Wistala pulled aside a shaven-headed Imperial Family thrall who trailed in the wake of the procession. He had a heavy canvas sack slung over his shoulder and his job was to pick up any of SiHazathant’s scale that accidentally fell off.
“I thought there were dozens killed,” she said to him. “Where are the other bodies?”
“They were put in a big tunnel closer to Ghioz,” a human thrall said. “Only place that would let them lay out properly.”
Wistala believed him. Or she believed that he thought what he told her was the truth. Somehow the thralls passed word around before even dragons could fly with the news, it seemed.
Wistala thought it important enough to find out where the bodies had gone that she bade her sisters in the Firemaids farewell.
“I go in search of the bodies from the feast massacre. Ayafeeia’s, of course, is my main interest, but I am curious if the bodies bear some mark that would illuminate the true culprits.”
“You’ll have a job getting in,” a Third-Oath said.
“Why all this digging?” a younger dragonelle with an anxiously flicking tongue asked. “The old demen hold at the Star Tunnel has space equal to what’s been planned, and more. But it’s off-limits.”
“Off-limits?” Wistala asked. “What, to dragons?”
“Even the Firemaids.”
“That’s curious. What are the demen up to there, I wonder?”
“They migrated nearer to us. The demen live beyond the river ring, guarding the borders to the Lavadome. If you can call those brutes ‘demen’ anymore. The only one who goes there is Rayg, sometimes with NiVom and Imfamnia.”
Wistala wanted to speak with Rayg. If anyone could give her an honest opinion about the cracks appearing in the Dragon Empire, it was their “First Thrall.”
Flying to the top of Imperial Rock was still forbidden, so she went in the entrance for dragon-petitioners. It was crowded with dragons lining up to express their sorrow at the death of SiHazathant, so it was easy for her to disappear into the crowd. When a young drake page came in to announce five more names of those who’d won an audience with SiHazathant’s sister, she nipped out down the low thrall passage that led to the kitchens.
She knew Imperial Rock well. Once in the kitchens, she grabbed a couple of tonguefuls of meat-broth and a stew joint—odds and ends the cooking thralls wouldn’t report her for stealing, but it explained the presence of a dragonelle—then headed for one of the older passages up. Skulls of vanquished opponents still grinned down at her from the tunnels.
Up she climbed. Imperial Rock was empty enough to echo. She heard some noise down at the end where the training wing of the Aerial Host still resided, dragons and dragonelles freshly winged were encouraged to at least do a year in the Host so they could say that they’d faced death, as was expected of any dragon who wished for position and title.
For a human, Rayg had done extraordinarily well on both. He’d never quite won his freedom, for one reason or another, but there were many dragons with less wealth and influence than this particular thrall.
Rayg had built himself a niche that made him virtually irreplaceable. He possessed a rare mind, able to synthesize different facts under the sciences of different disciplines. He was part inventor, part sorcerer, part repairman. He’d designed the original wing joint that kept her brother functional, one way or another, across years of use. According to the Firemaids, he had a long backlog of projects, from better saddles for the dragon-riding men of the Aerial Host to a new mill for grinding grains and corns into better stock feed. The twins had surrendered much of the top of Imperial Rock to his workshops, laboratories, and libraries, and he seldom descended from an observatory he’d built at one end of the rock, sticking out and up from the narrow, arrowhead end of Imperial Rock like a broken mast on a ship.
“Don’t stand under it,” a thrall carrying water for the gardens warned. “He likes to drop stuff out his window to test new weapons for the Aerial Host. If you hear a whistle, you have about three seconds before a loud bang. Hug ground.”
Two demen of the Tyr’s Legion stood outside his timber-and-iron door, warmed by their dwarf-beard cloaks trimmed with luxurious silken human yellow-hair scalp. They held long pole-arms crossed before it.
A door. How very human.
“Old friend, here to see the First Thrall.”
One of the demen stepped aside to give her access to a pulley. She pulled and a faint jangling sounded from within.
A scraggly-haired head appeared, leaned out over a balcony above, and then a hand made an intricate wave.
The demen parted their pole-arms and she heard something that sounded like a steel ball rolled across planking. The door opened of its own volition; no door-thrall worked it.
He called her up stairs wide enough for a dragon to an open room above. It took up the whole of the tower. She saw level after level above that with circular balconies overlooking the floor where she stood, sniffing the smells of dusty paper and hot lamps. She couldn’t see much of the very top of the tower, but she thought she saw a star chart with astrological symbols, rather like the one she’d slept under in the old dwarf fortress of the Wheel of Fire.
Rayg descended a stair. He was a little slow in his movements, but otherwise looked vigorous enough. His countenance was a strange mix of old and young: bright eyes and teeth in a deeply lined, careworn face.
There was a good deal of seating in this room, and a pair of big woven mats, slightly chewed up by scale, that would serve to keep a reclining dragon from losing body heat through the stone floor.
Rayg went over to a pair of matching leather-topped desks—built and paneled in the dwarf-style with many drawers and bins and such for storage—and sat on the cleaner of the two.
“Ahh, Wistala, my dear mother’s old friend. How is the old girl?”
“A venerable low churchwoman, when last I heard,” Wistala said. “I’ve been cut off from Hypatia for some years. I’m surprised you haven’t asked me about R—Well, my poor old brother.”
“Oh, yes, you did go away with him,” Rayg said. “He’s missed. This arrangement—with Nivom above and the twins below . . . Ahh, it’s best not to talk about it.”
“I won’t say anything. I’d like to hear your opinion,” Wistala said.
“Just idle talk,” Rayg said. “In return, your breaking of your exile is safe with me, of course. You’ve taken quite a risk coming all the way down here. Audacious of you.”
