"Moon, Elizabeth - Fool's Gold [v.1,html]" - читать интересную книгу автора (Moon Elizabeth)Fool's GoldElizabeth Moonfirst published in Esther M. Friesner, editor. Chicks 'n Chained Males. Baen. 1999formatted in HTML for #bookz by MollyKate September 2002
"It's been done to death," Mirabel Stonefist said.
"It's traditional." Her sister Monica sat primly upright,
embroidering tiny poppies on a pillowcase. All Monica's pillow-cases had
poppies on them, just as all the curtains on the morning side of the house had
morning glories.
"Traditional is another word for 'done to death,' " Mirabel
said. Her own pillow-cases had a stamped sigil and the words PROPERTY OF THE
ROYAL BARRACKS DO NOT REMOVE.
"It's unlucky to break with tradition."
"It's unlucky to have anything to do with dragons," Mirabel
said, rubbing the burn scar on her left leg. ∗ ∗ ∗
Cavernous Dire had never intended to be a dragon. He had intended to be a
miser, living a long and peaceful life of solitary selfishness near the
Tanglefoot Mountains, but he had, all unwitting, consumed a seed of dragonsfoot
which had been—entirely by accident—baked into a gooseberry tart. That wouldn't
have changed him, if his neighbor hadn't made an innocent mistake and handed
him dragonstongue, instead of dragonsbane, to ease a sore tongue. The two
plants do look much alike, and usually it makes no difference whether you
nibble a leaf of D. abscondus or D. lingula, since both will ease
a cold-blister, but in those rare instances when someone has an undigested seed
of dragonsfoot in his gut, and then adds to it the potent essence of D.
lingula… well.
Of course it was all a mistake, and an accident, and the fact that when
Cavernous went back to the village to dig his miser's hoard out from under the
hearthstone it was already gone meant nothing. Probably. And most likely the
jar of smelly ointment that broke on his scaly head—fixing him in his draconic
form until an exceedingly unlikely conjunction of events—was an accident too,
though Goody Chernoff's cackle wasn't.
So Cavernous Dire sloped off to the Tanglefoots in a draconish temper,
scorching fenceposts along the way. He found a proper cave, and would have
amassed a hoard from the passing travelers, if there'd been any. But his cave
was a long way from any pass over the mountains, and he was far too prudent to
tangle with the rich and powerful dragons whose caves lay on more lucrative
trade routes.
He was forced to prey on the locals.
At first, sad to say, this gave him wicked satisfaction. They'd robbed
him. They'd turned him into a dragon and robbed him, and—like a true miser—he
minded the latter much more than the former. He ate their sheep, and then their
cattle (having grown large enough), and once inhaled an entire flock of geese—a
mistake, he discovered, as burning feathers stank abominably. He could not
quite bring himself to eat their children, though his draconish nature found
them appetizing, because he knew too well how dirty they really were, and how
disgusting the amulets their mothers tied round their filthy necks. But he did
kill a few of the adults, when they marched out with torches to test the
strength of his fire. He couldn't stomach their stringy, bitter flesh.
Finally they moved away, cursing each other for fools, and Cavernous
reigned over a ruined district. He pried up every hearthstone, and rooted in
every well, but few were the coins or baubles which the villagers left behind.
Although the ignorant assert that the man-drake has powers greater than
the dragonborn, this is but wishful thinking. Dragons born from the egg inherit
all the ancient wisdom and power of dragonkind. Man-drakes are but feeble
imitations, capable of matching true dragons only in their lust for gold. So
poor Cavernous Dire, though fearsome to men, had not a chance of surviving in
any contest with real dragons—and real dragons find few things so amusing as
tormenting man-drakes.
'Tis said that every man has some woman who loves him—at least until she
dies of his misuse—and so it was with Cavernous. Though most of the children
born into his very dysfunctional birth-family had died of abuse or neglect, he
had a sister, Bilious Dire, who had not died, but lived—and lived, moreover,
with the twisted memory that Cavernous had once saved her life. (In fact, he
had merely pushed her out of his way on one of the many occasions when his
mother Savage came after him with a hot ladle.) But Bilious built her life, as
do we all, on the foundation of her beliefs about reality, and in her reality
Cavernous was a noble being.
She had been long away, Bilious, enriching the man who owned her, but at
last she grew too wrinkled and stiff, and he cast her out. So she returned to
the foothills village of her childhood, to find it ruined and empty, with
dragon tracks in the street.
"That horrible dragon," she wailed at the weeping sky.
"It's stolen my poor innocent brother. I must find help—" ∗ ∗ ∗
"So you see, it's the traditional quest to rescue the innocent
victim of a dragon," Mirabel's sister said. "Our sewing circle has
taken on the rehabilitation of the faded blossoms of vice—" Mirabel mimed
gagging, and her sister glared at her. "Don't laugh! It's not funny—the
poor things—"
"Isn't there Madam Aspersia's Residence for them?"
"Madam Aspersia only has room for twenty, and besides she gives
preference to women of a Certain Kind." Mirabel rolled her eyes; her
sister combined the desire to talk about Such Things with the inability to name
the Things she wanted to talk about.
"Well, but surely there are other resources—"
"In this city perhaps, but in the provinces—" Before Mirabel
could ask why the provinces should concern the goodwives of Weeping Willow
Street, her sister took a deep breath and plunged on. "So when poor
Bilious—obviously past any chance of earning a living That Way—begged us to
find help for her poor virgin brother taken by a dragon, of course I thought of
you."
"Of course."
"Surely your organization does something to help women—that
is its name, after all, Ladies' Aid and Armor Society…"
Mirabel had tried to explain, on previous occasions, what the LAAS had
been founded for, and why it would not help with a campaign to provide each
orphaned girl with hand-embroidered underclothes for her trousseau, or stand
shoulder to shoulder with the Weeping Willow Sewing Society's members when they
marched on taverns that sold liquor to single women. (Didn't her sister realize
that all the women in the King's Guard hung out in taverns? Or was that the
point?)
Now, through clenched teeth, Mirabel tried once more. "Monica—we do
help women—each other. We were founded as a mutual-aid society for all women
soldiers, though we do what we can—" The LAAS charity ball, for instance,
supported the education of the orphaned daughters of soldiers.
"Helping each other is just like helping yourself, and helping
yourself is selfish. Here's this poor woman, with no hope of getting her
brother free if you don't do something—"
Mirabel felt her resistance crumbling, as it usually did if her sister
talked long enough.
"I don't see how he can be a virgin, if he's older than his
sister," she said. A weak argument, and she knew it. So did Monica.
"You can at least investigate, can't you? It can't hurt…"
It could get her killed, but that was a remote danger. Her sister was
right here and now. "No promises," Mirabel said.
"I knew you'd come through," said Monica. ∗ ∗ ∗
As Mirabel Stonefist trudged glumly across a lumpy wet moor, she thought
she should have chosen "stonehead" for her fighting surname instead
of "stonefist." She'd broken fingers often enough to disprove the
truth of her chosen epithet, and over a moderately long career more than one
person had commented on her personality in granitic terms. Stonehead, bonehead,
too stubborn to quit and too dumb to figure a way out…
She had passed three abandoned, ruined villages already, the thatched
roofs long since rotted, a few tumbled stone walls blacked by fire. She'd found
hearthstones standing on end like grave markers, and not one coin of any metal.
And she'd found dragon tracks. Not, to someone who had been in the
unfortunate expedition to kill the Grand Dragon Karshnak of Kreshnivok, very
big dragon tracks, but big enough to trip over and fall splat in. It had been
raining for days, as usual in autumn, and the dragon tracks were all full of
very cold water.
Her biggest mistake, she thought, had been birth order. If she'd been
born after Gervais, she'd have been the cute little baby sister, and no one
would ever have called on her to solve problems for the family. But as the
oldest—the big sister to them all—she'd been cast as family protector and
family servant from the beginning.
And her next biggest mistake, at least in the present instance, had been
telling the Ladies' Aid and Armor Society that she was just going to check on
things. With that excuse, no one else could find the time to come with her, so
here she was, trudging across a cold, wet slope by herself, in dragon country.
They must really hate her. They must be slapping each other on the back,
back home, and bragging on how they'd gotten rid of her. They must—
"Dammit, 'Bel, wait up!" The wind had dropped from its usual
mournful moan, and she heard the thin scream from behind. She whirled. There—a
long way back and below—an arm waved vigorously. She blinked. As if a
dragon-laid spell of misery had been lifted, her mood rose. Heads bobbed among
the wet heather. Two—three? She wasn't sure, but she wasn't alone anymore, and
she felt almost as warm as if she were leaning on a wall in the palace
courtyard in the sun.
They were, of course, grumbling when they came within earshot.
"Should've called yourself Mirabel Longlegs—" Siobhan Bladehawk said.
"Don't you ever sleep at night? We were beginning to think we'd never
catch up."
