Read City of Fire (City Trilogy (Mass Market)) Online
Authors: Laurence Yep
Scirye wondered what Bayang was brooding about. The woman had looked somber enough before this, but she had been a bubbling fountain of happiness compared to her face now.
The girl felt her legs cramping, but as she changed position, her foot touched the bundle of axes. When her mind had been clouded by grief and rage, punishing the dragon had seemed like the right thing to do. However, now, aloft over the Pacific Ocean with her enemy perhaps only a few feet away, she was beginning to have her doubts. Her anger was cooling and reason was taking its place, and with its return her task was appearing to be more and more impossible.
Perhaps she should undo the bundle and lead the attack before she completely lost her nerve.
She was glad to postpone the decision when Koko held up a piece of wire that he had found. “Hey, guys and gals, why don’t we check the luggage? Roland might have hidden the ring in his suitcase rather than carry it on him. After all, he couldn’t be sure that he wouldn’t be searched. If it was in a bag, he could always claim it was planted there.”
Reluctantly, Leech looked away from the window. “Good thinking, but we just hunt for the ring. Don’t take anything else.”
Koko gave him an irritated frown. “What’s wrong with a guy taking a few souvenirs?”
“It’s called theft,” Kles said. “We’re already in enough trouble for stowing away, not to mention violating a stack of traffic laws back in San Francisco.”
“Okay, okay, look but don’t touch.” Koko cracked his fingers. “Just let me limber up the old digits then.”
Bayang took the wire, twisting it back and forth until it broke. “I’ll help you.”
“Ha!” Koko said skeptically. “Just don’t get in my way.”
They took down the empty crate and one by one climbed over into the rest of the hold. However, every bag they opened only contained clothes and toiletries. What surprised all of them was how adept Bayang was at picking locks, as well. It turned into a kind of competition with Bayang clearly in the lead, much to Koko’s annoyance.
Kles’s left hindpaw squeezed Scirye’s shoulder and then his right did the same. It was their signal that they needed to talk, so Scirye made a point of searching the hold as far away as she could from the others.
As she started to untie a rope, she whispered to her griffin. “What is it, Kles?”
He leaned his beak close to her ear. “I knew there was something familiar about her smell, but I couldn’t put a claw on it until we
caught up with the thief back at that seaplane terminal. Her scent’s real close to his.”
Scirye’s eyes widened. “You mean—?”
Kles nodded. “She’s a dragon.” He clicked a claw against his beak. “I’d trust this anytime over your eyes.”
Scirye felt a thrill. She had never expected to meet a dragon in the flesh. Dragons were notorious for avoiding humans, disdaining them in the same manner that humans ignored mayflies who might live just a few days. It certainly explained some of Bayang’s arrogance.
So it was odd to have a dragon disguising herself as a human, let alone taking a job that brought her into contact with so many of them—though it was true that the dragon thief worked for Roland and also took human shape.
Scirye studied the elderly woman bent over the steamer trunk, wishing with all her heart that she could see Bayang in her true form at least once.
Bayang was pondering problems of her own as she rifled through the luggage.
In the short time that she had spent with Leech, she’d come to like him, but even so, that would not have kept her from carrying out her mission if she thought he was a threat to her people. She would regret it later, but their safety came first.
However, Leech was not the heartless monster of the legends. Given his rough life so far, it was amazing that he had grown into a friendly, kind hatchling. There was no point in killing him.
She couldn’t help wondering if some of her previous assignments had been just as useless. Perhaps all of them had all been. Suddenly she felt a terrible weariness. Had she wasted her entire life?
If by some miracle she survived the hunt, she would return to the dragon kingdom and try to pull off an even bigger miracle by
convincing the elders that Leech was no longer a threat to dragonkind, and that he had paid the blood price in full after having suffered for his crime many times. And if, as was more likely, she paid the ultimate penalty for disobeying an order—well, so be it.
The decision seemed right to her, and for the first time in a long and troubled life, she felt at peace with herself.
Leech would not die by her paw—or by Badik’s, if she could help it. None of the hatchlings would. She would convince them to quit the hunt in Honolulu.
At least if they could find the ring in the luggage, Bayang could argue that it was more important for Scirye to return it to her people than to continue on and battle Badik. That might save the girl’s life anyway.
More determined than ever, she went on searching. When they found nothing, she still did not give up hope but suggested trying the other hold. So they restacked the luggage and tied everything down again. Then they opened the door of the port hold and peeked into the corridor. At one end light fell from an observation dome on top of the airplane where, Mugwort had said, the navigator could check the stars for night navigation.
