The sun was low in the sky over Bangdorf, igniting gold fire on the spires of the Kaiserlicher Palast and the tall, thin, single tower of the Kirche Unserer Heiligen Mutter. The red and white roofs of the many other buildings were less striking but no less beautiful. Senta Bly pulled a wayward blond curl back behind her ear as she stared out the large window on the twelfth floor of the Kanalgeschäfts Hotel, as she often did at this time of day. She had been in Bangdorf for a fortnight after six months of touring much of Sumir. She thought Bangdorf was the most beautiful city that she had ever seen. Smaller than Brech and much newer, it was laid out with wide streets and broad, lush parks. If it had been anywhere else in the world, she could have seen herself staying there.
She swiftly turned and walked down the hallway to the door of the Imperial suite and opening it, stepped inside. The large parlor was empty, so she continued on into the master bedroom. Reclining on the bed, wearing nothing but his slacks and a white undershirt, was her companion Kieran Baxter. Retrieving a lit cigarette from the ashtray on the nightstand, he took a long drag and blew out a thick stream of smoke.
“Dress shopping again?” he asked.
“Yes.” She spun around. “Does this dress make my bottom look big?”
“Huge.”
“Good. This is the latest thing in lady’s undergarments. It’s called a table-top bustle.”
“I can see why.” He took a last puff from the cigarette, before mashing it into the ashtray. “I could lay out a seven course meal on your ass.”
“Don’t say ‘ass’,” Senta hissed. “It’s uncouth.”
Baxter shrugged, then spun his legs off the bed and sat up. He cared little for ladies’ fashions. Senta on the other hand, spent a great deal of time shopping. This particular dress, newly in from Mirsanna, had a high collar in front, though it was cut low in the back. Gold, trimmed with black brocade, it had puffs of black lace at the wrists.
“Are we going out tonight?” asked Baxter.
“Of course. We only have four more days.”
“I’d better get dressed then, hadn’t I?”
A sudden loud “gawp” could be heard through the side door. Senta quickly crossed the room and opened the door to reveal a large closet. Curled up into a neat circle, just inside the door, was a dragon. No bigger than a medium sized dog, the beast was covered with coral tinted metallic scales. Its long thin snout was resting on its forearms. Its long whip-like tail, tipped with a spade-shaped barb, was wrapped around its body.
“Poor baby,” said Senta, leaning down and reaching out a hand to the little coral dragon. “Did the bad man lock you up in the closet all day?”
A thin forked tongue quickly licked the woman’s fingers, and then suddenly the mouth full of needle sharp teeth bit down upon the fleshy part of her hand.
“Ouch! You horrible little twonk!”
“You shouldn’t say ‘twonk’,” said Baxter dryly. “It’s uncouth. And that’s why she’s been locked up all day.”
“She hasn’t been out in forever,” said Senta, pausing to lick the blood off her hand. “She has so much pent up energy.”
“Indeed.”
“Come along, Pet,” she said, scooping up the dragon into her arms.
The little beast allowed itself to be cuddled for just a moment before slithering up her sleeve and taking a spot on her shoulder. The sorceress crossed the room and opened the doors to the balcony.
“Go on,” said Senta. “Fly, but be back by morning.”
The little dragon shot into the sky with so much force, it sent her staggering backwards several steps. Once inside again, she shut the doors. Baxter was now in the closet putting on a newly starched white shirt. Senta walked up behind him and snaked her arms around his waist.
“You do look handsome when you get dressed up.”
“Thank you.” He unfastened his pants and tucked in the shirt tail. “I worry about letting her out. We’ve already had two shooting attempts. It seems careless to chance a third.”
“Yes, but both of those times they were trying to shoot me,” Senta pointed out. “I doubt anyone will even notice her and I don’t think a bullet would permanently harm her anyway. I’m much more concerned about her growth. By this age, Bessemer was nearly the size of a pony.”
“Maybe the females are just smaller, or maybe her kind of dragon doesn’t grow as big.”
“Maybe, maybe. That’s why I’ve decided to spend tomorrow at the library.”
“I thought we were taking the river cruise tomorrow.” He turned around so that she could tie the bowtie he had just wrapped around his neck.
“You can still go.”
“By myself?”
“I doubt you’ll suffer from a lack of female companionship.”
“You wouldn’t mind?” he asked. “If I were to take the cruise with a lovely Freedonian girl?”
“As long as I don’t see you, you’ll both probably survive,” said Senta. “Just remember, the women here are desperate for you lot.”
“And whose fault is that?”
“It’s not mine,” said Senta. “Everybody seems to forget that. I had nothing to do with that bit. Now put your jacket on and let’s go.”
“Don’t you want to see the baby?” he asked.
“Yes, of course.”
Baxter put on his jacket as he crossed room, stepped out into the parlor, and opened the nursery door. Senta followed.
“Bringen sie das kind ins wohnzimmer, bitte fraulein.”
Two women stepped out into the parlor. Both were quite young. The first was a dark-haired beauty with flashing eyes, dressed in a simple black and brown dress. The other, who carried a sleeping baby wrapped in pink blankets, was blond and blue-eyed, with a colorful floral-patterned dress.
“She looks just precious when she’s asleep, doesn’t she?” said Senta, as she took the child from the other blonde.
“She is precious,” said Baxter. “You should spend more time with her.”
“She’s being well cared for by Miss Lorvann and Miss Müller. And I spend much more time with her than my mother ever spent with me at this age, I can tell you that.”
