The Sorceress and her Lovers: Chapter Seven Excerpt

The Sorceress and her Lovers“I don’t think you want to move that piece there,” said Iolana, peering across the vast gaming table.
Dozens of square wooden playing pieces were arrayed across the oak surface, only half of which faced her. The other pieces belonged to her opponent. Esther hissed softly and moved the piece back to its original spot.

The gaming table sat along the west wall of Iolana’s bedroom, the largest bedroom in the house. Just behind Iolana’s seat was a stone fireplace, and beyond that was a writing desk with chair, and in the corner a cheval glass. Across the room from the fireplace was a beautiful canopy bed, the cover and the drapes of which matched the Thiss green area rug beneath it. Rich oak nightstands, hand-crafted here in Birmisia, matched the oak chest of drawers and the six tall bookcases. At the other end of the room, a comfortable sofa, striped green and gold, sat facing two comfy armchairs. Beside them was a hutch filled with dolls and toys and a mechanical music box, which even now was playing a Freedonian waltz.

The lizzie placed her chin on the table and hissed again.

“You see I’ve got you beat, don’t you?” said Iolana. “Unless you have Insane WitchWoman, there is no way you can win.”

“Cheat,” said Esther quietly.

“How dare you!” growled Iolana, jumping to her feet.

“Ssiss zat techiss szessit suuwasuu dakkuk wasuu wasuu eesousztekhau.”

“Well of course I do. Who’s going to make the pieces for the game if I don’t? Answer me that.” The human girl put her hands on her hips. “All the other players in town copy my pieces and nobody has complained that they weren’t fair, ssisthusso very much.”
The lizzie slid her chin off the table and climbed beneath it.

“Oh, do get up. Maybe I should let you win sometimes. Perhaps that would be good for your self-esteem, but it just sends the wrong message, doesn’t it? How would you ever know if you truly were good enough to beat me?”
The door suddenly burst open and Iolana’s cousin Terra came shooting in. Though dressed in a frilly little outfit of burgundy and silver, the seven-year-old was barefoot and both her hands and feet were extremely grimy. Her thick brown hair was a mess. Iolana held up her hand like a traffic cop.

“You know you’re supposed to knock before you come in that door.”

“I only want to play with your lizzie,” said Terra’s scratchy little voice.

“How in Kafira’s name did you get so dirty? Your mother is going to have a dinosaur when she sees you.”

“I want to play with your lizzie,” Terra repeated. “Can I take her out to the swings?”
Iolana tilted her head to look under the table. “Do you want to go outside with Terra?”
Esther bobbed her head up and down.

“Say the word.”

“Yess.”

“All right then,” she told her cousin, “but don’t bring her back all dirty.”

“Come on, lizzie,” called Terra, as Esther scrambled out from under the table and followed the girl out the door.

After carefully washing her hands in the basin on her nightstand, Iolana checked her dress in the cheval that stood in the corner. Then she retrieved a straw boater from her closet and added a small red achillobator feather that just matched her red dress. Leaving her room, she ran into her mother’s dressing maid at the top of the stairs.

“Narsa, have one of the males go watch Terra and Esther. They’re playing out in the garden. And when they’re done, have them cleaned up, preferably before Auntie Yuah sees them.”

“Yess.”

The Sorceress and her Lovers: Chapter Six Excerpt

The Sorceress and her LoversHsrandtuss opened his eyes and stretched. He had to push both Ssu and Tokkenoht off of him before he could roll off his sleeping mat. Only the latter female woke up. He stretched again. He felt better than he had in months, better than he had in years. A lot of it had to do with the fact that he was sleeping much better. He didn’t know if it was the proximity of the young god or the fact that for a change, things seemed to be going his way.
The other chiefs had all gone home. The last to leave had been Tistakha. Before Tistakha had left for Tuustutu, Hsrandtuss had managed a brief meeting. To say they had formed an alliance would have been too much, but they did seem to have an understanding. The two would work together to see that their trade with the soft-skins increased and that the plans of the God of the Sky were not disrupted by the likes of Szisz and his band of broken yokes in Suusiss.

“Your morning meal, Great King,” said Sszaxxanna, handing him a pomegranate.

“I don’t want another fruit,” said Hsrandtuss. “Where is my meat?”

“Your bowels, Great King.”

“Never mind my bowels. Find me a bird, or at the very least a nice fish.”

“The fish are not very plentiful here in the mountains, Great King,” said Sszaxxanna, with entirely too much sass.

He glared at her.

“I will try to find you a fish,” she said, scurrying off.

“See that you do. And send Sirriss in here!” he called after her.

Sirriss hurried into the room.

“Paint me,” Hsrandtuss ordered.

“If you wish, Great King, but the God of the Sky is gone.”

“Gone? What do you mean gone?”

“He flew north. Kendra says he has gone to visit the soft-skins in their city.”

“Yes, I see. That is good. What else does Kendra say? What about Szisz? Is he being watched?”

“Shouldn’t you wait and ask Sszaxxanna?” she asked quietly.

“You will never be first wife with an attitude like that,” he said.

“Kendra has trackers following him and his people. They are halfway back to Suusiss. She also says that there is a way for you to rise high in the esteem of the young god. She says you should do it, but Sszaxxanna won’t…”

Suddenly Sszaxxanna was there, striking Sirris repeatedly with her clawed hands, driving her from the room. Tokkenoht jumped up and hurried after her. Ssu continued to snooze on the sleeping mat.

“I have a bird for you, Great King,” said wife number one, thrusting the charred carcass of a bambiraptor toward him.

