Authors: Alyssa Brugman
Tags: #Legends; Myths; Fables, #Magic, #Science Fiction, #Books & Libraries, #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Orphans
‘I'll take Vrod,’ Verris said, standing.
Both Florian and Drass began to protest.
‘Want to fight me for it?’ Verris asked, half drawing his sword from his scabbard. Florian closed his mouth. ‘Didn't think so.’
Drass stood, drawing his sword.
‘I say!’ the Archon spluttered. ‘Have you lost all sense of etiquette? There will be no fighting in this chamber.’
Drass narrowed his eyes at Verris, and then sheathed his weapon.
Fontagu hovered in the doorway rubbing his hands together and making a pathetic low bleating noise to attract attention.
‘Yes, you can come too, Fontagu,’ Verris said. ‘It's probably best for the city if you stay within my sight.’
‘… And Torby?’ Tab asked.
Verris and Stelka exchanged a glance. The Chief Navigator sighed again. ‘I suppose it can't do any harm.’
Amelia and Philmon went with Verris to gather the two equens from the ostler, while Vrod escorted Tab to the Navigators’ Guild to collect Torby. Tab was almost skipping. She felt as though she hadn't talked to Torby for ages!
Vrod waited outside while Tab entered the room in which Torby had been convalescing. It was a comfortable space with a warm fire. She was pleased to see that there was a table and chairs for drawing and toys on the floor. Tab knew that Stelka would have chosen a magician with strong skills to help Torby contain his gifts, but she was happy to see that the scholar who attended him had a kind face and a soothing voice.
He was pale, but Torby didn't seem unhappy, or afraid.
‘Have you seen ponies before?’ she asked him.
‘Only in the street,’ he whispered back, pointing to the window.
‘Would you like to see one up close?’ the nurse asked him, smoothing his hair away from his face.
Torby nodded shyly and held out his hand to Tab.
The nurse followed them along the corridor and when they got to the front door she placed her hands on Torby's shoulders. ‘Do you remember everything we have practised?’
Torby nodded again.
Tab could see the strain on the nurse's face. ‘He will be fine,’ she said, but she seemed to be trying to convince herself more than Tab.
Verris had already loaded the equens on the scout vessel when they reached the harbour. They seemed to be much more nervous about their proximity to Vrod than about being in the confined space. Tab could feel from them that it was the smell of meat fat that oozed through his pores. It made their muscles twitch and their eyes wide. She did what she could to send calming thoughts, but she was nervous herself about what she might find on the world below.
Amelia and Philmon didn't seem worried at all. They were quizzing Torby about what he was learning from the magicians, and Tab was pleased to hear Torby answering. They were slow, halting answers, but it was progress.
When they first boarded Torby rubbed the scars on his hands fretfully with his thumbs, but the more questions his friends asked the more relaxed he became. He sat close to the equens, and one of the drones reached out to gently nuzzle his hand.
The boy grinned with delight. ‘Tickly whiskers,’ he said.
Tab caught Fontagu watching the boy with an indulgent smile.
She sat next to him and dug him in the ribs with her elbow. ‘If you go near him I will set Vrod onto you,’ she whispered from the corner of her mouth.
Vrod's ears waggled. ‘Simesian actors make good stew,’ he mused, smacking his lips. When Fontagu shuddered, the troll grinned at Tab. Tab smiled back, but inside she shuddered too.
Verris steered the small craft down below the cloud layer and then began searching for the gouging trail left on the surface by the mighty anchor on their last visit.
Tab leaned her chin on her elbows. As they passed over a vast desert there was not much to see except undulating dunes. Tab squinted ahead. Beyond the dunes was the shimmering savannah, similar to the place Tattoo had shown her in her vision. She watched as the distant objects on the surface changed from faint blotches of colour to recognisable shapes.
She spied a dark lump half-buried in the sand.
‘What's that?’ she asked Verris.
He shrugged and handed her the spyglass. She placed it to her eye and swung it this way and that, trying to find the shape again.
When she found it she wound the focusing ring, and when she had it trained on the dark-coloured mound, she gasped and dropped the spyglass. It clattered as it rolled across the floor. The two equens started at the sound. Tab sat down quickly and tears sprung into her eyes.
‘What is it, Tab?’ Philmon asked.
‘It's …’ She tried to speak through the lump in her throat. ‘It's Melprin.’
Tab jumped out of the vessel before it had even landed. Her feet sunk into the soft surface. When she sprinted across the sand she swung her arms, trying to haul out her half-buried feet with each step. Warm sand slid over the tops of her boots and slipped in between her toes.
Tears poured down her cheeks. She grunted, trying to breathe, but her chest felt full and heavy.
As she drew nearer she could see two shapes. The larger was Melprin, but tucked in underneath the dragon's wing Tab could see the hatchling. It trilled a welcome in her mind, but she could feel that it was weak. The trip to the world below had taken a lot of energy. It rested its head on its mother's shoulder so affectionately that Tab almost choked on her tears.
There was a spear through Melprin's neck, and several arrows buried in her rump. Tab knelt down next to her friend, trying to blink away her tears so that she could see.
