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Dance with Clouds
Dance with Clouds
Dance with Clouds
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Dance with Clouds

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Malvern Frost, the crafty villain who tried to overthrow the land of Oasis in Big Dragons Don't Cry, has escaped from prison and fled to Dolocairn, a mountainous land where drug lords control the economy and threaten the rule of the priestess cult. They've allied with Frost to use amnesiac and possibly fatal drugs to engineer Frost's escape and incite a race riot.

Phileas, Guardian of Oasis, aware that these thugs will continue to try to undermine the fabric of his country, considers the possibility that drug lords could cause further chaos by withdrawing the flow of drugs into his country. When Serazina, the newest and youngest member of the ruling Council, proposes the legalization of drugs, the other members initially respond with hostility to both the idea and Serazina, but when they realize that no other way to combat their shadowy adversaries may exist, they reconsider.

The air dragons of Dolocairn, no longer honored in human worship and troubled by their own fears of the powerful drug cartel, come to Oasis to seek assistance. In response, Druid, Water Dragon of Destiny, Tara, the Chosen Kitten, and Serazina, volunteer to go into that dangerous land and uncover the intentions of both the big-time pushers and the mysterious High Priestess. They know that the spy business in Dolocairn is a deadly one.
Now, when alliances in that icy land seem to be shifting as easily as snow slides down a mountains, and Frost takes every opportunity to convince the people of Dolocairn that Oasis is their enemy, conditions could hardly be more dangerous for the trio of spies. They will be lucky to get out alive.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherC. M. Barrett
Release dateSep 10, 2011
ISBN9781466001374
Dance with Clouds
Author

C. M. Barrett

On my mother's side of the family, I come from a line of storytellers. My grandmother's stories ranged from my grandfather's arrest for draft resistance in England during World War I, the uncertainty of life during the Troubles in Ireland, to the day she decided to leave her marriage (but didn't). My mother's stories described a rural childhood that to a child of a suburb of little boxes seemed idyllic. Both of them encouraged me to read and provided me with books to feed a growing habit. When I was seven or eight, I discovered mythology, and the gods and goddesses in those tales were as real to me as the dragons and cats in my own stories are now. Thanks to my early training in fantasy, I like to hang out with dragons. Accepting the bizarre directions my imagination takes has allowed me to conjure up Zen cats, cougars, gossip-vending hawks, and other critters. Currently I live in upstate New York on a wooded piece of land not unlike some of the terrain in Big Dragons Don't Cry. Since 2000 I've belonged to the online writers' group, Artistic License, subtitled Shameless Blameless Hussies. They've read all my books, but don't blame them if you find errors, because they're shameless. I also paint, and the art on my book cover is one of my watercolors.

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    Dance with Clouds - C. M. Barrett

    Book 2 of

    A Dragon’s Guide to Destiny

    By C. M. Barrett

    DANCE WITH CLOUDS SYNOPSIS

    Malvern Frost, the crafty villain who tried to overthrow the land of Oasis in The Dragon Who Didn’t Fly, has escaped from prison and fled to Dolocairn, a mountainous land where drug lords control the economy and threaten the rule of the priestess cult. They’ve allied with Frost to use amnesiac and possibly fatal drugs to engineer Frost’s escape and incite a race riot.

    Phileas, Guardian of Oasis, aware that these thugs will continue to try to undermine the fabric of his country, considers the possibility that drug lords could cause further chaos by withdrawing the flow of drugs into his country. The air dragons of Dolocairn, no longer honored in human worship and troubled by their own fears of the powerful drug cartel, come to Oasis to seek assistance.

    In response, Druid, Water Dragon of Destiny, Tara, the Chosen Kitten, and Serazina, volunteer to go into that dangerous land and uncover the intentions of both the big-time pushers and the mysterious High Priestess. They know that the spy business in Dolocairn is a deadly one.

    Now, when alliances in that icy land seem to be shifting as easily as snow slides down a mountains, and Frost takes every opportunity to convince the people of Dolocairn that Oasis is their enemy, conditions could hardly be more dangerous for the trio of spies. They will be lucky to get out alive.

    Chapter 1

    Far from the swamp where he’d spent most of his five hundred years, Druid waddled along the shore with Daphne. The female dragon’s hips, rolling like the waves of the sea, bumped softly into Druid’s quivering side.