"And why'd you go off in that snit?" asked Krystal, flipping
the beaded fringe on her vest. "See this? I lost three strings, two of
them with real lapis beads, trying to track you through that white-thorn
thicket. You could just as easily have gone around it, rather than making me
get my knees all scratched—"
"Shut up, Krystal," Siobhan said. "Though she has a point,
'Bel. What got into you, anyway?"
Mirabel sniffed, and hated herself for it. "Bella said if I was just
investigating, I could go alone—nobody should bother—"
"Bella's having hot flashes," Siobhan said. "Not herself
these days, our Bella, and worried about having to retire. We unelected her
right after you left, and then we came after you. If you had just waited a day,
'stead of storming out like that—"
"But you're so impetuous," Krystal said, pouting. She pulled
the end of her silver-gilt braid around, frowned at it, and nipped off a split
end with her small, white, even teeth.
The third member of the party appeared, along with a shaggy pack pony,
its harness hung with a startling number of brightly polished horse brasses.
"I needed a holiday," Sophora said, her massive frame dwarfing
everything but the mountains. "And a chance for some healthy open-air
exercise." The Chancellor of the Exchequer grinned. "Besides, I think
that idiot Balon of Torm is trying to rob the realm, and this will give him a
chance, he thinks. The fool."
Mirabel's mood now suited a sunny May morning. Not even the next squall
off the mountain could make her miserable. Krystal, though, turned her back to
the blowing rain and pouted again.
"This is ruining my fringes."
"Shut up Krystal," said everyone casually. The world was back
to normal. ∗ ∗ ∗
Cavernous Dire had subsisted on rockrats, rock squirrels, rock grouse,
and the occasional rock (mild serpentine, with streaks of copper sulfate, eased
his draconic fire-vats, he'd found). In midwinter, he might be lucky enough to
flame a mountain goat before it got away, or even a murk ox (once widespread,
now confined to a few foggy mountain valleys) . But autumn meant hunger, unless
he traveled far into the plains, where he could be hunted by man and dragon
alike.
Now, as he lay on the cold stone floor of his cave, stirring the meagre
pile of his treasure, he scented something new, something approaching from the
high, cold peaks of the Tanglefoots. He sniffed. Not a mountain goat. Not a
murk ox (and besides, it wasn't foggy enough for the murk ox to be abroad). A
sharp, hot smell, rather like the smell of his own fire on rock.
Like many basically unattractive men, Cavernous Dire had been convinced
of his own good looks, back when he was a young lad who coated his hair with
woolfat, and had remained convinced that he had turned his back on considerable
female attention when he chose to become a miser. So, when he realized that the
unfamiliar aroma wafting down the cold wet wind was another dragon, his first
thought was "Of course." A she-dragon had been attracted by his
elegance, and hoped to make up to him.
Quickly, he shoved his treasure to the back of the cave, and piled rocks
on it. No thieving, lustful she-dragon was going to get his treasure, though he
had to admit it was pleasant to find that the girls still pursued him. He edged
to the front of his cave and looked upwind, into the swirls of rain. There—was
she there? Or—over there? ∗ ∗ ∗
The women of the expedition set up camp with the swift, capable movements
of those experienced in such things. The tent blew over only once, and proved
large enough for them all, plus Dumpling the pony, over whose steaming coat
Siobhan labored until she was as wet as it had been, and so were half their
blankets. Then she polished the horse brasses on Dumpling's harness; she had
insisted that any horse under her care would be properly adorned and she knew
the others wouldn't bother. Meanwhile, the others built a fire and cooked their
usual hearty fare, under cover of the front flap.
They were all sitting relaxed around the fire, full of mutton stew and
trail bread, sipping the contents of the stoneware jug Sophora had brought,
when they heard a shriek. It sounded like someone falling off a very high
cliff, and unhappy about it.
Scientific experimentation has shown that it is impossible to put on
breastplate, gorget, helm, greaves, armlets, and gauntlets in less than one
minute, and thus some magical power must have aided the warrior women, for they
were all outside the tent, properly armored, armed, and ready for inspection
when the dragon fell out of the sky and squashed the tent flat.
"Dumpling!" cried Siobhan, and lunged for the tent as the pony
squealed and a series of thumps suggested that hind hooves were in use.
"No, wait—" Mirabel grabbed her. Siobhan, doughty warrior that
she was, had one weakness: an intemperate concern for the welfare of
horseflesh. "You can hear he's alive."
"Ssss…" A warm glow, as of live coals being revived,
appeared in the gloom where the tent had been. Dumpling squealed again.
Something ripped, and hoofbeats receded into the distance. "Ahhh… sss
…"
"A dragon fell on our tent," Mirabel said, with the
supernatural calm of the truly sloshed. "And it's alive. And we're out
here in the dark—"
Light flared out of the sky; when she looked up, there was a huge shape,
like a dragon made all of fire. It was about the color of a live scorpion, she
thought wildly, as it grew larger and larger…
"That one's bigger," Sophora said, in her sweet soprano.
"At least it's not dark any more."
Mirabel had never noticed that dragons could direct their fire, in much
the way that the watch commander could direct the light of his candle lantern.
Silver threads of falling rain… a widening cone of light… and in the
middle of it, their flattened tent held down by a lumpish dragon the color of
drying slime along the edge of a pond. Its eyes—pale, oyster-colored
eyes—opened, and its gray-lipped mouth gaped. Steam curled into the air.
"Is it a baby?" asked Siobhan. Then she, like the others,
looked again at the expression in those eyes. "No," she said, answering
her own question. Even Siobhan, whose belief that animals were never vicious
until humans made them so had survived two years in the King's Cavalry, knew
nastiness when she saw it.
"It's hovering," Sophora said, pointing upward. Sure enough,
the bigger dragon, now only a bowshot above, had stopped its descent and was
balancing on the wind. Its gaping mouth, still pointed downward, gave fiery
light to the scene, but its body no longer glowed. Sophora waved her sword at
the big dragon. "This one's ours," she shouted. "Go away,
or—"
The dragon laughed. The blast of hot air that rolled over them smelt of
furnaces and smiths' shops, and deserts—but it did not fry them. It laughed,
they knew it laughed; that was enough for the moment, and the great creature
rose into the dark night, removing its light and leaving them once more in
darkness.
With a live and uncooperative dragon on their flattened tent.
"We haven't seen the last of that one," Sophora said.
"My best jerkin is probably getting squashed into the mud,"
said Krystal.
"Shut up, Krystal," they all said. All but the dragon. ∗ ∗ ∗
Cavernous Dire had never seen a dragon before he became one, and thus had
only the vaguest idea what they were supposed to look like. Big, of course, and
scaly, and breathing fire from a long, toothy mouth. Long tail with spikes on
it. Legs, naturally, or dragons would be just fire-breathing snakes. If he'd
known that dragons have wings, he'd forgotten it after he became a dragon, and
his own wings were, like those of all man-drakes, pitiful little stubs on the
shoulders, hardly more than ruffles of dry itchy skin.
So when the real dragon swooped down the valley, he was amazed. She—he
still thought, at this point, that the dragon was female—was an awe-inspiring
sight, with the wide wings spanning the valley from side to side. She was so
much bigger than he was. Crumbs of information about insects in which the male
was much smaller than the female tried to coalesce and tell him something
important, but he couldn't quite think, in the presence of this great beast.
Dragons have this effect on all humans, but it's much stronger with man-drakes,
and it amuses them to reduce their toys to mindlessness right before they
reduce them to their constituent nutrient molecules.
The dragon flew past, and out of sight. Cavernous thrust his own long
scaly neck out of his cave, trying to see where she'd gone. Nothing but wet
rock, nothing but wet wind, nothing but curtains of fine rain stirred by her
passage. She must be shy…
Strong talons seized his neck and plucked him from his cave as a robin
plucks out a worm from the ground. The wings boomed on either side of him, and
boomed again, and he was rising upward so fast that he felt the blood rushing
to his dependent tail.
It is not for Men to know, or Bards to tell, what true dragons do to
man-drakes in the high halls of the air, but it took several hours, during
which time Cavernous realized how little he knew about dragon anatomy, his own
or that of others, and how little he liked what he was learning now. Night had
fallen by then, and soon he had fallen—was falling—and the glowing beast beside
him rumbled warm laughter all the way down to the base of the clouds, then let
him fall away into the wet night.
He didn't remember hitting the ground, but waking up was terrible.
Darkness, cold, rain pelting his hide, and more pain than he had ever imagined
inside him. His fire-vats had slopped over, burning other internal parts he
hadn't known he possessed. Since it is the nature of dragons of all kinds to
heal with unnatural speed, his broken bones were already knitting, but they
hurt as they knit. Something was hitting him repeatedly, hard punches to the
nasal arch, and squealing in his lower ear. He tried to draw in a breath, which
hurt, and finally whatever it was quit hitting him and ran away. It was a long
moment before he realized it had been a horse.
