Revenge of the Rose

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Book: Read Revenge of the Rose for Free Online
Authors: Michael Moorcock
jill-dragon flew. Her venom sustained him. The
symbiosis was near-complete. On without rest beat Scarsnout until, beneath a
golden late afternoon sun which made the three-quarters ripened wheat glow and
shimmer like burnished copper, where a startled figure in a pointed alabaster
cap cried out in delight at the sight of them and a cloud of starlings rose
suddenly to trace with their hurried flight some familiar hieroglyph in the
delicate blue wash of the sky and leave a sudden silence behind them, Scarsnout
extended her great ribbed wings in a sinuously elegant glide towards what
seemed at first a road made of basalt or some other rock and then became a
mile-wide long-healed scar through the wheatlands, too smooth, unpopulated and
vast to be a road, yet with an unguessable purpose. It cut through the crops as
if it had been laid that day, heaped on both sides by great unkempt banks on
which a few weeds and wildflowers grew and over which hopped, flapped and
crawled every kind of carrion vermin. As they dropped lower Elric could smell
the vile stuff and almost gagged. His nose confirmed what he saw—piles of
refuse, bones, human waste, bits of broken furniture and ruined pots—great
continuous banks of detritus stretching on either side of the smoothly polished
road from horizon to horizon, with no notion of where or from where it
led … Elric sang to his jill to take him up and away from all this
filth and into the sweet air of the high summer skies, but she ignored him,
wheeling first to the north, then to the south, until she was swooping down the
very middle of that great, smooth scar, which had something of the
brownish-pink of sunned flesh, and she had landed, almost without any
sensation, in the centre of it.
                 Now
Scarsnout folded back her wings and settled her clawed feet upon the ground,
clearly indicating that she intended to carry Elric no further. With some
reluctance he climbed off her back, unraveling the ruined scarf and wrapping it
around his waist, as if it would secure him from any dangers hereabouts, and
sang the farewell chant of thanking and kinship and, as he called the last
lines, the great jill-dragon lifted up her beautiful, reptilian head and
joined, with sonorous gravity, in the final cadences. Her voice might have been
the voice of Time itself.
                 Then
her jaws snapped shut, her eyes turned once upon him, half-lidded, almost in
affection, and, once her tongue had tasted the evening air, she had widened her
wings, hopped twice, shaking the surface so that Elric thought it must crack,
and was at last a-sky, mounting into the atmosphere again, her graceful body
curling and twisting as her wings carried her up to the eastern horizon, the
setting sun casting her long, terrible shadow across the fields, and then, near
the horizon, a single flash of silver suggested to Elric that his jill-dragon
had returned to her own dimension. He raised his helm in farewell, as grateful
for her venom as her patience.
                 All
Elric wished to do was to get free of this unnatural causeway. Though it
gleamed like polished marble, he could see now that it was nothing more than
beaten mud; earth piled on earth until it had almost the consistency of solid
rock. Perhaps the whole thing was built of garbage? For some reason, this
thought disturbed him and he began to walk rapidly towards the southern edge.
Wiping sweat from his forehead, he wondered again what purpose the place had.
Flies now surrounded him and buzzards regarded him as a possible contender for
their sweetmeats. He coughed again at the stink but knew he must climb the
stuff to get to the wholesome air of the wheatfields.
                 “Safe
passage to your home-cave, sweet Lady Scarsnout,” he murmured as he moved. “I
owe you both life and death, it seems. But I bear you no ill will.”
                 His
scarf wrapped around his nose and mouth, the albino began to

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