“She ist a gute child,” said the brunette.
“And how is your baby, Miss Lorvann?”
“He ist einen big boy soon,” she replied.
“Of course he is. That’s why you were able to take on my little pet. I counted myself very lucky to find a wet nurse here in Bangdorf. She is sucking?”
Miss Lorvann blushed to be part of such a conversation in front of a man, but Baxter was already heading back to the bedroom to get his shoes.
“Ja, she eat gute.”
“And you are happy with her progress, Miss Müller.”
The blonde stared uncomprehendingly.
“Das baby ist gut?”
“Ja, Ja,” the young woman assured. “Sie weint kaum überhaupt.”
Senta looked at the cherubic face just visible within the swirl of blankets. A tiny curl of blond hair swept down just above the closed eyes. A cute little button nose was just set off by the tiny pursed lips. She handed the child back to the nurse.
“We will be back before nine,” she said. “Vor neun.”
Baxter returned, wearing highly polished shoes, as the two young women retreated to the nursery. The former navy officer cut quite a figure when he was dressed. Offering Senta his arm, he led her from the suite, down the hallway to the elevator. The operator opened the door for them and then threw the switch, sending the tiny conveyance downward.
“So what is the venue for this evening?” asked Baxter.
“Just dinner.”
“No opera? No ballet?”
“I’m tired of all that, honestly,” said Senta. “How many times can you enjoy chubby Freedonian women acting out fairy tales? The concierge gave me directions to a little place that’s supposed to be famous among the locals.”
“Did you order a car?”
“No, it’s close enough that we can walk.”
They strolled along the wide avenue, around the block, to a small building that looked like it could have come right out of one of the fairy tales to which the sorceress had been alluding. It was a small, two-story affair with heavy shutters open on either side of the windows and an ornately carved oak door. Baxter pulled open the portal and they entered to find a cozy interior, lit primarily by flickering candles. Seven or eight patrons, all but one of them women, sat at small square tables, being served by a pair of buxom blondes in light cotton blouses and green, heavy wool skirts. Senta chose a table in the corner and waited until Baxter pulled out her chair. Once they were both seated, one of the blondes appeared beside them.
“Gute nacht.”
“Was ist… um, besonderes?” Senta tripped over the unfamiliar Freedonian term.
“You are Brechs, Ja?” asked the waitress. “I can speak Brech very gute.”
“Excellent,” said the sorceress. “What do you recommend for dinner tonight?”
“We have a gute dinner. I bring you cheeses and then chicken soup. It is very gute, everyone says. Then I bring you roast beef or the fish, you choose. And potatoes Kasselburg, sour kraut, and fresh baked bread. Of course for dessert, you have strudel.”
“That sounds perfect,” said Baxter. “Roast beef for me, and a beer.”
“Yes, the same,” said Senta, and then when the waitress had gone, “Imagine serving cheese before the meal.”
“They do have some very good cheeses though. In fact, all the food here is good. I think I’ve gained five pounds since we’ve been here.”
“Ten,” said Senta. “You really are becoming hideous. But don’t worry. That’s just how I want you—fat enough that other women will find you unattractive, but not so fat that I’ll find you disgusting.”
The waitress returned and sat down a platter containing at least a dozen small wheels of cheese, which Baxter now stared at as though it was a platter of poisonous snakes. Senta smiled to herself and carved off a piece of one of the creamier varieties and brought it to her mouth. Neither of them finished their meals hungry. After large hunks of roast beef covered in thick brown gravy and creamy seasoned potatoes, they both felt satisfied and sedate.
Baxter picked up the tall glass of dark beer and sipped it.
“They’re watching you, you know,” he said.
Turning slightly, Senta could see the two blondes peering out from the kitchen.
“No, they’re not. They’re watching you, and with you being so ugly and all. I told you they were desperate.”
“How can you tell?”
“Watch.”
Senta raised her arm out straight in front of her over the table, palm down. Flipping her hand over, a flame sprang up in her palm. Within two or three seconds, the flame had coalesced into a humanoid figure, eight or nine inches tall, which immediately began pirouetting and spinning in a miniature ballet, all without leaving Senta’s hand. Baxter wasn’t paying the little dancing flame any attention. He had seen the trick before. He was watching the waitresses, who looked so much alike he decided that they must actually be twins. They started at the appearance of magic and their gazes shifted just enough for him to realized that they had previously been in fact, looking at him.
“Maybe you could take one of them on the river cruise with you.”
“Maybe both of them,” he replied. “It seems a shame to break up a set.”
Category Archives: Excerpt
The Two Dragons: Cissy
Cissy is one of the characters in Senta and the Steel Dragon. She is easily the most important non-human character. Her part in the original story arc of Senta and the Steel Dragon was relatively small. She appeared in book 3 and then her story culminated in book 5. When I went back and added what became books 0, 2, and 4, her story became much bigger and I think richer.
Here Cissy runs into Saba Colbshallow while both are shopping at the pfennig store.
The bell above the door clanged once again, this time as a lizardman entered. It was carrying a large hatbox tied with a red silk bow. There were quite a few variations from individual to individual among the reptilians. This aborigine had a face of deep forest green that continued down and was punctuated with darker strips just below the shoulder. Saba immediately recognized by the shorter stature, just under six feet, and the lighter belly coloring, a pale green, that this was a female. Only a few seconds later he recognized who the lizardman was.
“Hello Cissy.”
“Hello Sada,” she replied.
“What do you need, lizzie?” asked Delks in a rather snotty tone.
