Read Dragon Defense (Heirs to the Throne Book 3) Online

Authors: Diane Rapp

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Historical, #Sword & Sorcery, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Colonization, #Galactic Empire, #Teen & Young Adult

Dragon Defense (Heirs to the Throne Book 3) (19 page)

Sleepy young men filtered into the control room behind Bryant, while Chella pushed buttons and studied the book.  The display outlined a trajectory and she recognized the landing site.

“It’s heading for Havenshire!” Caston said as the picture on the screen showed the castle grounds.

“Good, we’ll prepare to greet unwelcome guests!”  Bryant grinned now that he could do something concrete.  “What does this picture represent?” He gestured at the drawing of a spacecraft.

Chella grinned.  “It shows a two-man shuttle!  They can’t launch a full scale manned assault.  According to the manual, the security system automatically shoots down anything larger than a small ship without a manual override.  They know the limitations, so they sent two men to sneak in and access our controls.”

Bryant flashed a feral grin.  “I can handle two men!  What else can pass through the system?” 

Chella frowned.  “I’ll try to find out.  Touchdown’s in twenty minutes.”

“Julian and Caston, you stay and help Chella.  Young minds absorb new ideas faster than men like me.  I’ll wait for that shuttle with my best men.”

“Be careful, Bryant,” Chella said.  “Spacers carry laser pistols.  Nothing larger would fit into that shuttle.”

“We’ll be careful.” 

Chella turned to Julian and Caston, who stood gaping at the flashing display with bewildered fascination.  She saw no fear just eagerness.

Chella handed the manual to Caston.  “Read this section aloud and help us follow the diagram.”  Chella gestured at the chair next to her. “Julian, I’ll show you what I’ve learned.”

Julian eased himself into the chair, grinning.  Chella described the keys and their functions until Caston read, “Small vessels penetrate the system unless manually targeted, see page 294.  Should I go to that page?”

“Yes!”

Caston flipped to the page.  “Whew!  This looks difficult.”  He studied the page, shifting his gaze to the keyboard.  “This stick is a toggle.”  He read aloud, “The technician directs fire at the intruder by moving the toggle to the target’s coordinates.  Manual operation is limited to the upper atmosphere.”  Caston sighed.  “The technician calculates the trajectory of the target and fires within two degrees of the expected flight path to score a hit.” 

Julian shook his head.  “We need someone who understands flight trajectories.”

“Ryan can do that, and so can Catherine!”  Caston grinned.  “Their archery experience gives them an instinct about flight patterns.”

Chella headed out the door.  “I’ll fetch Ryan and Catherine, while you guys keep studying the manual.”

Caston rolled his eyes.  “You think it’s safe to bring Ryan and Catherine into the same room?”

Julian said, “We don’t have a choice.  Our lives are at stake, so they must avoid killing each other.”

“There’s lots of work ahead but this is ever so much fun,” Caston said.

“I hope we live long enough to enjoy the experience.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

16 ~ THE SHRINE OF ASBOHAR

 

 

Once inside the mullah’s palace, Dr. Alexander led his party toward the throne.  The mullah stared at strangers dressed in silver garments and carrying helmets.  Salizar and Tamarind followed a few paces behind, looking worried.

The mullah held up his hand.  “Why do you dress in the garb of priests?”  He spoke clearly in their language.

Dr. Alexander stepped forward.  “We need to examine the Shrine to detect breaches of the code.”

“What do you know of the code?” The mullah frowned.  “Only the keepers speak of the code.  You spout heresy!”

The doctor held up a silver box.  “This box measures evil magic.”  He flicked a switch and the box clicked loudly.  “Keepers allowed evil magic to escape from the shrine and the gods are angry.  They already bring death to your people.  As King Donovan’s healer, I’ve seen blood run thin, women bear stillborn babies, hair falls out, and teeth bleed.  We’ve come to stop the evil magic.”

The crowd murmured and the mullah shouted, “Enough!  Call the priests and let them examine this box.  In the meantime let me see how King Donovan treated my daughter.”

Tamarind walked meekly forward and knelt before the mullah. “Your daughter fares well, my father.”

The mullah’s eyes softened.  “No harm befell you in infidel hands?”

“None.”

“It is well.  I’ve arranged a worthy husband, my child, a man of great wealth.”  The mullah smiled.  “Does that make your heart happy?”

Tamarind hesitated for a heartbeat. “Your daughter rejoices in her good fortune.”

“Salizar!” the mullah called and motioned him forward.  “We wish to reward our faithful servant.  You carried a treasure safely back to its proper place.”  The mullah clapped his hands and a servant placed a casket of gold at Salizar’s feet.  “This is your reward.”

Salizar bowed.  “Your servant is overwhelmed by your generosity.”  His gaze flickered sideways toward Tamarind.  “It was my duty to return your daughter safely.”

A priest entered the chamber, measuring his steps before he knelt before the mullah.  “I answer your summons, great one.”  The priest’s words sounded like a raspy whisper.  

“Are you ill?” the mullah asked.

