
Outwardly oblivious to the consternation, fear, and awe the dragons inspired, F'lar was secretly amused and rather pleased by the effect. Lords of the Holds needed this reminder that they still must deal with dragons, not just with riders, who were men, mortal and murderable. The ancient respect for dragonmen as well as dragonkind must be reinstilled in modem breasts.
«The Hold has just risen from table, Lord F'lar, if …» Fax suggested. His voice trailed off at F'lar's smiling refusal.
«Convey my duty to your lady. Lord Fax,» F'lar rejoined, noticing with inward satisfaction the tightening of Fax's jaw muscles at the ceremonial request.
F'lar was enjoying himself thoroughly. He had not yet been born on the occasion of the last Search, the one that ill-fatedly provided the incompetent Jora. But he had studied the accounts of previous Searches in the Old Records that had included subtle ways to confound those Lords who preferred to keep their ladies sequestered when the dragonmen rode. For Fax to refuse F'lar the opportunity to pay his duty would have been tantamount to a major insult, discharged only in mortal combat.
«You would prefer to see your quarters first?» Fax countered.
F'lar flicked an imaginary speck from his soft wherhide sleeve and shook his head.
«Duty first,» he said with a rueful shrug.
«Of course,» Fax all but snapped and strode smartly ahead, his heels pounding out the anger he could not express otherwise.
F'lar and F'nor followed at a slower pace through the double-doored entry with its great metal panels, into the Great Hall, carved into the cliffside. The U-shaped table was being cleared by nervous servitors, who rattled and dropped tableware as the two dragon-men entered. Fax had already reached the far end of the Hall and stood impatiently at the open slab door, the only access to the inner Hold, which, like all such Holds, burrowed deep into stone, the refuge of all in time of peril.
