Song of the Beast (32 page)

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Authors: Carol Berg

BOOK: Song of the Beast
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“No.” He pointed toward the spot at the cliff edge where Davyn had just reappeared and was beckoning us to hurry.
We used the last of the daylight to creep down the steep path—if one could call a crumbling, boot-wide seam in the cliff face a path. At every step more of the red stone dissolved to powder under our feet or split into tiny pebbles that skittered down the sheer drop beside us. By the time we wedged ourselves into the too-small crack in the base of the path where Tarwyl waited, the only light was a fading red glow in the west. The lair itself lay in darkness.
“A quarter of the way around the lair to your right, just below that cone-shaped spire,” said Tarwyl. “Just as I drew it. There are three Rider huts along the way; only the first two are occupied.”
A thunderous bellow split the night, and the spout of fire lit the valley. MacAllister's face grew so rigid that I thought his skin must split and show the iron beneath it.
“They don't wander ... the wounded ones?” said MacAllister, his eyes fixed on the bilious streaks fading in the sky.
“No. Only if its Rider commands it. If it is not allowed to go to ground where it chooses, it will stay in one place until it heals or dies.”
I was donning my armor as I answered him. MacAllister had, of course, not brought his. A worried Davyn started to speak, but another bellow—grinding, shrill, murderous—cut him off. By the time the echoes had died away, I had finished lacing my boots, and Tarwyl had given a small lantern to MacAllister.
“I'll carry that,” I said, jamming my helm over my hair to mask the last evidence that I was a woman. “You stay behind me, just out of the light.” I hung my coiled whip on my belt and patted my belt pouch to make sure my emergency gear was still in it. I didn't want MacAllister to see what I'd brought. It might worry him. It might make him leave me behind.
“The blessings of the One Who Guides go with you,” said Davyn. “We'll be waiting for you right here.”
MacAllister pressed his hand and Tarwyl's, and then turned to me with a mocking bow. “To our doom, Mistress Lara,” he said, raising his dark eyebrows to pull his eyes wide open. “Shall we be the dragon's saviors or its supper?” Then he motioned me to lead.
A hot, stinking wind gusted through the narrow, steep-sided valley. Because the only kai in the lair were wounded, they could be held in tighter quarters. The tighter, the better, clan lore said. Perhaps because it was more like the caves to which the dragons would go to heal or die if they were allowed.
We crept past vast pens crammed with goats that surged against the stout fences in waves of bawling terror at every blast of balefire. Beyond the herd pens were a few wooden sheds built up against the cliff walls: a cookshed, a smithy, a storehouse, a granary, a shelter for the women who cooked and served the Riders, and one for the drovers who kept the herd pens filled. A hospice for wounded Riders sat at the far end of the valley, far from the noisy, stinking pens. Lantern lights flickered in several of the buildings, and two slaves were hauling a heavy slops wagon slowly toward the pigsties.
We held up for a moment in the shelter of a wood cart until the wagon had passed. A heavyset man took a piss outside the smithy and then went back inside, shutting off the orange glare flooding out of his door. A short distance beyond our position, a dry, rutted wagon road angled to the right into a narrow cleft in the cliff wall—the main entrance to the lair. The guard posts would be at the far end of it. Unless you were holding hostages, you didn't need guard posts inside a dragon lair. To our left we could see the first Rider hut, its back to us. It faced the center of the lair where the kai were held captive by the ring of bloodstones. We would either have to cross the open expanse of the road behind the Rider's hut, or risk the Rider—or a dragon—spotting us as we went on the darker, more dangerous front side of the hut.
I chose the road. A mistake. No sooner had we stepped onto it than a party of horsemen came galloping out of the cleft—on us too quickly for us to dive back into our shelter. Two of them were Riders, very drunk from the sounds of their bawdy singing; two more were other clansmen equally drunk, each with a woman astride behind him. One horse carried two more women—drunk enough or stupid enough that they didn't know how difficult it was for a drunken Rider to control his inner fire when he was mating. They would likely be dead before morning. The other two horsemen were servants carrying torches. The Riders' horses reared as the party pulled into a milling knot no more than fifty paces from MacAllister and me, the women laughing and squealing like pigs. The men dismounted and turned the horses over to the servants. I thought we might escape notice in the confusion. But one of the servants lifted his torch high and called out, “Who's there?”
