Read A Dragon at Worlds' End Online
Authors: Christopher Rowley
In Marneri, Lagdalen had discovered her own natural skill. She was a dedicated attorney of law. In fact she was the Crown Attorney in the case against the Aubinan grain magnate Porteous Glaves. It was a torturous case with heavy political overtones. It had consumed Lagdalen for years now and had become her life's work. Or so it seemed.
Fi-ice knocked at the door. A young volunteer opened it, a girl from another of the upper aristocrat families, the Bestigari, and ushered the witch in. The message was delivered.
Lagdalen seemed haggard. Fi-ice knew it was the misbehavior of the queen that was responsible. Without the firm backing of the crown, the Aubinan case was extremely difficult to move through the courts. The Aubinans were very powerful.
The sight of the seal on the message caused Lagdalen to tremble visibly.
Not again. Not another mission for the Office of Unusual Insight. Lagdalen had been promised that that was over. Lessis had gone into the mystic and taken retirement. The wild days of the Unusual were behind them. Or so she had thought. But what else could bring a message to her from Lady Ribela, the new, shadowy executive of the Unusual?
"Thank you, Lady, for bringing this so promptly." Fi-ice heard the lack of enthusiasm in Lagdalen's thanks.
"I pray it has no significance for you, child. You have given enough."
Lagdalen nodded briskly. "And I am needed here. We have such a task in front of us." Lagdalen went into her small, private office, cut the seal, and read the message.
Her wild whoop shook the building a moment later.
"They're alive! It's incredible news. They're alive!"
She was holding hands with Fi-ice the next moment and dancing a jig.
"They survived the volcano. Don't ask me how, but the lady sends word that the Broketail dragon and his dragonboy are alive. They're somewhere in Eigo, which is a pretty big place, but they are still alive."
"Wonderful! Thanks be to the Mother."
"Thanks be. Oh, my, we must tell the dragons. Come, I've got to see the dragonhouse when they get this news."
Fi-ice chuckled. "They'll hear it in Seant."
Which turned out to be an accurate description of the hullabaloo that broke out when Lagdalen spread the news through the dragonhouse. As it happened, the 109th Marneri Dragons were in residence in the city that summer. They had spent the half year they'd been back from Eigo as a reserve unit based in the Blue Hills and had just completed a rotation into the city.
They had recovered from their experiences in Eigo, to an extent. But the dragon corps as a whole was still shaken by the casualties. The grim battle of Tog Utbek would always be a red memory, drenched with the blood of dead men and dragons. But the 109th had survived the campaign better than the other dragon squadrons, except that at the very end they had lost the Broketail.
This had been a hard blow, the worst in years. It left old Chektor as the only survivor of the original 109th. And Bazil Broketail had been the heart of the unit for a long time, a leatherback with speed and skill with that dread blade that made him the natural sword champion of the Legions. All the surviving dragons of the 109th were still in deep sorrow for the loss. The Purple Green of Hook Mountain, the only wild dragon to ever serve in the Legions of Argonath, had never felt such sorrow in his life, except perhaps for the misery he felt at the loss of his ability to fly. Even Alsebra, the caustic freemartin, had been subdued ever since the loss of the Broketail leather-back and his worthless dragonboy, Relkin. Those two had been in some scrapes before, by the fiery breath, they all had, especially the battle at Sprian's Ridge, but fate had finally caught up with them. There was a big empty space in the middle of the squadron and the new dragons, young Churn and Gryf, had been shut out socially by the older members. The unit was still not functioning well in battle drills. The new dragonleader, Cuzo, was inept with dragons, but wonderful at organization. He certainly couldn't motivate the dragons into more than halfhearted concern with his drills. They ran and exercised, but their hearts were not in it.
The Broketail had been their heart, and now it was broken.
Thus when Lagdalen sprinted in with the news that somehow those two had survived the volcano's blast, the roof almost came off with the collective roar that went up.
While enormous beasts cavorted in the gym and plunge pool, Lagdalen found herself cornered by Swane of Revenant, little Jak, and Manuel out by the door. The noise was still loud, but they could just about hear each other speak.
She showed them the message. Bazil and Relkin were alive. They were also lost.
"Well, that was what I figured," said Swane.
"Course, Swane," said Jak. "You've always got it figured out."
