"We roamed our world at will and fought ferocious battles for survival. These dragons you see here, this Beryl and this Malys, they seem to you enormous and powerful, but in comparison to those who ruled our world, they are small and pitiful creatures. That was one reason they came to this world. But I jump ahead of myself.
"I could see, as could others of our kind, that our world was growing stagnant. We had no future, our children had no future but to eat or be eaten. We were not advancing, we were regressing. I was not the only one to seek a way off the world, but I was the first to be successful. Using my magic, I discovered the roads that led through the ethers to worlds far beyond our own. I grew skilled at traveling these roads. Often the roads saved my life, for if I was threatened by one of the Elders, I had only to jump into the ethers to escape.
"It was while I was inside the ethers that I came upon Her Dark Majesty." Skie ground his teeth as he spoke, as if he would be glad to grind her between them. "I had never seen a G.o.d before. I had never before beheld anything so magnificent, never been in the presence of such power. I bowed before her and offered myself to her as her servant. She was fascinated by the roads through the ethers. I was not so enamored of her that I foolishly revealed their secrets to her, but I gave her enough information so that she could see how they might be of use to her.
"Takhisis brought me to her world that she called Krynn. She told me that on Krynn she was but one of many G.o.ds. She was the most powerful, she said, and because of that, the others feared her and were constantly conspiring against her. She would one day be triumphant over them, and on that day she would give me rich reward. I would rule Krynn and the soft-bodies who lived on it. This was to be my world in exchange for my services. Needless to say, she lied."
Anger stirred in Mirror, anger at the overweening ambition that gave no thought or care to any of those living on the world that was apparently little more than a bauble to Queen Takhisis. Mirror took care to keep his own anger hidden. He had to hear all that Skie had to tell. Mirror had to know what had happened. He could not change the past, but he might be able to affect the future.
"I was young then," Skie continued, "and the young of our species are the size of the blue dragons on Krynn. Queen Takhisis paired me with Kitiara-a favorite of the Dark Queen. Kitiara ..."
Skie was silent, remembering. He gave a deep sigh, an aching sigh of longing. "Our battles together were glorious. For the first time, I learned that one could fight for more than survival-one could fight for honor, for the joy of the battle, for the glory in victory. At first, I despised the weaklings who inhabit this world: humans and the rest. I could not see why the G.o.ds permitted them to exist. Soon, I came to find them fascinating-Kitiara, especially. Courageous, bold, never doubting herself, knowing exactly what she wanted and reaching out to seize it. Ah, what a G.o.ddess she she would have made." would have made."
Skie paused. His breath came with a painful catch. "I will see her again. I know I will. Together, we will fight.. . and ride once more to glory...."
"And all this time," Mirror said, leading Skie back to the main topic, "you worked for Takhisis. You established the road that would take her here, to this part of the universe."
"I did. I made all ready for her. She had only to wait for the right time."
"But, surely, she could not have foreseen the Chaos War?" A terrible thought came to Mirror. "Or did that come about through her machinations?"
Skie snorted in disgust. "Clever Takhisis may be, but she is not that clever. Perhaps she had some inkling that Chaos was trapped inside the Graygem. If so, she had only to wait-for what is time to her, she is a G.o.d-for some fool to let him loose. If it had not been that, she would have found some other means. She was constantly watching for her chance. As it was, the Chaos War played right into her hands. All was in readiness. She made a show of fleeing the world, withdrawing her support and her power, leaving those who relied on her helpless. She had to do that, for she would need all her power for the enormous task that awaited her.
"The moment came. In the instant that Chaos was defeated, the energy released was immense. Takhisis harnessed that energy, combined it with her own power, and wrenched the world free of its moorings, brought it along the roads I had created with my magic, and set it here, in this part of the universe. All of this happened so fast that no one on the world was aware of the shift. The G.o.ds themselves, caught up in the desperate battle for survival, had no inkling of her plan, and once they realized what was happening, they were so depleted of their own power that they were helpless to stop her.