No time to think. No time to delay. I had to keep them away from us. I pulled out my whip and whirled about to face MacAllister, keeping my back to the Riders' party. “On your knees,” I said quietly, “and do exactly as I say.” I cracked the whip on either side of him to drown out any protest he might make. Voices carried exceedingly well in a lair. Unfortunately mine was a woman's voice—entirely inappropriate for one in Rider's armor. “You must be my voice,” I whispered. “Tell them your name is Ger, and you've brought in an injured kai from Gondar and a Senai card cheat from Vallior. Say it like a Rider.”
As I cracked the whip again, raising spouts of dust and dried mud, MacAllister dropped to his knees with a steel-eyed glare. “Stay away!” He screamed out the words I'd told him—remembering to use the old tongue and the very voice of besotted arrogance that would be expected. “I'll take my pleasure with the Senai vermin undisturbed; then I'll join you and see what revels can be found in this pitiful excuse for a camp.”
Blast them,
I thought. The clansmen stood watching, swilling from bloated wineskins while the women wrapped themselves obscenely around their waists.
“We're going to have to play it out,” I whispered as I kicked MacAllister sprawling and wrapped a thong of my whip about his wrists.
He screamed out, “Never again, Senai. Never will you think to cheat a clansman of the Ridemark!” Then he struggled to get up, whispering back to me with the slightest edge of anxiety behind his smile, “As long as you don't get to like this.”
I kicked him again and stuck the point of my rapier under his chin.
“Now what to do with you,” he snarled, then followed with a string of curses that I wouldn't have imagined he knew. “Something fitting for a Senai donkey.”
I coached him, and he played it well. Sheathing my sword and yanking on the whip, I stretched his hands over his head and dragged him away from the drunken party toward the wood cart. He helped by digging in his feet as if to get up and fight, but would propel himself forward so that it wouldn't be too obvious that it wasn't easy for me to drag him. Several times he stumbled onto his back, and I had to drag him on it until he could get purchase with his feet again. I dared show no mercy. When we had covered the distance to the wood cart, he dragged himself slowly to all fours, working to get his breath, while I pulled manacles and chain from my pack and dangled them high in the torchlight. The onlookers laughed and cheered and whistled.
“Ask them if they approve,” I said. “Hurry. Keep them amused, and they won't get involved.”
“One moment.” He gasped; then he looked up and saw what I held. “Oh, gods ...”
“Say it.”
“So you approve?” he screamed, all the while shaking his head. Then, quietly, “No ... no ... I most certainly do not.”
As the drunkards cheered, I kicked him flat again, stepped on his chest, and loosened the whip enough that I could lock the iron bands about his scarred wrists. “I don't know any other way,” I said. Then, without looking at his face, I attached the length of chain to the rings bolted to the wood wagon. “We'll go between them and the Rider's huts, just like I'm planning to take possession of the empty one. It's the only way.”
It seemed to take two hours for MacAllister to drag the wood cart the fifteen hundred paces to the deserted Rider hut. The wagon was three-quarters loaded, heavy and cumbersome. Our audience cheered as we passed them by. I saluted with my sword and repeatedly laid the whip as close as I dared to the Senai. Once I grazed him on his cheek, and another time on his shoulder, ripping his tunic and drawing a smothered curse from him. He flinched dutifully with each crack, and I believed there was more truth to his groaning effort than he would care for anyone to know.
Once we were past them, the onlookers seemed to remember their own plans and staggered toward the occupied Rider's huts, calling out that I should come join them when I'd had enough of my vengeance.
“Tell them to save you a woman,” I told MacAllister.
But he was panting and heaving, and shook his head. “Can't.”
So instead I raised my sword again and whirled it in circles above my head. I didn't let him stop until we reached the third hut, and even then I scouted the area thoroughly before I unlocked his bonds.
