The Dragon's Eye (11 page)

Read The Dragon's Eye Online

Authors: Dugald A. Steer

Emery placed the papers on Dr. Drake's desk.

“Thank you, Emery,” said Dr. Drake, turning to me. “Now, Daniel, you have had quite a shock with Scorcher. The fault is mine, for I have never come across a case such as this with such a young dragon. Hypnosis can be a dangerous thing unless it is caught early enough. Nevertheless, I am going to administer a fail-safe cure, which you may not like but which will certainly do you good. I want you to forget all about dragons for a while and concentrate on working out the answers to these pages of mathematical sums. When I am satisfied, we shall talk again.”

I took the sheaf of papers back to my new room. There were quite literally hundreds of mathematical sums. I didn't like the look of them at all. Suddenly, life at Dr. Drake's was beginning to feel very like boarding school, except that all of the other children were having the most fantastic time learning about dragons, while I was doing sums.

Beatrice came to see me.

“Are you all right?” she said.

“No,” I said. “I've got to do about a million sums.”

“Dr. Drake says that's the best way to cure someone who has been hypnotised by a dragon,” she said.

I told her what I had overheard Mr. Tibbs tell Dr. Drake.

Beatrice was quiet for a moment.

“Don't worry,” she said. “I am sure that Dr. Drake has everything under control. When you are better, I will tell you what I have learned in class. After all, Billy needs to learn that girls are —”

“More or less about the same speed as boys?” I said.

“Quicker!” said Beatrice with a laugh.

And she left me to my pages and pages of sums.

Even though I desperately hated being made to do so many pages of sums, I was equally desperate for the cure to be a success, and I went at them as hard as I could. I think I must have got through about fifteen pencils and ten erasers. Every evening Dr. Drake would come up to check my work. By the end of three days, I had could probably have recited my times tables all the way up to about fifty or sixty, and my head was so swimming with numbers that I even started doing sums in my sleep.

Finally I finished a page that ended like this:

3.14159 × 3963.205 × 3963.205

2 × 3.1459 × 3963.205

299792458 × 7926.41

1.09714 × 3

1357911 × 3.14159

123456 ÷ 17

727218 ÷ 81

299792458 ÷ 14

It took me less than twenty minutes, and Dr. Drake finally pronounced himself satisfied that the cure had worked and that I could rejoin the other children. That night after dinner, I took Beatrice aside.

“Dr. Drake says that I'm cured,” I said. “But I must be careful not to see Scorcher for a while.”

“Thank goodness,” said Beatrice. “Billy is not being helpful, to say the least. Darcy is amazing. But Billy seems to think that the classes are all for him, and whenever he knows something that we don't — which obviously he does, because he's studied dragons for longer — he says it's too difficult for girls and won't explain it.”

“What have you been studying?” I asked.

“We've been learning about the history of the S.A.S.D.,” said Beatrice.

“Can you tell me about it?” I asked.

“Well,” said Beatrice, “it all started in about 1281, when King Edward I ordered the extermination of all the dragons in the kingdom. Unfortunately, quite a few knights joined in and things began to look pretty bad for the dragons. There were some people, however, who tried to help them, including a lady dragonologist named Beatrice Croke.”

“You must have been named after her!” I said.

“Perhaps,” said Beatrice. “She narrowly avoided being burned as a witch and escaped to Scotland. Before then, most intelligent dragons had been happy sleeping in their lairs. But now they started to seek each other out, and the Society of Dragons was formed. It was only through a great deal of cunning that Beatrice Croke managed to convince them not to burn down London, York, and several other large cities. She helped them to hide the treasures of some of the dead dragons and formed the Secret Society of Dragonologists with her son Daniel. We call it the Secret and Ancient Society because, as far as we know, it is the oldest dragonological society in the world.”

“So we
were
named after them,” I exclaimed.

“It seems like it. Anyway, over the years the S.A.S.D. collected twelve special treasures. Although they were made at different times in different countries, each one of them gives the wielder certain powers over dragons. And they were the treasures that Ebenezer Crook returned to the dragons before he died.”

“Since Ignatius is Ebenezer's son, I wouldn't be at all surprised if he was searching for them!” I said.

“Yes,” said Beatrice. “Dr. Drake's suggestion may have been right.”

Beatrice fetched her record book so that I could copy down the list of treasures. This is what I copied:

T
HE
D
RAGONOLOGICAL
T
REASURES OF THE
S.A.S.D.

NOTE
:
Most are ineffective without the accompanying charm.

1. THE TALISMAN OF MASTER MERLIN
An extremely powerful Welsh artefact that has the power to call upon the aid of a mighty dragon — if you know the right words.

2. SPLATTERFAX
From ancient Russia, this amulet is said to bring down a hail of rocks on its unfortunate victims; legend says that it was brought to England in 1066 by the Norwegian King Harald Hardrada but was lost at the Battle of Stamford Bridge before he could use it.

3. SAINT PETROC'S CHALICE
An ancient Cornish cup that bears around its rim the ingredients of a sure cure for sick dragons, which must be mixed in the cup itself.

4. ABRAMELIN'S DRAGON ATTRACTOR
From England, this is an iron ornament in the shape of a hexagon, fitted with a gemstone that can be used to locate particular kinds of dragons.

5. THE DRAGON'S CLAW
Said to come from China, the claw has various properties and is a powerful ingredient in many different kinds of dragon spells.

6. THE SPEAR OF SAINT GEORGE
More like an African assegai than a traditional spear, this is one of the few weapons hard and sharp enough to kill a dragon.

7. A BOX OF DRAGON DUST
Dragon dust is a very rare substance, normally available only in minute quantities. Some of this dust, collected in Austria, dates back to the 1280s; the rest was collected much later.

