CHAPTER IX. - The Prince and the Firedrake
IT was dreadfully hot, even high up
in the air, where the prince hung invisible.
Great burning stones were tossed up by the volcano,
and nearly hit him several times. Moreover, the
steam and smoke, and the flames which the Firedrake
spouted like foam from his nostrils, would have daunted
even the bravest man. The sides of the hill, too,
were covered with the blackened ashes of his victims,
whom he had roasted when they came out to kill him.
The garden-engine of poor little Alphonso was lying
in the valley, all broken and useless. But the
Firedrake, as happy as a wild duck on a lonely lock,
was rolling and diving in the liquid flame, all red-hot
and full of frolic. “Hi!” shouted
the prince. The Firedrake rose to the surface,
his horns as red as a red crescent-moon, only bigger,
and lashing the fire with his hoofs and his blazing
tail.
“Who’s there?” he
said in a hoarse, angry voice. “Just let
me get at you!”
“It’s me,” answered
the prince. It was the first time he had forgotten
his grammar, but he was terribly excited.
“What do you want?” grunted
the beast. “I wish I could see you”;
and, horrible to relate, he rose on a pair of wide,
flaming wings, and came right at the prince, guided
by the sound of his voice.
Now, the prince had never heard that
Fire-drakes could fly; indeed, he had never believed
in them at all, till the night before. For a moment
he was numb with terror; then he flew down like a stone
to the very bottom of the hill and shouted:
“Hi!”
“Well,” grunted the Firedrake,
“what’s the matter? Why can’t
you give a civil answer to a civil question?”
“Will you go back to your hole
and swear, on your honour as a Firedrake, to listen
quietly?”
“On my sacred word of honour,”
said the beast, casually scorching an eagle that flew
by into ashes. The cinders fell, jingling and
crackling, round the prince in a little shower.
Then the Firedrake dived back, with
an awful splash of flame, and the mountain roared
round him.
The prince now flew high above him, and cried:
“A message from the Remora. He says you
are afraid to fight him.”
“Don’t know him,” grunted the Firedrake.
“He sends you his glove,”
said Prince Prigio, “as a challenge to mortal
combat, till death do you part.”
Then he dropped his own glove into the fiery lake.
“Does he?” yelled the
Firedrake. “Just let me get at him!”
and he scrambled out, all red-hot as he was.
“I’ll go and tell him
you’re coming,” said the prince; and with
two strides he was over the frozen mountain of the
Remora.