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Chapter Nine illustration
by Melissa Cuthill
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Across
Madellon territory, the last day of the Turn dawned alternately
dry or humid, but uniformly hot.
At the Weyr, the bustle of activity that usually preceded
the Turn's End celebrations had been reduced to a sluggish
crawl. The youngsters sent out to pick the best produce from
the kitchen gardens sweltered in the heat, and the limp greens
and wilted leaves of the roots they brought back paid testament
to the arid weather. The grass in the stock pens had been
scorched into straw, and exhausted beasts stood or leaned
by the fences, drained even of the energy to fear the few
dragons picking off meals.
Another group of youngsters trudged wearily back and forth
from the lake to the kitchens with buckets. The stream that
had long been dammed to run past the entrance to the kitchens
had dried up. The level of the lake had dropped to a such
an extent that even the oldest riders could not remember ever
having seen it so low, and most dragons were opting to bathe
out-Weyr rather than swim in the increasingly brackish water.
Up by the Star Stones, the watchrider had taken refuge from
the sun under his dragon's slightly open wing. Being put on
watch on Turn's End normally constituted punishment, which
was why T'kamen hadn't been surprised to see his name on the
roster. He had accepted his lot with equanimity, although
some of his supporters had thrown savage looks at L'dro in
the dining hall at breakfast.
Epherineth called a friendly greeting to the blue dragon
who had just taken off from the Bowl and was flying up towards
the watch post. T'kamen squinted against the sun to identify
Darshanth, and signalled the blue permission to land beside
his bronze.
Darshanth alighted, neatly folding his wings, and touched
noses with Epherineth as his rider dismounted. C'mine ducked
under Epherineth's wing, sighing in visible relief at the
shade. "Morning, Kamen."
"Mine," the bronze rider replied. "What are
you doing up here?"
C'mine smiled sheepishly. "C'los is throwing things,
and I don't duck very well."
T'kamen looked down at the ledge shared by Darshanth and
Indioth. C'los' green was preening and posturing by turns,
and her hide glowed fiercely. "That counts you out of
the Turn's End celebration, too."
"One way or another," C'mine agreed. "Even
if Darshanth doesn't catch her, I won't be showing up."
The bronze rider looked at his friend's dragon. Darshanth
was much smaller than Epherineth, but the blue was gleaming
with good health, and the bright sun emphasised the almost
silvery highlights of his fine colour. "Good chasing,
Darshanth."
The blue rumbled pleasantly in response. "He says thank
you," said C'mine.
The two riders stood in companionable silence for a few moments
under the shade of Epherineth's obligingly spread wing. Then
T'kamen noticed how C'mine was regarding his weyrmate's green.
"Something the matter?"
C'mine's slight frown vanished. "No, it's nothing."
T'kamen folded his arms. For all that C'mine willingly took
responsibility for his friends' worries, the blue rider was
notoriously cagey about his own. "It must be something,
Mine, or you wouldn't have that look on your face."
The blue rider frowned again, as if in thought. Then he asked,
"Do you think C'los has...changed at all?"
"Changed?"
"Forget it," the blue rider said hastily.
"No, Mine, it's all right. How do you mean, 'changed'?"
C'mine's frown deepened. "Since we've been helping you
build up to being Weyrleader. He just seems to have become
more...I don't know...cold. No, that's not right."
The blue rider fumbled for words. "Ruthless, maybe? Unscrupulous?"
C'mine's expression grew troubled. "That's it. Unscrupulous."
"In what way?" T'kamen asked, concerned. If C'los
was acting in a way that disturbed his weyrmate, something
was certainly wrong.
"You remember that discussion we all had, when H'ersto
offered to interfere with Shimpath's flight?" At T'kamen's
nod, C'mine went on. "All that night, Los was trying
to think of a way to turn that to our advantage. He asked
me if I thought R'hren and T'rello might get their bronzes
to do something similar to what H'ersto suggested."
"He couldn't have been serious," T'kamen objected.
