SOLINA
The palace doors opened, and her guards dragged in a lanky man robed in muddy black. A hood covered his face; Solina could see only strands of dangling white hair. Sitting upon her ivory throne, she narrowed her eyes and watched as her guards, tall men bedecked in steel, shoved the man down upon the floor of her hall.
"My queen!" said a guard. His voice echoed behind his falcon visor. "We found this one skulking outside the palace, muttering strange spells. He claims he's a weredragon."
Fifty guards, ten generals of her army, and three Sun God priests filled her throne room. They all sucked in their breath. Solina leaned forward in her ivory throne. The fallen man coughed; the sound echoed in her silent hall.
"Stand up!" she barked. She rose from her throne, her jewels jingling, and walked down the stairs of her dais. Her sandals clacked against the gold and white tiles of her hall. Granite columns rose around her, the stone a mosaic of reds and blacks and whites, their capitals coated in platinum.
"My Queen Solina!" said the robed man.
He pushed himself to his feet. His hood had fallen back, revealing a smooth face that belied his long white hair; that face looked no older than her own. His eyes were shrewd, his nose thin, his mouth a red line across his pale skin. His hands, which peeked from his robes, were long and skeletal; in one, he clutched a staff.
A guard kicked the man's leg behind his knee, forcing him to kneel.
"Kneel before Queen Solina, scum!" the guard said.
The other guards goaded the man with spears. Another kick sent him facedown upon the tiles, and a boot pressed against his nape. The man coughed and hissed but did not struggle to rise.
"My queen!" he said, voice serpentine. "I only seek to serve you. I come from Requiem, I—"
Solina waved her guards back and glared down at the weredragon. Her chest rose and fell. She knew this one. She had seen him during her captivity in Requiem. He had been but a youth then, a scrawny boy who always seemed too pale, the son of the palace servants. Twice she had caught him peeking through a keyhole, watching her bathe.
"Nemes," she said, voice twisting in disgust. "I know you. On your feet."
Solina was a tall woman, but when Nemes stood, she felt short; he towered above her, thin and long and pale as a bone. His lips twitched in a mockery of a smile; those lips looked more like crawling snakes to her. She remembered the stories whispered about Nemes in Requiem: the animals he skinned and dissected in the forest, the books of dark magic he read, and the women he would leer at, Lyana foremost among them. Yes, she remembered this youth, now this man before her. She remembered him and he disgusted her.
"Queen Solina!" he said and sketched a bow, struggling perhaps to reclaim some of his lost pride. "I remember you a beautiful maiden, a rose in the thorny court of dragons; your beauty has only grown, and here I find a golden deity, a—"
Solina drew her twin sabres with a hiss, crossed them, and thrust both blades against Nemes's neck; if she pushed them but a hair's breadth closer, she'd cut his skin. He froze and his voice died.
"Silence, slithering snake," she said. "What does a weredragon, a beast of night, seek in the courts of the Sun God?"
He tried to step back from her blades, but her men held him fast. He licked his lips, tried to speak, and when his neck bobbed, her blades drew a drop of blood. He whispered hoarsely.
"I do not serve the stars of the night, those petty gods of Requiem," he said. "Mine is a different, older lord. I will help you wake him. I will help you slay the weredragons."
Solina snarled and took a step nearer. She bared her teeth and glared at him closely; her nose was but an inch from his. She drove her blades but a whisper closer, and another drop of blood dripped down his neck.
"Perhaps I shall begin with slaying this weredragon," she said.
What game did this reptile play? Surely he knew he would die in this court. She knew he was mad; all of Requiem knew that. But she had not known the depth of his madness, if he was truly so keen to abandon his life.
He licked his lips again; his tongue was serpentine, a snake emerging from its lair. He hissed his words.
"I am, my queen, but a humble servant, the son of a servant. The weredragons themselves cared not if I lived or died; why should you? But I can give you their king, the cruel Elethor. Why kill me when I can deliver him to you? For three moons now, your men have sought him in the wilderness, burning forests and fields, scouring mountains and plains—and still the weredragons evade you. I was part of their camp. I can lead you there."
Solina growled. She lifted one of her blades, keeping the other on his neck, and placed it against his cheek. A red line of blood appeared. He hissed and dared not move.
"Why?" she whispered. "Why, Nemes, do you betray your filthy kind?"
A throaty chuckle rose from him, then died when the blades cut deeper.
