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Authors: Elizabeth A. Lynn

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BOOK: Dragon's Treasure
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In the chamber next door, her grandfather, oblivious to what was happening in his house, snored. He, too, was drunk. He was constantly drunk, now. He had started drinking before her mother's death, and since that event, a year ago New Year's Moon, he kept a bottle always nearby. But his sickness—the falling, the tremors—had begun before then. Nothing she knew of Master Eccio's lore would help him. He refused the tonics she mixed for him. On good days he was lucid. On bad ones he marched through the house shouting incoherent orders, half-naked, breathing wine fumes into the faces of those who had once obeyed him. They had no time for the sick old warrior. They were Treion's, now.

A door opened, and someone shouted below. At first she thought it was her brother.

Then she heard the rush of footsteps through the house. Booted feet came down the hall. The dogs came silently to their feet. Fenris faced the door, her silver pelt erect. Morga growled deep in her throat.

"Hush," Maia said softly. She moved to the window and peered through the gap in the shutter. The clearing in front of the manor was ringed with armed men. Moonlight glinted off sword blades. She backed from the window.

The knife her mother had left her lay beneath her pillow. She strapped it on. A fist hammered on the door of the chamber next to hers. Her grandfather yelled a stream of drunken curses. A quietly competent voice told him to be still. She waited for them to pound on her door. But they did not. She heard her grandfather's plaintive voice, and the sound of booted feet retreating down the stairway.

She opened her chamber door, and gestured to the dogs. They went downstairs together. The hall was devoid of life, except for a bloodstained cat grooming in a corner. It raised its head to growl at the dogs.

The front door was ajar. Through the opening she saw Edan and Nils and the rest of her grandfather's men standing in the clearing. Their weapons lay in a heap in the dirt.

She looked for Treion among them. He was not there. The Hunter's Moon made the night bright as day. Her grandfather, barefoot, wearing only his night robe, stood in the center of the clearing, hands on his hips. His white hair was wild.

"Iva," he called shakily to his dead daughter, her mother. "Iva, we have guests! Bring wine!"

Before him stood a tall, fair man. He said, "Do you know where your band of cutthroats went tonight, old man? To Thorin Amdur's farm. They stole the horses. They killed Thorin and his son Garth. They fired the house and left everyone in it to burn."

His voice was very deep. His face was bleak as winter. Although Maia had seen him only once before, and that at a distance, she knew who he was.

Her grandfather said, whining a little, "I did not tell them to do that."

"Did you not?" the dragon-lord said. "It does not matter; it's done, and you must answer for it."

She knew the stories of the dragon-kind: their strength, their startling generosity, and their terrible ferocity when defied. She put her hand flat on the door and pushed. It was stuck; it would not move. Her fingers trembled.

Her grandfather leaned forward. "You should not speak so to me," he said, with a drunkard's mad dignity. "I saved your father's life in battle. He granted me this land."

The dragon-lord said, "I know it. You have traded on that service for nearly thirty years. Out of respect for my father I grant you one day's grace. But by sunset tomorrow, you and your kin must be gone from my domain."

"What of my men?" Reo Unamira demanded.

"They killed my people," Karadur Atani said coldly. "Their lives are forfeit." He looked at the encircled outlaws. "Which of you is Edan?" No one spoke, but heads twitched. The dragon-lord leveled a finger. "You. Step forward." Edan obeyed. The other men moved away from him. "Finle. Kill him."

From where he stood beneath a copper beech, a slender dark-haired archer lifted his bow and shot in one smooth motion. An arrow seemed to grow out of Edan's broad chest. He curled his hands helplessly around the shaft, and fell.

Reo Unamira cackled.
"
That
for the gratitude of the dragon-kind." He genuflected mockingly toward the dragon-lord. "Iva! Iva, hurry up. We are leaving. Maia! Treion! Come quickly. Our gracious liege is dispossessing us from our home!" He spat in the dirt.

Maia pushed the door open with her shoulder. With Fenris and Morga flanking her on either side, she descended the steps. They all turned to look at her: her grandfather's men, the soldiers, and the dragon-lord.

