Authors: Will Elliott
âStones!' Bald screamed. âI need stones! Bring stones!' He clawed at his own face, opening up the grooves dug in the last time he was worked up. Blood poured down his cheeks.
âI'll get them,' said Stranger.
When she'd gone down the steps Gorb remembered he was meant to watch her. âEric, I better stay with Bald. Sometimes he hurts himself bad enough to nearly die. Can you go with her? Make sure she comes back like Far Gaze asked me? You got your gun back now.'
âI don't think I'll need it for her,' he said, standing.
And I don't know that it will be much use if Shadow returns.
But its weight in the holster reassured him nonetheless. He loaded it then followed her.
2
At the water's edge Eric found Stranger crouched to examine what looked like a scorched path burned into the ground in a neat ring about the moat. âEnough heat to melt the rocks. Our new friend did this, didn't he?' she asked as he stepped out of the water.
âYes. Can you sense him nearby?'
âNever him; he goes unfelt. Butâ¦' She looked at the horizon and he saw excitement on her face, which she quickly masked. âStones. There don't seem to be many here. Let's try over there, near the woods.'
There were occasionally villagers around, come to stare at the tower. They'd learned a healthy respect for the dangerous mage who had boiled its waters and sent a Tantonese patrol away, shrieking in pain. Now a young girl, alone among the trees, ducked out of sight of Eric and Stranger. Eric pretended he hadn't seen her.
âHere's some,' Eric said, finding a few smooth pebbles at his feet and stuffing them in his pockets. But when he stood Stranger was no longer with him. She did not answer his calls.
He went to where he'd seen the girl. âHey there. I see you, hiding behind the bush there. Come out, you're safe. I'm no scary wizard. Did you see where she went?'
The girl emerged and pointed to her left.
âYou look frightened,' he said. âWhat's the matter?'
âA dragon's in there,' she whispered in an awed voice.
â
What?
A dragon? Are you sure?'
âI'm going to ask the wizard to kill it. Will he? He's your friend. Can you make him?'
âIf by wizard you mean Loup, the most dangerous thing about him is his breath. Why would you want the dragon killed?'
âIt killed some people in our village. My friend Shalinta's parents. She's alone now. We are looking after her.'
The dragon killed them, or did Shadow? he wondered. Aloud he said, âThat's very sad. Can you take me to the dragon? Quickly, I need to see it. Then I'll speak to my wizard friends about it.'
âDo you promise?'
He nodded solemnly. She led him in through the same part of woodland Gorb had hunted game from earlier. The trees were spaced a good distance apart, another of those little hunting playgrounds made (it seemed) especially for human convenience. It wasn't far before he caught sight of Stranger's green dress ahead, and a larger shape looming before her. There was a sonorous musical note, not obviously speech at first.
Adrenaline shot through him as another miracle revealed itself among the horrors: a dragon! A living dragon, as real as the trees.
The village girl evidently did not find the sight miraculous. She ran. The beast glanced up at the sound of her quick feet crunching leaves. Eric ducked out of sight and crawled closer, quietly as he could, shielded from the dragon's sight by a thick trunk with a fan of bush at its base.
The dragon was bigger than a horse; its scales of many sparkling shades tended toward the green of the woods. Its build was sleeker than the smaller drake's, which seemed clumsy and bulky by comparison. This was no mere animal; it was beautiful, he thought, a higher being, its mouth shaped up in a slight permanent grin, the power about it as real as heat about a fire. He wished he were close enough to stroke its head, which was lowered as though in supplication to Stranger.
She stood before it with her arms crossed. Eric could hear her weeping.
âThere are no more fitting words, in all the poetry of your kind or mine, than these: I am sorry,' said the dragon Dyan, its voice like a deep woodwind instrument. It peered up at her with big beautiful eyes. The way its wings were spread flat on the ground to either side of it seemed to convey shame.
âThe answer is
no!
' said Stranger.
âAnd yet you remain here to speak with me. I use no magic on you now, O
Hathilialin,
Great Beauty. Find forgiveness for me! Draw it from the memory of love, if love has truly left you.'