C'mine shook his head. "I don't know. I said straight
away that it wasn't right. He seemed to agree, but I know
he kept thinking about it anyway."
"You know what he's like when he gets an idea in his
head, Mine," said T'kamen. "He doesn't let it up
until he's explored all the possibilities. It doesn't mean
he'd actually try it."
"It's not just that," said C'mine. "He talks
about Valonna as if she's just a piece to be taken in a game
of chess. He doesn't think of her as a person - just as a
weakness to be exploited. Kamen, I know she isn't the Weyrwoman
we would have liked to have seen Impress Shimpath, but that
doesn't give us the right to take advantage of her the way
L'dro has."
"Other than you, the rest of us have barely spoken to
Valonna," T'kamen said gently. It wasn't a rebuke, not
exactly, but the scheme to work him into the Weyrwoman's good
graces had never really happened.
C'mine wasn't dumb to the mild criticism. "Kamen, after
the challenge it was difficult enough to convince her that
I wasn't just using her the way C'los wanted to, let alone
getting her to warm to the idea of you."
"All right, Mine. You don't have to justify it to me."
"But I do have to justify it to C'los," the blue
rider said doggedly. "And that's what bothers me. He's
so caught up in the game, he's forgotten that the pieces he's
playing with are real people."
"I don't like it much either," said T'kamen. "Massaging
egos and making alliances with people I can barely stand -
the riders who seem to think it's clever or daring to salute
me in the dining hall - always having to take care of what
I say in case some of the more zealous ones pick up on it...
I'm a dragonrider, C'mine, not a politician. But I think Los
is right. If popular support counts for anything in a mating
flight, I won't have a chance without him."
"I suppose so," C'mine said reluctantly.
"It won't be for much longer, anyway," said T'kamen.
"And when Indioth rises she'll take both your minds off
politics for a while."
Another dragon appeared from between above them. Epherineth
raised his head and uttered a short querying bark. The brown
bugled a response, and Epherineth shifted aside for the pair
to land beside him. Sweeprider.
The bronze rider ducked underneath his dragon's neck to greet
the brown rider. Part of the watchpair's job was to take reports
from the day's sweepriders, and pass pertinent information
on to any departing dragons. "What have you got, R'han?"
The young rider scrambled down from his dragon, pulling his
riding jacket open and fanning himself in the heat. "We
swept north over Kellad. Skies are clear as far as the southern
border, but there's a storm front gathering north of there,
and Bostrath says the air feels very thick."
"Wind conditions?"
"Not much high up, but it's hot and gusty on the ground."
The young brown rider made a face, scratching his sweaty hair.
"About time for a good rainstorm, I think. I envy them!"
"Not rain," C'mine said quietly, from behind T'kamen.
"Thunder. You've just described all the warning signs
of a Kellad summer thunderstorm."
R'han looked puzzled. "Won't it rain too?"
"For about ten minutes," C'mine agreed. "Then
it'll stop, and the heat will turn it all to steam. The ground's
so hard now it won't even soak in. Kellad gets them a lot
at this time of Turn. Don't worry about it. The holders there
are used to them."
"Oh." The brown rider looked at T'kamen. "Can
I go now? It's hot up here."
T'kamen nodded his assent, and R'han climbed back aboard
his brown. "I was never there in the summer," the
bronze rider commented defensively.
"You weren't missing much," C'mine assured him.
"I should get on. I was going to go find out if Saren
knows where people have been going to hunt. Darshanth's going
to be hungry after Indioth rises, and he says the Weyr beasts
stick in his teeth."
T'kamen smiled briefly, and not only at the blue's fussiness.
"Give her my best."
"Always, Kamen." C'mine hesitated, as if he was
going to add something else, then shook his head. "See
you later."
"Later, Mine." T'kamen knew the blue rider was
holding something back regarding Sarenya. But as he watched
Darshanth launch off the heights and glide down towards the
stock pens, he realised that he didn't mind at all.
