CHAPTER 27

The Taking of the Trove

Early Summer, 3E1602,

[This Year]


A full tenday had passed since the army of Jord had ridden away from the keep, and Elyn and Mala had filled each of those days with frantic activity, arranging for supplies to be transported to the Host, planning for the defense of Jord should another foe fall upon them, conducting the business of State. At times Elyn was called upon to sit in judgement over some dispute, and she detested this role of governance. Yet amazingly, Mala proved to be an invaluable counsellor in these instances, for at last, it seemed, something of worth was asked of her. Over the past month Elyn had observed Mala’s sour disposition giving way to one that in manner was softer, for although her temperament yet remained somewhat austere, a sense of fair play now was evident. Not to say that Mala was not firm, but rather to say that now she was more thoughtful. And more than once when Elyn had consulted her, Mala had balanced the alternatives against one another, asking if there was aught else that bore upon the problem ere rendering her assessment; and when she had garnered all the information available, step by step Mala would logically and forthrightly come to a conclusion, an appraisal based upon fact rather than upon preconceived notions, an evaluation that Elyn found herself in agreement with at nearly every turn. Aye, without warning, Mala had been thrust into a role of great responsibility, and she grandly rose to meet the challenge, breaking through the shell of her past narrowness as she did so.

And now it was the beginning of the eleventh day since the Host had been gone from the keep, and on this morning Elyn felt a deep sense of foreboding, for she gauged that the Harlingar had stood before the gates of Kachar for at least four days, given the pace of a Vanadurin long-ride; surely the struggle had already begun: even now, Harlingar could be failing in battle, and this Warrior Maiden was not there to lend the strength of her arms.

Shaking her head to clear it of these bodeful thoughts, Elyn looked up from the ledger before her. “Wheat,” she announced to the delegation that had been standing in silence before her, a dozen or so Men, “oats, grain: that will feed both Harlingar and horse.”

“Aye, Princess, that it would, could we break the soil.” The speaker was an elderly Man dressed in the rough breeks and heavy jerkin and thick boots of a crofter. “But the plain truth is, most o’ the Men ha’e gone off to this Dwarf War, and there be no’ enough left to do the tillin’.”

Elyn turned to Mala sitting at the end of the table.

“Are there enough so that the most hale and fit could do all the plowing, and the less fit do the harrowing, and the remaining do the sowing?” Mala’s eye swept across the delegates, noting that some saw what she was driving at. “Can you not join forces in this time of trial, each doing that for which he is best suited, and by joining together doing it all?”

“Aye, Lady, that we might be able to do,” answered the spokesman. “By workin’ all the land in common, ’stead o’ that which be ours alone, it might be done.”

“Then I suggest that you go forth and do so,” responded Mala.

The delegates turned to the Princess, and smiling, she waved them away. And awkwardly saluting this Princess, this leather-clad, Warrior-Maiden Steward of Jord, they withdrew.

When they were gone: “Ah, Mala, you are a jewel!” exclaimed Elyn.

“Nonsense,” growled Mala, though it was plain to see that she was pleased with herself, and pleased as well that the Princess considered her worthy. “They would have come to the same decision among themselves. Crofters have always aided one another. . just never on such a grand scale.”

“Even so, my Aunt, you lend the Court a noble air of wisdom,” Elyn replied, “much needed in these dark times.”

Shuffling the papers before her, Mala cast her eyes down, and the Princess knew that the prim Mala was embarrassed.

“Well, now,” said her aunt at last, “what shall we do about more waggons?”

Sighing, Elyn looked at the tally sheets. “As supplies are used by the Host, wains will come empty. These will return here to be refilled with other cargo, and then it’s back to Kaagor Pass. The trick is to ascertain just how many will be in this continual round, and to determine how many more are needed to supplement those. . ”


It was nearly two hours later when the frantic bugle call sounded from the walls: A-raw, a-rahn! A-raw, a-rahn! A-raw, a-rahn! [A foe, alert!] Dropping her quill pen, papers scattering, Elyn leapt up from the table, her chair toppling to the floor, falling with a crash behind. Snatching up her saber, she dashed from the room, Mala hurrying to right the seat, and gather up the strewn documents. The horn continued to bell.

