Silence and the Endless Sea

 

In the stillness of the underworld the spirit of the dragon moved with wonder and deliberate purpose. So many dead dragons. Dulled things, moving without direction, looking for a new home. Even here the alchemical potions wove their magic. How? How did you poison the dead?

The spirit mused on that for a moment, then threw the thought away. It skirted around the hole where the dead earth goddess and her slayer had held the Nothing at bay for so long. They were gone now. The hole was getting bigger and the Nothing was seeping slowly through. Now there, there was something that could kill a dragon.

Yes, the spirit of the dragon kept well clear of that. It had found something else. Hatchling flesh, waiting for the spirit to wake it. Eggs. A few here, a handful there. And one great clutch of them. So many eggs. So many dragon souls searching for new skin.

Quai’Shu sat in his cabin, quietly staring out at the sea, at the waves rolling away from the back of his ship. He felt a warmth inside him, the quiet contentment of someone who had worked very hard for a very long time and who had finally got what they wanted.

‘Sea-Lord? Sea-Lord?’

The dragon-spirit raced towards the clutch, dragging others in its wake. More had gone ahead, many more. The spirit felt them shimmer out of the underworld as they merged into the waiting bodies. It followed. It felt the moment, the pull of new life, dragging it away, and then it was born. Alive. With a single violent jerk, the dragon shattered the shell that held its new form.

Two hatchlings were already loose in the hatchery. One had a human in its mouth and was shaking him from side to side like a dog worrying a rabbit. The man was already dead. The hatchery was smaller than the ones the dragon remembered, much smaller. Cramped and smelly. Smelled of wood and tar and water.

In the doorway stood a silhouette. A silhouette of silver.

Be STILL!

The dragon hissed. No.

One hatchling sprang; the other dropped the dead man. The sorcerer who blocked their escape shifted, the silver he wrapped around him flowing like water into a long spike in front of him. It touched – a scratch – the first hatchling, and the dragon fell dead. The second hatchling ripped the sorcerer’s head off. Even as it did, the silver flowed again. The hatchling shuddered and collapsed beside the sorcerer’s corpse. They both lay still while the sorcerer’s liquid silver turned hard and dull on the floor.

The dragon called Silence jumped on the corpse. Everyone else had fled. It seized the dead sorcerer’s head between its jaws and bit down. Hard.

Free . . .

‘Sea-Lord?’

With a sigh Quai’Shu eased his aching joints out of his comfortable chair and stood up. As he did, he happened to glance out of the stern windows at the end of his cabin.

Half his ships were burning.

Quai’Shu’s jaw fell open. Before he could think, a voice thundered straight into his head, just like the moon-sorcerers had done.

I am Silence, it said, and I am hungry.