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The Tattooed Woman Volume 2 - Chapter 9: If the skies could dream.
Unlike during her last visit, Cassie found that the great hall she had been led to was lit this day and she looked about curiously, for outwith the mythical faerie castles she had once dreamed of as a child she had never seen such a grand place. The walls were of panelled wood and decorated with many tapestries all woven from richly coloured threads of silk and wool. Tall columns of carved black oak stretched up to a panelled ceiling that towered high above her, and a long feasting table stretched along the length of the hall.
The halls of the faerie castles of her dreams were all lit by beams of brilliant sunshine that streamed through windows of coloured glass, but that was not the case here, for there were no windows to allow such illumination to this place and she thought that strange.
The tall Firbolg guard who had been her grim and silent escort closed the door behind her and she swallowed nervously.
At the far end of the hall, Shalidar was waiting.
The Dragon looked down at the small human as she came to stand before her and pondered. It was strange to Shalidar that so many of her plans and schemes all seemed to hinge upon such a short-lived terrestrial creature, such a small thing, so puny, so helpless, she chuckled darkly, so
edible
.
Shalidar examined the young woman with senses far keener than any possessed by mortal man. She could smell the girl's fear, mingled with a healthy portion of awe, and... yes, a strange measure of envious excitement. She could hear the pounding of her heartbeat, sense the delicious warmth of the hot blood that coursed through her veins, and feel the cold touch of death that still lingered like a shadow upon her spirit.
The wound inflicted upon the girl by the Drow had been most grievous, and she had slipped so far into the cold embrace of that final sleep that its treatment had taxed even her daughter's significant healing magicks to such an extent that afterwards, Ellén had collapsed into an exhausted coma-like sleep for days as she recovered her strength.
Such was the potency of the powers used to heal the girl that Shalidar wondered if the sorcery and shadow would forever leave their mark upon her, poured into the crucible of her spirit like molten iron into a mould, though whether that would ultimately be for good or ill, was far beyond even the perceptions of a Dragon to fathom and she found herself murmuring.
"What immortal hand, or eye..."
Cassie tilted her head curiously, "Pardon?"
The Dragon shook herself as she realised that she had spoken aloud, "A passing thought, nothing more, young Cassie. It is a small thing, pay it no mind," she drew a breath, "I see your wound is well healed now. Would you be fit enough to travel, I wonder?"
A glimmer of hope sparkled for a moment in the girl's eyes, "I feel much better, thank you. And you," she blushed, "does your wound still trouble you?"
Shalidar smiled, "I am well, the injury is all but healed. Indeed, I can take a human shape again easily enough. Would it be a comfort to your mind if I did so?"
The girl swallowed her fear, "Well, it might save me getting a crick in my neck from looking up at you, but..."
"But what?"
Cassie smiled nervously, but despite her fear she couldn't stop the words bubbling forth, "it's just... you're a Dragon! A creature out of... of legend, and... I've dreamed, but never seen such..." she blushed, "I just don't have the words."
Shalidar stared at the girl dumbfounded, "You... like this form?"
"In the same way one might like a mountain or a thunderstorm. It's... beyond me."
In a gesture, Cassie thought strangely similar to that of the half-wild tomcat that used to catch mice back at the inn the Dragon shook her great head with amusement and snorted, "I've seen mighty warriors soil themselves with fear at the very sight of me, while others have fallen to their knees and begged for deliverance as my shadow fell upon them, but not you. Where does this courage come from, I wonder."
"Maybe it comes from being helpless."
"How so?"
Cassie shrugged, "I've always been small. I doubt I could fight off a full-grown man if he sought me harm, far less a
Dragon
. What point is there then in falling to useless panic and terror?"
The girl swallowed as Shalidar's head moved closer and those brilliant blue eyes peered at her intently. After an endless moment, the Dragon retreated slightly and shook its head, "No."
"No?"
Shalidar smiled, revealing an array of curved, foot-long fangs, "No Cassie, I can read the courage within you as easily as I can smell your blood," the Dragon chuckled, "it is simply that you are brave."
The girl gave a derisive snort, "I'm not! I fear so many things."
"Your fear doesn't stop you from arguing with a Dragon though it seems. Tell me, girl, at the temple, when you were attacked by those demonic hounds, and one went after the children. Did you snatch up yon vorpal broom and run away from the danger, or towards it?"
"B-but they were just children, I couldn't abandon them."
"Indeed."
Shalidar sighed as she considered. The little thing was likeable enough, and her precocious courage was almost endearing. It seemed a shame to inflict her woes upon the human, and yet necessity was perhaps the harshest of all Mistresses so she steeled her heart against the small flicker of sentiment that strangely pricked at the corner of her mind.
"I am considering what to do with you, Cassie."
The girl looked up at her with those deep brown human eyes and her lower lip trembled slightly as if she waited to hear a sentence being pronounced. Her small hands were clasped tightly into fists and despite her efforts, her voice held a quiver as she spoke, "What's to become of me then?"
The Dragon looked for alternatives, but few presented themselves, "I knew that Adair felt some sentiment towards you Cassie, but I confess I considered it to be the affection one might feel for a pet, not kinship."
The girl's cry of furious indignation was almost enough to set the dragon to laughing, "A pet!"
"I know, I apologise for the slight but think on it from my perspective if you can. Adair is of the Danu, and you are a mortal child. There is a significant incompatibility to be measured."
The Dragon made a disgruntled grumbling sound as it allowed its chin to rest on the stone floor with an audible "thump" that shook the furniture.
"I was told about you, but it seems the tale that was spun to me was... let's say,
incomplete
, and now I feel like some dupe who has allowed herself to be thoroughly manipulated. It's all rather galling."
"Huh?"
"Cassie, I took you with the intent of holding you hostage against any intemperate actions Adair might take against me, thinking to return you safe and unharmed after we spoke, but now? Now I learn that not only have I kidnapped her
sister