The Lost Heir (10 page)

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Authors: Tui T. Sutherland

Tags: #General, #Fantasy, #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Action & Adventure, #Children, #Social Issues, #Adolescence

BOOK: The Lost Heir
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When Queen Coral landed on the Council level, a flurry of wingbeats sounded all over the palace. Council members swept down from caves or surged up from the water below. Coral settled herself in the largest pool, which was labeled
QUEEN
. She tugged Anemone into the water with her, although it was a bit of a squeeze, and the little dragonet had to curl under the queen’s wing.

“Mother,”
Anemone protested. “Quit
squashing
me.” She wriggled around until there was a little more space for her.

Small turquoise dragons darted in with platters of food, laying them all around the pools as Council members slipped into their places. Tsunami stood awkwardly to the side. She felt like her tail and wings were in the way of every thing.

“Oh,” said Queen Coral, finally noticing. “Tsunami, you can sit there. Tortoise is guarding the hatchery at the Deep Palace, so she won’t be joining us today.” The queen pointed her claw at a pool two down from hers, labeled
DRAGONET CARE
in tiny emeralds. The wet stone was chilly under Tsunami’s talons as she climbed into it.

The pools on either side of the queen said
DEFENSE
and
COMMUNICATION
. Shark splashed down in the first one, and a moment later, Moray landed in the other.

“Good morning, Your Majesty,” Moray said, bowing and dipping her wings. “I know yesterday was a shocking day, but I hope you slept well. I worried about you all night.”

“Thank you, dear,” said the queen. Her eyes were scanning the rest of the Council. Whirlpool flew up beside Moray. His pool was labeled
MAGIC & PUBLISHING
. Tsunami tilted her head at him. How did one become an expert in either of those things? What kind of magic did he know anything about?

She glanced around, wondering if there was a pool for the king, but she didn’t see one. Queen Coral hadn’t said anything about Tsunami’s father yesterday, and in all the excitement about Kestrel’s body, Tsunami hadn’t had a chance to ask. Maybe he was at the Deep Palace. Maybe she could meet him later today.

She remembered some of the Council from the day before — the plump dragon, Lagoon, who’d been sent to feed the other dragonets, sat in a pool marked
AQUACULTURE
. Piranha, the one who’d gone with Shark to examine and dispose of Kestrel’s body, was in
WAR
. Tsunami didn’t know any of the other dragons’ names, but from where she sat she could see the labels
TREASURY
,
JUSTICE
, and
HUNTING
.

She didn’t really understand this “Council” business. She wasn’t sure what they did or why they were necessary. Wasn’t it enough to have a queen? Couldn’t Coral just decide every thing herself?

That’s what I’d do,
she thought.
I’ll get rid of this Council and run the tribe like a proper queen.
Maybe it worked for Coral, but Tsunami didn’t need or want eleven dragons following her around offering advice all the time.

Her stomach rumbled, and she tried to remember when she’d last eaten. The platters around her were loaded with raw ruby-red fish, most of it sliced and deboned and arranged into fancy rolls with seaweed. She’d only ever eaten fish raw and whole, or sometimes scorched when her friends decided to set their dinner on fire.

A few cauldrons held seething mountains of tiny green crabs. Three large bowls contained some kind of salad of octopus tentacles and herbs that Tsunami had never seen before.

She plucked out one of the tentacles and tasted it. It was rubbery but sweet, with a tang like lemons and salt. She reached for another one and realized the whole Council was staring at her. Nobody else had started eating yet.

Oops.

All the Council eyes swiveled toward the queen, who was staring at the bit of octopus in Tsunami’s claws. Coral shook herself and smiled.

“It’s all right,” the queen said, clapping her talons together. “Naturally I forgive my long-lost daughter any accidental impudence. As we all know, she was raised by barbarians, so she couldn’t know any better. I give you all permission to eat.”

Tsunami crushed the tentacle between her claws.
Raised by barbarians!
Perhaps it was true, but what a thing to say to Tsunami’s future subjects. They’d think of her as the dragon who knew nothing about SeaWing customs. How would she ever earn their respect with
that
reputation?