    Daphne wasn’t the shiniest pebble on the beach, but she demonstrated exceptional talent in the shadows of a dune or beneath sheltered palm trees. Having spent too many centuries as a sex-starved virgin, Druid loved to lose himself in scaly embraces, and Daphne’s enthusiasm matched his.

    Stars winked suggestively, and the moon wore a sensuous smile. Druid was ready to romp.

    Wouldn’t you like to rest beneath a palm tree? he asked Daphne. She lowered her long green lashes and smiled.

    They were in the throes of thumping passion when Druid sensed a disturbance in the quiet of the tropical night. Over the whisper of sheltering fronds and the sigh of the sea, a metallic hum cut through the sky.

    Only one species made noises that sawed into bones and nerves. Humans! he shouted, jumping off Daphne and raising a sandstorm as he hurried down the beach. One by one, dragons stumbled out to join him, their wings flexed to resist attack.

    What? Where?

    Druid raised his eyes to the sky and pointed at distant lights that cut through the pearl-black night and dimmed the stars. He had seen such lights blinking over the swamp. They belonged to a flying machine called airplane. This one seemed to pollute the ocean breeze with a faint but spreading malevolence. Like a distinct odor, it evoked powerful memories. Druid tasted the tang of fear rising from the sun-leathered skin of a hundred frightened humans and the mixture of sweat and oil smeared on their weapons. He heard the hatred in their breathing. He smelled the venom of Malvern Frost, self-proclaimed Dragonslayer.

    Dragonslayer. The human fiend was supposed to be in a cave called prison, no longer able to harm anyone, but Druid was certain the monster was in that infernal airplane. The dragon’s scales clacked with alarm, and his wings flapped with the urge to fly at the alien machine and knock it from the sky.

    Attack! he shouted. The enemy who tried to destroy the swamp is in that machine!

    Several dragons hissed in sympathy, but no one moved a wing. Why attack? a dragon asked, yawning. He’s going south, away from us, away from your friends and their city. Let us rejoice. Good riddance, says I, and I’m going back to bed.

    The other dragons yawned in sleepy agreement and disappeared. Only Daphne remained, still panting from interrupted passion. Druid watched the winking lights until they disappeared, leaving his unease intact.

    Daphne tugged at his wing. It’s gone. Let’s go back and romp.

    Druid, ignoring her, poised himself for flight to the swamp to warn his old companions, but a voice stopped him.

    They are safe at the moment. Danger is still a distant storm. When the time comes to act, you will know.

    Not that Dragon of Destiny business again, he groaned.

    * * *

    The first knock on his door awoke Phileas, Guardian of Oasis. By the second knock, his hand was turning the doorknob.

    Commander Dal’Rish stood in the doorway. Frost has escaped.

    A person of great mind did not succumb to rage, no matter how eagerly it flamed within him. Enter, Phileas said, and tell me the rest. When and how did it happen?

    Two hours ago.

    "Two hours ago, and I am only hearing about it now?"

    Sometimes a person of great mind abandoned his principles.

    Dal’Rish flinched. Your fury is totally justified, and I offer my resignation. I have failed my country, my people, my Guardian—

    A person of great mind recovered his calm quickly. I will be held responsible for this mess, and I don’t have the luxury of resigning. Gather your wits, Commander, and give me some useful information. Enlighten me with the details of how Frost escaped from a prison with the highest known level of security.

    Drugs in aerosol form, Dal’Rish said. Our scientists are now analyzing the substance. It first hit the guards who circle the perimeter of the prison. The members of the tactical squad who rushed out to disable the criminals also got sprayed, and the criminals got inside and immobilized the guards who controlled the locking system. We suspect that a former inmate or guard supplied detailed plans of the prison. Guardian, I in no way seek to excuse myself—

    I’m clear on that.

    But the attackers disabled security and communications to such an extent that I’ve only just heard of the incident myself.

    The ring of Dal’Rish’s beeper interrupted him. After listening for a moment, he put it on speaker mode.

    A female voice spoke. Commander, we’ve discovered tire tracks, apparently those of an all-terrain vehicle, leading to a nearby beach. We also see the imprints of a small passenger airplane like those used by drug traffickers. Our teletrackers saw the flight pattern of a plane that was headed south towards Tamaras before we lost it.

