“And if I do not fail?”
“Then I become king.”
Monja waited for the dragon-man to continue talking, but he did not. Somewhere inside the observatory, Sallah screamed.
“Is this not what you want?” The palms of Monja’s hands began to itch.
“Mine is a long life, and I have many tomorrows before me.”
The dragon-man looked back at the halfling. “If I were to blink, your life would escape me entirely. Time is my friend.” He turned back to gaze at the observatory. “It is not yours.”
Monja felt the ship inch forward, right toward the open doorway. The Phoenix moved without the halfling willing her to, but Monja knew that the elemental within still obeyed her. The shaman wanted to charge the airship straight into the place and lay about with her until everything came tumbling down, but she knew she couldn’t.
She had to trust her friends. She had to give them a chance.
She had come along with Kandler, Esprë, Burch and the others to help—to heal them when they needed it and to fly the airship. As a shaman, the need to aid others ran thick in her blood, but she had to admit that she would have come along just so she could keep flying the airship.
Monja had spent much of her life soaring through the air on the back of one glidewing or another. Since childhood, she’d taken to the sky whenever she could find one of the winged lizards ready to give her a ride.
Soaring above the waving grasses of the Talenta Plains gave the halfling the kind of perspective she could find nowhere else. In the air, she could leave her earthbound problems—which were mostly other people’s problems— behind and revel in the vibrancy of life.
Flying the airship didn’t feel the same.
A glidewing flew in concert with the winds. It rode the updrafts and downdrafts and currents and eddies of the sky. It danced with nature.
The airship represented power. She did not respect the weather but defied it. Nothing stood in the way of the Phoenix.
Monja recognized the irony that a fiery elemental—the quintessence of a natural force—powered the airship. Trapped in the rune-crusted restraining arcs, the ring of fire had been harnessed to allow the craft to own the skies. Up here in the air, it could challenge anything— even a dragon.
To have all that power in her hands intoxicated Monja. She took every spare shift at the helm that she could cadge from the others. Even though she had to stand on the middle spars to be able to see over the bridge’s console, she spent almost all of her moments behind the wheel with a gleeful grin on her face.
To have all that power now, it seemed a shame not to use it. Monja felt the Phoenix edge forward again, and she reined the airship in hard.
From somewhere in the tower, she heard a strange bellow. It could only be the sound of a warforged’s scream.
“Are you a coward?” the dragon-man asked.
Wondering what her father would think of her, Monja felt sick. What would he do in such a situation? Would he tolerate the dragon-man’s taunting? Or would he make the vicious creature pay?
As lathon of the tribes of the Talenta Plains, Halpum knew all about war. He had fought bitter struggles in his youth to prevent other ambitious laths from destroying their tribe or bringing it to heel, but in his elder years, he had shunned the horrors of the battlefield for the comforts of the campfire.
It had been he who had represented all of the Talenta tribes at the peace talks that brought an end to the Last War. He had brought his fractious peoples together not through strength of arms but force of will. He had used that same skill with others to help forge the peace that now held over most of Khorvaire, ever since the signing of the Treaty of Thronehold.
He was no coward. Nor was his daughter.
Monja smiled as she wiped her hands on her shirt and then readjusted them on the airship’s wheel. Despite removing her fingers from the controls for a moment, the fire elemental had not moved the ship an inch. It knew who held sway over it—at least now that she held sway over herself.
“I am content as I am,” Monja said, the words flowing from her like wind under wings.
The dragon-man scowled.
56
Kandler felt his heart stop.
Until that moment, he’d been able to hear his blood pounding through his veins. Despite the fact that he could not move, that Esprë had paralyzed him with her deadly powers, his heart had hammered away in his chest, faster than ever.
When he saw his daughter reach for the rope and begin the long climb back up to where the dragon queen rampaged, his heart halted in mid-beat. To have come all this way and fought so hard to save the girl, he couldn’t bear to watch her charge off to sacrifice herself on his behalf.
“No,” Kandler rasped, bringing his arms to his chest. The thrill he felt at being able to move again, even so weakly, paled at the pain he felt spreading across his tightening ribs. It felt like someone had sat on his sternum, meaning to crush the life from him.
The justicar wanted to say more, to call out to Esprë, to ask her—beg her—to stop, but he couldn’t suck enough air into his lungs to do more than whisper, “No.”
Esprë didn’t hear him. If she did, she didn’t look back.
He knew she couldn’t be that cold-blooded to him, not after all the years they’d lived together as father and daughter. He suspected that she feared she might lose her resolve if she turned around and saw him lying there on the floor, dying. If that was true, then his only hope right now was to get her to do just that.
“Esprë.” He tried to shout the words, but they came out as barely more than a whisper. He tried again, but with results no better.
Clutching his chest, he rolled over and spotted Burch. The effort took everything he had. When he tried to say the shifter’s name, nothing came out.
Burch lay there before him, curled in a ball, his eyes clenched shut. Frost tipped the shifter’s dark mane and furry arms, and he shivered as if someone had turned his insides to ice.
Kandler reached out and slapped Burch’s arm. The shifter’s yellow eyes popped open. They burned with determination.
Despite the cold that gripped him, Burch unfolded himself and rolled onto his back. Kandler saw the shifter’s eyes light up when he spotted Esprë climbing the rope.
“Esp-prë!” Burch growled.
Kandler fell back and stared up at the girl. His vision had been closing in on him since his heart had stopped, and now it seemed that he gazed up at her through a long dark tunnel. She was the only light at the end of it.
She’d gotten almost halfway to the upper floor by now, but she’d stopped climbing now. Her shoulders shook, and Kandler feared that she might lose her grip and come crashing down on the unforgiving stone. He tried to call out to her once more, but he couldn’t find the breath.
“Save them,” Esprë said, her voice raw. She did not look back down. “Don’t let them die.”
Then she started climbing upward again.
Greffykor nodded at the girl’s words. Then he chanted a few phrases in his native tongue. As he did, one of his claws began to glow.
The silver dragon reached out with a talon on that claw and tapped Kandler in the chest just as his world went dark. It felt like the tip of that talon might stab right through the justicar’s ribs. Instead, the glow flowed from the talon into Kandler’s form.
His heart started beating again. It felt weak at first, but within three beats it pounded as strong as ever. He opened his eyes and saw that Esprë had nearly made it to the upper floor.