“It’s cooked?”

“It will be easier on your stomach.”

“What was it that Kendra suggested?” he asked, taking the bird and biting off the top half.

“It is nothing. It is ill conceived.”

“Would I not be a better judge of that than you?”

“Of course, Great King. But the god already favors you. You don’t need to risk yourself unnecessarily.”

“Bring her in here. I want to hear it.”

“But Great King…”

“Now.”

“As you wish,” said Sszaxxanna, stomping sulkily through the doorway. Hsrandtuss had no doubt that both Kendra and Sirris would be on the receiving end of Sszaxxanna’s claws later, but what was it to him how the females settled their differences?
Kendra entered and stepped very close to him. She placed one hand, palm outward, on her dewlap in a sign of respect and reached out familiarly to touch him on the shoulder with the other. She and Ssu were the youngest of his wives, and Kendra was very tiny, barely reaching up to Hsrandtuss’s shoulder.

“All right, what is this about improving my esteem?”

The Sorceress and her Lovers : Chapter Five Excerpt

The Sorceress and her LoversThe L.Z. Frühlingshuhn descended from the clouds toward Royal Tybalt Hall, the top stories of which had been converted ten years earlier to a dirigible port. From the great window on the observation deck, Senta Bly watched as Brech City slid by below her. The buildings all looked like toy models of themselves. The boats in the Thiss and the carriages on the streets likewise looked like the playthings of children. It was a sight well worth the cost of a ticket, even without the three-day voyage from Bangdorf.

“It’s quite a sight, isn’t it?”

She turned to Kieran Baxter, who was sitting in one of the comfortable lounge chairs bouncing the baby on his knee.

“I never get tired of it,” she said.

“Funny, I wouldn’t think it would be that impressive to you… what with you being able to fly and everything.”

“Who said I could fly?”

“Can you?”

She shrugged. “Sort of.”

“I knew it,” he said, hopping easily to his feet, still holding the child. He stopped next to the sorceress. “Look. You can see right into the courtyard of Palace Eidenia. I always wanted to look in there. I expected piles of treasure or something equally grand.”

“Looks like their storing old trolley cars in there,” said Senta. “Quite the let-down I’ll bet.”

“It always is when your fantasies meet your realities. They just don’t hold up.”
She leaned in close to him. Her hot breath reached his cheek and the side of his neck.

“Perhaps not in all cases,” he said.

The ship glided lower, turning so that Palace Eidenia was no longer visible. Instead they had a splendid view of the Palace of Ansegdniss, for 250 years the meeting place of the Parliament of Greater Brechalon. The buildings below became larger and larger until suddenly they stopped being toys and became real full-sized structures. The dirigible slowed to a stop and at last all they could see was the roof of Royal Tybalt Hall.
Though they had packed those belongings that had been in use during their three-day journey, Senta was in no mood to join the ranks of those passengers rushing to get out. So she and Baxter continued to sit in the lounge for another hour. He let the baby crawl a bit on the floor, though he didn’t allow her to get far, and she couldn’t have in any case. Finally with him carrying little Senta and the sorceress carrying the animal carrier, they walked down the gangway, followed by two stewards with the luggage. Quickly procuring a cab, they were on their way to The Clarkson House.

The Clarkson House was Brech City’s finest hotel. It reigned over Avenue Boar with all the opulence of Palace Eidenia—more now that they had seen the old trolleys stored in the latter. Once at the hotel they stepped across the black and white chessboard-like floor of the palatial lobby, past the gilded furnishings beneath the crystal chandeliers. To Senta, who had stayed at the Clarkson for several weeks before traveling to Freedonia, and who had in fact given birth to her daughter there, it almost seemed like returning home. It cemented in her mind the decision she had already made.

When they were safely settled in the imperial suite, Senta let the little dragon out of the carrier. It immediately ran toward the baby.

“Back off you,” said Baxter, protectively pulling the child away.

“Good baby,” said the dragon.

“Kafira’s twat. The bloody thing talks.”

The Sorceress and her Lovers: Chapter Three Excerpt

The Sorceress and her Lovers“Keep both eyes open and look carefully through the telescopic sight. Place the little intersecting lines directly in front of the creature’s breast.”

“Yes Father,” said eleven-year-old Iolana Livonia Dechantagne Staff, pressing her face against the cool wood of the rifle stock.

“How many do you count, dear?”

“I see six, Father. How many should I shoot?”

“You’ll be lucky to hit even the one.” Radley Staff bent down and kissed the top of his daughter’s head. “Achillobators are very fast.”

“Beautiful too.”

“Yes, beautiful too.”

“It seems a shame to shoot them.”

“Well perhaps, but they are very dangerous. You wouldn’t want them coming around our house when your little cousins are outside, would you?”

“No, Father.”

“Alright, let’s see if you can shoot one. Squeeze the trigger. Don’t pull.”

“I know, Father.” The girl jerked as the high-powered rifle let out a deafening report. Then she quickly worked the action, bringing another round into the chamber. She fired again, and cocking the weapon, fired a third time. Then she stopped and looked up at her father, who was beside her, on his knees, peering through a pair of binoculars. “I’m sorry Father. The rest have fled.”

“No, no. You did very well.”

He stood up and then reached down to help her up. Once back on her feet, Iolana carefully smoothed out her dress. Though not burdened with the bustles and corsets of grown women, she was nevertheless covered from chin to ankle in the fashion appropriate to a girl of her age. Plenty of white lace and brocade accented the light gold poplin. One of the lizzies picked up the rifle, while another rolled up the mat upon which the girl had been lying.

