The Order of the Scales (24 page)

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Authors: Stephen Deas

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BOOK: The Order of the Scales
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‘Yes.’
About that . . .
‘I hear you mean them to stay, Your Holiness. It is most unusual.’

‘They’re here for their own reasons, Eyrie-Master. Please don’t imagine that I have any say over their comings and goings, let alone their doings. I am merely the Speaker of the Realms, their lord and master. No, don’t imagine that they answer to me.’

Isentine bowed and nodded and pretended to listen.
You deserve your bitterness
, he thought.
That’s all you ever brought for the rest of us. I hope you choke on it
. Servants brought drinks of scented water. The speaker’s riders filed in behind him. They were subdued. Scared even. Before Isentine could eavesdrop on their conversation, though, Hyrkallan was back, and Queen Jaslyn with him. Isentine hadn’t seen his queen for days; she looked terrible. Her face was drawn and haggard. Her eyes didn’t quite focus on him. When he looked, he could see the skin on the back of her hands, on her knuckles, was hard and flaking. Hatchling Disease, despite all his efforts.

She walked straight towards him. Didn’t exactly meet his eyes, but more looked past him, through him, as if she was looking at something from another world that none of the rest of them could see. ‘Morning Sun,’ she said curtly. ‘Have him saddled and ready to ride. Every other dragon here too.’

Isentine bowed as best he could. ‘Yes, Your Holiness. But nearly every dragon is already at Sand or at Southwatch.’
So you’re going then. Almiri didn’t mean enough to drag you away from the horror you’ve created for us, but Lystra does. Good. We’ll have an end to it then.

‘Now. Every dragon I have. All of them. I want them ready to fly. At once.’

He nodded. ‘You mean to fly to war, your Holiness?’ At least she was lucid. There were days now when the potions he gave her to keep the disease at bay left her babbling like a madwoman. On days like that he took care that no one else saw her.

‘I do. Do you have food and drink for these riders?’

‘It is being prepared, Your Holiness.’ Another bow. She hardly noticed.

‘Make sure we have plenty of wine. Get them all drunk. You too. Get me so drunk I can’t stand. I don’t want to remember any of this.’ She snatched a bottle from the nearest table and swallowed deeply. ‘Hyrkallan! My Lord! To me, if you please!’ She cast her eyes wildly around the hall and then back to Isentine. ‘Get the Viper,’ she hissed. ‘Him as well.’

By the time Isentine had found Jehal, already half in his cups, Hyrkallan was standing at Jaslyn’s side. His face was a mask of stone.

‘Marry us,’ snapped Jaslyn.

‘I must call a priest.’

‘Not you.’

Jaslyn pointed a finger at Jehal. ‘You. Marry us. You can do that. Then put a crown on Hyrkallan’s head and call him king.’

Jehal sniffed. He wrinkled his nose. ‘I’m not sure I should. Do you consent to this, My Lord?’ He gave Hyrkallan an arch look. ‘I’m not sure I would advise it. This one looks like she has the makings of a cuckold. You never know; you might yet do better elsewhere.’

Hyrkallan clenched his fists. Isentine wondered, briefly, if he should be looking for that knife again. The only person who seemed unmoved was Jaslyn. She looked at Isentine.
With the same stony mask as her mother
, he thought.
Hiding the same sorrow underneath
.

‘You will witness this, Eyrie-Master. You and every rider present.’

Isentine nodded. Jehal raised his eyebrows and then shrugged. ‘Fine, then you’re married. Congratulations.’ He leered at Hyrkallan. ‘If she’s like her sister, go easy on the Maiden if you want any sleep.’

Hyrkallan’s hand shot out and grabbed Jehal by the throat. He squeezed. ‘When we’re done with this, you and I will have a reckoning.’

Jehal choked. ‘There’s a long queue,’ he gasped, ‘and there might not be much left by the time you get to the front of it. Do you want your crown now,
King
Hyrkallan?’

‘Oh let him go.’ Jaslyn turned away from them both. ‘Is that all? Aren’t you supposed to say more than that?’

Jehal rubbed his throat. ‘Oh, you could do the whole staying up all night for the dawn vigil and then the standing still waiting for the sunlight to strike your face, and then the speeches and the feasting and the endless witterings of the priests and so forth, but really what’s the point? I’ve done all that and I can’t say it had much to recommend it. You’re married. Sorry that I don’t have a present for you. Go fuck and make an heir. And then can we get on? I’m not nearly drunk enough for this and my leg is killing me.’ He hobbled away.

