Novels2Search
The Broken Knife
Chapter One hundred seventy-four

Chapter One hundred seventy-four

The city was huge, but sprawled in a way the mosui city hadn’t. All of the buildings there were tall, to the point that all you could see while standing in the street were the walls to each side, a straight corridor ahead and behind, and the ever-present ki-stones above. Here, it looked like the tops of several buildings had been removed, then the square stones were used to create more of the low buildings that kobolds preferred, extending the outer edge of the city far beyond where it originally ended.

As the group stared out from one of the lowest of the open-sided caverns in the sheer cliff walls, Raff let out a low whistle. Nearby, Avli laughed softly. She was holding hands with Dett again, and looked as though she had no intention of ever letting go. The little male looked happier and more relaxed than Kaz had ever seen him, and seemed disinclined to argue with his soon-to-be mate’s display of affection.

“I was young when the Woodblade was lost, closing the mountain, so I only saw humans from a distance. But as my mother’s heir, I was taught how to interact with them,” Avli said. “She told me that most humans stayed just long enough to conduct their business, then left. They rarely asked about our people, other than a few who would compliment everything in hopes that this would help them make a better bargain. As a result, few humans ever left the area we prepared for them, and fewer still saw this.”

Lianhua shook her head. She had out her pen and book, but hadn’t yet begun to draw. “How can they not be curious? Not want to know?”

Raff shrugged. “Lotta rock around us right now. Most folks aren’t real fond of feeling like a mountain is going to fall on them. That, or their hosts might decide to eat them.” He flashed a glance around at Kaz and the other kobolds. “No offense meant.”

Kaz, for one, had never seriously considered eating the humans, even if one of them had died. For one thing, it seemed wrong to eat someone he had conversed with, and for another, he had plenty of other food. Li, on the other hand…

The dragon tilted her head to the side. she said, and Kaz wasn’t sure if she was talking to him or herself. She turned to look at Chi Yincang, who was currently standing just a few steps behind Lianhua.

Kaz grimaced, deciding to act as if he hadn’t heard her, and held out his hands for Lianhua’s book. “May I?” he asked.

Gratefully, she passed it over, along with the pen, and Kaz began to draw the city, starting with the large, round, open space in the center, and the five distinct roads leading away from it. Each road ended in a wide archway, with bright-furred kobold guards flanking it.

Three of the five wedge-shaped sections of the city, each one clearly delineated by wide roads on their two longest sides, was primarily occupied by kobolds of a single fur color. Yellow, brown, and green fur dominated the lower right, while white, gray, and pale shades of the other colors occupied the lower left. The upper left area was dark compared to the other two, but the black-furred kobolds seemed more likely to have spots or stripes of bright color somewhere on their bodies, though whether this was natural or an effect created by paint or dye, Kaz had no idea.

The segment at the very top was neat and well-maintained, and almost all of the roofs there were painted in shades of blue or green. Few kobolds wandered the streets, however, and there was no particular pattern to the fur-colors of those who did. It seemed to be open to anyone.

The last section, located at the top right, looked broken down and was, as far as he could tell, completely empty. Not a single kobold walked the winding streets, and the red paint on the gray stone buildings was faded and dull.

Carefully, Kaz drew lines indicating the colors of the different areas, wishing once again for different colored inks or paint. He marked each line with the rune for the color that dominated it, and then blew gently on the page to dry the ink.

Lianhua leaned over his shoulder, watching as he drew in a few last details. “It’s beautiful,” she said. “We’ll have to find you some proper paints and brushes, though. I’d love to see what you can do with color.”

At this, Avli, too, looked at the small drawing and shook her head. “You really are a Woodblade. I’ll have to take you through their section of the city. It’s by far the most beautiful, though I do like what the Waveblades have done with water.”

Everyone else turned to look back at the city, and Kaz pushed a bit more ki into his eyes. The dark section of the city was just that: dark. Except… that darkness caught and reflected the light of the luminescent plants in some places. With that, something in Kaz’s mind clicked, and he realized that some of the ‘streets’ themselves looked like they were made of water. More water gathered at corners, flowing up as if pushed into the air.

“Are those canals and fountains?” Lianhua asked wonderingly. “How is that possible?”

Avli shugged, her soft white fur seeming to float around her, almost making her glow as she was backlit by the cavern’s light. “We each have our own powers, and the city is where we show them off. Come on.”

She turned away, and they followed.

=+=+=+=

They entered the city through the Mithrilblades’ gate, and to Kaz’s amazement, it looked exactly like the entrances to the ‘secret’ passages he had found in the mid-levels, except much, much larger. The swiveling stone block was in the open position, dividing the entrance into two equally large halves, each well over ten feet tall and nearly as wide. The path to each side of the door was littered with stones, as well as the occasional mushroom or patch of fungus, and Kaz doubted if the opening in the wall had been closed in years. Possibly many, many years. Did the current occupants even realize that it was a door?

You could be reading stolen content. Head to the original site for the genuine story.

The map carved onto one side of it showed only the city in the Deep, and the image was so large that Kaz could clearly make out the shapes of the occupants. Their group paused halfway through, staring up at the intricately carved slab, which was wider than Kaz was tall. The reptilian creatures who had once lived in the city were a full six to eight inches tall in this version, and on the right side, the Tree towered over it all, arching branches forming the ceiling overhead. Looking at it this way, Kaz could understand how his people could believe that the Tree actually held up the mountain.

“What are these?” Lianhua asked, not quite touching one of the reptiles striding through the carved stone street. It looked as if someone had tried to chip away its head at some point, but stopped before they did more than break off part of the snout.