"They are filthy, my queen, you are right. I cleaned their filth. I watched my grandfather sweep their floors, chop their wood, empty their chamber pots, wash their clothes… and all the while, they never invited him to a feast, or a hunt, or a ball. He died alone, thin and overworked. The same happened to my father. The same would have happened to me, had you not burned their cursed court to the ground." He hissed a laugh. "The weredragons speak of their justice, their pity, their wisdom, yet they are cruel. They are weak. In Tiranor I see strength! When you invaded Requiem, I saw a proud, noble people, a strong race, a beautiful race, a race where the powerful can rise, where pity and weakness are crushed. This I seek to serve, not Requiem's cruel lords. Allow me to serve you, my fair queen, my goddess of pride and strength, and I will deliver you the Weredragon King and what remains of his court."
She stepped back and sheathed her blades. Nemes gasped and clutched at his throat and cheek where lines of blood ran. Solina nodded at her guards, and they promptly kicked Nemes down again. He lay on the floor before her, a boot pressed against his neck, spears against his back.
"Empty words," she said and spat. "Do you think I will trust you? Your kin are reptiles; you are merely a worm. I should kill you now. Guards! Hang his head upon Queen's Archway. Let the city—"
"You seek the nephilim!" cried Nemes, cheek pressed against the floor.
Her men had drawn their swords and raised them. Solina held up her hand, stopping them from landing the blows. They stood frozen, sabres held above the worm.
Solina's heart raced. She sucked in her breath and snarled. He knew. Sun God, the worm knew of the key. He knew of the Iron Door and the creatures who lurked behind it. She knelt above him, grabbed a fistful of his hair, and raised his head. She glared into his eyes.
"What do you know of this?" she hissed.
Blood covered his cheek. He still managed to grin.
"One of Elethor's spies made it to our camp," he said. "A man you took to Tarath Gehena. He babbled. The weredragons knew not what he meant. But I do." He licked blood off his lips. "I know of the dark arts. I know of the Palace of Whispers where the nephilim languish. I know of the tower where the key to the palace is guarded." His lips pulled back, revealing crooked teeth. "I studied their art. I studied the books of Legion, their demon lord. If you free the nephilim, I can help you tame them; I speak their tongue and know their lore. With the nephilim's power, you can crush not only the weredragons, but the world itself. I ask only to stand by your side and serve you as you reign, and to serve Lord Legion. Will you accept? Will you let me serve your glory, let me watch you crush the world under your heel? I will have my revenge. You will have the greatest empire this world has known."
Solina stared down at him. What game was he playing? What weredragon trick was this? The dangers raced through her mind. He could be a spy sent by Elethor, hoping to win her favor. He could be planning to lead her into a weredragon trap. He could be an assassin, waiting to catch her alone. He could be insane. Solina knew enough of weredragons to never trust them; she would not trust this one.
Unless…
Unless there was some way he could prove his loyalty, prove his worth. Solina narrowed her eyes and nodded.
Yes, she thought. Yes, a weredragon would do nicely. If he dies, he dies. And if he lives… I will be too strong for an empire of reptiles to hurt me.
"Stand him up!" she shouted to her guards. "Chain him. Collar him. We leave for Tarath Gehena—right now." As Nemes struggled, and as her men clasped him in chains, Solina smiled. "The weredragon will prove his loyalty. The weredragon will retrieve the key."
At once Nemes began to object, sweat upon his brow. "My queen! I… I am not a warrior, merely a priest of Lord Legion. I can help you speak with the nephilim, but to fetch the key, perhaps a soldier or—"
"Gag him!" Solina said. At once her men silenced him.
She walked across the hall toward her towering doors of gold and ivory. When she snapped her fingers, more guards stepped from between her columns to march behind her. The weredragon's chains rattled, and a thin smile twisted Solina's lips.
When her guards opened the doors of her hall, she stepped outside and stood above the palace stairway. The Faceless Guardians, the great statues of her dynasty, towered at her sides. She gazed down upon her realm. The Square of the Sun spread below her, its cobblestones golden in the sunset. The Sun God's Temple rose to her left, scratching the sky, while Queen's Archway rose before her across the square, golden sunbursts shimmering upon its bricks. Beyond the square rolled countless houses and streets, finally fading into desert and delta. And there in the west, beyond dune and mountain, rose the tower. There awaited her glory.
The sun dipped in the sky, a melting ball of orange. Its light caught the platinum capitals of the columns surrounding the square. They burned like a ring of torches, like the light of her heart, and like her glory that would soon bathe the world.
A Night of Dragon Wings
Daniel Arenson's books
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