8.
LIBER DRACONIS
A book written in Dragonish by Gildas Magnus and said to have been copied from an original kept in the Reales Alcazares in Seville, Spain. Only a true Dragon Master is allowed to know what it contains.

9. SAINT GILBERT'S HORN
From Scotland, this horn has the power to summon any nearby dragon. Combined with dragon dust, a powerful taming effect may be obtained that lasts for a number of weeks.

10. THE DRAGON SCEPTRE
Said to have come from ancient Peru sometime before Columbus discovered America, the sceptre can be used only once to summon an army of dragons, after which it will break into pieces.

11. A VIAL OF DRAGON'S BLOOD
Like dragon dust, dragon's blood is very rare, and it is forbidden to collect it these days. It is also very dangerous. However, in extremely small doses it can assist in understanding Dragonish. This vial contains blood collected in India.

12. THE DRAGON'S EYE GEM
Lost for many years, this gem has the power of confirming the status of a true Dragon Master. As such, it must be returned to the Society of Dragons upon the death of each previous Dragon Master, and kept until such time as they elect a new one.

“What does it mean by the ‘accompanying charm'?” I asked when I had finished copying the list.

“It means you have to use some special words,” said Beatrice.

“What, like magic?” I said.

“Yes, but don't worry. We haven't done any magic. Dr. Drake says it's not something you should meddle with unless you know a lot about it. He says that lots of dragon charms use supposedly magic words, but that a proper dragon scientist should pay more attention to the ingredients and the way the charm works.”

“Oh,” I said.

“Did you know that dragons have their own language?”

“No,” I said.

“It's called Dragonish. Only intelligent dragons speak it. One of the charms is in Dragonish. Dr. Drake taught it to us. But you need dragon dust in order for it to work properly.”

“What is dragon dust, exactly?” I asked.

“Apparently, when a mother dragon has babies, she breathes out a sort of calming vapour. It condenses on the walls of dragon lairs in a silvery sheen and it can be scraped off — if the dragon will let you.”

“And what are the words of the charm?”

Beatrice showed me the place in her record book where she had written down instructions for something that Dr. Drake had called Abramelin's Taming Spell. Apparently it lasted three hours, but you needed three troy ounces of dragon dust, whatever troy ounces were, and you had to put them in a silver dish that had been washed three times in water that had reflected a full moon.

“I suppose most water has reflected a full moon at some stage,” I said. The rest of the spell involved casting the dragon dust over a dragon you needed to tame, and saying the following strange words:

Ivàhsi yüduin!

Enimôr taym inspelz!

Boyar ugôner gedit!

“I wonder if
taym
means ‘tame,'” I said.

“I don't know,” said Beatrice. “Dr. Drake wouldn't provide us with a translation.”

The next day, I remembered that I had forgotten to ask Beatrice about the leather ball Emery had given us before I was hypnotised, but I didn't have time to ask her anything before we sat down in the classroom, waiting for Dr. Drake.

“First,” said Dr. Drake, “I would like to welcome back Daniel. He has been studying mathematics, which ought to be a field of study embraced by all dragonologists. You never know when the ability to perform a lightning-fast calculation might save your life.”

He winked at me and continued, “We have studied some dragonology theory — charms and so forth — which luckily all require ingredients that you do not have and so I am not worried about you trying them out by mistake. Today, I shall just finish telling you about the Society of Dragons and then, after an early lunch, there will be time for a spot of fieldwork.

“I will start off by pointing out that while there are various dragonological societies around the world, what I am telling you relates to the societies that were set up in the British Isles in the Middle Ages. As you know, the Society of Dragons was first formed in response to King Edward I's command that dragons be exterminated. The society was a haphazard affair at first, but now there are always seven wise dragons that act as the chief members of the society. They meet every seven years in order to discuss any matters of interest to them. And while an experienced dragonologist like myself may know some of these important dragons and suspect that they are members, the actual composition of the Society of Dragons is a secret known only to the Dragon Master himself.

“Chief among the members of the Society of Dragons is an extremely wise, extremely ancient dragon called the Guardian. Her lair is the most secret of all, because it contains the remains of many hoards that were collected during the last great dragon slaying. Because dragons rightly distrust humans, the only person who has a right to make representations and suggestions to the members of the Society of Dragons on behalf of mankind is the Dragon Master of the Secret and Ancient Society of Dragonologists. This has resolved conflicts and helped both humans and dragons on many occasions. Because of the respect he is accorded among all dragons, the Dragon Master needs some sign of authority. That sign is the Dragon's Eye gem. It supposedly belonged to the magician Merlin, whom many consider the founding father of Western dragonology. When exposed to dragon fire — but only to dragon fire — an image can be fixed within the gem so it is the only image the gem will reflect.

“When the Society of Dragons elects a new Dragon Master — almost always respecting the wishes of the previous one — the Guardian uses her flame to burn his or her image into the Dragon's Eye and presents it to the new Dragon Master. When there is no Dragon Master, then the Dragon's Eye is returned to the Guardian. This situation has been rare, but there has been at least one period before now when there was no Dragon Master. During the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, the gem, along with contact with the Society of Dragons, was very nearly thought to be lost. Now, are there any questions?”

“If the Dragon's Eye can only be awarded by the Society of Dragons, why would anyone but a Dragon Master search for it?” I asked.

Other books

Let it Sew by Elizabeth Lynn Casey
Don't Cry Tai Lake by Xiaolong, Qiu
Fire and Hemlock by Diana Wynne Jones
Slow Dollar by Margaret Maron
The Quest Begins by Erin Hunter
2 To Light A Candle.13 by 2 To Light A Candle.13
Out of the Dark by April Emerson
Untrained Eye by Jody Klaire