Song of the Dragon
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Book 1: - THE JESTER
CHAPTER 1 - The Song
CHAPTER 2 - The Folds
CHAPTER 3 - Empty Rooms
CHAPTER 4 - Firefall
CHAPTER 5 - The Last Throne
CHAPTER 6 - Spoils
CHAPTER 7 - The Way Home
CHAPTER 8 - Myths, Legends, & Nonsense
CHAPTER 9 - Mala
CHAPTER 10 - Cleansing
CHAPTER 11 - Taboo
CHAPTER 12 - Hall of the Past
CHAPTER 13 - The Altar
CHAPTER 14 - The Fall
CHAPTER 15 - Flight
Book 2: - THE PREY
CHAPTER 16 - Heart of the Empire
CHAPTER 17 - The Keeper
CHAPTER 18 - Tracks
CHAPTER 19 - Loose Ends
CHAPTER 20 - Bolters
CHAPTER 21 - The Hunt
CHAPTER 22 - Togrun Fel
CHAPTER 23 - Murialis
CHAPTER 24 - Hyperian Trap
CHAPTER 25 - The Glade
CHAPTER 26 - Three Truths
CHAPTER 27 - Pretending
CHAPTER 28 - Eternal Halls
CHAPTER 29 - Unwelcome Guests
CHAPTER 30 - Shift in the Wind
Book 3: - THE FORGOTTEN
CHAPTER 31 - Fool’s Errand
CHAPTER 32 - The Hak’kaarin
CHAPTER 33 - Caliph
CHAPTER 34 - Traveler’s Tales
CHAPTER 35 - Preceding Reputations
CHAPTER 36 - RuuKag
CHAPTER 37 - Different Roads
CHAPTER 38 - Sondau Clans
CHAPTER 39 - Something of my Own
CHAPTER 40 - Without Doubts
CHAPTER 41 - The Crossroads
CHAPTER 42 - Heart of the Manticore
CHAPTER 43 - Relentless
CHAPTER 44 - Fury
CHAPTER 45 - Fall of the Inquisitor
Book 4: - THE SIRENS
CHAPTER 46 - Do Dwarves Float?
CHAPTER 47 - One Among Us
CHAPTER 48 - Chimera
CHAPTER 49 - Voice of Dragons
CHAPTER 50 - Celebrations
Teaser chapter
The Annals of Drakis
They emerged in chaos.
The fold collapsus behind them, but the sound was swallowed in the cacophony of battle that raged before them.
“By the gods!” ChuKang roared. “Where are we now?”
KriChan turned on Braun, grabbing the edges of his breastplate with both fists. “Where have you taken us? Where are Jerakh and the rest of the Centurai?”
“I . . . I don’t . . .”
KriChan shoved Braun to the ground, his lips curling up around his fangs in disgust.
“Wait!” Drakis shouted above the noise. “I know where we are! This is it . . . the Ninth Throne of the Dwarves!”
The throne room was enormous, the hollowed out core of the Stoneheart nearly a hundred yards in diameter. All the Impress Warriors could see the Last Dwarven King sitting on his throne, his crown shining in the explosive light of the invading army. Scattered about the room was the last of the wealth gathered from all of the Nine Kingdoms, but it was the crown that riveted the eyes of every Impress Warrior smashing against the dwarven circle of defense.
“Is that it?” KriChan shouted, pointing toward the throne even as he began charging toward the writhing slaughter around the base of the steps.
“Yes!” ChuKang snarled through his clenched, bared teeth, running alongside him. “We take it and we go home!”
The Annals of Drakis
by
Tracy Hickman:
SONG OF THE DRAGON CITADELS OF THE LOST
Copyright © 2010 by Tracy and Laura Hickman.
All Rights Reserved.
DAW Book Collectors No. 1514.
DAW Books are distributed by Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
All characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any resemblance to persons living or dead is strictly coincidental.