    Inform our agents there at once, Dal’Rish said. He clicked off his beeper. Why Tamaras? he asked Phileas.

    A diversionary move. Malvern will surface in Dolocairn.

    The astonishment on the Commander’s face was no greater than what Phileas felt. He hadn’t thought out the answer in his usual deliberate, logical way. It had seemed inspired by—the word that defiled reason—intuition.

    But Malvern loathes Dolocairn and all Dolocairners, Dal’Rish said.

    The Commander spoke logic: clear, unarguable, but wrong. Phileas clung to intuition’s wobbly perch. He’d always called Frost a wily spider, but now the former Councilor’s web glittered in blinding silvery strands, a pattern impervious to reason.

    Guardian, can you explain this?

    The panic in Dal’Rish’s voice made Phileas desperate for a ladder of logic to help him down to earth. Breathe deeply, Commander. Let’s consider the facts. We can agree that Frost always clung to the Etrenzian half of his heritage and repudiated his Dolocairner ancestry. Is it possible that his denunciation served as a cover for a far-reaching plot involving that accursed land of ice and mountains?

    The Commander’s face relaxed. Guardian, allow me to salute your brilliance.

    Thank you, but I’m afraid the brilliance is all Malvern’s. He duped us. Phileas mentally shook himself. Remorse, however, defeats the intentions of Mind. Now we can anticipate him.

    We’ll take action at once, Dal’Rish said. I’ll get messages to our agents in deep cover as soon as possible. Do you think he’ll have the temerity to surface openly?

    Malvern never lacked temerity, but if he does show his face, we’ll know that powerful forces in Dolocairn, if not the government itself, are in league with him. We’ll find out soon enough.

    Phileas was tempted to rub his hands in satisfaction. His brain sparked in preparation for battle. Only now did he realize how dull life had been since Malvern’s incarceration.

    I think I’ll go over to the House of Healing and check on those attacked by the mysterious drug, he said.

    I’ll accompany you. Guardian?

    Yes?

    What about Serazina Clare? Shouldn’t she be told that Frost has escaped?

    Phileas stopped, momentarily paralyzed with a guilt he shook off almost as soon as it burdened him. She must be brought to safety. Have several of your trusted subordinates bring her to this building. Order a round-the-clock watch. She is not to go out unescorted. Frost may be gone, but he clearly has a well-organized network. If there’s one person other than me upon whom he’d seek revenge, it would be Serazina.

    I’ll tell her myself, Dal’Rish said.

    I’ll come with you.

    * * *

    Serazina was having the usual nightmare. She saw Malvern Frost’s hate-filled face as he aimed his gun in the dragon’s direction. As she had night after night, she leapt at him, and the bullet meant for Druid drilled its way into her.

    She sat up, screaming, and Tara pressed against her head and purred. Calm, calm.

    What? Berto reached for Serazina. The dream again?

    More real than ever before. Serazina looked around, half-expecting to see Frost lurking in the corner of the bedroom.

    He can’t hurt you now.

    Serazina was sure he could.

    She heard a knock on the door that sounded like trouble. I’ll get it, Berto said. He dressed quickly and went into the hall.

    Guardian?

    Serazina threw on some clothes and joined him. The Guardian and Commander Dal’Rish stood in the doorway, both looking grim. He escaped, she said.

    How did you know? Dal’Rish asked, but the Guardian merely said, We believe he fled to Tamaras.

    Images of steep mountains crowded her head. Not Dolocairn?

    Astonishing, the Commander said.

    The Guardian stepped on Dal’Rish’s foot. Why do you think Dolocairn?

    "I don’t think it. I see it."

    Her voice was sharp, but he deserved it for testing her. He might as well realize she was no longer going to hide her sensing ability, even though the old fear that she’d be shut up in the Ward for the Chronically Crazy assaulted her.

    Then you’re not afraid? Phileas asked.

    She wished he hadn’t asked. His question opened the floodgates straining against terror. Because he’s not here? What difference does that make? He didn’t escape unassisted and not only for the sake of freedom. He must have a plan, and he’ll try to eliminate those who stopped him the last time.

    The Guardian nodded again. That’s why I’m ordering you to move to the House of Justice and full-time protection.

