1161 lines
45 KiB
Plaintext
1161 lines
45 KiB
Plaintext
Virta 7, 0119
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"Journal Entry... Journal Entry... Dammit, how does he write
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those things?" She cursed and threw the pen aside. She sat on the
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cold rock, staring at the pen where it lay, then rose to retrieve it.
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"I'm never gonna be able to keep a record. Damn you, Ken, how do you
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do it?" she shouted at the trees.
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"He doesn't."
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She whirled around, looking for the source. "Who said that?"
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"I did."
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"The book?" She stared down at the blank book she'd been
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attempting to write her thoughts down in.
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"The book."
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"Who are you?"
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"My name is Luke. I'm the neighborhood AI. The book is just a
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receiving unit."
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She bit at her nail. "I see. And Ken put you here to monitor
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me?"
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"Not really. More to just talk to you, if I thought you needed
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talking to."
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"O-kay. So, tell me, Luke, how does Shardik keep his Journal?"
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"Dave writes them."
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"Dave? The Shardik AI?"
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"Yes. He and Shardik made a deal a long time ago. Dave watches
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everything Ken does, so the two of them collaborate. The only thing
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Ken does is review the day's entry, and with biocybe that takes just
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a few minutes. Sometimes he stops and adds material to the entry, if
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he thinks it's important, but not usually."
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"Would you be willing to..."
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"Do the same for you? Of course. That's part of the deal."
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"Okay. Can you tell me other things?"
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"Like?"
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"Where the Hell am I?"
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"You're in the sector known colloquially as 'BackWater.' It's
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major claim to fame is a powerful tradition, if you will, of
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archaism."
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"Meaning?"
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"Meaning people still wear swords around here."
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"Pendor never had a 'Dark Ages!' It sprung up as a high-tech
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colony world!"
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"That's why there's a BackWater. People thought it should."
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She thought about that. "Great. I guess that's why I've got
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the funky clothes and the carved staff and the necklace." Her tone
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became sarcastic. "So, can people do magic in BackWater?"
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"Yes."
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"Yes?" she asked, incredulous. "How?"
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"There's still a local AI. I've got the forces at my command."
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"Then you decide who can do magic, as well."
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"Sort of. Look, Miss Moran, we can talk all day, but I should
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tell you that, as far as most people know, there are no SDisks in
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BackWater, so if you plan on getting anywhere I'd suggest you put
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those boots back on and start walking."
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She pulled her boots on, put away the pen, but decided to keep
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the book out. "So, how does magic work in BackWater?"
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"Well, there are rituals, forces, places, empowerments. All the
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stuff of a Dungeons n' Dragons game. Think of BackWater the same way
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Shardik thinks of The Great Hall... as a bad literary device." Kathy
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laughed. "I try to balance the game by introducing portends, omens,
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and such."
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"If people are playing in what is basically a giant role-playing
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game, can they die?"
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"I won't lie to you, Miss Moran. Yes. One thing even
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Pendorians can't do is raise the dead. If you lose a swordfight and
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you're dead, then you're dead. So far, no one has died in BackWater,
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but it's only thirteen years old."
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"Oh. Luke, do me a favor? Call me Kitty."
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"Okay... Kitty it is. Let me make a note of that."
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"Luke... how do you do some of the magic. Can you read minds?"
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"Yes. I'm a rarity of sorts... A telepathic AI. But it takes
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time for me to tune someone in. The longer you stay in BackWater,
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the easier it will be for me to read/write you." Kathy chuckled at
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that. "But you're pretty easy. I can already empath a lot off of
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you."
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"Is that good or bad?"
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"I think it's good. It means that if you want, you'll be able
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to learn BackWater magic."
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"Is that any good in the outside world?" she asked.
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"Not very likely. Oh, and I should also tell you this. I know
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you're an immigrant, one of the few, in fact, that made it through
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the Hall without change. That makes you almost as rare as I am. But
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you went from being a 20'th century Terran to a second-century
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Pendorian, where the technology is by far and away superior. Around
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here, though, we're back to second-century Earth again, only with
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swords, castles, wizards and princesses."
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"Where am I?"
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"You're almost dead center of the sector. About forty miles to
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the north is the city of Kendre. If we traveled south for a couple
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of months you'd reach the Vassalo mountains, on the other side of
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which is the Tangent Arcology. Travel East and we'd reach the the
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town of Akkhen, which has steam power. To the far, far west of us is
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The Village. Those are the borders, mostly, of BackWater."
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"And the extreme north of Kendre?"
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"Well, a few months travel north of Kendre will get you to the
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Nogero plains, which is not a nice place to visit. It's cold, wet,
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and uncomfortable."
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"Let's go to Kendre, first."
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She walked for a few miles and sat down to take a rest, taking a
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few sips from her waterskin. "Kitty!"
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"What?" she said.
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"Look up!" She looked up and saw a black, vaguely stylized
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shape flying over head. "What's that?" she asked.
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"That, Kathy, was a Dragon. Don't tell anyone; they're a
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secret. They were released yesterday."
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"You're kidding."
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"I am not. Funny how no one blinked twice when Shardik ordered
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a hundred genetanks sixty feet on a side."
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"Dragons?"
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"That was a black Dragon. They're the largest."
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"Tell me something, Luke. I thought Pendor used the Metric
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system."
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"You're lucky I'm giving it to you in miles and feet! The
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official units of measurement around here are cubits, stone, and my
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favorite, the furlong per fortnight!"
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She thought about that for a second and said, "Isn't that a very
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silly number?"
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"Well, figuring you can only walk about ten hours a day, and do
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about three miles per hour, you're doing 3360 furlongs per
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fortnight."
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"Guess so." She stood and started walking. "I wonder if I can
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get a ride from a Dragon."
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*WHY DON'T YOU ASK FOR ONE?*
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Kitty grabbed her head and screamed. That 'pathing was
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extremely loud.