"Watch it, Jak. Stands to reason. If they survived, they got lost; otherwise they'd have been back long ago."
"If I was them, I'd never come back. Just to get away from you."
"Trust those two to survive. Even a volcano!" said Manuel.
Another boy came stumbling in, his skinny frame bent under a bale of hay.
"Uh-oh, here's Curf," said Swane.
"You all right, Curf?" said Jak.
Curf merely gasped under his burden.
"Old Cuzo came down pretty hard on you this time, kid," said Manuel.
"Cuzo wants to kill me," said the bent figure under the hay.
"Put the hay down, Curf, we got some news."
Curf shed his load and straightened. Lagdalen had never seen a more handsome youth. Straight chin, fine nose, level brown eyes, and short black hair—he was almost perfect.
Swane told him about the Broketail and Relkin, and Curf whooped. He'd never met either of them, but he'd heard all the legends about the Broketail dragon when he was growing up. The loss had been a blow to the entire Legion.
"You'll have to write us a song, Curfy," said Swane.
"I'll try."
Lagdalen's interest was piqued.
"Are you a musician, Curf?"
"No, Lady, but I play guitar a little."
"I'm sorry, Lady Lagdalen, this is Curf. Curf, this is the very honorable and most high Lady Lagdalen of the Tarcho."
Curf bowed.
"Honored to meet you, Lady."
"And I, to meet you, Curf."
"Curf's dead modest, Lady," said Jak. "He's really good with the guitar."
"I should like to hear him play. Perhaps when the song is written. We'll all sing together."
"Be like old times, eh, Lady?"
"Yes, Swane. Like old times."
"Have to buy the dragons some extra beer. That'll get them singing."
"Haven't had a sing in a long time," said Manuel.
"Well, Cuzo don't know nothing about dragons," groused Swane.
"Well, let's do it soon."
"Hear that, Curfy?"
"I heard, Swane."
"Just think, those two are alive, and probably living like emperors among some bunch of natives."
"Of course, they'll be living in the palace."
Manuel snorted. "It says they're south of the Inland Sea. That means they're in the Lands of Terror still. You know what that means."
Swane and Jak knew. Carnivorous monsters bigger than wyvern dragons, twice as big in some cases, and capable of eating a horse in about three bites.
"I hope Bazil has his sword," said Jak.
Swane brightened. "As long as that leatherback has his sword, they're safe. He's deadly, is the Broketail."
"We'd better pray for them," said Manuel.
Lagdalen nodded. "You're right, Manuel, we must all send our prayers to them."
Relkin awoke in the house of pain. It was still night, and he was still bound to the wall of the pergola by heavy bracelets around his wrists and ankles.
His situation remained hopeless. Biroik stood nearby, as still as the statue he really was. Mot Pulk probably lurked within the pergola, nursing his hatred for an orphan boy from Quosh.
Then Biroik noticed that he was awake and clapped his hands.
There was a slight shuffling sound from the pergola and a moment later Mot Pulk was there.
"Ah, child, you are back among the living. Worse luck for you, eh?" The elf lord strutted up and down in front of Relkin, whose face was so swollen, his left eye was almost closed. There was blood caked round his mouth. "I think you remember where we had bogged down," Mot Pulk continued. "All you have to do is tell me what I want to know. Who was it that infiltrated the lovely Ferla?" The elf lord's face still bore the effects of Relkin's blows and seemed weirdly misshapen.
"I told you already," Relkin croaked. "I can tell you nothing more."
"You think I can be taken in by such ridiculous stories?" Mot Pulk said scornfully. "A witch woman from the far east somehow invaded Ferla's mind, such as it was, and supplanted her? Someone from outside the Thousand? Such nonsense. I know it was someone from the board, and I have to know who it was. It could be very important to my—even to our—survival. I should emphasize that whereas I wish to keep you alive, they will kill you."
"You killed Ferla."
Mot Pulk's eye showed a blue center for a moment.