As the Princess dashed across the bailey, the iron-clad gates of the keep wall were slammed to, the great bar blanging into place, the portcullis rattling down. Glancing up at the sentinel atop the barbican, her gaze followed his outstretched arm, and he was pointing east, up into the sky. And there, hurtling down from the heights came a great ebon shape: ’Twas a Dragon.

Black Kalgalath had arrived.

And all trembled at his coming.


Elyn gained the top of the wall as the mighty Drake whelmed down into the court, the air from his wings booming like thunder. Men blanched with fear, and many ran. Horses shrieked in terror, bucketing and lashing out their heels. Windows and doors slammed to. And the Dragon roared-“RRRRAAAWWWW!”-his voice crashing through the air, so loud that it burst eardrums, and blood ran from nostrils. Windows shattered, and tiles crashed down, and the roofs of stalls fell inward.

Atop the wall, Elyn of Jord clapped her hands o’er her ears and wrenched in pain and fell to her knees clutching her head. And she trembled in fear, for a calamity beyond measure had come upon the keep of the Harlingar, and she knew nought to do to stave it off.

And from the ebon Drake there came a massive sound, a sound like immense brass slabs dragging one upon the other, booming together, belling, grating; and within this hammering din, clangorous reverberations formed into words, speech: “Where is this Elgo Drake Slayer? I would meet him in combat and take my revenge. Where is this Man who would dare to fell one of the Dragonkith? Come forth, pygmy, and meet your doom!”

Silence met Black Kalgalath’s challenge.

“RRRRAAAWWWW!” came his roar again.

FOOSH! A vast jet of flames hurtled from his throat and thundered into the stables, engulfing the mews in unquenchable fire; horses trapped inside shrieked in terror, those in the outside pen hammered through the fence or leapt over the barrier in their fear.

“Elgo,” came the brazen clang, “come out. Face your slayer.”

“My brother is dead, foul Drake, beyond your vengeance.” Elyn’s voice rang out across the courtyard, the words seeming small and shrill.

Black Kalgalath’s mighty head swung about, his yellow eyes fixing upon this Human creature standing atop the fortress wall above the iron gate.

Elyn turned her head aside and thrust a hand out toward the Dragon, tracing the sign of Adon, a sign of warding, within the air, for she had heard that Drake’s eyes would capture the soul of one who was unwary.

Kalgalath’s voice boomed outward: “Who has cheated me of my pleasure? What fool thwarted my revenge?”

“The Dwarves of Kachar,” came Elyn’s reply. “They slew the Liberator of Blackstone; they slew my twin.”

Kalgalath’s hideous visage once again faced the castle. “Aranor of Jord,” he roared, “sire of this Dragon murderer now dead, then would I take my vengeance upon you. Are you hiding in fear? Do you quaver within your halls?”

“Nay, foul Drake”-Elyn’s voice held the timbre of one pushed to the limit-“he stands before the gates of Kachar and seeks a tribute of blood from the murderers of his heir.”

Black Kalgalath swung his face back to Elyn, and she listened to his words in growing horror. “Hear me then, O Sister of arrogant Elgo: He who would presume to slay one of my kind shall suffer, and if not him, then his sire, or his get, or his kith. For now Sleeth’s ledge will be empty come the time of the Maelstrom, and there will be a struggle to see who moves up, and some may even think to challenge me! For this alone would I seek the death of those who cause it, but even moreso would I slay the one who has slain one of mine.

“By your words do I know where to seek my vengeance for this runt Elgo’s wrongdoing: Kachar is where I shall go, for there will I find King Aranor, sire to the presumptuous one. There, too, shall I find the foul-beards who robbed me of my pleasure, and they shall know that what is mine is mine, and that includes the revenge I am owed.

“But first I shall take that which is my due: the stolen bed of Sleeth.”