L'dro
stripped the last shreds of flesh off the bone he had been
gnawing and tossed the wreckage away. As a drudge appeared
at his elbow to take away the remains of his lunch, the Weyrleader
wiped his greasy fingers on the tablecloth and sighed contentedly.
As a child, he'd hated the way that supplementary meals were
always skimped on a feast day. Since becoming Weyrleader he
had made it clear that he would expect to eat as heartily
as ever at breakfast, lunch, and dinner, no matter the occasion.
His only concession to informality was that he ate in the
kitchen while drudges and serving women laid out the dining
hall for the evening's celebrations.
He was looking forward to the new Turn. Other than the constant
thorn in his side that was T'kamen, the Weyrleader felt he
had much to celebrate. Tomorrow, the ninety-ninth Turn of
the Interval would begin, and he, L'dro, would see the new
Turn in as Weyrleader for the fifth time, equalling the record
set by his father L'mis. It had been more than thirty Turns
since a Weyrleader had remained so for longer.
The thought made L'dro sneer, despite his good mood. That
old bitch Fianine had seen to it that no one bronze rider
could consolidate his position as Weyrleader. She had used
L'mis, letting Pelranth fly her queen when it suited her own
ends, and then influencing Cherganth against the bronze when
she tired of his rider. L'mis' plans for the Weyr had never
come to fruition through the old Weyrwoman's meddling.
L'dro had been thirteen when his father had first become
Weyrleader. The pride he'd felt for L'mis' achievement had
been crowned by the prospect of Impressing a dragon of Pelranth's
parentage. For the Weyrleader's only son to Impress a bronze,
first time, would have been a glorious portent for L'mis'
career as Weyrleader.
It was not to be. The boy Leddrome had stood on the hot sands,
confident, expectant, as one by one dragonets escaped their
shells. He had watched, tolerantly at first, as other boys
and girls Impressed blues and greens, safe in the knowledge
that only a bronze would choose him. He had stepped forward
proudly when the first bronze had broken free, only to see
it rush to another boy. He had felt first disbelief and then
anger as two more bronzes passed him over, one in favour of
Frampton, the ridiculous slow-witted candidate he had taken
so much pleasure in teasing. Unable to comprehend the hatchlings'
decisions, Leddrome had closed in around the final egg with
the other remaining candidates, convinced that his dragon
must be inside. It was a large egg, quite large enough to
hold a good sized bronze. As it had rocked and cracked, Leddrome
had willed its occupant to be free, turning all his mental
power on welcoming the last dragonet, the one that had to
be his.
The hatchling that had finally burst free of the egg was
blue. Frozen in shock and disappointment, Leddrome had watched
dumbly as two other boys helped the little creature to its
feet. The blue dragonet had taken a single step towards him,
his sorrowful creeling momentarily hopeful. Leddrome had looked
at the crying hatchling, so very different to the proud, strong
bronze dragonet he had envisaged, and known that it was not
for him. The Weyrleader's son would never accept a lesser
dragon.
L'dro remembered vividly how clear his mind had been at that
moment, as he had stepped away from the blue dragonet. He
had decided then that he would never settle for second best
- a comprehension of his own mind almost akin to an epiphany.
The uncompromising stance had stayed with him ever since.
He never regretted rejecting the blue. It had died little
more than a Turn later anyway, lost between in weyrling
training along with the boy who had Impressed it. But his
failure to Impress from Pelranth's first clutch had doomed
his father as Weyrleader. Five Turns later, when Cherganth
rose to mate again, a different bronze won her. Leddrome maintained
his confident façade on the sands, but inside he was
a morass of doubts: guilt for standing to a clutch not of
his father's bronze, worry that he would fail again, fear
that this would be the last time he had a chance. Much of
his confidence had come from taunting the weaker candidates.
By making them feel unworthy of dragons - or, at least, of
the bronzes Leddrome claimed as his own - surely he would
improve his own chances.
