which his father had taught him when he was eleven and first taken to
Melniboné’s Dragon Caves . Her dragons slept there to this day. A
dragon must sleep a hundred years for every day of activity, to regenerate that
strange metabolism which could create fiery saliva strong enough to destroy
cities.
How
this jill-dragon had awakened and how she had come here was a mystery. Sorcery
had brought her, without doubt. But had there been any reason for her arrival,
or had it been, like Wheldrake’s, a mere incidental to some other
spell-working?
Elric
had no time to debate that question now as he moved in gradual, ritualized
steps towards the natural ridge just above the place where the leading part of
her wing joined her shoulder. It was where the Dragon Masters of Melniboné had
placed their saddles and where, as a youth, he had ridden naked, with only his
skill and the good will of the dragon to keep him safe.
It
had been many years, and a shattering sequence of events, which had led him to
this moment, when all the world was on the change, when he no longer trusted
even his memories … The dragon almost called now, almost purred,
awaiting his next command, as if a mother tolerated the games of her children.
“Scarsnout,
sister, Scarsnout kin, your dragon blood is mixed in ours and ours in yours and
we are coupled, we are kind; we are one, the dragon rider and the dragon steed;
one ambition, mutual need. Dragon sister, dragon matron, dragon honour, dragon
pride …” The Old Speech rolled, trilled and clicked from his tongue; it
came without conscious thought; it came without effort, without hesitation, for
blood recalled blood and all else was natural. It was natural to climb upon the
dragon’s back and utter the ancient, joyful songs of command, the complex
Dragon Lays of his remote predecessors which combined their highest arts with
their most practical needs. Elric was recollecting what was best and noblest in
his own people and in himself, and even as he celebrated this he mourned the
self-obsessed creatures they had become, using their power merely to preserve
their power and that, he supposed, was true decay …
And
now the jill’s slender neck rises, swaying like a mesmerized cobra, by degrees,
and her snout tilts towards the sun, and her long tongue tastes the air and her
saliva drips more slowly to devour the ground it touches and a great sigh, like
a sigh of contentment, escapes her belly and she moves one hind leg, then the
next, swaying and tilting like a storm-tossed ship, with Elric clinging on for
his life, his body banged and rolled this way and that, until at last Scarsnout
is poised, her claws folding tight as her hind legs rear. Yet still she seems
to hesitate. Then she tucks her forelegs into the silk-soft leather of her
stomach, and again she tests the air.
Her
back legs give a kind of hop. The massive wings crack once, deafeningly. Her
tail lashing out to steady her uneven weight, she has risen—she is aloft and
mounting—mounting through those miserable clouds into blue perfection, a late
afternoon sky, with the clouds below now, like white and gentle hills and
valleys where perhaps the harmless dead find peace; and Elric does not care
where the dragon flies. He is glad to be flying as he flew as a boy—sharing his
joy with his dragon-mate, sharing his senses and his emotions, for this is the
true union between Elric’s ancestors and their beasts—a union which had always
existed and whose origins were explained only in unlikely legends—this was the
symbiosis with which, natural and joyful at first, they had learned to defend
themselves against would-be conquerors and later, turned conquerors, with which
they had overwhelmed all victims. Having become greedy for even more conquests
than were offered by the natural world, they sought