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*I'm sorry. I didn't mean to yell.* That 'path was so low
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Kitty barely heard it. She looked up from between her hand. "Who
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was that?"
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*Me.* She scanned left and right, and there was an enormous
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motion of black a few hundred yards away. She watched carefully and
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the motion resolved into what she guessed was a Dragon.
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"Hi..." she said, timidly.
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*Hello. What are you?*
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"My name's Kitty."
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*No, what are you?*
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"I'm a human."
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*Oh. Okay. Now I know what a 'human' is. And you called me a
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Dragon. I think my name is Pendor.*
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"I think that's the name of the world."
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*No, I'm pretty sure it's my name, too.* Kitty shook her head,
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thinking idly that if the other dragons had the same confusion, they
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were all in a great deal of trouble. The dragon spoke again. *Are
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you a Male or a Female?*
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"I'm a woman, if that's what you mean."
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*Yes. I am a Male, I assume. You said you wanted a ride?*
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"Yeah, sure. Can you fly?"
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*I don't know. I think I can. At least, when I think about it
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I feel sure that I understand how I do it. Let me try.* The dragon
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spread his wings wide and pulled them in, flapping them. He gathered
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his massive hindlegs underneath him and with a massive lunge took to
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the air, sending huge gouts of dust towards Kitty. She shielded her
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eyes, and when she finally looked up, she could see him making lazy
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circles in the sky. He turned a few circles and then landed in the
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grove he had awoken in.
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*My memory tells me I am a newborn creature, a 'Tleil.' Are
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you?*
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Kitty thought about it. "I don't know, really."
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*Can you climb on and talk about it?* Pendor easily extended a
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foreleg, and Kathy used it as a springboard to jump up onto his back.
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His hide was thick and leathery, with a pronounced scaling that she
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could hold onto with ease. She pulled her jacket close around her,
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and held on for dear life. Pendor again launched himself into the
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sky.
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Once in flight, holding on was easier, but the wind was a wicked
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cold and strong, threatening to blow her off. She was more terrified
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than she'd ever been in her life, and yet, the sight of the Ring, the
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ground, sliding by effortlessly underneath her gave her a sensation
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of freedom she'd never felt before. Stranger, still, was the feeling
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of Pendor's monstrous shoulder sinews stretching and flexing
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underneath her thighs, which spurred in her mind thoughts both wild
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and lewd. She idly thought that if Ken knew what he had done to her
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by putting her in this predicament, he might have reconsidered.
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She was also more than a little confused. Was she feeling lust
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for Pendor? Especially when this Dragon seemed to be just a touch
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naive. She shook her head. It had been less than a week since she
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and Shardik had first made love. Since she had lost her virginity,
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the way she had wanted to. Not at the hands of some random whacko in
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a back alley, the way her physical maidenhood had been taken, but in
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the arms of someone she had trusted back on Terra, long before there
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was a Pendor, and now here, where she could tell he was still the
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same, still crazy, still setting his sights on every woman he met,
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and yet being so unfathomably lovable about it. Ken had taken her
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virginity, the way she had wanted. But he was the only one. What
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did she know of other men, much less Dragons?
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That's it, she told herself, I'm just confused.
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*You said you did not know if you were a Tleil. How can that
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be?* the dragon asked, interrupting her train of thought.
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"I was just... born again, about a month ago." She explained
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her homeworld, as best as she could, and how she had moved to Pendor
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and survived The Great Hall.
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*I see. Kitty, you are the first person I have ever talked to.
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You have been kind to me, but I have words I do not understand.
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'War,' for instance. 'Hate.' Why are these words in my vocabulary?*
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"I wish I could tell you, Pendor. All I know is that we are
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different, obviously, and sometimes people are afraid of
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differentness."
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*I still am not understanding you. I'm sorry if I sound
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stupid.*
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"That's okay. You don't sound stupid." Kitty felt stupid,
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though. Her answers felt lame to her, and they didn't help the odd,
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liquid fire sensation between her thighs. She was getting turned on
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by this Dragon, and in many ways that frightened her. She spread her
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legs further apart on either side of Pendor's back, and lowering her
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body until she was lying prone along him, pressed hard with her
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knees, rubbing her crotch through the leather of her pants against
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him.
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*Kitty,* Pendor said.
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"Yeah?" she said, breathlessly.
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*Are you okay? I felt... weird things coming from you.*
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"Yes. Yes, I'm okay, Pendor. Please, just keep flying."
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There was a massive shifting of his shoulders; she guessed it
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was a shrug, but the feeling of those muscles flexing like that gave
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her a wild thrill. She began pressing again with her knees, sliding
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against his spine, feeling the huge ridges of it as they slipped
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between her knees. The burning sensation became more pronounced,
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more pleasurable, as the wind whipped her hair behind her, and she
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screamed loudly as she came, bucking against his reptilian hide and
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holding on for her dear life.
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*That does it. I'm landing.*
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"No, please. I'm okay, Pendor. Please don't land."
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*What was that.*
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Kitty's faced burned with embarrassment. "I... I can't tell
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you."
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*It felt like you hurt. And you kicked me.*
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"I'm sorry. No, it didn't hurt, just the opposite Pendor. It
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felt very good. I'm sorry if I hurt you."
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Pendor flew on, slowly and lazily, leaving Kitty more confused
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than ever. The flight to Kendre, which, walking, would have taken
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her two days, took slightly over an hour.
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*Should I land near the city? If all Dragons are as new as I
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am, then maybe we should be careful,* Pendor said.
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"That's a good idea," said Kitty, coming out of her reverie.