"A regrettable lapse, I admit. No one regrets that moment of rashness more than I, for if I had her here I would have gotten the truth out of her by now. More than this drivel you give me about witches. Listen to me, child, you stand on, breathe, eat the very stuff of the magic power of the Lords Tetraan. No other magical system is as powerful as ours. None of your Doom Masters or metal lords would ever dare to challenge us. They flourish out in the lonely wastes of this desolate world because we are invested here. Stop trying to tell me that some puny heathwitch, some ignorant old hag, would have been able to penetrate my secret world. Not even the best players in the Tendency and the Cabal have been able to do it, or else we would not be here now! So it must have been some independent, some wild fellow from the second or third hundred. Someone with a new system. I must know who it was. You must tell me everything!"
"I have told you everything. You are mad, all of you."
"No, fool, we are gods. Biroik! Fetch the irons and the charcoal. I can see that we will have to move to sterner measures."
Relkin stared sullenly out to the dark pool where he knew the grotto plunged.
At that moment he would have given anything to just be able to run out and throw himself into that darkness. An end to the pain, and Biroik, and the broken heart and the sorrow and all the rest of it. Poor Ferla. Thrown to her death. That such fear and agony should ever have afflicted Ferla made him writhe inside. It was far worse than what they were doing to him. At least so far.
Biroik pulled a charcoal grill on wheels out of the bushes on the other side of the pergola. The charcoals were piled high on the grill pan. They ignited on their own, or so it seemed to Relkin's fuddled senses, and burned down very quickly to a hot glowing mass. Relkin could feel the heat they cast from five feet away.
Onto the grill went a number of long metal irons.
"Now, child, shall we begin?" said Mot Pulk in his mildest voice.
Relkin tried to grit his teeth, but that hurt too much. Biroik brought a hot iron down on the skin of his forearm and he leaped in his bonds and let out a sharp scream. In part it was the terrible surprise of it, for the iron hurt far more than he had imagined it would. His whole body was shaking from it half a minute later.
When he could speak, he begged Mot Pulk for mercy.
"Listen to me, I'll tell you anything you like. You don't have to do any more. What do you want to know? Just tell me what you want me to say."
"Good. So who was it?"
"I told you, it was the one they call the Queen of Mice."
"Stop! Consider your words carefully, you little fool. You were there; you spoke to whoever it was. You must be able to tell me more."
"I have told you, don't you understand? I'm no hero! I don't have anything to hide from you. What can I give you, what can I tell you? I don't know anything about your thrice-damned Game!"
Mot Pulk nodded to Biroik, who proceeded.
Relkin blacked out again after a while and Mot Pulk had Biroik douse him with a bucket of cold water and leave him.
Mot Pulk was troubled. The boy had resisted to a point that seemed unimaginable. Whoever had infiltrated had done a wonderful job on him. He was completely convinced of his improbable tale. Nothing would shake him.
The only way to get at the truth would be the hard way. Mot Pulk would have to cast the mind magic and probe the boy's thoughts directly.
The next time Relkin awoke, he was seated on a bench inside the pergola. Mot Pulk was seated close by. Biroik loomed in the doorway. Relkin groaned. The burns on his arms were very painful. He was still well shackled.
"Ah, there you are. Back with us again."
"No more," said Relkin. "No."
"I agree, child. Biroik will not torture you any further. Come, look up, look into my eye."
The elf lord took his chin in one hand and lifted his head. Relkin's mouth throbbed. There was a loose tooth on the left side. The pain from the burns was so bad, though, that he scarcely noticed the agonies from his battered face. His eyes met Mot Pulk's single orb and froze. The golden orb was glaring down at him; he felt himself shriveled and naked to it.
Mot Pulk pressed upon Relkin's mind. The pressure grew greater minute by minute, as if a great constricting snake had wrapped itself around his mind and was crushing it. He resisted with every bit of willpower he could muster.
It was not such a surprise this time, either. In some undetermined way, Relkin found that he was ready for the challenge. Once before he had suffered something like this, when great Heruta, leader of the Padmasa Five, had tried to enslave him. But this was a subtler, deadlier pressure than anything Heruta had summoned up.
Relkin struggled to awaken that infant power he had felt within him—one side effect of the bruising Heruta had given him. Something had shaken loose that day and had not returned to normal since.
Mot Pulk pressed in on his mind like floodwater, rising inexorably into the village that was Relkin's mind. Relkin could not keep him out forever; he just didn't have enough sandbags. There was further frustration in that Relkin could sense that there was power there inside him, something that might be able to turn the tide, but it hovered just out of reach.