She looked over her shoulder to see Verris approaching cautiously. Back in the vessel the others waited and watched. Verris drew his sword.
‘Put that down!’ Tab shouted. ‘How
could
you?’
‘Dragons are hard to kill, Tab,’ he said gently. ‘And if she isn't dead …’ He paused. ‘Maybe it would be better for her if she were.’
‘Get away!’ Tab screamed. ‘I won't let you!’ She fell to her knees and collapsed into sobs.
Melprin's scales were warm under Tab's fingers. She pressed her cheek against the dragon's side. She should have come down here sooner. All this time her friend, who had saved her life three times now, had been lying in the sand, alone and slowly dying. Tab had done nothing to help. She'd been having a picnic and gorging herself with thickleberry tarts. It was all her fault. She had been selfish.
>>>Not
Tab sat up. ‘Did you say something?’ She put her hand on her friend's side and felt it rise a little.
>>>Not alone. Hatchling … most beautiful
Tab laughed. ‘You're alive!’ She called over her shoulder. ‘She's alive!’
>>>Name her
‘Her?’ Tab called over her shoulder again. ‘The hatchling! It's a her! A she. I mean, it's a girl!’
>>>You really want me to name her?
>>>Don't think
>>>Aventurine
>>>Aventurine
Melprin rolled ever so slightly.
‘I can take those arrows out,’ Verris said. ‘But it will hurt. At least it would hurt a human. Can you tell her that?’
Tab translated Verris's offer.
Melprin inclined her head.
Verris put his sword back in its scabbard and drew out his dagger. He reached into his waistcoat and pulled out a flask, pouring the alcoholic liquid onto the blade. ‘She'd better not torch me,’ Verris added.
Tab crawled around to the front of Melprin and placed her sand-encrusted snout on her lap. ‘There now. If anything happens it will happen to me.’
She looked back over the sand to where her friends stood next to the scout's vessel. Fontagu was gesturing wildly, hopping up and down. Eventually Amelia punched him in the arm. Tab faintly heard her shout, ‘Fontagu! Shut up!’
Verris crouched down over Melprin's wounds. He started to press and dig, gingerly at first but then with more vigour. Melprin's breath was hot on Tab's arm, making her sweat. The dragon made the sound like glass in a barrel again, which Tab remembered meant that she was hurting.
‘Let me tell you about when Aventurine hatched,’ she began. Then she told Melprin about how the roofie had caught the egg and taken it to the council chamber. She laughed out loud when she thought the part about Tash Morley scrambling away as the egg rolled toward him.
Tab felt a rumbling in Melprin's throat. She hoped she was laughing too. Verris had extracted one of the arrows. He was examining the tip. Blood dripped from his hands and down Melprin's side.
‘Now I know how the arrowheads are shaped the next one will be easier. It should not hurt as much.’
>>>Are you ready?
>>>Do it
Tab nodded to Verris. He doused his dagger again and slid it under Melprin's scales.
Tab told Melprin about being thrown into the dungeon – about how little Aventurine had punched through the wall. She talked about the Loraskian attack, the screeching, and how they looked like giant moths.
Verris placed another of the arrows on the ground.
Next she explained about how Aventurine had scampered through the Barrenlands and escaped over the Drop-off.
A third and a fourth bloody arrow now lay on the sand.
>>>You're doing very well
Tab felt the rumble again and this time a plume of smoke emerged from one of Melprin's nostrils.
‘Last one,’ Verris said, holding up the nasty looking arrow. His face was glistening with sweat. He shuffled around so that he could see the spear through Melprin's neck. First he inspected the spearhead, then he pressed at the wound. He wiped his face with his sleeve, panting. ‘We will have to break the spearhead off, and then slide the shaft back through the wound. I can't do it by myself, but Vrod should be able to split it. It will really, really hurt. Can you explain that?’
>>>Do it
Verris called for Vrod. When the troll approached, Verris explained what he wanted.
Vrod knelt down. He took the spear in his two massive hands, poking out his tongue as he focused. His knuckles went white.
Snap! The spear broke in two. Melprin's head jerked and Tab gasped. She looked down to see blisters bubbling on her arms.
>>>You burned me!
>>>Trying to hold it inside. I couldn't
‘Tab! You're burnt!’ Verris said, moving around the dragon's body.
‘We can fix it later,’ she said. ‘We must help Melprin first.’ She winced against the pain, feeling a cold sweat spring up on her forehead, and a sick churning in her stomach. ‘Besides, it doesn't hurt that much,’ she lied.
Verris and Vrod discussed how to draw the shaft of the spear from Melprin's neck, their faces grim with concentration. Verris looked at Tab, frowning. ‘We're set to go.’
>>>Are you ready?
Melprin still had her eyes closed. Verris and Vrod grasped the shaft. Tab felt herself tense. If Melprin burned her again she wouldn't be able to stay conscious. It might even kill her, but she didn't want to abandon her friend either.
‘Wait!’ Tab said. ‘Let me try something.’
She wanted to show Melprin the moment when Aventurine hatched. She closed her eyes and created the pictures in her mind, the way Tattoo had shown her – paying attention to every detail.