He had targeted three other boys with particular scorn: Taskamen,
Cairmine and Carellos. The latter two had made friends easily
amongst the candidates, threatening to undermine Leddrome's
authority, so he had approached the trader lad, Taskamen,
in search of an ally. Even then, Carellos and Cairmine had
been on the edge of the kind of relationship most Holdbred
types would revile, and Leddrome had tried to use it to turn
Taskamen against his friends. The tactic had backfired dramatically.
Under the gaudy clothes and sashes and bandannas and earrings
that made up the trader's apparel, there was a quick and savage
temper, and an abiding loyal to his friends. The fight resulting
from Leddrome's attempt to win Taskamen over had almost seen
them both barred from the sands.
The battle lines were thus drawn for the remainder of their
candidacy. Taskamen had been easily provoked, but his two
friends had been adept at talking him out of retaliation,
so Leddrome's forays against him were seldom reciprocated,
and word of the pranks never got back to the Weyrlingmaster.
On several occasions Leddrome had thought he might finally
have pushed Taskamen into giving up his candidacy and leaving
the Weyr for good, but the trader lad had apparently inexhaustible
reserves of determination.
By the time of the Hatching, their rivalry had become a bitter
feud, with half the candidates siding with Taskamen and the
rest with Leddrome. The sniping had continued even on the
way to the Hatching Ground. But once the ceremony had begun,
Leddrome had been forced once again to watch boys he hated
Impress before him.
Cairmine had been chosen first, claimed by a blue with more
assertion than befitted the colour. A green, Hatched too late
to choose from amongst the four female candidates, had gone
to Carellos. Both Impressions had galled Leddrome, but with
the pair attaching lesser colours he could at least disdain
them. But when the egg to which Taskamen had been drawn from
the start of the Hatching had spilled its inhabitant onto
the sand, and the sleek bronze dragonet had looked straight
into the trader boy's eyes and cried out for joy at finding
him, the bitterness and jealousy twisting in Leddrome's guts
had almost overwhelmed him.
Too sick with anger and envy to hear the cries and cheers,
Leddrome had simply stared blankly at the remaining eggs,
his confidence in tatters. All around him, newly linked pairs
had been experiencing their first magical moments together,
and the six or eight remaining candidates had gathered closer
to the handful of un-Impressed dragonets, but Leddrome had
only been able to stare at Taskamen and his bronze, with tears
of resentment running down his cheeks.
Pierdeth had found him, then. The hatchling, ungainly but
muscular from the moment of Hatching, had been wandering,
inspecting each of the candidates that were left. A tentative
push at his mind had startled Leddrome into focusing on the
tear-blurred shape before him, and as he had taken in the
sight of the powerful bronze dragonet of his dreams, the push
had exploded into the presence and consciousness of the hatchling
Pierdeth.
A smile crossed L'dro's face at the memory. Impressing Pierdeth
had marked his second epiphany, confirming the first and banishing
all uncertainty. And so it had been since. He personally had
prevented the possibility of another Weyrwoman like Fianine
by Searching Valonna. He had courted her, using every last
shred of her awe and gratitude to him to gain her trust and
love. He and Pierdeth had won her, snatching the young Shimpath
quickly in flight before even half a dozen bronzes had failed,
seizing power for himself. He had used that power as both
armour and weapon, making an example of T'kamen to inspire
the other bronze riders with fear, and courting them as he
had Valonna, with power and luxury. Bronze riders had never
been so well-off at Madellon Weyr, and it was all down to
L'dro. Never mind what the lower echelons thought: in decisive
flight, only queen and bronzes counted. The queen's rider
was his: she had responded with pathetic gratitude to his
renewed attention. Expensive gifts and exaggerated solicitude
cost no more than Weyr marks and a finite amount of time:
once Pierdeth had caught Shimpath again and consolidated L'dro's
position, he would be free to pursue his own diversions again.
The riders of the Council knew to a man that they were best
off under L'dro as Weyrleader.