    The idea of safety seduced her until she remembered it meant loss of freedom. "I won’t be imprisoned. Would you?"

    I’m ordering you.

    And I’m refusing your order—with all due respect.

    Though the Commander looked horrified, Berto stifled laughter. The Guardian glared at him.

    Aren’t you worried about her safety?

    Of course I am, but it’s never done me any good to worry about Serazina. What if you’d ordered her not to go into the swamp and meet the dragon? Malvern Frost might be ruling this country.

    And he still wants to, Serazina said. None of us are safe anywhere.

    The Guardian’s lips tightened. I accept that—with reluctance. Since you refuse to be reasonable, will you accompany us to the House of Healing? Perhaps you could help heal or at least study the victims of Malvern’s attack.

    That was an offer she couldn’t refuse.

    * * *

    Although it was a short walk from the cottage to the House of Healing, Tara noticed that Serazina saw danger in every clump of bushes. After the third time she jumped and cried out, Berto took her hand.

    About time. Once Berto would have immediately reached out to comfort Serazina. Now the demands on each of them pulled them apart. Serazina worried about what the Guardian would ask of her now that she was the Heroine of Oasis. Berto faced his own torments. Having given up on the idea that the boy would become a political leader, Phileas had commissioned Berto to paint a series of murals depicting the Night of the Dragon, as Druid’s triumph over Malvern Frost had come to be named.

    If Berto had a cat’s sense, he wouldn’t assume that Phileas favored him only because of his relationship with Serazina. Even Druid, a dragon unfamiliar with human concepts of art, had spotted Berto’s genius when the boy had drawn his image in the sand.

    Tara sensed deeper problems, swimming in murky waters as foul as those of the swamp. These issues stemmed from the human word, relationship, a concept alien to the kitten. She wondered whether she should find ways to reconcile the unhappy couple or encourage a division that might lead each more surely along their paths of destiny.

    Orion always said that when two possibilities beckoned equally, the path of least resistance usually proved to be the best choice. He would further say that when one was dealing with a number of pressing questions, those that could be most easily neglected deserved to be let alone. He would tell Tara she had more important responsibilities at the moment.

    And he would lecture to Tara about a lot more. When her mother’s ears flattened against Orion’s verbal assaults, Emerald called him a pompous windbag. Moving to the city to live with Serazina had freed Tara of Orion’s endless supply of wind. Despite this, she missed him—but not as much as she missed Emerald, who would be a much better cat to ask about relationships.

    Now, though, was the time for telling. Orion, Emerald, and other cat leaders needed to hear about Malvern Frost as soon as possible. Someone had to get to the swamp and tell the animals there. For once, Tara wished that Gris, the newshawk, were around.

    She scanned the trees and saw the round eyes of an owl. Brother Moonfriend, she called. I need help.

    And why should I help a competitor for the mouse supply?

    This year has given us many mice because cats urged them to procreate with greater vigor. Hasn’t that news reached you yet?

    The owl hooted. And I suppose you were one of them?

    Tara raised herself on her hind legs. I am the kitten who faced the dragon in the swamp.

    Who?

    Tara, kitten of the Quest.

    The owl shuffled on the tree limb. Oh, that kitten. In the city we don’t take much notice of rural happenings. However, I do have an opening in my schedule. What do you want?

    An owl relay, if possible. Malvern Frost, Dragonslayer, is on the loose, probably headed to the icy country of Dolocairn. What he plots may cause harm to all creatures, owls included. The animals of the forest and swamp must learn this news.

    Very well.

    Tara could have gone for a little more enthusiasm, but Orion had always said that graciousness was its own reward. Orion again! Was his entire body of wit and wisdom buried in her little skull?

    Thank you, night brother.

    Just don’t eat all the mice before I come back.

    The owl winged his way west.

    Tara caught up to the others as the humans were about to enter the security door of the House of Healing. I’m sorry, Guardian, the guard said. No animals allowed.

    Apparently the salvation of Oasis by animals, especially cats, was yesterday’s news. Tara was trying to decide whether to scratch him or piss on his shoes when Serazina picked her up and brought her face to face with the guard.

    This kitten helped to save the lives of everyone in Oasis. When the dragon came to put out the fire that would have destroyed Oasis West, Tara organized cats to keep his scales wet.