"Takhisis s.n.a.t.c.hed the world away from them and hid it from their sight. All proceeded as she had planned. Bereft of the G.o.ds" blessing, stripped of their magic, the people of the world were thrown into turmoil and despair. She herself was exhausted, so weak that she was reduced to almost nothing. She needed time to heal herself, time to rest. But she wasn"t worried. The longer the people were without a G.o.d, the greater their need. When she returned, they would be so thankful and relieved that they would be her abject slaves. She made one minor miscalculation."
"Malys," said Mirror. "Beryl and the rest."
"Yes. They were intrigued by this new toy that had suddenly dropped down among them. Weary of struggling to survive in their world, they were only too happy to take over this one. Takhisis was too weak to stop them. She could do nothing but watch in helpless frustration as they seized rulership of the world. Still, she lied to me and continued to promise me that someday, when she was again powerful, she would destroy the usurpers and give the world to me. I believed her for a while, but the years pa.s.sed, and Malystryx and Beryl and the rest grew more powerful still. They killed the dragons of Krynn and feasted on them and built their totems, and I heard nothing from Takhisis.
"As for me, I could see this world degenerating into a a world like the one I had left. I looked back with joy to my days of battle with Kitiara. I wanted nothing more to do with my kind, nothing more to do with the pathetic wretches who populated this place. I went to Takhisis and demanded payment. world like the one I had left. I looked back with joy to my days of battle with Kitiara. I wanted nothing more to do with my kind, nothing more to do with the pathetic wretches who populated this place. I went to Takhisis and demanded payment.
""Keep the world," I said to her. "I have no need of it. I do not want it. Restore Kitiara to me. We will travel the roads together. Together we will find a world where glory awaits us." "
"She promised me she would. In a place called the Gray, I would find Kitiara"s soul. I saw the Gray. I went there. Or thought I did." Skie rumbled deep in his chest. "You heard the rest. You heard Mina, the Dark Queen"s new toady. You heard her tell me how I had been betrayed."
"Yet, others saw you depart. . . ."
"Others saw what she meant them to see, just as all saw what she meant them to see at the end of the Chaos War."
Skie fell silent, brooding over his wrongs. Mirror listened to the blue dragon"s labored breathing. Skie might live for hours or days. Mirror had no way of knowing. He could not find out where Skie was wounded, and Skie himself would not tell him. Mirror wondered if the wound was not so much heart-deep as soul-deep.
Mirror changed the subject to turn Skie"s thoughts. "Takhisis faced a new threat-the dragon overlords."
"The overlords." Skie grunted. "Yes, they were a problem. Takhisis had hoped that they would continue to fight and eventually slay each other, but the overlords agreed to a truce. Peace was declared. People began to grow complacent. Takhisis feared that soon people would start to worship the overlords, as some were already doing, and have no need of her. The Dark Queen was not yet strong enough to battle them. She had to find a way to increase her power. She had long recognized and lamented the waste of energy that pa.s.sed out of the world with the souls of the dead. She conceived a way to imprison the dead within the world, and thus she was able to use them to steal away the wild magic and feed it to her. When she deemed she was strong enough to return, she came back, the night of the storm."
"Yes," said Mirror. "I heard her voice. She called to me to join her legions, to worship her as my G.o.d. I might have, but something stopped me. My heart knew that voice, if my head did not. And so I was punished. I-"
He halted. Skie had begun to stir, trying to lift his great bulk from the floor of the lair.
"What is it? What are you doing?"
"You had best hide yourself," said Skie, struggling desperately to regain his feet. "Malys is coming."
"Malys!" Mirror repeated, alarmed.