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ISBN : 978-1-101-54837-0
First Paperback Printing, July 2011
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For Gerry . . . my hero.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We all stand on the shoulders of giants and all are worthy of thanks but to two women especially I owe public acknowledgment: Laura, my wife and partner without whose muse I would have no tale to tell nor song to sing; and the brilliant Sheila Gilbert, who showed us where to find the fire beyond the smoke.
Book 1:
THE JESTER
CHAPTER 1
The Song
THE SONG would not leave him.
Nine notes . . . Seven notes . . . Nine notes . . . Seven notes . . . Five notes . . . Five notes . . .
Circles in circles, endlessly spinning through his mind, filling its space with an endless melodic wheel. It pulls at him, calls to him, drawing him into a whirling vortex of music that engulfs his thoughts, his actions . . .
“Drakis! Wake up!”
Drakis, Impress Warrior of the House of Timuran and Leader of the First Octian, shook his head and tried frantically to focus his eyes in the stark light.
The enormous, broad face of ChuKang, Captain of the Timuran Warriors, swam in front of him. ChuKang was a manticore—a lion-man from the Chaenandrian Steppes—and was therefore forced to bend his towering, eight-foot tall form down to face the human. ChuKang’s lips curled back on his flat, fur-covered face as he spoke, exposing his sharp fangs. “Drakis! Do you have the count or not?”
Nine notes . . . Seven notes . . .
Drakis found it hard to catch his breath in the stifling heat of the narrow corridor. The stone hall was barely twenty feet wide and packed shoulder to shoulder and wall to wall with his brother warriors as far as he could see in both directions. Their faces stared back at him, cast in the stark and unnaturally cold light of a number of globe-torches distributed among them. They were mostly made up of towering manticores mixed with nearly an equal number of four-armed chimera and the occasionally emerging face of an impatient Mestophian goblin. Each of their heads—shaved from the top of their foreheads running back to the base of their necks—was marked with the sinque tattoo branding every one of them as the property of House Timuran.
Each warrior-slave knew his place—just as Drakis well knew his own. He was the third of eight warriors that made up the First Octian, first of the ten Octia that made up House Timuran’s eighty-warrior Centurai. Timuran’s Centurai had been attached to five more from neighboring Houses on the Imperial Frontier to form the Second Cohort of the Western Provinces—just short of five hundred warriors—which in turn was united with seven other Impress Cohorts, an additional War-mage Cohort, plus a Warlord Cohort creating the four thousand and eight hundred strong Legion of the West. Three such Legions made up the army grandly named ”Blade of the West,” which was then joined with two other such armies—“Emperor’s Blade” and “Blade of the Marches”—to fill out the enormous Imperial Army of Conquest.
Over forty-three thousand Impress Warriors bringing their bright-edged s
teel against the last bastion of Dwarven Mighty—and Drakis was but one among them.
Nine notes spun through his mind, sounding hollow as they fell into a vast, surging sea of blood . . . Five notes singing of his insignificance drowned out by the nine notes that dragged him downward into an abyss of sound. His dying breath made no impression on anyone else at all . . .
“Drakis!” ChuKang roared.
“Captain! I have the count!” Drakis blurted out, his eyes focusing on the captain. “First Octian through Fourth Octian are at full strength with eight warriors each. Seventh Octian has combined with the Sixth and are now reporting seven warriors strong. Eighth and Ninth Octia are also at full strength of eight warriors each. Archers of Octian Dista are answering with four.”
“What about Fifth Octian?” KriChan growled. He was a fierce-looking manticore with a long scar running from just above his right eye across his face—and also second-in-command of the House Timuran Centurai after ChuKang.
“Fifth Octian does not report,” Drakis answered. He was sweating profusely now. “I think we lost them just before the last fold.”
“Lord Timuran will not be pleased,” KriChan said quietly. “Committing the entire Centurai in this campaign was more of a gamble than an investment . . . and we’ve yet to garner a single prize.”
ChuKang gave a warning glance at his Second. “Without a prize of honor it might be better if we all came back on our shields. We need to get into the fight. Braun! What’s taking so long?”
