Chapter 10 - Avalanche
Dragonfriend (Book 1 of the Dragonfriend series)
On the evening of her rest day, four weeks later, Lia sat on the highest point of the volcanoâs rim wall, resting her back against a boulder. To her left hand, the still crater-lake collected the last ruddy fires of suns-set, as darkly mysterious as Jaâalâs eyes, yet gilded with strands of twin-suns fire. Dragonets dive-bombed the waters in search of fish. Close at hand, she saw a mother dragonet teaching three hatchlings the basics of flight, angling her wings in an instructional manner. To her right hand, the tangled green wall of Haâathior Island, four miles from its base to the cooler heights up top, curved away northward until it grew misted with distance and height. She could never tire of this view.
Moodily, she wondered which females Flicker was chasing this time.
She was stuck in a volcano stuffed to the rim with gorgeous, fit young monks, all of whom intended to make vows to the Great Dragon. Picking up a small stone, Lia lobbed it crossly into the lake. Celibacy. What was the point, as Flicker had inquired, a trifle archly? She admired their religion. They were so dedicated and frugal, and yet in an indefinable way, full of life and Dragon fire. She could not spoil that. Not even if she knew that her great Dragon, Amaryllion, wanted no worship.
Her Ancient Dragon? My, how the idea tickled her tongue. His counsel that morning had been to be patient, to bide her time and learn from the monks. Ha. He obviously had neither seen her daily humiliation in the arena, nor fathomed the storms in her heart whenever she dared to consider her familyâs fate.
A soft footfall made Lia startle. âJaâal.â
Gathering his robe about him, the young monk sat down on the boulder beside her, almost but not quite touching her arm. âIslandsâ greetings, Princess,â he said, drolly. âTo which Islands do thy thoughts soar?â
Lia kept her eyes downcast. âTomorrowâs expedition.â
âAh. We go to find the Nameless Man. If youâre wondering, Master Joâel has assigned you the twin slabs of granite as bodyguards.â
âNot you?â
âWhy, am I nicer than them?â
He said it lightly, but tension roiled beneath his words. âIt hurts my neck to look up at Hallon and Rallon,â she returned, aware of a similar undercurrent in her tone. âDo I understand that you hail from Yaâarriol Island?â
âAye. Huaâgon and I come from a family of ten brothers. Heâs the oldest, and I am five years younger, the fourth in our clan. Youâll get to meet them all.â
âOh.â
Somehow, Lia had imagined that Jaâal would be an orphan, like her. Had he entered the Great Dragonâs service out of choice rather than necessity? So yawned the gap between their lives. The gentle excitement in his voice told her that Jaâal had a family who loved him, and parents who had not dumped him on Giâishior for Dragon-fodder. He had no appreciation of how deep her soul-scars reachedâand better he did not, Lia told herself. She could never wish this on anyone else.
âI see youâre wearing a Dragonâs scale,â said Jaâal.
Lia chuckled, âItâs a White Dragonessâ scale. It took me two months to figure out how to bore a hole through it.â At his upraised eyebrow, she explained, âMaster Toâibbik showed me how to build a diamond-tipped bore. Thatâs the only way to penetrate a Dragonâs scale without enormous force, and it still took three hours of drilling. Now I have a unique necklace.â
âAs if you need outward adornment,â he remarked. âIt suits you.â Lia failed to deny a blush from sizzling upward from the region of her belly, but he did not appear to notice. âLia, where do you go on these days off?â
âI wish I could say,â she retorted, rather less apologetically than she had intended.
Her companion sighed. âI have to admit, itâs weird having a girl in the monastery. I donât know what I expectedâa spoiled brat, perhapsââ
âWhat?â
âEasy, dragonet!â he placated her. âPerhaps, a Princess who had no idea what it might be like to blister her hands from hard work, or take a blow to the ribs and get up again. Great Islands, was I wrong. Just when I think Iâve understood something about you, Lia, I discover thereâs another layer beneath a layer.â
âIâm not deliberately hidingââ
âNo. But you do have secrets. Your ability to speak Dragonish, for example.â
Lia opened and closed her mouth like a trout sieving water for food. The deep blue of his eyes captivated her, causing her to shiver despite the warmth of the breeze. How had he guessed?
