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They did not speak to me anymore. They made patterns of knowledge and they expected me to fit mine into theirs. Perhaps I did! Not much of what I knew would be of interest to them. But I knew that the Wastelands had been freed of the soul-killing power that dwelt there, and that the Two Powers were no longer to be found abroad in the world. Perhaps they know that now, too.

Most of what they knew, I could not understand. But I saw that they were hostile to light, and life, and they had a plot to kill the sun and pass into our world after its death.

I was losing myself in their patterns . . . becoming the kind of nothing that each of them was. I saw with my other eyes that much time had passed, and I broke the bond with Skellar. His mind may still live and suffer there, but I cannot reach it.

That was a generation of men or mandrakes ago. Now we see the sun dying, and the world with it. Is it any wonder that I seek escape?

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Morlock stood listening intently, his head bowed, staring past the dragon as if he were looking all the way to the end of the world.

“Then,” he said at last.

The dragon roared in fury that shook the pillars of his temple. Will you speak in whole sentences, you vague, grunting gutworm!

“Not about this,” Morlock said. “Not to you.”

The dragon grumbled into his gold and then said, I care not. Fulfill your word or break it, Ambrosius.

“Wait,” said Kelat, causing Deor and Ambrosia to glance at him in surprise.

The dragon looked at him, a deadly amusement in his fiery eyes. Yes, son of man?

“You stole my mind, when I was last here. I demand . . . I demand compensation.”

What I steal is mine. Your mind was mine, not yours, because I could take it. I do not buy or sell.

“Then I will kill you.”

Men have killed dragons on occasion, but I have never been one of them.

“I’m with him,” Deor said impulsively. “You owe the—you owe Kelat some answers. Your agreement with Morlock doesn’t bind me.”

The dragon looked at Morlock. Morlock said nothing. He glanced at Ambrosia. She shrugged impatiently and pointed out the door of the temple, where Danadhar’s voice could be heard, a lone ship sailing against a storm of shouting.

What do you want? the dragon said reluctantly. The gold I am leaving for my spellbound servants to bring away. Do you want some of it? Take it.

Kelat seemed repelled. Deor could understand it. Blood has no price. . . . This grief, this shame was like that.

“Answer a question,” Deor suggested.

“Yes!” said Kelat eagerly. “You put a gem in my head to control me. How? Who made it?”

Old Ambrosius, of course, the dragon said. He, too, broke the Wards, through some knowledge of his own he would not share. I dealt with him through agents and the spellbound—never trusting him, you see. And I was right: all along he was plotting to attack me.

“Old Ambrosius,” whispered Kelat.

“Also, Merlin,” Deor observed. “Also, Olvinar. And many another name.”

“Lightbringer lately, I understand,” Ambrosia said wryly. Morlock looked at her incredulously and she said, “Yes, I thought that would amuse you, brother.”

This is very warm and cozy, the dragon remarked sourly, and I’m sure it’s very amusing. But those mandrakes outside are preparing to enter and resolve their religious disputes at my expense. They’ll kill you, too, I think: the god-speaker is having trouble talking them out of it. Time to keep your word or break it, young Ambrosius.

Morlock drew his black, shining blade and descended into the hoard. He waded through the gold until he reached the crystalline device. He paused to examine it and the shining cables passing out of it.

“This is a very intricate and beautiful device,” he said.

Yes. Yes. It feels almost like a part of me. There is no chance to bring it along when I leave, I suppose?

“None. This is only the visible extrusion; it is built all through this temple.”

The dragon groaned sadly.

Morlock paused again to pick up a piece of gold. “This metal seems even denser and heavier than gold,” he said to the dragon.

The dragon said nothing, but opened his many-fanged mouth in a predatory smile.

“A dead dragon is heavier than lead,” Morlock said. “Do you draw something from the metal that helps you fly?”

You expect an answer? the dragon said.

“You’ve given the answer, worm,” Deor muttered under his breath. Morlock, too, seemed pleased with the dragon’s ambiguous response. He nodded and flipped the coin away.

Morlock approached the dragon’s face. Deor’s fingers and toes curled, as if he were standing on the edge of a precipice or riding a hippogriff through the middle air. But Morlock showed no signs of fear as he came within reach of the dragon’s long, wolf-like jaws. He looked closely at the cables sinking into the dragon’s eyes and earholes.

“Are you ready?” he asked Rulgân, who only growled in answer.

This was enough for Morlock. Using his left hand, he gripped the cable coming out of the dragon’s right eye; using his right hand, he cut through the cable with Tyrfing.

The dragon shrieked.

Morlock did the same with the other three cables, and each time the dragon shrieked fiery despair and poison smoke like mist filled the temple chamber.

The ends of the cables were still lodged in the dragon’s head. Morlock gestured at one of them.

Yes, hissed the dragon.

Morlock sheathed his sword and took hold of the cable with both hands. He pulled.

The dragon roared his agony, writhing on his gold bed, pounding the pillars and the floor with his tail, sending fire and smoke throughout the temple chamber. Pillars were destroyed; sections of the roof fell in. Ambrosia, Deor, and Kelat tried to keep to the least dangerous parts of the chamber, their eyes on Morlock in case he needed assistance. He did not pause until the dragon’s eyes and ear holes were free from obstructions.

The noise from within only increased the noise from without. Now Deor could hear words in the cries. “Kill the God!” “Kill the outsiders before they can kill the God!” “Vengeance and freedom!” The crowd liked that and repeated it a lot: “Vengeance and freedom!”

No sentiment could have pleased Deor’s dwarvish heart more, except that he feared that he and his would be caught up in that wave of vengeance.

Rulgân rose up on his back legs, towering over Morlock. Deor rushed to stand by him, in case Rulgân attacked, and he heard Kelat and Ambrosia wading through gold in his wake.

But Rulgân didn’t attack. He put his narrow, winged back against the cracked roof of the temple and pushed; the roof split apart, showering timber, stone, and mortar. The sky was open to him now: he could escape his erstwhile worshippers.

Coated with dust and grit, he was pale, like the ghost of a dragon. He looked down in fury and contempt at the four travellers at his feet.

But he roared, If I let them kill you, who’ll save the world? He reached down and scooped them up, Ambrosia and Morlock in one clawed foot, Deor and Kelat in the other. He lifted them over his fuming head and leapt straight up into the sky.

Deor was utterly aghast. He watched with horror as the dragon’s wings unfolded like sails and then beat back to drive them deeper into the sky. The fire-scarred town below spun dizzily in the dark, fell away below and behind. The stars were gone. The moons were gone. There was nothing but the stench of the dragon and Kelat’s terrified face, which Deor proceeded to vomit onto. He would have been ashamed indeed, except that Kelat vomited more or less simultaneously.

“This is the worst!” Deor kept telling himself. “Nothing on this terrible journey will ever get worse than this!”