Avli’s lip lifted, revealing fangs. “Traitors,” she growled. “They were supposed to guard the mountain, but they attacked us instead. We fought back and sent them running, never to be seen again.”

Kaz knew Lianhua well enough by now to see the questions flicker behind her eyes, but, as someone who valued words above almost anything else, she pressed, “But what are they?”

“Kobolds,” Avli answered. “Our sisters, and our enemies.” Turning away, she made it clear that she was done with the subject, and Kaz gave the image one last look as he passed by. The long neck, horns, small wings, and serpentine tail were very familiar to him from the vision he’d seen when he touched Emperor Qiangde’s core. These were clearly Nucai’s ‘kobolds’, who called themselves the xiyi, and as they walked down the broad street, that image was far from the last.

Statues and carvings were everywhere. All of the statues had been broken down into little more than clawed feet and a bit of reptilian tail on a pedestal, but some of the carvings, especially the ones high on the walls, were almost intact. Kaz could tell that he’d been right, and the taller buildings had simply been disassembled and rebuilt on the ground nearby, narrowing and sometimes even closing off what had once been more of the straight, wide streets. When the buildings were intact, the carvings would have encircled the top of the buildings, but now they were only visible on one in five or six of the truncated structures. Why had the carvings been allowed to remain, while the statues were destroyed?

The kobolds - Dongwu’s kobolds, Kaz supposed - had truly made the city their own. Besides the defaced statues, the shortened buildings, and the narrow, winding paths, many walls were covered in paint, or even stretched leather, making them look like normal huts that might be found in any kobold den, other than the fact that they were tall enough for even Raff to walk upright inside.

Metal was everywhere here. Long metal spikes pinned the leather to the walls, and drawn metal wires held niu-fur cloth draped across doorways. There were even delicate metal ornaments on the edges and tops of roofs, though these were distinctly pointy and mildly threatening. Otherwise, the changes definitely seemed to lean more toward the practical than the ornate, making Kaz wonder if there was some airborne threat the residents were trying to keep away from their homes.

Kobolds filled the street, entering and exiting the narrowed paths to the right and left. There were even carts pulled by placid niu, just like in the mosui city, though there were no palanquins, carrying more important members above the rest. All of the kobolds walked on their own paws unless they were driving a cart, though a few puppies sat on the back of the carts, legs dangling as they yipped happily at each other. Males and females even mingled easily, though Kaz did notice that males still stepped aside for females, unless they were with a female as well.

“This seems like a good place,” Lianhua said, watching a trio of puppies run across the road in front of a niu, who halted without prompting, waiting until the pups were out from under its hooves before it ambled on.

Avli nodded. “My mother, Zava, was a good chief, though she could be harsh at times. She made sure everyone was fed and safe, and no one was forgotten. She checked on all of our subsidiary tribes personally, which is how she ended up dying.” Her ears flattened, and Kaz saw her fingers tighten around Dett’s. “She was checking to find out why some of their gathering groups had disappeared, and one of the creatures you called shiyan attacked, wiping out almost her entire party.”

Lianhua lowered her eyes, giving Avli a small bow, barely a dip of her head. Her sorrow sounded genuine when she said, “I’m sorry for your loss.”

Avli sighed. “Thank you, but…. We weren’t close. She taught me what I needed to know, but we both knew that someday,” she hesitated, glancing at the other kobolds surrounding them before pressing her free hand to her belly, “I would replace her. Few puppies of chiefs are encouraged to be fond of their mothers. Most of us believe that will make it easier for them to do what they must when the time comes.”

Kaz gritted his teeth at this, but finally burst out, “Why? Why does… that have to happen? Isn’t your own strength enough?” His throat ached, but he didn’t regret asking.

The Mithrilblade looked sad. “If we didn’t have to fulfill our duties, perhaps. But a weak Mithrilblade cannot work mithril or adamantium, a weak Waveblade cannot raise water from the depths, and a weak Goldblade cannot pull pure metal from an ore vein. No one but the strongest Magmablades can heat the forge to melt mithril and adamantium, and only the greatest Woodblades could help the yumi fields and the Tree thrive. Most kobolds don’t do as we do, and most aren’t strong enough to do as we must.”

Kaz felt his chest tighten. He was certain that if they could see as he did, they would be able to tell which of them was strong enough to do these things. Surely they didn’t really have to eat their mother’s cores, knowing that they would either destroy the last remnant of their parent, or they themselves would be lost.

“Here,” Avli said, stopping outside the first intact multi-level building Kaz had seen since they entered the city. It even had the same openings on the upper levels as the ones in the mosui city. Around the top, some forty feet above them, xiyi stood, captured in stone as they fought a battle where the reptiles were most definitely winning.

“Humans usually stayed with the Goldblades, since what they most often wanted was gold, gems, and other minerals. But we all had buildings prepared, just in case, and this one is ours. Go inside and see what you think.” She flicked an ear, smiling at Lianhua.

Lianhua started to move, but Chi Yincang stepped forward, holding out a hand as he looked toward Raff. The red-furred human looked startled at first, then his expression went flat, and he opened the yumi-reed door and went inside. The door had barely clattered shut behind him when they heard a soft scuffle, then several pained yelps.

A moment later, the door opened again, and Raff lifted two gray-furred male kobolds by the scruff of their necks. One was clearly unconscious, a large lump already forming on his forehead, but the other flailed weakly, blood dripping from a long cut down his right leg.

Chi Yincang shifted, stepping in between Lianhua and the Mithrilblades. Kaz, too, stepped back, one hand going to the knife at his waist, while the other checked to be certain that Li was safe on his shoulder.