When they were sure no one was around, they crossed the corridor and entered the starboard hold, where they had no more luck; they could only conclude that Roland or the dragon thief had kept the ring after all.
Back in their hiding spot, they held a council of war.
“There has to be a stair or ladder leading from this deck down to the passenger deck,” Leech said. “I bet it’s up front with the crew. I say we rush down it and grab Roland and his buddy.”
Taking a breath, Bayang tried once more to get them to abandon the chase. “It would be crazy to attack in midair.” She couldn’t help smiling at Scirye. “Unless you have another flying carpet up your sleeve.”
“Mind your manners before nobility,” Kles said, snapping his beak at her indignantly. The griffin was sitting on his mistress’s gauntleted hand which, in turn, rested on her lap.
With an amused smile, Bayang dipped her head in an apology. “No disrespect meant. I was merely suggesting that you’ve tried your best to avenge your loved ones,” she added kindly to the children. “There would be no shame attached if you left me in Honolulu. Why don’t you leave this to a professional from now on?”
“That makes sense to me.” Koko nudged his buddy. “After all, she’s a cop. Let her earn her pay.”
Leech shook his head. “If it had been you and not Primo who got hurt, what would you expect me to do?”
Koko scratched his head and then stared at his shoes. “I’d want you to get even.”
Bayang had to admire the hatchling’s courage if not his stubbornness. She turned to Scirye, hoping that she could at least spare her any more danger. “I hope you’ll have more sense than these hoodlums. Do you really want your mother to worry about you?”
Scirye stroked her griffin but, in her agitation, her hand moved in a quick, choppy rhythm. “I want to punish that dragon.”
For a moment, Bayang felt as if she were talking to her younger self. After what Badik had done to her people, revenge was all she had wanted, too. She’d shed any emotions that she regarded as weak just as steel is plunged into fire to burn away the impurities. She’d forged herself into a weapon strong enough to battle Badik only to find the dragons wielded her against other targets.
“You’re choosing a difficult road to travel,” she warned. “You’ll have to harden your heart and make many sacrifices. And in the end, you may be sorry you did that. Surely the goddess won’t hold you to an oath that you took in the heat of battle.”
“So you’re going to quit?” Leech asked Scirye, sounding sad.
“Because she’s smart,” Koko snapped, “like we ought to be.”
“And because she’s got something to lose.” Leech shrugged. “Not like us trash.”
“Don’t let him influence your judgment,” Bayang urged the girl. She was aware that perhaps she was pushing too much, and that would be a bad mistake if the hatchling was anything like her. When people insisted she do something, the dragon usually chose the opposite action. The greater the pressure, the greater the contrariness.
And yet she felt an immense need to convince the hatchling to quit the path that Bayang had taken. It only led to a lonely weariness.
“You’re too young for this,” Bayang argued.
It was the wrong thing to say. Scirye stiffened indignantly. “I’ve proved I’m tough enough.”
“Yes, of course you are,” Bayang said, trying to recover. “It’s just that I’ve seen too many lives thrown away for some outmoded code.”
Scirye was too annoyed to listen to reason now. “So what code do you live by?” she demanded. “You’re going to tackle a dragon and one of the most powerful men in the world all by yourself.”
But that is different
, Bayang thought.
I have no future. You do.
Out loud she said, “It’s all in a day’s work for a special operative.”
“Especially when that operative is a dragon,” Kles sniffed.
Koko and Leech’s jaws dropped open, and Bayang sat back, annoyed. The little griffin looked insufferably smug.
Kles was going to say more but his mistress put her free hand over his hindpaws. His beak clacked shut obediently.
Leech stared at Bayang as if he was trying to penetrate her human disguise. “Are you really a dragon?”
“I’m not going to transform myself just to prove your suspicions. But”—Bayang rubbed at a dirt stain on her coveralls—”yes, I am.”
“If you were assigned to protect the treasure, then why didn’t you
change into your true shape back at the museum?” Scirye asked shrewdly. “It would have been dragon against dragon, and you wouldn’t have had to bother with the carpet for flying.”
Bayang did not want the hatchlings to learn about her original mission, but Scirye was too blasted sharp. Bayang began improvising frantically, knowing that half-truths deceived better than outright lies. “Because the dragon’s no ordinary thief. He’s called Badik and he once tried to exterminate my people.”