Light stabbed through his third eyelid, and he smelt the big dragon
hovering above him. If he could have thought, he would have begged for mercy.
Then darkness returned, and he closed his eye again, hoping that he'd wake up
in his own cave and find it had all been a bad dream. ∗ ∗ ∗
Experienced campaigners can light a fire in a howling wet gale, if sober
and industrious. Those whose tents have been flattened by dragons, and whose
last prior calories were derived from potent brew may have more problems.
Siobhan was off somewhere in the distance, calling Dumpling. It wouldn't
do any good to call her back; as long as she was fretting over the pony her
brain wouldn't work anyway. Krystal muttered on about her ruined wardrobe, but
Mirabel heard Sophora give a gusty sigh.
"I supposed I'll have to do something about that dragon," she
said. "And that means making a light—"
Experienced campaigners always have a few dry fire-starters in their
packs, but the packs were inside the tent, underneath the dragon. Mirabel felt
in her pockets and discovered nothing but a squashed sugared plum, left over
from the Iron Jill Retreat some months back. Sophora had her Chancellor's Seal,
with the crystal which could double as a lens to start a fire from sunlight . .
. but not in the middle of the night. Glumly, they huddled against the dragon
and sank into a state of numb endurance familiar from past campaigns. ∗ ∗ ∗
Morning arrived with a smear of light somewhere behind the Tanglefoot
Mountains. Eventually the sodden expedition could make out the shape of the
fallen dragon, still lying on their tent.
Compared to the Grand Dragon Karshnak, it was a small specimen, not much
larger than the tent it had flattened. Its color in this cold gray light
reminded Mirabel most of a mud turtle, a dull brownish green. It lay as it had
fallen, in an untidy heap.
But it wasn't dead. Even if thin curls of steam hadn't been coming from
its nostrils and partially open mouth, the slow undulation of its sides would
have indicated life within. Siobhan, returning with the mud-streaked Dumpling,
eyed the dragon suspiciously.
Dumpling whinnied. At that, the dragon opened one gelid eye. Its mouth
gaped wider, and more steam poured out. It stirred, black talons scraping as
its feet contracted.
"We ought to kill it now," Siobhan said, soothing the jittery
pony. "While we can."
"No," Krystal said. "If we kill it now, it'll bleed on the
tent, and there go all our clothes."
"If we don't kill it now, and it wakes up and kills us, what use
will our clothes be?" ∗ ∗ ∗
Recovery from the dragon-change induced by eating a dragonsfoot seed, and
then a leaf of dragonstongue, and then being slathered with Goody Chernoff's
anti-wrinkle ointment (guaranteed to hold your present form until a certain
conjunction of events) requires three unlikely things to happen within one day,
as foretold in the Prophecies of Slart.in sunlight lying on the grounde, in autumn's chill to gather heate, and when the blonde beautie sweete, her lippes pressed to colde flesh, and also dragons' song be herde, then shalle the olde Man spring afresh, and hearken to commandinge werde."
If the warrior women had known that Cavernous Dire was the dragon,
bespelled into that form, and if they had known of the Prophecies of Slart—but
they didn't. The Prophecies of Slart were only then being penned three kingdoms
away by a young woman disguised as a young man, who had not been able to make a
living as a songwriter. ∗ ∗ ∗
Toying with the man-drake had been fun, but now the big dragon wanted
meat. He could always go back and eat the man-drake—but if he did that, he'd be
tempted to play with his food awhile longer, and his body wanted food now.
He sniffed, a long indrawn sniff that dragged the prevailing winds from their
courses.
Somewhere… ah, yes, murk ox. He sniffed again, long and low. It had
been a long time—centuries, at least—since he'd eaten the last murk ox near his
own lair. And he did like murk ox. Huge as he was, even one murk ox made a
pleasant snack and a herd of them was a good solid meal, food for the
recreation he rather thought he'd enjoy later.
The trick with murk ox was extracting them from the murk. They lived in
narrow, steep-sided valleys too narrow for his great wings, where the fog
lingered most of the day. The great dragon had learned, when much smaller, that
flying into murk ox terrain, into the fog, led to bruised wings or worse. There
were better ways—entertaining ways—to hunt murk ox.
The great dragon drew in another long, long breath and then blew. ∗ ∗ ∗
For days a chill wet wind had blown down from the mountains. Now, in the
space of a few minutes, it had shifted to the southwest, and then gone back to
the northeast, then back to the southwest again. Back and forth, as if the sky
itself were huffing in and out, unsure whether to take in air or let it out.
Then, with startling suddenness, the clouds began rolling up from the
southwest, toward the mountains, the bottoms lifting higher and higher until
the sun struck under them, glittering and sparkling on the drenched moorland.
Higher still the clouds rose, blowing away eastward, and leaving a clear blue
sky behind.
Mirabel squinted in the sudden bright gold light, but as far as she could
see the land lay clear—wet but drying—in the sun, which struck warmer with
every passing minute.
"It's certainly a break from Court procedure," Sophora said.
"There every day's much the same, but this—"
"What's that?" asked Siobhan, pointing to a cleft in the
mountains a few leagues distant. Little dark dots were moving quickly from what
must be the entrance to a narrow mountain valley, out onto the moorland.
Sophora held up her Chancellor's seal, centered with crystal, and put it
to her eye. "I had our guild wizard apply a scrying spell," she told
the others. "Good heavens—I do believe—it's a kapootle of murk ox."
"Murk ox! But they never come out in the open. Certainly not the
whole kapootle."
"Not unless they're chased," Sophora said. "Look."
She pointed.
Mirabel recognized the flying shape without having to be told what it
was. The big dragon, now gliding very slowly down the mountainside and aiming a
stream of fire into the valley where the murk ox had been concealed until the
clouds lifted.
Soon the last murk oxen had left the valley, but the great dragon seemed
in no haste to snatch them. Instead, it floated low overhead, herding them
closer and closer to the women and the smaller dragon. Then it dipped its head
from the glide—not even swooping lower, they noticed, and snatched one murk ox
from the herd. They could see it writhe… and then the lump sliding down
the dragon's long throat, just like an egg down a snake.
Another jet of flame, and the murk ox kapootle picked up speed, lumbering
nearer—those splayed hooves now shaking the boggy heath.
"That dragon," Mirabel said. "It's herding them at us."
"Oh, good," Sophora said. "I was hoping for some fresh
meat on this trip, and hunting's been poor…"
"Not that much fresh meat," Mirabel said. The heaving backs of
many murk oxen could now be seen quite clearly, though the curious twisted
horns could not be distinguished from the muck they were kicking up.
Although it is well known—or at least believed—that a herd of horses or
cattle will divide around a group of standing humans rather than trample them,
the murk ox kapootle has quite another reputation, which explains why it has
not been hunted to extinction by men. No one knows what the murk ox thinks as
it gallumphs along, but avoiding obstacles smaller than hills isn't part of its
cognitive processes. A kapootle of murk ox will trample all but the stoutest
trees, and the mere human form goes down like straw before the reaper.
With the quick decision that characterizes the combat-experienced
soldier, the warrior women bolted for the only cover available, that of the
still-recumbent dragon on their collapsed tent. Siobhan dragged Dumpling along
behind.
In moments, the lead murk ox overran their campsite. Emitting the
strident squeaks of a murk ox in mortal fear, the lead ox galloped right over
the dragon, digging him painfully in the snout and eye on the way up to his
shoulder, and then staggering badly on the slippery scaled ribs, before running
on down the declining tail. Only a few of his followers attempted the same
feat, and all but one slid off the dragon's ribs, there to be trampled by their
fellows. That one, unable to match its leader's surefooted leap down to the
tail, launched itself right over the heads of the cowering warrior women,
tripped on landing, and broke its neck.
"That was lucky!" shouted Mirabel over the piercing squeaks of
the kapootle, now thundering past on either side.
"Yes," Sophora agreed. "Quite plump—a nice dinner for
us." She started toward the twitching carcase, but a shadow loomed
suddenly. They looked up. The great dragon lowered one foot and plucked the
murk ox off the ground, meanwhile watching them with an expression which
mingled challenge and amusement.
"You are a wicked beast," Sophora said, undaunted. Mirabel
remembered that Sophora had been undaunted even by the Grand Dragon Karshnak,
at least until she'd been knocked unconscious by a wing blow.
The dragon winked, and popped the murk ox into its mouth. Flames licked
around it; they could smell the reek of burning hair, and then the luscious
smell of roasting meat. Then, with a boom and a whirl of air, the dragon was up
and away, chasing laggard murk oxen on with a lick of flame, and crooning
something that might have been meant for music.
"Well," said Krystal, flicking dabs of muck off her vest.
"Now that's over, maybe we can do something about getting this mess
off our tent, so I can find out what's happened to my clothes." ∗ ∗ ∗
Cavernous Dire had slept uneasily, with cold rain trickling down his ribs
and under his tail, but each time he'd roused, he'd managed to force himself
back to sleep. It hurt less that way. When sunlight struck his eyes in the
morning, he clenched his outer lids tight to block it out and hoped for the
best. He could feel that his broken bones were mostly mended, and the internal
burns were nearly healed as well. But he did not feel like coping with the real
world.
