Twenty-three: Dragonmote
The number of screw-ups in a presentation is directly proportional to the importance of the audience and inversely proportional to their belief in what you’re selling.
The Consultants’ Handbook
Never meddle in the affairs of dragons, for they are subtle and see right through bullshit.
Marginalia in a copy of The Consultants’ Handbook
The place was a narrow chasm between two towering sandstone cliffs. When it rained the sandy bottom was probably under several feet of water. About twenty feet of water, Wiz judged from the bits of driftwood and debris caught in cracks and ledges up the wall. He devoutly hoped it didn’t rain while the dragonmote was in progress.
Not that it would matter to the dragons. They dropped in through the narrow crack of sky above and settled themselves along the cliff faces, hanging head-down like bats.
The smell of snake and sulfur was well-nigh overpowering and garbled bits of dragon speech rang in his head.
With a minimum of hissing and squabbling the dragons settled into their places. There didn’t seem to be any strict hierarchy, but the larger, older dragons clearly got the best seats in the house.
A smallish dragon slipped in through the crack of sky, but instead of choosing a spot on the sandstone walls, it dropped down onto the sand next to Wiz. All dragons looked pretty much alike to Wiz but as soon as the creature “spoke” Wiz recognized Griswold.
“You cheated me!” the young dragon said. “Cheated me out of my rightful prey. That spell you showed me was a phony.”
“No it wasn’t.”
“But it doesn’t do anything!” Griswold protested.
“I never said that it did,” Wiz said blandly.
“But, but, but . . .” Griswold did a fair imitation of a turkey gobbling.
Wiz just smiled sweetly.
The young dragon drew back his head as if to say something else, but Wiz shushed him as the meeting came to order.
“This mortal is here under my protection,” Wurm declared as the dragons settled in. “Are there any objections?” There was a certain amount of shifting and hissing, but apparently no one objected strongly enough to try to tackle Wurm.
There was no introduction. The dragons fell silent and stared at Wiz, waiting for him to begin.
Wiz gestured and his equipment appeared. It included an overhead projector, complete with a green demon to operate it, a screen, and a large easel holding flip charts. Beats heck out of lugging this stuff down the hall, he thought. He picked up the pointer lying on the easel and launched into his prepared spiel.
“Uh, good afternoon ladies and, uh, well dragons. My name is . . .”
“We know who you are,” a steely voice rang in his head. “Get on with it.”
“Certainly, Mr. ah . . .”
“Ralfnir,” came the cold voice. Looking up and to his right Wiz identified the “speaker” as a dragon nearly as large as Wurm and just as ferocious looking.
“First slide, please. Now, as you can see here . . .”
The demon flipped on the projector and a gorgeous rainbow-tinted slide appeared on the screen. It was not, however, the title slide. Wiz didn’t recognize it at all. Then he looked harder and realized it was in upside down. At least it seemed to be upside down. Since it was titled in Japanese it was hard for Wiz to tell.
“Uh, next slide please. Now, as you can see here . . .” He stopped. This one was the Miss July picture from the presentation to the council. Trying to look at the slide from the dragons’ perspective, Wiz realized her pose and lack of clothing made her resemble something on a buffet. The dragons seemed mightily unimpressed.
“Uh, next chart please.”
Finally, mercifully, the demon got the right slide.
“Now as you can see . . .” But that was as far as he got. Ralfnir drew back his head and aimed an incandescent blast of dragon fire down at him.
The world blinked as Wiz’s protection spell cut in. When it cut out Wiz found himself standing beside a heap of smoking ashes holding the charred stub of a pointer. Behind him the reflected heat from the canyon wall warmed his back unpleasantly.
Damn. There have been times I’ve wanted to do that to a presenter.
“Ah, perhaps it would be better if I dispensed with the visual aids,” he said weakly.
“Now,” said another frigid, metallic “voice,” “tell us something we wish to hear or begone.”
Always stress the advantages to the client. But he couldn’t think of any.
“All right,” he said desperately. “I’m here today to talk to you about a matter of mutual concern between humans and dragons.”
“Not all dragons think there is a problem with humans,” Ralfnir put in, looking at Wurm. “Humans multiply and dragons eat them.”
Wiz got the strong impression that Ralfnir and Wurm were rivals in some way. The very fact that Wurm was sponsoring him seemed to make Ralfnir oppose him.
“You have until now,” Wiz said. “But things are changing among the humans.”
“Oh yes,” Ralfnir said, “the ‘new magic’ we have heard of. Why should we fear anything you humans do?”
“It’s already defeated two of you,” Wiz said levelly.
“That’s a lie!” Griswold “shouted” so loud Wiz flinched. “I was hornswoggled, not defeated.”
There was a ripple of laughter from the other dragons. Griswold bridled with rage, but Wurm checked him with an easy gesture of his wingtip. The young dragon subsided, glaring murderously at Wiz.
“The point is,” Wiz went on, “that humans are much more potent magically than they have been. It would be in all our interests for dragons to recognize that and to renegotiate your contract with humans.”