Jaâal said, âLia, thereâs something I came to tell you. Please donât hate me.â
âI wouldnât.â Hualiama bit her lip, wondering at the melancholy undertone in his words. If he was building up to a confession of loveâwas this not a strange approach? Yet he had sought a time for them to be alone together.
âLia â¦â he groaned softly, sounding so anguished that the wound in her stomach twinged. âLia, when we return from Yaâarriol Island, I will be taking my vows.â
At once, she replied, âThatâs fantastic, Jaâal. Iâm so pleased for you.â
Her lie sounded so pathetic, she was surprised he did not snort his contempt.
Instead, with sober mien, the monk noted, âI respect you too much for there to be secrets between us, Lia, and I hope that you respect me equally. You see, when you say you dream of Dragonsâlet me put it this wayâmy powers give me insight into your feelings. You struggle to conceal your heart for my sake. It is so very principled of you, I want to weepâfor I am irrevocably committed to the Great Dragonâs service.â
Fragile her hopes, and so easily shattered. Lia stared at her toes, fighting a tearful fury that threatened to completely unravel her. Jaâalâtoss him into a Cloudlands volcano! His hand rested upon her arm, briefly, a touch that made her tingle as though an electrical storm brewed around her. Lifeâs tempests. Here came yet another, roaring over her in full spate. Loneliness. Fear for her family. Jealousy, truth be told, that Jaâal should choose his vows over her. Was she forever fated to be little Lia, her Island passed over by all?
Bleakly, she said, âSome secrets are not given to us to reveal, Jaâal.â
âAye. But to some, it is given to love.â
Love? Now, of all times, he dared ⦠that word? She erupted, âYou try to keep loving when life drags your heart through lava flows and tosses it off the Island!â
âLiaââ
âDonât Lia me!â she snapped. âDonât you see how hard Iâve tried, Jaâal? Islandsâ sakes, you infuriate me like nothing Iâve ever ⦠I do respect you. Admire you, even. Iâll tell you a secret, and may Fraâanior himself have mercy upon my soulâI donât just dream about Dragons. I dream about flying with them. I dream of falling over the Islands in love with a Dragon!â
She sought to shock the young monk, yet all she saw in the deep blue pools of his eyes was acceptance, and it shivered the foundations of her Island. How dare he understand? How dare he be so cursed noble, standing immovable upon the peak of his religion, yet be exquisitely attuned to her feelings and needs?
Molten fury, mingled with shame, spat out of her. âGo on, say it! Iâm depraved. Iâm a wicked, wicked ⦠aberration. I deserve to burn in the nearest volcano!â
âShh.â
âSo help me, I will bite those fingers!â Lia snarled around his hand, spitting with rage at being hushed like a child.
âListen. Listen to me! Mercy, you and your passions, youâre such a little Dragoness!â Only Jaâalâs wry smile kept her from blowing her top again. âTell me, whereâs the sin in great love?â
Hualiama wrinkled her nose at him. âMust I teach you the tenets of your faith, monk?â
âLia, my faith isnât unshakable.â
The words he left unspoken hurt more than he could possibly know. Jaâal meant it kindly and without rancour, but the vulnerability in his manner trumpeted his true, conflicted feelings. She was the nexus. The cause and the pain. How could she drag him away from the very faith that defined his life? She should rather leap off Haâathiorâs cliffs!
Suddenly, a decision crystallised in her mind. Should Amaryllion allow it, she would take Jaâal to meet the Ancient Dragon. He deserved no less.
