Read The Blind Dragon Online

Authors: Peter Fane

Tags: #Fantasy, #Ficion

The Blind Dragon (17 page)

BOOK: The Blind Dragon
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Anna pulled out her telescope, pointed it at Corónd, then turned it to the lead Dradón rider.

"It's not Terreden," Anna said. She didn't know who the lead Dradón rider was. And it didn't matter. She leapt to her saddle, clipped on, and they launched for the High Square.

 

40

T
HEY LANDED A
moment later on a rooftop near the Square's eastern edge and quickly hid behind a roofline. Carefully, she looked over the ridge.

Inside the High Square, a brutal melee raged around the High Gate. The Gate itself was a huge, pointed arch of high silver, five times the height of a man, seeming to rise from the foundations of the Square itself. Around the Gate, combat seethed, a smashing mass of blue and maroon uniforms. The elaborate pattern of the Square's flagstones was slick with ash and gore. Five House Dradón adepts, their blue robes stained with blood, lay dead around the Gate, surrounded by four grim squads of Tevéss heavy infantry. One side of the Square was a blackened carnage of burnt bodies, stone and flesh melted and smoldering.

Anna didn't see any of House Tevéss's adepts. That meant that the High Gate might still be open. It might still be theirs. For the moment—.

A shout and a roar and there was Master Khondus on the far side of the Square, swinging his hammer to horrible effect. Blood flowed from two bullet wounds in his back. Master Zar was at his side, his face a purple mask of rage, using a strange flame weapon against the enemy, blasting the Tevéss ranks with ropey gouts of silvery fire. Jenifer Fyr, Captain of Lady Abigail's High Guard, was there, too, twin revolvers blazing, Dradón guardsmen rallying around her with grim determination. Master Khondus, Zar, Fyr and their men were pushing hard towards the High Gate. But they still had to cross more than half the Square. Anna touched the silver message tube she'd placed in her armor's pocket. The note that she'd written might not be the most well-written message that the High King had ever received, but it might be all they had.

Then, in the corner of her eye, Anna saw little Gregory.

The old messenger dragon was crawling across the flagstones, making his way towards the High Gate, pulling himself over bodies and through the combat. He still wore his leather carrier harness and it looked like his message tube was intact—but his left wing had been broken, a splintered tube of bloody bone spiking at the sky. His right leg was gone too, crushed to a pulp of blood and faded blue scale. The end of his tail had been hacked off. But he was still moving, still trying, crawling towards the Gate with a slow, wobbling little crawl. His little neck strained forward. His old milky eyes were wide. His mouth was open, his tongue hung past his one, yellow tooth. A trail of blood smeared the flagstones in his wake.

A thunderous explosion and the eastern wall of the Square erupted in an inferno of silvery flames. A cascade of rubble fell inwards and a heavily armored formation of Tevéss soldiers charged into the Square, maroon banners streaming above them.

There were at least a hundred of them.

"Tevéss!" they roared as they charged into the plaza. "Lord Gideon!" They crashed into the blue forces of House Dradón that barely managed to turn to meet the new threat.

Behind the charging Tevéss warriors, in the dark of the walls' breach, Anna saw the massive, silvery maw of an ancient great cannon withdraw into the shadows, its huge bore shaped as a snake's mouth, vile fangs stretching 'round the smoking hole. Another Tevéss squad came through, a dozen big men. This squad was different from the others. They wore ancient plate mail of black iron and carried huge, iron-bound shields. There was something at the squad's center. A flash of deeper maroon. Anna looked closer. A group of five young women, hooded in burgundy robes. The centers of their foreheads were marked by silver Dallanar Suns. Around their necks, they wore silver amulets representing the five tokens of the Great Sisters: the tear, the sword, the book, the scales, and the cornucopia.

They were Lord Gideon's adepts. Tevéss meant to take the High Gate now, this moment. Dagger growled, his claws scraping stone.

"For Dradón! For Dávanor!" Master Khondus roared, recognizing the danger.

"For the Remain!" Master Zar bellowed. "For Lady Abigail!"

