DragonLight (19 page)

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Authors: Donita K. Paul

BOOK: DragonLight
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23
         

I
NTO
E
VERY
L
IFE A
L
ITTLE
R
AIN
M
UST
F
ALL

“Catching up on the news?” Bardon asked Kale as he ducked through the flap of their tent. She sat cross-legged on her pallet with the talking gateway floating in front of her.

“I’ve heard from Wizard Namee, Librettowit, and Father.” She looked up from her work. “I thought I smelled rain when you came in.”

“It’s breezy, and the clouds have covered the night sky. I’d say the likelihood of showers before morning is strong.”

“If we’d brought one of the blue dragons, we’d know for sure.”

“When we hear the rain against the canvas, we’ll know for sure.”

Kale grinned and went back to fiddling with the talking gateway.

Bardon stretched out on a pile of blankets and reveled in the lack of discomfort from stakes. Kale rubbed the ointment Elma had given them into his neck every night. It helped tremendously. As they traveled north, he and Regidor had been doing forms every morning. The exercises had been beyond Bardon’s capabilities for many months. Kale joined them most mornings, which left Gilda to cook.

“What are you grinning about?” asked his wife. “You look like a bobbin bird with a stash of worms in his nest.”

“I
was
thinking about food, Gilda’s food. For someone who dislikes cooking, she sure fixes delectable meals.”

“Librettowit says Sir Dar will join us soon.”

“More good food. We’re going to come back from this quest fatter than when we left.”

“Namee says he’s coordinating all the information on the Followers for Paladin.”

“That’s logical. He has the talking gateways, and his castle is centrally located. The Followers’ activities have originated in central Amara.”

Kale’s fingers nimbly worked the threads of the gateway. Bardon’s ability to see the contraption was limited. He didn’t have a wizard’s eye, but as with many things, when he was with his wife, her talent enhanced his abilities.

He concentrated, trying to see more than just vague strands of light. “I know I’d never see that thing if you didn’t have your fingers on it.”

“You see the pictures, don’t you, and hear the words?”

“Oh yes.”

“Good, because this one from my father, I particularly want you to hear.”

He moved to sit beside her as she finished. The gateway popped once before the image of Sir Kemry appeared.

Bardon scooted closer to Kale so he could see over her shoulder. “Why did it make that noise?”

“I don’t know. I must have something out of alignment. I’ll ask Regidor later.”

Sir Kemry spoke from the portal. “Hello, my lovely.”

Bardon chuckled and kissed her cheek. “Obviously, your father is not speaking to me.”

“Shh!”

The message continued. “I’ve had some disturbing news from my friends in the North. The pesky swarms of those dark dragons are spotted almost every day now. They still mind their own business, barreling along until they drop out of sight.

“A farmer witnessed the demise of one of the hordes. He said a thick, black cloud started across his field of corn. The pack skimmed the tops of his plants and seemed to become less dense as it flew. By the time the swarm reached the other side, it had disappeared. He rushed out to examine his crops to see if they’d caused any damage. They hadn’t, but he found a trail of their bodies between the rows. The bodies had disintegrated.

“And of more interest to Regidor and Gilda, a meech dragon’s body was found on the edge of the Brosnatt Desert where the Callum River goes underground. Apparently died of old age. There’s a lot of uncharted territory in that region. They’ll want to check into the area.”

“They will, indeed,” said Bardon.

“Your mother sends her love. Taylaminkadot thinks she’s going to have twins. Your dragon Iffit is stealing grain from that farmer—what’s his-name?—down past Orcan’s Hollow. I’ve paid twice for huge dragon-sized suppers. But Iffit promises to behave. He says he misses you, and that makes him hungry.”

“Ha!” said Kale. “He’s just as hungry when I’m there.”

“Take care, my lovely. But enjoy the adventure.”

The center popped again, and the image disappeared.

Bardon moved to get up. “Shall we take the message to Regidor?”

Kale flattened the portal and put it in the cylinder. She handed it to Bardon. “I need to groom the little dragons. Would you take Father’s message to their tent? He may want to see the others, as well, if he hasn’t been contacted. When Regidor opens the talking gateway, ask him if he’ll fix that noise.”

