribute to their master had given her the idea. Once Arku-peli had fallen, she would ask him to send swift scouts to every corner of the plains to find her former chief. When Karada was found, Nacris would send her gifts from the new mistress of Arku-peli — the heads of her brother and the bronze dragon, salted and cured like elk jerky.
Chapter 17
The Sensarku marched along in good spirits, chattering and enjoying the dry morning after the thunderstorm. They camped the first night by a branch of the Plains River, laid fires, and generally behaved as though they were on a casual hunting trip rather than a war party.
The second day dawned much like the first, with no sign of raiders, a green dragon, or their own lost people, but the acolytes’ ease was shattered by midmorning. Paharo and his scouts had kept their distance from the noisy Sensarku, save for periodic reports to Tiphan. Before noon on the second day, the acolytes were alarmed to see all the scouts suddenly returning as fast as they could run.
Calming his followers, Tiphan ordered his spearmen forward. Fingers fumbling a bit, he tied a special belt around his waist. In it were fourteen separate pockets, each containing a fragment of spirit stone.
“What news?” called Tiphan as Paharo returned.
Though the morning was mild, beads of sweat glistened on the scout’s forehead. “Something strange, Tosen. The day broke clear, but an unusual patch of fog has appeared to the southwest, and it’s moving our way.”
“Fog? Is that all?” Tiphan frowned, adding, “Wait. You say it’s moving?”
“It’s like no mist I’ve ever seen.”
“How fas
t is it moving?”
“It’ll reach us by noon at the latest, I’d say.”
Tiphan nodded. “Then we shall continue our advance.”
The scouts muttered, their disagreement with this strategy plain.
Paharo, trying to keep his tone respectful, said, “Tosen, I don’t advise it. Anything could be in that fog — anything!”
“Then the further from Yala-tene we meet it, the better for our people,” was his lofty reply. To his acolytes, Tiphan said, “Make ready! We will proceed.”
“Tosen, please! This isn’t wise.”
“I’ll be the judge of that, Paharo.” Tiphan noted the apprehension on the faces of the other scouts. “Have your men stay in sight until we reach the mist,” he said. “No sense getting separated.”
Gradually the southern horizon took on the color of pale bronze as the sun played over the gently rolling fog-bank. Without being ordered to do so, the Sensarku slowed then halted in a body to gaze at the strange phenomenon. The oncoming mist slowly swallowed isolated trees and waving grass.
“Why have you stopped?” Tiphan’s voice rang out.
Nervously, the acolytes shouldered their weapons and started forward. All talk ceased.
Tiphan debated using one of his spirit stones to dispel the fogbank, but decided to save his power for more serious threats. When they finally entered the murk, he congratulated himself on his wisdom. The mist flowed around the Sensarku, but nothing untoward happened.
Paharo was not so confident. Conditions were entirely wrong for such a mist, and it behaved most unnaturally. The fog held together in the wind instead of tearing into wisps, as was usual. Despite his concerns, Paharo and the scouts continued forward.
Moments later the scout on his far right suddenly stiffened. The fellow held up his hand, and his comrades halted. He knelt in the high grass. The others followed suit, obeying his silent warning.
Paharo heard what had alarmed the boy — a swishing sound of movement in the grass ahead and to their right. It could be a deer or pig, or it could be a raider approaching. He strained his eyes to penetrate the mist, but it was so thick the Sensarku thirty paces behind him were completely hidden.
Paharo got a whiff of a sour aroma he knew well — larchit paste — as two figures loomed out of the mist. He could make out only enough to know they were humans on foot. He brought his spear up, ready to cast.
One of the intruders stumbled and cursed. Though the words were muffled, Paharo recognized the voice. He grinned in relief.
“Arkuden!” he called out. “It’s Paharo. We are here.”
The two newcomers closed the last few steps rapidly, revealing themselves to be Amero and Beramun. With many grins and back slaps, Amero was reunited with the young hunter.
“Did Udi and the rest make it back to the village?” the Arkuden asked quickly. Paharo explained he hadn’t seen the other boys since Beramun had sent him off to warn the village.
Just then, the loud footfalls and careless jangling of the young Sensarku rattling their gear pierced the fog.
In response to Amero’s questioning look, Paharo explained, “We’re guiding the Tosen and his acolytes to turn back the enemy.”
“What?” the Arkuden exclaimed. “They’ll be slaughtered!”
Another sound forestalled any reply: a heavy dragging noise, as though a large, laden travois was approaching.
“Duranix is coming,” the Arkuden explained. The scouts were thankful to hear the dragon was alive.
“He’s grievously hurt,” Beramun warned. “Look yonder.”
Duranix was pulling himself along with his powerful front legs. When he saw Amero talking with the young hunters, the dragon lowered his head to the ground and sighed gustily.
“I can’t go another league,” he said.
“How far are we from the valley?” asked Amero.
“At a hunter’s pace, a day and a night,” Paharo replied. “With the Sensarku in tow, two full days.”
Amero’s face reddened. “The arrogant fool. Where is Tiphan?”
“He is here.” Tiphan strode through the murk, leading his followers. “I rejoice to find you alive, Arkuden.”
“I’m sure you do.”
Tiphan spied Duranix lying motionless in the grass. He bowed to the dragon. “And our Protector! How fares he?” he asked solicitously.