“Can we go gather some feathers, Father? I would like some of them for a new hat.”

“Whatever you want.”

Staff waved his hands toward the lizzies, who quickly gathered up the rest of their gear. Staff, his daughter, and the six reptilians were soon stalking through the brown grass of the vast open meadow. He kept looking toward the girl to see if she needed any help, but the few times her dress became caught on a thorn, one of the lizzies jumped forward to unhook it before it tore the material. At last they reached their destination.
Achillobators were feathered dinosaurs about the same size as utahraptors. The latter, covered in bright blue and turquoise feathers and hunting in pairs, had been common along the coastline when humans had arrived. They were becoming increasingly scarce though as civilization spread into their habitat. On the other hand, achillobators were becoming more and more common. Covered in bright crimson with a black breast, they hunted in packs of eight or more.

The three dead creatures were grouped close together. One was as large a specimen as Staff had ever seen, more than twenty feet from nose to end of tail, over seven feet tall when it had stood. The other two were slightly smaller. All three were clean kills.

“Good hunt,” said Teska, the old lizzie hunter who usually accompanied Staff when he went out shooting. A couple of the others hissed in agreement.

The Sorceress and her Lovers: Chapter Two, Part Two

The Sorceress and her LoversSszaxxanna gave Tokkenoht a little shove, and the younger female opened her shoulder bag, pulling out a lizard talisman. She said a few words, shook the lizard on a stick, kissed it, and then blew into Hsrandtuss’s ear. Suddenly he could hear the words of everyone present.
“I bring you a great gift,” said Zsackass, waving three of his warriors forward.
The three colorfully painted males each carried a leather sack. In front of Yessonar, they opened them up to reveal that they were filled with the copper coins the humans made. Zsackass must have sold many animal skins to the humans to accumulate so much treasure. Hsrandtuss shook with mirth.
“What a fool,” he hissed gleefully. “What a stupid gift for Yessonar.”
“It is great wealth,” said Ssu, before Sszaxxanna slapped her mouth shut.
“Yessonar grew up among the soft-skins,” explained the king. “The copper bits are valuable to us, but I have seen the humans trade piles of them for a bit of scrap with a picture on it. The copper bits are not valuable to the humans and they will not be to Yessonar.”
“Thank you for your gift,” said the god with a shrug, seeming to confirm Hsrandtuss’s evaluation. One of the orderlies led the king back up to sit with his people. Tokkentott stepped forward to take Zsackass’s place.
“Great Yessonar, I too have a gift. I hope you will like it.” He glanced over his shoulder at Hsrandtuss.
Two warriors from Hiikhuu brought forth a wooden chest, which they sat at their king’s feet. He reached down and pulled the lid back. Reaching inside, he pulled out a large black rock.
Hsrandtuss slapped his knee and hissed.
“What an idiot. He brought coal.”
He turned toward his second wife, expecting her to ask why coal was not an acceptable gift, but she was busy avoiding Sszaxxanna’s fist. He looked around for someone to address and found his sixth wife, Kendra.
“The humans want coal, but the amount he could bring in that box can’t be worth more than a few copper coins.”
Kendra nodded knowingly.
“This is just a sample, Great Yessonar,” shouted Tokkentott, as if he had heard his rival. “I have brought the equivalent of 500 of these boxes.”
Hsrandtuss sucked in air at the extravagance, but Yessonar did not seem impressed. If anything he looked bored. His tail whipped around and he reached up a clawed hand to scratch his whiskers.
“Uh… that’s not all either,” said Tokkentott. “We will bring you more. You shall have all the black rock you want.”
“That is very nice. That really is splendid,” said the dragon without enthusiasm. “Thank you.”
The king of Hiikhuu slumped his shoulders and led his warriors back up to the rest of the embassy from his village. His place was taken by Szisz. The king of Suusiss was painted in his war paint and was decorated with utahraptor feathers. He crossed his arms and looked up the huge dragon.
“I have brought you no gift,” he said with a sneer in his voice. “You are a false god.”
“How dare you!” shouted Hsrandtuss.
Tistakha jumped to his feet. “I will kill you with my bare hands!” His warriors jumped up and down, baring their claws.
Both Zsackass and Tokkentott were equally enraged. Only Hakheekh remained calm, though some of his people certainly looked uncomfortable.
“Silence,” said the god, his demeanor sedate, though his voice still boomed through the open air. When relative calm returned, he looked at Szisz and spoke. “Go in peace.”
With a sneer, Szisz turned and marched up the steps to the exit. His warriors fell in line behind him.
“Have him followed,” whispered Hsrandtuss to Sszaxxanna. “I want to know everywhere that offspring of an addled egg goes and everything he does.”
“Tistakha, come forward,” said Yessonar. “How good it is to see you again.”
Tistakha waited until the last of the envoy from Suusiss were out of sight before he stepped down in front of Yessonar.
“Hail, God of the Sky.”
“You have come quite a distance, Tistakha.”
“All for your glory, Yessonar, and I have brought gifts.”
