Dragons of the Autumn Twilight - Margaret Weis [182]
Pyros reacted differently to the sight of the prisoners. The transformed dragon half-rose to his feet while his thin hands clenched the ebony desktop with such ferocity he left the impressions of his fingers in the wood. Shaking with excitement, it took a great effort of will to force himself to sit back down, outwardly calm. Only his eyes, burning with a devouring flame, gave a hint of his inner elation as he stared at the prisoners.
One of the prisoners was a gully dwarf, Sestun, in fact. He was chained hand and foot (Toede was taking no chances) and could barely walk. Stumbling forward, he dropped to his knees before the Dragon Highlord, terror-stricken. The other prisoner—the one Pyros watched—was a human male, dressed in rags, who stood staring at the floor.
“Why have you bothered me with these wretches, Fewmaster?” Verminaard snarled.
Toede, reduced to a quivering mass, gulped and immediately launched into his speech. “This prisoner”—he hobgoblin kicked Sestun—“was the one who freed the slaves from Solace, and this prisoner”—he indicated the man, who lifted his head, a confused and puzzled expression on his face—“was found wandering around Gateway which, as you know, has been declared off limits to all nonmilitary personnel.”
“So why bring them to me?” asked Lord Verminaard irritably. “Throw them into the mines with the rest of the rabble.”
Toede stammered. “I thought the human m-m-might b-be a s-spy.…”
The Dragon Highlord studied the human intently. He was tall, about fifty human years old. His hair was white and his clean-shaven face brown and weathered, streaked with lines of age. He was dressed like a beggar, which is probably what he was, Verminaard thought in disgust. There was certainly nothing unusual about him, except for his eyes which were bright and young. His hands, too, were those of a man in his prime. Probably elven blood.…
“The man is feeble-minded,” Verminaard said finally. “Look at him—gaping like a landed fish.”
“I b-b-believe he’s, uh, deaf and dumb, my lord,” Toede said, sweating.
Verminaard wrinkled his nose. Not even the dragonhelm could keep away the foul odor of perspiring hobgoblin.
“So you have captured a gully dwarf and a spy who can neither hear nor speak,” Verminaard said caustically. “Well done, Toede. Perhaps now you can go out and pick me a bouquet of flowers.”
“If that is your lordship’s pleasure,” Toede replied solemnly, bowing.
Verminaard began to laugh beneath his helm, amused in spite of himself. Toede was such an entertaining little creature, a pity he couldn’t be taught to bathe. Verminaard waved his hand. “Remove them—and yourself.”
“What shall I do with the prisoners, my lord?”
“Have the gully dwarf feed Ember tonight. And take your spy to the mines. Keep a watch on him though—he looks deadly!” The Dragon Highlord laughed.
Pyros ground his teeth and cursed Verminaard for a fool.
Toede bowed again. “Come on, you,” he snarled, yanking on the manacles, and the man stumbled after him. “You, too!” He prodded Sestun with his foot. It was useless. The gully dwarf, hearing he was to feed the dragon, had fainted. A draconian was called to remove him.
Verminaard left his throne and walked over to his desk. He gathered up his maps in a great roll. “Send the wyvern with dispatches,” he ordered Pyros. “We fly tomorrow morning to destroy Qualinesti. Be ready when I call.”
When the bronze and golden doors had closed behind the Dragon Highlord, Pyros, still in human form, rose from the desk and began to pace feverishly back and forth across the room. There came a scratching at the door.
“Lord Verminaard has gone to his chambers!” Pyros called out, irritated at the interruption.
The door opened a crack.
“It is you I wish to see, royal one,” whispered a draconian.
“Enter,” Pyros said. “But be swift.”
“The traitor has been successful, royal one,” the draconian said softly. “He was able to slip away only for a moment, lest they suspect. But he has brought the cleric—”
“To the Abyss with the cleric!” Pyros snarled.