SAND
Sand did not like having no magic. Draconic shapeshifting was handled via using magic to kick one's celular structure from one phase state to another - so, while she had no access to magic, she had no ability to shift her current latticework of cells and polymers into a new form. She could wriggle around in the current form - she could change colors, she could extrude tendrils, she could think. But she couldn't shift from the current phase-state of clothing to, say, a mouse, or a dragon, or an elf. It made things very hard when one wanted to shrug, or look inquisitively, or ask silently for someone to elaborate.
So, instead, she spoke in Mavlynn's mind.
Well?
"I, uh..." Mavlynn shook her head, tearing her eyes from the huge bronze statue head. "So, humans. They're in stories. Legends. Fables. There was that animated show about them, you know? With the skyscraper and the greedy dragon CEO."
Nope,
Sand said, then paused.
What did they do?
"The old stories said that they were terrifyingly tough creatures - unkillable, able to keep going through anything," Mavlynn said, pursing her lips. "But how much of that is true or not...I mean, I thought they were just myths."
Well, they are, aren't they? Big statue, we can make statues of mythic things, right? It's not like if you found a dragon statue,
Sand said.
Come on! Lets keep exploring!
The cave, as it transpired, continued going. The ceiling grew lower and lower the further they got from the trash chute that had dumped them down here - but the width never narrowed. It was an ancient shelf of shale, Sand realized, the kind that would keep everything preserved and in place for centuries. The walls, distantly visible in Mavlynn's makeshift torch, had a few doors leading into deeper corridors. The main chamber was dominated by more and more of those metal rectangles. Mavlynn paused to examine a few of them. Their sides were armored, and they had huge thick metal bands that wrapped around circular protrusions. Mavlynn examined one for a long, long moment, then whispered softly.
"I think they're like dragon cars," she said.
That's ridiculous
, Sand said, her voice haughty as she pumped it into her girlfriend's brain via direct nerve interface.
Dragon cars need a place for the dragon to go, and for their legs to stick out. So they can run around.
"Okay, imagine those wheels spinning," Mavlynn said. "The big metal bands would rotate along the ground, and the whole thing would move.
Sand remained quiet for a moment. She had a poofy hat that sat atop Mavlynn's head as part of her body. She deflated a little bit.
I suppose.
Mavlynn smirked. "What? A little nervous at the idea of something replacing dragons?"
...a little...
Sand admitted, a bit sullenly. The idea of two-leggers having something that wasn't dragons to move them around - that couldn't be, at any moment, inhabited by a dragon's mind and directed by a dragon's will...two-leggers didn't like thinking about it, but those dragon bodies they rode around on? They had dragon souls. Those souls may spend most of their time in the deep astral, having good times, but they could be called back to their bodies, if they ever needed too. What was next, though? Guns that fired, like, metal balls instead of dragons? Or acid spitters that didn't have tiny dragons hidden in their chambers? Or computers that just used crystals without any dragon organs, or dragon lines at all?
She shivered around Mavlynn, who continued towards one of the doorways.
Stepping inside, they started to walk past chambers, each sealed by a door with a dusty window on it. Ancient runes done in paint that had long since been covered by dust and chipped away smeared onto the windows. Mavlynn brushed some aside, peering in through the window.
The room beyond was filled with crates, each one sealed with a kind of complex lid. She opened the door, walked in, then tugged a lid off with a grunt. Within, there were thick binders made of some kind of non-draconic bone, covered with a strange filmy material. When Mavlynn poked it, she frowned. "It's smooth." She said, then started to rub her fingers up and down it.
Lemmi
. Sand said, and grew a glove along Mavlynn's fingers.
Rub me against it.
Mavlynn hesitated, then did just that. Sand licked the material.
It's not dragon bone at all! Nor any kind of bone. It tastes kind of like the long-strand thread that I can spin out when I shapeshift into certain kinds of clothing and objects. Uh. It had word. It started with a P. Uh....poly...poly...amo...rous?
"That's having two boyfriends at once," Mavlynn said, her voice amused.
No, no, that's something else, this is made of a complicated polyamorous chain of organic stuff. Definitely.
"Why not just use dragon bone?" Mavlynn asked. "Does this stuff last longer?
It tastes like it should last longer, but, like, way TOO long. Dragon bone is cool cause it decays eventually. This stuff would just sit around forever billion million years, and then the tiny dragons would eat it, and then it'd get all up in our food and drink. Yuck. Well, I guess tiny dragons could filter it out.
"Huh," Mavlynn said. She used one hand to pick the binder up, then set it on the crate next to the first, letting it fall open. It appeared to be a bunch of bound pieces of paper - but the paper wasn't, like, shed dragon skin, it was something weird and flatter and, when Sand tasted it...made of
wood pulp
.
Weird!
Sand whispered, while Mavlynn leaned over, shaking her head.
"It's a list," she said. "See, these are definitely numbers - I they have the same shapes as our numbers. These are...names? This is like, census data or something." She flipped page after page, each of it full of names and numbers. She flipped the binder shut, then started to take out others. Each one was filled with more names and numbers - completely incomprehensible lists of unknown objects, written on impossible paper, buried at the heart of the world. Mavlynn was frowning after she was done searching - and Sand's own confusion had given way to uncertain boredom, waiting for her to come to some big old conclusion.
Mavlynn stood in silence, her torch flickering.
...well?
Sand prodded her. Mavlynn blinked, lifting her head.
"I need to investigation more before I make a decision," she said. "But there's gotta be hundreds of these binders down here."
But I wanna know nowwwww!