He bent over, resting his head and arms on the side of the cart. “Thank the Seven, it wasn't fully loaded,” he said.
“We've got to get moving. The Riders and their friends were drunk enough to forget us, but the servants weren't. They'll ask about the new arrival.”
“You're very resourceful and your plan worked, but next time you might warn me.” MacAllister straightened, stretching his shoulders and back, wincing as he rubbed his wrists. “I could at least practice my name-calling.”
Trying to ignore his eyes on me, I took the kai'cet from its case, slipped it into its leather collar, and tied it about my neck so I could have both hands free. Then I pulled on my gauntlets, stowed the manacles and chain in my pouch, and coiled my whip. I didn't need to see MacAllister's expression to sense how he was revolted. “If you weren't such a sniveling fool, you might give our safety a bit more consideration,” I blurted out. “I, for one, have no wish to die, so I don't walk naked into the most dangerous places in the universe.”
Without letting him speak any more teasing foolishness, I tramped into the darkness, aiming for the cone-shaped spire Tarwyl had described. MacAllister trailed silently behind as I picked my way around the pits and cracks in the iron-hard earth. Though there was a small risk of the yellow lantern glow being spotted by one of the Riders ringing the lair, I wasn't about to fall into some blast fissure and break a leg. I picked up the pace. We needed to hurry.
A thousand paces from the Rider hut we began to feel rumbling beneath our feet and hear the muted, angry grumbling of the kai. A blast of blue-orange fire to our left caused me to stop for a moment while I considered which way was shorter to get around a monstrous heap of rubble. MacAllister caught up with me as I moved off again to the left. “You'll command him to speak his name, just like the first time with Keldar?”
“If that's what you want.”
“Whatever happens after ... you must get away as quickly as you can. If it's not Roelan, I'll be right on your heels.”
“And how will you manage that? It seems like you had to be carried before. I've dragged you far enough tonight.”
“I can do what I have to do. I've no wish to die.”
I didn't say anything. He caught my shoulder and made me stop and look at him—the last thing I wanted to do with the balefire glaring in the sky just beyond the next rise. “Promise me you'll keep yourself safe,” he said. “Please. It will help a great deal to know you've sworn it, because anything you've sworn to, I know you'll do, no matter how much you hate it. Then I won't have to worry about you.”
He didn't know just how good I was at compromising my swearing. “I promise,” I said. “Now can we get this done?”
The kai lay buried in carrion. It had blasted a deep hole in the earth in a vain attempt to go to ground. Herd beasts had been driven in to feed it, and many of them had fallen into the pit where the kai could not reach them with either its fire or its jaws. So they lay uneaten, bloated and rotting, while the injured dragon roared its fury and pounded its tail. A charnel pit, the smell so foul that I came near vomiting up my last week's food.
Blue flame spewed into the air as we lay on the ground at the top of the rise. MacAllister had pulled his shirt over his nose and mouth, his face the sick blue of the balefire.
I knew from the first it was the wrong dragon. It was not old enough. The brow ridges were not the most reliable indicators, but I had seen fifty dragons older than this one. And the left wing that lay partially unfurled, twitching so awkwardly, had clearly been broken in battle. The Elhim said that Roelan was one of the seven eldest dragons, and that the legend that named him hunchback was as old as his name. Any gathering of birds about this kai would be only the hardiest of vultures, desiring the rotting meat the kai could not reach.
“It's not the one,” I said to the Senai, trying to explain, trying to make him give it up.
But MacAllister shook his head. “We've come this far; we must be sure.”
And he dared call me stubborn! I drew out my whip, in case the beast could get about on one wing better than it looked, and with a certainty that I was wasting what remained of my life, I scrambled and slid down the rocky slope until I was standing much too close to the kai.
“Teng zha nav wyvyr,”
I cried, drawing its attention, its hatred, and its fire all at once. It bellowed so horrifically that I feared that Aidan's skull would shatter. My own came near it. I called on the bloodstone and fought for control, laboring to build a cocoon of safety about MacAllister and me. If I let go, if I showed any weakness, the fire would creep closer and destroy us. This was a very different beast from the one they called Keldar.

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