Hyrkallan shook his head. ‘Will your dragons be ready?’ he asked. Isentine nodded. Hyrkallan looked back to Jaslyn and held out his hand to her. ‘Come, my queen. Come with me.’

She didn’t move. Isentine saw a muscle in Hyrkallan’s jaw twitch.

‘Must I drag you?’ He reached for her.

Jaslyn neatly batted him away but then pressed her cheek against his and whispered in his ear so only he and Isentine could hear: ‘Touch me without my permission and I’ll cut your hand off.’

‘We have a duty, my queen. To our realm.’

‘Will you get me back my Lystra. From both of them?’

‘I will do what I can. If I cannot, it will be because I am dead.’

Jaslyn took his hand and pressed it against her thigh. ‘Then if you will do your duty, I will do mine. Leave me. I will come to you shortly.’

Hyrkallan lingered, unwilling to move. Jaslyn had almost to push him away, and then slowly he went, in long strides across the hall towards the one hundred and twenty steps that led to the Queen’s Rooms and beyond. Jaslyn stood very still, watching as he climbed them. She didn’t move until her was out of sight.

‘Zafir has my sister,’ she said as if that explained everything. Then, all of a sudden, she led Isentine out of the cavernous hall full of riders and servants. As soon as they were alone, she took his hands and rested her head against his chest. ‘I have to go and save her. You have to look after my Silence.’

She’s mad
. Isentine stumbled away. ‘Your Holiness. You are my queen, but . . .’
But you cannot be seen like this. Not by anyone. Never like this.

There were tears in her eyes. ‘Then, as your queen, I command you to look after my Silence. You must feed him yourself. I’ve told him you’ll do that. You have to make the kill and then bring it to him. If you don’t he’ll know.’

He bowed. ‘Yes, Your Holiness.’ Lying to her was like sticking a knife in his own eye.
But what else is there to do? The dragon is an abomination. It cannot live to grow.

‘Thank you. I won’t be gone for long. No other riders on Morning Sun, please. No scorpions. I would much prefer to ride alone.’

‘As you wish.’
And then I’ll wish you well and wave you farewell, for before you return your abomination will be dead and I will have taken the Dragon’s Fall.
He almost wept. Not for himself or for any of the rest of them here in Outwatch, but for dead Queen Shezira, for everything she’d done and what had become of it. Before Jaslyn could turn away, he held out Hyrkallan’s pouch. ‘You will want this. For later. For the night. It will numb the sadness.’ Which was one of many ways of putting it and made giving it to her feel like yet another betrayal. ‘This isn’t the wedding I would have wanted for you.’

Jaslyn looked at him as though he was stupid. ‘And what wedding
would
you have wanted, Eyrie-Master? I suppose some grand affair with the lords and ladies of all the nine realms gathered around. Just like my mother. What
I
wanted, Eyrie-Master, was no wedding at all. I do not desire men, Eyrie-Master – any of you, for any purpose, or are you too blind to see that? I suppose you’ve been kind enough. There was a rider in the alchemist caves. I forget his name. He was kind too. Two kindnesses. I think that’s all I can remember.’ She snatched the pouch out of his hands. ‘But my desires don’t seem to mean very much. What is this?’ She opened it and sniffed. ‘Ah. The Maiden. Thank you for that small mercy at least. I shall take it all and as much wine as I can stomach and hope to have no memory of this night. It appals me, but I find I have some sympathy with Jehal. We both love my sister, and we both have our hands tied fast behind our backs by the power we hold.’ She took a deep breath. Her face softened. ‘I’m sorry. You
have
been kind. Look after my Silence for me, Isentine.’

He bowed and then watched her go. There didn’t seem to be much else to do.

War
 

As weddings went, Jehal decided, it could have been worse. He’d had enough wine to take down a horse and no one had murdered him. Hadn’t even had much of a hangover, somehow. Two pleasant surprises in the same day. So yes, as weddings went, it could have been worse.

The morning came, the sunlight unkindly bright. They flew south. No reason to wait.