Kalgalath cast forth his awareness, and below the castle he sensed the gold. And as Elyn watched in helpless desperation. BOOM! Black Kalgalath whelmed his massive tail into the main tower, shattering it at the base, and slowly it toppled outward, crashing like thunder down into the bailey, brick and stone smashing asunder, and inside could be heard the screams of the dying. The Dragon slithered up over the wrack and onto the ruin left behind, moving forward into the remaining part of the castle, his mighty claws rending and tearing, shattering the structure as he went, his power, his strength, beyond measure. And always there came the shrieks of those caught within the bursting halls and collapsing walls, and the sobbing and moaning of those trapped within the rubble. At last he stopped his advance, and down dug the great Drake, ripping aside the stone floor, blocks sent flying, slabs tumbling, stone plates shattering upon impact.

And then the treasure was exposed unto the daylight, gold glittering in the Sun, jewels sparkling, a hoard revealed. And Kalgalath was well pleased by its volume, though he wished for more. And he cast his awareness forth into the prize, but no small silver horn did he sense. Andrak would be disappointed, though the thought of the Mage being thwarted gave pleasure to the Dragon.

Reaching down with a great webbed claw, the black Drake grasped a clench of the trove and raised it up before his eyes, gripping it in his left clutch. It glittered in the sunlight, and felt smooth, pleasurable to his clasp. Tilting his clawed foot, he allowed the treasure to cascade from his webbing and fall back into the trove, and gold struck gold, a chinging music. But how to bear the hoard back unto his lair?

Turning, he came face to face with the Human that had stood atop the wall. Grim visaged, she bore a bow fitted with fletched arrow. Letting fly, the shaft sped at Kalgalath’s eye, but ere it struck, the nictitating membrane flashed downward o’er long slitted pupil, and the bolt crashed into the crystalline layer and fell harmlessly to earth. Kalgalath’s brazen laughter rang forth, and he offhandedly slapped her aside. She was hurled backwards into a ruin of a wall, whelming into loosened bricks that toppled upon impact, cascading, crashing to the floor, Elyn fallen among the rubble. And she moved no more.

Slithering out from the wreckage, the Drake made his way to the barbican, and metal shrieked as he reft aside the portcullis as if it were no more than an insignificant hindrance. And he slid under the arch and to the iron gates and whelmed the midpoint of the rightmost one, buckling the cladding and splintering the interior wood, shattering the great bar. Hurling aside the broken beam, twice more he smote upon the thick plating, hammering it concave. He eyed his work, and then ripped the incurved metal from its hinges, and stripped away the ruptured wood and the outer cladding from the ruined gate. Retaining the inner plate, Black Kalgalath dragged the thick concave sheet behind as he slid back unto the shattered tower, leaving the great iron dent lying in the forecourt.

When he slithered once more to the trove, the Human was gone, but it mattered not. Reaching down and scooping up two clawed grips of riches, the Drake awkwardly made his way to the bent metal, placing the wealth within. Sliding back, the Dragon reached down into the treasury and grasped more, returning to the curved plating and depositing the plunder. Trip after trip he made, transferring the trove from the wrecked treasury to the great iron dish, until it was done.

Again the Dragon cast out his senses, and once more affirmed that there was no small silver horn within his purview. And he laughed at what he knew would be Andrak’s rage.

The hiding Humans did not escape his attention, for he detected many cowering or trapped within the wreckage or fleeing across the plain. And so he spewed forth fire, blasting the places where he knew these cringing creatures huddled in fear, setting structures aflame, slaying horses, scorching the land.

Looking about, the Drake saw wreckage and flame and death, and was well pleased with his handiwork. And clenching the treasure-laden iron plate with grasping talons, hind claw as well as fore, bellowing a deafening roar, once again he took to wing, his great black leathery pinions straining up into the air, haling the massive trove into the sky, struggling to gain altitude, moving eastward all the while.

And to the end, from the safety of the hiding place where she had dragged the Princess, Mala clasped the unconscious Elyn unto her bosom and watched Black Kalgalath, the Destroyer, the Pillager, wreak his havoc and then fly away, hatred in her eye.

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