“Weak,” said Amero. “The raiders wounded him with a poisoned spear.”
The acolytes huddled behind Tiphan, pointing at the unmoving dragon and murmuring unhappily. Amero resisted an urge to push among them and box their ears. It was Tiphan who deserved his anger, not these foolish youngsters.
“Shall I heal him?” Tiphan said simply.
All conversation stopped. “What?” Amero asked.
“Shall I call upon my spirit power to heal the Great Protector?”
Amero, Beramun, and the scouts exchanged surprised looks.
“Can you?” the girl asked.
“All things are possible to the wise,” Tiphan said smugly. Gripping his staff, he walked to Duranix’s side.
“Great Protector,” he declaimed loudly. “May I, the first of your servants, attend you?”
The dragon opened one eye. “Did you bring me an ox haunch?”
“No, Protector. I’ve come to heal you.”
“I’ve no patience for jests, little man.” The eyelid clicked shut.
“I have the power, Protector. May I use it to aid you?”
A sigh echoed in the silence. “Do what you will. I can go no further.”
The Sensarku leader bowed. He waved the acolytes forward and had them stand in a ring around the prostrate dragon. Taking one of the largest fragments of stone from his belt pouch, he wedged it into a slot cut in the head of his staff.
“Behold! Power from the time before men and dragons!” Tiphan raised his staff, then lowered it until the stone chip hovered a finger’s width above Duranix’s forehead.
The dragon’s eyes snapped open. He exclaimed hoarsely, “Thunder and lightning! That’s — !”
“Is it all right?” Amero interrupted, stepping forward.
“Stand back!” Tiphan commanded. “The power is not for ordinary men!”
Duranix said nothing more, so Amero kept silent, though his gaze moved uneasily from the Sensarku to the prostrate dragon.
Tiphan began his invocation as proscribed in the Silvanesti books, repeating again and again a simple, clear command to the power in the stone. At first, he did this silently, in his head, but as his blood warmed with the force of his concentration, the words spilled loudly out of his lips.
“Heal the wound!” he cried. “Cleanse this tainted flesh! By all the power captive in you, I command you, spirit of the stone, to heal this wound!”
Softly at first, then rising in volume as their master’s voice likewise rose, the acolytes took up the chant.
“Heal! Heal! Heal! Heal!”
The stone glowed. Tiphan was trembling from head to toe, and sweat dampened his colorless hair. He lifted the blazing stone away from Duranix’s head, holding it as high as his arms and the length of the staff would permit.
“Let it be done!” he screamed, and brought the staff down like a club.
For the briefest instant Amero imagined he saw a plume of sparks trailing from the dazzling stone. Then it struck Duranix’s head between his horns, and a tremendous flash of white light erupted. Amero reeled away and fell, taking Beramun down with him. As he hit the ground, he heard the full-throated roar of the bronze dragon.
Zannian cantered forward to confer with his lead riders. The vast fogbank was at last beginning to dissipate, after they’d spent half a day plodding through the impenetrable murk. Riders on the west side had found signs of humans on foot, moving northeast, along with a broad bloodstained trail flattened in the grass — the trail of the wounded dragon.
He ordered a hundred men to gallop northwest to intercept the wounded creature and his helpers. Poisoned spears were given
to every fifth man.
Then came the explosion. It began as a distant flash in the fog, like far-off lightning, but instead of fading, it grew larger and brighter until it engulfed Zannian and everyone around him. He felt a sharp bite of cold on the exposed flesh of his face and arms. When his eyes recovered from the blinding glare, he saw the fog had been swept away. Not a trace of the mist remained.
Sthenn, who had been flying overhead all morning, emerged from the blast out of control and plummeting to earth. He landed hard a score of paces from Zannian, his breast and chin striking the ground. The warrior chief rode over to the floundering green dragon.
“Master! Thank you for clearing away the fog!”
“Worthless rodent! I didn’t do it!” Sthenn said shrilly, and Zannian was shocked to see portions of the dragon’s hide were blistered and smoking. He held his wings awkwardly away from his body, as though it was painful to move them.
“A great power has been loosed,” Sthenn said. “Power not seen in these parts in my lifetime!”
“By the bronze dragon?”
Before the green dragon answered, he tried to fold his wings. Several enormous blisters on his wing membranes ruptured. Sthenn’s howls of anguish were so loud Zannian’s horse shied. Mad with pain, Sthenn rolled and thrashed in all directions, swatting riders from their horses. His hind feet tore huge clods from the ground as he shrieked in agony.
Zannian, fighting to control his mount, dodged frantically, but a buffet from the dragon’s wing felled him and his horse. He hit the ground, rolled away from the gray stallion, and kept crawling until he was well clear of the great beast’s tantrum.
At last the aged green dragon mastered his temper and roared an answer to Zannian’s question. “That was no dragon spell! One of those detestable elf priests must be nearby. Only they have the means of tapping the ancient spirit power!”
Gingerly, Sthenn stood on all fours, breathing heavily. “Get your men together,” he told Zannian.
The raider chief formed his band into three large blocks of horsemen, with the center under his personal command. It took some time for all the warriors to gather, and before he was done mustering them, Nacris had arrived with the slaves and the Jade Men.