Bardon leaned over and kissed her forehead. “You’re tired, aren’t you? We both need this quest to get back in shape.”

“The stakes?”

“Not a twinge.”

“Good.”

“I’ll be right back.” He pushed the canvas flap aside. “Dark and misting. Artross, will you come with me?”

The gray dragon flew to his shoulder. As soon as they stepped out into the night, Artross began to glow. Mikkai barreled out of the tent and sat on Bardon’s other shoulder.

“So you think I need an interpreter, Mikkai?” He listened to his dragon chitter. “Yes, I suppose I do.”

Bardon saw Regidor had not yet doused whatever light form he used in the tent. From the position and color, Bardon guessed the meech dragon used floating globes as his light source. Glad that his friend had not retired, Bardon tramped to the other side of the fire. As he and the dragons passed Brunstetter’s dark quarters, they heard the urohm snoring and the two youngsters giggling.

Bardon crept over to their side of the tent and said, “Shh!” just as loud as his lungs would let him. Toopka and Sittiponder gasped and let out a peal of laughter. The snickering they made trying to stifle their noise woke Brunstetter. He grumbled something, but the big urohm had a large family and the happy racket of children didn’t really disturb him. Bardon heard him snoring again before he went on.

On the other side of the fire, Bardon stopped short. He could call out to Regidor, but instead he eavesdropped a moment. Gilda’s strident tone penetrated the cloth walls. Her husband answered each complaint in a stern voice. Without hearing the particulars of the argument, Bardon went back to the blessed peace of his own tent.

“They’ve gone to bed?” asked Kale as she rubbed oil into Dibl’s back and wings.

“It just wasn’t a good time.”

Kale’s eyes flashed to his and immediately away. She would not pry into what he had seen or heard. He could tell her. She probably already knew. But what would be the good of discussing the strife Gilda poured into their lives? He didn’t need Tieto to know the meech lady’s aura must be jagged and discordant.

The mist thickened, then turned to tiny droplets, soaking the ground with a quiet rain. Bardon helped massage oil into the nine dragons.

“Celisse is calling to me,” said Kale, not stopping as she clipped Gymn’s tiny toenails.

“Greer, too. They don’t quite understand why we would prefer to remain warm and dry.”

“I’m willing to go play with them any afternoon when they dance in a warm summer rain. But I’m not joining their antics in the middle of the night.”

“Greer says you’re chicken.”

“Tell him I’m practical.” She reached into her medicinal bag and pulled out Elma’s ointment.

Bardon laughed. “Are you going to oil me now?”

“Only one tiny spot at the back of your head.”

They fell asleep with their pallets pushed together and small dragons piled on top of them.

The drizzle of the rain quieted in the early morning, and when they awoke it was to the unnerving silence of a forest filled with fog. Gray tendrils of mist curled through the slight opening Bardon had left to allow fresh air to circulate through the flaps of the tent.

Bardon got up and pulled on riding pants and a thick shirt before sitting on a camp stool to shove his feet into scuffed black boots.

From where he sat, he peeked out into the gloom. “A hot cup of tea will sure taste good this morning. Crispin, do you think you can start the fire?”

The red dragon stretched and yawned. A burst of flame escaped as he exhaled.

“Come on, then.” Bardon ducked through the door. Mikkai followed with Tieto and Crispin. They flew the perimeter of the camp as if checking to see if all was well.

“Greer and the others kept watch, boys.” He crouched beside the fire. “Our wood is good and soaked. It’s a good thing we put a supply under a tarp.”

He retrieved sticks and pieces of old log from the stash and built a campfire.

“Crispin, will you do the honors?”

The small dragon landed beside the ring of rocks. He eyed the organized tangle of tinder and the bigger branches laid across the top.

“Give it a try, old man,” said Bardon. “We’ve got a tinderbox. You don’t need to feel as if the world will fall apart if you don’t set it ablaze on the first try.”

On the third blow, Crispin sent a stream of fire right into the middle of the pile. The flame caught the smaller twigs. Soon the tinder snapped, popped, and shimmered as it turned from brown to orange. The small blaze ignited the logs and continued to lick the wood until the fire permeated Bardon’s carefully laid tower.