He waved to his gathered people and three warriors brought forth a huge bundle. Laying it on the ground, they began unfolding a huge skin. It was flat black and almost large enough for the dragon to wear as a coat. It was a tyrannosaurus skin that had been tanned and then prepared by having females, probably a dozen or more of them chew on it until it was soft and supple.
Hsrandtuss let out a low whistle.
“A great gift,” said Tokkenoht.
The dragon lifted his long serpentine neck and moved his head over the skin, examining it carefully. Every so often, his forked tongue shot out to touch it.
“This is very well done,” he said. “What shall I do with it, do you suppose?”
“Anything you wish,” said Tistakha quickly. “I have several females who can cut and stitch it if you wish. It can be made into clothing. It can be mounted on a wall. It can be cut into squares, stitched together, and filled with feathers.”
“Pillows,” said the dragon. “Yes, I could use some of those. And maybe a satchel so I can carry things with me. Wonderful. Wonderful.”
“It shall be done, God of the Sky,” said Tistakha, waving for his warriors to roll the skin back up.
He turned and marched back up to join his people, his dewlap flushing bright with pride.
Hsrandtuss didn’t wait to be invited down. He immediately marched to stand directly in front of the steel dragon’s massive head.
“Great Yessonar, I have come…”
Suddenly the great shining body rose to its feet. Two massive wings spread out wide enough to blot out the sun. The tail, tipped with a razor-sharp barb, whipped through the air. A great mouth opened and a few sparks shot out, floating to the ground before dying on the stone floor. Then just as suddenly, the dragon plopped back down. He closed his mouth and ran his huge, clawed fingers through his whiskers. Then suddenly his attention was back on the king of Hiissierra.
“My old friend Hsrandtuss. It is good to see you again.”
“Great Yessonar.”
“Is it true that you have six wives and that you’ve brought them all with you to see me?” asked the dragon. “I should have expected something like that from you, but still… six seems quite excessive.”
“It’s not excessive. Khassna had fifty wives and mated with hundreds of females.”
“You see yourself as another Khassna?”
Hsrandtuss stopped for a moment, then continued, carefully choosing his words. “Khassna was evil. He was on the wrong side of things. He was a poor king. But he was a great warrior and he was loyal to his god.”
“Well said,” commented Yessonar. “Well, let me see your wives then.”
The king waved his wives toward him without looking back. They formed a line to his left.
“This is Sszaxxanna and Ssu and…”
“Yes, I remember these two from my visit to your village.”
“My third wife is Szakhandu. She is from great Tsahloose, from a noble house.”
“Did you buy her, or was it part of an alliance?” asked the dragon.
“Both,” replied Hsrandtuss. “Her family is well connected in their city but are not as wealthy as they once were. They were happy to have her married to a wild male, so long as he had trade relations with the humans. Next to her is Tokkenoht. I stole her from Hiikhuu.”
He looked over his shoulder at Tokkentott, who was silently fuming.
“A female witch-doctor?” wondered the dragon. “Curious.”
“Then there is Sirriss. She comes from Tserich and knows much trade and speaks many lizzie dialects. Finally, there is Kendra.”
“Oh, I know her too, don’t I?” Then Yessonar broke into the musical language of the humans. Kendra replied and they spoke back and forth. Hsrandtuss leaned over so that Sszaxxanna could translate for him.
“He asks her how she comes to be in Hiissierra. She says she leaves the human city before the war and doesn’t want to go back. He asks if you are a good husband. She says you are a good husband and a good king.”
“I see you are a wily one, Hsrandtuss,” said the dragon, once again speaking the lizzie tongue. “Among your wives you have trade connections north and south, an alliance with the largest city-state, a magic-user, a hunter, and a translator.”
“Yes, God of the Sky.”
“So, just one more question. If I were to eat one of your females, which one should I choose?”
“I am sure that Ssu would taste the best,” said Hsrandtuss, and Sszaxxanna shoved Ssu forward. Ssu looked too terrified to move.
The dragon laughed a deep rumbling laugh.
“Relax, he will not eat you,” the king told his second wife.
“I am glad you are here Hsrandtuss,” said Yessonar. “We will talk later.”
“Wait, Great God of the Sky. I have a gift for you too.”
He held out his hand and Sirriss placed a small bundle in it. Carefully unwrapping the cloth covering revealed what the humans called a “book.” He held up the grey and black volume with the gold lettering facing upwards.
“Power and Guilt: The Crimes of Klaus II of Freedonia by Isaak Wissinger,” read Yessonar. “I’ve been meaning to read this one. Can you open it for me?
Hsrandtuss didn’t really know how a book was supposed to be used, but he held it as steady as he could and lifted the top cover back.
“Yes, the title. McCoort and McCoort Publishing. Yes. Turn the page please.”
Hsrandtuss carefully lifted the first thin white leaf.
“Ah, there it is: the dedication. For Zurfina.” The dragon’s voice became smaller than Hsrandtuss thought possible. “It’s dedicated to my mother.”
“What is this word—nother?” Hsrandtuss asked Szaxxanna in a whisper.
Sxaxxanna shrugged, but Kendra leaned toward him.
“The female that laid his egg.”

