Part 37 (2/2)

Maggaron.

Maggaron. What came out wasn't the word Kaylin said; she knew it. It was what she felt. The syllables were longer, and there were more of them-but they coalesced, in the same way his foreign tongue did, into a language she knew.

He began to shake. She swore the ground beneath his knees shook with him, as if he were part of the earth, and rooted deeply there. His head swiveled toward the fief's heart. Toward the shadows and the storms and the hidden ancient ruins that had only been barely glimpsed by anyone who now stood in these streets. Look, Chosen. You've allowed me to hear as you hear. Now, see as I see.

She did as he asked. She saw the red she usually saw when her eyes were closed; that wasn't helpful. Maggaron, are your eyes closed?

Yes, Chosen.

What am I supposed to see if your eyes are closed?

He was silent for a minute; she felt his shock and his frustration.... Know what I know, then. Feel what I feel. If I try, I can see you; it doesn't matter where I am. You would know that I'm looking if you were paying attention; you could force me not to look. If I try, I can see him. See what I see, Chosen.

Hand on the flat of his blade-which would have gotten her ears boxed by one of the drillmasters in the Hawks' training ground-she closed her own eyes, as if what she could see on these streets was too small and too confining. Given that it encompa.s.sed two Dragons and the Avatar of a fief, this said something.

She was aware of Maggaron's name. In the red darkness behind her lids, she could glimpse it as if it were burned into her vision. She looked at that first because there wasn't much else to look at. It shook, as Maggaron had shaken, as if his movement was an echo of what now rocked the symbol. She reached for it, touched it, and realized that she had no clear sense of where her hands were in the darkness.

As she touched it, as she felt it shrinking away from her figurative palms, she said it clearly. Maggaron.

It twisted, as if attempting to avoid her. It couldn't, of course; she knew it. She approached it, rotating it in her mind's eye. It grew larger and larger, until it looked like something produced by a drunk architect's nightmares. It had windows, or at least great translucent patches; it had crevices and sudden openings that seemed to be almost door-shaped. They weren't, however, very welcoming doors; she'd been in condemned buildings on the other side of the river that seemed safer and more welcoming.

Safer and more welcoming, however, wouldn't get the job done, and she knew that she had to enter here. She wondered what other people made of true names and their connections to them, because she realized this was very much like magic, or like the way she saw its effects. It was a metaphor that she could understand.

She entered one of the doors, and was not surprised-although very dismayed-when she discovered it had no floor. She started to fall, and caught herself, remembering that she was firmly ensconced in her own body.

See what I see.

Shadow.

Darkness that was illuminated by patches of chaotic, opalescent colors which all managed to look repulsive. Kaylin was about to take issue with her metaphors when she realized that this was almost a literal vision of formless Shadow; she'd seen things that were very close before. It made her feel cold, but not enlightened; it wasn't telling her anything she didn't already know.

She couldn't walk among the Shadows; it wasn't the way this particular vision worked. It was as if she was looking through an arrow slit in a tall building; she could see out, but she wasn't close enough to be able to change the angle of view. So she watched, waiting for illumination.

When it came, it flew in-almost literally. The Shadows darkened, and they darkened exactly the way any landscape does when something gets between it and sunlight. It was the only thing about the landscape that implied that sun shone here. She watched as the darkness spread, and realized that it was taking shape, and at that, a familiar one.

Not very familiar; it couldn't be.

Dragon form was illegal within the bounds of the Empire-not that she'd seen all that much of it-and an act of treason within the borders of the City. But it was unmistakable. A dragon was landing.

She couldn't see where. She couldn't see streets or ruins or even buildings-and she was pretty certain those still existed in the heart of the fiefs. It would have helped, because what she could see caused her to freeze in place, like a particularly stupid rabbit. She recognized this Dragon. She'd seen him twice before.

Makkuron.

The only Outcaste Dragon who still lived. He was dark, his scales obsidian in almost exactly the same way Tara's eyes sometimes were. Flecks of color glinted off those scales, implying that light could change the way they appeared, but not by much. He turned toward her as she stared, and his eyes flared instantly red; she could almost see flame.

”What is this?”

He could see her.

Of course he could see her. She could see him and she had always been aware of his name. Of the size and complexity of it; of the shape and the tone and the architecture. She had seen it once and she had known at that time that to even attempt to speak it was death. It would almost be like attempting to speak the name of a G.o.d. Worse, really, because the G.o.ds didn't live here.

She pulled back, retreating from Maggaron and his name, remembering only as she returned to the world and her eyes snapped open that retreating from him was a very bad idea at this time.

But Maggaron had stopped his teetering shake and his eyes, although blue, had returned to something close to normal for a Norannir. ”Chosen,” he whispered.

She spoke Maggaron's name like thunder, like a challenge, aware that making him a battlefield with the one Dragon she truly had cause to hate and fear was the act of a coward. The Ascendant was not an object, not a possession; he thought, felt, breathed.

”It is inevitable,” he told her softly. ”If you cannot control me, if you cannot exert that level of power, people will die.”

”Give me your sword,” Kaylin told him, holding out both hands. She might have slapped him or beaten him instead; it would have caused less pain. She didn't attempt to force his body to comply with her demand; she simply waited for him.

He understood why she'd made her demand, and he acquiesced without struggle. ”I'm sorry,” she said when her hands were around the giant hilt. The sword obligingly began to shrink until it was once again the size and shape of a blade meant for someone like Kaylin. ”I surprised him; I think that bought us some time. But probably not much.”

”You surprised him?”

”Yes.”

”You know him?”

”Let's just say we've met once or twice. I didn't care for the experience either time.” Turning to the Arkon, she said, ”I know who holds his name.”

The Arkon, who had been listening intently to at least one-half of the conversation, said, ”The Outcaste.”

Kaylin nodded.

After some discussion between Sanabalis and the Arkon-in Dragon, which Kaylin thought a tad unfair because she only had one free hand and could therefore only attempt to protect the hearing in one ear-the Arkon turned to Tara. Tara, in her gardening clothes, had been listening intently to everything that was said, because Tara understood Dragon. The Arkon must have known this, but chose to address her in High Barrani anyway.

”What we require is a clear idea of when the Ascendant lost his name.”

”What we need,” Kaylin snapped, ”is a clear idea of how the Outcaste was able to pick his name out of the air. He's a Dragon, not a G.o.d. Last I heard, Dragons weren't particularly adept at reading the True Names of others.”

”If we can determine when, Private, it will give the Dragon Court more information with which to work.” He placed emphasis on the syllables that involved Dragons and implied Emperor, and Kaylin swallowed the rest of her ill-advised words.

”Does time even work the same way across different worlds?” she asked.

He glowered. Sometimes his ill humor was its own answer; sadly, that answer lacked anything Kaylin could hang a fact on.

But Maggaron rose-unsteadily-to his feet. He looked at the sword in Kaylin's hand. ”If you carry the blade,” he finally said, ”I can...hear less.”

”Hear or see?”

”I do not hear my name, Chosen.”

”Good.” Turning to the Dragons, she said, ”Shall we continue?”

The Arkon looked like the definition of the word no. Kaylin, who usually let the Arkon make the decisions because she liked her job, began to walk anyway. This was because the sword was now pulling at the hand that held it, as if it were an excited orphan at Festival. ”It's not me,” the Hawk said in a rush. ”It's the sword. It's pulling my hand.”

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