He was taller than she was. The amber moonlight seemed to settle on his shoulders. But she was Iva Unamira's daughter. She would
not
be cowed, even by a dragon.

"Treion is gone, Grandfather," she said. She saw him in her mind, circling soundlessly around the soldiers' perimeter, finding a horse, mounting, riding, over the ridge, and gone.... He would not have been drunk. He drank—he had an especial fondness for her grandfather's merignac—but in all the months he had lived among them, she had never seen him drunk.

She faced Karadur Atani. "My lord," she said, and was pleased to hear her voice emerge steady, "as you can see, my grandfather drinks more than he should. It makes him foolish."

His gaze was like a weight. "Who are you?"

"I am Maia diSorvino. My mother was Iva Unamira."

Her grandfather said jauntily, "You were supposed to marry her, boy!" He giggled. "Your father and I planned it all. But then he went mad. Mad Dragon." He ran his hands through his white brush of hair.

The dragon-lord said, "I remember. Your grandfather wrote me a letter four, no five years ago. He wanted me to marry you." He looked at her oddly. "I thought you were younger."

She remembered that letter. Her grandfather had sent it without telling her mother. When finally the old man let it slip, Iva Unamira had been furious.

Greedy thieving sot!
she had said.
What did you ask for in payment? Gold? A case of wine? My daughter is not a horse or a sheep, to be bartered to the dragon-kindred in exchange for a bottle of merignac.

She said, "I was younger. Five years ago I was thirteen."

"You're from Nakase?"

"I was born in Sorvino. My father is Marion diSorvino. My mother and I returned six years ago."

Reo Unamira cackled. "You want her, my lord? Twenty nobles, and I'll throw in the dogs." He snapped his fingers at the moonlight. "You, there. Bring me some wine."

Karadur Atani said, "Your mother—is she still alive?"

"She's dead. She died in January last year."

Some emotion, perhaps surprise, perhaps compassion, she could not tell, moved in the dragon-lord's brilliant blue eyes. He said, "I am sorry. I know what it is like to be motherless."

Reo Unamira whined, "I want a drink. Treion took my merignac, the little bastard. Little bastard." He turned in a circle. "She would never say his name, no matter how I beat her. But I knew. I saw them. I saw them." He giggled senselessly, and crouched to pat the dirt with his hands.

Karadur Atani's face went stony again. Maia said, "My lord, I beg you, ignore him. He does not know what he is saying. He has been like this for months."

"Has he indeed." His face changed suddenly. "Of course. He did not lead the raid tonight. Who did?"

She could tell him it was Edan. But no, one could not lie to the dragon-kind. They always knew a lie, and it made them angry. Her mother had told her that. She did not want to make him angry.

"My half brother Treion led the raid. Ask any of his cohorts, those that are sober enough to talk. They will tell you."

"And where is he?"

She said, "Gone, I am sure. He must have heard you coming, and escaped."

"Herugin!"

A lean, grim-faced man with a badge on his sleeve said, "One man did get out the back ahead of us, my lord. But he won't get far. Huw and Elief are out there."

To her horror, a familiar voice said, "My sister tells the truth. I do not deny it." Sweet Sedi, it was Treion. He sauntered into the center of the clearing. He held his bare sword in his right hand. "However, I must correct her inference that I ran away when your men arrived. I did not run away. I merely moved faster than these cretins." He cut a contemptuous look at the encircled men. Arrogant, impossible, stupid Treion... The outlaws looked at him hopefully. Fools, Maia wanted to shout at them, he will only make it worse. Her fingers curled into fists. She wanted to hit him.

He bowed theatrically, almost derisively, to the dragon- lord. "Treion Unamira, my lord, at your service. They call me the Bastard."

"I have no interest in your parentage," the dragon-lord said. "Was it indeed you who led tonight's raid?"

"It was. Though I did not kill the old man. Edan did that." Treion nudged Edan's corpse with his toe. "He's paid for it, I see. Dragon's justice."

The dragon-lord's eyes glittered like blue flame. "Herugin. Take him."

Drawing his sword, the grim-faced officer walked confidently toward Treion. Treion turned to face him. He looked relaxed, even lazy, and entirely unafraid.

