Read Dragonlance 17 - Dragons Of A Vanished Moon Online
Authors: Margaret Weis
"Mina save us!" moaned the jailer, shivering in the doorway. He made a lunge at Silvanoshei, caught hold of his arm with a grip that nearly paralyzed the elf.
The jailer broke into slobbering tears and clung to Silvanoshei as if he'd found an elder brother.
"What is it?" Silvanoshei cried.
"The dragon! Malys," the jailer managed to blurt out. His teeth clicked together so he could barely talk. "She's come. We're all going to die! Mina save us!"
"Mina!" Silvanoshei whispered. The word broke the shackling fear.
"What has Mina to do with this?"
"She's going to fight the dragon," the jailer burbled, wringing his hands.
The prison erupted into chaos as the guards fled and the prisoners
screamed and shouted and flung themselves against the bars in frantic efforts to escape the horror.
Silvanoshei pushed away the quivering, blubbering mound that had once been the jailer. The cell door stood open. He ran down the corridor. Men pleaded with him to free them, but he paid no heed to them.
Emerging outside, he drew in a deep breath of air that was not tainted with the stink of unwashed bodies and rat dung. Looking into the blue sky, he glimpsed the red dragon—a huge, bloated monster hanging in the heavens. His eager, searching gaze flicked past Malys without interest. Silvanoshei scanned the heavens and at last found Mina. His sharp elven eyesight could see better than most. He could see the tiny speck that gleamed silver in the sunlight.
Silvanoshei stood in the middle of the street, staring upward. People ran past him, dashed into him, shoved him and jostled him in their mindless panic. He paid no attention, fended off hands, fought to keep his feet, and fought to keep his gaze fixed upon that small sparkle of light.
When Malys appeared, Palin discovered that there was one advantage to being dead. The dragonfear that plunged Sanction's populace into chaos had no effect upon him. He could look upon the great red dragon and feel nothing.
His spirit hovered near the totem. He saw the fire blaze in the eyes of the dead dragons. He heard their cries for revenge rise up to the heavens, rise up to Takhisis. Palin never doubted himself. His duty was clear before him. Takhisis must be stopped or at least slowed, her power diminished. She had invested much of that power into the totem, planning to use it as a doorway into the world, to merge the physical realm and the spiritual. If she
succeeded she would reign supreme. No one—spirit or mortal— would be strong enough to fight her.
"You were right/' said Mirror, who stood by Palin's side. "The city has gone mad with terror."
"It will wear off soon—" Palin began. He broke off abruptly.
Dalamar's spirit emerged from among the dragon skulls.
"The view of the battle is better from the box seats," Dalamar said. "You do not have feet, you know, Majere. You are not bound to the ground. Together you and I can sit at our ease among the clouds, watch every thrust and parry, see the blood fall like rain. Why don't you join me?"
"I have very little interest in the outcome," said Palin. "Whoever
wins, we are bound to lose."
"Speak for yourself," Dalamar said.
To Palin's discomfiture, Dalamar's spirit was taking an unusual interest in Mirror.
Could Dalamar see both the man and the silver dragon? Could Dalamar have guessed their plan? If he knew, would he attempt to thwart them, or was he preoccupied with his own schemes? That Dalamar had schemes of his own, Palin did not doubt. Palin had never fully trusted Dalamar, and he had grown more wary of him these past few days.
"The battle goes well," Dalamar continued, his soul's gaze fixed on Mirror. "Malys is fully occupied, that much is certain. People are calming down. The dragonfear is starting to abate. Speaking of which, your blind beggar friend appears to be remarkably immune to dragonfear. Why is that, I wonder?"
What Dalamar said was true. The dragonfear was fading away. Soldiers who had been hugging the ground and screaming that they were all going to die were sitting up, looking sheepish and embarrassed.
If we are going to do this, we have to act now, realized Palin. What danger can Dalamar be to us? He can do nothing to stop them. Like me, he has no magic.
A roaring bellow boomed among the mountains. People in the street stared upward, began to shout and point to the sky.
"A dragon has drawn blood," said Mirror, peering upward. "Hard to say which, though."