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Pendor flew in large circles as he passed over Kendre, looking for a
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place to land. He chose a meadow about a mile out of town and
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landed, giving Kitty just a few seconds to dismount before he bounded
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into the sky again. *I'm going to try and find something to eat.*
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"Just don't kill someone's entire flock!" Kitty shouted,
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figuring that would be Pendor's obvious target. She'd seen several
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large herd of animals on their way to Kendre.
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"Luke," she said, addressing the book she carried in her left
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arm, "do I have any money?"
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"I believe you should look in your pack. There's a substantial
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amount of gold there."
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"How much is gold worth?" Kitty asked. It was obvious to her
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that, as a Pendorian, it shouldn't matter nearly as much as it had
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when she'd been a native of Terra. But in Backwater, the rules,
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she'd learned, were very different.
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"Kendre has a silver-driven economy. Gold is exceptionally
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valuable. From the amount you are carrying, my guess is Shardik had
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no desire to see you starve. Just don't get robbed."
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"Oh," Kitty said. It hadn't occurred to her that there might be
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bandits on the road.
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"Kitty?"
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"Hmmm?"
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"I think you should know that I am personally troubled by your
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and the Dragons' presence in my domain."
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"Why is that?"
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"Because in Backwater, no matter what happens to someone it
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happens because they consented to be here. But you were put here.
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Do you understand the danger you are in?"
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Kitty thought about it. "No more danger than walking around New
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York City at night, really. At least, I doubt it."
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"Comparing the crime rates here and there, I find your argument
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convincing. I must concern myself with the Dragons."
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Kitty walked through the woods to the road she'd seen from the
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air and began making her way to Kendre.
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She soon found the staff she carried comfortable as it clacked
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along the pebbles and dirt of the dusty road. The forest came to an
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end as she came into view of Kendre. Not much of a city, she
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thought. Not being much of a student of things medieval, she at
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least had the vocabulary to assess Kendre. The town lacked a main
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tower; did that mean it rarely suffered attacks from the outside?
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She saw a small river running north to south along the road; in
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several places it was diverted into the city, but she saw no sewage
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ports leading back out of the city. The gates of the city, made of
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wood, were wide open, but there were two guards, both human. They
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eyed her with looks she thought she had left behind when she had left
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Earth. She checked for the knife she had found on her belt.
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She drew her cloak closer around her and made her way further
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into a town that seemed cramped and crammed together. She was passed
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by four Uncia, dressed in tight-fitting leathers and carrying very
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long swords. The scene reminded her that she was still on Pendor,
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and she looked around, identifying Felinzi and Satryls and such
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around her. She spotted a Tindal, a male, dressed in a dark blue
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robe with a single star on the back about a handwidth in size.
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People were giving him a lot of room, and she figured he must be play
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the role of 'wizard.' That made sense; Tindals had the highest
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psi-percentage of any Pendorian species. She spotted a sign, carved
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crudely in wood, of a mug and a plate above a unicorn, and headed for
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it. The door to what she figured to be a tavern stood ajar, and she
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pushed it in and peeked around.
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"Come in, lass, come in!" said a deep voice from within. She
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looked for the voice and saw an aging Felinzi standing in a corner
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beside the bar. "'Tis na safe to be standin' outside, not with tha'
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monstrous new beasts in t'air."
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"You mean the Dragons?" Kitty said.
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"Aye. They be huge, and a one attacked me'friend Erik's flock
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just the mornin'." Kitty stepped in. The place was otherwise
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deserted. "You a traveller?" the tavern keeper asked.
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"Yes," Kitty said.
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"I c'n tell. Y've the boots, and the look. I got t' tell you,
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though, lass, donna go waving that staff in here. I'll not have
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magic in here; the last wizard who got t' fightin' in here near
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burned the place down. What c'n I ge ye?"
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Kitty looked down at the staff and resolved to have a word with
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Luke at the first chance she got. Shrugging, she sat down at the bar
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and said, "What have you got for breakfast?"
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"Food y're after? Well, I got's last night's stew. It's still
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warm; we'll just throw in more fixings and serve it agin tonight."
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Kitty nodded. "What's to drink, then?"
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That stopped her for a second. In medieval romances they
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normally drank wines and ales; the local water was untrustworthy.
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"Give me an ale a lady should drink," she said, hoping that was the
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right thing to say.
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"Aye, lass. We've a real pale beer you might like."
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Kitty nodded. He brought her a large wooden mug and then passed
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through a pair of swinging doors to return with a large bowl of stew.
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She sampled the beer and found it drinkable, even if she wasn't fond
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of beer in general. The stew, in the other hand, was excellent, and
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she ate it with a gusto that made the Felinzi laugh. "Ye been on the
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road a long time, lass?"
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Kitty shook her head. "Just the past day."
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"Where ye' from lass?" the Felinzi asked, with suspicion.
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"I don't know. I was in Shardik Castle last night."
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The Felinzi's accent vanished. "You were at Castle Shardik last
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night? How did you get to Kendre?"
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"I woke up in the woods near here. I walked to Kendre." That
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part was true enough.
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"You know where you are, then?"
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"Oh, yes. That's been clearly explained to me."
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"Good, lass," he said, the accent returning. "My name be Alfar.
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Welcome to Kendre, truly Heaven on Pendor."
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"Thank you. Should I develop a funny accent, too?"
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"Only if ye want t', lass. Only if ye want t'. So what do ye
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make of Dragons?"
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"They're new. Shardik made them."
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"Ah, and he sought to put them 'ere, where we could best
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appreciate 'em, eh? Figures y'd know that. Make sense. Can they
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talk?"
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Kitty shrugged. No reason to reveal what she knew, not yet.
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"Tha's too bad," Alfar said. "Wonder wha' the temples'll make of
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'em."
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"How so?" Kitty asked.
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"There's been a rivalry growin' between the followers of Luccas
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and the Mage's school. Seems a priest o' Luccas had said there'd be
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great beasts soon and that these beasts would fight to destroy all
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th' Mages."