“All the priests are stricken by a dread disease.” He sighed and slumped to the floor.

Dr. Alexander stepped forward.  “May I tend the priest?”

The mullah looked shaken.  “Please.”  He watched Dr. Alexander bend over the priest with hands hovering over the body.  He took a vial from his bag and helped the priest sip.  Finally, the doctor turned to the mullah.

“Sire, the evil magic is at work.  Restrict access to the Shrine until our examination is complete.”

The mullah gestured to his guards.  They carried the priest out as the crowd grew silent.  “Examine the Shrine.  No one shall enter until it’s safe from the evil magic,” the mullah said in a loud voice and abruptly left the chamber.

The mullah’s decree spread rapidly through the city.  Dark stares followed Dr. Alexander’s party as they rode to the shrine.              Maggie led the team through the gate, holding the radiation monitor ahead of her.  She spoke through a headset.  “The count’s within a safe range at this distance.  Let’s head inside the building.” 

Lauryn felt awestruck by the foreboding structure.  A cavernous ceiling vaulted overhead and massive machinery stood behind a transparent wall.  Maggie led them through a series of corridors made of the same transparent material until they reached the center of the dome. 

“Here we are,” Maggie announced.  “Make sure your suits are properly sealed.”

Lauryn blurted, “ASBOHAR.” 

Maggie glanced back.  “What did you say?”

Lauryn pointed at the large letters above the doorway.  “ASBOHAR.  Activate Shielding Beyond Opening—Hazardous Area—Radiation.  ASBOHAR is the initial-word for the message printed over the door.  The Shrine and the city are named Asbohar because of those initials.” 

Maggie laughed.  “You’re right.  Never thought it would go so far.  Let’s enter ASBOHAR.”  Behind the shield, the radiation monitor jumped into the red zone. Maggie frowned.  “The leak contaminated this entire area.”

Dr. Alexander nodded.  “Can you pinpoint the trouble?”

Maggie’s dark eyes examined the dome and she pointed at a large tube connecting the dome to the outside.  “I sense strong radiation in that direction.”

“Let’s take a look.”  The doctor led the party forward. 

Maggie stopped short, gasping as the monitor needle jumped off the scale.  “Stop!  Don’t go any further!” she shouted.  “It’s too dangerous, even wearing protective suits.”  She pointed at a wet stain on the wall, rimmed with white crystals.  “There’s the breach!”

Lauryn asked, “Can it be repaired?”

“Plasteel could seal the breach but the technology of plasteel is beyond this planet.”  Her eyes followed the crystalline stains.  “This crack comes dangerously close to the chamber holding liquid sodium.  The Hosler design includes a desalination plant in the reactor complex.  When the tide rises, salt water pumps through the system.  See?  Salt water corroded the barriers.  Exposed to air and water, liquid sodium can explode.”

Alex frowned.  “Drako might get contaminated by nuclear fallout.”

Lauryn shivered.  “Why did they stop taking care of it?”

Maggie sighed.  “The priests are descendents of the original caretakers.  When Drako rejected technology, they shut down the reactor but the core remained dangerous.  The priests’ duty to maintain the core became religious ceremonies rather than scientific duties.  Solving this problem was beyond their capability.  We need to figure out a way to reinvent plasteel or something as effective.”

 

 

*****

 

 

Salizar waited outside the shrine, considering his plan.  Life was an adventure, and he needed to redeem his family honor!  Figures dressed in silver emerged, and Salizar spurred his horse.  In two bounds he bent and snatched the daughter of the infidel king—the man who killed his father and destroyed his family’s honor.  Hooves pounded through twisting alleys, quickly losing sight of dumbfounded guards.

“Let me go!”  Lauryn screamed as she kicked and pounded her fists.

Salizar’s iron grip tightened. “Don’t worry, princess.  No harm will befall you.”  The slender body lay across his legs like a bag of grain with Lauryn’s head hanging down.  The horse galloped through a maze of cobblestone lanes while Lauryn closed her eyes to fend off dizziness. 

Salizar knew the route.  Well ahead of pursuit, he turned sharply into a courtyard, slid off the horse, and dragged Lauryn into a tiny house.  Lauryn struggled in vain as Salizar slammed the door.  She screamed as hooves clomped down the cobblestone lane outside, but Salizar clamped a hand over her mouth.  Her screams sounded like a whimper. 

Lauryn bit into leathery flesh until she tasted blood.  Salizar winced.  His dark eyes burned with anger, but he kept the hand in place until the sounds of pursuit trailed into the distance.

As his grip slackened, Lauryn twisted free and ran toward the door.  An old woman dressed in black robes blocked her escape.  A sheer veil covered the woman’s face but Lauryn saw a harsh unyielding glare through the fabric.  With a massive key the old woman locked the door and spewed foreign words at Salizar.  She grabbed Lauryn with claw-like fingers, stopped abruptly and stared at the girl with a shocked expression.

Lauryn felt a jolt of power in the old woman’s touch.  She jerked away, turning into the solid wall of Salizar’s body.  He laughed.  “This is my mother, princess.  She’ll protect your honor.”