"She has heard I am dying. Those cowardly minions who used to serve me must have raced to her with the glad tidings. The great vulture comes to steal my totem. I should let her! Takhisis has usurped the totems for her own use. Malys takes her worst enemy to bed with her every night. Let the red monster come. I will fight her with my last breath-"
Skie might be raving, as Mirror truly thought he was, but the Blue"s advice to hide was sound. Even had he not been blind, Mirror would have avoided a fight with the immense red dragon, much as he hated and loathed her. Mirror had seen too many of his kind caught and crushed in the mighty jaws, set ablaze by her horrific fire. Brute strength alone could not overcome this alien creature. The largest, strongest dragon ever to walk Krynn would be no match for Malystryx.
Not even a G.o.d had dared face her.
Mirror shifted back to human form. He felt very fragile and vulnerable in the soft skin, the thin and delicate bones, the paltry musculature. Yet, a blind human could manage in this world. Mirror began to grope his way around Skie"s ma.s.sive body. Mirror planned to retreat, move deeper into the twisting maze of corridors in the Blue"s labyrinthine lair. Mirror was feeling his way about, when his hand touched something smooth and cold.
A shiver pa.s.sed through his arm. Mirror could not see, but he knew immediately what he had touched-Skie"s totem, made of skulls of his victims. Shuddering, Mirror s.n.a.t.c.hed his hand away and almost lost his balance in his haste. He stumbled into the wall, steadied himself, used the wall to guide his steps.
"Wait," Skie"s voice hissed through the dark corridors. "You did me a favor, Silver. You kept me from death by her foul hands. Because of you, I can die on my own terms, with what dignity I have left. I will do you a favor in return. The others of your kind-the Golds and Silvers-you"ve searched for them, and you cannot find them. True enough?"
Mirror was reluctant to admit this, even to a dying blue dragon. He made no reply but continued groping his way along the pa.s.sage.
"They did not flee in fear," Skie continued. "They heard Takhisis"s voice the night of the storm. Some of them recognized it, understood what it meant. They left the world to try to find the G.o.ds."
Mirror paused, turned his sightless face to the sound of Skie"s voice. Outside, he could now hear what Skie had heard long before him-the beating of enormous wings.
"It was a trap," Skie said. "They left, and now they cannot return. Takhisis holds them prisoner, as she holds the souls of the dead prisoner."
"What can be done to free them?" Mirror asked.
"I have told you all I know," Skie replied. "My debt to you is paid, Silver. You had best make haste."
Moving as fast as possible, Mirror slipped and slid down the pa.s.sage. He had no notion of where he was going, but guessed that he was traveling deeper into the lair. He kept his right hand on the wall, moved with the wall, never let go. Thus, he reasoned, he would be able to find his way out. When he heard Malys"s voice, strident and high-pitched-an odd sound to come from such a ma.s.sive creature-Mirror halted. Keeping his hand firmly against the wall, he hunkered down onto the smooth floor, shrouded in the lair"s cool darkness. He quieted even his breathing, fearful that she might hear him and come seeking him.
Mirror crouched in the blue dragon"s lair and awaited the outcome with dread.
Skie knew he was dying. His heart lurched and shivered in his rib cage. He fought for every breath. He longed to lie down and rest, to close his eyes, to lose himself in the past. To once more spread his wings that were the color of heaven and fly up among the clouds. To hear Kitiara"s voice again, her firm commands, her mocking laughter. To feel her hands, sure and capable, on the reins, guiding him unerringly to the fiercest, hottest part of the battle. To revel again in the clash of arms and smell the blood, to feel the flesh rend beneath his talons and hear Kitiara"s exultant battle cry, challenging all comers. To return to the stables, have his wounds dressed, and wait for her to come, as she always did, to sit down beside him and relive the battle. She would come to him, leaving behind those puny humans who sought to love her. Dragon and rider, they were a team-a deadly team.
"So, Skie," said a voice, a hated voice. Malys"s head thrust inside the entrance to the lair, blotted out the sunlight. "I was misinformed. You"re not dead yet, I see."
Skie roused himself. His dreams, his memories had been very real. This was unreality.