Captain Fyr screamed for blood, and her guardsmen attacked with fury. The men of House Dradón roared and pushed back hard against the Tevéss reinforcements. Master Khondus drew his pistol and fired twice at the sister adepts—but they were too well-protected, his bullets glancing off the heavy armor of their guardians, the ancient mail sparking with deflected force. Master Zar unloaded again with his strange flame weapon, its weird, silvery fire splashing and sizzling over the front line of the Tevéss soldiers, screams of horror and pain flooding their ranks. Then Master Khondus bellowed and launched himself full force into the center of the enemy's line, swinging his hammer in huge, bloody arcs, crushing limbs, bodies, and skulls, his pistol held in his off-hand, waiting for a target. The Tevéss front parted like a wave before him, and House Dradón rallied behind, the roar of battle rising.

But they couldn't hold, Anna realized.

Even with Master Khondus's ferocious charge, even with the dreadful damage caused by Master Zar's bizarre weapon, the blue livery of House Dradón was being slowly squeezed between the maroon Tevéss forces already in the High Square and their reinforcements from the breached wall. Five Dradón messenger dragons banked hard, dropping towards the Gate, the pointed arch glowing silvery-white at their approach—but a roar of perfectly coordinated Tevéss gunfire blasted them to smoking pieces, the remains of the dragons' small bodies tumbling and cartwheeling across the flagstones.

Little Gregory was only about ten paces from the High Gate now. He was stopping to rest more often than he moved. His broken left wing pointed at a freakish angle into the air. And when he did move, Anna noticed, he moved much more slowly. His blue scales, already pale, had taken on an unhealthy, whitish tint.

The little dragon was bleeding to death, Anna realized.

He wouldn't make it.

A few House Dradón squads still struggled near the Gate, but the battle's focus had wholly shifted towards the breach in the eastern wall.

And the tide was already turning.

Master Khondus, Master Zar, Captain Fyr, and her men were being slowly pushed back by the Tevéss advance, step by hard-fought step back towards the High Gate.

When the House Tevéss adepts reached the Square's center, they would take the Gate. When that happened there would be no way to send word to anyone, no way to communicate with the rest of the Realm. No one to send them aid.

Anna pulled the Tevéss war banner from her saddle bag, swung off Dagger's back, and clipped the banner's brass rondels to her rig's flag hooks so that the maroon standard hung across Dagger's neck and chest. She tugged it twice to make sure it was secure, then remounted and clipped on.

"Go!" she cried and Dagger launched, knifing hard along the western side of the Square, the maroon banner cracking and snapping, walls blurring beneath them, white wings taut and fast.

They landed right behind little Gregory with a crunch of stone and claw. Two squads of Tevéss infantrymen turned as one, perfectly disciplined, leveled their weapons at them, but did not fire.

"You idiots!" Anna sneered, doing her best to mimic their western accent. She pointed at Gregory disdainfully. Automatically, the Tevéss soldiers followed her extended finger. She unhooked and jumped from her saddle, pulling her goggles off her face to glare at them. "This worm has been making its way through our dead for the last ten moments and none of you fools have the presence of mind to crush its skull and take its communication? Great Sisters curse you fools! Who is in 'command' here?"

A huge, blond sergeant, wearing a thick, maroon headband instead of a helmet, saluted her somewhat skeptically and nodded. "I am." His eyes were pale grey. He searched her uniform for some rank, some sign of authority. His western accent was very thick.

"What is your name?" she demanded. A bullet buzzed past her ear. She didn't bat an eye.

"Lodáz," he replied. His pale grey eyes searched her face.

Anna nodded, bent, and picked up little Gregory as gently as she could without betraying that she cared. His body was barely warm. His head drooped as she lifted him from the flagstones.

"Lord Gideon wants the messages these dragons carry." She lifted Gregory slightly, showing them the message tube tucked into the leather cache at the little dragon's chest. "You were told to control that Gate and to
intercept
all missives. What do you fools think this fight is all about?" She lifted her chin at the carnage around them, pushing the western accent as hard as she could to get it right. "If you blast all their messengers to shreds, we will have to waste our time searching the mess for the intelligence Lord Gideon demands. What do you have net guns for? Think, man,
think
!"

The big sergeant looked at her uncertainly.

