her where it willed.
Khisanth saw the whole of the world as the gods had cre shy;ated it-rugged land, shifting water, turbulent air-and she thought what a loss it would have been to sleep through her entire life beneath it all. Looking back, she saw herself with an admiring detachment. The scales above her rippling mus shy;cles were sleek and black like polished onyx. What perfect creations are dragons, Khisanth thought. Surely as god-touched as the land itself.
Ah, flying…. The blood-rush it inspired was akin to that of gorging, especially when a tail wind helped her cruise with impossible swiftness. She pushed herself on this maiden flight, past the first ache of her wing muscles, until the legs that would help her land cramped as well. She located the edge of forest that shielded her lair and let her body take care of the details of returning to earth.
Either she had flown too long, or her body had little practi shy;cal knowledge of landing, because her legs buckled upon con shy;tact with the ground. Khisanth tumbled head-over-tail, losing count after the tenth rotation. At last her tail met with a stout tree trunk and she stopped, unable to tell up from down.
'Not bad,' said Kadagan, as ever at her shoulder. 'Not good, but not bad. Next time thou wilt know not to fly beyond thine endurance.'
Khisanth was still smarting from Kadagan's chastisement when she awoke the next day. She had wanted to make him choke on the smug look he maintained during his insuffer shy;able preaching about qhen. Khisanth had proven that she could fly, and the greatest compliment he could offer was 'not bad.' She'd asked him about it, challenged him. The nyphid had said with maddening serenity, 'Thou canst fly. So can a mosquito.' She'd cast him a scorching look that made her golden eyes look like burned amber. He'd been unmoved. Then he'd left her for the night. Before following the younger nyphid, Joad had handed her some herbal lini shy;ments with the unspoken understanding that she should apply them to her stiffening muscles.
Stretching painfully now, Khisanth was sorry that she had defiantly flung the small, unused pots of balm across her lair the night before. Spotting the cracked vessels of ointment, she dabbed the fleshy ball beneath one claw into a partially dried puddle and touched it to the sorest muscles in her wings. To her surprise, the goo provided instant, if not total, relief. The dragon reached down for more and was dismayed to realize that she could not salvage enough from the sandy floor to apply to her whole body. It enraged her to think that her anger had cost her the cure to her ills. Her tail lashed out, and she sent the shards of the crude ceramic pots flying through the lair's opening.
'Anger will defeat thee in battle as well as in life,' said Kadagan, calmly dodging the flying fragments as he flut shy;tered into the cave. 'An old nyphid maxim.'
'Does nothing enrage you? Aren't you furious those humans took Dela?'
'Anger is energy spent foolishly.'
Khisanth's eyes rolled up in exasperation. 'It never ceases to amaze me that such a wise and all-knowing race has come to the brink of extinction,' she stabbed.
As usual, Kadagan did not rise to the bait. 'A cruel trick of nature hast given nyphids wisdom without the physical strength to defend it. Thou hast the opportunity for both.' Kadagan settled himself, pulling up his tunic slightly to sit cross-legged on the dirt floor. 'Art thou prepared for the next lesson in qhen?'
'Qhen?' snorted Khisanth. 'I intend to fly today.'
Kadagan watched the dragon's stiff, jerky movements as she shuffled around the cave.
'I feel fine! I'll have no problem flying,' Khisanth croaked defensively at the nyphid's cool gaze. 'Besides'- she whirled on the small creature — 'I thought you and Joad were in a hurry for me to rescue your Dela. I'm just trying to oblige you.' She crossed her claw arms in a challenging pose.
'So let's skip these fascinating lectures of yours and get on with teaching me to shapechange.'
'I am more than anxious to rescue Dela,' said Kadagan evenly. 'But thou wilt surely fail in the task if thou dost not moderate thy temper. How canst thou hope to control an enemy without first controlling thyself?'
'Is that why you're always so maddeningly calm?' Khi-santh snapped.
They both knew the question needed no answer. In a strange way, she was beginning to understand the nyphid's logic. Besides, she was tired of looking foolish in contrast to the nyphid's unshakable tranquility. 'How long will it take to learn what you want me to know?'
'As I said before, that depends on thee,' said the nyphid. 'I cannot hurry and teach thee patience.' Sensing the circular course this topic could take, Kadagan noted, 'The males of my race pass down a tale that might help thee:
The time came for a young nyphid to develop her magical nature and learn qhen. She walked to the pod of her teacher uncle and said, 'It is time for me to become the finest nyphid qhen. How long must 1 study?'
'Ten years at least,' her teacher uncle said.
'Ten years is a long time,' said the young female. 'What if I studied twice as hard as all thine other students?'
'Twenty years,' replied her teacher uncle.
'Twenty years! What if I practice day and night with all my effort?'
'Thirty years.'
'How is it that each time I say I will work harder, thou tells me that it will take that much longer?'
'The answer is clear. When one eye is fixed upon thy destina shy;tion, there is only one eye left with which to see the way there.'
The thick, scaly skin above Khisanth's brow bones drew up in understanding. She heaved a rumbling sigh of surren shy;der. For a hot-tempered dragon, grasping qhen was going to be a lot more difficult than learning to walk or fly.
Chapter 4
Under cover of darkness, Khisanth, with Kadagan clinging to her neck, soared over the eastern cliffs of the bay known as the Miremier. Guided by the nyphid, the dragon was learning the names of the lands over which they flew.
The terrain just south of the long narrow forest of End-scape was unremarkable for anything but its rugged coasts on both the east and west sides of the peninsula. Impossibly long stretches of flat, unforested land continued south until, abruptly and without foothills or even forest, the easternmost ridges of the Khalkist Mountains jutted out of the earth like jagged fangs.
The flat land might have made for good farming, if any humans cared to go into the far northern reaches of the Ogre-lands, to face the isolation of life beyond the populated vil shy;lages of either Kernen or Ogrebond. It was a strange and silent stretch of land, surrounded by lonely rain-washed cliffs.
The nyphid and the dragon shared a new spirit of, if not mutual respect, common purpose. Khisanth was learning qhen even more quickly than Kadagan had hoped, for the dragon was a very bright student and was learning, above all, to control her ever-ready temper. Her muscles were toned by long daily flights. With a little more practice, she would be able to master the rudiments of shapechanging. With a little more mental discipline, both teacher and student knew that Khisanth would be ready to fulfill her end of the bargain.
In light of this fact, Khisanth had persuaded Kadagan that she was ready to begin shapechanging. Kadagan himself had said she must see, firsthand, a human female in order to assume its shape. It would also be helpful, Khisanth had rea shy;soned, for her to see the village where Dela was being held. The young nyphid had given a fairly detailed description of Styx from his own journey there with Joad, but Khisanth had a difficult time envisioning it. She'd never seen human dwellings before.
'Something puzzles me mightily, Kadagan,' said Khi shy;santh now. 'How have these humans come to govern the world? By your own words, they are weakly built, to the point of perishing from simple indigestion. They aren't the least magical by nature. Only after a lifetime's study can a very few of them wield even paltry spells.
'You've said they can do almost nothing for themselves,' the dragon continued. 'Beasts of burden plow their fields and pull their wagons. They use bows and arrows to bring down prey larger than the smallest rodent, and even those they will not kill with their bare hands or teeth.'
'That's all true,' noted Kadagan. 'Yet they can walk freely, while nyphids and dragons must hover in shadows, for fear of retribution.'