Unsteadily, desperate to conceal her distress, Hualiama said, âAs you are so committed to your vows, Jaâal, perhaps I might help you to develop your faith.â
âOh? How is that?â
âI shall wake you in the mornings with sweet flirtation, make shameless moon-eyes at you every hour of every day, and attempt in every possible wayââ
âI surrender already!â His exaggerated shout of horror drew a hoot of genuine laughter from her. âOh, thou shameless Princess, what faith shall I learn by my inevitable capitulation to your charms? Nay, not the pout! I canât stand the pout.â
âThen I must depart the monastery.â
âI forbid that.â
âReally?â Lia waggled an eyebrow at him. âYour name is Master Joâel?â
Jaâal folded his arms, his eyes dancing. âAny other options?â
âI shall issue a royal decree that you are to wear your shirt at all times, for no chaste and incorruptible monk should have a right to flaunt such a magnificent set of pectorals.â
She had thought Jaâal could not be embarrassed. Flaming of cheek, he toppled her with a playful shove. âYou are impossibleâgreat Islands!â
A Dragon shot by overhead. He was so close, the down-stroke of the Dragonâs wingtip struck Jaâal atop his shaven head. Barely had the young monk tumbled across Liaâs bodyâprotecting herâwhen another two Dragons raced by in hot pursuit, the shockwave of their passage punching her eardrums.
The first Dragon, a sixty-five foot juvenile, flared his wings as he dodged the aggressorsâ fireballs. Recognition struck Hualiama like an Island-avalanche loosed by an earthquake; her pulse pounded inside her ears with deafening hammer blows. That young Dragon was a vibrant gemstone colour, the very Tourmaline Dragon she had dreamed about!
Horror piqued her gorge. She knew what was to come.
The foremost pursuer wheeled with breathtaking agility to strike the youngster with his talons. Lia choked. Oh mercy, her soul should perish ⦠it was the huge Orange Dragon who had attacked her, the one whose scarred muzzle reminded her so lucidly of Raâaba! She would never forget him. The second aggressor, raking the Tourmaline Dragonâs wings with his talons, was an even more massive Brown. The battling reptiles clashed with monstrous power, snarling and biting each other, fangs agape. Fireballs seared the evening sky. Jaâal and Lia ducked involuntarily as the ferocious melee abruptly swept back toward their position. Despite lying beside a boulder, their exposed location was perilous. Molten fire splashed the ground not ten feet away, so close that the heat sucked their lungs dry. Bushes crisped instantly.
Dragon thunder rolled over the chasm between the Islands. Battling two Dragons half again his size and weightâhundred-foot monstersâthe Tourmaline Dragon was being chewed up, despite his most valiant efforts. Lia found herself unable to tear her eyes from the aerial combatants. So powerful! So majestic! How could a smaller Dragon even hold those two at bay? The juvenile fought with the strength of ten, punching with his claws and biting and shaking the larger Dragons off time and time again ⦠but he was tiring. He suffered a vicious bite to the base of his tail, and now another that wrenched his wing, slewing him in the air.
In the space between heartbeats, Liaâs breath sucked into a new, cavernous space. A soul-shift caught her unawares. Suddenly, she knew pain and gasping breaths and the prodigious boiling of Dragon passions in her breast. Blood-thirst! Battle-rage! The inrush of senses was so sensitive and all-consuming that her little Human heart feared to burst. A veil slipped over her eyes. Lia saw the world in enchanted freshness, a hiatus of time as she became he, and her Dragonâs neck snaked about with great cunning, spraying fire into the Brownâs face. Enjoying a surfeit of time, she flipped about in the air to strike the Orange Dragon a talon-blow that opened a ten-foot gash on his neck. Her challenge boomed off the cliff-side. She mauled the Brownâs neck and hindquarters with claws that suddenly became his again and she yelped, ejected by an eruption of draconic rage.