In her arms, little Gregory trembled and gave a faint squeak.

The sergeant began, "We were told—."

"
Now!
" Anna cried, hurling herself sideways, her arms shielding Gregory's shattered body as she rolled behind an armored corpse.

Moondagger was ready. He blasted the enemy's center—neck stretched forward, eyes clamped shut, silver-white fury roaring from his mouth—and the Tevéss line melted. Several soldiers tried to roll away, but Dagger tracked them, burning them to slag, hissing blood and metal spattering the flagstones. Some preternatural instinct shrieked in Anna's mind. She jerked her head back. A crossbow bolt hissed past her eyes. A Tevéss crossbowman crouched there, ratcheting his weapon, not ten paces to her right. Hugging little Gregory to her chest, Anna drew her revolver, fired, and blew a hole in his throat. The man fell, and Anna turned to the Gate, holding little Gregory before her. A pair of roaring, lightweight dragons, blue and brown, crashed together into the Square's far colonnade locked in savage melee, flames hissing, claws and fangs streaming blood. Behind her, a horrible scream as someone died. She kept moving. The big Tevéss sergeant, Lodáz, had dropped flat in an attempt to evade Moondagger's fire, but he'd been too slow. She stepped over his fried body. As she did, the High Gate began to glow with silvery-white radiance. The Gate was responding to Gregory, of course—the primordial songs woven into the ancient message tube at his chest firing the Gate's timeless magics.

Anna ran forward. As she got closer, the huge arch burst to life with a surge of silent, silver flame. An intermixed roar of triumph and fury rose through the High Square. At her back, Dagger continued to cover her, to engage the enemy, his white snout bobbing and weaving, short jets of silver-white fire punctuating longer, roaring blasts, huge eyes wide, tail flashing like a white snake, whipping this way and that over the bloody cobblestones as he turned to face any threat. He had taken light fire—a black crossbow bolt protruded from his saddle, a trio of bullet holes marked his right wing, and there was a short cut running along his ribcage—but he was otherwise unharmed. Still, he looked tired.

"Hurry!" someone cried above the din. It sounded like Master Khondus. Then, louder: "Hold, lads! For all our sakes!
Hold
!"

On impulse, Anna took the message tube from her pocket and pushed it into position beside the one Gregory already carried. She placed Gregory on the ground, about a pace in front of the Gate. The air framed by the silver arch went hazy, filling with silvery mist. Careful not to touch either the Gate or the glimmering space that it framed, Anna scooched Gregory forward with her toe. The old dragon wobbled forward, his head and neck craning toward his goal. First his snout, then his eyes, then his whole head vanished into the silver sheen. Anna could just see the empty flagstones on the other side of the Gate's haze, where Gregory's head should have been. It was as if Gregory crawled into nothingness. His shattered wing vanished, then his smashed leg, then his lopped-off tail, and then he was gone entirely. The Gate's silvery mist thinned and dissipated.

A ragged roar of triumph went up, quickly lost amid the crash of combat. Anna sprinted to Moondagger, dodged a thrown spear, and emptied her revolver at a Tevéss rifleman who pointed his carbine at Dagger from behind a column. She pulled out the bolt sunk in Dagger's saddle, swung up, and latched on. She scanned the sky. Dradón and Tevéss dragons still battled, but the combat had devolved into a series of brutal duels, the dragons of House Dradón hopelessly outnumbered. She could see neither Captain Corónd nor his bronze. She looked to the High Square. Maroon everywhere, pushing hard against a thin blue line.

She could help.

Dagger growled, tired but ready for more action.

"Fly, Anna!" Master Khondus shouted hoarsely, waving his arm. "Fly!"

She couldn't see his face, but his voice was clear.

"Fly home! Tell your mother! The minor houses! You must bring aid —."

His arm dropped and vanished.

"Go!" Anna cried.

Dagger leapt to the air, cut hard to the left, then hard to the right, bullets hissing past them. The thrust of his wings was astonishing, and her heart skipped as they cannoned out of the Square, skimming the battlements, staying clear of the fighting dragons. The sound of battle quickly dropped away.

BOOK: The Blind Dragon
2.04Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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