"No, I am not dead," he growled. His talons dug deep into the rock, fighting against the pain, forcing himself to remain standing.
Malys insinuated more of her great bulk inside his lair-her head and shoulders, front talons and neck. Her wings remained folded at her side, her hind feet and tail dangled down the cliff face. Her small, cruel eyes swept over him disdainfully. Discounting him, she searched for the reason she had come-his totem. She found it, elevated in the center of the lair, and her eyes glistened.
"Don"t mind me," she said coolly. "You were dying, I believe. Please continue. I don"t mean to interrupt. I just came to collect a few mementos of our time together."
Reaching out her talon, Malys began to weave a magical web around the skulls of his totem. Skie saw eyes in the skulls of the totem. He could sense his Queen"s presence. Takhisis had no care for him. Not anymore. He was of no use to her now. She had eyes only for Malys. Fine. Skie wished them joy together. They deserved each other.
His legs trembled. They could not support his weight any longer, and he slumped to the floor of his lair. He was angry with himself, furious. He had to fight, to take a stand, to at least leave his mark upon Malys. He was so weak, shivering. His heart pounded as if it would burst in his chest.
"Skie, my lovely Blue!" Kitiara"s voice came to him, mocking, laughing. "What, you sluggard, still asleep? Wake up! We have battles to fight this day. Death to deal. Our enemies do not slumber, you may be certain of that."
Skie opened his eyes. There she stood before him, her blue dragon armor shining in the sun. Kitiara smiled her crooked smile and, lifting her arm, she pointed.
"There stands your foe, Skie. You have one fight left in you. One more battle to go. Then you may rest."
Skie raised his head. He could not see Malys. His sight was going rapidly, draining away with his life. He could see Kitiara, though, could see where she pointed. He drew in a breath, his last breath. He had better make it a good one.
The breath mingled with the sulfur in his belly. He exhaled.
Lightning cracked and sizzled, split the air. Thunder boomed, shook the mountain. The sound was horrendous, but he could still near Malys"s shriek of rage and pain. He could not see what damage he had done to her, but he guessed it had been considerable.
Enraged, Malys attacked him. Her razor-sharp talons dug through his scales, ripped apart his flesh, tore a gaping hole in his flank.
Skie felt nothing, no more pain, no more fear.
Pleased, he let his head sink to the floor of his lair.
"Well done, my lovely Blue," came Kitiara"s voice, and he was proud to feel the touch of her hand on the side of his neck. "Well done. . ."
Skie"s weak thunderbolt had caused Malys no real harm, beyond a jarring, tingling sensation that danced through her body and knocked a large chunk of scaly flesh off the joint of her upper left foreleg. She felt the pain more to her pride than to her great, bloated body, and she lashed out at the dying Skie, ripping and rending his flesh until the lair was awash with blood. Eventually, she realized she was doing nothing but maltreating an unfeeling corpse.
Her fury spent, Malys resumed her dismantling of his totem, prepared it for transport back to her lair in the new Goodlund Range, the Peak of Malys.
Gloating over her prize, eyeing with satisfaction the large number of skulls, Malys could feel her own power swell just handling them.
She had never had much use for Krynn dragons. In a world where they were the dominant species, Krynn dragons were feared and revered by the rest of the world"s puny inhabitants and had thus become spoiled. Sometimes, it was true, Krynn"s soft-skins had taken up arms against the dragons. Malys had heard accounts of these contests from Skie, heard him go on and on about some event known as the War of the Lance, about the thrill of battle and the bonds formed between dragonrider and dragon.
Clearly Skie had been away from his native world for too long, if he considered such childlike flailings to be true battles. Malys had gone up against a few of these dragonriders, and she"d never seen anything so amusing in her life. She thought back to her old world, where not a day went by but that some b.l.o.o.d.y fight erupted to establish hierarchy among the clan.