He had, however, sneaked peeks at the humans in his immediate vicinity.
Four women in bronze and leather, with swords and short hunting spears.
Cavernous Dire had not enjoyed human meat when he tried it before, and three of
the four warrior women looked unappetizing in any form. The fourth, though, he
might have fancied in other situations. She had silvery blond hair,
peach-blossom cheeks, a perky nose, teeth like pearls, and a ripely pouting
mouth. Years of solitude as a dragon, with a meagre and uninteresting hoard to
guard, had given him time to fantasize about women, and this woman met all his
qualifications except that she was carrying a very sharp sword.
If he just lay there and pretended to sleep, maybe the women would go
away. His draconic scales dulled his tactile awareness enough that he didn't
realize he was lying on their tent, and before he listened to enough of their
conversation, he became aware of something else.
The ground was shivering. Then shuddering. Cavernous opened one eye just
in time to see a dark hairy shape hurtling toward him, and snapped his eye
shut. Sharp hard things hit the same tender parts of his snout which the horse
had kicked in the dark, and then dented his scales on their way up his head,
his shoulder, and along his ribs, where they tickled. And he could sense, with
that infallible sense given to man-drakes, that somewhere in the sky the large
dragon which had hurt him so badly was lurking, waiting for him to show life so
he could be tormented again.
Better the tickle of murk ox hooves than the talons of a dragon.
Cavernous hunkered down, feigning unconsciousness as best he could, as the
kapootle squeaked and thundered past, though the moment when he sensed the
great dragon close above him was almost impossible to bear. Then it was gone,
and he dared open his outer eyelids again, just a tiny bit, to see what was going
on.
"—And I say we butcher it now!" That was his diminuitive
blonde, she of the perky nose and accouterments.
"You were the one who said it'd bleed on our gear," the tallest
one said. "Besides, Krystal, you really should be grateful to it. It saved
our lives."
"And if you say 'What's life without my embroidered nightshirt with
the suede fringe?' I will personally roll you through that squashed murk
ox," said the one with the crooked nose.
"I am grateful," Krystal said, sounding very cross. "What
do you want me to do, Mirabel, kiss it and make it well?"
"Don't be silly," said the one petting the very dirty pony,
whose harness was adorned with gleaming gold shapes. For a moment all Cavernous
could think of was the treasure wasted on that stupid pony. "We all know
you wouldn't kiss anything that ugly, no matter what it did for you."
"You—you—"
"Like when Rusty the Armorer fixed that helm for you, and all you
did was wave at him—"
"Well… he's old. And he has only three teeth."
The one named Mirabel grinned suddenly. "Come on, Krystal—I dare
you. Kiss a dragon. Maybe it will cure it."
"Eeeeuw!"
"Scaredy-cat."
"Am not!"
"Just think, Krystal, how your… mmm… special friends will
be impressed… if you do dare the dragon's breath, that is. If you
don't—are they going to respect you, even if you do have that fancy mask?"
Krystal glared at them, shrugged, and twitched the twitchable parts of
her anatomy. Then, with a pout the dragon was finding increasingly adorable, she
shrugged. "All right. But only because I know you'll make up some horrid
story about me if I don't. And not—not on the lips."
She sauntered toward the dragon's mouth. Cavernous had to roll his big
man-drake eye down to watch her. She leaned over his snout, lips pursed.
From the man-drake's point of view, the kiss was an explosion of
sensation unlike anything he'd ever felt, and the strange feelings went on and
on. No one had told him he could turn back into a man, so he hadn't bothered
trying to imagine what it would feel like. His eyes opened very wide, but all
he could see was whirling colors.
From Mirabel's point of view, Krystal put her lips to the dragon's snout,
and the dragon collapsed like a bagpipe's bag, with a sort of warm whooshing
noise, and almost simultaneously, the moor burst into spring flower. Where the
dragon had been, a scruffy looking naked man hunched against the cool air.
Although Mirabel knew nothing about physics, she had just observed that the
energy released when a large form condensed to a small one could generate
enough heat to activate seeds and accelerate their growth.
Krystal, who had had her eyes shut, stepped back and opened them. When
she saw that the tent was no longer covered by a dragon, and that lumps within
the wrinkled canvas suggested the remains of their gear, she made straight for
the collapsed entrance. A dirty old man didn't interest her at all.
Mirabel had gone on guard instinctively, as had Sophora, and the
appearance of Cavernous Dire did not reassure them. Decades of life as a
man-drake had left him no handsomer than when he had chosen misering over
marriage. Now his greasy hair was stringy gray instead of black, and his lanky
form even more stooped. A dirty-looking gray beard straggled past his chest no
farther than necessary… in fact, not quite far enough. He looked like the
sort of man who would lurk in dark alleys to accost the sick or feeble.
"Who are you?" Sophora asked, in her Chancellor voice.
"Cavernous Dire," the man said. His voice squeaked, like an
unoiled hinge.
"You're Cavernous Dire?" Mirabel asked. Her mind boggled, then
recalled the shape and expression of Bilious Dire, made a quick comparison, and
knew it must be true.
"You were a dragon…" Sophora said.
"They tricked me," the man said. "Just because I was
getting rich and they wanted my money…" He sounded peevish, like
someone whose neighbors would trick him every chance they got.
At that moment the big dragon returned. They had not heard it gliding
nearer, but they heard the long hiss as its shadow passed over them.
"Noooo!" wailed Cavernous. "Don't let it get me!"
"He's Cavernous Dire?" Krystal said, crawling out from under
the tent. "He's the one we were supposed to rescue? Eeeeuw!"
Nonetheless, she struck an attitude, peering up at the big dragon with
conscious grace.
Mirabel and Sophora both had swords in hand, but Mirabel knew that they
hadn't anywhere near the force necessary to tangle with a dragon this size. But
they also had nowhere safe to run. The dragon smiled, and let its long, thin,
red tongue hang out a little, steaming in the morning air.
What might have happened next, she never knew, but Cavernous Dire
suddenly snatched her belt knife, and lunged toward Siobhan and the pony Dumpling.
"Here's treasure!" he screamed, hacking at the horse brasses on
Dumpling's harness.
"Hey—stop that!" Siobhan tried to grab his arm, but Dumpling
interfered. The pony backed and spun, fighting Siobhan's hold and cow-kicking
at Cavernous. The dragon seemed to be amused, and let another yard or so of
tongue slide out. Cavernous quit hacking at the brasses individually, and slid
Mirabel's knife up under the harness, which parted like butter. Two more
slices, and he'd cut it free, all the while dodging Siobhan's angry swats and
Dumpling's kicks. He snatched it from the ground, dropping Mirabel's knife, and
turned back to the dragon, holding the harness at arm's length.
"Treasure! Gold! Take it! Go away!"
"Yesss…" The long tongue lapped out, and gathered it
in—but Cavernous did not let go, and the tongue wrapped round him too,
snatching him back into the dragon's toothy maw as a lizard might snatch a fly.
A gulp, and the bulge that had been Cavernous Dire disappeared into the
dragon's innards. A flick of the wings, and another, and the dragon was gone,
sailing low over the heather, back toward the distant kapootle of murk ox.
Dumpling squealed and bucked, landing on Mirabel's knife, which
shattered.
"My best knife—!" Mirabel said.
"I hope he hasn't cut his hoof," Siobhan said.
"My best shirt, ruined!" Krystal held up a nightshirt with a
wet stain down one side.
"Shut up Krystal," they all said.
On the way back to the city, they agreed that Bilious Dire need not know
the whole story, only that at the end Cavernous had sacrificed himself for
others, and been eaten. ∗ ∗ ∗
Mirabel's sister had things to say about the outcome which left a
coolness of glacial dimensions between them for more than a year. At Monica's
instigation, the Weeping Willow Sewing Circle paid for a plaque commemorating
the Dauntless Courage of Cavernous Dire, in saving the life of four of the
King's Guardswomen from a dragon. Every May-morn, they lay a wreath beneath it.
Mirabel Stonefist won't walk by that corner at all anymore. Siobhan Bladehawk
narrowly escaped punishment for defacing the plaque as she tried to correct
"Four of the King's Guardswomen" to "Three of the King's
Guardswomen and One of the King's Cavalrywomen."
In the belly of the dragon, Cavernous Dire remains undigested, a
situation acceptable to neither him nor the dragon. Neither of them knows that
it is Cavernous's miserly grasp of the pony Dumpling's horse-brass which
maintains this uneasy stasis.