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How dare you? The Tourmalineâs suns-white fury lashed her mind. All was fire. All was incandescent agony ⦠the connection chopped off as the Brown Dragon thundered back into the fray, striking such a devastating blow with his left forepaw that the young Tourmaline shuddered from muzzle to tail. He sagged in the air before catching himself no more than a decent spear-cast from Hualiamaâs position. The breeze generated by his wing-strokes ruffled her hair.
âNo,â Lia moaned. âDonât kill me â¦â Him? Did she mean him? Confusion and disbelief surged as a dark tide through her mind, underpinning a rising song of grief at the Dragonâs impending doom.
The Orange Dragonâs flame spurted out, lava-like. It stuck to the blue scales, burning the Dragon terribly, a scream of anguish cutting her soul to ribbons ⦠the Tourmaline broke away with a supreme outpouring of strength, flying raggedly ⦠he shot into a cavern in the lower mountainside of Haâathior Island, and vanished in the blink of an eye.
The Orange Dragon thundered, Bring it down, Yulgaz. Bury him.
Aghast, Hualiama became an unwilling spectator to the enactment of her dream. Her scalp crawled; so surreal the moment, she knew it would be seared on her memory forever.
The Brown Dragon hurled a torrential outpouring of magic at the mountainside. Rock cracked and sagged. With a reverberation that shook the volcano beneath the two Humans, a landslide tore a reddish-black streak through the foliage, wounding the holy Islandâs cliff. It buried the Tourmaline Dragon alive.
Sealed, o Razzior, said the Brown Dragon.
Hualiama shook as though she had the fire-fever, which often caused violent convulsions in its victims. Ravaged, broken in spirit, she could only watch as the Orange Dragon scanned the avalanche site with manifest satisfaction. He said, Excellent work, Yulgaz. Teach that flying worm to plot against us.
The scarred orange muzzle began to twist as the Dragon scanned his surrounds.
Every hair on the back of Liaâs neck stood to attention. âNo ⦠heâll kill me! Mercy, no â¦â Running would never work. The Dragons were too close. Lia felt as paralysed as a rodent facing a cobraâs mesmeric stare.
She gasped at an unexpected contact, skin to skin. Jaâalâs lips covered hers.
The monk kissed Lia with wary, eloquent attention, one eye fixed on the two Dragons hanging in the void between the Islands, just a few hundred feet away. Against her mouth, between the mingling of suddenly overheated breath, he whispered, âA proper kiss, you silly ralti sheep â¦â
Smart man. If she could not fool that Orange Dragon, she was dead. Shielding her face with a hand she brought up to cup Jaâalâs cheek, Hualiama of Fraâanior set about thoroughly decimating the promise she had just settled uponâplease, let her not tempt Jaâal from his intended vows.
Terror screamed its lonely counterpoint to the song of her excitement. Lia realised that this was her first kiss, a sweet, forbidden kiss with a monkâwith two hostile Dragons for an audience. Mercy. What could be more ironic, or more perfectly sum up her life? For an unending second, the burning gaze of two Dragons dwelled upon a young man and an Isles maiden kissing on the edge of a volcano.
Jaâalâs heart thudded against her fear-numbed chest.
Bah, Humans, said the Orange Dragon. With a flip of his wings, he rocketed away to the north.
The Brown Dragon glanced back over his shoulder, causing Lia and Jaâal to freeze in position, faces less than an inch apart. The Dragons vanished over the rim of the Island above.
Jaâal coughed awkwardly. âYou werenât supposed to kiss me ⦠quite so â¦â
âFervently?â Hualiama squeezed her eyes shut, breathing raggedly. âIâm so sorry, Jaâal. That was the Orange, the one who attacked me before, on Haâathior Island. I panicked.â
âThe one you told me about?â
âAye.â
âWell, Princess. You are not forgiven.â
âWhat?â Her eyes sprang open.