The Sorceress and her Lovers: Chapter Two, Part One

The Sorceress and her LoversChapter Two: The God of the Sky
Hsrandtuss stopped halfway up the hillside and leaned wearily on his staff. Glancing behind him, he saw that his six wives and twenty warriors were not having nearly as difficult a time with the climb as he was. Looking up the other direction he saw the massive fortress at the top of the hill. It was covered with wooden scaffolding for renovation and hundreds of small square wooden houses surrounded it. He felt a hand on his shoulder and turned to his first wife Sszaxxanna. She pointed off to the right.
Hsrandtuss, his wives, and his warriors were all members of the cold-blooded reptilian native race of the continent of Birmisia. The humans called them lizzies. Ranging in color from light olive to deep forest green, they gave the appearance of an alligator crossed with an iguana, if either had been able to walk around on their hind legs. Thick tails followed behind them, the tips a few inches off the ground.
“That is the road of supplicants, my king,” she said.
He nodded and started off in that direction, leading his small column along.
As they neared the road, they could see that literally thousands of people were upon it, making their way to the fortress and to the god who lived within. They were not all walking though. About one mile from the great gate, there was an arch over the road. Upon reaching the arch, travelers dropped down onto their bellies, crawling the rest of the way, dragging their tales behind them. Hsrandtuss stopped at the archway. He was torn. He needed to go on, but it was unseemly for a king to crawl.
“Hsrandtuss,” called a voice, just as he had decided that he had better get down on his belly.
He looked up to see an ornately painted male, wearing a bright red cape. He started when he noticed that the cape was made not of feathers, but of the smooth cloth woven by the soft-skins to the north. He nodded at the male.
“You need not enter through this gate. Bring your people and follow me.”
The red-caped male led them up a path paved with shiny river stones. It wound up the hill, sometimes approaching the main road and sometimes veering farther away. Finally it led to a small but beautiful gate in the cyclopean fortress wall. It was not as large as the main gate, but was lined with two beautifully carved statues of the god.
Close up, it was easy to see that the fortress was more than undergoing a simple renovation. One entire wall in the rear of the structure was gone and another had just been rebuilt. Buildings inside the walls were being remade. Every brick was being replaced. Thousands of males and females were laying bricks, hauling stones, or pushing wheelbarrows. Hsrandtuss hadn’t seen so many people since he had visited Suusthek as a child.
Tokkenoht, the king’s third wife, gave a low hiss and Hsrandtuss turned to see what had drawn her attention.
The body of a huge creature lay on its back, rotting in the sun. It was over fifty feet long, easily as large as a tyrannosaurus, though it was obviously a quadruped. A thick armadillo-like armor that had once protected the mighty back, now seemed to weigh the body down to the ground, and the gigantic head, attached with almost no neck, now gazed at the sky with empty eye sockets.
“What is it?” asked Sszaxxanna.
“I’ve never seen anything like it,” Hsrandtuss replied.
“It was a magic beast,” said the red-caped envoy. “The god killed it.”
Hsrandtuss stared.
“Come with me,” said the envoy.
He led them to a one of the few completed structures near the newly rebuilt wall. Tall and boxy, the building was covered on all sides by hanging pots, from which grew flowering vines. Beneath the windows were more flowers growing in heavy stone window boxes.
“This is the style popular in the south,” said Sszaxxanna.
Hsrandtuss nodded. He didn’t ask her how she knew such a thing.
“Make yourself at home,” came the order, before the caped one left.
Seconds later four females entered through the same door that both the party and the envoy had used. They carried huge platters of food—raw meat, cut into fist-sized pieces, and fresh fruit. As the females placed the platters on the floor, the warriors all looked at their king, waiting for him to choose the best for himself.
“Remember your bowels,” whispered Sszaxxanna, leaning her long snout near his earhole. “Just have some fruit.”
“I’m too tired to eat,” he sighed, and then turned to his warriors. “Feast my friends.”
The warriors went right after the slabs of meat. Two of his wives did too, but Sszaxxanna quickly put an end to that.
“Get over here,” she hissed. “The king needs to be rubbed with oil while he relaxes.”
Tokkenoht and Sirriss both looked suitably chastened.
“Oh, let them eat,” said Hsrandtuss. “I just want to go lie down for a bit.”
He opened the tiny pouch on his belt and pulled out a golden pocket watch that he had purchased from the soft-skin city trader for 2,500 copper bits. He held it in front of his first wife’s face and pointed to it.
“The little hand is on the river and the big hand is on the tree by the river. I want to get up when the little hand is on the claw and the big hand is on the ladle.” He handed her the watch.
“It will be done, Great King,” she said, and then snapped her fingers, calling his second wife. “Ssu will sleep with you and make sure you are comfortable.”
Hsrandtuss nodded. Ssu was good for little else, but she did a good job of seeing to his comfort.