Meanwhile, the Chancellor of the Exchequer had a very satisfactory chat
with Balon of Torm, whose arms, dyed orange to the elbow, proved he had been
dipping into the treasury. Sophora Segundiflora may be the only person
satisfied by the expedition. ∞
Fool's GoldElizabeth Moonfirst published in Esther M. Friesner, editor. Chicks 'n Chained Males. Baen. 1999formatted in HTML for #bookz by MollyKate September 2002
"It's been done to death," Mirabel Stonefist said.
"It's traditional." Her sister Monica sat primly upright,
embroidering tiny poppies on a pillowcase. All Monica's pillow-cases had
poppies on them, just as all the curtains on the morning side of the house had
morning glories.
"Traditional is another word for 'done to death,' " Mirabel
said. Her own pillow-cases had a stamped sigil and the words PROPERTY OF THE
ROYAL BARRACKS DO NOT REMOVE.
"It's unlucky to break with tradition."
"It's unlucky to have anything to do with dragons," Mirabel
said, rubbing the burn scar on her left leg. ∗ ∗ ∗
Cavernous Dire had never intended to be a dragon. He had intended to be a
miser, living a long and peaceful life of solitary selfishness near the
Tanglefoot Mountains, but he had, all unwitting, consumed a seed of dragonsfoot
which had been—entirely by accident—baked into a gooseberry tart. That wouldn't
have changed him, if his neighbor hadn't made an innocent mistake and handed
him dragonstongue, instead of dragonsbane, to ease a sore tongue. The two
plants do look much alike, and usually it makes no difference whether you
nibble a leaf of D. abscondus or D. lingula, since both will ease
a cold-blister, but in those rare instances when someone has an undigested seed
of dragonsfoot in his gut, and then adds to it the potent essence of D.
lingula… well.
Of course it was all a mistake, and an accident, and the fact that when
Cavernous went back to the village to dig his miser's hoard out from under the
hearthstone it was already gone meant nothing. Probably. And most likely the
jar of smelly ointment that broke on his scaly head—fixing him in his draconic
form until an exceedingly unlikely conjunction of events—was an accident too,
though Goody Chernoff's cackle wasn't.
So Cavernous Dire sloped off to the Tanglefoots in a draconish temper,
scorching fenceposts along the way. He found a proper cave, and would have
amassed a hoard from the passing travelers, if there'd been any. But his cave
was a long way from any pass over the mountains, and he was far too prudent to
tangle with the rich and powerful dragons whose caves lay on more lucrative
trade routes.
He was forced to prey on the locals.
At first, sad to say, this gave him wicked satisfaction. They'd robbed
him. They'd turned him into a dragon and robbed him, and—like a true miser—he
minded the latter much more than the former. He ate their sheep, and then their
cattle (having grown large enough), and once inhaled an entire flock of geese—a
mistake, he discovered, as burning feathers stank abominably. He could not
quite bring himself to eat their children, though his draconish nature found
them appetizing, because he knew too well how dirty they really were, and how
disgusting the amulets their mothers tied round their filthy necks. But he did
kill a few of the adults, when they marched out with torches to test the
strength of his fire. He couldn't stomach their stringy, bitter flesh.
Finally they moved away, cursing each other for fools, and Cavernous
reigned over a ruined district. He pried up every hearthstone, and rooted in
every well, but few were the coins or baubles which the villagers left behind.
Although the ignorant assert that the man-drake has powers greater than
the dragonborn, this is but wishful thinking. Dragons born from the egg inherit
all the ancient wisdom and power of dragonkind. Man-drakes are but feeble
imitations, capable of matching true dragons only in their lust for gold. So
poor Cavernous Dire, though fearsome to men, had not a chance of surviving in
any contest with real dragons—and real dragons find few things so amusing as
tormenting man-drakes.
'Tis said that every man has some woman who loves him—at least until she
dies of his misuse—and so it was with Cavernous. Though most of the children
born into his very dysfunctional birth-family had died of abuse or neglect, he
had a sister, Bilious Dire, who had not died, but lived—and lived, moreover,
with the twisted memory that Cavernous had once saved her life. (In fact, he
had merely pushed her out of his way on one of the many occasions when his
mother Savage came after him with a hot ladle.) But Bilious built her life, as
do we all, on the foundation of her beliefs about reality, and in her reality
Cavernous was a noble being.
She had been long away, Bilious, enriching the man who owned her, but at
last she grew too wrinkled and stiff, and he cast her out. So she returned to
the foothills village of her childhood, to find it ruined and empty, with
dragon tracks in the street.
"That horrible dragon," she wailed at the weeping sky.
"It's stolen my poor innocent brother. I must find help—" ∗ ∗ ∗
"So you see, it's the traditional quest to rescue the innocent
victim of a dragon," Mirabel's sister said. "Our sewing circle has
taken on the rehabilitation of the faded blossoms of vice—" Mirabel mimed
gagging, and her sister glared at her. "Don't laugh! It's not funny—the
poor things—"
"Isn't there Madam Aspersia's Residence for them?"
"Madam Aspersia only has room for twenty, and besides she gives
preference to women of a Certain Kind." Mirabel rolled her eyes; her
sister combined the desire to talk about Such Things with the inability to name
the Things she wanted to talk about.
"Well, but surely there are other resources—"
"In this city perhaps, but in the provinces—" Before Mirabel
could ask why the provinces should concern the goodwives of Weeping Willow
Street, her sister took a deep breath and plunged on. "So when poor
Bilious—obviously past any chance of earning a living That Way—begged us to
find help for her poor virgin brother taken by a dragon, of course I thought of
you."
"Of course."
"Surely your organization does something to help women—that
is its name, after all, Ladies' Aid and Armor Society…"
Mirabel had tried to explain, on previous occasions, what the LAAS had
been founded for, and why it would not help with a campaign to provide each
orphaned girl with hand-embroidered underclothes for her trousseau, or stand
shoulder to shoulder with the Weeping Willow Sewing Society's members when they
marched on taverns that sold liquor to single women. (Didn't her sister realize
that all the women in the King's Guard hung out in taverns? Or was that the
point?)
Now, through clenched teeth, Mirabel tried once more. "Monica—we do
help women—each other. We were founded as a mutual-aid society for all women
soldiers, though we do what we can—" The LAAS charity ball, for instance,
supported the education of the orphaned daughters of soldiers.
"Helping each other is just like helping yourself, and helping
yourself is selfish. Here's this poor woman, with no hope of getting her
brother free if you don't do something—"
Mirabel felt her resistance crumbling, as it usually did if her sister
talked long enough.
"I don't see how he can be a virgin, if he's older than his
sister," she said. A weak argument, and she knew it. So did Monica.
"You can at least investigate, can't you? It can't hurt…"
It could get her killed, but that was a remote danger. Her sister was
right here and now. "No promises," Mirabel said.
"I knew you'd come through," said Monica. ∗ ∗ ∗
As Mirabel Stonefist trudged glumly across a lumpy wet moor, she thought
she should have chosen "stonehead" for her fighting surname instead
of "stonefist." She'd broken fingers often enough to disprove the
truth of her chosen epithet, and over a moderately long career more than one
person had commented on her personality in granitic terms. Stonehead, bonehead,
too stubborn to quit and too dumb to figure a way out…
She had passed three abandoned, ruined villages already, the thatched
roofs long since rotted, a few tumbled stone walls blacked by fire. She'd found
hearthstones standing on end like grave markers, and not one coin of any metal.
And she'd found dragon tracks. Not, to someone who had been in the
unfortunate expedition to kill the Grand Dragon Karshnak of Kreshnivok, very
big dragon tracks, but big enough to trip over and fall splat in. It had been
raining for days, as usual in autumn, and the dragon tracks were all full of
very cold water.
Her biggest mistake, she thought, had been birth order. If she'd been
born after Gervais, she'd have been the cute little baby sister, and no one
would ever have called on her to solve problems for the family. But as the
oldest—the big sister to them all—she'd been cast as family protector and
family servant from the beginning.
And her next biggest mistake, at least in the present instance, had been
telling the Ladies' Aid and Armor Society that she was just going to check on
things. With that excuse, no one else could find the time to come with her, so
here she was, trudging across a cold, wet slope by herself, in dragon country.
They must really hate her. They must be slapping each other on the back,
back home, and bragging on how they'd gotten rid of her. They must—
"Dammit, 'Bel, wait up!" The wind had dropped from its usual
mournful moan, and she heard the thin scream from behind. She whirled. There—a
long way back and below—an arm waved vigorously. She blinked. As if a
dragon-laid spell of misery had been lifted, her mood rose. Heads bobbed among
the wet heather. Two—three? She wasn't sure, but she wasn't alone anymore, and
she felt almost as warm as if she were leaning on a wall in the palace
courtyard in the sun.
They were, of course, grumbling when they came within earshot.
"Should've called yourself Mirabel Longlegs—" Siobhan Bladehawk said.
"Don't you ever sleep at night? We were beginning to think we'd never
catch up."