Treacherous monk. His face was still so close, she saw every detail of the very fine wrinkles edging his smile. He waggled an eyebrow suggestively at her, causing Lia to splutter, âJaâal of Yaâarriol, if Iâve caused you to break ⦠your beliefs are you. Slay me now. I could not live, nor could I ever forgiveââ
âYou misunderstand.â His eyes, oh, his beautiful, swimmable eyes, so depthless that they took her breath away, crinkled as his smile broadened. âO Princess, Iâm being obtuse. Forgive me. Holding you in my arms has only convinced me more than everâdespite that this was my first kiss, and undoubtedly the sweetest kiss in the history of the Island-Worldââ
âUnforgettable, indeed.â
ââthat I must take my vows.â
Hualiama gaped at Jaâal. By the innermost fires of Fraâanior, she lacked the power to change this monkâs convictions? Was this a fundamental insult to her femininity, or an even deeper relief? His hand moved to stroke her cheek hesitantly, a touch devoid of the passion she expected. Something had changed between them. A forever change. There was sadness, a sense of farewell.
Delicately, Jaâal said, âOccasionally, it is given to me to penetrate the veil of the future, Lia. Itâs a dangerous power, for it is easy to say too much. Know this. Our paths will diverge from this moment. I will take my vows, andââ
ââbecome the next leader of this monastery after Master Joâel,â Lia interjected.
Rather wild of eye, he breathed, âYou never fail to astonish. Are you quite certain you have no magic?â
She replied, âI will find the Nameless Man, and he will name my destiny.â
âAye.â
A simple word, and Lia knew there was more. Their gazes met, sparred, sparked. Why press him? Let the future care for itself, for knowing the future must certainly change it, or change the person who held that knowledge. What a burden to carry. What a noble vessel to carry that burdenâIslandsâ sakes, and would her heart not stop asserting that for reason of being incorruptible, Jaâal was therefore infinitely the more appealing?
On an impulse, Hualiama tilted her chin upward to press her lips to his cheek. âI know my opinion doesnât count for a great deal in this Island-World, Jaâal, but I want you to know that I think youâre categorically and amazingly awesome.â
He looked to the horizon, swallowing audibly.
âNow,â she said, âwe should return before your brother hatches any ideas.â
As the monk rose, helping Lia to her feet, her eyes traversed the newly scarred cliff-side. Surely no Dragon could survive a mountain being dropped on his head? She had witnessed the death of a Dragon, a heart-wound which could know no stanching.
Jaâal dropped her hands with a soft exclamation. âHuaâgon.â
Barefoot, Jaâalâs brother sprinted away as though the Orange Dragon hunted him. He must have come right up to the boulder, spying on them.
Lia said, âYou donât suppose heââ
âThereâs no doubt Master Joâelâs about to receive an earful. Thereâll be no stopping him now.â Jaâal sighed, rubbing his bald pate with a long-suffering air. âMy sneaky brother. Do you have any siblings as delightful as Huaâgon?â
âImplausible as it might seem, yes,â said Lia. âShall we swap notes?â
Would that her heart could be a strongbox, for she would lock and bolt it and throw away the key, rather than suffer this pain.
* * * *
Four hours before dawn the morning following Liaâs inadvertent witness of the Tourmaline Dragonâs destruction, eighty monks filed underground to the great storage caverns a quarter mile beneath the monastery. Four Dragonships lay at anchor there, gently bobbing in the cool breeze that trickled through the cavern mouth.
Master Joâel crooked a finger at Lia. âYou. Get your sorry hide over here.â
Somewhere amidst the cloaked, hooded mass of monks, Huaâgon would be smirking. Lia dragged herself over to the Master, fixing her eyes on a point near her toes.
âHualiama,â he said.
