Lost mark 3 The Queen of Death: (38 page)

Read Lost mark 3 The Queen of Death: Online

Authors: Matt Forbeck

Tags: #Fantasy, #General, #Fiction

BOOK: Lost mark 3 The Queen of Death:
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Kandler tried to shout out a warning to her, but Greffykor squeezed his chest hard the moment he took a large breath. His yell came out only as the barest wheeze.

"We will watch this happen,” the silver dragon said. "We will not interfere.”

Kandler looked to Burch and saw the shifter struggling against the dragon’s grip too. He had as much success as the justicar did at prying loose those silvery talons: none. They seemed to be made of polished steel rather than flesh, and they gave not one inch despite Kandler’s most desperate efforts to make them move.

The dragon queen knocked Sallah flat, and Kandler tried to shout again, this time in dismay. Greffykor stifled him once more.

"If you do not cease your struggles, I will kill you,” Greffykor said. "This is far too important for you to disrupt.”

Espre stood over Sallah’s fallen form, between the lady knight and the dragon. "Leaver her alone!” she shouted. "I’m the one you want! ”

The dragon queen paused and considered the young elf’s words. Then she opened her mouth and arched her neck back as she prepared to strike.

"Wait!" Espre said. "I wish to make a bargain with you.”

The dragon ignored her. Kandler could see that the

creature would just slay the girl on the spot.

"I am the one with the dragonmark!” Espre shouted. "I bear the Mark of Death!”

The dragon queen’s eyes flew wide, and her mouth snapped shut. She regarded the girl in suspicion. She turned one eye toward Espre and squinted at her as if she were an unusual—rare, even—cut of meat.

The dragon queen snarled something at the girl. Her voice was low and calm, despite the way her nostrils flared and tossed off rising plumes of smoke.

"She requires proof,” Greffykor said, translating for everyone else in the room.

Espre spun about and spied Kandler and Burch in the silver dragon’s clutches. As she did, the creature relaxed his grip on them. Kandler still had no hope of breaking free, but at least now he could breathe freely.

"Espre!” Kandler said. "Get out of here!”

The girl lowered her head and shook it. Kandler couldn’t remember seeing her so serious, so sad, since word of her mother’s death.

"Good-bye, Father,” she said to him. Then she turned her back on him and Burch and faced the dragon.

"I will surrender to you,” Espre said, "if you swear to leave here afterward and let Greffykor and his other guests be.”

The dragon made a halting, coughing sound that Kandler could only guess was meant to be a laugh. Then it snarled at the girl.

As the dragon spoke, Kandler spotted Xalt creeping around behind the dragon. The warforged seemed to be looking for a means of attacking the dragon or—barring that—charging out and running off with Espre.

Before he could make a move, though, the dragon queen’s tail lashed out and caught him in the chest, knocking him flat against the tower’s far wall. It stayed there then, pinning Xalt against the wall. The cut Sallah had made in the dragon’s tail started to bleed once again, and some of the crimson liquid trickled over Xalt’s legs, but the dragon queen ignored it.

"Frekkainta is curious to know why she shouldn’t just kill you all,” Greffykor said. "Permit me to answer that.”

The silver dragon held up Kandler and Burch to illustrate the point he planned to make. "These people are my guests, and they have no means of harming you. If you insist upon trying to jail me and kill them, I will fight you tooth and claw. You may defeat me, but I will make you pay for your victory.”

"And,” said Espre, "once you do what you came here for—to find the dragonmark and destroy it—it would be a waste of your time to bother with the rest of us. Why would my friends and family be worth even your notice?”

The dragon queen murmured something in a tone of grudging assent.

"Also,” Espre said, "if you do not swear to let the others go free, I will kill you. I have learned many things about my dragonmark over the past few weeks, and I believe I can work it to stop your heart cold in your chest.”

The dragon queen regarded Espre with a stony eye.