"And why'd you go off in that snit?" asked Krystal, flipping
the beaded fringe on her vest. "See this? I lost three strings, two of
them with real lapis beads, trying to track you through that white-thorn
thicket. You could just as easily have gone around it, rather than making me
get my knees all scratched—"
"Shut up, Krystal," Siobhan said. "Though she has a point,
'Bel. What got into you, anyway?"
Mirabel sniffed, and hated herself for it. "Bella said if I was just
investigating, I could go alone—nobody should bother—"
"Bella's having hot flashes," Siobhan said. "Not herself
these days, our Bella, and worried about having to retire. We unelected her
right after you left, and then we came after you. If you had just waited a day,
'stead of storming out like that—"
"But you're so impetuous," Krystal said, pouting. She pulled
the end of her silver-gilt braid around, frowned at it, and nipped off a split
end with her small, white, even teeth.
The third member of the party appeared, along with a shaggy pack pony,
its harness hung with a startling number of brightly polished horse brasses.
"I needed a holiday," Sophora said, her massive frame dwarfing
everything but the mountains. "And a chance for some healthy open-air
exercise." The Chancellor of the Exchequer grinned. "Besides, I think
that idiot Balon of Torm is trying to rob the realm, and this will give him a
chance, he thinks. The fool."
Mirabel's mood now suited a sunny May morning. Not even the next squall
off the mountain could make her miserable. Krystal, though, turned her back to
the blowing rain and pouted again.
"This is ruining my fringes."
"Shut up Krystal," said everyone casually. The world was back
to normal. ∗ ∗ ∗
Cavernous Dire had subsisted on rockrats, rock squirrels, rock grouse,
and the occasional rock (mild serpentine, with streaks of copper sulfate, eased
his draconic fire-vats, he'd found). In midwinter, he might be lucky enough to
flame a mountain goat before it got away, or even a murk ox (once widespread,
now confined to a few foggy mountain valleys) . But autumn meant hunger, unless
he traveled far into the plains, where he could be hunted by man and dragon
alike.
Now, as he lay on the cold stone floor of his cave, stirring the meagre
pile of his treasure, he scented something new, something approaching from the
high, cold peaks of the Tanglefoots. He sniffed. Not a mountain goat. Not a
murk ox (and besides, it wasn't foggy enough for the murk ox to be abroad). A
sharp, hot smell, rather like the smell of his own fire on rock.
Like many basically unattractive men, Cavernous Dire had been convinced
of his own good looks, back when he was a young lad who coated his hair with
woolfat, and had remained convinced that he had turned his back on considerable
female attention when he chose to become a miser. So, when he realized that the
unfamiliar aroma wafting down the cold wet wind was another dragon, his first
thought was "Of course." A she-dragon had been attracted by his
elegance, and hoped to make up to him.
Quickly, he shoved his treasure to the back of the cave, and piled rocks
on it. No thieving, lustful she-dragon was going to get his treasure, though he
had to admit it was pleasant to find that the girls still pursued him. He edged
to the front of his cave and looked upwind, into the swirls of rain. There—was
she there? Or—over there? ∗ ∗ ∗
The women of the expedition set up camp with the swift, capable movements
of those experienced in such things. The tent blew over only once, and proved
large enough for them all, plus Dumpling the pony, over whose steaming coat
Siobhan labored until she was as wet as it had been, and so were half their
blankets. Then she polished the horse brasses on Dumpling's harness; she had
insisted that any horse under her care would be properly adorned and she knew
the others wouldn't bother. Meanwhile, the others built a fire and cooked their
usual hearty fare, under cover of the front flap.
They were all sitting relaxed around the fire, full of mutton stew and
trail bread, sipping the contents of the stoneware jug Sophora had brought,
when they heard a shriek. It sounded like someone falling off a very high
cliff, and unhappy about it.
Scientific experimentation has shown that it is impossible to put on
breastplate, gorget, helm, greaves, armlets, and gauntlets in less than one
minute, and thus some magical power must have aided the warrior women, for they
were all outside the tent, properly armored, armed, and ready for inspection
when the dragon fell out of the sky and squashed the tent flat.
"Dumpling!" cried Siobhan, and lunged for the tent as the pony
squealed and a series of thumps suggested that hind hooves were in use.
"No, wait—" Mirabel grabbed her. Siobhan, doughty warrior that
she was, had one weakness: an intemperate concern for the welfare of
horseflesh. "You can hear he's alive."
"Ssss…" A warm glow, as of live coals being revived,
appeared in the gloom where the tent had been. Dumpling squealed again.
Something ripped, and hoofbeats receded into the distance. "Ahhh… sss
…"
"A dragon fell on our tent," Mirabel said, with the
supernatural calm of the truly sloshed. "And it's alive. And we're out
here in the dark—"
Light flared out of the sky; when she looked up, there was a huge shape,
like a dragon made all of fire. It was about the color of a live scorpion, she
thought wildly, as it grew larger and larger…
"That one's bigger," Sophora said, in her sweet soprano.
"At least it's not dark any more."
Mirabel had never noticed that dragons could direct their fire, in much
the way that the watch commander could direct the light of his candle lantern.
Silver threads of falling rain… a widening cone of light… and in the
middle of it, their flattened tent held down by a lumpish dragon the color of
drying slime along the edge of a pond. Its eyes—pale, oyster-colored
eyes—opened, and its gray-lipped mouth gaped. Steam curled into the air.
"Is it a baby?" asked Siobhan. Then she, like the others,
looked again at the expression in those eyes. "No," she said, answering
her own question. Even Siobhan, whose belief that animals were never vicious
until humans made them so had survived two years in the King's Cavalry, knew
nastiness when she saw it.
"It's hovering," Sophora said, pointing upward. Sure enough,
the bigger dragon, now only a bowshot above, had stopped its descent and was
balancing on the wind. Its gaping mouth, still pointed downward, gave fiery
light to the scene, but its body no longer glowed. Sophora waved her sword at
the big dragon. "This one's ours," she shouted. "Go away,
or—"
The dragon laughed. The blast of hot air that rolled over them smelt of
furnaces and smiths' shops, and deserts—but it did not fry them. It laughed,
they knew it laughed; that was enough for the moment, and the great creature
rose into the dark night, removing its light and leaving them once more in
darkness.
With a live and uncooperative dragon on their flattened tent.
"We haven't seen the last of that one," Sophora said.
"My best jerkin is probably getting squashed into the mud,"
said Krystal.
"Shut up, Krystal," they all said. All but the dragon. ∗ ∗ ∗
Cavernous Dire had never seen a dragon before he became one, and thus had
only the vaguest idea what they were supposed to look like. Big, of course, and
scaly, and breathing fire from a long, toothy mouth. Long tail with spikes on
it. Legs, naturally, or dragons would be just fire-breathing snakes. If he'd
known that dragons have wings, he'd forgotten it after he became a dragon, and
his own wings were, like those of all man-drakes, pitiful little stubs on the
shoulders, hardly more than ruffles of dry itchy skin.
So when the real dragon swooped down the valley, he was amazed. She—he
still thought, at this point, that the dragon was female—was an awe-inspiring
sight, with the wide wings spanning the valley from side to side. She was so
much bigger than he was. Crumbs of information about insects in which the male
was much smaller than the female tried to coalesce and tell him something
important, but he couldn't quite think, in the presence of this great beast.
Dragons have this effect on all humans, but it's much stronger with man-drakes,
and it amuses them to reduce their toys to mindlessness right before they
reduce them to their constituent nutrient molecules.
The dragon flew past, and out of sight. Cavernous thrust his own long
scaly neck out of his cave, trying to see where she'd gone. Nothing but wet
rock, nothing but wet wind, nothing but curtains of fine rain stirred by her
passage. She must be shy…
Strong talons seized his neck and plucked him from his cave as a robin
plucks out a worm from the ground. The wings boomed on either side of him, and
boomed again, and he was rising upward so fast that he felt the blood rushing
to his dependent tail.
It is not for Men to know, or Bards to tell, what true dragons do to
man-drakes in the high halls of the air, but it took several hours, during
which time Cavernous realized how little he knew about dragon anatomy, his own
or that of others, and how little he liked what he was learning now. Night had
fallen by then, and soon he had fallen—was falling—and the glowing beast beside
him rumbled warm laughter all the way down to the base of the clouds, then let
him fall away into the wet night.
He didn't remember hitting the ground, but waking up was terrible.
Darkness, cold, rain pelting his hide, and more pain than he had ever imagined
inside him. His fire-vats had slopped over, burning other internal parts he
hadn't known he possessed. Since it is the nature of dragons of all kinds to
heal with unnatural speed, his broken bones were already knitting, but they
hurt as they knit. Something was hitting him repeatedly, hard punches to the
nasal arch, and squealing in his lower ear. He tried to draw in a breath, which
hurt, and finally whatever it was quit hitting him and ran away. It was a long
moment before he realized it had been a horse.
Light stabbed through his third eyelid, and he smelt the big dragon
hovering above him. If he could have thought, he would have begged for mercy.