“What do you want?”  Tears stung her eyes as she backed away from him.

“A bargain,” Salizar said.

“What?”

“Your friends must help me get what I want, and I’ll release you.”  Salizar ignored blood dripping from her bite and waved his hand as he spoke. “I want Tamarind as my wife!  Your friends must help me steal her from the palace.” Salizar smiled as if he announced an ordinary request.

Lauryn laughed, and Salizar’s dark eyes narrowed.  She said, “You want to marry that hellcat?”

“Cursed witch!  You mock me for chasing the dream of every young rider?”

Lauryn shrugged.  “If you wanted to kidnap Tamarind, your chances were better in the desert.  Why wait until she’s locked inside her father’s fortress?”

An expression of horror filled his face.  “You’d have me break the oath of a guardian!  Do you think I am without honor?”

“Isn’t it the same thing?”

“Infidels don’t fathom proper behavior.  While commissioned by her father, I could not touch Tamarind.  Upon completion of my task, my oath was fulfilled.  She’s guarded by sworn protectors, and I’m not accountable.  A new husband will have her if I don’t steal the one I love.”  He stared into the distance like someone called to a noble cause.

Lauryn felt a stirring of sympathy.  “Why not ask for help?  Did you need to toss me over a horse and run?”

Salizar shook his head, weary of explaining every detail to an addle-brained girl.  “It is not proper to beg help from infidels, but we can strike a bargain.  That’s entirely different.”

“You plan to trade one girl for another.”

Salizar frowned.  “I propose to exchange favors.  There are nuances in striking a bargain of mutual interest.”

Lauryn rubbed her bruised arms and plopped onto a stiff wooden chair. “What nuances?”

Salizar ran his fingers through black hair as the infidel princess stared at him with her pale blue eyes.  “By returning valuable property, I can receive a favor in return,” he explained as though he spoke to a child.

“But you stole the valuable property—the valuable person—to begin with!”

“It matters not.  A favor is required when I return the property to your friends.”  Salizar’s lip curled into a lopsided grin and spread his hands in a friendly gesture.

“How long before you perform this favor?  I’d rather get back to my friends than sit around here waiting.” 

Salizar scrunched his dark eyebrows and looked serious again.  “A bargain must be struck before I return you.”

Lauryn popped out of the chair and paced the room.  “You’re asking for ransom not striking a bargain!”  She nearly ran into the old woman again but preferred to avoid contact with the woman.  “Do you have anything for your ‘honored guest’ to eat?  I’m famished.”

Salizar spoke to his mother in their language and the woman left the room.  She returned a moment later with a tray of carefully arranged cheese and fruit.

“You were prepared for guests, I see.”  Lauryn gave the woman a sarcastic smile.  She sat in the stiff chair and tasted a chunk of cheese.

Salizar brushed past her and settled on the other chair, waiting for his mother to pour him a drink before he picked up a plump pear.  “Infidel women brazenly display their faces in public.  Is your father stupid?  He let you travel unprotected into a foreign land.  Why?”  Salizar spoke with unfeigned curiosity as he enjoyed the pear, wiping the juice from his fingers onto his tunic.

“I’m a healer.  I choose my own path, and father respects my choices.  Your people are sick, dying from radiation poisoning. I wanted to help.”  Lauryn stared at the cheese in her hand as she spoke.  “I’m free to choose my own work and who I marry.”

Salizar’s eyes widened.  “Marriages are not arranged?  I can’t believe such foolishness.”

Lauryn set the cheese down and leaned forward, resting her elbows on her knees as she tried to make him understand.  “Some lords arrange marriages but not my father.  He believes I should marry for love and allows me to choose for myself.” 

Salizar grinned. “Good.  Then he’ll understand why I must marry Tamarind!  I love her.”

“Does Tamarind love you?” Lauryn asked and popped a grape into her mouth.

“Of course, I’ve seen it in her eyes.” Salizar’s gaze turned sultry, and his mouth curled into a seductive grin.

Lauryn groaned and rubbed her forehead.  “You haven’t asked her?”

He waved the question away and took a swallow from his cup.  “In our land, a man does not ask the woman.  He buys a bride or steals one.  Asking a woman to agree brings shame upon her family.”

“Great!” Lauryn stood and rested her fists against her hips.  “You must let me talk with Alex about the idea.  He’s more likely to bend to persuasion than threats or blackmail.”

“You would negotiate the matter on my behalf?”  Salizar gasped and bowed his head before her.  “A royal negotiator is an honor I never dreamed of requesting.”

“Yes, I’ll negotiate.  If Tamarind desires this marriage, we’ll help you fake the kidnapping.  Is that agreed?”

He stood and paced the room, rubbing his chin as he thought about the proposal.  “Agreed, but you will not be allowed near the princess in the guise of a boy.” 

Lauryn shrugged and popped another grape into her mouth.  “I’ll figure out a way to speak with her in private.  Could you take me back to my friends now?”

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