“Does this mean we won’t fly today?”

Bardon turned to see Gilda wrapped in some silken robe that belonged in a fancy castle, not a clearing in the wood.

He gestured to the air around them. “The fog?”

She shivered. “The gray, murky, thick, and silent fog.”

“We’ll fly, Gilda. First, this vapor may burn off. Second, our dragons will carry us straight up and level off above this ground-hugging cloud. Mikkai can keep us on course even without looking at familiar landmarks. He has a special sense of direction that I’ve never known to fail.”

Gilda sat abruptly on a log they had been using as a seat. “It can’t be soon enough for me. This egg is getting larger every day. I don’t want to be in the wilderness when it comes.”

“That’s understandable.”

“I don’t think you truly do understand. I’m a dragon. When I present an egg, I won’t stay to hatch it. I won’t even want to. Not then. But now, I care about where I leave it. I want it to be nurtured in a community of meech, not raised by some scurvy specimen from another race.” She laughed a mirthless titter, picked up a twig from the ground, and twisted it with her fingers. “Need I tell you that Risto was not a nurturer?”

“No, I can guess as your guardian he was abominable. Cherishing was beyond the scope of his nature.”

“I want better for my offspring. Regidor had Kale and Fenworth and Librettowit. You were better off in The Hall than I was.”

Bardon opened his mouth to protest, but Gilda plunged on. “At least you were surrounded by your own kind. Whereas I…” She dropped the mangled twig and stepped on it, grinding it into the thin layer of mud. “There was no one I could say was of my kind, no meech. And those enslaved by Risto? Every single soul I came in contact with was either filled with hatred or fear. And I hated and feared them as well.”

She thrust her chin forward and glared at Bardon. “I not only want this meech child to know his own kind, I want him to absorb the atmosphere of a meech colony. This child will exude intellect, culture, and refinement. No one will look askance at my offspring.”

Her gaze shifted to the fire. Her expression became pensive. Bardon wondered what future she tried to envision in the dancing yellows and reds of the blaze. Apparently, Gilda forgot that Bardon and several dragons listened.

“No one will shun my child,” she whispered. “No one.”

         
24
         

C
AMPFIRE
T
ALES

Bardon watched Sir Dar’s dragon Merlander as the brilliantly colored beast approached. He raised a hand in greeting. The doneel would surely raise the spirits of all those on the quest. Bardon sighed. The group had fallen into a glum state.

He and the others had only been journeying for four days, but something heavy oppressed the country. As they traveled northward, the melancholy became palpable. Bardon tramped through the thigh-high grass to greet Sir Dar. He expected to see the wide smile that typified doneels. Instead, Sir Dar’s solemn expression deflated Bardon’s hopes for good news.

They sat around in a circle after savoring a meal the doneel diplomat brought with him. He demonstrated a happy demeanor as he heated and served dinner by the campfire. But Bardon detected an underlying distress that his diplomatic mentor fought hard to hide. Finally, after they were settled, Kale demanded a full account.

“It’s obvious, Sir Dar, and you’re driving me crazy. You are trying
not
to tell us something, or waiting for the right moment.” She brushed her curly locks away from her face and looked him in the eye. “My courage is shriveling as I imagine all sorts of bad news. Please, tell us.”

Sir Dar sat for a moment, staring at the fire. When he began to speak, he outlined his news in a direct manner, never attempting to gloss over the implications of the events. The most alarming element of his report came last. He revealed the amazing speed with which the Follower faction was expanding throughout the country.

Bardon broke the silence that followed Sir Dar’s speech. “It’s amazing how quickly evil spreads and how long it takes to gain back the ground with good.”

“I don’t believe these people just popped up out of nowhere.” Sir Dar scratched his chin. “One day the Followers were a rumor. Two weeks later they possess meeting houses in every big city, communes in every province, and even schools for older children. Officials in government are declaring their allegiance to the New Understanding. Businesses and properties have recently changed hands and now belong to the Collective.”

He looked around the group and sniffed. “The Collective! Even the name smells of heresy. Wulder has always emphasized the importance of individuals. He’s never lumped people together. There’s a reason he made seven high races.”

