
dragon seemed to crouch in his place on the far side of the clearing, his crest quivering. A moment
passed. The great head moved a trifle, (uncertainly,) and the faceted, gem-like eyes rolled in their hooded
sockets—blue, green, blue-green light flashing in the beam of moted sunlight which suddenly broke
through the trees. Then, incredible how long it was, the red and bifurcated tongue leaped out from the
mouth, quivered, tasted the air. It was blowing right towards him. Body rather than mind (if mind it had at
all… and what thoughts must it think!) probably making the decision, the dragon darted off to the left.
Instantly the silence was shattered. The beaters were trotting left, clashing their cymbals and howling, the
musics blared on their harsh-voiced shawms, the archers (all neat and trim in their green tunics and
leggings) nocked their arrows and poised. The dragon halted. At a signal, so swiftly that Jon-Joras
scarcely saw the motion, a flight of arrows was loosed; in another instant were visible only as feathery
shafts ridged in the great beast’s side.
To say that the dragon hissed was only to confess a limitation of language: ear-drums trembled painfully
at a sound the auditory nerves could but faintly convey. The dragonhissed. A spasm passed along the
great, pierced flank, and tiny runnels of dark blood began their paths. The dragon halted, turned its head
from side to side in search of its tormentors, its cheek-nodules swelling with rage. The wind shifted,
bringing a rank, bitter odor to Jon-Joras. He felt his skin grow cold and his heart expand.
Then the bannermen ran forward, teasing their flags on their long poles. The hiss broke off suddenly and
the air vibrated with the roar which succeeded it. Here, at last, was an enemy which the dragon could
see! Head down and neck out-thrust, it began to move towards it. At the first, slowly and ponderously,
each immense leg placed with care. The bannermen seemed almost now to dance, in their traditional
movements… the figure-of-eight, the fish, the butterfly… faster now… the wasp… the flags, white and
red and green and yellow, whipping through the roar-tormented air.
And faster and faster came the great bull-dragon, now at a lumbering trot, turfs flying as the great
splayed feet came pounding down, shaking the ground. The cymbals ceased, the horns, too. The trot
became a gallop, a charge, and the men broke into a shout as, in one sudden and tremendous movement,
the dragon reared up upon its hind legs and came bounding forward upon them, its forelimbs slashing at
the air. In one accord, the flags dropped to the ground, the bannermen swiftly twirled their poles, winding
up the wefts at the ends of them. The colored cloths had danced and teased—suddenly, suddenly, they
were gone; furled, grounded, hidden in the grass; and the bannermen crouched.
Bewildered, the great beast paused again. Twenty feet above the ground the huge head growled and
rumbled and it turned from side to side. From the left, a flight of arrows stitched the now-exposed chest.
The dragon screamed; the dragon tore at the barbs; it plunged in the direction from which they came.
And the cymbals clashed three times and another flight of arrows, now from the right, stitched the
creature hip and leg, and three more times the cymbals sounded and as the dragon sounded its pain and
fury and swiveled its head, again the bannermen twirled their palms and pinnacled their poles and once
again their bright flags played upon the air.
The dragon bellowed and the dragon charged. Striped with the blood that coursed along its paler
underside, it thundered down upon the bannermen. Once again flags and flagmen vanished. Once again
the dragon paused. Again and again it hurled its great voice upon the wind. Jon-Joras saw, midway from
throat to fork, like a blazon on its fretted hide, the white X-mark. He thought he could see the great pulse
beating in the mark’s crux, and then—sight and sound together—heard the crack of the huntgun behind
him and the crux vanished in a gout of blood. The blood gushed forth in a great arched torrent. And the
dragon stretched out its paws and talons, showed its huge and harrowing teeth in a scarlet rictus,
sounded its hoarse, harsh death cry, and fell face forward onto the ground which trembled and shook to
receive it.