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"What other... 'Temples' are there?" she asked.
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"Well, lass... there be the house o' Senn, but that be more a
|
|
home for unladylike ladies, if you see my drift, than a temple. But
|
|
th' Sennites, they can do a spell or two." Alfar developed a
|
|
far-away smile. "There's the Alias, but i's very quiet, as a temple.
|
|
But th' Luccas, they be the worst."
|
|
|
|
"How so?"
|
|
|
|
"They be looking for something. Call it the Sazknife. They say
|
|
they need be needin' it, but for what, they say not. But they kill
|
|
to get it."
|
|
|
|
"Alfar, how big is Backwater?"
|
|
|
|
"Backwater be seventy terrs on a side."
|
|
|
|
"And how big's a terr?"
|
|
|
|
"A terr be about forty-six hundred leagues on a side. Don't go
|
|
messing your pretty head with numbers, lass. A square terr on a side
|
|
is the surface area of Terra."
|
|
|
|
"And Backwater's seventy terrs on a side?" Kitty asked, eyes
|
|
unbelieving.
|
|
|
|
"Aye, lass." He smiled. "Lots o' room for growth, Lass. There
|
|
be only about a thousand people in Kendre, and four hundred times
|
|
that in all o' Backwater. Lots o' room."
|
|
|
|
"I need a room for a night," she said. "Can you recommend a
|
|
place?"
|
|
|
|
"Aye lass... Right here. Not as comfortable as Castle Shardik,
|
|
mind ye, but it'll do." He seemed pleased with himself. "Just for
|
|
one night?" Kitty nodded. "That'll be, oh... a copper. And for
|
|
that I'll throw in the meal, and breakfast tomorrow. Will ye be
|
|
wantin' hot water for a bath tonight?" Kitty nodded again. "Then
|
|
that'll be another two brass, lassie... sorry, but I gots to charge."
|
|
|
|
Kitty rummaged in her bag and pulled out a gold coin. "Can you
|
|
change this?"
|
|
|
|
Alfar put his hands over hers and drove them down to the table.
|
|
"What are ye' doing with tha' much money, girl?" he said in a
|
|
powerful whisper. "Be careful who ye show tha' to. Aye, I can
|
|
change it, but only because I be going to th' bank today. Myrna!" he
|
|
shouted.
|
|
|
|
Another Felinzi slid out from inside the kitchen and said,
|
|
"Yeah, Alfar?"
|
|
|
|
"Watch the bar for a second." Alfar disappeared through the
|
|
swinging doors and returned. "You be lucky girl." He carefully
|
|
counted out eleven silver, bronze, ten copper, and brass pieces.
|
|
"That one coin could feed you and house you overhead for four months.
|
|
Stay here, the both of you."
|
|
|
|
Sliding the gold piece into his apron, he closed a cloak around
|
|
his shoulders and slid out. Kathy watched him go. She turned back
|
|
to her beer and drank quietly; Myrna appeared uninterested in her and
|
|
instead began cleaning the tables, filling lanterns along the wall,
|
|
and dusting the curtains on the windows.
|
|
|
|
"Luke!" she whispered when she thought Myrna was out of range,
|
|
"You didn't tell me my staff was magical!"
|
|
|
|
"Did you ask?"
|
|
|
|
"No, but I think it's something you should have told me! What
|
|
can it do?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know."
|
|
|
|
"What? I thought you were the source of all magic in
|
|
Backwater."
|
|
|
|
"I am. Let's put it this way; in one sense I am your companion,
|
|
but that doesn't mean I'm going to let you see me in my other sense,
|
|
as referee."
|
|
|
|
"That's just great." Kitty stared at the yellow cover of the
|
|
book.
|
|
|
|
Alfar returned after a few minutes and said, "Myrna, we be doing
|
|
well. The money's goin' up, and the taxes are paid."
|
|
|
|
Myrna smiled and still didn't speak. Alfar slid back to his
|
|
place behind the bar and said, "You still here, lass?"
|
|
|
|
"You told me not leave."
|
|
|
|
"Aye, I did, didn't I? Listen close... What ye' gave me was a
|
|
gold. It's worth twelve silvers. A silver's twelve bronze, a bronze
|
|
twelve copper, a copper twelve brass. Lodgin' here's a copper, but
|
|
hot water's expensive. Below brass there's an iron piece; beer's two
|
|
iron a mug." Kitty nodded. It wasn't going to be easy keeping that
|
|
in her head; she opened her book and wrote down what Alfar was
|
|
telling her.
|
|
|
|
"Ye c'n write!" Alfar said.
|
|
|
|
"Can't everybody?" Kitty asked.
|
|
|
|
"Na, lass... not in Backwater. Sometimes, when ye come in, ye
|
|
ferget. I c'n, but na' as fast as I could out there."
|
|
|
|
"Oh," Kitty said.
|
|
|
|
"At least ye' needn't fear getting wi' child, lass. That donna
|
|
happen in Backwater. One o' Shardik's rules, he says. There's been
|
|
some talk o' moving backwater to a new world, where his rules donna
|
|
reach, but thas' been shelved. Rule makes sense, I says. Aside's
|
|
sometimes people come in, an' they's changed. And sometime, the
|
|
children's just the ref's NPDs."
|
|
|
|
"NPDs?" Kitty asked.
|
|
|
|
"Non-Player Droids." Alfar had trouble maintaining his accent
|
|
while discussing game mechanics.
|
|
|
|
Kitty nodded. She thanked Alfar for the meal and asked for a
|
|
key to her room. "You be goin' up now?"
|
|
|
|
"No, but when I come back..."
|
|
|
|
"I'll be here, lassie. You go on... we han't got no real keys,
|
|
not round these parts."