âHow you cheapen the word. You want something. So you return.' Her voice wavered with tears and anger. âRide me like a mule again! You left me to die in that village where the air was bad. You have not even asked what happened. The wolf found me while you were gone.'
âHas he hurt you?' the dragon said in a harder voice. A ripple of bright red passed through its scales.
âDon't pretend you care about that now,' she said.
âGreat Beauty, who I freed from the cavern's cruel claws. Great Beauty who I saved! I have not forgotten the flow of your moods. There is a secret inside that you long to tell. Tell it to me! I ask you, Great Beauty, using no arts or devices. Instead I offer freely a secret of my own in the hope you will reciprocate. And it is a warning to take care. Do! There is another dragon free.'
Stranger was shocked to silence for a moment. âAnother dragon? No!'
âThere
is.
I felt it, days ago in these very woods. It was watching me. It came upon me by surprise, as I ⦠as I sought you out so desperately. I'm nervous. I am
frightened.
There were not supposed to be more. I do not know who sent it. I know nothing of it at all. The moment I felt it near, I fled quicker than the wind. I have sought it ever since, fearing it would come for you, but can find no trace. It hides from me with great skill. It may watch us now. Indeed I feel that something does.'
âWhy has it come?'
âTo watch me.' Dyan lifted his head and gazed about the woods, eyes gleaming. Eric ducked away from what felt like a searchlight beaming about him. The colour of Dyan's scales shifted from green to deepest blue as he crept closer to Stranger. A thick fallen branch split under the weight of his feet. âI have not done my duty. I have been lax, idle, have been ⦠indulging myself. Swimming with you in lagoons, soaring the skies. It is so different here now! You have no idea the beauty of this place, after being in
Takkish Iholme
so long. But Tzi-Shu is angry. It was surely she, or Shâ, who sent the new one to spy. If they deem I have failed them, I am doomed when they descend. I must go now to World's End, naked and openly, if you will not come and hide me in your great beauty.' The dragon sighed, a low piping note that sent shivers down Eric's back. Dyan said, âThings must have moved too slow for them. After uncounted years, with so little time left to wait, they have discovered impatience.'
âWhat will you do?' said Stranger with fear in her voice.
âI will go to where the stoneflesh wait to cross. Two gods prevent them. I will try toâ'
âNo!'
âI must. I want this no more than you. My freedom is enough. I don't need theirs. But if I am being watched there is no choice. I will be careful. I will not battle them, don't fear! And I will return for you. I swear it.'
Stranger was crying again. âYou have no idea how much you hurt me,' she said.
âNever again! But, Great Beauty, I must act. If only I knew the other dragon's mind. Will you share yours with me?'
Stranger lowered her voice and Eric had to risk crawling closer to hear the end of her story. â⦠the girl has it. Or more likely,
it
has
her.
It has fused to her neck and won't come off. It was surely made for the Pilgrim. The wolf contemplates her murder to remove it, but the charm will protect her. Vyin made it.'
âVyin!'
âI'm sure it's his touch I see upon it.'
âDo the humans know the artefact's function?'
âI guessed some things, but keep my guesses private. It's not easy. The wolf hates me; the half-giant has keen eyes. The charm must be for the being they call Shadow.'
The dragon crept closer. âSo, he has been made real. What have you learned of him? What are his powers? Is it as Shâ guessed?'
âI have not learned much at all. The Pilgrim and he are linked somehow, but he knows less than I. Shadow cannot come close enough for the charm to do its work, whatever that work is. The tower prevents him.'
âDon't let him near! Keep the girl inside until I know more. I must consult the other great ones and tell them of this.'
Stranger groaned. âWhy? Why involve yourself?'
âThey will learn of it in time. They always do. And they will call it betrayal and complicity, and hunt me down.'
Dyan's long tail reached around behind her and gently stroked her back. She fended away its touch. âNo! None of that. If you return for me soon I will know your promises have worth. Don't look at me that way! I would rather be held in that foul prison again than feel the pain you did to me. I must go back soon. If you have any more promises, give them now.'
âFirst tell me â do the human casters sense me? I have been nearby more than once.'