T'kamen was the only threat. L'dro had once considered transferring
him forcibly out of the Weyr, but D'feng had dissuaded him
of the notion. To remove the rider altogether would suggest
L'dro was afraid of him: better to keep him near and best
him at every turn. There were ways to hamper a dragon in a
mating flight, but with the queen's rider utterly devoted
to L'dro, such measures shouldn't be necessary. T'kamen had
never gained any standing with Valonna. Indeed: D'feng's sly
plan to distract the other bronze rider by bringing back the
failed candidate T'kamen had presented for Shimpath appeared
to have worked, if their informant in the inner circle was
to be believed. Other than the endorsement of a rabble of
wingriders, and two bronze riders respectively too old and
too young to make a difference, T'kamen had nothing. Maybe
he'd even leave in shame when he lost to Pierdeth again.
L'dro leaned back in his chair, his smile broadening. Oh
yes: he was definitely looking forward to the new Turn.
The
afternoon dragged on: hot, airless, suffocating. Up by the
Star Stones, T'kamen could only just keep himself from drowsing.
L'stev had been up twice with cold drinks and a scathing appraisal
of the celebrations already going on under cool canvas shade
at the far end of the Bowl. Both pitchers were empty now,
and T'kamen was considering whether to get Epherineth to ask
Vanzanth to bring some more when the bronze alerted him to
something.
There. Little ones.
T'kamen strained his eyes in the direction Epherineth indicated,
then laid a hand on his bronze's smooth hide and let himself
use the dragon's sight. Three fire-lizards, young ones by
the size, flew in a tight cluster, but their indecisive dips
and swoops suggested that something was wrong. Can you
tell them to come over here?
Epherineth expressed his doubt silently. They're very
young and have never seen a dragon. They would respond better
to one of their own.
Who at Madellon has fire-lizards? Then, T'kamen spoke
and Epherineth responded at the same moment. Sarenya.
I'll get her.
T'kamen stepped back, unsure whether to be amused or annoyed
by his dragon's initiative as Epherineth launched himself
off the Rim. The bronze rider winced as the blistering sun
hammered down on him, and hastily retreated into the shadow
of the Star Stones.
Sorry.
T'kamen watched his bronze glide across the Bowl, bright
sunlight flashing off his sleek back. He noticed that Indioth
was still on her ledge. C'los' green was really working herself
up into a frenzy. There was going to be a very loud mating
flight before the end of the day.
Epherineth returned with Sarenya astride, quickly enough
to make T'kamen wonder. He pointedly expressed his suspicion
at the bronze as he reached up to help Sarenya dismount. "Did
he tell you what we need you for?"
The journeyman touched his hand but lightly as she slid down.
"Something about fire-lizards." She motioned to
the bronze fire-lizard on her shoulder. "He'll get on
it."
Epherineth was watching Sarenya with brilliant blue eyes.
"Would some shade be too much trouble?" T'kamen
asked his dragon dryly.
The bronze extended a wing without a word, although he threw
his rider a disapproving glance.
Sarenya's lizard had taken flight from her shoulder. T'kamen
borrowed Epherineth's long sight again and watched as Tarnish
approached the three visitors. The young lizards veered towards
Sarenya's mature bronze as if in relief.
"They're very young," said Sarenya, critically.
T'kamen looked at the journeyman, seeing the concentration
in her eyes as she tried to make sense of the situation. "Any
idea where they're from?"
"We'll soon find out. Come on, Tarnish, bring them over
here." The last was spoken under her breath, like a new
weyrling who had yet to grow fully accustomed to communicating
silently.
Tarnish herded the cluster of lizards towards them, alternately
reassuring them with soothing chirps and berating them for
their reluctance with angry flutters of his wings. The green
and two browns were clearly juveniles, but when a roll of
hide dropped from their talons into Sarenya's hands it became
clear that their owners were inexperienced, too.
"Shards, some people don't have the sense they were
born with," said Sarenya, weighing the message in her
hand before passing it to T'kamen. "These lizards are
too young to be carrying messages, and it's no wonder it took
three of them, with the weight of that thing!"