“The sleeping room will be through there,” Ssaxxanna pointed.
Hsrandtuss found a large, well appointed chamber set up in the usual style. A fire pit burned in the center of the floor, surrounded by comfortable sleeping mats. The king climbed down onto one of the mats, pausing to appreciate its craftsmanship. Then descending to his stomach, he put his snout near the burning fire. Ssu settled next to him, on the same mat, placing her snout over his, and pressing her stomach to his side. He scratched her belly idly before drifting off to sleep. When he woke Ssu was gone, but Tokkenoht was in her place, in exactly the same position.
“The little hand is on the claw, Great King,” said Sszaxxanna, from the next sleeping mat to the left. “The big hand is past the ladle. It is on the stacked boulders.”
“Fine, fine.” Hsrandtuss pushed his fourth wife aside and stood up. He stretched out his arms and hissed in pleasant surprise. “I feel good. I feel rested. Find me some of that meat.”
His first wife rose with a single fluid motion that the king couldn’t help but admire, but he scowled when she held out her hand grasping a large, lush pomegranate. He took it, tearing it in two with his heavy claws and then eating it in two bites.
“Great King, Great King!” Sirriss scurried into the room. “The god calls for you!”
“Come along,” he told Sszaxxanna, and then looking first Tokkenoht and then Sirriss. “Both of you too. Get the others. You must all come. Others might bring him better gifts, but none of them will show up with six wives, I can tell you that.”
“Your paint has become smudged,” said Sszaxxanna, looking him over.
“We haven’t time to worry about it now. Just wipe it off.”
Hsrandtuss stopped only long enough to let her wipe him down with a moist towel. He noted that at least the females were properly painted. Less than five minutes later, he was out the door followed by his entire retinue of wives and warriors. The red-caped envoy met him just outside and without a word, led him through the fortress and out a gate, recently rebuilt in the otherwise deconstructed wall. Halfway down the sloping hillside beyond, they entered a stone amphitheater. The lizardman king could see the god as soon as they entered.
Since time immemorial, the lizardmen had worshipped dragons. Their gods had lived among them and ruled over them. There had been a dozen in the pantheon, including Setemenothiss the black god of war and mighty Hissussisthiss the green god of fear. But they were all gone now: gone and dead. There was a new god though: a new, powerful, young god. He was much larger than the last time that Hsrandtuss had seen him, but there was no mistaking. Yessonar, the god of the Sky, sat in the center of the amphitheater. His massive head, covered in whiskers and spikes, lay resting in front of his great winged body. His whip like tail was hung off the edge of the stage. When stretched out completely, it was more than eighty feet from the former to the latter. Every inch of his body was covered with tightly woven scales, and they were the color of new steel.
In addition to the god’s servants and Hsrandtuss’s own group, there were five other groups of lizzies present: five congregations of lizzies from various villages. The king hissed unhappily. He knew four of the other leaders, two of them well, and he knew who the fifth was.
Zsackass was the king of Ussus. He had reigned longer than Hsrandtuss and seemed to delight in one-upmanship over the king of Hiissierra. If Hsrandtuss built a shrine, Zsackass built a temple. If the hunters from Hiissierra took down a gorgosaurus, Zsackass and his warriors killed a tyrannosaurus. And Zsackass loved to repeat how he had stolen his wife from Hiissierra.
Tokkentott was the new king of Hiikhuu, taking the leadership after killing the old king. As a warrior, he had led several attacks against Hiissierra after Hsrandtuss had stolen a group of females from Hiikhuu, including Tokkenoht, who had come from Tokkentott’s own house. Now as king, Tokkentott was actively attacking Hsrandtuss’s warriors on their patrols.
Tistakha was not exactly a friend, but Hsrandtuss knew him and had traded with him. He was the king of Tuustutu and owed as much of his village’s prosperity to the humans as Hiissierra did. The two villages were relatively close and traded between themselves as well as with the humans.
Then there was Szisz, the king of Suusiss. He had been closely allied with the city of Suusthek, which had been destroyed by the human witch woman. Hsrandtuss was surprised that he was even there. There was no love lost between Suusiss and the humans and the young god was closely allied to the soft-skins.
The unknown factor was Hakheekh, the king of Zis Chusstuss. The old village of Chusstuss had sat far north near the coast, but had run afoul of the humans when they had arrived. The old king, a curse be forever on his unspoken name, attacked the humans. When that didn’t work, he had allied himself with another group of soft-skins. He had picked the wrong side. The humans had made Chusstuss pay and afterwards, the lizzies that remained had abandoned it. Some of them had moved south and founded Zis Chusstuss. Zis Chusstuss had grown recently as lizzies from the south moved north, but Hsrandtuss didn’t know Hakheekh and didn’t know his politics.
Zsackass was standing before the young god. Yessonar’s voice rumbled throughout the stadium seats, but Hsrandtuss couldn’t hear what Zsackass was saying.
“I want to hear,” he hissed.

