His heart went cold; she would not have said anything at all unless she was sure of her information, and the feeling of familiarity with the Council that permeated her thoughts made him certain that her information was as accurate as it was foreboding. The elven lords’ refusal to reconcile their differences and work properly together was all that had saved the wizards from annihilation the last time. With that factor gone—
He took himself firmly in hand. This was no time for distractions. Never mind. It hadn’t happened yet. And he had a fight to win before he could see that it didn’t.
He continued to gain height, wings pumping strongly, heading straight up into the sun, which gave him the added advantage that Myre couldn’t see him—
—which meant she couldn’t see what he was doing!
He had a considerable height advantage on her now; would it be enough? Only one way to find out!
Abruptly he flipped over, folded his wings and plummeted, straight down, talons fisted in front of him like a falcon’s fisted claws. Not for nothing had he been studying the way that hawks and falcons flew and fought. He would have to be the little peregrine here, who weighed far less than the ducks he pursued. More than that, he would have to be the peregrine defending his nestlings from a goshawk. He would have to outfly her to outfight her.
He dove at Myre with the wind of his passage whistling in his nostrils and pulling at the edges of his wings. He had to fight the pressure of the air to keep his wings tucked in tight to his body; had to strive with aching muscles to keep his rear legs pulled in hard against his stomach. Myre still had no idea what he was doing; she grew larger and larger in his sight, squinting against the light, wings pumping, lungs panting as she tried to catch him—
Then suddenly her eyes widened as she spotted him diving down at her out of the sun; abruptly she turned, her first instinctive action to turn tail and evade his attack.
Too late.
With a thud that surely reached down to the ground, he hit her in the back of the head with both fisted fore-claws, knocking her into an uncontrolled tumble and surely bringing stars to her eyes. But it would take more than one blow to the head to knock Myre out of a fight, and her instincts were sure. Before she could lash out with her claws and catch him, he snapped his wings open again, and turned the dive back into a climb. The sudden pressure of air against his wings was so much like hitting a solid object that it made him gasp, and his speed was so great at that point that he shot past her before he could begin climbing again. He lost sight of her for a moment as he fought to control his own headlong climb; when he found her again, she was far below him, but doggedly climbing to reach him once more.
She said nothing now, though, even when he taunted her about being “too fat to fly.” Though his chest muscles were afire with exertion, and his wings aching with stress, he smiled. The only time Myre didn’t talk was when she was so angry that she couldn’t respond.
But he knew he couldn’t expect his attack to work a second time—at least, not in the same way. She might be angry, but she was a good fighter, and had probably gotten better since the last time he’d dealt with her.
So—make her think he was going to try the same tactic again, feint to draw her out, and switch to something else at the last minute? That could work.
He turned head over heels again, and dove a second time, although this time he did not have the advantage of the sun behind him. He had intended, instead of thumping her in the back of the head, to rake her back with his hind-claws, perhaps even tearing the tender membranes of her wings. But Myre wasn’t finished yet; as he feinted, then snapped his wings open an instant earlier than before, she turned on her back, risking all in a desperate attempt to grapple with him and carry him down!
He eluded her only by side-slipping violently, and be lost all the advantage of the speed his dive had given him in that panicked maneuver. She could have had him then—except that she had counted on being able to close, and she lost even more height trying to recover both from the flip and the uncontrolled tumble it sent her into.
Once again he raced for the sun—but slower this time. His breath burned in his throat and lungs as he panted; his wings felt as heavy as stones, and his body a burden too great for his wings to carry.
Now what? Now what? I can’t keep running like this; she has more endurance than I do! 1 have to end this, and end it quickly.’ Running me out of endurance was how she won that last fight!
Finally it came to him. It was desperate—but right now, a desperate chance might be the only one he’d have.
Once again, he turned and dove. Once again, she flipped over to grapple with him, claw to claw.
This time he let her catch him.
Her fore-claws grabbed and locked with his, her hind claws raked across his belly-skin, sending rivers of agony racing along his nerves. He screamed—but pulled her closer, pulling her head between his wings.
And he sent the lash of captured lightning that was a dragon’s most feared weapon arcing between the tips of his wings, catching her head in the middle.
Her mouth snapped open in a silent scream; her head arched back on her long neck until the back of her head met her shoulders. Her claws convulsed closed once, as he maintained the arc—then, when he released the lightning, she went limp.
He was ready for that, or else she might have achieved a Pyrrhic victory by making them both tumble headlong out of the sky onto the hard and unforgiving earth. He pumped his wings furiously as her limp body dragged at his; holding both of them in the air in a controlled fall instead of an uncontrolled one. Instead of both of them tumbling and plummeting to earth, he achieved a hard landing, with her body still locked in his talons. Fortunately, he had her to cushion his fall. He was not feeling charitable enough not to take advantage of that.
Just as well, since she had started to come to just as they landed. Her head hit the ground, and the force of the blow knocked her out again.
Not for long; just long enough for him to pin her to the ground, helpless beneath his weight, as the wizards ran toward them from the tents. Behind the wizards, the humans of the Iron People approached them cautiously.
“Shift, Myre!” he growled. “Into a human. Do it now, or I swear I’ll—”
“You’ll what?” she taunted, although there was panic in her eyes as she tried to squirm away and couldn’t. “You’ll kill me? You haven’t the stomach!”
“I’ll break your wings,” he spat. “I’ll shred them, and I’ll break every bone, so that no matter how well you heal, you’ll never fly again! I’ll do it, Myre! I will!”
He saw by the fear in her that she believed him—and of course, it never occurred to her that she could simply shift to heal any damage he did to her! Father Dragon knew that little ploy, and his mother—and of course, he had been the first dragon to try it, to his best knowledge. But evidently Myre assumed, like most dragons, that damage to her true self was permanent damage.
Just as well.
Beneath his talons, she dwindled down and shrank into a helpless human, trembling under his claws, but staring up at him with hate in her eyes. Not a human of the Iron People, but a pale-skinned slave of the elven lords.
“Now what?” she sneered up at him as he loomed over her. “Are you going to eat me?”
He closed his talons around her, none too gently. “You’re going to wish I had, Myre,” was all he said.
:Shana!: he sent out the thought, even as he spoke. :Get a collar—a new one—and bring Kala and her tools.’:
By now the humans were encircling them where they both sat, near-motionless, in the dry, hot grass. Keman was not going to give up his draconic form until he knew that Myre was no longer a threat. The sun beat down on both of them without mercy, but full sun was a friend to a dragon, the hotter, the better, he felt the pain of his belly wounds aching with every tiny movement, but the heat of the sun revived him, even as it wilted Myre in the form he had forced her to assume.