Kandler renewed his struggles to free himself from Greffykor’s grasp. The moment he moved, though, the dragon tightened its grip enough that the justicar could barely breathe once more.

"Espre!” Kandler shouted. "No!”

The dragon queen nodded at the girl and growled softly at her.

Greffykor cleared his throat and said, "The dragon queen finds your terms adequate and agrees to them— provided you do bear a dragonmark.”

Espre grunted. Then she turned about and tore open her shirt to her navel. Maintaining her modesty, she pushed the fabric back, exposing the skin between her shoulder blades to the dragon’s eyes.

The dragon queen reached forward with a taloned claw and tugged the shirt back just an inch farther. As she did, Kandler noticed the girl shaking like a sail tacking toward the wind. He wondered if she might collapse before the dragon could see what it wanted to find. He hoped so.

The dragon queen growled something soft. As she did, Espre raised her bright blue eyes and stared straight at Kandler. A tear rolled out of her reddened lids.

The justicar strained and pulled at Greffykor’s talons. "Let go of me, damn it! Let me go!”

In the dragon’s other hand, Burch struggled and fought like a wild animal. His teeth and claws could not get past Greffykor’s silvered scales. He might as well have been trying to chew on a suit of armor. The shifter howled in frustration and desperation, but Greffykor grip altered not one bit.

Kandler cast about everywhere for help. He refused to just let this happen.

The dragon queen still had Xalt trapped under her bleeding tail. The warforged tried to reach for the open wound, but his arms were not long enough by at least a yard.

Sallah lay sprawled on the ground, her broken sword fallen from her curled fingers. She might just be unconscious, but Kandler feared she could just as easily be dead.

In a break between Burch’s howls, Kandler heard the crackle of the
Phoenix
’s ring of fire as she hovered moored over the landing platform outside.

"Monja!” Kandler shouted. "Monja!”

Burch took up the call too. "Monja!” the two friends

shouted in unison, their voices already run hoarse.

The halfling didn’t respond, and the airship didn’t move. Kandler wondered if the little shaman might also be dead, but that didn’t matter to him now. All he cared about was stopping the dragon queen from killing his daughter.

Where, he asked himself, was Te’oma? He’d written the changeling off long ago, but her affection for Espre was clear. He couldn't believe that she’d just stand by and watch the girl sacrifice herself—unless, of course, she was already dead too.

The blood-colored dragon stooped low over the girl and turned her snout so that she could focus a single eye on the dragonmark between Espre’s shoulders. She grunted, and noxious, black smoke billowed from her nostrils.

Turn around, Espre,
Kandler thought

Then the dragon queen sat back on her haunches again and spread her lips wide. This exposed all her rows of sharp, vicious teeth, most of which were long enough that they could have been used to fashion a fangblade like the one Kandler had been forced to leave behind.

Kandler shuddered in horror.

"The dragon queen finds the girl’s offer acceptable,” Greffykor said. Not a trace of emotion tainted the silver dragon’s voice.

"Remember me,” Espre said. Then she turned to face the dragon queen and accept her fate.

The crimson dragon huffed in a great gulp of air and held it inside her for a moment.

"NOOOO!” Kandler shouted.

The dragon queen’s snout snapped forward, and a jet of fire gouted from between her teeth. The blinding orange flames swallowed Espre whole, and the girl screamed. The sound lasted only an instant before it was cut short.

The dragon continued to drench the girl in fire.

Espre—who now seemed nothing more than a blackened silhouette framed in the incinerating blaze—fell to her knees for a heartbeat and then collapsed on the stone floor, flames engulfing her on every side.

Kandler kept screaming until his voice gave out, but the dragon did not stop. She poured fire from her gullet onto the girl for what seemed like forever, until nothing remained but ashes and tiny fragments of bone.

When the dragon queen finally stopped, the stone floor glowed bright red in a circle centered on what little was left of Espre. Wisps of smoke trailed up from the tiny pile of remains, reaching up through the observatory to the stars watching down from the open sky above.

