he was holding his breath. He heard only the hiss of the rain and the drum of thunder.
“Furlinastis,” Cale called again, louder.
A pungent organic stink filled Abelar’s nostrils, faint at first, but then stronger, the smell reminiscent of mud, of life, death, decay. A reptilian hiss sounded in the blackness. Movement stirred the shadows. Abelar had the impression of an immense form moving in the darkness but he could see nothing. He leaned forward …
A dragon materialized out of the darkness, its body a mountain of black scales and muscle. The scales shimmered a faint purple around the edges when the wyrm moved. The vertical slit of its reptilian eyes fixed on Cale, Riven, Rivalen, and Abelar. It spread its wings and they blotted out the sky, sheltering them all from the rain.
Abelar met and held the dragon’s gaze, though the power and age implied by the dragon’s form made him feel tiny.
Its tail slid over the plains behind it, knocking over trees. Its claws, each as long as a short sword, sank deeply into the earth. It oozed toward Cale, silent despite its size. Shadows hung from its form, swirled, blurred its borders.
The dragon’s voice was soft, sibilant. “I have heard and answered, First of Five.”
Cale inclined his head. “My thanks, Furlinastis. You have kept your promise.”
Streams of shadow leaked from the dragon’s nostrils.
Cale pointed at the black wall of the Shadowstorm. “Kesson Rel’s forces stalk the darkness of that storm.”
The dragon hissed at the mention of Kesson Rel.
“My company battles them there,” Abelar said.
“Bear him into the storm,” Cale said, indicating Abelar. “Fight Kesson Rel’s creatures as you wish.”
“My promise was to serve you,” he said to Cale then swung his head toward Abelar, “not to bear your lackeys.”
Abelar took a step forward. Furlinastis’s breath, as foul and damp as a swamp, moistened his face. “I am no lackey, wyrm.”
The dragon’s lips peeled back from his teeth in snarl, showing fangs as black as tarnished silver and longer than a dagger. The shadows around the creature swirled, engulfed Abelar.
“You serve me by bearing him to battle,” Cale said. “You owe your life to me, dragon. I ask little in return.”
Furlinastis hissed, exhaling twin streams of darkness from his nostrils. “I am—”
“My time is short, dragon!” Cale snapped. “Keep your promise to me.”
The slits of Furlinastis’s pupils narrowed. He swung his head from Abelar to Cale, sniffing the air as if sampling the shadows around Cale.
“You have changed since last we met, First of Five.”
“Yes. Will you do this, dragon?”
They stared at one another for a long moment.
“How will you ride?” Furlinastis said to Abelar.
Abelar eyed the creature’s body. The ridges along his neck would provide stability.
“Upon your neck, just above the wings. I need only a rope.”
“Do it,” the dragon said.
Riven produced a rope from his pack and he, Cale, and Abelar fitted the wyrm as they best they could. Riven’s use of rope would have bested even a lifelong sailor. Abelar tested the knots.
“A good harness,” Abelar said.
“I will not save you if you fall,” Furlinastis said, and lowered his head to allow Abelar to mount.
Abelar climbed into position, secured his thighs with the sling knots they had improvised, and took the makeshift reins in one hand and wrapped them around his wrist.
“I have ridden since I could walk, wyrm.” He shifted, testing his range of motion, his comfort with his perch. It was no saddle, but it would do. “I haven’t lost my place in a saddle since I was a boy. Not even so mighty a creature as you can throw me.”
Furlinastis snaked his neck around to look at him and Abelar thought he saw mirth in the creature’s eyes. “We will see.”
“You need to be warded against the storm,” Cale said. He held his velvet mask in one hand, intoned the wards to a ward, and placed a charged hand on Abelar then Furlinastis.
“Thank you, Erevis,” Abelar said. He held a hand out. “I am glad that we met, both of you.
“As am I,” Cale said, clasping hands.
“And I,” Riven said, doing the same.
He leaned down in the saddle and spoke in a conspiratorial tone. “Do not trust the Shadovar.”
“We don’t,” Cale said. “But we need him. And he needs us. That is enough for now.”
Abelar accepted that. War made for strange allies. And this war more than most. He looked Cale in the face.
“There is a haunted look in your eyes,” Abelar said to Cale.