They all turned to the only other human present, the sole Proxi for the remaining warriors of House Timuran’s Centurai. He was a short man with a stocky build, easily distinguishable by his large, hooked nose and piercing, dark eyes. Like most of the Timuran warriors, he wore a hodgepodge of protective armor, but instead of a weapon he carried the Proxi staff of the Timuran Centurai—a tall wooden shaft with an onyx claw headpiece gripping an Aether crystal at its top. As the Proxi, he was the connection between the elven Tribunes who ran the battle from their hilltop thousands of feet above and many leagues distant from the combat underground. The Tribunes experienced the war from a command tent filled with the breezes of an open sky, their bodies far removed from the blades of the enemy. Bound by the power of Aether magic, the Proxi was the projected presence of the War-mage Tribunes at the battlefront. What Braun saw, his Tribune saw. What Braun heard; his Tribune heard as well. More important still, Braun and all other Proxi were an extension of the Tribunes’ magical powers wrought from the Aether, the conduit for the Tribunes’ spells. Thus their elven masters leagues away could experience and contribute to the battle through the Proxi in nearly every aspect except one: In agony and death a Proxi was always alone.
Braun cocked his head to one side, as though he were listening to the rocks overhead. He flashed a crooked smile, but his eyes were fixed on a scene far beyond the close walls around them. “Can’t you hear it? Don’t you see? The dancers and the puppets are all moving across the stage, each one playing his little part, just as we are—our own little part! And now we’re coming to the great finale—the headlong rush into death itself. It’s all going exactly as the masters have promised it would be. Death, blood, and glory all threshed like fall wheat with our deaths and our blood as dross and the glory all neatly gleaned for House Timuran. Smell the applause!”
“What in the name of all the gods . . .” KriChan began.
Five notes . . . Five notes . . .
Drakis drew in a deep breath. “Captain ChuKang, Braun is not—Captain, it’s been three days since his last Field Devotion.”
It’s been three days since my own devotions, Drakis thought. Three days of this song rolling through my head . . .
“Three days for any of us,” ChuKang snapped. “What of it? Is that a problem, hoo-mani?”
KriChan’s eyes narrowed as he stared first at Braun and then back at Drakis.
“He’ll do fine, Captain,” Drakis said, his own eyes focusing on the scowling face of ChuKang. “I’ll see to him.”
“You had better see that he doesn’t break, Drakis,” the Centurai commander grumbled while shooting a glance at KriChan. “His folds got us into this and, by the gods, his folds had better get us out! Proxi’s minds always break first in battle. We’re too deep under this mountain to have our Proxi snap like some dry twig.”
“Deep?” Braun said, crouching on the fitted stones that formed the floor of the corridor. He reached down to the paving stones at his feet, his fingers brushing against a pattern of interlocking rings etched into the stone. The symbol glowed faintly at his touch. “Yes, we are deep and far from home. See the gate symbol here? They have been growing weaker with every fold farther from the Aether Well of House Timuran. What shall save us if the way is shut? The cords that bind us to the House of our master unravel, and does not our future unravel along with our past?”
KriChan opened his mouth to speak, anger flashing in his eyes.
“Yes, Captain,” Drakis inserted quickly before the manticore could speak or, worse, act. “I’ll take care of him.”
Nine notes of the dwarven kings laughing in the darkness . . . Seven notes in his screaming as his world falls in glittering shards five notes at a time to the ground . . .
I’ll take care of him, Drakis thought, if I don’t unravel first.
Drakis drew in a deep, shuddering breath and tried to breathe slower. The armor he wore was mismatched and pinched him. He fought the panicked urge to tear at the straps and cast off the torturous steel tomb—and tomb it was, his mind screamed at him—and run blindly away to anywhere but here in the darkest heart buried far beneath the Aeria peaks. He considered praying to the gods of the House but then stopped.