    That little thing?

    Tara hissed again.

    Little, brave, and heroic.

    Does that mean you’re Serazina?

    Tara saw the girl physically shrink away from fame, her shoulders hunched, her neck nearly contracting, as if she were trying to pull her head inside her body. This unnecessary modesty would have to be addressed very soon.

    Phileas took control. This animal is allowed.

    His black eyes burned red spots on the guard’s cheeks. The youth buzzed them through.

    Tara began sniffing the moment they entered the room where victims of the prison assault were lying. The odor emanating from the skin and clothing of the patients reminded her of the perfume of ginger flowers, but it was far more powerful.

    Romala, Chief Healer, called from a corner where she was tending to comatose men, and the group moved to her side.

    Has anyone identified the drug used to immobilize the guards? Phileas asked.

    The scientists have narrowed it down to some species of alpine weed. That means Dolocairn.

    Dolocairn, indeed, Phileas said, but that doesn’t indicate the country’s direct involvement. Its drugs are distributed to all the other lands. Anyone could get some. I want to be very cautious about pointing the finger of blame until we have irrefutable evidence.

    Understood, Romala said. I won’t make this information available to anyone else.

    Thank you, Chief Healer.

    According to Serazina, the Guardian and Chief Healer were sexually interested in each other. Based on this exchange, no one would ever know it. Analyzing human relationships was a task without reward.

    Guardian, Serazina said, I can sometimes detect the properties of a drug by smelling it. This reminds me of the odor of the would-be assassin, but I sense something else . . . and I think it’s fatal.

    Phileas frowned. Let’s see if you’re right. I’ll go into these wounded minds and discover the nature of the damage done. Chief Healer, shall we do this together?

    Tara knew humans were underdeveloped, but why couldn’t they sense the wealth of information leaking from the brain cells and blood of the injured people? It was time for a cat to take control of the situation.

    Tell them I’ll investigate, too, she said to Serazina.

    Serazina repeated that to the other humans. "Her?" the Guardian demanded.

    From guard to Guardian, most humans could benefit from a good cuffing about the head.

    Tara has great skills, Serazina said.

    We’ll see whether our conclusions match.

    Talk about gratitude.

    They chose a human, and Tara padded around the perimeters of his awareness. She noticed that he had no memory of what had happened immediately before the attack. A thick, black curtain separated the events from the man’s awareness.

    The kitten shoved the curtain aside to hear the echoes of what must have been the human’s last conscious thoughts.

    Something sure smells awful. I wonder what Lorens brought for dinner. Smells like a rotten—

    He smelled rotten, too. Though the odor was subtle, its poisonous tendrils inched through his body, eating up cells in the course of its passage. It might be days before this human died, and he didn’t seem to be suffering. The pain response, like all other sensibilities within him, was silent.

    She reported this to the humans.

    I didn’t notice any signs of physical illness, the Guardian said.

    Romala frowned. Neither did I. Of course, Serazina came to the same conclusion as the kitten did.

    We haven’t tested either of their abilities. You and I are highly trained Healers, and I thought the drug’s effects appeared identical to what we noticed in the assassin who tried to kill me last summer.

    Poor Serazina looked crushed. She had the misfortune to care what other humans thought of her. Tara didn’t care, well, maybe a little, but she knew she would be proven right. She was sorry it would mean the death of Frost’s victims, but she’d warned them.

    The Chief Healer still looked uncertain. If only we knew more about Dolocairner pharmaceuticals. We’re unprepared for this assault.

    Tara, still in search-and-discover mode, caught the Guardian’s unguarded thoughts.

    My fault again. Phileas the Failure.

    His mental odor had a bitterness that she connected to the distinctly human emotion of guilt. She wanted to tell him that it was more deadly than the most dangerous drug. If a kitten leapt at prey and missed, she either decided that failure had improved her odds for the next pounce or practiced leaping for a while. Humans wore failure and self-blame like a heavy coat of winter fur.

    To his credit, the Guardian didn’t linger long in these muddy waters. He turned to Serazina, and Tara saw that he’d made a decision. Oasis is again in crisis, and I want to go into it better prepared than before. For all my mistrust of intuition, I am mandated by our recent history to respect it.