|
|
|
|
Kitty wandered out into the city, looking around for a merchant
|
|
where she could buy some things she now wanted. There was nothing of
|
|
the sort to be found immediately; she walked back towards the gate
|
|
and asked one of the guards. He directed back towards to right,
|
|
towards the bazaar.
|
|
|
|
The bazaar was a riot of colors, smells and sounds, densely
|
|
packed with people jostling each other; from far ahead of her came
|
|
the sounds of swords, and of cheering. She found several clothes
|
|
merchants, and stopped at one. A Mephit, dressed in a shockingly
|
|
tacky silver-lame kilt and leather vest, turned to her and "Yes? Kin
|
|
I help yu?"
|
|
|
|
Kitty stifled a laugh. The accent was outrageous; all the words
|
|
were crammed together, they came out as one phrase: "KinIhelpyu?"
|
|
She pointed to a heavy, padded coat and a large muffler and paid for
|
|
both. The Mephit looked at her as they exchanged coins and said "It
|
|
is not winter. Why do you need these clothes?"
|
|
|
|
Kitty shot him a dirty look, and he backed off momentarily. She
|
|
draped the coat over her pack and tied it down with a loose leather
|
|
tie, then headed deeper into the bazaar. The sword fighting was
|
|
actually rapiers, and it seemed to be practice; a tall Mephit faced
|
|
off against a much shorter Human, and the Human seemed to be easily
|
|
driving back the Mephit with every feint. She was impressed. After
|
|
a few rounds of this the Human sheathed his weapon and said, "You've
|
|
improved, M'Lord."
|
|
|
|
"Always the good teacher, Napper, always the good teacher.
|
|
Thank you for the exercise."
|
|
|
|
"A pleasure, Lord Aaden." The Mephit bowed swiftly and walked
|
|
off to the left, two Uncia following him. Bodyguards, she guessed.
|
|
|
|
She left the bazaar and walked back to the gate, leaving the
|
|
city and heading down the road to where she guessed she had left
|
|
Pendor. She walked through the woods into the meadow and found him,
|
|
curled up into a large, black ball. "Pendor?" she asked.
|
|
|
|
The dragon woke with a start, turning his head towards her.
|
|
*Oh, it's you.*
|
|
|
|
"Scared me."
|
|
|
|
*Sorry,* he said, apologetically. *What did you find?*
|
|
|
|
"I'm going to stay the night in town, if that's allright. I
|
|
need to learn more."
|
|
|
|
*I understand. The hunting has been good here, and I did not
|
|
disturb a flock that was guarded by people, but a large yapping
|
|
animal ran at me.*
|
|
|
|
"Probably a dog, for the shepherd." She sighed. Feeding a
|
|
Dragon was not going to be easy. "You didn't hurt it?"
|
|
|
|
*No. I made a noise at it and it backed away.*
|
|
|
|
"That's good. We can meet tomorrow?"
|
|
|
|
*Of course we can. Here, right?*
|
|
|
|
"If you feel safe here."
|
|
|
|
*I do.*
|
|
|
|
"Then here. I'll see you later."
|
|
|
|
*Good bye, Kitty.*
|
|
|
|
Kitty bent over and kissed Pendor gently on the nose. As she
|
|
walked back towards the road she was bewildered to figure out why
|
|
exactly she had kissed him.
|
|
|
|
In town, she returned to the Unicorn Inn and asked Alfar for her
|
|
room. "It be the third on the left, lass."
|
|
|
|
She found it and walked in. The room was clean, and the window
|
|
had glass in it. She found a basin for washing, and the bed seemed
|
|
sturdy enough, made entirely of wood, with a cloth-filled mattress
|
|
and pillow. She opened up her backpack and rummaged through it.
|
|
|
|
Inside she found a spare set of clothing, with three changes of
|
|
underclothes. There's was also a smaller book than the one she'd
|
|
found next to, and it had a clasp holding it shut. She also found
|
|
money; nineteen gold, plus what Alfar and the merchant at the bazaar
|
|
had given her as change. And three silver-colored coins, very bright
|
|
and shiny, in the shape of an eight-pointed star with a ring around
|
|
it. "Luke, can you tell me what these are?"
|
|
|
|
"They're called ringwheels. They're worth a thousand gold
|
|
each."
|
|
|
|
"What?"
|
|
|
|
"I believe you heard me."
|
|
|
|
Kitty stared at the three coins. If Luke was telling the truth,
|
|
she was set for life. And if anyone found out about them, she was
|
|
also a bandit's favorite target.
|
|
|
|
She sighed quietly and put them back into her bag. She packed
|
|
away the spare clothes and tied the bedroll to the bottom of the
|
|
pack.
|
|
|
|
After a few minutes a knock came at the door. "Yes?"
|
|
|
|
"Miss Kitty? Your bath is ready."
|
|
|
|
She opened the door to see Myrna. "It is?"
|
|
|
|
"We have to get it right done before the evening crowd, Miss
|
|
Kitty. There's nobody else asking for a bath, Miss Kitty, so you can
|
|
take as long as ye wish. Door over there," Myrna said, pointing.
|
|
|
|
"Thank you, Myrna." She grabbed her pack and staff and left her
|
|
bedroom; she had no desire to part with any of her equipment, now
|
|
that she had an inkling of the total value of what she carried. The
|
|
bath turned out to be a large wooden tub filled with water that was
|
|
steaming, but she trailed her fingers through it and found it to her
|
|
liking. She bolted the door, noting the sandglass on the shelf next
|
|
to it, and turned it over even though Myrna said she could take as
|
|
long as she liked. There was also a large object covered with a
|
|
towel; picking up the towel she noted the object was a pail, filled
|
|
with much hotter water than the tub, and covered with a wooden cap.
|
|
|
|
Stripping, she stepped into the tub and quickly sank down into
|
|
it, sighing with pleasure as she did so. Even though it had been
|
|
only yesterday that she'd been in the veritable lap of luxury, she
|
|
felt extremely tired; the entire day, from meeting Pendor to now, had
|
|
been one long, bewildering experience.