Dalamar's spirit hung in the air. The eyes of his soul stared at them as if he would delve the depths of theirs. Then, suddenly, he vanished.
"The outcome of this fight means something to him, that is certain," said Palin. "I wonder which horse he is backing."
"Both, if he can find a way," said Mirror.
"Could he see your true form, do you think?" Palin asked.
"I believe that I was able to hide from him," said Mirror. "But when I begin to cast my magic, I can no longer do so. He will see me for what I am."
"Then let us hope the battle proves interesting enough to keep him occupied," said Palin. "Do you have fur and amber ... ? Ah, sorry, I forgot," he added, seeing Mirror smile. "Dragons have no need of such tools for their spell casting."
Now that the battle had begun, the totem's magic intensified. Eyes in the skulls burned and glittered with a fury so potent it shone from ground to heaven. The single eye, the New Eye, gleamed white, even in the daylight. The magic of the totem was strong, drew the dead to it. The souls of the dead circled the totem in a pitiful vortex, their yearning a torment fed by the goddess.
Palin felt the pain of longing, a longing for what is lost beyond redemption.
"When you cast your spell," he said to Mirror, the longing for the magic an aching inside him, "the dead will swarm around you, for yours is a magic they can steal. The sight of them is a terrible one, unnerving—"
"So there is at least one advantage to being blind," Mirror remarked, and he began to cast the spell.
Dragons, of all the mortal beings on Krynn, are born with the ability to use magic. Magic is inherent to them, a part of them like their blood and their shining scales. The magic comes from within.
Mirror spoke the words of magic in the ancient language of dragons. Coming from a human throat, the words lacked the rich
resonance and rolling majesty that the silver dragon was
accustomed to hearing, sounded thin and weak. Small or large, the words would accomplish the goal. The first prickles of magic began to sparkle in his blood.
Wispy hands plucked at his scales, tore at his wings, brushed across his face. The souls of the dead now saw him for what he was — a silver dragon — and they surged around him, frantic for the magic that they could feel pulsing inside his body. The souls reached out to him with their wispy hands and pleaded with him. The souls clung to him and hung from him like tattered scarves. The dead could do him no harm. They were an annoyance, like scale mites. But scale mites did nothing
more than raise an irritating itch. Scale mites did not have voices that cried out in desperation, begging, beseeching. Hearing
the despair in the voices, Mirror realized he had spoken truly. There was an advantage to being blind. He did not have to see their faces.
Even though the magic was inherent to him, he still had to concentrate to cast the spell, and he found this difficult. The fingers
of the souls raked his scales, their voices buzzed in his ears.
Mirror tried to concentrate on one voice — his voice. He
concentrated on the words of his own language, and their music was comforting and reassuring. The magic burned within him, bubbled
in his blood. He sang the words and opened his hands and cast the magic forth.
Although Dalamar guessed that his fellow mage was up to something, he had discounted Palin as a threat. How could he be? Palin was as impotent as Dalamar when it came to magic. True, Dalamar would not let that stop him. He had schemed and
connived so that whichever way the bread landed, he'd still have the butter side up.
Yet, there was something strange about that blind beggar. Probably the fellow was or fancied himself a wizard. Probably Palin had concocted some idea that they could work together, although what sort of magical rabbit they would be able to pull
out of their joint hats was open to debate. If they were able to come up with a rabbit at all, the souls of the dead would grab it and rip it apart.
Satisfied, Dalamar felt it safe to leave Palin and his blind beggar to bumble about in the darkness while he went to witness first hand the gladiatorial contest between Malys and Mina.
Dalamar was not overly interested in which one won. He viewed the battle with the cold, dispassionate interest of the gambler who has all his bets covered.
Malys breathed blazing fire on the corpse dragon, the leather wings erupted into flames. Malys chortled, thinking she was the victor.
"Don't count your winnings yet," Dalamar advised the red dragon, and he was proven right.
Takhisis advanced onto the field of battle. Reaching out her hand, she touched the death dragon. Her spirit flowed into the body of the burning corpse, saving Mina, her champion.