Was Coral deliberately making Tsunami look foolish in front of the other dragons?

Tsunami studied her mother while Coral helped herself to the largest pieces of fish and crunched through talonfuls of crabs. She dropped bits of food into Anemone’s open mouth as she ate.

Maybe not. Maybe Tsunami was seeing problems where there weren’t any.

But maybe it wouldn’t hurt to be a little more careful from now on.

“Pearl, report,” ordered the queen after the dragons had eaten in silence for a while.

“No change,” said the elegant pale green dragon in the trea sury pool. “All your jewels are safe, as always. No scavengers can get to them, and no dragon would dare to try.”

“Splendid,” said Coral. She upended the last of a cauldron of crabs into her mouth. “Shark, report.”

“I am concerned about our defenses,” snarled the gray-green dragon. He glared at Tsunami. “The intruders in our midst are a danger to us. We have no idea whether they might have led others to our palace, or what they might be planning.”

“Now, now,” said the queen. “Those are our guests, not intruders. If my daughter trusts them, then of course I do, too.”

“Oh, good,” Tsunami said quickly. “Because I was thinking maybe they could join us for breakfast. I’m sure they’re hungry. And if they could see that they’re really welcome here . . .” She trailed off as Coral shook her head.

“Only Council members and royalty are allowed at Council meetings, darling,” Queen Coral said, running one claw along a strand of her pearls. “But they certainly won’t go hungry. Lagoon, did you make sure they were served an ample breakfast?”

The turquoise dragon nodded.

“They can have the rest of this as well.” Queen Coral waved her talons at the breakfast leftovers. The same small dragons from before darted up from the kitchen level, collected the platters, and flew down to the cave with them. Tsunami watched over the edge of the pavilion. None of her friends even poked their heads out. Were they sulking in there? Were they still mad at her?

Well, she was doing a fine enough job of embarrassing herself. She didn’t need them to come out and help. Raised by barbarians, friends with other tribes . . . not the stuff most queens were made of.

“Whirlpool, report,” said the queen, smiling at him.

Whirlpool touched the hoop in his ear and flared his wings. “Anemone’s lessons are going wonderfully,” he said. Tsunami wasn’t sure why his voice was so irritating, but it felt like claws scraping on stone to listen to him. “And your scrolls have never been more popular. The latest has been bought by every single SeaWing in the tribe.”

“Mostly the underwater editions,” Moray jumped in. “Those tend to sell the best. Of course, I spend all my energy promoting them —”

“But I’ve or ga nized another reading,” Whirlpool interrupted. “Every high-ranking dragon is clamoring to attend. We’re charging an emerald apiece this time.”

Queen Coral waved her tail thoughtfully. “I want to be sure I’m reaching the eel-eating masses as well, though,” she said. “I mean, my writing should be shared with everyone, not just those who can afford it.”

“Of course,” Moray said. “That’s why the schools have all changed their curriculums again to be sure the dragonets have enough time to read every thing you’ve written. It’s the most important subject they study.”

“You can’t be serious,” Tsunami burst out. “More important than how to fight the war?”

Cold silence.

Queen Coral pressed a talon to her chest, looking injured. “Darling, my writing is about
every thing
. As you would know if you’d finished the scrolls I gave you yesterday. What did you think of them?”

Tsunami guiltily remembered the scrolls she’d tossed aside as they flew off to see Kestrel’s body. She hadn’t even gone back to the library to get them.

“Uh,” she mumbled. “
The Missing Princess
is still my favorite.”

A chuckle ran around the assembled dragons. Tsunami felt hot with embarrassment. Councils were so stupid! She would never ever have something like this when
she
was queen!

“That reminds me,” said the queen. “Whirlpool, Tsunami needs lessons in Aquatic. Can you believe she never learned it, poor thing?” She tapped her claws on the stone in front of her. “Such a sad upbringing.” Her face was sympathetic, but her stripes were flashing, and Tsunami wondered angrily if she was saying something different to the Council, knowing Tsunami couldn’t understand.