    I agree, Serazina said.

    Do you agree enough to accept a position on the governing Council when I nominate you?

    The girl shrank again. How will that help?

    The events of the past several months have proven to me that we must have young people helping to govern our land. In addition, despite your deplorable habit of relying solely on intuition, you hit on the right solutions often enough that we need your insights. Thirdly, you are the Heroine of Oasis. The decision will be popular, and I need all the popularity I can get, especially with Malvern’s escape.

    Chapter 2

    The next day, when Phileas arrived at the Council chambers, other Councilors already sat at the long table.

    Kermit, the treasurer, shuffled through papers, his forehead creased. Guardian, I am examining the cost figures for the construction of the high-security prison, and I am appalled. How did the fiend Frost escape, despite all our very expensive efforts?

    Defensiveness was unworthy of the Guardian. Because we failed. We didn’t allow for the possibility of chemical warfare. All guards must receive gas masks and sensing devices.

    At still greater expense.

    Unfortunately, you’re right, but we need to do extensive damage control while we consider the political ramifications of Frost’s escape.

    Daria pounded the table. I heard he fled to vile Tamaras, source of all corruption and evil in the Four Lands.

    Phileas groaned. Daria, a Council member only because she was descended on both sides from Nathan and Zena, founders of Oasis, loved to rant about Tamaras. He wondered if she would readily switch her hostility to Dolocairn.

    The other council members filed into the room: Wendly Icinger, representative of the farmers and farm laborers, Snurf Noswan, delegate of the Godlies, Janzi, Phileas’s mother and speaker for the Earthers, and Romala.

    Before we discuss Frost’s escape, Phileas said, I have an urgent item of business.

    What could be more urgent than the escape of Oasis’s greatest enemy? Snurf demanded.

    Ever since the Night of the Dragon, Snurf had been exceptionally aggressive and hostile, principally because the Godlies had virtually collapsed. Once Druid had turned out to be a hero, it become impossible to run a sect based on hatred and fear of the dragon. The Godlies, mostly Dolocairners, had found the Dolocairner-strong Earther movement more suited for the changing times.

    I wish to propose Serazina Clare as a provisional member of this Council. According to the bylaws, she needs a simple majority to approve her.

    I approve, Janzi said at once. We need a young person, especially one of Serazina’s caliber. Fine idea, Guardian.

    I agree, Romala said.

    Wendly nodded. She may be half-Etrenzian, but her roots are in the Dolocairner community. Oasis West will be pleased.

    That’s a majority, Kermit said, and I have no objection. For the record, Snurf, what’s your vote?

    I’ll stand with the other Councilors, but, also for the record, I would prefer that we receive advance notice of potential Councilors, and I would remind everyone that provisional means exactly that. A trial period must be followed by a full vote.

    Phileas hadn’t anticipated such easy agreement. Understood. Shall we say a three-month trial period?

    All the members assented.

    I’ll go get her.

    He went downstairs to an anteroom where minor visiting dignitaries were stored to await the Guardian’s pleasure. Serazina was chewing her fingernails.

    No need for distress, he said. You’ve been unanimously approved.

    Really?

    Someone should attend to the girl’s self-confidence problems, but maybe the appointment would help.

    Hurry, they’re all waiting.

    Serazina followed him into the room, and Janzi said, Sit next to me, dear girl.

    Phileas sat down again. On to the agenda. As you all know, Malvern Frost has escaped in a small plane that appeared to be headed towards Tamaras. However, none of our spies have seen Malvern there. I believe he will end up in Dolocairn.

    Dolocairn! Land of emotional floods, dragon worship, and general idiocy!

    Daria had found a new enemy.

    Phileas was pleased to see that Serazina didn’t allow her provisional status to silence her and equally pleased to note that she spoke slowly and carefully.

    I can appreciate being angry that another country would take in our enemy, but surely our Dolocairner community will feel betrayed. Did Malvern ever have a good word to say for his own people? I don’t think they should suffer because of someone who never did anything for them.

    Hear, hear. Wendly looked pleased. Very well said, young lady. We must all be alert for any increase of anti-Dolocairner sentiment.

    I agree, Phileas said. We need to make a clear distinction between our people and those of another country. Who among us has actually been to Dolocairn?