“Dillingdow’s,”
“Huh?”
“She wants Billingbow’s,” translated Saba. “A six pack?”
Cissy nodded.
Delks raised an eyebrow, and then walked to the back of the store once again, returning with yet another wooden carrier containing six bottles of the popular soda water.
“I didn’t know you lot drank this,” he said. “That will be three marks.”
“That should be one mark thirty two P,” said Saba.
“I can charge whatever I want.”
Cissy set three one mark notes on the counter and picked up the six-pack in her clawed fist. She headed back out the front door, pausing just long enough on her way out to hiss “Asshole.”
“If you’re going to start skinning the natives,” said Saba to the proprietor. “You might not want to start with the governor’s own lizzie.”
Walking outside, Saba found Cissy tilting one of the bottles into her long, many-toothed mouth.
“I like to let mine cool down in the ice box.”
“I know. I see you drink. Cold drink not good to lizzies. I get thirsty. I like Dillingdow’s.”
“Did you pick that up for Mrs. Dechantagne?” he asked, indicating the hatbox.
“No. This is Cissy’s hat. You like to see it?”
He nodded. She carefully untied the red silk ribbon and opened the box, withdrawing a broad-brimmed lady’s hat, made of plaid material, decorated with artificial blue and pink roses and a large green feather. Carefully balancing it on her head, Cissy tied it below her chin with a thick strand of blue lace.
“It looks very nice on you,” said Saba.
“I wear it to shrine, like all the fine ladies.”
“You go to shrine regularly?”
“Yes. I Zaeri now. You Kafirite?”
“Yes, that’s right.”
“Kafira die for hoonan souls. I think not for lizzie souls.”
Saba nodded thoughtfully, and then turned to set his two six-packs into the passenger seat of the steam carriage. He didn’t know much about the lizzie religion, or if there was one now that he thought about it. It was not surprising that Mother Linton was not interested in converting the locals to Kafira, but it seemed like someone would want to. He wanted to ask Cissy who had told her about the Zaeri faith, but when he turned back around, she was already gone.
The Two Dragons: Ivo & Femke Kane
Ivo and Femke Kane are two characters in Senta and the Steel Dragon. They first appear in book 3: The Drache Girl. They are a husband and wife pair of engineers that come to Birmisia to work for the coal company. Although there are hints in book 3, we don’t really learn all that much about them until The Two Dragons, in which we learn they have an unusual relationship.
Senta, who had taken a bath upon her return from the great plaza earlier in the day, took another. The rectangular tub was just over seven feet long and five feet wide, which by human standards made it quite spacious. Its depth however was what made it remarkable. Though she was an even six feet tall, Senta could not touch the bottom even on her tip-toes, without dunking her head. Four square stone spouts provided a continuous flow of water into the tub, which spilled over the top and ran down to a drain cut with four long grooves from a one foot square piece of stone.
After the bath, Senta returned to her room dressed in her large fluffy housecoat. She sat down on her sleeping mat and thought about opening Matter and the Elements once more, but just couldn’t face it. Instead she reached into her bag and pulled out a well-worn copy of Intruder by Anarosa Freedman. It was a relatively easy matter to find the racy parts, as the corners of the pages had become dog-eared with rereading.
“Well, what are we priming ourselves up for?” asked Mrs. Kane, when she entered a few minutes later.
“Just reading a bit.”
“So I see. You’ve had an exciting day.” Mrs. Kane sat down cross-legged next to Senta. “You know I’ve always thought that you were a remarkable young woman,” she said, placing her hand on Senta’s shoulder.
“Thanks…”
“I’ve thought that you might be someone I would like to get to know better.”
“Okay…”
“My husband and I have an agreement. He’s free to pursue other women, as am I.”
“As you are what?”
“Free to pursue other women.”
Senta stared uncomprehending for a moment. Then recognition kicked her in the side of the head just above the ear.
“Eww!”
“Now don’t be that way,” said Mrs. Kane. “The love between two women can be a beautiful thing.”
“I’ve got all the loving women that I need,” said Senta. “What’s more, I have a loving man.”
“That’s what I’m trying to tell you, dear. You don’t really need one of those.”
“There we must agree to disagree.” Senta lifted the woman’s hand from her shoulder and set it aside.
“Pity,” said Mrs. Kane, moving to her own sleeping mat. “If you change your mind, you know where to find me.”
“Yes, I’m sure I could navigate thirty-three inches if needed.”
Senta put away her lamp, though it had not yet grown dark enough in the room to need it, and her book, and curled up under her blanket. It had been an eventful day and despite feeling vaguely more nervous about Mrs. Kane’s proximity than she had before, she was soon asleep.
The Two Dragons: Loana Colbshallow
Loana Hewison Colbshallow is a character in Senta and the Steel Dragon. She has a fairly memorable part in The Drache Girl, when she meets her future husband as he saves her from velociraptors. In The Two Dragons, the two have been married for a while and her husband realizes that sometimes beauty is only skin deep. It might be worth noting that Loana is my wife’s least favorite character.
“What the hell?” Saba demanded of his wife.
“It’s about time they pay their fair share, if you ask me.”
“They paid for dinner the last time.”
“Dot cooked dinner last time, and it was nowhere near as nice as this.”
He gaped at her.
“The dinners we provide are always nicer than the ones they provide. And we should get out and socialize with some different people anyway. We’re very popular. Everyone wants to have us. We shouldn’t be monopolized. Reenie Ghent has been after me for weeks for us to go out with her and her husband.”