Then darkness returned, and he closed his eye again, hoping that he'd wake up
in his own cave and find it had all been a bad dream. ∗ ∗ ∗
Experienced campaigners can light a fire in a howling wet gale, if sober
and industrious. Those whose tents have been flattened by dragons, and whose
last prior calories were derived from potent brew may have more problems.
Siobhan was off somewhere in the distance, calling Dumpling. It wouldn't
do any good to call her back; as long as she was fretting over the pony her
brain wouldn't work anyway. Krystal muttered on about her ruined wardrobe, but
Mirabel heard Sophora give a gusty sigh.
"I supposed I'll have to do something about that dragon," she
said. "And that means making a light—"
Experienced campaigners always have a few dry fire-starters in their
packs, but the packs were inside the tent, underneath the dragon. Mirabel felt
in her pockets and discovered nothing but a squashed sugared plum, left over
from the Iron Jill Retreat some months back. Sophora had her Chancellor's Seal,
with the crystal which could double as a lens to start a fire from sunlight . .
. but not in the middle of the night. Glumly, they huddled against the dragon
and sank into a state of numb endurance familiar from past campaigns. ∗ ∗ ∗
Morning arrived with a smear of light somewhere behind the Tanglefoot
Mountains. Eventually the sodden expedition could make out the shape of the
fallen dragon, still lying on their tent.
Compared to the Grand Dragon Karshnak, it was a small specimen, not much
larger than the tent it had flattened. Its color in this cold gray light
reminded Mirabel most of a mud turtle, a dull brownish green. It lay as it had
fallen, in an untidy heap.
But it wasn't dead. Even if thin curls of steam hadn't been coming from
its nostrils and partially open mouth, the slow undulation of its sides would
have indicated life within. Siobhan, returning with the mud-streaked Dumpling,
eyed the dragon suspiciously.
Dumpling whinnied. At that, the dragon opened one gelid eye. Its mouth
gaped wider, and more steam poured out. It stirred, black talons scraping as
its feet contracted.
"We ought to kill it now," Siobhan said, soothing the jittery
pony. "While we can."
"No," Krystal said. "If we kill it now, it'll bleed on the
tent, and there go all our clothes."
"If we don't kill it now, and it wakes up and kills us, what use
will our clothes be?" ∗ ∗ ∗
Recovery from the dragon-change induced by eating a dragonsfoot seed, and
then a leaf of dragonstongue, and then being slathered with Goody Chernoff's
anti-wrinkle ointment (guaranteed to hold your present form until a certain
conjunction of events) requires three unlikely things to happen within one day,
as foretold in the Prophecies of Slart."Whanne thatte murke-ox be founde, in sunlight lying on the grounde, in autumn's chill to gather heate, and when the blonde beautie sweete, her lippes pressed to colde flesh, and also dragons' song be herde, then shalle the olde Man spring afresh, and hearken to commandinge werde."
If the warrior women had known that Cavernous Dire was the dragon,
bespelled into that form, and if they had known of the Prophecies of Slart—but
they didn't. The Prophecies of Slart were only then being penned three kingdoms
away by a young woman disguised as a young man, who had not been able to make a
living as a songwriter. ∗ ∗ ∗
Toying with the man-drake had been fun, but now the big dragon wanted
meat. He could always go back and eat the man-drake—but if he did that, he'd be
tempted to play with his food awhile longer, and his body wanted food now.
He sniffed, a long indrawn sniff that dragged the prevailing winds from their
courses.
Somewhere… ah, yes, murk ox. He sniffed again, long and low. It had
been a long time—centuries, at least—since he'd eaten the last murk ox near his
own lair. And he did like murk ox. Huge as he was, even one murk ox made a
pleasant snack and a herd of them was a good solid meal, food for the
recreation he rather thought he'd enjoy later.
The trick with murk ox was extracting them from the murk. They lived in
narrow, steep-sided valleys too narrow for his great wings, where the fog
lingered most of the day. The great dragon had learned, when much smaller, that
flying into murk ox terrain, into the fog, led to bruised wings or worse. There
were better ways—entertaining ways—to hunt murk ox.
The great dragon drew in another long, long breath and then blew. ∗ ∗ ∗
For days a chill wet wind had blown down from the mountains. Now, in the
space of a few minutes, it had shifted to the southwest, and then gone back to
the northeast, then back to the southwest again. Back and forth, as if the sky
itself were huffing in and out, unsure whether to take in air or let it out.
Then, with startling suddenness, the clouds began rolling up from the
southwest, toward the mountains, the bottoms lifting higher and higher until
the sun struck under them, glittering and sparkling on the drenched moorland.
Higher still the clouds rose, blowing away eastward, and leaving a clear blue
sky behind.
Mirabel squinted in the sudden bright gold light, but as far as she could
see the land lay clear—wet but drying—in the sun, which struck warmer with
every passing minute.
"It's certainly a break from Court procedure," Sophora said.
"There every day's much the same, but this—"
"What's that?" asked Siobhan, pointing to a cleft in the
mountains a few leagues distant. Little dark dots were moving quickly from what
must be the entrance to a narrow mountain valley, out onto the moorland.
Sophora held up her Chancellor's seal, centered with crystal, and put it
to her eye. "I had our guild wizard apply a scrying spell," she told
the others. "Good heavens—I do believe—it's a kapootle of murk ox."
"Murk ox! But they never come out in the open. Certainly not the
whole kapootle."
"Not unless they're chased," Sophora said. "Look."
She pointed.
Mirabel recognized the flying shape without having to be told what it
was. The big dragon, now gliding very slowly down the mountainside and aiming a
stream of fire into the valley where the murk ox had been concealed until the
clouds lifted.
Soon the last murk oxen had left the valley, but the great dragon seemed
in no haste to snatch them. Instead, it floated low overhead, herding them
closer and closer to the women and the smaller dragon. Then it dipped its head
from the glide—not even swooping lower, they noticed, and snatched one murk ox
from the herd. They could see it writhe… and then the lump sliding down
the dragon's long throat, just like an egg down a snake.
Another jet of flame, and the murk ox kapootle picked up speed, lumbering
nearer—those splayed hooves now shaking the boggy heath.
"That dragon," Mirabel said. "It's herding them at us."
"Oh, good," Sophora said. "I was hoping for some fresh
meat on this trip, and hunting's been poor…"
"Not that much fresh meat," Mirabel said. The heaving backs of
many murk oxen could now be seen quite clearly, though the curious twisted
horns could not be distinguished from the muck they were kicking up.
Although it is well known—or at least believed—that a herd of horses or
cattle will divide around a group of standing humans rather than trample them,
the murk ox kapootle has quite another reputation, which explains why it has
not been hunted to extinction by men. No one knows what the murk ox thinks as
it gallumphs along, but avoiding obstacles smaller than hills isn't part of its
cognitive processes. A kapootle of murk ox will trample all but the stoutest
trees, and the mere human form goes down like straw before the reaper.
With the quick decision that characterizes the combat-experienced
soldier, the warrior women bolted for the only cover available, that of the
still-recumbent dragon on their collapsed tent. Siobhan dragged Dumpling along
behind.
In moments, the lead murk ox overran their campsite. Emitting the
strident squeaks of a murk ox in mortal fear, the lead ox galloped right over
the dragon, digging him painfully in the snout and eye on the way up to his
shoulder, and then staggering badly on the slippery scaled ribs, before running
on down the declining tail. Only a few of his followers attempted the same
feat, and all but one slid off the dragon's ribs, there to be trampled by their
fellows. That one, unable to match its leader's surefooted leap down to the
tail, launched itself right over the heads of the cowering warrior women,
tripped on landing, and broke its neck.
"That was lucky!" shouted Mirabel over the piercing squeaks of
the kapootle, now thundering past on either side.
"Yes," Sophora agreed. "Quite plump—a nice dinner for
us." She started toward the twitching carcase, but a shadow loomed
suddenly. They looked up. The great dragon lowered one foot and plucked the
murk ox off the ground, meanwhile watching them with an expression which
mingled challenge and amusement.
"You are a wicked beast," Sophora said, undaunted. Mirabel
remembered that Sophora had been undaunted even by the Grand Dragon Karshnak,
at least until she'd been knocked unconscious by a wing blow.
The dragon winked, and popped the murk ox into its mouth. Flames licked
around it; they could smell the reek of burning hair, and then the luscious
smell of roasting meat. Then, with a boom and a whirl of air, the dragon was up
and away, chasing laggard murk oxen on with a lick of flame, and crooning
something that might have been meant for music.
"Well," said Krystal, flicking dabs of muck off her vest.
"Now that's over, maybe we can do something about getting this mess
off our tent, so I can find out what's happened to my clothes." ∗ ∗ ∗
Cavernous Dire had slept uneasily, with cold rain trickling down his ribs
and under his tail, but each time he'd roused, he'd managed to force himself
back to sleep. It hurt less that way. When sunlight struck his eyes in the
morning, he clenched his outer lids tight to block it out and hoped for the
best. He could feel that his broken bones were mostly mended, and the internal
burns were nearly healed as well. But he did not feel like coping with the real
world.