And now the Adamantine Eyries were bursting. Hyrkallan’s dragons, Sirion’s dragons, Almiri’s dragons, his own, a few from Narghon that had escaped Valmeyan in the south. Some of Zafir’s, the ones she’d lost at Evenspire. Six or seven hundred, and that wasn’t counting the dragons that weren’t fully grown. You had to laugh at that, Jehal thought, not counting the dragons that weren’t fully grown. Give it a second or two to work out that it wasn’t an egg any more and even a hatchling could kill any man that crossed its path with ease. No sucking at its mother’s tit, no blind helpless mewling. They started as they meant to go on. Vicious, mean and hungry.

Which is why we wrap chains around their necks before they’re even out of their shells and fill them with potions at their first meal
. Jehal had watched a hatching once. His father hadn’t wanted him to.
Didn’t want to take the chance of Hatchling Disease. Just look at Jaslyn to see he was right about that one.
But he’d never taken very well to doing as he was told. He’d probably gone to watch it just because he’d been told not to.
And what I saw made me forget why I’d gone. The egg cracking, splitting open, a head shooting out like an arrow, black and glittering, jaws already open, clamping on the armoured arm of the nearest handler. He was a big man, but you flung him back and forth like a doll. Practically tore his arm out of its socket before the rest of them jumped on you. Six men and you were still half in your egg, only born seconds ago. And you shook them off. You let go of the first man and bit the hand clean off another one instead. I remember you knocked two of them over with a slash of your tail. The first one was the lucky one. You broke both his legs but at least his helmet stayed on. The second one lost his. I’ll never forget that, the gleam in your eye when you saw his face, the terror in his. There was nothing anyone could do to stop you. Jaws and claws and fire all at once. You ripped his head clean off. What was left of it. I remember the smell, the stink as he emptied his bowels, the reek of burnt skin and hair. You could have had the rest of them, I have to believe that because I was there and I saw what you did. But you paused then to admire what you’d done and that was when they got the chain around your neck.
Jehal stroked Wraithwing’s neck.
After that I had to have you. And do you want to know something funny? When I first saw Zafir, I thought of you at that moment. How perfect you were. How singularly and perfectly designed you were for what you were destined to become.
He smiled grimly.
That was just the first thought, of course. Second thoughts followed rather different paths.

‘Three days,’ Jeiros had told him as the hordes of the north had landed around the palace. ‘We have enough potion here for three days and then we have nothing and I will poison any and every dragon here.’

‘I don’t suppose they brought any of their own with them?’ They hadn’t. Of course they hadn’t. Jeiros was strangling them all, and so they in turn hoarded what little they had for themselves.
Poor man, do you think that when the potions run out and the dragons threaten to run amok, we’ll all stop and see the madness of our ways? I can promise you we will not. We’ll all wring our hands and say how terrible it is and agree with you that others should put their dragons down for the good of all the realms, but will we do it ourselves? No, we will not. It will always happen to someone else. Another king will find his dragons turning before ours do. We’ll all watch each other, all hold for another to act first, all look at you to relent, and so we will all lose. The Night Watchman has the right of it. Sending men to our eyries with hammers. Yes, I know you meant to do it in secret, but really, do you think I wouldn’t notice a score of men piled on to the back of my own dragons as we flew north? Don’t worry though; I’ll not tell anyone what you’re up to. Why should I when I don’t even have an eyrie of my own any more? No, if you’d have asked me, Vale, I’d have told you to send a legion to every eyrie in the realms. Have your way. Put them all down, the lot of them. All except my Wraithwing. That’s what you plan, isn’t it? As soon as this war is done? A cull. A slaughter. The dragons will come back, but you have potion enough for eyries filled with little hatchlings, is that it? Hatchlings and a choice few, carefully chosen and carefully saved. Do you care into whose hands they fall, those few? No. But I do.

He climbed onto Wraithwing’s back. Vale and Jeiros could do whatever they liked. Meteroa was dead. Lystra and his baby son were lost too. Hard to accept, but Zafir would never let them go, never. Even if they were the last things in the world that could save her own skin, she’d kill them before she let them go. There was only one thing that mattered now, and that was killing Zafir, preferably in a nice quick clean war that would wipe her out so thoroughly and in such a way that he could afford to let Jeiros have the cull he so desperately wanted.
Most likely she’ll insist on burning Furymouth. Anything to make my victory as bitter as it can be. Well you can burn that if you want to. It’s a bit of a mess in places, rather smelly, and I’d been thinking about having a new palace soon anyway. But I’d give up this crown, give it back to you and go into exile if it would get me back my Lystra and my son.

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