“Of course, Your Majesty,” Whirlpool said. He inclined his head toward Tsunami. “I would be happy to instruct the princess.”

“Piranha, report.” Queen Coral snapped her head around to the war pool.

The war commander was so clawed up that she seemed to be more scars than scales. One horn was snapped in half, and several of her teeth were broken.

“Still no information about the dead SkyWing,” Piranha growled. Tsunami ducked her head. Eventually she had to tell her mother the truth — who Kestrel was, how Tsunami knew her. But she didn’t want a harness attached to her, or some kind of permanent guard. And she felt like she should tell her friends first.
I’ll tell her later. I will.

“A war party returned early this morning,” Piranha went on. “Do you want to hear their report?”

Queen Coral sighed and gestured with her claws.

Piranha called over the edge and two soldier SeaWings came flying up from a lower level. One was too injured to fly, so the other supported him. They spiraled in a jerking, awkward motion and landed heavily in the center of the Council meeting.

The SeaWing who couldn’t fly had long burns along his side and one wing was scorched almost entirely black. Claw marks along his underbelly were still oozing blood, which dripped into the sparkling channels between the Council dragons, staining the pearls red. Tsunami saw the queen give her decorated floor a concerned look.

The other SeaWing had a scorch mark in the middle of his tail and a horrible gash in his neck. He was breathing heavily, and bubbles of pale red blood foamed out of his gills.

“Let’s hear it,” Queen Coral ordered.

“Something strange is happening in the Sky Kingdom, Your Majesty,” said the one who couldn’t fly. “The battalions — it’s as if nobody knows who’s in charge. We were patrolling the outer islands, and we were attacked by three separate wings. The first squadron was half SkyWings and half SandWings. During the second attack, we heard the SkyWings yelling, ‘For Ruby!’ and in the third, at least one dragon shouted, ‘The queen is not dead! Long live the queen!’ ”

Queen Coral sat forward, splashing water over the edge of the pool and squashing Anemone over to the side. “For
Ruby
?” she echoed.

“One of Scarlet’s daughters,” growled Piranha. “Does that mean Queen Scarlet is dead?”

Tsunami clenched and unclenched her talons. How much should she tell the Council? She didn’t want to reveal Glory’s secret weapon. They never knew when they might need it. And they weren’t even sure Glory
had
killed Queen Scarlet during the escape.

“We would have heard if there had been a challenge, surely,” said Moray.

Queen Coral shot a stern look at the blue dragon in the secrets and spies pool. “Why don’t you know anything about this?”

“None of my spies have reported in for days,” he protested. “I had no idea anything strange was happening in the Sky Kingdom.”

The soldier who couldn’t fly was leaning more and more dizzily against his companion. Puddles of blood soaked their claws.

“Mother,” Tsunami said. “Shouldn’t somebody look at their injuries?” She pointed at the soldiers.

Coral eyed them up and down. “Anything else to report?”

“Twelve casualties,” the soldier croaked. “All the rest badly injured.”

“But nobody followed you back to the palace?” demanded Shark.

“We were careful,” he promised, wincing with pain. “We took the longest routes back.”

“Very well.” Queen Coral waved her talons dismissively. “You may go.” She flicked her tail at the smallest Council member, in the
DRAGON HEALTH
pool, who ushered the soldiers away. Moray immediately jumped out of her own pool and started cleaning up the blood on the floor.

“If there is chaos in the Sky Kingdom, maybe this is the time to strike,” Coral said. She wrapped one strand of pearls around her claws. “We should send the rescue mission now. We could get him back
today
.”

“We don’t know enough,” growled the secrets and spies dragon. “If Scarlet is dead, how did she die? Did Ruby kill her, or is she fighting with her sisters for the throne?”

Moray hissed at the blood under her claws. “Like the SandWing rivalry all over again. Making the war even worse.”

“Or has Burn taken over?” Piranha suggested. “She would, if she was there.”

“But Scarlet’s daughters might not listen to Burn the way Scarlet did,” said Moray.