That produced a babble of dragon speech that made Wiz’s head ring. Finally Ralfnir cut through the din.
“Nonsense!” he roared. “I have no ‘contract’ with humans.” There was another head-splitting chorus of assent from the dragons up and down the canyon walls.
Gradually the noise, both acoustic and mental, died away. “Not all of us are afraid of humans,” Ralfnir continued, turning his head to look at Wurm. “Dragons dealt with your kind for ages and dragons will deal with them for ages more. Magic or no, dragons will continue to handle humans as it pleases us to do so.”
“That won’t be as easy with the new magic,” Wiz said.
“So far, your ‘new magic’ has only disturbed Shulfnim at his nap.” He paused and nodded toward Griswold. “Oh yes, and bested that one.”
Griswold’s renewed protest was cut off by a roar of dragonish mirth. The other dragons flapped their wings and slapped their tails against the rock to show approval.
Ralfnir waited for the noise to die again before he went on. “I do not think we have to fear such powers as these.”
“This was just a taste,” Wiz warned. “The new human magic is very powerful. You will have to reckon with it or I cannot be responsible for the consequences.”
“If humans interfere with us,” came another steely voice, “it will be we who are responsible for the consequences-to the humans.”
Another cacophony of approval with more wing flapping and tail slapping burst out from the assembled dragons.
“But if you look at the long-term trend . . .” Wiz began, but Ralfnir cut him short.
“A human talks to dragons about the long term? We who live for age upon age?”
Wiz gathered his remaining courage and tried again. “Even dragons can die,” he pointed out. “They can be killed by magic and humans now have magic that can, ah, severely limit your scope of action.”
“Then prove it,” Ralfnir said. “Show me the power of this new magic you think of so highly.”
“I’ll be glad to demonstrate,” Wiz said. As soon as the words were out of his mouth he realized he had made a mistake. “Uh, what did you have in mind?”
“Why,” Ralfnir purred, “if this new magic is so dangerous to us, surely you cannot object to a simple duel.”
Having no lips, dragons cannot smile. But Ralfnir did an excellent imitation, drooping his lids over his golden eyes and opening his mouth slightly to run a blood-red forked tongue over his gleaming ivory fangs.
Wiz looked at Wurm but the great dragon remained impassive. The chasm had gone very, very quiet.
“Okay,” Wiz lied. “How about tomorrow?”
Their business concluded, the dragons left the canyon like a cloud of startled bats. At last only Wurm and Wiz remained.
“It was perhaps unwise to challenge Ralfnir to a duel,” the dragon said in a tone of mild reproof.
“Did anyone ever mention your genius for understatement?” Wiz said sourly.
“This was not your object, then?”
“No. I was suckered. What now?”
Wurm seemed surprised by the question. “Why, that is up to you. You can fight him or not.”
“Any advice?”
“Advice? That would be presumptuous indeed of me. You must do as you think best.”
Wiz thought Wurm had been presumptuous as hell already by getting him into this mess. However he didn’t see any point in saying so.
“But if I fight him and he kills me, I haven’t solved the problem.”
Wurm considered. “Your death would be a solution of sorts.”
For an instant Wiz wondered if this entire episode might have been Wurm’s elaborate plot to get him to commit suicide. He dismissed that as unnecessarily baroque, even for a dragon.
“I don’t suppose I could talk him out of this?”
Wurm cocked his enormous head. “Unlikely. The challenge was formally issued and accepted. Now it is a matter of honor.” He paused, as if considering. “True, there is not much honor to be gained by killing a single human, but Ralfnir enjoys sport for its own sake.”
“But if I win do I have a deal?”
“Why should you? If you win you will only eliminate Ralfnir.”
“Then what’s the point?”
“No point, really,” Wurm said, “unless you like slaying dragons as much as Ralfnir likes slaying humans. I told you before, Wizard, dragons do not form groups as humans do. There is none who can speak for all of us.”
“So why should I even show up for this duel?”
Wurm gave a mental “shrug.” “Perhaps no reason at all. Save that if you do not Ralfnir will undoubtedly hunt you down and quite likely burn down that town you humans are so fond of in the process.”
“And if I do face him?”
“If you win you have nothing to fear from him. If you lose-“ again the “shrug” “-he will probably not bother with the town.”
“Great. And if I do beat him, I’ll still have to best every single other dragon in order to get them to leave the people alone?”
Wurm paused, as if considering. “Probably not. I imagine that after you have slain forty or fifty dragons most of the rest will decide humans are not worth bothering with.” He cocked his head. “It would be an effective strategy, were you able to carry it out.”
“There’s gotta be a better way,” Wiz muttered.
“If there is I would suggest you endeavor to find it,” Wurm said. “It would be best if you found it ere dawn tomorrow.”
“I’m working on it,” Wiz told the dragon and turned to start down the canyon.
“Oh, and Wizard . . .” Wurm’s “voice” rang in his head.
Wiz turned back to the dragon.
“Do not count on your ring of protection. Even a hatchling could defeat that spell.”
“Thanks,” Wiz mumbled, and turned his face again toward town.