Survival had been a daily battle, then, one reason Malys and the others had been glad to find this fat and lazy world. She did not miss those cruel times, but she tended to look back upon them with nostalgia, like an old war veteran reliving his past. She and her kind had taught these weakling Krynn dragons a valuable lesson-those who survived. The Krynn dragons had bowed down before her, had promised to serve and worship her. And then came the night of that strange storm.
The Krynn dragons changed. Malys could not say exactly what was different. The Reds and Blacks and Blues continued to serve her, to come when summoned and answer her every beck and call, but she had the feeling they were up to something. She would often catch them in whispered conversations that broke off whenever she appeared. And, of late, several had gone missing. She"d received reports of Krynn dragons bearing dragonriders-Dark Knights of Neraka-into battle against the Solamnics at Solanthus.
Malys had no objections to the dragons killing Solamnics, but she should have been consulted first. Lord Targonne would have done so, but he had been slain, and it was in the reports of his death that Malys had first heard the most disturbing news of all- the appearance on Krynn of a G.o.d.
Malys had heard rumors of this G.o.d-the very G.o.d who had brought the world to this part of the universe. Malys had seen no signs of this G.o.d, however, and could only conclude that the G.o.d had been daunted by her arrival and had abandoned the field. The idea that the G.o.d might be lying low, building up her strength, never occurred to Malys-not surprising, for she came from a world devoid of guile, a world ruled by strength and might.
Malys began to hear reports of this One G.o.d and of the One G.o.d"s champion-a human girl-child named Mina. Malys did not pay much attention to these, mainly because this Mina did noth-ing to annoy Malys. Mina"s actions actually pleased Malys. Mina removed the shield from over Silvanesti and destroyed the sniveling, self-serving green dragon, Cyan Bloodbane. The Silvanesti elves were properly cowed, crushed beneath the boots of the Dark Knights.
Malys had not been pleased to hear that her cousin Beryl was about to attack the land of the Qualinesti elves. Not that Malys cared anything for the elves, but such actions broke the pact. Malys didn"t trust Beryl, didn"t trust her ambition and her greed. Malys might have been tempted to intervene and put a stop to this, but she had been a.s.sured by Lord Targonne, late leader of the Dark Knights, that he had the situation under control. Too late Malys found out that Targonne didn"t even have his own situation under control.
Beryl flew off to attack and destroy Qualinesti, and she was successful. The Qualinesti elves were now fleeing the wreckage of their homeland like the vermin they were. True, Beryl managed to get herself killed in the process, but she had always been an impulsive, over-emotional, irrational nincomp.o.o.p.
The green dragon"s death was reported to Malys by two of Beryl"s minions-red dragons, who cringed and groveled properly but who, Malys suspected, were chortling out of the sides of their mouths.
Malys did not like the way these reds gloated over her cousin"s death. They didn"t show the proper respect. Nor did Malys like what she heard of the reports of Beryl"s death. It had the whiff of the G.o.d about it. Beryl might have been a braying donkey of a dragon, but she was an immense and powerful beast, and Malys could not envision any circ.u.mstances under which a band of elves could have taken her down without divine a.s.sistance.
One of the Krynn dragons gave Malys the idea of seizing Beryl"s totem. He had happened to mention the totem, wondered what they were going to do with it. Power radiated from the totem still, even after Beryl"s death. There was some talk among her surviving human generals that they might make use of it themselves, if they could figure out how to harness the magic.
Appalled by the idea of humans laying their filthy hands on something so powerful and sacred as the totem, Malys flew immediately to claim it for herself. She used her magic to transport it to her lair, added the skulls of Beryl"s victims to the skulls of her own. She drew upon the magic and felt it well up inside her, making her stronger, more powerful than ever. Then came the report from Mina that she had slain the mighty Skie.
Malys wasted no time. So much for this G.o.d. She had best creep back into whatever hole she had crawled out of. Malys wrapped Skie"s totem in magic and prepared to carry it off. Pausing, she glanced at the mangled remains of the great blue dragon, and wondered if she should add his head to the totem.
