Lord's Fall

But his goal was not necessarily the same as the Elves’.

 

Careful to avoid the body liquids that smeared the stone floor, Dragos squatted in front of the Elf to examine him more closely. He took his time, and gradually the resentful muttering around him fell to silence. He ignored them, concentrating on the shards of Power in and around the male’s aura. The dragon took note of the male’s own Power first. Once he had identified it, he moved on to studying the rest.

 

The Elf’s aura held a lingering taint of the Machine that was interwoven with another, third identity. Much as he was interested in locating the Machine itself, he was less interested in the aftereffects of its use. Instead, he filtered that out carefully until he could concentrate all his attention on that last thread of Power. The dragon savored the taste of it like it was the blood of his prey.

 

And in a way it was.

 

That’s who you are, he said silently. Amras Gaeleval, adept at persuasion and beguilement, and fire. It appears that we might have a few things in common, you and I. And no matter how you might change your looks, or where you go and what you do, I will know you again now.

 

Anywhere.

 

He could kill the Elf in the chair with the twist of his mind, and he could kill the others in the holding block too, quicker than they could do anything in retaliation but inflict incidental damage. He would not be who and what he was if he didn’t at least consider the fact that he had unprecedented access, not only to Calondir but also to several key remaining Elves in this demesne.

 

And the unforgiving part of him that knew how to nurture a grudge wanted to. Oh, it wanted to.

 

Instead, he said, “I can try to remove the lingering beguilement from him and the others, but you must understand I can only try, not promise. Both Gaeleval’s Power and the Machine he used are threaded into their core identities. Gaeleval had to go deep to establish the kind of control that would make them turn weapons on their own family and friends.”

 

“What would happen if you can’t remove it?” Calondir asked.

 

“Oh, I can remove it,” Dragos said. He straightened lightly from his crouch and turned to the High Lord. “The question is whether or not it will break their minds if I did.”

 

“My lord!” the healer exclaimed. “I beg of you, do not allow this. Give us more time to try!”

 

Dragos regarded the healer indifferently. Then he said to Calondir, “Personally, I do not care which you choose. But if you give your healers time to study this, they will only come to the same conclusion I just have. The beguilement cannot be completely removed without some risk to the victims.” He met Calondir’s sharp gaze. “You will lose more people here. That is a fact, unless you want to leave them as they are, in which case you will have lost them all, for the only thing you have contained here are their bodies.”

 

The Elves began to talk over each other and argue. Dragos turned away.

 

As he did so, the male bound in the chair whispered, “He knew you would come, Beast.”

 

Dragos spun back around. He ignored the others’ reactions as he stared at the Elf. The bound male’s gaze was blank as ever, and a thin line of drool spilled from his slack lips. “Why does this not surprise me?” he murmured.

 

A woman’s voice spoke from one of cells. “He saw you when he spoke his manifesto, just as you heard him.”

 

Another woman, across from the first, said, “Then he saw your mate and unborn son.”

 

At the mention of Pia and the baby, a fiery red haze obscured Dragos’s sight. “Yes,” he said between his teeth. “And Gaeleval tried to take them like he took the others.”

 

Dead, he thought. You are dead.

 

Another male from down the hall said, “They would have been a worthy addition to his cause, their lights turned to new purpose and grand change.”

 

“Grand change,” he said.

 

Taliesin, the god of gods, was god of the Dance, of change. Dragos prowled down the hall, looking at the caged empty shells of the Elves’ bodies. Someone who stood by Calondir was weeping. Dragos quoted softly to himself, “‘Lord Death himself has forgotten that he is but a part of this fractured whole.’” He pivoted and stalked back to the High Lord. “Calondir, which of the Deus Machinae did Numenlaur possess in the war?”

 

“Taliesin’s,” Calondir said. He was pale, his expression drawn stark. “Camthalion of Numenlaur was the one who insisted we rid ourselves of the Machinae. We all agreed to the pact then Numenlaur closed itself off from the world.”

 

Threidyr, bound to the chair, whispered, “The guardian fulfilled his duty and barred the passage with a flaming sword so that none could enter. Thereafter he stood vigil at the gate for an age, until the time came to pass that this all must pass.”