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than Tang's.

Inside Ruha's mind, the wail of the wind became a roar, then a howling sand cloud billowed across the boil- ing plain. Cypress groaned, and the cyclops turned to face the storm. The brute took a deep breath and began to blow, but his breath was no match for the fury of the gale. The sand blasted over him, and he vanished into

the tempest.

Cypress grunted, his empty-eyed head recoiling as though the storm had struck him physically. He backed away from the wagon, trembling and sputtering and madly scratching at his temples. Tang's guards charged, filling the spicehouse with a tremendous clamor as their blades struck their foe's impenetrable scales. Several of the blades snapped on impact, but most either bounced off or became lodged without causing any damage. The

dragon lashed out with fangs, claws, and tail, littering the floor with the shattered bodies of Tang's loyal guards.

Finding herself completely in control of her own body-if somewhat exhausted and fuzzy-headed-Ruha rose to her feet and swung a leg over the side of the wagon.

"No!" Wei Dao shrieked.

The princess leapt toward Ruha, causing the witch to hesitate just long enough for Tang to grab her by the shoulder.

"If you leave wagon, we all die." The prince's words were slurred, and he seemed to be having trouble focus- ing his eyes. "Only fear of burning blossoms saves us now."

"I know that." Ruha scowled, struggling against the roaring storm in her head to remember why she had decided to throw the fireball in the first place. "But I

must attack… while we have the advantage."

You have nothing.

Cypress cast aside the bodies of two more guards, then pointed his long snout in Tang's direction. The dragon was far from destroyed, but he looked as haggard as

Ruha, and more than a few of his thick scales had been pulled or cut away. Tang called something to his surviv- ing guards, who looked rather relieved and backed away.

"But wu-jen is under my protection," the prince said, speaking in Common.

Your protection? This time, Ruha heard Cypress-though whether it was intended or an accident of his anger, she did not know. She is a Harper, sent to take

Yanseldara away from me!

Tang cringed at the dragon's anger, but did not back down. "Nevertheless, while she remains in Ginger

Palace, she is under my protection." The prince glanced at his battered guards and nodded once. They leveled their weapons and took a single step forward. "If you do not agree, we finish this now-and you lose Yanseldara anyway."

"Are you mad. Husband?" Wei Dao cried. "Give him

barbarian! She causes too much trouble already."

Tang glared at Wei Dao. "I hear enough from you, Wife.

I am Prince of Shou Lung, and to call me mad is treason."

Wei Dao's face darkened to an angry ocher, but she obediently lowered her gaze and mumbled, "Please to for- give outburst, Merciful Husband."

Cypress observed the exchange in silence, then pointed his snout in Tang's direction. Why all this trouble for a barbarian, Young Prince? he demanded, still allowing

Ruha to eavesdrop. Could it be you have fallen in love?

"That is not your concern," Tang replied. "I have ylang oil by evening. Please to bring Lady Feng, and we make

exchange."

Cypress stepped forward, bringing his nostrils almost to within arm's reach of Ruha. You are fortunate that I

understand the power of love. Harper. Treat Tang well.

You owe him your life.

Ruha brought her fireball around. So exhausted was

Cypress that he barely pulled his head away in time to keep her from stuffing the sphere into his nostrils.

"I'll treat Tang as well as he deserves, I assure you."

Ruha said.

The dragon backed away and swung his snout toward

Tang.

The prince listened for a moment, then pointed to the door. "You bring Lady Feng. I see to wu-jen."

Cypress allowed his empty gaze to linger on Ruha for a moment, then turned away. With a weary beat of his wings, he lifted himself into the air and flew out the door.

Tang waited until he was gone, then turned to Ruha.

"Perhaps now you understand wisdom of my actions."

The prince's voice was smug and condescending. "Or do you still believe Cypress is destroyed?"

Ruha shook her head. "I do not-but how could he have survived?" The lasal haze inside her mind was already beginning to clear, but it had not yet grown thin enough for her to understand what she had seen. "I

blasted him into a thousand pieces."

"You destroy body, not spirit," Tang explained, assum- ing a superior air. "Cypress is dracolich. He hides spirit inside gem-"

"Wise Prince," Wei Dao interrupted. "Cypress says she is Harper. Is it prudent to tell her so much?"

By the scowl Tang shot nis wife, Ruha could see that the prince wanted to impress her with his proscribed knowledge-and she wanted him to. The witch allowed an expectant gaze to linger on the prince's face for a moment, then rolled her eyes and looked away, letting out a deliberately loud sigh of disgust.

The silent put-down worked as no verbal upbraid could have. Tang's face reddened, and he snapped at Wei Dao,

"I decide what is prudent!" When the princess lowered her gaze, Tang looked back to Ruha. "Cypress hides his spirit inside gem. After his body is destroyed, he pos- sesses new corpse and consumes old one."

"But the sharks ate his old one," Ruha said, thinking aloud. "And that is why he smells like rotten fish now. He is eating the creatures that ate him!"

Tang nodded. "It is impossible to stop process. Even if you burn old corpse and spread ashes, he can find them and swallow them. When he has eaten enough, he becomes dracolich again."

"How close is he now?"

Tang shrugged. "It does not matter to you. For your protection, I must not allow you to leave Ginger Palace."

"Is that by Cypress's command, or yours?"

"By dragon's-and he warns me you have no gratitude.

He says you do not repay my bravery as woman should."

Ruha's eyes narrowed. "And how is that?"

The prince smiled. "Ginger Palace still has need ofwu- jen. Our union would be most blissful."

"Prince Tang, that will never be," Ruha said, speaking sharply. She climbed out of the wagon and moved several paces away. "But I have a better way to show my grati- tude. I shall let you leave the wagon before I throw my fireball into it."

The VeUed Dragon

In the blink of an eye, Ruha was surrounded by Tang's battered and bloodied guards, each holding a long-bladed halberd or square-tipped sword within an inch other body. Wei Dao stood behind them, looking more than a little disappointed that she had not been able to draw her dagger quickly enough to kill the witch before her hus- band's soldiers got in the way.