The Sorceress and her Lovers: Chapter One- Part Two

The Sorceress and her LoversOne of the two girls arrived with plates of strudel, but only came close enough to set them on the table when the magic had abated.
“You are her, are you not? You are the Drache Girl?”
“I am,” confirmed Senta. “And now you’re going to regale me with a story of how your young lover was a soldier who had never done anything to anyone, but was sent to an early grave by my demon mother?”
The girl needed no reminder of the story. Nobody did. Five years ago, during the war between Brechalon and Freedonia, Senta’s mother, Zurfina the Magnificent, had cast a spell. Senta believed the intent of the spell was to eliminate the attacking warriors at Iquanodon Heath just outside of Port Dechantagne in Birmisia—though guessing Zurfina’s intentions were always hit and miss propositions. In any case, Zurfina’s spell had not only removed the soldiers from Iguanodon Heath. It had blinked out of existence every man in a uniform of the Freedonian Empire anywhere in the world: millions of men who all simply vanished. As did Zurfina herself, never to be seen again.
“Lover?”
“Mannfreund.”
“Nein,” said the girl. “I had no… lover. Mein vater was a postmaster, und mein older bruder—he was a polizist. Mein baby bruder—he collected tickets on the trolley. They are all gone now.”
“Bad luck,” said Senta, rubbing an index finger over her lower lip.
“Ja, luck.” The waitress turned and rejoined her sister.
“Let’s go,” said the sorceress. “I don’t want dessert.”
“As you wish,” said Baxter. He tossed a wad of Freedonian banknotes on the table before getting up and stepping around to pull out Senta’s chair. He followed her as she stepped quickly through the restaurant to the front door. She didn’t look back, but he did. The two blondes were still watching them, and he was back to not being sure which of the two Brechs they were watching.
Though his legs were longer and he wasn’t encumbered by a bustle dress or corset, Baxter still had a hard time keeping up with Senta as she strode quickly down the street.
“You shouldn’t let that upset you,” he said as he fell into step beside her.
“I’m not upset. I’m full.”
“Glad to hear it.”
“If I got upset every time such a situation presented itself, I’d be upset all the time.”
Suddenly gunshots rang out in the night—three shots in quick succession. Two small craters appeared in the building stonework next to Baxter’s head, sending tiny rock chips flying. The third projectile hit a window two feet higher up on the same building. The glass cracked but didn’t shatter.
“I see him!” said Baxter, spotting a figure running away into the night. He produced a .45 caliber revolver from his pocket, and started off at a run after the retreating figure. “I’ll get him!”
“Don’t bother!” called Senta after him. “It’s not worth it!”
He didn’t respond and disappeared around the corner, leaving her standing by herself in the halo of lamplight. She sighed and turned to examine the bullet holes.
“Three times then,” she said. “Three times I’ve been shot at.”
A noise behind her drew Senta’s attention. Beneath the flickering light of the next streetlamp were two children. They looked to be a boy and a girl of about eight or nine. The girl was wearing a brown dress and a bonnet, while the boy had on a great coat and a cap. They reminded Senta a little of her friends Hero and Hertzal, as they had been when she first met them. They too were from Freedonia. As she watched, the two ran into the mouth of a nearby alley.
Retracing her steps to the opening of the alley, the sorceress looked in. It was completely dark beyond the lamplight. She listened. She couldn’t hear the children. She couldn’t hear much of anything really. She heard voices in the distance and a steam engine, but neither of them was from the direction of the gaping darkness before her. With no real thought behind her actions, she stepped into the alley. Twenty or so feet into the darkness, she heard a small splash as she stepped into a puddle.
“Uuthanum.” A small sphere of cool blue light appeared floating before her. The ugly, moldy brick walls of the buildings on either side of her were illuminated, as were the ugly faces of eight men surrounding her. They were dressed as some kind of laborers, maybe dock workers, she thought. Most of them carried clubs. One, a vicious looking fellow with a big scar across his nose was carrying a piece of heavy chain.
“Oh my,” said Senta. “You are an ugly one, aren’t you?”
“Your bodyguard is gone,” said the man, revealing a Brech accent.
“That’s so cute, that you think he’s my bodyguard. So you’re not from around here. Let me guess. Somebody hired you—to what… kill me, rape me?”
“Why limit ourselves to just one,” he grinned.
“Oh I do like a man with ambition,” she said. “Uuthanum regnum.”
All of the men were suddenly stricken. Several bent over in pain and several others simply dropped to the ground. One screamed out. Others began to cry. Scarnose dropped to his knees and gripped himself around his waist. Senta bent down and looked at him.
“Where did those children go, anyway?”
The man let loose a hideous moan. Senta noticed an open but dark doorway at the back of the alley. A shriek brought her attention back to the writhing figure before her.
“If this had happened five years ago, I would have felt sorry for the pain you’re experiencing now.” She ran the palm of her hand across his dirty cheek. “Then again, five years from now, I might wipe out your whole family in retribution. Perhaps you should count yourself lucky. Well, maybe lucky isn’t the right word. Uuthanum.”
Black strands spread from Senta’s hand through Scarnose’s skin. As a new round of screams burst from his mouth, the sorceress stood up and walked past him toward the doorway, leaving the man clawing at his own skin as whole chunks of it blackened and sloughed off.
Up two steps, she entered the doorway. The shining ball of light, which had remained where it had been created, quickly followed her when she snapped her fingers. Beyond a long hallway, was a vast room filled with bodies. Many women and a few men were lying all about the marble-tiled floor. There had to be more than a hundred of them. Some had their heads propped up by pillows, but just as many lay without any attention to comfort. A low moan escaped from the far corner. Here and there a body twitched. Senta moved carefully through the spaces between the bodies. Hearing the clink of glass as her foot kicked something, she looked down to see a tiny, empty indigo vial go skittering away.
“Well well,” she thought aloud. “Somebody is getting rich.”
Suddenly hands gripped her ankle. Kicking her leg loose, she looked down into the milky eyes of a middle-aged woman.
“She wants you,” the woman hissed.
“Who wants me?”
“She wants you.”
“She can go to hell,” said Senta.
The sorceress made her way through the maze of drug-addled bodies to a door that led out onto the street. White opthalium, the see spice, was becoming more and more common. It sapped the will of those who became addicted to it. Senta had seen similar dens back in Brech, though none so large. Made from rare enchanted lotus blossoms and blue fungus from the distant island land of Enclep, and whipped together with relatively potent magic, the drug provided a doorway to a shared fantasy for those who rubbed it upon their eyes. The price for these visions was lethargy, depression, and finally the loss of the will to live.
Senta stopped outside the door and stared back into the room. She was still there, lost in thought, when Baxter came jogging up to her.
“I’m sorry. He got away.”
“It doesn’t matter,” said Senta. “Are you sure it was a he?”
Her companion thought for a moment. “No, I suppose not.”
“Let’s get home.”
Baxter put his arm around her shoulders and led her back to the hotel. Senta was lost in silent thought as they passed through the lobby and rode up in the elevator. Once back in the suite, she went directly to her boudoir and began removing her dress and complicated undergarments. She had just slipped into a filmy nightgown made of Mirsannan silk, when Baxter entered, still dressed, carrying a smiling baby.
“Look at what I found,” he said, spinning the child around him. “Come look at her new trick.”
He set the baby on the bed on her stomach and stood back. The little girl, her bright eyes now wide and mouth smiling, pushed herself up onto her hands and knees.
“Ta da!” he said, with a laugh.
Senta looked from child to the man without recognition.
“She’s up on her knees,” he explained. “Soon she’ll be crawling and then there’ll be no keeping up with her.”
“Ah.” The sorceress sat on the edge of the bed and picked up the baby, looking into her face. “I suppose I should be impressed.”
“I sent the women home,” said Baxter, walking into the other room.
The sorceress followed, the baby on her hip. “Senta will need to eat again.”
“Miss Lorvann left us with a bottle.” He took off his coat, hanging it up; then began unfastening the cuffs of his shirt. “You didn’t think that giving your child your name would be confusing?”
“Men do it all the time,” said Senta. “Besides, who do you propose I name her after?”
“Your mother?”
“No, that wouldn’t do. I doubt anyone will name their child Zurfina ever again.”
“Her father then?”
“Is that a hint that you would like me to tell you who he is?”
“I don’t care who he is.” Baxter peeled off his pants, and hung them up.
Senta placed her daughter down in the center of Baxter’s bed and attempted to play peek-a-boo with her, using a pillow to cover her own face, but the girl rolled over, rising to her hands and knees, and began rocking back and forth. Putting the pillow back in place, the sorceress slid up so that she could lie back upon it.
“Besides, bastards don’t get their fathers’ names.”
“Is that a hint?” asked Baxter, stepping out of the closet in his robe.
“A hint at what?”
“A hint that you would like me to marry you and give your child my name.”
“Don’t be stupid. I wouldn’t marry you in any case. You’re probably far too good for the likes of me, and I am most definitely too good for the likes of you.”
Baxter lay down on the other side of the bed, so that little Senta was between the two of them. With a flourish, he produced his cufflink box, shaking it so that it rattled loudly. The baby’s eyes went right to it. She opened them wide in astonishment as her mouth gaped, leaving a long strand of saliva dripping down onto the bed cover. They played with the rattling little box until the child’s eyes began to droop, then her mother scooped her up and sang to her until she was asleep. Baxter stepped into the nursery and returned carrying the cradle, which he sat near the foot of the bed. Once little Senta was placed in it, he turned down the room lights and rejoined Senta the elder in his bed.