|
|
|
|
She found a bar of soap. With a breath of thanks that it wasn't
|
|
lye soap, she reached down to clean her feet. As she worked her way
|
|
up, she gently rubbed her sore thighs; being a city girl hadn't
|
|
really prepared her for the walking she'd done today. She closed her
|
|
eyes when she had cleaned her face and tried to relax and sort things
|
|
out.
|
|
|
|
"Why am I here?" she asked the ceiling through closed lids.
|
|
Talking to myself, she though. First sign I'm cracking up.
|
|
|
|
But why was she here? What plans did Shardik have for her?
|
|
She'd asked to go someplace "different, where the rules are
|
|
different." The rules certainly were different here. She shrugged,
|
|
disturbing the water. She'd survive, one way or the other.
|
|
|
|
Her hands had drifted down to her painful legs, and she sighed
|
|
quietly as they unconsciously stroked her pubic hair. She smiled and
|
|
resigned herself to the fact that she wanted to masturbate.
|
|
|
|
But as she thought that, she was disturbed by the memory of this
|
|
morning, when she'd had an orgasm while riding on Pendor's back. She
|
|
didn't stop stroking her swelling outer lips, but she also explored
|
|
her memory of this morning, trying to figure it out. The wind,
|
|
passing by her, the feeling of his body under hers, all these
|
|
memories ran through her as she parted her outer lips, her fingers
|
|
slicking between them and over her clit in the soapy water; the
|
|
sensation made her light-headed as it ran straight through her mind.
|
|
She tried to concentrate on something else, someone else, as her
|
|
fingers slid over her clitoris faster and harder, sometimes plunging
|
|
a finger into her opening and up inside herself, pressing against the
|
|
upper pad of her pubic bone. Anyone else, she wished, stretching
|
|
for her orgasm as she slowed down to pinch her clit gently. Ken,
|
|
Nance, Dillion, anyone she'd met at the castle. Alfar, anyone.
|
|
|
|
As she came the name that possessed her was "Pendor."
|
|
|
|
|
|
When she felt it was time to get out of the bath, she realized
|
|
what the extra pail was for. She removed the towel and the wooden
|
|
cover and used the water in the pail to rinse off. She dressed in
|
|
the same clothes she'd entered with and put her pack on, heading for
|
|
the downstairs tavern and dinner. She still had a lot of thinking to
|
|
do. When Kitty awoke her first thought was that she had slept all
|
|
the way through to noon. A few seconds of thought and she laughed to
|
|
herself. Pendor was a ringworld, of course the sun was overhead!
|
|
The sounds outside her window however, told her that whatever time of
|
|
day it was, the daily life of Kendre was in full swing.
|
|
|
|
She stretched and yawned. The bed she had slept in had been
|
|
both lumpy and itchy, but she had been so tired that it hadn't
|
|
mattered when she had first lain down. Now, in the morning, her back
|
|
told her a different story. She sighed and tried to lick clean the
|
|
foul taste in her mouth, a combination of sleep and ale.
|
|
|
|
As she was dressing a knock came at her door. She turned to
|
|
look, shook her head again and said "Yes?"
|
|
|
|
"Miss Kitty? Miss Kitty? Are you awake?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, Myrna," she said. "What is it?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh good, Miss Kitty. I gots a letter for you."
|
|
|
|
Confusion reigned for a moment. " A letter?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes Miss Kitty. It's got a seal on it, it looks important.
|
|
You might want to read it now."
|
|
|
|
Kitty rose from the bed with a groan and wandered over to the
|
|
door, unlatching it and pulling it open. She looked into Myrna's
|
|
face and said, "Okay."
|
|
|
|
"Here it is, Miss Kitty." Myrna pressed a folded sheet of thick
|
|
paper, held closed with a glob of wax. Kitty flipped it over; it was
|
|
otherwise unmarked.
|
|
|
|
"Myrna, where did you get this?"
|
|
|
|
"Priest of Alias came this morning. Gave this to me and said it
|
|
was for Miss Kitty Moran. I guess that'n be you."
|
|
|
|
Kitty nodded. "Thank you, Myrna. Give me a moment, will you?"
|
|
|
|
"O' course, Miss Kitty. Take all the time'n you need."
|
|
|
|
Kitty closed the door gently and re-latched it. After a quick
|
|
glance at the seal, which meant nothing to her, she broke it open and
|
|
read it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dear Kitty:
|
|
You said you wanted to go someplace "different." Without
|
|
sending you off-world, there's only one really "different" place on
|
|
Pendor that suits you- Backwater. But I've also made a new addition
|
|
to the list of Pendorian races recently, Dragons, and I released them
|
|
all in Backwater.
|
|
|
|
At this point you're on your own. What you choose to do is your
|
|
own business. What Luke does with you is his business, but he's been
|
|
instructed not to mess with you too much.
|
|
|
|
And remember, the monsters are only droids anyway. It's the
|
|
live ones you've got to worry about.
|
|
|
|
Love, Ken.
|
|
|
|
|
|
She closed her eyes and sighed. The letter didn't tell her
|
|
anything new, but she was glad to have it. The one thing that
|
|
bothered her was what it didn't mention- Luke, her staff, the money.
|
|
What was going on?
|
|
|
|
She dressed, pulled on her boots and cloak and headed down the
|
|
stairs. "Alfar?" she said.
|
|
|
|
"'Mornin, Lass. How was your sleep?"
|
|
|
|
Kitty stretched again and felt bones in her back pop. "The
|
|
sleep was good. It was waking up I had trouble with."
|
|
|
|
Alfar smiled and said, "I know, Lass, I know. So, ye be heading
|
|
out t'day?"