She blurted out, âIâm awfully, awfully sorry, Master.â
âSorry? You should be, and worse,â he growled. âA highly unusual strategy to encourage a young monk to take his vows.â His long forefinger wagged beneath her nose. âAye, blush like the dawn, you pint-sized Cloudlands pirate. We will have words, later. Right now, I need a competent Dragonship pilot. Iâm short one, who was struck down with a bowel infection yesterday evening. Are you the woman to help us?â
âCertainly, Master.â
He snorted at her tone. âI donât buy the meek and mild Lia. Pack her away, and go find the other pilots. We leave in ten minutes. And Princess, one more thing.â
âAye, Master?â
âNice beard.â
Lia spluttered something respectful, and fled.
Her face itched beneath her disguise, but Lia concentrated through the distraction as she piloted her hundred-foot tradersâ Dragonship out of the cavern, one hand lightly resting on the levers controlling the airflow valves which governed hot air flow into the six main compartments of the dirigibleâs sack, and the other on the wheel. She gazed through the forward crysglass windows, judging the tricky exit. Meantime, in the main cabin behind a panel at her back, ten monks pedalled the machines that drove the six turbines, affixed in two clusters of three up the Dragonshipâs port and starboard flanks. With severely limited fuel, they would have to rely on manual propulsion or a helping wind.
This beast was so much less manoeuvrable than her Dragonship. Flying solo was one matter. Being responsible for twenty-five lives back there, including Master Joâelâs ⦠daunting. The crossing to Yaâarriol Island, however, should take only a couple of hours. The small Island stood a little apart from the main Fraâanior Cluster, west and a few points north of Haâathior.
âYou know, that beard is amazing on you,â said Jaâal, from the doorway.
Without looking, Lia flung a rolled-up scrolleaf at him.
âHow did you lose your curves?â
âPadding on the shoulders, binding around my ribs, and what do you care anyway, you prissy, puritanicalââ
âI kissed a bearded Princess?â
âGet out!â
âHuaâgon wants to kill you.â
âTell him to stand in line! Thereâs Raâaba first, an Orange Dragon nextââ Liaâs hands jerked on the controls, swerving the Dragonship, but she recovered her mistake deftly ââafter that, any other Dragon who figures out I lived on Haâathior Island, and lest we forget all of Raâabaâs troops â¦â
Jaâal pointed at the crysglass window. âWhatâs that ridiculous dragonet of yours doing?â
Lia tilted her head askance. âI do believe heâs calling you an egg-head.â
* * * *
Stop distracting me, Hualiamaâs voice growled in Flickerâs head. Ever since she had learned telepathic Dragon speech, her mental voice had been growing stronger and more distinct. Are you alright, Flicker?
Iâm far handsomer than the egg-head, said Flicker.
I kissed you first, remember?
Fickle woman, he grumbled, mostly because of her alert perception. Flicker was not feeling wellâthe fiery scourge, dragonets liked to call this fever. It could kill a hatchling.
He zipped through the doorway, making Jaâal duck, and alighted on Hualiamaâs shoulder. He glared at the monk, making his expression as fierce as possible. Paws off my girl, egg-head.
Lia made her cross clucking sound. Heâs a good man. And how exactly am I your girl?
Fine, Iâll call you my talking perch, then.
Oh, a dragonetâs perch? Itâs all Iâve ever aspired to in life.
Barely fit for the clasp of my claw, said Flicker, rubbing his muzzle contentedly against her neck.
âAre you two talking Dragonish right now?â Jaâal asked curiously.
âWe are. He saidâouch, you flying earthworm!â The dragonet purred as he showed Lia the talons of his right forepaw. She shoved his paw away. âHonestly, Flicker. He saidâaieee! My neckâs being held to ransom here, Jaâal. If Iâm still alive, Iâll tell you later. Boys, I need to concentrate on piloting this Dragonship now. Can you kindlyââ
âAye, Captain,â said Jaâal, throwing her a slipshod salute.
Lia hissed wordlessly at him.
After the monk withdrew, however, Flicker sensed that her thoughts dwelled upon him. Lia said, Flicker, you feel hotter than your natural temperature â¦
Iâm not well, he said, explaining.