He had, however, sneaked peeks at the humans in his immediate vicinity.
Four women in bronze and leather, with swords and short hunting spears.
Cavernous Dire had not enjoyed human meat when he tried it before, and three of
the four warrior women looked unappetizing in any form. The fourth, though, he
might have fancied in other situations. She had silvery blond hair,
peach-blossom cheeks, a perky nose, teeth like pearls, and a ripely pouting
mouth. Years of solitude as a dragon, with a meagre and uninteresting hoard to
guard, had given him time to fantasize about women, and this woman met all his
qualifications except that she was carrying a very sharp sword.
If he just lay there and pretended to sleep, maybe the women would go
away. His draconic scales dulled his tactile awareness enough that he didn't
realize he was lying on their tent, and before he listened to enough of their
conversation, he became aware of something else.
The ground was shivering. Then shuddering. Cavernous opened one eye just
in time to see a dark hairy shape hurtling toward him, and snapped his eye
shut. Sharp hard things hit the same tender parts of his snout which the horse
had kicked in the dark, and then dented his scales on their way up his head,
his shoulder, and along his ribs, where they tickled. And he could sense, with
that infallible sense given to man-drakes, that somewhere in the sky the large
dragon which had hurt him so badly was lurking, waiting for him to show life so
he could be tormented again.
Better the tickle of murk ox hooves than the talons of a dragon.
Cavernous hunkered down, feigning unconsciousness as best he could, as the
kapootle squeaked and thundered past, though the moment when he sensed the
great dragon close above him was almost impossible to bear. Then it was gone,
and he dared open his outer eyelids again, just a tiny bit, to see what was going
on.
"—And I say we butcher it now!" That was his diminuitive
blonde, she of the perky nose and accouterments.
"You were the one who said it'd bleed on our gear," the tallest
one said. "Besides, Krystal, you really should be grateful to it. It saved
our lives."
"And if you say 'What's life without my embroidered nightshirt with
the suede fringe?' I will personally roll you through that squashed murk
ox," said the one with the crooked nose.
"I am grateful," Krystal said, sounding very cross. "What
do you want me to do, Mirabel, kiss it and make it well?"
"Don't be silly," said the one petting the very dirty pony,
whose harness was adorned with gleaming gold shapes. For a moment all Cavernous
could think of was the treasure wasted on that stupid pony. "We all know
you wouldn't kiss anything that ugly, no matter what it did for you."
"You—you—"
"Like when Rusty the Armorer fixed that helm for you, and all you
did was wave at him—"
"Well… he's old. And he has only three teeth."
The one named Mirabel grinned suddenly. "Come on, Krystal—I dare
you. Kiss a dragon. Maybe it will cure it."
"Eeeeuw!"
"Scaredy-cat."
"Am not!"
"Just think, Krystal, how your… mmm… special friends will
be impressed… if you do dare the dragon's breath, that is. If you
don't—are they going to respect you, even if you do have that fancy mask?"
Krystal glared at them, shrugged, and twitched the twitchable parts of
her anatomy. Then, with a pout the dragon was finding increasingly adorable, she
shrugged. "All right. But only because I know you'll make up some horrid
story about me if I don't. And not—not on the lips."
She sauntered toward the dragon's mouth. Cavernous had to roll his big
man-drake eye down to watch her. She leaned over his snout, lips pursed.
From the man-drake's point of view, the kiss was an explosion of
sensation unlike anything he'd ever felt, and the strange feelings went on and
on. No one had told him he could turn back into a man, so he hadn't bothered
trying to imagine what it would feel like. His eyes opened very wide, but all
he could see was whirling colors.
From Mirabel's point of view, Krystal put her lips to the dragon's snout,
and the dragon collapsed like a bagpipe's bag, with a sort of warm whooshing
noise, and almost simultaneously, the moor burst into spring flower. Where the
dragon had been, a scruffy looking naked man hunched against the cool air.
Although Mirabel knew nothing about physics, she had just observed that the
energy released when a large form condensed to a small one could generate
enough heat to activate seeds and accelerate their growth.
Krystal, who had had her eyes shut, stepped back and opened them. When
she saw that the tent was no longer covered by a dragon, and that lumps within
the wrinkled canvas suggested the remains of their gear, she made straight for
the collapsed entrance. A dirty old man didn't interest her at all.
Mirabel had gone on guard instinctively, as had Sophora, and the
appearance of Cavernous Dire did not reassure them. Decades of life as a
man-drake had left him no handsomer than when he had chosen misering over
marriage. Now his greasy hair was stringy gray instead of black, and his lanky
form even more stooped. A dirty-looking gray beard straggled past his chest no
farther than necessary… in fact, not quite far enough. He looked like the
sort of man who would lurk in dark alleys to accost the sick or feeble.
"Who are you?" Sophora asked, in her Chancellor voice.
"Cavernous Dire," the man said. His voice squeaked, like an
unoiled hinge.
"You're Cavernous Dire?" Mirabel asked. Her mind boggled, then
recalled the shape and expression of Bilious Dire, made a quick comparison, and
knew it must be true.
"You were a dragon…" Sophora said.
"They tricked me," the man said. "Just because I was
getting rich and they wanted my money…" He sounded peevish, like
someone whose neighbors would trick him every chance they got.
At that moment the big dragon returned. They had not heard it gliding
nearer, but they heard the long hiss as its shadow passed over them.
"Noooo!" wailed Cavernous. "Don't let it get me!"
"He's Cavernous Dire?" Krystal said, crawling out from under
the tent. "He's the one we were supposed to rescue? Eeeeuw!"
Nonetheless, she struck an attitude, peering up at the big dragon with
conscious grace.
Mirabel and Sophora both had swords in hand, but Mirabel knew that they
hadn't anywhere near the force necessary to tangle with a dragon this size. But
they also had nowhere safe to run. The dragon smiled, and let its long, thin,
red tongue hang out a little, steaming in the morning air.
What might have happened next, she never knew, but Cavernous Dire
suddenly snatched her belt knife, and lunged toward Siobhan and the pony Dumpling.
"Here's treasure!" he screamed, hacking at the horse brasses on
Dumpling's harness.
"Hey—stop that!" Siobhan tried to grab his arm, but Dumpling
interfered. The pony backed and spun, fighting Siobhan's hold and cow-kicking
at Cavernous. The dragon seemed to be amused, and let another yard or so of
tongue slide out. Cavernous quit hacking at the brasses individually, and slid
Mirabel's knife up under the harness, which parted like butter. Two more
slices, and he'd cut it free, all the while dodging Siobhan's angry swats and
Dumpling's kicks. He snatched it from the ground, dropping Mirabel's knife, and
turned back to the dragon, holding the harness at arm's length.
"Treasure! Gold! Take it! Go away!"
"Yesss…" The long tongue lapped out, and gathered it
in—but Cavernous did not let go, and the tongue wrapped round him too,
snatching him back into the dragon's toothy maw as a lizard might snatch a fly.
A gulp, and the bulge that had been Cavernous Dire disappeared into the
dragon's innards. A flick of the wings, and another, and the dragon was gone,
sailing low over the heather, back toward the distant kapootle of murk ox.
Dumpling squealed and bucked, landing on Mirabel's knife, which
shattered.
"My best knife—!" Mirabel said.
"I hope he hasn't cut his hoof," Siobhan said.
"My best shirt, ruined!" Krystal held up a nightshirt with a
wet stain down one side.
"Shut up Krystal," they all said.
On the way back to the city, they agreed that Bilious Dire need not know
the whole story, only that at the end Cavernous had sacrificed himself for
others, and been eaten. ∗ ∗ ∗
Mirabel's sister had things to say about the outcome which left a
coolness of glacial dimensions between them for more than a year. At Monica's
instigation, the Weeping Willow Sewing Circle paid for a plaque commemorating
the Dauntless Courage of Cavernous Dire, in saving the life of four of the
King's Guardswomen from a dragon. Every May-morn, they lay a wreath beneath it.
Mirabel Stonefist won't walk by that corner at all anymore. Siobhan Bladehawk
narrowly escaped punishment for defacing the plaque as she tried to correct
"Four of the King's Guardswomen" to "Three of the King's
Guardswomen and One of the King's Cavalrywomen."
In the belly of the dragon, Cavernous Dire remains undigested, a
situation acceptable to neither him nor the dragon. Neither of them knows that
it is Cavernous's miserly grasp of the pony Dumpling's horse-brass which
maintains this uneasy stasis.
Meanwhile, the Chancellor of the Exchequer had a very satisfactory chat
with Balon of Torm, whose arms, dyed orange to the elbow, proved he had been
dipping into the treasury. Sophora Segundiflora may be the only person
satisfied by the expedition.
∞
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