Saba dropped fifteen marks on top of those left by Eamon, and then he escorted his wife out of the café and down the cobblestone walk to the edge of the road where his steam carriage was parked. The sun had finally dropped out of sight, lending a monochrome cast to the city street that he didn’t think showed off the bright blue of the car’s bonnet well. Helping Loana into the passenger seat, he walked around back to shovel coal into the firebox. He looked up in the sky to watch a large flying reptile, harassed by seven or eight small birds. With a sigh, he shut the relief cock and stepping to the left side of the vehicle, climbed into the driver’s seat. Saba waited ten minutes for the steam to come up before pulling away from the curb. It was only a fifteen-minute drive home, but it was an altogether silent twenty-five minutes.
The Colbshallow home was a large, beautiful, red brick house sitting back from the road in the shade of large pines and maples, along with some recently planted apple trees, on a large fenced estate. The small A-frame house, which had been Saba’s first home, on the corner of the property, was currently being rented by the Zaeri Imam Francis Clipers. Pulling into the parkway, Saba brought the steam carriage to a halt in front of the portico. The lizzie doorman hopped down the steps to help Loana down.
“Leopold Ghent is a wanker,” he called after her, breaking the silence.
“He’s railroad agent,” said his wife in a tone that was usually reserved for sweet nothings. “And Reenie is adorable.”
She swept up the four steps and as the lizzie held the door for her, she disappeared inside. Saba pulled the car around to the far side of the house and parked. He hopped out, opened the steam cock, and poured a bucket of water over the coals. The loud hiss startled three bambiraptors who had been feeding in the yard, unbothered by the normal chug of the vehicle.
Saba climbed the five cement steps that led to the side door and entered the kitchen. Not having to serve dinner this evening, the lizzie cook had been given the night off and the kitchen was pleasantly cool. Opening the froredor, he retrieved a soda water and pulled out the cork stopper with his left hand, his wife having successfully trained him not to do so with his teeth. He took a swig, then snorted and almost gagged. Lifting the bottle to look at the printing, he read. “Major Gortner’s ginger and mint flavor barley pop?” He opened the froredor again and looked inside finding five more of the imposters and not a single bottle of original Billingbow’s sarsaparilla and wintergreen soda water.
“Bugger all!” he slammed the door shut, rocking the magical freezing box back and forth and toppling a small, pink pot filled with red flowers to the floor where it shattered.
The next morning, Saba got up before his wife awakened. He dressed quickly in his grey suit and left through the kitchen. He didn’t stop for breakfast, just grabbed a crumpet from a pile that the cook was assembling. She hissed at him, but handed him a cup of tea. He folded the crumpet in half and stuffed it into his mouth, then set the steaming cup on the passenger seat as he lit the furnace and filled the boiler from the water jug by the side door. By the time the steam was up, he had finished with his tea, and left the empty cup on the step.
The Two Dragons: Edin Buttermore
Edin Buttermore was a character I created for The Drache Girl. I always had in mind that he would be a big part of the plot at some point. While he has a few memorable scenes in The Young Sorceress, he doesn’t really have that much to do until The Two Dragons. Here he explores the dragon fortress with Senta and Staff.
In the daylight it was plain that Brown had been bitten on the face by a spider, but he seemed to have no other wounds. Ivo Kane produced a tiny clear bottle of detoxicant, pouring it down the man’s throat, while his wife taped a plaster over the injury. They had between them already seen to Mr. Vever’s pains. His left arm was splinted and his right hand was bandaged.
“Here comes Staff,” said Werthimer, pointing to the back of the fortress courtyard.
Staff was indeed coming, followed by Buttermore, Wissinger, and Manring. When they reached the eight party members, the former naval officer looked at Bratihn questioningly. Later, Senta couldn’t remember exactly what Bratihn had said, but he seemed to sum up every detail of their adventures in remarkably few words. Croffut added one or two details. Staff nodded as if he had expected nothing less.
“And how did it go with you?” asked Kane.
“We made it to the top of the tower,” said Staff. “No problem, though we had to chase off a few pterosaurs.”
“It was a magnificent view,” said Buttermore. “I think I captured it.”
“It took us a while to set up Mr. Buttermore’s camera equipment,” said Wissinger. “Not that I’m criticizing.”
“We found treasure too,” said Buttermore.
“Really? Treasure?” Mr. Vever climbed unsteadily to his feet, accidentally kicking Brown in the head as he did so.
Staff set his rucksack down and opened it, withdrawing what appeared to be a very ornate necklace. It was made of copper and the metal was so green with corrosion that it had almost dissolved away. Clearly visible though were a number of large red gems.
“By Kafira, those are rubies,” said Ivo Kane.
“I think that copper is a loss,” said Vever. “But I could set those gems in gold settings and they would be fit for Prince Tybalt himself.”
“My plan is that when we return to Port Dechantagne you should do just that, Mr. Vever,” said Staff. “I count fifteen rubies. Maybe matching rings for all of us? I think we’ve earned it. And I imagine a set of earrings for the governor.”
The Two Dragons: Dot Shrubb
Dot Shrubb is one of my favorite minor characters in Senta and the Steel Dragon. I’m always looking for something to differentiate characters and Dot is separated from the others in the story because of her deafness. As I have mentioned before, the idea for her came from the wife of a work friend I had years ago. She too was deaf and had red hair.