At that moment, Dalamar's soul heard the sound of a voice chanting. He could not understand the words, but he recognized the language of dragons, and he was alarmed to realize by the cadence and the rhythm that the words were magic. His spirit fled the battle, soared back to the temple. He saw a spark of bright light and realized immediately that he had made a mistake—
perhaps a fatal mistake.
As Dalamar the Dark had misjudged the uncle, so had he misjudged the nephew. Dalamar saw in an instant what Palin planned.
Dalamar recognized the blind beggar as Mirror, guardian of the Citadel of Light, one of the few silver dragons who had dared remain in the world after all the others had so mysteriously fled. He saw the dead surrounding Mirror, trying to feed off the magic he was casting, but the dragon would be poor pickings. The dead might leech some of the magic, but they would not seriously impede Mirror's spellcasting. Dalamar knew
immediately what the two were doing, knew it as well as if he had
plotted it with them.
Dalamar looked back to the battle. This was Takhisis's moment of victory, the moment she would avenge herself on this dragon who had dared moved in to take over her world. The Dark Queen had been forced to endure Malys's taunts and gibes in seething silence. She had been forced to watch Malys slay her minions and use their power—that should have been her power.
At last, Takhisis had grown strong enough to challenge Malys, to wrench away the souls of the dead dragons, who now
worshiped their queen and gave their power to their queen. Dragons of Krynn, their souls were hers to command.
Long had Takhisis watched and worked and waited for this moment when she would remove the last obstacle to stand in her way of taking full and absolute control of her world.
Concentrating on the foe in front, Takhisis was oblivious to the danger creeping up on her from behind.
Dalamar could warn Takhisis. He had but to say one word and she would run to protect her totem. She could not afford to do otherwise. She had worked hard to create the door for her entry and she was not about to have it slammed shut in her face. There would be other days to fight Malys, other champions to fight Malys if she lost Mina.
Dalamar hesitated.
True, Takhisis had offered him rich reward—a return to his body and the gifting of the magic to go with it.
Dalamar reached out with his soul and touched the past, touched the memory that was all that was left to him: the memory of the magic. He would do anything, say anything, betray, destroy anyone for the sake of the magic.
The thought that he must abase himself before Takhisis was galling to him. Once years ago, when the magic had been his to command, he had been open in his defiance of the Dark Queen. Nuitari, her son, had no love for his mother and could always be counted upon to defend his worshipers against her. Nuitari was gone now. The power the dark god of magic had lavished on his servant was gone.
Dalamar must now abase himself before the Dark Queen, and he knew that Takhisis would not be generous in her victory over him. Yet, for the magic, he could do even this.
Takhisis straddled the world, watching the battle in which she took such a keen interest. Her champion was winning. Mina flew straight up at Malys, the gleaming dragonlance in her hand.
Dalamar knelt in the dust and bowed his head low and said humbly, "Your Majesty . . ."
Mirror could not see the magic, but he could feel it and hear it. The spell flowed from his fingers as bolts of jagged, blue
lightning that crackled and sizzled. The air smelled of brimstone. He could see the blazing bolts in his mind's eye, see them striking a skull, dancing from that skull to another, from the skull of a gold to the skull of a red, from that skull to the skull touching it, and round and round, jumping from one to the next, in a blazing, fiery chain.
"Is the spell cast?" Mirror cried.
"It is cast," said Palin, watching in awe.
He wished Mirror could see this sight. The lightning sizzled and danced. Blue-white, the bolts jumped from one skull to the next, so fast that the eye could not follow them. As the lightning struck each skull, that skull began to glow blue-white, as though dipped in phosphorus. Thunder boomed and blasted, shaking the ground, shaking the totem.
Power built in the totem, the magic shuddered in the air. The voices of the dead fell silent as the voices of the living raised in a terrible clamor, screaming and crying out. Feet pounded, some running toward the totem, others running away.
Watching Mirror cast the spell, Palin recited to himself the words of magic that for him held no meaning, but which were imprinted on his soul. His body sat unmoved, uncaring, on a bench in the temple. Exultant, his soul watched lightning leap from skull to skull, setting each afire.
The magic reverberated, hummed, grew stronger and stronger. The white-hot fire burned bright. The intense heat drove back