Then the dragon queen took another deep breath and blew the last bits of ash away. In an instant the floor cooled and cracked where Espre had last stood, and nothing remained of her but those last few tendrils of smoke still wafting into the night sky.

Chapter

60

K
andler felt like his heart might burst. He slouched forward in Greffykor’s iron grip and buried his face in his hands.

He allowed himself only an instant of grief at that moment, then wiped his face and stretched back up tall. He would weep for his daughter later. First, he wanted to memorize her murderer’s face, so he would know her later when he found her and punished her for her deeds.

The dragon queen snarled at Greffykor, then spread her wings and leaped into the air. Instead of passing over Kandler and Burch and their silvery captor, she zoomed straight up toward the tower’s open top, disappearing into the night sky. She left only the horrible scent of Espre’s execution behind.

Greffykor leaned forward and deposited Kandler and Burch on the floor before him. The justicar raced over to where Sallah lay on the floor.

Freed from the dragon queen’s tail, Xalt had already reached the knight’s side, but he had not touched her yet. "She is still breathing,” the warforged said, "although not well.”

Kandler nodded his thanks to Xalt as he knelt and put his arms under the woman’s shoulders. "Take her legs,” he said. "With her armor on, she’s too heavy for me to carry alone."

"Perhaps we should remove it.”

"We don’t have the time. We need to get her to Monja right now.”

Xalt put his hands under Sallah’s legs and nodded. The two lifted the knight together and began to carry her toward the doorway.

"I am so sorry for—”

"Not now,” Kandler said, choking up as he spoke. "It’s too late for Espre, but maybe not Sallah.”

Greffykor swept out of the way as Kandler and Xalt trotted Sallah out of his home. The silver dragon watched them every moment, seemingly oblivious to the murderous looks Kandler shot his way. As Kandler and the others left, Greffykor turned to examine his destroyed crystal, a mournful look on his reptilian face.

Burch met them at the tall, open archway. "Monja brought the airship down closer,” he said as he guided them into the chill night air.

Outside on the landing platform, Kandler saw the
Phoenix
hovering to the right. Her deck hung level with the platform now, and Monja waved to them tentatively from where she stood on the wheel.

Burch leaped from the platform to the airship and grabbed the gangplank. He thrust it over the gunwale, and as soon as it touched down Kandler and Xalt bore the unconscious Sallah onto the main deck.

Before Kandler could turn around to tell Burch to take the wheel, the shifter had already done so. Monja leaped down from the bridge and dashed over to inspect the knight.

"What in the names of the spirits happened in there?” the shaman said as she bent over the knight.

"You didn’t see the red dragon?” Kandler asked.

Monja peeled open Sallah’s eyelids. "Of course, I had her son out here to keep me company.” She felt her neck for a pulse. "He took off as soon as he saw her fly out of the top of the tower.”

Kandler grimaced. He wanted to blame the halfling for not doing something, but what could she have done? None of the others had been able to stop the dragon queen either. Even trying would have probably cost Monja her life too.

He realized he should probably have been grateful that so many of them had survived their meeting with the dragon queen. He just couldn’t manage to muster that feeling up.

"Can you help her?” Kandler asked.

"Give me some room,” Monja said.

As Kandler stepped back, the halfling spread her arms wide and looked up toward the sky. She chanted a heartfelt prayer to her people’s spirits, and a warm, golden glow flowed around her arms. She reached forward and laid her hands on either side of Sallah’s forehead.

The pleasant glow flowed off of Monja’s hands and surrounded Sallah instead. As Kandler watched, the woman’s breathing grew steadier, and the creases of pain in her brow smoothed down.

As Monja sat back to examine her work, Kandler knelt down next to Sallah and took her hand in his. After a moment, her emerald eyes fluttered open, and she smiled up at him.

"Did we do it?” Sallah asked.

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