"He does not deserve such distinction," Malys said, shoving aside a bit of Skie"s bone and flesh with a disdainful toe. "Mad, that"s what he was. Insane. His skull would likely be a curse."
She glowered at the wound on her shoulder. The bleeding had stopped, but the burned flesh stung and ached, the damage to the muscle was causing her front foreleg to stiffen. The wound would not impede her flying, however, and that was all that mattered.
Gathering up the skulls in her magical web, Malys prepared to depart. Before leaving, she sniffed the air, took one last look around. She had noticed something strange on her arrival-an odd smell. At first she"d been unable to determine the nature of the smell, but now she recognized it. Dragon. One of those Krynn dragons and, unless Malys was much mistaken, a Krynn metallic dragon.
Malys searched the chamber of Skie"s lair in which his body lay, but found no trace of a metallic dragon: no golden scales lying about, no silver sc.r.a.pings on the walls. At length, Malys gave up. Her wound pained her. She wanted to return to the dark and restful sanctuary of her lair and build up her totem.
Holding fast to the web-encased skulls of the totem and favoring her wounded leg, Malys wormed her ma.s.sive body out of the lair of the dead Blue and flapped off eastward.
5.
The Silver Dragon and the Blue.
Mirror remained in hiding until he was certain beyond doubt that Malys was gone and that she would not return. He had heard the battle, and he"d even felt pride in Skie for standing up to the heinous red dragon, experienced a twinge of pity at Skie"s death. Mirror heard Malys"s furious roar of pain, heard her rip apart Skie"s body. When he felt a trickle of warm liquid flow past his hand, Mirror guessed that it was Skie"s blood.
Yet now that Malys was gone, Mirror wondered what he would do. He put his hand to his maimed eyes, cursed his handicap. He was in possession of important information about the true nature of the One G.o.d. He knew what had become of the metallic dragons, and he could do nothing about any of it.
Mirror realized he was going to have to do something - go in search of food and water. The odor of dragon blood was strong, but through it he could just barely detect the scent of water. He used his magic to shift back to his dragon form, for his sense of smell was better in that form than this puny human body. He invariably looked forward to the shifting, for he felt cramped and vulnerable in the frail, wingless human form, with its soft skin and fragile bones.
He flowed into the dragon"s body, enjoying the sensation as a human enjoys in a long, luxurious stretch. He felt more secure with his armored scales, felt better balanced on four legs than on two. He could see far more clearly, could spot a deer running through a field miles below him.
Or, rather, I could have once seen more clearly, he amended.
His sense of smell now much more acute, he was soon able to find a stream that flowed through the cavernous lair.
Mirror drank his fill and then, his thirst slaked, he next considered easing his hunger pangs. He smelled goat. Skie had brought down a mountain goat and not yet had a chance to eat it. Once he quieted the rumblings of his belly, Mirror would be able to think more clearly.
He hoped to avoid returning to the main chamber where the remnants of Skie"s body lay, but his senses told him that the goat meat he sought was in that chamber. Hunger drove Mirror back.
The floor was wet and slippery with blood. The stench of blood and death hung heavy in the air. Perhaps it was this that dulled Mirror"s senses or perhaps the hunger made him careless. Whatever the reason, he was startled beyond measure to hear a voice, dire and cold, echo in the chamber.
"I thought at first you must be responsible for this," said the dragon, speaking in the language of dragons. "But now I realize that I was wrong. You could not have brought down the mighty Skie. You can barely move about this cavern without b.u.mping into things."
Calling defensive magical spells to mind, Mirror turned his sightless head to face the unknown speaker-a blue dragon, by the sound of his voice and the faint scent of brimstone that hung about him. The blue must have flown in the main entrance to Skie"s lair. Mirror had been so preoccupied with his hunger that he had not heard him.
"I did not slay Skie," said Mirror.