The Rise and Fall of a Dragonking - By Lynn Abbey Page 0,69

she died in the Lion-King’s arms, with his obsidian knife piercing her heart.

Had Windreaver guessed Pavek’s intentions while Hamanu was preoccupied? Had the troll whispered a suggestion in Pavek’s mortal ears—

Or, had some instinct guided the templar’s search? Some druid instinct? Some druid guardian whose presence a champion’s magic couldn’t detect?

Hamanu had thought himself clever when he conceived his campaign to win Pavek’s support as a means to win the druid guardian’s protection for his city. His bandaged hand could be taken as a sign that he was succeeding—but, at what cost?

A wound?

That was nothing. Windreaver spoke the truth: Rajaat’s champions didn’t heal, but the raw crater would be consumed by Hamanu’s inexorable metamorphosis. In the meantime, he’d had a thousand year’s practice ignoring worse agony.

A wound, then, was no cost, but what about the nagging emptiness around his slow-beating heart, hinting that he’d lived too long?

He had Urik, and for a thousand years, Urik had been enough. Mortals came and went; Urik endured. The city was immortal; the city had become Hamanu’s life. The passions of his minions had supplanted any natural yearning for love or friendship. Then he conceived the notion of writing his history, and after that—after ages of attention and nurturing—his precious minions wandered the city like lost children while he confessed his private history on sheets of vellum.

Hamanu berated himself for their neglect and sought his favorites through the netherworld.

Lord Ursos reclined in his scented bath while adolescents satisfied his whims, his needs. Elegant fingers cupped a beardless chin and drew it close.

The Lion-King turned away. Lord Ursos’s bents were familiar, stale, and without fascination. The bath faded from his imagination. He looked around the workroom for another stylus.

* * *

I don’t know how long I remained strung between life and death, locked in a mind-bender’s battle with Myron of Yoram. That’s what it was, a netherworld war: the Troll-Scorcher’s imagery against mine, his years of experience against the purity of my rage, my hatred. I was, if not dead, at least not truly unconscious when the battle ended. Our battle had lasted long enough and was loud enough to disturb the War-Bringer’s peace, and that was what truly mattered.

Rajaat burned through the Gray to find me, though I could not appreciate my rescue or his undoubtedly spectacular appearance on the plains. I was aware of nothing except the pain, the darkness, the silence and—very dimly—that my enemy no longer rose to the challenges I continued, in my mad, mindless way, to hurl at him.

Then there was a ray of light in my black abyss, a wedge of sound, a voice I recognized as power incarnate, telling me to desist.

Your pleas are heard, your wishes granted.

Rajaat. No need for him to state his name, then or ever. When the first sorcerer was present in my mind, the world was Rajaat and Rajaat was the world, endless and eternal.

Look for yourself—

He gave me a kes’trekel’s vision and hearing. Peering down from a soaring height, I saw mekillots pulling a four-wheeled cart along a barrens road. There was a cage on the cart, and Myron of Yoram was in the cage. The Troll-Scorcher had himself been scorched. He lay on his back, a bloated, blackened carcass. His charred skin hung in tattered strips that swayed in rhythm with the creaking cart. A cloud of buzzing insects feasted on his suppurating wounds.

I’d judged Yoram a corpse; I was wrong. With Rajaat’s aid, I heard pathetic whimpers in the depths of his flame-ravaged throat. I saw delicate silver chains nearly lost in the rotting folds at his wrists and ankles: links of sorcery potent enough to render a champion helpless.

I was pleased, but not satisfied. It was not enough that the Troll-Scorcher suffered for his betrayal of the human cause. The war against the trolls had to be fought and won—

In time, Manu. In due time. Wait. Rest—

A soft shadow surrounded me, not the bleak darkness of my recent torment, but oblivion all the same. I wasn’t interested in oblivion or resting or waiting. Childish and petulant, I tried to escape the shadow.

My uncanny vision shifted: There was a second cart. Like the first, it ferried a human husk across the barrens. The second body was little more than a black-boned skeleton held together with rags. Its knees were drawn up. Its arms were crossed and fused together. They hid what remained of its face.

Of my face…

The husk was alive; the husk was me.

All the pain I’d felt was

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