Mrs. Loana Colbshallow was without a doubt the most beautiful woman in the café. Her multihued hair was swept back beneath a broad-brimmed, bright red hat with white flowers that matched her bright red dress. The plunging neckline showed a bit more skin than was current fashion, but neither her husband nor any other man in the establishment seemed to object. Directly across from Mrs. Colbshallow in a quite fetching sky blue gown, Mrs. Dot Shrubb clearly was bothered both by the lack of cloth which covered her dinner partner’s breasts and by the amount of breast which threatened to jump out at her. All through dinner she had stared at the prodigious amount of cleavage and scrunched her nose. Her husband seated to her right had been oblivious to this, and fortunately for him, seemed oblivious to the cleavage as well.
“I’ll say this,” he said. “If we had dined on this meal in Brech City, we would have had to pay a pretty pfennig for it.”
“I think we may very well pay a pretty pfennig tonight,” replied Saba. “Dining out is one of the few things that isn’t dirt cheap in Birmisia.”
“I hear the new café, Bonny Nurraty, is only half the price, because they employ a lizzie wait staff.”
“It’s Bonne Nourriture,” said Saba. “I also hear the food’s not half as good, though I’m sure that has nothing to do with the lizzies.”
“Unless my mother-in-law decides to open her own restaurant,” said Loana. “I don’t see anyone taking the fine dining crown away from Aalwijn Finkler.”
“And you can be bloody positive he won’t ever have a lizzie wait staff either,” added Eamon. “Actually it’s nice to have a place to come where there aren’t any.”
“What do you think about it, Dot?” asked Saba.
Dot just shrugged.
“Dot’s getting to be a lizzie-lover,” said Eamon, stroking his wife’s long coppery hair.
“You like her too,” said Dot, in the nasal voice that was the result of her deafness.
“Well, our lizzie is all right. She dotes on the boys—takes them for walks and plays her little block game with them.”
“That’s just it, isn’t it,” said Loana. “Everyone seems to like their own lizzie. They just don’t trust the rest of them. I have several to take care of things and one that comes in twice a week to clean and have never had any problem with any of them.”
“How are the boys, anyway?” said Saba, intentionally changing the subject.
“They’re fine. Young Saba showed me this week that he can do addition, and little Al isn’t far behind.”
“Alasdair,” corrected Dot, punching her husband on his meaty shoulder.
“And how is Darsham?”
“Wonderful. He follows Saba and Alasdair everywhere they go. Best dog I’ve ever seen.”
“You know he was going to name one of the boys Darsham,” Saba told his wife.
“That’s right,” said Eamon. “But I was overruled on account of my wife fancying your husband.”
Dot hit him again. “You named Saba. I named Alasdair.”
The Two Dragons – Amoz Croffut and Woodrow Manring
Amoz Croffut and Woodrow Manring are two characters in Senta and the Steel Dragon. Their main appearance is in The Two Dragons, though I foreshadowed them in the earlier books here and there. I really like when a character that fulfills part of the plot is someone the reader has seen or heard from before. Amoz and Woodrow make the journey to the lizzie city along with Senta and the others, facing adventure and adversity along the way.
Staff picked his way through the large feathered bodies to where the man lay. A quick examination revealed however that he was unharmed. He had apparently fainted from sheer terror. The only one injured was Manring, who had dived out of the way of the vicious claws, but not quite quickly enough, and had sustained a horrible gash across his forearm. Staff quickly drew a healing draught from his pack and poured half of the contents of the small brown bottle onto the cut and had Manring drink the remaining potion. Within seconds the bleeding had stopped and the injury had already begun to heal.
“Thank heavens for magic,” said Mr. Vever.
“Yes,” agreed Staff, then turning to look at Senta. “I assume that was your magical lightning?”
The girl nodded.
“These are beautiful,” said Femke Kane, holding up a long black tail feather. “Perhaps we should take some to present to the lizzies in Tsahloose.”
“All right,” replied Staff. “We earned them I suppose.”
“I think we should take some of this meat for our lunch,” offered Werthimer. “Have you ever seen a drumstick like this? What are these anyway?”
“They are called achillobators,” said Wissinger. “Colonel Mormont described them in his journal when he scouted this region. Considering what he wrote, we got off lightly. He said they were relentless once they had chosen a target. Looking at them, I think they make the point that dinosaurs and Mallonian birds are all from the same group of animals.”
“Maybe dinosaurs and all birds belong in the same group,” said Senta.
“Perhaps you should leave that type of speculation to trained naturalists.” Staff hadn’t realized until this point that Brown had recovered consciousness. Though the sorceress seemed to ignore his condescending tone, it made no friends among the others, whose imperiled lives she had so recently saved.
“Look out! That one’s still alive!” cried Croffut.
Brown let out a girlish squeal, sending most of the other party members into fits of laughter. The beast in question had indeed been moving, but only because Werthimer was struggling to remove its leg. A few minutes later he had finished butchering the animal, removing a large portion of breast meat as well as a drumstick and the party, now with Brown scowling angrily, moved on down the hillside.
When Staff judged that they had gone far enough that they would not be bothered by scavengers drawn to the dead achillobators, he ordered a stop for their luncheon. The group managed to quickly put together a large pile of wood for a fire, which Senta ignited with no more than a glance. Manring, whose wound had by now completely healed, pulled out a bag of seasoning and began preparing the meat.
“He was company cook in the Guard,” explained Werthimer.