T'kamen inspected the outside of the hide, but it revealed
nothing of its origin or intended recipient. "Thanks
for your help, Saren," he said as he unrolled the message.
"Epherineth will take you down again in a moment."
Sarenya nodded. "When do you get off watch? I guess
it was inevitable that L'dro would put you on duty for Turn's
End."
"Not until tonight..." T'kamen trailed off as
he absorbed the import of the words that had been hastily
penned on the piece of hide.
"What is it, Kamen? What does it say?"
The bronze rider made himself go back and read the words
again. "It's from Meturvian at Kellad Hold."
"No wonder those fire-lizards were so timid," said
Sarenya. "They must have hatched from the eggs we delivered
a month ago."
T'kamen took a deep breath. "There's a fire in the forest."
For a moment they both stood there, absorbing the possible
consequences of such a disaster, not only to the precious
timber lots, but to the people who worked them. The long,
hot summer had leeched the Kellad area of moisture. A big
fire could blaze for months. The loving husbandry of five
generations of Kellad holders could be wiped out in a single
season.
The bronze rider scarcely hesitated an instant before acting.
"I don't know how L'dro will take this, but he can't
ignore it." He vaulted to Epherineth's neck ridges, putting
a hand down to assist Sarenya. "Epherineth, make some
noise."
For once, the bronze didn't grudge the uncharacteristic necessity.
As he extended his wings to take off he called out to the
Weyr with unmistakeable notes of urgency and alarm in his
voice, and T'kamen heard his broadcast to every other dragon.
We are needed!
T'kamen looked down at the tents and awnings that had been
erected in the Bowl, seeing the confusion of riders and Weyrfolk.
Land as close as you can. Then he turned to address
Sarenya, shouting over the clamour of wings. "You'd better
hang on."
The wind of Epherineth's wings made the canvas pavilions
flap wildly, straining against their tethers. The bronze landed
hard, absorbing most of the impact with his powerful hind
legs, without his normal grace.
The other dragons of Madellon had responded to Epherineth's
cry, trumpeting alarm. Even Pierdeth had bugled a query. Riders
and Weyrfolk crowded around Epherineth, demanding to know
what was happening.
"Urgent message from Kellad Hold," T'kamen shouted
above the din. He held the missive high in his fist. "It
goes to the Weyrleader."
"What does it say?" someone in the crowd demanded.
"Let him dismount!"
T'kamen clenched his teeth against the irritation, and slid
down from Epherineth's neck. "Clear some space, this
needs to get to L'dro."
"Make way!"
Amazingly, the shout was D'feng's. The press of bodies eased
as the tall Flightleader waded into the crowd. T'kamen nodded
curtly to the man, wary, but grateful for his intervention.
"L'dro needs to see this."
D'feng nodded, equally wary. "Come this way."
T'kamen followed the other bronze rider with Sarenya beside
him. The mob of riders - most of the Weyr, now - trailed at
a slightly more respectful distance: good, T'kamen thought.
He wanted to see how L'dro would deal with this.
The Weyrleader was already on his way, with a face like a
thundercloud. "Who in Faranth's name do you think you
are?"
T'kamen stared impassively at L'dro for a moment before holding
out the message. "I think I'm the watchrider."
"What is this?" L'dro snatched the hide away and
narrowed his eyes to focus on it.
"Lord Meturvian of Kellad Hold urgently requests the
Weyr's assistance," T'kamen said, for everyone else to
hear, quoting the brief message as he remembered it. "A
fire is sweeping through the eastern forests of the Hold and
endangering the lives of Kellad holders."
"Endangering his timber industry, more like!" L'dro
scoffed, throwing the message back at T'kamen. "It's
Turn's End, no one's going to be in the forest today. Let
it burn."
"Weyrleader, communities made up of woodcutters and
their families have sprung up in the deep forests in recent
Turns," D'feng said discreetly. "Their holds are
built of timber: they would most certainly be at risk."