Suddenly his drooping sword sliced upward. The Atani soldier's sword spun from his hand. Treion touched the point of his blade to the disarmed man's throat.

He said tautly, "I am not so easily taken, my lord. Tell your men to lay their arrows in the dirt. Otherwise, he dies."

No one moved. A ghostly bird called across the forest. A second answered.

Then Herugin turned his head to look at his lord.

Karadur said, "Do it." The archers unfastened their quivers and laid them on the ground.

"Move away from them," Treion said.

The dragon-lord nodded. His soldiers stepped back.

"You drunken, stupid pigs," Treion Unamira said scathingly to the outlaws. "Find your weapons and meet me where we left the horses. Go." The men scrambled to obey.

"My lord, as you have ordained, we will leave. You will not see us again, though you may hear of us. I intend that you shall hear of us. I will take your officer with me, however; he shall be my safe conduct till I leave your land. Once we're beyond your borders, I'll let him go. Edric, get a rope. Tie his wrists together in front. Now, get me a horse. One of theirs. The rest of you take their horses. Hurry." Edric brought him a horse. "Tie the end of the rope to the saddle." The tip of his sword had not deviated an inch.

He waited until the rope had been secured, then mounted. "I understand you brand brigands in this country." The sword point slashed across the bound man's face, and returned immediately to his throat. "My brand," Treion said.

He touched his rigid captive lightly in the center of the chest with the tip of the sword. Blood from the wound on his cheek ran down the man's face and into his clothing.

Karadur Atani's voice was soft and deadly. "If he dies, make no mistake: I will find you."

"I believe you," Treion said. "I wouldn't want you to do that. I'll keep him alive. Farewell, Grandfather. You are a vicious drunk. I hope your death finds you soon." For a moment his eyes met Maia's, and she saw the pride and the rage there. "Farewell, sister dear. Walk, you." He urged his mount into the trees. The Atani officer, blood streaming down his cheek, loped at the horse's side.

The dragon-lord's soldiers scrambled to retrieve their weapons. Maia's legs were shaking. The dogs pressed protectively against her.

The delicate, insubstantial birdsong went on. The moon, its light diminished, had fallen behind the trees. Dawn was approaching.

Reo Unamira whined, "Iva's little bastard. It was my thought to name him Treion. It means treasure. I meant it as a joke. The joke's on me. The boy took my treasure. Stole my soldiers. Drank my merignac. Bad dragon. Mad dragon." He glanced archly at the dragon-lord. "Mad as your father."

"Old man, for the gods' sweet sake, be quiet," the dark-haired archer said.

"Hah." The old man drew himself up. "Who are you to talk to me like that? My lord, your men are rudely mannered. Mad Dragon. They say you killed your brother for his treasure. Chests of gold and jewels." He waggled his bony fingers in the air. "Poof! I had chests of gold and jewels once. Gone, all gone. Treion took them. He took my merignac, too. It was the dragon's gold he stole. Your father gave it to me. Kojiro Atani, the Black Dragon. I wanted him to marry her, but no, he wouldn't do it, not Iva Unamira, not
my
daughter.

"He fucked her, though. She would never admit it, but I saw them, I saw them, I saw them lying beside the stream. I knew it.

"I knew the Diamori bitch would never satisfy him."

The dark-haired archer flinched. Karadur Atani's eyes burned like stars. A hot wind rose out of the earth, bowing the tall trees as if a giant's hand had swept across their tops. Dust and dirt and tiny pebbles whirled in circles. Half-blinded by the swirling dust, Maia grabbed for the dogs' collars. She could not find them. The hot wind thundered in her ears. She saw her grandfather's mouth fall open. Then fire sheathed his head, and he screamed.

A bright light seared the clearing. The Golden Dragon soared above them, great wings spread like sails. His deadly exhalation fell upon the house. White flame dripped along its walls, its heavy timbers.... Fire filled her vision. The trees were burning. Her grandfather howled in pain. Fire whipped about her, devouring the air. She panted, fighting for breath. A terrible, inhuman bellow shook her to her knees. She struggled to her feet.

BOOK: Dragon's Treasure
6.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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