Staff nodded. He wasn’t really paying attention. He was watching Senta unpack her bag. He had seen it a dozen times now but he still found it fascinating. Unlike every other member of the party who carried heavy haversacks, she carried a small purse-like bag no more that eleven inches square, yet she pulled the most remarkable amount of equipment from it. Now as he watched, she pulled out a camp chair that even folded up was two feet long. She set up the chair, sat down, and crossed her legs. With a dull thud, the pyramid of backpacks that had been hovering behind her all the while, crashed to the ground.
Staff turned around to find his face only inches from the brim of Femke Kane’s pith helmet. Though she eschewed feminine convention from the lack of foundation garments right on up to her unshaped brows, she was still a handsome woman. At five foot eleven, she scarcely had to look up to meet Staff’s hazel eyes with her sparkling baby blues.
“She’s quite something, isn’t she?” she said.
“Mmm,” he murmured noncommittally. He was thinking of how unlike the girl that had come to Birmisia all those years before, Senta now seemed, and how much she seemed like the sorceress with whom the girl had come.
It wasn’t long before the smell of roasted meat filled the air. Whether Manring was a great cook or the meat of the achillobator was naturally succulent, Staff didn’t know, but there was no question that it was excellent. Along with mixed fruit from tins, it was a fine repast. After eating, they rested for an hour before continuing on their journey.
The Two Dragons – Taddeus Vever
Taddeus Vever was one of those characters who grow naturally out of the writing process. Writing the story of The Voyage of the Minotaur, I mentioned Mr. Vever as someone who was a jeweler and had jewelry parts. I was then able to use the character in The Dark and Forbidding Land, when Terrence needed a ring for Yuah. Finally, I was looking for characters to make the great journey with Senta and crew in The Two Dragons, and I added him into the mix. Here is Mr. Vever and the others on that trip.
Radley Staff stopped to look back at the line of people following him and make sure that there were no stragglers. The formation remained tight, which was a miracle considering the diversity of the party members. Behind Staff was Amoz Croffut, a veteran soldier only recently retired from the militia, or the Colonial Guard as it was now officially known. He had already proven more than once on this trip that he could spot danger. Third was Senta, the tall, thin, blond, seventeen year old sorceress. Next came Taddeus Vever, sweating and puffing as he marched along on his short legs. Vever was a jeweler by trade, a sedentary job that gave him little time to exercise, so he was horribly out of shape. He didn’t complain though. Unlike Paxton Brown, who followed closely behind Vever and whose constant protests had long since worn thin. The man was supposed to be a scholar of lizzie behavior, and Staff had chosen him over several other naturalists for that reason. Now he was beginning to regret his decision. Behind him was the husband and wife duo of engineers, Ivo and Femke Kane. They looked at each other and smiled, apparently enjoying Brown’s discomfort. They were followed by Isaak Wissinger the writer. Arriving from Freedonia two years before to join relatives, Wissinger had already published several well-known works of fiction and non-fiction. He was on this journey for his keen ear and understanding of language, though he spoke the hissing tongue of the lizzies less well than some of the others. He was followed by Lawrence Bratihn, the head of trade for Birmisia Colony, as well as the only person in Port Dechantagne besides Senta who had been in a lizzie city before. Occupying the tenth spot in line was Edin Buttermore. Buttermore was in much better shape than he had been when he arrived in Mallon. Now though, he was struggling under a pack filled with a good seventy pounds of photographic equipment. Pulling up the rear were Bertrand Werthimer and Woodrow Manring. Both were accomplished soldiers, though they like Croffut and Bratihn for that matter, no longer wore uniforms. All members of the party, excepting only Senta, wore khaki shirt and khaki trousers tucked into high boots. Senta wore black leather pants and a black and red leather corset that left her shoulders covered only by her long blond hair.
Staff let Croffut pass him and took up a spot beside the girl.
“I should have had you change into your khakis.”
“I didn’t bring any. Zurfina packed for me.”
“Black is too hot for a journey.”
“Do I look hot?”
“No. You look remarkably comfortable. But there is the question of camouflage. You stand out.”
“I’m supposed to stand out.”
“All right. Are your spells ready?”
She grinned at him. “You’ve worked with wizards in the navy, eh?”
“Yes.”
“I’m not a wizard. My spells are always ready.”
“Potent too, from what I understand. It’s been a couple of years since I’ve actually seen you do magic.”
“How is married life?” she asked, changing the subject. “I would think it would be hard being married to the governor.”
“It’s good. It’s a bit like being in the navy. If you don’t mind taking orders, it’s a good life.”
“Say there, Senta,” said Vever catching up to the other two. “Is it magic that you’re not exhausted like I am?”
“Yes, it’s magic,” replied Staff. “It’s the magic of youth. She has twice the energy that either of us has and half as much idea what to do with it.”
“It’s a shame,” said Vever, though he didn’t complete the proverb. “That youth is wasted on the young.”
“Would you like me to carry your pack for a while, Mr. Vever?” asked Senta.
“I would never allow a young lady…”
She patted Vever, who was a foot shorter than she was, twice on the top of his head and then grabbed the pack by one of the loops on the back and lifted it off his shoulders. Pointing downward and swirling around her index finger, she said “Uuthanum Izesic.” She tossed the backpack into the air just above where she had pointed, and it plopped onto an invisible surface, three feet above the ground. Senta smiled and continued on, following Croffut who was none the wiser. The backpack and whatever transparent thing supported it followed five feet behind her.
Staff and Vever stopped walking and wondered at the hovering object. As they stood thus amazed, Paxton Brown rushed past them. Catching up with the invisible transport, he flung his own pack on top of Vever’s. Now both haversacks followed along in the air behind the girl.