The Sorceress and her Lovers : Chapter One- Part One

The Sorceress and her LoversChapter One: Bangdorf

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.”

The Sorceress and her Lovers – Minor Characters Part III

The Sorceress and her LoversHere are a few more minor characters from Senta and the Steel Dragon Book 6: The Sorceress and her Lovers.

Kenda: Another of Hsrandtuss’s wives, Kendra at one time lived in Port Dechantagne and worked as a guide for hunters, as seen in The Dark and Forbidding Land.

Kayden: The lizzie majordomo of the Dechantagne-Staff household.

Benny and Hero Markham: Senta’s childhood friend has grown up into a married woman with several children, including her daughter named Senta.

Walter and Warden Charmley: The twins, who have appeared numerous times in the earlier books, notably as small boys in The Drache Girl, have grown up and started their own dinosaur ranch.

Talli Archer and Questa Hardt: Talli and Questa are two members of Sherree Glieberman’s clique.  Questa’s father is Birmisian and her mother is from Mirsanna.

Little Senta: There are many children in Port Dechantagne named Senta– not surprising after Senta’s defeat of the dragon Hissussisthiss.  This one is special though because she is the daughter of the sorceress herself.

Sirris: Still another of Hsrandtuss’s wives ( I think I’ve covered them all now).  She comes originally from the village of Tserich.

Risty: The lizzie butler in the Colbshallow home, Risty is always ready to drop a cold Billingbow’s Soda Water into his master’s hand.

Gabrielle Bassett and Dutty Morris: Two young women of the Birmisian upper crust, have been mentioned in several books and were seen at the Accord Day party in The Two Dragons.  They became friends with Hero and Senta in their early twenties.

Chutturonoth: There are several notable warriors among Hsrandtuss’s tribe, but Chutturonoth is right there in the heat of the action on several occasions.

Bessemer the Steel Dragon: I wouldn’t call Bessemer as minor character.  He is one of the two title characters of the series, after all.  Even in The Two Dragons where he plays a huge part, he is seldom “on scene.”  The same is true here, though he has at least one scene with each of the other important characters.

The Sorceress and her Lovers – Minor Characters Part II

Here are a few more minor characters from The Sorceress and her Lovers.

Peter Sallow: Last seen in The Dark and Forbidding Land as an apprentice of the great wizard Bassington, Peter has grown up quite a bit since then.

Dovie Likliter: A new arrival to Birmisia, along with her mother and brothers, Dovie become friends with Iolana Staff.

Wenda Lanier: An arrival to Birmisia as a preteen in The Drache Girl, Wenda has grown up to become what many consider to be the most beautiful woman in the colony.

Sherree Glieberman, arriving on the same ship as Wenda Lanier, Sherree was last seen at the Accord Day party in The Two Dragons.  She is now the leader of the colony’s mean girls, and Iolana’s nemesis.

Zeah and Egeria Korlann: The Korlann’s are now happily married, having finally ended their seemingly interminable courtship in The Two Dragons.

Augie and Terra Dechantagne: Still both young children, Augie and his sister Terra appear more in this book than any of the previous volumes.

Wizard Cameron and Wizard Winton: Two more police wizards, both have been in Port Dechantagne for a few years as the story begins.  That doesn’t mean they’re trusted.

The Coral Dragon: The little dragon that Senta got as an egg in The Young Sorceress and hatched in The Two Dragons travels the world with her mistress.  She doesn’t get along well with all her fellow travelers.

Pantagria: Back with a vengeance– literally.

Szakhandu: Another of Hsrandtuss’s wives with some peculiar ideas about how lizzies should be living.