There was nothing special in him that the gods might want to save, he thought. He was a human—a defeated and moderately rare race—talented with a sword, perhaps, but otherwise unremarkable. He was of only average height for his kind. Broad shoulders and a strong body, perhaps, but the skin of his face was pocked, and a small scar at the corner of his lips gave him the affectation of a crooked frown; not handsome in the way of the gods but of average looks for a warrior of his race. The campaign had done nothing to improve his appearance either, as the tattoo brands on his scalp—usually shaved cleanly bald before the daily Devotions of House Timuran—were now slightly obscured by a fuzz of dark brown hair that had pushed its way through his scalp over the last three days. No, he realized, there was nothing remarkable enough about him to command the attention of the gods. All he had was himself and his brother warriors from his Octian to keep him alive for one more day.
Drakis squeezed his wide-bladed short sword tighter, desperately willing the strength of his hand to overcome the sweat and dark dwarven blood that coated the grip. He did not dare close his eyes, tempting as it was to banish the walls closing in around him.
He had won victory in many battles, slain many enemies in the service of the Rhonas Empire—may his allegiance and loyalty to his elven masters ever be on his lips—and the glorious House of which he longed to be a part.
He was only a warrior-slave of House Timuran—as he had always been, as the gods had made him.
Nine notes rolled around Drakis on shattered shields, a chorus of screaming slaves all singing in madness . . . Seven notes drew him back, running from the flames burning down his life . . .
“It’s here! The last judgment of the gods!” Braun shouted. The Proxi suddenly knelt down in the corridor, planting the steel-spiked base of his staff against the glowing symbols in the paving stones and leaning forward. A blue glow grew within the crystal fixed in the staff’s headpiece.
“This is it!” ChuKang shouted. “Drakis! First Octian stand to the sides of the fold! Jerakh! Murthas! Second Octian leads those on the right! Third Octian leads the rest on the left”
Drakis tried to ignore the notes turning through his mind in an unending circle as he stepped back, pushing his back against the corridor wall. Nine notes . . . Seven notes . . . Five
. . . Five . . . It was his sanity that rotated on a melodic wheel careening across an endless plain toward a dark tower atop a pillar of stone . . .
The Proxi staff’s crystal flared with brilliant light. The air in the corridor before the Proxi twisted, flattening into a vertical disk that cut across the width of the corridor. Space itself contorted, collapsed, and compressed. Dark hallway, rock, stone, passages, walls, lit rooms, dark halls—all rushed forward inside the magical oval whose edges writhed with arcing light. Just as quickly the rushing motion stopped. The sounds of battle rang out through the magical fold, and Drakis could see clearly a huge underground plaza lit by hundreds of burning torches. An enormous statue filled a rotunda just beyond the plaza around which a line of screaming, enraged dwarven warriors were charging toward them.
“For the glory of House Timuran!” ChuKang roared as he and the rest of the First Octian stood aside, pressing their backs against the walls. They would be the last to enter the battle.
“For the glory of the Emperor!” Drakis shouted in chorus with the rest of the Centurai around him.
Second and Third Octia rushed forward as though charging to collide where the glowing oval from Braun’s staff bisected the wall between them. Drakis felt the brush of armor and whiffed the stench of drying blood as the Second Octian rushed past him, followed immediately by the Fourth and Sixth.
“Keep moving, you slave bastards!” ChuKang shouted. “Win me enough room to kill some dwarves!”
KriChan continued to roar. “For the Emperor and his Imperial Will!”
The ranks of warriors surged forward like a confluence of rivers, leaping into the vertical glowing disk on both sides as though in collision . . . but the folded space of the elven war-mages and their Proxi obeyed a reality that was uniquely dictated by the power of Aether magic. Drakis watched as the converging warriors dashed headlong into the magically wrenched space, and, from where he stood, he could see that those entering from his side were rushing into the distant illuminated plaza and engaging the charging dwarves. He knew from experience that those warriors charging in the opposite direction were rushing from the opposite side of the fold into that same plaza.