He hissed, slowly straightened, fighting against the sudden welling of grief at the loss of two men he had come to consider friends. And
Relieved nods answered him.
They quickly attached the rope between them.
The four travellers had walked another thousand paces when the air stirred — the first wind they had felt since entering the warren — and they ducked as one beneath the passage of something enormous directly overhead.
Scrabbling for his crossbow, Fiddler twisted around to look skyward. 'Hood's breath!'
But the three dragons were already past, ignoring the humans entirely. They flew in triangular formation like a flight of geese, and were of a kind, ochre-scaled, their wing-spans as far across as five wagons end to end. Long, sinuous tails stretched back behind them.
'Foolish to think,' Apsalar muttered, 'that we're the only ones to make use of this realm.'
Crokus grunted. 'I've seen bigger …'
A faint grin cracked Fiddler's features. 'Aye, lad, I know you have.'
The dragons were almost at the edge of their vision when they banked as one, plunged down towards the ground and broke through the tiles, vanishing from sight.
No-one spoke for a long minute, then Apsalar's father cleared his throat and said, 'I think that just told us something.'
The sapper nodded. 'Aye.'
'All right,' Fiddler said, straightening. 'Seems we've just got to keep moving.. until the time and place arrives.'
'Mappo and Icarium are not lost, not dead,' Crokus said in obvious relief as they began walking again.
'Nor is the High Priest,' Apsalar added.
'Well,' the Daru muttered, 'I suppose we have to take the bad with the good.'
Fiddler briefly wondered about those three dragons — where they had gone, what tasks awaited them — then he shrugged. Their appearance, their departure and, in between and most importantly, their
In his mind's eye he saw his horizons stretch out on all sides, and as they grew ever vaster he in turn saw himself as ever smaller, ever more insignificant.
Korbolo Dom's warriors celebrated their triumph through the hours of darkness after the Fall of Coltaine. The sounds of that revelry drifted over Aren's walls and brought a coldness to the air that had little to do with the physical reality of the sultry night.
Within the city, facing the north gates, was a broad concourse, generally used as a caravan staging area. This open space was now packed with refugees. The task of billeting would have to await the more pressing needs of food, water and medical attention.
Commander Blistig had set his garrison to those efforts, and his soldiers worked tirelessly, displaying extraordinary compassion, as if answering their own need to respond to the enemy's triumph beyond the walls. Coltaine, his Wickans and the Seventh had given their lives for those the guard now tended. Solicitude was fast becoming an overwhelming gesture.
Yet other tensions rode the air.