|
|
|
|
"Aye," Kitty said, getting into the accent. "Right now, in
|
|
fact. I've got a friend to meet."
|
|
|
|
"And what be this friend's name, might I ask?" Alfar said.
|
|
|
|
"Pendor," she replied, slipping out the door.
|
|
|
|
The street was a bustle of activity. The smell of Kendre was
|
|
rich in her nostrils and the sun was clear overhead as she walked to
|
|
the bazaar she had found yesterday. Getting past a Centaur blocking
|
|
her vision, she found a shopkeeper selling jerked meats, dried fruits
|
|
and nuts. After haggling with him for a few minutes, she walked away
|
|
with what she figured was two weeks worth of foodstuffs. It was a
|
|
lot heavier than the camping foods she had been used to packing over
|
|
Mount Washington, that was for sure.
|
|
|
|
She shook her head again and headed out for the main gate. It
|
|
felt so good to be out of there, she realized. The light and air of
|
|
the fields outside the city cured the odd melancholy she'd been
|
|
feeling all morning, and she positively felt like skipping as she
|
|
headed towards the treeline and her meeting with Pendor. She sang to
|
|
herself as she walked. She wondered if there were any listeners, and
|
|
if there were, was Jethro Tull out of place in Kendre?
|
|
|
|
She found what she thought to be the place where she had turned
|
|
off the road yesterday. After walking some yards through the dense
|
|
forest, she broke out into the meadow a distance away from the
|
|
glaringly obvious dragon, who lay curled up on the grass with his
|
|
wings spread wide. "Pendor!" she shouted.
|
|
|
|
The dragon raised his head slowly, looked and said, *Good
|
|
Morning, Kitty!*
|
|
|
|
She ran up to him and wrapped her arms around his head, hugging
|
|
him. "It's good to see you," she said.
|
|
|
|
*It's good to see you too,* he replied. *So, what was a town
|
|
like?*
|
|
|
|
"Smelly," she replied. "A good place to buy things, but I don't
|
|
think I'd like to live there."
|
|
|
|
*Anything else?* he asked.
|
|
|
|
Kitty related her experiences with Alfar as she pulled on the
|
|
coat and muffler she'd purchased at the bazaar. "Ready to go?" she
|
|
asked.
|
|
|
|
*Where are we going?* the dragon asked.
|
|
|
|
"Does it matter? According to everybody we've met, we're in the
|
|
center of Backwater. Every direction is somewhere new."
|
|
|
|
*Then let us head, that way,* the dragon replied, lifting his
|
|
head and pointing to aspin.
|
|
|
|
"Fine with me. Why that direction?"
|
|
|
|
*Less mountains.* Kitty laughed as she mounted Pendor's back.
|
|
With a powerful bunching of the legs, Pendor launched himself into
|
|
the air and they took flight. The powerful force of it exhilarated
|
|
Kitty, and she cheered as they took flight. *Are you okay?* he
|
|
asked.
|
|
|
|
"Pendor, you worry too much about me. I'm fine!" she replied.
|
|
|
|
*Could you explain something to me then?*
|
|
|
|
"Of course."
|
|
|
|
*What are we?*
|
|
|
|
"I don't understand."
|
|
|
|
*What are we? You're a human girl and I'm a dragon. You are my
|
|
rider, but I don't think I'm your pet. Are we friends? Partners?
|
|
Lovers?*
|
|
|
|
Memories of yesterday flooded Kitty and her face grew hot with
|
|
embarrassment. She waited for the thoughts to fade before she said,
|
|
"We're friends, Pendor. I think. I don't know. We're not lovers;
|
|
we probably can't be."
|
|
|
|
*Why not?*
|
|
|
|
"Because I'm a human and you're a dragon, and you probably won't
|
|
fit."
|
|
|
|
Pendor didn't answer.
|
|
|
|
They flew on for almost half a day. The terrain below was
|
|
lightly hilled and covered in dense forest, but otherwise was so
|
|
nondescript that Kitty asked to head back to Kendre. Pendor agreed.
|
|
|
|
Once over the city, Kitty asked, "What now?"
|
|
|
|
*We could follow the road that heads towards the mountains.*
|
|
|
|
She shrugged. "It's up to you, Pendor."
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There was that massive shrug of the shoulders. Kitty crouched
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down behind Pendor's head to keep out of the slipstream and watched
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as they flew on. The sky was still as clear as ever.
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Less than hour out from Kendre, Pendor said *Kitty?*
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Kitty looked up with a start. "What?" she asked.
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*I don't feel good.*
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"Don't feel good? Tired? Hungry?"
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*Tired. I think we should head back.*
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"Then, let's go." Kitty looked around. The day seemed a little
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darker. What was it? She looked up and saw that they were flying
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right into the coming night's shadow as it draped itself over the
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countryside. Behind it were dark stormclouds. She began to worry.
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*Kitty, I don't think...* The dragon's "voice" sounded strained,
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sickly.
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"Come on, Pendor,"
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*Kitty, I'm going to fall.*
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"Pendor!" she shouted as the dragon's wings seemed to lose their
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strength. The thrilling power she felt in him faded as the night
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grew darker. The dragon began a frighteningly fast downward spiral.
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*I'll try-* Pendor started. *Try to put down safe.*
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"Please," Kitty whispered. "Be careful." She held on tightly
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to his neck, praying every second for him. There was a clear spot
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up ahead, another meadow, but the trees were close, very close. The
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ground was coming up fast as total darkness washed over them.
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Kitty felt a tremendous >thump< as Pendor slammed into the
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ground, rolling into a black ball that threw her free. She landed on
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her shoulder, the pain registering dully in her head. Dull compared
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to her concern for her friend. A light drizzle began to fall.
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"Pendor!" she screamed.