“What could have happened?” Coral said. “Queen Scarlet was so strong.”

Tsunami shifted uncomfortably, feeling the cold water seeping through her scales. She couldn’t hide what she knew, not when her mother needed the information so much. Or at least she could share some of the dramatic highlights. “Um,” Tsunami said. The entire Council turned to stare at her. “That . . . might have been us.”

There was a shocked pause.

“You!” barked Piranha.

“Ridiculous,” snarled Shark.

“Queen Scarlet found us under the mountain,” Tsunami said. “She held us prisoner in her palace, and when we escaped, we sort of might have killed her. Maybe. I’m not sure. I will say we
tried
.” She quite liked the horrified look on Shark’s face at that bit of news.
Starting to respect us a bit more?
she thought.

“You were at the SkyWing palace?” Coral lunged out of her pool, swarmed across the stone, and seized Tsunami’s front talons in her own, clutching them so hard it was a little painful. Behind her, Anemone was yanked half out of the pool with a squeak of protest, but Coral didn’t seem to notice.

“Did you see a SeaWing named Gill?” the queen cried. “Green scales, big and powerful, with brave eyes?”

Tsunami felt sick. Gill. Yes, she remembered Gill — but not the way Queen Coral described him. She’d been forced to fight Gill in Scarlet’s gladiator arena after he’d been deprived of water for months and driven mad with thirst. He’d been covered in scratches, as if he’d tried to drink his own blood.

The sound of dragon bones snapping between my talons.

“I did see him,” Tsunami said slowly. A gasp went up around her, whispers traveling from one Council member to the next. Shark’s pale, unfriendly eyes were like octopus arms coiling around her neck.

“Can you tell us where he is?” Queen Coral asked ur gently. “We’ve been planning a rescue mission, but he’s not in the regular prison with the others. And we’ve got to get him back, Tsunami. You have no idea how important it is.”

Tsunami curled her tail in close to her talons. She wanted to dive into the lake, crawl down to the bottom, and stay there forever with her wings over her head.

“He’s —” Her voice cracked. She swallowed and started again. “He’s dead.”

She’d had no choice but to kill the desperate SeaWing in the arena. It was his life or hers. She hadn’t wanted to kill him . . . at least, she was pretty sure she hadn’t wanted to kill him. But when she did — the truth was, Tsunami had loved the look on Queen Scarlet’s face when she broke Gill’s neck. She liked the feeling of being powerful and dangerous.

Gill’s sanity had been long gone anyway. It had been easy for Tsunami not to think about where he came from or what his life was like before he landed in the SkyWing prison. It was easier not to think of him as a real dragon.

She’d never imagined her own mother desperately planning to get him back — or that she’d have to explain his death to anyone.

“Dead?” Queen Coral released Tsunami’s talons and staggered backward. Her claws splashed in the winding channels, slipping on pearls. “How?”

“Um,” Tsunami stammered. Did she really have to admit this in front of all these dragons? “In the arena.”

“But he refused to fight,” Coral said. “We heard about it, through our spies. He convinced each of his opponents to lie down and refuse to fight along with him. He has — had a way with words. No one who met him would be able to kill him.” A smile flickered across her snout and vanished. “Queen Scarlet was furious, I heard.”

“She was.” Tsunami swallowed again. “She punished him. It was — really awful.”

“What do you know about his death?” Shark demanded coldly.

Tsunami stirred the water with her claws. “She drove him mad. She kept him away from water until he lost his mind and — and when he was crazy, he was dangerous. He was barely even a dragon anymore. He had to be killed.”

“Really,” Shark said, and Tsunami felt horribly sure he had guessed the truth.

“Why?” Tsunami asked. “Who — who was he? An important general?”

“More than that,” said Queen Coral in a hollow voice. “Much more. He was my husband.”

Darkness seemed to be rushing into Tsunami’s vision, sucking away all her breath. She knew what Queen Coral was going to say next, and she would have fled back to the mountains to avoid hearing it if she could.

“Tsunami . . . Gill was your father.”

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