âNo. Something at the tower prevents it. It is the water I think: many enchantments are about it. But if you are with no woman â does your Parent not know of you now?'
Eric backed away till he was beyond earshot of Stranger's voice and the deep music of the dragon's. When he came out of the trees Loup was at the tower window, scouting around so frantically it looked like he was having a seizure. After much waving Eric caught his attention. âWhere'd she go?' Loup called down.
âIn the woods,' he answered.
âIf she's run off, I'll have your skin for a jacket, you and the giant both.'
âI'm here,' said Stranger, stepping through the trees and waving at Loup. She had erased any sign from her face that she'd been weeping. She smiled at Eric.
âWe'd better head back,' he said casually. âI think we've broken the rules to let you outside.'
âAll for a good cause,' she said, smiling as though at a private joke.
âOh?'
She showed the handful of stones she'd collected.
As he set his foot into the waves, he saw a person standing in that space beneath the tower where there was a whirlpool. It was a man waist-deep in the water, tall and bald, with eyes bent on Eric intently.
Having just seen a dragon in the woods, this should hardly have been a disconcerting sight in comparison, yet an odd feeling came over him, as though he had for a long while now been watched by this man, unseen. âDo you see him?' he said to Stranger.
âHmm?' She was looking back at the woods where the dragon had been.
The man was gone. âNever mind.'
As they neared the tower base, a gust of wind blew from that space. He fancied he heard words spoken within it, just a whisper:
Take the girl to Shadow.
âWhich girl?' he called. Stranger looked at him curiously. From the wind there came no answer.
3
In the afternoon Siel called to the tower's top floor Eric, Loup and Far Gaze. They went up the rickety wooden stairs to a little platform overlooking the room, level with the tower's uppermost window. The groundman cowered over near the beds, desperate to escape but unwilling to go down the steps where lurked the half-giant, who held a particular terror for him. The candle brightness of his eyes had gone out. âHis name is Tii,' said Siel.
âWhy is he so afraid of Gorb?' said Eric.
She shrugged. âBig people are bad, so very big must be very bad. He's also angry at me for making Shadow bring him back here. He feels I tricked him. I certainly didn't ask his permission.'
âHe owes you his life. I don't care about his complaints,' said Far Gaze, pacing. He still wore the sheet he'd wrapped about himself. His face was dark with stubble and his eyes intense, as though staring at Aziel's sleeping body had carved on it permanently the way he watched her.
Said Siel, âTii told me everything he knows, on the condition that we release him. Being “up” is making him sick. He says he will fade altogether if he doesn't get back belowground soon. I don't know if that's true or not. He has renounced friendship with me, though that might have just been heated words.'
âTell him he's free,' said Far Gaze irritably. âYou're very lucky,' he called across the room. âI could extract many things from you, information being just one.'
â
Please
don't threaten him.'
âI hate the little shits. Is that all? Goodbye.' Far Gaze rushed back downstairs, the white sheet billowing behind him to reveal a hairy backside.
Siel climbed down, spoke to Tii and assured him Gorb had no evil plans. He embraced her shins then dashed down the steps, diving into the whirlpool. He sank like a rock.
âIs there a cave down there?' said Siel.
âAye,' said Loup. âWhat did the small one tell you? Don't you mind our wolf, I'll see he learns anything important.'
âGroundman slaves have built a highway, beneath the deepest mines. Tii was not one of those slaves, but once he met some who'd escaped. The highway leads from a vast underground realm near the castle, near the Entry Point, all the way to World's End. He says that far, far belowground, the Wall was already cracked. Well before anything Anfen or the Arch did.'
âWhat caused the break?' said Loup.
âSomething on the far side. It was not the castle's doing. There is no knowing how long the crack was there. One day, in the deepest mine, at the very southern point of World's End, slave miners overpowered a guard and escaped. There was nowhere for them to flee but down. They were not heard from again. It was assumed they starved or fell to their deaths, or maybe stumbled their way through the deep mazes to freedom. But a few days later, something returned to the mine from the deeps, and attacked. All the slaves were killed. A few overseers found their way back to the castle, with a very strange tale to tell.