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*Kitty?* the dragon said weakly. *I'm hurt.*
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She scrabbled to her feet and ran to the treeline, where Pendor
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had impacted against a stand of three trees, fracturing one. As she
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ran, the dragon began shifting, moving back away from the trees. In
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a slow limp he turned around and fell to the ground, his eyes closed.
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As Kitty got closer, she could feel the waves of pain emanating
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off him. She closed her eyes and concentrated, walking up to his
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head and saying, "Pendor?"
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*My wing... It hurts.* She looked over at the wing he had
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splayed out along the ground. It looked wrong. Horror spread
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through her when she realized why; the wing was broken, high by the
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shoulder.
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"Don't move!" she screamed as the dragon started to get up
|
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again. "Pendor, your wing is broken."
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*Broken?* he asked. *How do you fix it? It hurts!*
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"I know, I know it hurts. It'll be okay." Okay? What did she
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know about broken bones... broken Dragon's bones? She grit her teeth
|
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for a second and said "I'm going to do something. It's going to
|
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make it hurt more."
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*MORE?* the dragon wailed.
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"It has to, Pendor. Please, trust me."
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*Kitty, I don't want it to hurt.*
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"Please, Pendor!" She walked around to the wing and examined it
|
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from the outside. All she had for medical training was her Girl
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Scout's badge and the time she'd broken her leg. She knew you had to
|
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set it and keep the person from using it, but how? "Pendor?" she
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asked, laying hands out the edge of the wing away from the break,
|
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away from his body.
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*What?* the dragon asked.
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She dug her bootheels into the ground and said, "Pull."
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*WHAT?*
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"Pull away from me, Dammit! One sharp pull! Do it now or
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you'll never be able to fly again! Do it, NOW!"
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The dragon raised his head and turned on his long neck to look
|
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at her, his eyes full of pain. He closed them.
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Kitty felt him tense, and there was a sudden jerk, followed by a
|
|
sickly cracking sound, and Pendor screamed, the pain emanating from
|
|
his mind into hers; she whimpered in her agony. But she never lost
|
|
her grip.
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"Pendor!"
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There was no answer for a few seconds. *Kitty...* he said.
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"Pendor, fold the wing, slowly. Very slowly." She held the
|
|
fracture point in place carefully, straining her arms; his wing was
|
|
heavy. The wing slowly folded into place. Kitty pulled her staff
|
|
from her waist and laid it along the fracture. "Don't move," she
|
|
said. She stripped off her shirt and pulled her knife, slicing the
|
|
sleeves from her shirt and using them to tie the staff in place,
|
|
splinting the wing. She worried that she was cutting off Pendor's
|
|
circulation. She checked the splint; it looked adequate. She could
|
|
only hope.
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"Let the wing loose, Pendor. Relax it."
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|
*It hurts!* the dragon said.
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"I know it hurts," she said. "But you've got let it go.
|
|
Please?" The wing slowly drooped downwards until it rested loosely
|
|
against Pendor's body. "Okay, that's it," Kitty said, trying to
|
|
reassure the Dragon.
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|
"Pendor?" she asked, walking around to his head. She touched
|
|
him gently there.
|
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|
*Kitty,* he said, his voice barely a whisper in her head. *Will
|
|
I fly again?*
|
|
|
|
"If you don't move you will. It might be a few days. Will you
|
|
be okay?" It suddenly occurred to her she might have to feed her
|
|
friend. It was going to be more than a few days. It might be a few
|
|
months.
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|
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|
*I don't know. I hurt.*
|
|
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|
"I know, I know," she said, kissing his head, lying close to him
|
|
in the rain. "Pendor, I have to get my stuff."
|
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|
*Don't leave me!* he wailed.
|
|
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|
"I won't. I'm just going to walk to where I fell. Okay? It's
|
|
right over there."
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|
*Okay.* Kitty didn't think he sounded okay.
|
|
|
|
Kitty walked around the place where she thought she had landed,
|
|
looking for her pack. It had fallen open, scattering her equipment
|
|
everywhere. The only things still inside it were her money pouch and
|
|
the little red book. She gathered up her clothes and food, finding
|
|
the yellow book by touch and wondering why he hadn't said a thing.
|
|
"Luke?" she asked the book.
|
|
|
|
No answer. She pursed her lips and wondered if the book had
|
|
been damaged in the accident. "Luke!" she demanded. The book was
|
|
silent. Cursing, she threw it into the pack and wandered back to
|
|
Pendor.
|
|
|
|
"It's wet," she said to him, but he didn't answer. Instead, he
|
|
snored quietly, and when she recognized the sound she was grateful.
|
|
He had shifted weight slightly so that he was propped up against the
|
|
nearest tree, the broken wing laying flat on the ground. She prayed
|
|
silently that she'd done right, setting and restraining the wing.
|
|
She touched it gently, reassuring herself. It was warm to the touch.
|
|
|
|
She cursed the rain, wondering where she was going to find
|
|
shelter when an answer presented itself. She had noticed that Pendor
|
|
tended to sleep with his wings outstretched; his left wing, his good
|
|
wing, was splayed out along the ground. She knelt down; there seemed
|
|
to be room underneath, so she crawled under and took refuge. She
|
|
leaned up against
|
|
his leg and tried to sleep. Touching his body, she could hear his
|
|
massive heart beating slowly, feel his breathing. She felt that as
|
|
long as he kept breathing, they would be okay. She turned on her
|
|
side, feeling his cool reptilian hide against her cheek, and kissed
|
|
his leg, hoping for sleep.
|
|
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
"Kitty And The Dragon"
|
|
The Journal Entries of Kennet R'yal Shardik, et. al.
|
|
are copyright (c) 1989-1994 Elf Mathieu Sternberg. Distribute freely
|
|
via electronic media. This copyright permits individual users to
|
|
make single hardcopies for their own use. The Journal Entries may
|
|
not be sold or otherwise distributed for profit.
|