She looked at him intently now, surprised and wondering.
"I will also be the first Pathfinder who takes a wife… if she will have me."
For a moment, he didn't know what she would say. The tears spilled down her cheeks then, overwhelming her efforts to blink them away.
"She will," the elfwoman said, and his arms wrapped her as she fell against him.
"This is a wonderful development, truly splendid!" Lectral declared when, hand in hand, they went to the cave and shared their news. "A bit of departure from tradition, though, isn't it?"
"It is," Ashtaway agreed. "We live long lives, your people and mine, but I have learned that times can change, peoples can change-many things change."
Lectral blinked sagely. "Even for elves and dragons," he said with a contented nod.
Chapter 21
Thee two wild elves returned to the village together. As they entered the vallenwood glade, Ashtaway saw Faltath, bearing the fresh, plump carcass of a wild pig on his shoulders, emerge from the forest on the opposite side of the clearing.
"Ashtaway!" cried the delighted brave, casting his prize to the ground. "I thanked the gods for sending me this gift of game-and now I know the cause of our joy! We shall have a feast to celebrate your return!"
"I thank you, my friend. And know that there is even more to celebrate-on this day I shall speak to Wallaki about the taking of his daughter's hand." Faltath's eyes widened, then he threw back his head and whooped in delight. "You are the Pathfinder!" he declared heartily. "And you are sure to show the tribe some very interesting trails!"
The tribe immediately set to the preparations for a feast. Older women took Faltath's pig and began to skin it, while several braves laid a bed of hardwood on the base of the fire pit.
Ashtaway crossed to the bark lodge where Wallaki, Hammana's father, sat outside the door, enjoying the afternoon's warmth. Blocked by the hut, the elder Kagonesti had not seen the pair return to the village.
"Welcome back, Pathfinder. Come sit with me and rest your feet after your long march. Do you have any further word of my daughter, or have you come straight from the Three Smoking Mountains?"
"Thank you." Ash squatted beside the old warrior. "Hammana has returned to the village with me. She will come to see you soon."
"But first…?"
"I would speak with you." Ashtaway drew a deep breath and told Wallaki about the changes that he would make in his time-honored role. "I shall bear the Ram's Horn as long as the tribe wants me to have it," he concluded. "But, also, I will take a wife."
Now Wallaki's eyebrows raised and he looked at Ashtaway with keen interest. "Hammana is a precious girl, and a wonderful prize for any brave. She knows the arts of curing in ways that many healers who have studied for centuries can never master. Too, she is an elf of wondrous beauty, with many other talents as well. But I do not know how I should survive without her to tend to my needs."
Ash might have pointed out that Wallaki had survived quite nicely while his daughter had been caring for Lectral, but he did not. Instead, he spoke with respect. "Perhaps two doeskins and the down of fifty geese would make your loneliness more comfortable," he suggested.
Wallaki nodded. "That would help. But see these old fingers? They are too gnarled for proper fletching. I can still shoot, but I have no arrows."
"You will soon have one hundred of the finest shafts that I can feather," Ash promised, bowing his head. The dowry price was very high-and he was elated to pay it.
"Ah… that will do much to soothe my despair!" It was all the old shaman could do to keep from cackling in delight.
"We shall be wed with the autumn harvest," Ash told the beaming priest. The Pathfinder rose and bowed respectfully before he went to spread the word through the rest of the village.
Ashtaway stood beside the slowly roasting pig, far enough away so that he didn't get burned-but close enough for his silhouette to darken against the backdrop of brightness, as he looked across the faces of his people. The young Pathfinder felt a vague, unidentifiable sense of disquiet, wondering what unease lurked at the back of his mind. He wished that Iydaway could be here-and he wondered what his uncle would say about his break with tradition.
Then he realized another thing: He wished that Lectral, too, could share in this feast-that they could really celebrate the end of the Dragon War. But did he dare to hope that Huma's victory over Takhisis would occur, that the scourge of evil dragonkind might be lifted from Krynn?
"What is it, my Pathfinder?" He felt a gentle hand in his and looked down into Hammana's bright, penetrating eyes.
"I'm thinking of a friend," he said quietly.
"I think our friend will come."
Ashtaway patted her hand, appreciating her optimism even as he couldn't share it. But she was no longer looking at him-instead, she raised a hand and pointed toward the forest encircling the village.
"Look!"
Shiny silver rippled through the trees, and Ashtaway and Hammana raised shouts of greeting as a broad snout poked out of the forest. Kagonesti voices shouted in alarm, mothers sweeping children into their arms as warriors raced toward the dragon that had suddenly appeared in their midst.
Ashtaway raised the Ram's Horn to his lips and blew a joyful blast. "Hold!" he cried, as the warriors turned to look at him. "This is a friend-a very welcome friend!"
Stepping forward, Hammana at his side, he advanced to greet the mighty dragon.
The serpent, dragging his injured hind leg, limped into the clearing and coiled himself, smiling gently, at the edge of the village. Remembering Ash's tale of the great silver dragon, Lectral Hornbearer, the Kagonesti gradually overcame their awe and came forward to regard the dragon, who returned their dignified inspection with a serious and serene expression.
Children stared at the dragon wide-eyed, but without fear. Some even ventured to approach, and soon Lectral was entertaining them by lifting them up on his broad snout and letting them slide, squealing, down his smooth, curling tail.
"It is a time for changes of many kinds," Ashtaway observed solemnly.
"Aye, and friendships of many kinds as well," the dragon replied as a giggling tot tumbled from his tail into the dirt. Children clamored for more turns, but Lectral gently disengaged himself-after each of the youngsters had had a ride-and limped to the central clearing. The Kagonesti hurried about, cleaning dirt off the children, getting ready for the feast.
"It is good to see you so happy," said Lectral. "For this alone I would have come to the village."
Ashtaway didn't miss the dragon's meaning. "There is another reason that you came, then?"
"Yes. It is to make my farewells to you and Hammana, who have cared so well for me."
"Farewells? But surely you're not going anywhere? Not with the battle won, perhaps even the war! You must stay with us and celebrate the peace!"
"Alas, I cannot," sighed Lectral with genuine regret. "For, as you suspect, the war is won. But the price of that victory is the departure of me, and my kind."
"What do you mean?"
"They are winging to me, tonight. I came here to say good-bye to you and await Saytica-for the two of us will fly together."
Saytica, Ash remembered, was one of Lectral's female offspring-now a huge silver dragon in her own right. Her proud father had boasted that she was one of the foremost fighters in the dragon wing defending Palanthas.
"You're going to fly? Fly where? And how?" Ashtaway couldn't believe what he was hearing. He gestured at the scarred mass of the dragon's once-mighty wings. "Saytica may be a mighty dragon-but do you think she's going to carry you?"