“Why?” asked Toopka. Her voice at full volume demanded attention. “Why did Wulder make seven high races?”

Sir Dar frowned at her. “I don’t know the reason He did, child. I just know if Wulder chose to make seven high races, He had a good reason for doing so.”

Toopka scrunched up her face, then turned to her blind tumanhofer friend next to her.

Sittiponder rocked slightly as he sat cross-legged on the ground. His hand rested on Toopka’s arm. “It’s called trust, my furry friend. Wulder puts a lot of stock in trust.”

The little doneel’s shoulders hunched up far enough to touch her cheeks. She let them fall and sighed loudly. “What’s that mean?”

“Do you always have to talk so loudly? You rattle the leaves on the trees around us.” Sittiponder sighed. “It means He appreciates it when we believe Him.”

Toopka clicked her tongue and shook her head. “I believe He made seven high races. I can see them.”

“He appreciates it when we believe He has a reason for making seven and not five or six races.”

Toopka remained silent.

“Ha! You don’t have a question?’

“No.” She played with the fringe on the end of her sash.

Sittiponder nodded sagely. “Wulder also appreciates it when you’re not constantly questioning whether He’s doing things the right way or not.”

“So,” said Toopka in a quieter tone than she usually used, “if Wulder wanted someone to do something, the someone shouldn’t worry about knowing when to do it and how to do it and where to do it and who to do it to and why it has to be done?”

No one answered.

“Well?” Toopka’s volume had risen again.

“I’m thinking,” said Sittiponder. “You asked a lot of questions in that question.”

“As we have seen in our history,” said Sir Dar, “Wulder does equip His warriors specifically for the challenges they face.”

Brunstetter reached over and put his huge hand on the doneel girl’s back. “He provides help in every time of trouble. Sometimes the help comes from a surprising source.”

“And that…” Sir Dar clapped his hands together. “That makes our adventures a good deal more entertaining. We cannot predict whom He will use to further His plans.”

“You need not worry, Sir Dar,” said Gilda. “In the old records Regidor and I have discovered, there are references to the meech holding a vital secret. This mysterious power controls evil. Once we find the meech colony, the destiny of Amara will once more be in safe hands.”

Bardon glanced at Regidor, hoping for further details. But his friend wore his most bland expression, and Bardon knew the closed-off attitude well. There would be no explanations from that quarter.

“Would you share with us the extent of your discoveries?” asked Sir Dar. His bright eyes showed interest. His ears perked forward, and his furry hands rested on the elegant cloth covering his knees. He leaned forward, giving Gilda all his attention. “I’m sure all of us are anxious to know more of your ancestry.”

The campfire flames caught the resin of a log. Snaps and crackles punctuated the sudden whoosh of sparks shooting into the air. The flare cast a glow on Gilda’s exotic features. Bardon caught a glimpse of eagerness in her eyes. The excitement accentuated her fascinating appeal. A moment later, shadows again obscured her beauty. At times, Bardon thought of Regidor’s wife as a rare piece of art, lovely to look at and admire, but too peculiar to step out of the frame and be a part of the ordinary world.

Gilda stood and paced, animated by her knowledge. She clasped her hands and addressed the others as if they were an audience in a lecture hall. “The meech probably came from another planet through something similar to a gateway. The only explanation is that Wulder Himself made the portal, and for His reasons, brought what is termed ‘the great and the small’ by ancient scribes to your land.

“By comparing the three accounts we found, we’ve concluded that the ‘small’ are the minneken, who also wisely withdrew from mingling with your seven high races. The legend is that the meech brought knowledge of good and evil, that they controlled evil on their world, and were charged with controlling evil on this world.”

Regidor threw a small branch onto the campfire. The disturbance caused another flare up. Red and gold sparks floated up into the dark sky and disappeared.

“The key word in this is ‘legend,’” said Regidor. “In all of our searching, we found only three documents. Each was written in the style of folklore.”

Gilda started to say something, but Kale jumped in. “Many of the ballads I heard while growing up were history in poetic form. Mistress Meiger always said there is some truth behind the tales woven into the music.”

