The Radiant Dragon

The Radiant Dragon Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: The Radiant Dragon Read Online Free PDF
Author: Elaine Cunningham
Tags: The Cloakmaster Cycle - Four
shrewd, pale eyes. Vallus Leafbower stood stiffly as he awaited her response. The gossamer chain mail of his uniform glittered in the dim lamplight, and his blue tabard was embroidered with a wizard’s insignia as well as elven runes naming his house and rank. He had been with the Imperial Fleet only a short time, yet Vallus Leafbower was highly regarded by the command of Lionheart. He was a powerful wizard of impeccable lineage, and he’d brought information deemed vital to the elven war effort. Had the report he’d just given come from any other adviser, the grand admiral likely would have dismissed it as hysteria.
    “Ghost ships are not uncommon. Perhaps you should tell me why this particular one was brought to my attention,” she suggested.
    Vallus hesitated, and the admiral did not miss the foreboding in the wizard’s eyes. “The abandoned ship was an armada. It was adrift in Winterspace,” he said.
    The ancient admiral’s face turned gray at this news, but her disciplined features showed no other sign of her distress. “I see.” She nodded curtly. “Very well, you may bring the patrol ship captain to me now.”
    Vallus Leafbower bowed and left the small chamber. Alone, the grand admiral slumped low in her chair and passed one hand wearily over her eyes. The power and authority of her position fell from her, and for a moment she was no longer the grand admiral, the representative and embodiment of all elves; she was only a frail and heartsick elven woman, exhausted by the weight of centuries and the responsibility of directing an escalating war.
    She dragged herself from her chair and began to pace, relying on the motion of her legs to nudge her numbed mind into action. There was time to collect her thoughts, for it could be a good while before Vallus returned with the rescued captain.
    Lionheart was a vast place. The base under her command was actually a fleet of ships connected by magically animated walkways and enveloped by a single atmosphere. In addition to the armada battleships, Lionheart included patrol ships, supply barges, docking bays, warships, and, of course, the enormous, coin-shaped vessel that housed the magnificent blue-and-silver Elven Council, a chamber large enough to seat representatives from every known elven world. Soon, the admiral feared, she might have to call a general council of the elven peoples. Such a thing had not been done in living memory, but the war was going badly.
    In the first Unhuman War, the goblinkin had been unorganized and undisciplined. Unfortunately, her people’s disdain for all goblin races had left them ill prepared for the scro. Descendants of orcs, the highly evolved, fiercely militaristic scro were a force to fear both in wildspace and on world-to-world combat. Already the scro had overcome and destroyed whole elven worlds. Now, as if the elves hadn’t problems enough, it seemed that the mighty armadas were somehow vulnerable.
    A small knock on her office door interrupted the admiral’s troubled thoughts. Vallus Leafbower had returned, and with him was a young male elf clearly long past exhaustion.
    “Captain Sirian Windharp reporting, Admiral,” Vallus said gently, unobtrusively supporting the haggard elf.
    The admiral motioned the captain to a chair. “Please have a seat, Captain Windharp,” she said kindly. “We will try to keep this interview as brief as possible, so that you may be free to rest and recover from your ordeal.”
    Sirian Windharp sank gratefully into the offered chair, and the admiral took the seat behind her desk and folded her hands on the polished expanse of blue marble. “I understand that you have something important to tell us. Please start at the beginning.”
    The elf nodded. “I am captain of the Starfoam, a dolphin patrol vessel recently assigned to duty in Winterspace. As we approached our post, we came across an abandoned armada —”
    “Where, precisely?”
    The captain blinked, startled by the interruption. The
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