Scabrous backs bristled into heaps of stone. Heads shriveled to black nubs. Flesh melted, and creatures died, and the dragon winged on.
Eir and Garm crawled from beneath the stone beasts.
The world had been transformed. From the northern horizon to the place where Eir stood, the land had been blasted and fused and crystallized. Hundreds of minions of the great beast now stood as statues.
Eir hoped that Caithe and Rytlock and Zojja had found cover, but of course, the most important question was-had Snaff survived?
The dragon's ravening power had roared through the whole of the sanctum, crystallizing everything. Even Big Snaff had turned to stone.
But within the belly of the golem, Little Snaff hung unharmed. Gemstones flashed around his head.
Snaff was deep within the dragon's mind now. He had sunk past its consciousness and delved into the recesses of the lizard brain. This was the reptilian place beneath all that crystalline thought. It was a place of breath and blood, hunger and lust.
Here, Snaff was not just a maddening idea. He was an irresistible itch bedded deep in the spine of the beast.
Lungs, forget to breathe.
Heart, forget to beat.
Wings, fold.
Eyes, close.
The lizard brain battled back. It struggled to regain control.
Dragon, fall.
Eir drew more exploding arrows from her quiver, nocked them, and drew back her bow as Kralkatorrik approached for another pass.
But something was different this time. The dark center of the storm where it flew had begun to twist. Sand and wind and blackness knotted themselves around it in a churning ball. Lightning raked out from it and split the sky and lashed the ground. The crackling thunder gave way to an omnipresent roar.
Still, the wyrm turned, twisting the storm tighter and tighter around it. Here, a wing tip slashed through the black shroud; there, a claw raked free before being swallowed again. Golden beams of ravening light flashed all around that whirling core.
Then the Elder Dragon seemed to ignite. Fire roared out from it, the heat melting the sands, destroying the minions that raced along below.
Eir fell back into the archway, shielding herself.
Kralkatorrik shot by overhead, eating up the air. Its flaming form caused the stone walls of Glint's sanctuary to explode with heat.
A moment later, the burning dragon plunged toward the desert beyond.
Kralkatorrik fell like the fist of a god.
It smoked.
It roared.
It plunged into the sands.
A white-hot shock wave swept out, leveling any beast it struck. From the point of impact, a vast plume of sand hurled skyward, the particles catching fire as they flew. Still, the massive beast plowed through the ground, ripping a long furrow in the desert. Pyroclasts rolled out all around it. The world shuddered as the beast tore it open.
Then, at long last, the shaking stopped, and the fires flared out, and the cloud of debris lifted. It revealed a deep crater torn through the desert floor, a black and smoldering scar. At its farthest point thrashed an Elder Dragon. It was on its back, giant wings pounding the tortured ground, but it could not right itself, could not rise.
"Kralkatorrik is down!" shouted Eir. "Kralkatorrik is within reach!"
"I've got to go!" Rytlock said, lifting the crystalline lance.
"Then go!" Caithe replied. "The dragon has thinned the ranks for me."
Hundreds of dragon minions had been turned to stone, but dozens more clambered across the desert toward the south gate.
"You can't guard the gate alone!" Rytlock said.
Caithe's eyes blazed. "I have to! Go!"
The charr nodded and ran. In his claws, he carried the crystalline lance.
Before him, the glassy ground sloped away into a great black crater, wide and deep. Rytlock bounded into it and ran down the ragged rift. Crystals cracked beneath his claws as he went. Ahead, at the terminus of the great scar in the ground, lay the mountainous monster.
Kralkatorrik was upside down, thrashing with his breast bared.
Rytlock ran on, lifting the crystalline lance. The rift seemed impossibly long. He only hoped he could reach the dragon before the dragon's minions reached Caithe.
Caithe stood alone in the south gate as dozens of beasts came her way.
First was a crystalline coyote, enormous and whooping. Its rocklike teeth snapped at Caithe.
She feinted back and grasped one stony whisker and flung herself onto the coyote's back. She plunged her white-bladed stiletto into the creature's neck and twisted, ripping through its spine. The coyote's whoop devolved into a ragged gasp of pain, and it collapsed.
Caithe leaped free, only to see more of the dragon's minions pour past her. Horned lizards and giant rats and geckos and tarantulas and jackals and snakes all thundered by, heading for Big Snaff in the center of the sanctum.
Caithe rushed after the bounding horde. She jumped from beast to beast, ripping out their throats and pounding their skulls into the ground as she leaped away, squealing, but still the others ran on.
They converged on Big Snaff.
Snaff lay embedded in the deepest layers of the dragon's mind, choking off breath and pulse. The dragon could not find him here, could not root him out. It could not even right itself.
But its minions found Snaff elsewhere.
There came a crash-stone shattering-and the rumble of claws.
Claws dug, and jaws gibbered.
Snaff opened his eyes.
Big Snaff had toppled and shattered, and the monsters were on him.
Fangs snapped.
Muzzles bled.
Hungry. Angry. Insatiable.
Teeth clamped on Snaff. They bit through him. There was blunt pain and the sudden certainty that he was dying.
More teeth seized him.
Bones broke.
Breath burst through his wounds.
Blood foamed out.
Fangs met in his stomach.
Rytlock was galloping toward the downed dragon when it suddenly rolled over and righted itself. Its holocaustal eyes glared down the length of the crater at the running charr, a stone lance in his claws. Then Kralkatorrik spread massive wings and beat them against the air and rose from what should have been its grave.
"No!" roared Rytlock.
The dragon lifted easily away and climbed into the sky.
"No!" Rytlock bellowed, hurling the spear.
It arced up, cracked off the shoulder of the beast, bounding away. The lance fell, useless, in the crater.
Already, Kralkatorrik was out of reach. Its mile-long wings thrummed the air, blasting flat every creature on the desert below.
Rytlock Brimstone fell to his knees.
Winds buffeted.
The dragon retreated, unhearing, uncaring. Its wings boiled the clouds as it climbed. It ripped through them and rose, leaving only a troubled wake across the heavens.
SUNDERING
Logan's hammer shattered the knee of an ogre. It toppled like a tree and smashed into one of its comrades, which crashed on top of a charr. A second charr vaulted onto the fallen ogre and ripped out its throat-only to be cleaved by a great axe.
It was a bloodbath in the courtyard of Ebonhawke. Seraph and Vanguard, Blood Legion and Iron Legion, ogre and hyena, fought and fell. The battle roared like a ravenous monster that would not rest until it had eaten them all. At the heart of that maelstrom, Logan Thackeray held the line by sheer force of will and rallied the defenders for one last, desperate surge.
Then, above the fortress city, a greater monster arrived. Its wings blackened the sky, and the beat of those wings pounded down on the warriors below. Ogres and hyenas looked up and wailed in glee. Humans and charr groaned in dread.
Kralkatorrik had returned.
It shrieked, a sound bigger than the sky.
Every mortal creature dropped to its knees.
Kralkatorrik's eyes lit, and twin beams of ravening power raked down upon the warriors. Charr hackles hardened to spikes. Human muscles clenched to stone.
The ogres grinned to see their enemies transformed. It turned them to rock but left them puny-punishment for their resistance. The beams blazed through the courtyard, catching every last human and charr.