“That’s so.” Gilda gave Kale a rare look of approval. “Many questions will be answered when we locate the colony.”

Sittiponder shivered.

“Are you cold?” asked Toopka. She picked up her gaily striped shawl and put it around his shoulders.

Bardon rose to his feet. The boy’s pale face alarmed him. Sittiponder stared with unseeing eyes at the fire, looking distressed. The muscle in his jaw twitched. His lips quivered as if he worked to keep from crying. Kale rose and started forward.

Bardon stepped closer and crouched before Sittiponder. “What is it, lad?”

“The voices have told me to beware.”

“I’d forgotten the boy hears voices,” said Brunstetter. “We decided they come from kimens, didn’t we? Guardians appointed by Wulder?”


We
decided,” said Sir Dar, “with no real evidence. We never came up with an alternate, logical explanation.”

Gilda sat beside her husband. “It’s obvious that someone protects him.”

“I’m not the one who needs protecting,” objected Sittiponder. “I’m supposed to watch after Toopka. She’s the one who will face danger.”

Gilda rolled her eyes.

Regidor took her hand but addressed the children. “We will all do our best to protect you.”

Kale put her arms around the boy. “You’re still shivering.” She turned to Brunstetter. “It’s late. I think they should go to bed.”

“Right.” Rising with more agility than one would expect from such a large man, the urohm swooped down on both the boy and girl. He tucked each child under one of his huge arms and lugged them off to his tent. Toopka squirmed and giggled, but Sittiponder hung limply without the mock protesting that usually accompanied this bedtime ritual.

Kale bit her lower lip. “I hope nothing’s wrong with him.”

Gilda took a large breath and let it out slowly. “Nothing is wrong with the child,” she said patiently, “that a good night’s sleep won’t cure.”

Kale turned sharply to cast an irritated glare at the meech lady.

Gilda hiked a shoulder and looked down her nose. Before Kale could speak, she snapped, “I am more aware of children now that I carry my own. Those two have vivid imaginations and take an element of truth and stretch it into something that suits their fancy. It’s mostly done to gain attention, I presume.”

Bardon felt annoyance bubbling in Kale. The rejoinder she formed in her mind had something to do with Gilda taking scraps of legends and stretching her conclusions until the meech colony was the seat of all knowledge and culture. He quickly moved to Kale’s side and put an arm around her waist. “I’m tired too. Good night, Sir Dar, Regidor. Pleasant dreams, Gilda.”

He turned toward the tent and relaxed when he felt Kale give way to his guidance. A principle came to his mind.

A shield of kind words deflects arrows thrown by the wounded.

“I don’t want to pity her.”

You don’t want to add to Regidor’s burdens, either.

Inside the tent, Kale sat down on her pallet and gathered the minor dragons into her lap.

“You know what I think, Bardon?”

“Sometimes.”

“Right now I’m thinking I resent the fact that Gilda is going to have a baby. And being a meech dragon, she’ll feel a thrill of accomplishment and then no further need to nurture the child.”

“It is odd that they deal with offspring in such an inattentive manner. But from what I understand, the child is the concern of each person in the community.”

“I don’t think I could share my baby with everyone.”

“Considering how you felt about letting your father take over your duties with the dragons at home, no, I don’t think you would.”

Kale sighed heavily. “I don’t suppose my ability to share the responsibility of raising a child will be a problem anytime soon.”

Bardon sat beside her. Immediately, the dragons spilled over into his lap and began a game of chase, using the two of them as a playing field. “Someday we’ll be parents.” Bardon dodged Filia as she dashed across Kale’s shoulder. He managed to plant a kiss on his wife’s cheek before Dibl crash-landed on Bardon’s head, digging his claws into his scalp. He winced and shoved the yellowish dragon back into the air. “You, Kale, will be an overprotective mother. I will be an obnoxiously proud father. And all these critters will be guardians and playmates.”

Artross jumped onto Bardon’s head. Metta challenged him for possession of the prized perch and knocked the glowing white dragon into Bardon’s lap.

“Enough!” said the Dragon Keeper’s husband. “Settle down and go to bed.”

Kale giggled, but Bardon thought her eyes still held a wistful look.

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