L'dro's anger at being disturbed from his day of revelry
combined with the embarrassment of having his ignorance shown
up publicly. Crimson-faced, he spat, "The Weyr doesn't
protect fools who shelter in wood! If Thread was falling..."
"Thread isn't falling," T'kamen interrupted.
The Weyrleader glared at him with such an intensity of hatred
that T'kamen felt his own spine go rigid. "Idiocy!"
"You'd let them burn, then, Weyrleader?"
The disapproving mutters from the crowd, and the looks being
thrown at L'dro, almost made T'kamen pity the Weyrleader.
He had no concept whatsoever of how to handle a crowd in a
crisis. Without D'feng's meticulous hard work, L'dro would
be nothing.
"Fine!" L'dro snapped. "If you're so concerned about them,
why don't you go and help!"
"Yes sir," T'kamen replied, so immediately and
so smoothly that his obedience was mocking. He turned to the
crowd of riders, the necessary commands coming to him easily.
"I need volunteers who can have their dragons ready to
go in ten minutes. Healer training or knowledge of Kellad's
forests would be an advantage, but I need a good spread of
colours."
After an instant of stunned silence, a chorus of willing
voices greeted T'kamen's request. The bronze rider felt a
sudden surge of pride, not only at their response to him,
but at the eagerness of dragonriders to help the people of
Pern. "All right!" he shouted above the racket. "L'stev, T'rello,
you're seconds." He scanned the volunteers rapidly. "Ishane,
I want you to take A'len, L'jando, and Jenavally to the infirmary
for litters and first-aid supplies. T'sten, get between
to Kellad to tell them help is on the way."
Riders scattered to follow his orders, and those who remained
looked hopefully at the bronze rider. T'kamen rapidly named
another ten blue and green riders: their smaller dragons would
have less trouble moving in the forests, but he still only
had two bronzes. Several Council riders had volunteered, but
T'kamen didn't trust any of them. R'hren was just too old
to risk in a perilous environment. It left him only one option.
"Fr'ton."
The blonde bronze rider looked startled.
"We're going to need you and Peteorth." T'kamen
raised his voice as riders hurried away. "I want everyone
in full wherhide and fighting harness, and back here in ten
minutes."
T'kamen paused to draw breath, and only then noticed the
expressions of those he hadn't chosen. There was regret on
many faces, but also admiration. He turned to Sarenya. "I
don't know what kind of casualties we might have, if any,
but I want the healers and dragon-healers prepared, and everyone
else ready with numbweed."
"Kamen. I'm coming too."
The voice belonged to C'mine, and it was full of resolve.
T'kamen looked at the blue rider, realising that he had automatically
counted his friend out of the rescue wing because of his weyrmate.
"Mine, you don't have to. Stay and be with C'los."
C'mine shook his head; there was shielded anguish in his
eyes, but his determination overrode it. "He'll understand.
This is more important. I lived at Kellad for sixteen Turns,
remember? I know how the fires spread."
T'kamen gripped his friend's shoulder. "C'mine, I would
have you come more gladly than any other rider in the Weyr,
but I know how much Indioth's flights mean to you and Los."
"I know. That's why I'm asking you: please don't leave
me behind."
For a moment T'kamen didn't understand, but then he realised
what C'mine meant. The blue rider had made a difficult decision
in putting his duty as a dragonrider over his dedication to
C'los. It wasn't T'kamen's place, as friend or leader, to
belittle him by questioning that decision.
T'kamen thumped C'mine's shoulder. "Get Darshanth ready."
C'mine paused and then said softly, "Kamen, look at
L'dro."
The bronze rider turned. The Weyrleader stood with D'feng
in the shade of one of the pavilions. The thin Flightleader
was talking rapidly to him, but L'dro's gaze was fixed on
T'kamen.
It might simply have been the shadow of the canvas, or the
fact that T'kamen was standing in direct sunlight, but the
Weyrleader's face seemed grey, and his eyes showed stark hatred
and naked fear.
  
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