“Do you think I could..?” asked Buttermore, puffing up beside them.
Staff turned to see that the entire column, besides Senta, Croffut, and Brown were bunched up around him. He shrugged. They hurried to catch up to the sorceress and one by one began placing their backpacks on what Staff began to think of as the invisible wagon. By trial, they eventually determined that it was a disk about three feet in diameter. They were only able to get seven packs to stay on it, and then only by balancing them one on the other in a three-story pyramid. In the end, they were so distracted by the game that they scarcely noticed the miles that had passed, and even Brown’s complaining had ceased.
An angry screech brought their attention back to their surroundings. Hopping down the sloping landscape from their right was a pack of frightening beasts. Staff didn’t quite know whether most of the animals in Mallon belonged in the dinosaur family or the bird family, and these did little to unmuddy the question. They were fifteen to twenty feet long, slightly larger than the utahraptors seen near Port Dechantagne. From their shoulders back, they were covered with brilliant crimson feathers with a dash of black on the tufts of their tails. Their heads were feathered in black. They had large lizard-like mouths filled with knife-like teeth. Eight of the creatures ran, in little fits and starts, toward the line of humans.
The stock of Staff’s rifle was at his shoulder before he realized he had slipped it over his arm. He aimed at the first creature’s head and fired. The .30 caliber bullet exploded out the back of its skull. The spent cartridge clanged onto a large rock at his feet and he targeted a second charging animal. But the first one didn’t fall down. It kept running, going right past him and continuing down the slope for several hundred more feet, its legs no longer directed by its brain, but continuing to kick anyway. His second target he shot twice, once in the neck and once in the chest. He heard a couple of shots fired by the others, but by this time the entire pack was upon them.
Staff didn’t let the sounds of battle distract him. He fired quickly at a third and fourth beast. He heard Vever’s voice shouting over the others and he heard Brown screaming. The crack of rifle fire was suddenly overpowered by an even louder crack as a tremendous bolt of lightning shot horizontally across the hillside. Staff fired one more time, but the crimson-plumed monster in his sights was already dead—killed by the lightning. Looking around he saw it was the last one.
“Surgeon!” yelled Werthimer, out of habit, as he jumped toward the prone form of Mr. Brown.
Staff picked his way through the large feathered bodies to where the man lay. A quick examination revealed however that he was unharmed. He had apparently fainted from sheer terror. The only one injured was Manring, who had dived out of the way of the vicious claws, but not quite quickly enough, and had sustained a horrible gash across his forearm. Staff quickly drew a healing draught from his pack and poured half of the contents of the small brown bottle onto the cut and had Manring drink the remaining potion. Within seconds the bleeding had stopped and the injury had already begun to heal.
“Thank heavens for magic,” said Mr. Vever.
The Two Dragons– Hissussisthiss the Green Dragon
Hissussisthiss is a character in Senta and the Steel Dragon, who I haven’t spoken much about. This seems particularly unfair as he is one of the two title characters in The Two Dragons (although there are actually three dragons in the story). Hissussisthiss is a dragon as I envision them to be– intelligent, powerful, almost indestructible, worshipped as a god. Here is a scene from the two dragons in which Senta has a close encounter with the green dragon.
Stopping to rest just after noon, the party had exhausted all of the food that they had carried with them, but Senta had a secret cache that she had been saving for just such an emergency. Pulling out nine tins of peaches in heavy syrup and nine tins of rooster in wine, she passed one of each to the other members of the party. They had almost finished eating when a great kafuffle on the plain drew all of their attentions.
A great herd of monstrous paralititans had been making its way through the grasslands, walking roughly parallel to the humans. More than thirty individuals strong, ranging in size from eight ton youngsters to a massive matriarch bigger than most buildings in Port Dechantagne, they had little to fear even from the tyrannosauruses which stalked along behind them. Only Mr. Vever observed all of the action, because only he happened to be turned in that direction at just the right moment. The giant form of the dragon Hissussisthiss fell out of the sky like a meteor, landing right on one of the largest paralititans—a ninety ton dinosaur that was overall about the same size as the dragon. Though the sheer force of impact might well have done the job, the dragon with one swift movement, bit through the long serpentine neck, decapitating its prey.
Paralititans ran in every direction, sending all manner of smaller dinosaurs stampeding out of their way. Only the tyrannosauruses, their scarred red heads an ugly contrast to their black bodies, stayed where they were. Slowly circling, they waited for any scraps that might be left over by the much larger dragon. The nine members of the party ducked down as quickly as they could and scurried to the tree line, hoping that they would not be seen. But it was not to be.
Hissussisthiss, his metallic scales reflecting their green sheen, took a bite of the dinosaur carcass and looked right toward them.
“I know you are there.” His voice was like rolling thunder. He bit off an entire shoulder of the paralititan and chewed the meat, bones, and blubber. A spray of arterial blood showed that the dinosaur’s heart had not realized that its owner’s head at least was dead. “Come out and chat with me while I eat.”
Staff looked around at the others as if to make sure that none were inclined to accept the dragon’s invitation. None of them were.
“I was not pleased with the magic you used in my city, Sorceress.” Hissussisthiss took another bite. Blood ran down his chin. “It makes my skin crawl.”
“I thought dragons were magical,” whispered Femke Kane.
Senta nodded, but didn’t look away from the scene on the savannah.
