Open Chronicles From Above - Thanasis

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A dragon's-eye flight over Thanasis, the City of Dragons - Malakath. (Ciraxis POV.)

The wind was sharp and high, cold enough to bite even through her pale scales. Ciraxis soared above the world, wings stretched wide enough to catch the sun’s first gold. From beyond the Wall, she could see everything - the bones of the land, the veins of the living city, the pulse of the people and dragons who called Thanasis home.

Below her, the Wastes of Malakath stretched for leagues upon leagues; an endless sea of cracked ochre stone and shifting sands. Jagged peaks tore at the sky where the earth had erupted long ago, and among them lurked the Jarlax, the monsters that crept from old stories into new nightmares. The white dragon coasted over the shadows of The Spires, a tall crown of blackened mountains with a molten heart, where the Rising took place each year. A glimmer of movement drew her golden eyes; wild dragons, their hides shimmering like scattered gems, rising on the updrafts and vanishing into the clouds.

She turned her head to the west, and there, carved into the dunes like a fortress half-swallowed by the desert, stood The Forge, where she and Briseis still trained. It rose from the sands in towers of sandstone and steel. The training fields were alive with motion, young riders and dragons weaving through formations.

Ciraxis banked eastward, leaving behind the golden dunes for green and stone. The land softened into forests and foothills, where the Stille folK made their camp in their painted wagons. She caught glimpses of them through the trees, fires burning, music carried on the wind.

And then, ahead - the great city. Thanasis.

The walls glimmered white in the morning light, streaked with the royal banners of crimson and gold. Ciraxis dipped lower, wings beating slow and steady as she glided over the lower quarter, a tangled web of narrow streets, crowded homes, and bustling markets. Smoke rose from cooking fires. Merchants shouted. Children pointed skyward at her in their usual amazement, their laughter rising above the hum of the waking city. Beneath the surface noise, Ciraxis could sense other things too; the thrum of clandestine affairs, the roar of fighting pits beneath the streets, where men and small dragons clashed for coin.

Further in, the streets grew wider, cleaner, paved in pale marble that gleamed like water. Houses grew grander, separated by gardens and walls. The scent of spiced breads, oils, and burning incense filled the air. She could see the plazas blooming with life; stalls draped in silks, the markets overflowing with fruit, trinkets, and fine metals.

It was a festival day - The Day of Reforging, a celebration of the city’s rebirth after the Jarlax’s recent assault. Music thundered through the streets, drums and flutes and the rise of countless voices singing in unison. Banners rippled in every colour. In the central plaza, where once a gaping wound had scarred the heart of the city, now stood a statue of dragon and rider, wings spread, heads bowed to one another. At its base, flowers had been laid in memory of those who fell in the defense of Thanasis.

Ciraxis’s shadow passed over the noble estates, gardens perfumed and guarded by stone gargoyles shaped like dragons. And then, rising above it all, the Royal Palace. Its towers pierced the clouds, gilded roofs catching the morning sun. She circled it once, low enough to glimpse the courtyards and the balcony where her rider stood, smiling up at her.

The dragon’s heart ached, an emotion so old and deep it was beyond words.

With a mighty beat of her wings, she rose higher, leaving behind the city’s roar for the whisper of the wind and the glimmering blue stretch of the Thanasian coastline. The sea was warm and bright, dotted with sails and islands. Along the beaches, huts and villages rested among the palms. Beneath the waves, sea serpents rolled and coiled, their scales flashing in the sun like molten silver.

Ciraxis let out a cry that split the air - a long, mournful sound that scattered gulls and sent ripples across the ocean below.

This was Thanasis - the City of Dragons and men, born from dust and dragon fire, rebuilt time and again from the ashes of its own ruin. Her city. Her home.
 

As above, so below. Dragons dominated the expansive skies, while their lesser cousins scrabbled around and clawed the dust-breathing streets. As with near everything in Thanasis, reptillians ruled every space, whether small or huge.

In the bowels of these maze-like streets and fighting pits, Ovlan was staring, utterly hypnotised, at a cockfight: a sand pit three feet deep, ringed by nothing more than this indentation, a small rickety fence and a mass of hooting, hollering crowds. A battle between cockatrices, a unique twist of Thanasis to the age-old tradition of cockfights. Scarly, on the left, versus a particularly tough customer, ugly scales matching a brownish beak, called Dwon.

He barely noticed when a shadow passed, several members of the crowd shading their eyes, momentarily distracted, pointing up at the gargantuan creature soaring overhead, some calling Ciraxis by her name and waving. Even Dwon looked distracted, its rooster-like frills, snake's tail and beak all set a-quivering, staring with animalistic fear up at its distant kin passing in flight.

Scarly, in turn, stared up at his master; googly, brassy eyes seeming to peer in different directions, though Ovlan knew the trajectory of his sight by now. Ovlan recognised a chance when it was staring him in the face, even prostrating itself before him, begging to be claimed. He leaned over the fence, yelling while the rest marveled:

"Now, Scarly! Now! ATTACK! POUNCE! HE'S DISTRACTED!!"

Scarly, comprehending his trained keywords, went on the offensive in gleeful abandon, tearing into the other turkey-sized bird-dragon. The crowd's attention resumed to the cockfight, sucking their teeth or yelling out as Dwon was, to put it mildly, torn to feathery shreds.

The fight was a short affair, but Ovlan felt months of relentless pursuit for profit coming to a close, an indelible relief surging through him. He had bet everything he owned on this match. Blast, even the shirt on his back. About time Lady Luck blew a few kisses his way.

Rattling the pile of gold left in the black cauldron serving as a money pot, Ovlan grinned up at the three, brooding men he had bet against.

"Gentlemen, pleasure doing business today. We should play again sometime."

Scarly climbed up on his shoulder, finding his usual perch. But he didn't stop there. His beak and snake's tail went below Ovlan's scarlet coat, sneaking into the bandoliers carrying his spare elixirs. The competition cocked eyebrows and glanced at one another, and before Ovlan could snap at his pet in reproach, it had dextrously fished out a half-drained potion, still retaining some of its amber liquid. Flumph went the cork, Scarly's tail wrapped around the bottle neck, beak clamped on the cork, separating the two before he started chugging like a tippler dying of thirst on a revel spree. Visibly, the muscles below his scales and feathers flared, expanding and contracting in size, while the potion's magic seeped through him like golden fingers.

Three pairs of eyes sliced straight to Ovlan. A hand seized the cauldron of gold by its lip. Ovlan's lower lip quivered, scrambling for words, raising both index-fingers before they finally came to him:

"Now, I know what this looks like . . . but hear me out." Pause. Chug, chug, chug. The pear-shaped glass clattered to the ground, and Scarly's beak curled with satisfaction - long, brown tongue lapping out remaining, dripping juices that glistened like sap. "Scarly's addicted to spirits. In fact, he fought inebriated." Ovlan patted the bird on its head, whose lazy face did indeed look somewhat akin to inebriated contentment. He attempted a small crack in his voice: "We've been fighting a long battle to sober him up. Poor thing's barely able to stand without his favourite tap-suckle. Proceeds will go to an dragon handler to sort him out, first thing."

They did not look terribly convinced. Or amused.
 
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