    No one spoke. Phileas nodded. I have as part of my training to become Guardian, and I will tell you frankly that it is a bewildering country. Rather than bore you with my observations, I’ve ordered the emergency production of a video to refresh and increase our knowledge of the principal elements of Dolocairner society.

    He pushed a button to dim the lights, and a screen lowered from the ceiling.

    The snowy mountains of Dolocairn appeared, accompanied by a woman’s voice narrating.

    These mountains have always isolated the land of Dolocairn and kept its citizens from being exposed to the ideas of other cultures. If Oasis is the most multicultural of the Four Lands, Dolocairn is the most stagnant and monolithic. As a result, archaic devotion to the emotions and a focus on dragon worship prevail.

    The scene switched to a field swaying with colorful flowers. The growing season in Dolocairn is much shorter than in the other lands. However, its alpine climate allows a number of unique medicinal plants to thrive. Botanical products form the country’s main export. Many of these are legal; many are not. The illegal drugs form the basis for a growing underground economy run by drug lords.

    The screen next showed a domed temple with tall, intricately carved columns. "This is the Temple of the White Dragon, the principal place of worship in the capital city. Connected to it are the dwellings of the priestesses, including that of the High Priestess. Members of our rational and logical society have difficulty comprehending the dragon cult. This challenge is compounded by the various changes the cult seems to have gone through over the centuries.

    "Though much of the religion of Dolocairn is shrouded in secrecy, the following summary is accurate to our best knowledge. Originally, the people believed that some imaginary being called the Great Mother created the mountains to shelter them from cold winds. The dragons were her angels. The people concluded that the frequent high winds and avalanches meant their goddess was a passionate deity. If they worshipped her with all their emotions, things went well for them.

    "Pilgrims frequently climbed the mountains to leave offerings of goats and a fiery drink. Unfortunately, too many people sampled the drink during their journeys. Accidents began to occur, culminating in a tragedy. Drunken pilgrims sang the Dolocairner national anthem at the top of their lungs, causing an avalanche that buried twenty climbers.

    Although the cause of this disaster seemed obvious, the priestesses, always ready to manipulate a gullible population, told worshippers that the Goddess was angry. They initiated the practice of sacrificing humans to the dragons and claimed that no one was suffering enough. The Goddess needed to hear their pain. People began to suffer very loudly, and their misery became so great that many ended up resorting to alcohol and drugs to alleviate it.

    The narrative was interrupted by a series of headlines:

    "DOLOCAIRN HAS MORE DRUG ADDICTS THAN THE OTHER

    THREE LANDS COMBINED."

    SEX/DRUG ORGY CULT EXPOSED IN DOLOCAIRN.

    "‘THE DRAGONS MADE ME DO IT,’

    CONFESSES YOUTHFUL DOLOCAIRNER MURDERER."

    The narrator continued in a sober tone. "With much of the population disabled by addiction and resulting antisocial behavior, the current high priestess introduced measures to bring people back to whatever passes for balance in Dolocairn. She put out the idea that earlier High Priestesses had gotten the message distorted. People didn’t need intermediaries; they could dispense with dragon worship and human sacrifice. They needed to communicate directly with the Goddess.

    "She initiated a format that featured the crying out of confessions. These were rarely specific in content, and the new feature failed to satisfy the excessive emotionality of many Dolocairners. People longed for the old days of rituals. According to our understanding, three basic camps exist.

    "1. Those (increasing in number) who want to return to the old suffering days and dragon worship.

    "2. Those (decreasing in number) who want to continue the slightly more restrained manner of worship.

    "3. Those (numbers undetermined) who want to forget about dragons and priestesses and move into a modern secular society.

    We wish to apologize for the vagueness of these statistics. However, the deep-cover agents who have supplied them to us report that because of the overall reliance on emotions in Dolocairn, the political/cultural system is often in flux. The increasing domination of the country by the drug lords and the traditional secrecy with which the priestesses operate further complicate the problem of obtaining accurate information.

    Phileas shut off the machine. Questions or comments?

    Here’s what I don’t understand, Kermit said. Frost isn’t an idiot who believes nonsense about some Great Mother and angelic dragons.

    Indeed not. Phileas smiled. "He is, however, one to take advantage of mass dementia, as we know too well. If ever a people could be

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