“The Freedonians have showed me a great deal in the past few weeks—machine guns, artillery, poison gas. You humans have come up with ways to kill that would even have amazed Setemenothiss the black dragon, god of war… were he still alive. The Freedonians have magic too. But none of them are a match for you or the other one.”
One of the tyrannosauruses darted in to grab a bite of Hissussisthiss’s meal while he was distracted. Without looking, indeed without pausing at all, the dragon flicked his tail, crushing the skull of the frightening predator. The Brechs watched as the green monster tucked in and gobbled down mouthful after mouthful of dinosaur meat, until within only a few minutes, there was nothing at all to be seen poking above the grass at all except for a single gigantic rib bone.
“I’m still hungry,” said Hissussisthiss, and then gestured toward the tyrannosaurus. “I’m not eating that though. I have my standards.”
With a quick hop he closed about half the distance between his landing spot and the hiding place of the humans. His already frightening appearance was enhanced by the smears of blood across his face and neck. The remaining tyrannosauruses dived upon their fallen fellow but the dragon paid no mind.
“What do you taste like? I have to admit I’ve been wondering since I met that Korlann fellow. You might be so small I wouldn’t even be able to taste you, but then there are a bunch of you. What do you think, Sorceress? Do you have enough magic to protect yourself, or have you used it all up?”
“Why don’t you come and find out!” shouted Senta suddenly.
Staff rolled his eyes, then grabbing the girl by the shoulder pulled her away into the forest. The others ran after them. Hissussisthiss roared and suddenly the entire area was one great conflagration of burning trees, burning brush, and burning grass. Even the air seemed to ignite in places.
The Two Dragons– Smedley Bassington
Smedley Bassington is a character that appears in Senta and the Steel Dragon. He originally appeared in book 3: The Drache Girl. I expanded his story a bit and added him to book 0: Brechalon. Bassington is a wizard for the Brech War Ministry. He’s shown himself to be devoted to their service, even when it conflicts with his own life, or the life of a loved one. Here he is with Senta in The Two Dragons.
Café Etta was one of two new eating establishments opened by Aalwijn Finkler as an expansion of the bakery business that he had inherited from his now retired mother. It sat on the corner of the Boulevard and Forest Avenue, and featured a large awning-covered outdoor dining area. There was a queue of patrons waiting to be seated, though the maitre d’ ushered Senta and her guest inside first and no one waiting complained. Once seated on finely crafted wrought iron chairs from Mirsanna, they ordered the house specialty and got down to business.
“Zurfina wants to stay away from service to the King, but she can’t anymore,” said Bassington. “War is coming. It’s going to come to Brechalon and it’s going to come to Birmisia as well.”
“We’re on the other side of the world from Greater Brechalon,” replied Senta. “And from Freedonia.”
“So you’re not completely ignorant of what’s going on.”
“I know that Brechalon and Freedonia have broken off diplomatic relations. It’s in the papers. And I’ve dealt with Freedonian wizards before.”
“I’m only too aware of that,” said Bassington. “Who do you think kept you out of prison? You didn’t think it was Zurfina, did you? What’s not in the papers is that Freedonia has ten million men under arms—the largest army assembled in the history of the world.”
“Brechalon has you though. You’re the Great Wizard Bassington. Just how good a wizard are you anyway? You can’t be all that if you get yourself tied up in a barn.”
“I’m a third level Master Wizard,” said Bassington, waving his hand and lowering his eyes in what, Senta was sure, was false modesty. “I do quite well. But there is nobody on the planet today with Zurfina’s power. That’s why she’s needed. You’re needed too. Don’t think that Freedonia doesn’t have plenty more wizards of its own. It has many of them, and magical weapons too. When war comes, it will involve the whole world.”
“Zurfina says that she and I don’t have to worry about countries and kings. And I don’t think she has to worry about any wizard.”
“What about Suvir Kesi?”
“He was a bug,” sneered Senta. “He got lucky.”
“Lucky or not, he could have killed her… and you.”
“Zurfina won’t let her guard down again.”
“You may be right, but what about other people? Do you know what they’re doing to the Zaeri in Freedonia?”
“Yes, Mr. Wissinger, the writer, told me about the ghettos. But the Zaeri are mistreated everywhere. They are mistreated in Brechalon.”
“In Freedonia, they are being rounded up and put in cages—far worse than the ghettos. All their possessions are taken away and sold. They are worked to death in labor camps.”
“Well what is Zurfina supposed to do about that?” wondered Senta. “What am I supposed to do about it?”
“Get ready. The governor of Birmisia is sending an expedition to Tsahloose to establish trade relations. They won’t be able to. The Freedonians already have a foothold there. Go with the expedition and see for yourself. While you are there, if you find out anything interesting about Freedonian forces in Mallon, give that information to the governor. She’ll contact me.”
“What makes you think Zurfina will let me go three hundred miles into dangerous territory, to a lizzie city?”
“Ask her. If she says no, don’t go.” Bassington smiled slyly. “Do you think she’ll say no?”
Senta pursed her lips. “Probably not.”
The waiter brought their food just as the sun was going down below the tall redwoods and another waiter was lighting the gas lights strung along the edges of the awning that covered the diners. The wizard and the sorceress faced two great platters of pork chops with brown pudding, green beans, polenta, boiled potatoes, sliced tomatoes, and the course, dark bread for which the Finkler family was famous. Senta picked at her food a bit, but Bassington dived in.
Senta leaned back in her chair and crossed her arms. “You said you would answer any questions I had.”
“That’s right,” he said, carving his pork chop.