“I’m trying to figure out what really happened at that feast. The deaths.”
“Curious,” Rayg said, returning to his papers. “Did you lose someone close?”
“Ayafeeia, the leader of the Firemaids. I could use your insight.”
“I don’t think I’ve ever properly thanked you for hunting me down as a child and getting me away from the barbarians. I know you acted on behalf of my great-grandfather, not me, but it’s weighed on me that you might die without my making some gesture of gratitude. So here’s this: I’ll give you a pass to go into the Star Tunnel. According to the pass, you’re gathering a specimen I need. No one will dare question that. Were I to complain to NiVom that my work was impeded by some functionary—well, let’s just say NiVom has great hopes for my work.”
He fiddled about on a mass of shelving behind his desks.
“May I ask, Rayg, why two desks?”
“A man can work for pleasure, and a man can work for reward. Ideally, you’d like both. But anything for our glorious Sun King and Tyr goes on this desk”—he indicated the tidier of the two—“and my own pleasures and interests are piled on this one.”
“Thank you, Rayg. You’ve done well here. I hope NiVom releases you from service so you have a few quiet years with the second desk.”
“I’ve long since come to terms with that. Who knows? I may outlive NiVom. I may have to. There’s so much to do.”
AuRon, in one of his storytelling moods, had said that the Red Queen talked that way—too much to do to die.
Her pass took her all the way to the Star Tunnel without question. There was a heavy guard of those oversized demen at the old rising narrows to the Star Tunnel, and several different versions of spiny officer looked at her pass from Rayg before letting her through.
While passing along the chain of command, she marked one of the blood barrels resting on a piece of conveniently shelved stone. It had been tapped and had the wide copper bowls that fit a demen’s broad face scattered all about. The demen had been swilling dragon-blood like harvest wine.
When she descended again into the passage leading to the Star Tunnel, the demen clacked their mandibles at her as she passed, but Wistala didn’t see the humor in it.
Perhaps you had to smell the humor. She picked up a dreadful reek on the flowing air, almost as bad as trolls.
The Star Tunnel was different from the wondrous Lavadome in that it was a work of nature expanded by dwarfs and demen rather than a miraculous mystery. Much of it was shaped like a triangle, with a wide bottom and sides narrowing to the top. It was scored horizontally, like sedimentary rock. Daylight could be seen here and there at the apex of the triangle, and at night stars could sometimes be distinguished if the air was clear up short tunnels rising like chimneys from the vaster cavern.
The floor was smoothed in most places, save where they’d left a decorative stand of rock or stalagmite.
Wistala had first met Ayafeeia and the rest of the Firemaids here, when they fought off a last, desperate assault of starving demen. Her brother wanted space between the demen and the important underground rivers—when talking of his reign, he’d told her that from the first he’d had ideas about expanding the Dragon Empire belowground before returning to the surface—and by taking the Star Tunnel he deprived them of some of their best mushroom-soil and worm-beds.
She caught a distant glimpse of scale reflected from light shining down from above, near the huge crack where she’d first seen the Firemaids in action.
Tempted to hurry toward it, instead she slowed, suspicious. This air was foul with rotting bodies, certainly, but there was something else in the air. Had trolls ever come down and hunted the Lower World? The smell certainly seemed evocative of them, but muted by more comfortable dragon odors.
She saw a pile of rock with what looked like some human and demen bones, dirt, and what was hopefully just detritus that had fallen through the shafts from the Upper World shoved against the wall of the Star Tunnel. She heard faint banging sounds coming from a downward-leading passage next to it—there must still be mining going on. But the slagheap made a convenient perch, and she ascended it very carefully to avoid dislodging loose material.
She was never sure which she spotted first, the broken bodies, obviously dumped on top of each other from a height, or the trolls picking over, climbing, shifting, and rending the mass of scaly carrion, most of the color lost to a rusty coating of dried blood.
Gross and misshapen, elephant-sized, scale-covered, and dripping with secretions from orifices of unguessable purpose, they were easily the most loathsome creatures Wistala had ever seen.
Trolls. They had to be. She knew the shape too well, the dangerous power in those heavy-forward, light-rear limbs, and the odd sensory globes extending to examine the picked-over carcasses.
She knew that men fed a little dragon-blood now and then felt energized, in their prime. The Copper, when he was Tyr, kept bats and fed them from his own veins, so it was said, and they grew into great waddling winged things, like dogs. The Tyr’s Demen Legion had evidently taken the blood-drinking process a step further and were morphing into soldiers that could grow their own armor, see in the dark, and break down walls with their bare hands.
These trolls had been feasting on dragon flesh, and blood—with the demen skimming a little, it looked like, for who knew how many years?
These had developed not scale as such, but growths that reminded her of the corals of the Inland Ocean she’d seen shaped into art in Hypatia. They even had wings of various sizes, some just vestigial, others dragging behind from their joints like capes, and a few of the biggest ones looked capable of gliding or perhaps flight.
One troll was dangerous to an unwary dragon. Two might just be handleable, if they were caught in the open by an experienced dragon with a full firebladder.
She counted nineteen rummaging around the pile of bodies. Who knew how many more lurked in the recesses of the Star Tunnel, once the home-cave of the demen, who’d spent lifetimes adding to the living and gardening space?
Further writhing, pulsing horrors supped and extended inside the bodies. They had to be troll progeny. They resembled eggs only in their overall mass; the shape was more like some fantastic hairy starfish, extending bits of itself into the dead flesh and twitching as it absorbed rent flesh.
Her stomach pulsed and she didn’t know if she would erupt in flame or half-digested ration-meats and joints. She heaved, an involuntary act, and her legs extended as though to brace herself.
She sent a skittering of dried bones and dropped troll-scale down from her perch.