Isibel has certainly heard that the Endarkened were not much kinder to each other than to others, and has no trouble swallowing the notion that one could have been imprisoned by his fellows. Nor does she disbelieve that they'd have captured a unicorn.
So: himself and Tialle, imprisoned together, her horn being broken either before she got there or just as she arrived. At first he cowers away from her, and (he indicates with more mime around the statue) she from him. Then they come closer together. Closer.
He lays his hand slowly, deliberately, against her horn. A hiss and an artful shudder remind Isibel that this would have hurt quite a lot.
Moving quickly, he breaks the imaginary chains around each of their necks, then the ones around his wrists. Creative mime, with some limping and fluttering, indicates that he was too weak or injured to stand; he crawled to the door of their prison and broke it open with only a little more difficulty than he had with the chains.
And then, apparently, Tialle stood still with some reluctance while he hauled himself onto her back, and he guided the pair of them all the way through the tunnels and up to the surface, and they proceeded in this way across a considerable distance before they finally parted ways. (A hand clawing illustratively down the scarred membrane of his wing indicates why he did not just fly away at that point.)
Isibel does not quite get the connection between touching Tialle's horn and being able to escape, but that she was helpful, that she gets. She nods slowly.
They never saw each other again.
(It's not a question if she doesn't actually say anything. She thinks.)
He smiles, looks down, rubs a hand over his face, shakes his head, shrugs helplessly. If there's a story there, he doesn't feel up to telling it.
She has those. She's started a fresh book recently; there's nothing sensitive in what she hands him even if he's deceiving her about not knowing the language.
The pencil seems to puzzle him.
He peers at it, rubs his thumb over the point, sniffs it, and only then deigns to make marks on a page.
An extremely crude map of a continent she should be familiar with. The shape is vague and partly wrong, but he gets most of the mountains right, and he draws Shadow Mountain up in the far north where it should be. From there, the point of the pencil wanders down over the continent in a meandering pathway. He mimes people, then himself hiding from them. This, apparently, was his primary method of navigation: flee from anyone who walks upright.
After some time spent doing this, he ended up deep in a forest (indicated by gesturing around them and patting a tree, then pointing at the map).
He turns the page.
He draws a dragon, crude but unmistakable.
He touches his face, the pad of his thumb just under one eye and his first two fingers just under the other; he brings that hand down to touch the dragon; he makes a circling gesture, then brings it back up to touch under his eyes again.
Then he stretches his wings, and draws the dragon in flight with a winged bipedal figure beside it, and turns back to the map and drags the pencil right off the edge of the continent and over the ocean and around the edge of the page to pass under the flying figures and end in a small blob shaped more or less like this island.
(Isibel thought long, long and hard before deciding not to present herself to any of the young unbonded dragons, or any of the old dragons with old bondmates. The trouble is - whatever power they offer, however much she'd like to wield it - the dragons read their bondmates' minds. She has met dragons, but only dragons who are not due for a handoff anytime in the near future, and keeps her distance from the others.)
But apparently there is another. And if the dragon is not Bonded, of course he's immortal -
No. That's not the only way.
If the dragon is bonded to something immortal -
Her eyes fly open as she realizes that this dragon may not just be this Endarkened's friend, but his bondmate. Could that be what he meant? It's never happened before that she knows - there have been dragons fighting on the side of demons, but only at the command of Tainted bondmates -
If this Endarkened is actually bonded to his dragon then he's some kind of mage, and he's got an unlimited wellspring of power.
And he's chosen to live on an island with his dragon completely alone fondly sculpting Tialle for at least the last two thousand years.
Isibel does not understand.
Then he hands her back her notebook and pencil.
She purses her lips, and draws a little stylized dragon - she is not an artist, but because she knows this, she draws as simply as she must to achieve a reasonable result. And she draws a little stylized demon next to it. And then she draws a line between them.
She taps the dragon-doodle with her pencil, and then mimes looking around.
The dragon is sleeping, apparently.
...And then she draws a stylized little elf.
And then another and then another and then a lot of dots. (This number of dots does not represent the size of her expedition.)
She circles them, then turns back to the map and taps the island.
He throws up his hands, gestures to himself, touches wings, horns, the dots on the page, tips his head to one side and looks at her challengingly.
She flings up her hands and looks away, biting her lip; she doesn't know what to do. Most people would have killed him on sight.
She taps the paper with her pencil, thinking; this demon is not the Legendary Vestakia, but there is some precedent for red-skinned demonic-looking entities living peacefully among elves.
Touches the Vestakia figure. Touches the unicorn's head in her lap. Touches the burn on his hand.
Isibel nods. There aren't any live unicorns around anyway. She draws a mini family tree for Vestakia: demon doodle plus human doodle equals Vestakia with Shalkan's head in her lap. She draws circles around the demon father's horns and the human mother's heart. Then she draws this demon under all that, and an arrow from him to the family tree, and crosses it out firmly, and throws up her hands again, he's not Vestakia, he can't prove himself like Vestakia could, she doesn't know what to do.
She turns the page; this one's out of space. She doodles his dragon meeting the elves, no demon in sight.
She then draws an elf with a dragon, turns back to the map and describes a path between Elven Lands and the island, and doodles the two dragons facing each other, mouths open to speak - might they share a language, she wonders.