'But you don't get fresh blood from a week-old corpse,' the other reminded him.
Each feather, as it was pulled, invoked a stab of exquisite pain; he squawked involuntarily as his tormenters extracted them. Finally they left him alone.
They were only after feathers this time, not blood. Just as well, every talon ached where they had cut each one to the quick to collect blood.
'Shall we truss it back up again?' the first man asked when they finally left him alone for a moment, and he decided that they were done with him for the nonce. 'We'll be gone all evening, with no one here to watch him.'
The second one prodded him with a toe, and all T'fyrr could do was groan. 'I don't think so,' he said. 'He isn't going anywhere. All those bindings were breaking feathers anyway; we need to get as many perfect feathers from him as we can. Only the perfect feathers are any good, magically. Now that makes me wonder, though_we need to do some research and see if the down and body feathers could be used for anything.'
The sounds of their feet receded. 'Considering what we're getting for feathers and blood, can you imagine what the heart and bones will be worth?' the first one said, greed and awe in his voice. 'Not to mention the skull and the talons?'
'We will be able to purchase mansions and titles, at the very least,' the second chuckled over the sound of a door opening. 'And as many_'
The door closed, cutting off the end of the sentence.
And that was when the despair he had been holding off finally swooped down on him and took him.
He couldn't sit up, he was too weak and dizzy; he could only curl into a shivering ball and clutch his legs to his chest, shaking with despair. No one would ever find him. There was no rescue at hand. Probably no one had even bothered to make the attempt.
No one cared.
But it was hopeless. How could one woman, however resourceful, find him hidden away in this hive of a city? How could anyone find him, even with all the resources of the King? Lyonarie was too big, too impersonal, for anyone to search successfully.
Even clever Nightingale. There were too many places even she could not go.
He could not weep, but his beak gaped as much as the muzzle would permit, and he keened his despair into the uncaring darkness.
The moon shone down on rooftops encrusted with ornamental false towers and crenellations, on chimney pots shaped like toadstools, flowers, trees, tiny castles_anything
Magical guards above and physical guards below. If this was
A square area lit up inside her shielding hand, giving off a dim, red light. It represented a square space, twenty feet on a side, with herself in the middle.