With a deft touch, Lia set the controls and locked them in place, freeing up her right handâthe left, she kept on the wheel. Flicker, are you fully recovered from what the warren-mother did to you? I worry â¦
Too much, he said, nibbling her ear. You know how that scar on your back twinges sometimes?
Aye.
Itâs like that. Now, memorise this herbal recipe, which should help my fever.
* * * *
Lia chatted a few more minutes with the dragonet before he fell asleep on her shoulderâunusually, for him. Just as a bird could sleep clutching its perch, the dragonet remained in place even when sleeping, his febrile body curled around her neck.
As her smoky green eyes searched the farthest reaches of the Cloudlands, Hualiama felt her gut clench with a sense of foreboding. What would this day bring? At a Dragonshipâs cruising speed of four leagues per hour, factoring in a slight headwind, they should cross the nine leagues to Yaâarriol Island in two and a half hours, arriving before dawn.
Incipient tears blurred her eyes. The magnificent Tourmaline Dragon would never see another Fraâaniorian dawn.
Just then, a jolt of insight struck Lia so forcefully, she tasted blood in her mouth from biting her lip involuntarily. She had dreamed of the Dragonâs fate before she ever saw him; before ever imagining a Dragon of such a colour could exist. How could she anticipate the future so accurately? There could be no doubt. The moment of that dream was branded forever in her memory, for it was the day she had helped Flicker escape the warren-motherâs torture.
She had dreamed a Dragonâs death. Dreams could foreshadow, but they could not determine the future, could they? A soul-lost chill accompanied this thought. No, the Tourmaline Dragonâs gemstone scales would nevermore gleam resplendent beneath the twin suns, the magical flame of his eye ⦠snuffed out. Destroyed. Hualiama stared unseeing at the bulk of the Yellow moon, covering fully a third of the western horizon, as she relived the awfulness of the Dragonâs final moments.
How could she bear yet more grief?
Heâs alive.
Liaâs body jerked. âWhat?â
A hand reached over to grasp hers, correcting the Dragonshipâs course. âLia? Are you alright?â
âIâMaster Joâel?â
âDo you have fits?â he inquired. âI came in and spoke to you, but you acted as if you hadnât heard a word.â
Where had the Master sprung from? Lia shook her head. âI ⦠Master, Iâm sorry! Mercy, all I ever seem to do is apologise to you. Iâd never put your life in dangerââ
âI know that.â The Master bent, bringing his eyes disturbingly close to hers. âWhy do I sense that the paw of the Great Dragon lies heavy upon your life?â
âMaster, did you just say, âHeâs aliveâ?â
âNo. Whoâs alive?â
âThe Tourmaline Dragon I told you about, Master. The one I thought was buried.â
The Master gave a grunt of apparent satisfaction. Lia felt her eyes widen. Releasing her hand, Master Joâel moved over to stand at the forward crysglass windows, wrapping his lean frame in his robe as though he had felt a chill.
He said, âAnd will you obey the Great Dragonâs voice in this, Hualiama of Fraâanior?â
Lia wished she possessed his faith. Whether it had been Amaryllion, speaking across the leagues, or Fraâanior himself, she had no ideaâbut an adamantine certainty lodged in her breast. The Dragon was alive. Only she had the power to save him. Perhaps Amaryllion had cast his thoughts into her mind? She would have no idea what the Black Dragon Fraâanior sounded like.
âMaster, I will.â
Joâel said, âWe must speak to the Nameless Man.â
The silhouette of Yaâarriol had enlarged against the yellow backlight of Iridith. How long had she been absent, lost in her thoughts? Hualiama shivered. And look at those dots above the Islandâs cone â¦
âMaster? Isnât Yaâarriolâs caldera inactive?â
âAye.â
âThen why do I see smoke rising from the southern ledge? And shadows above it which look like Dragonships?â
The Master did not hesitate. âFull speed ahead, Lia! Signals! Ready for battle!â