Saturday, February 7, 2015

The Living Stone, Chapter 8


Rage. Twisting, frothing, rending, scarring, vulcanizing rage was the only thing keeping Vengaralix alive. It pounded in his chest, keeping blood flowing to his broken limbs and wings. It burned the fog away from his bleeding eyes, searing red permanently into his vision. It roared in his mind so fiercely that it drowned out the echoes of pain. 

Somehow, after crashing down off the mountains, he managed to drag himself into a crevice to keep safe. Days later, he had stopped bleeding but his ability to move was no more improved. Unable to change his fate, his mind had begun to distort. Death had spared his body, but left his mind ripe for madness.

Only one word remained coherent throughout his torment: kra. The nothing had done this, beyond all sanity and possibility. The mere thought festered like a virulent rot in his mind, disintegrating his grip on reality.

So when a man stood in front of him as he faded in and out of consciousness, he took it as a hallucination. The reality of the man was made clear by the heel of his boot coming to rest between the dragon's eyes. Vengaralix growled and tried to bite at the offender, barely managing to snap his jaws.

The man smirked, arrogance burning in his eyes. "Still alive, then. Not bad, for someone pitiful enough to be pushed of a cliff by nothing."

The gurgling in Vengaralix's throat was supposed to be a roar.

Now the impudent man laughed. "You're right to be angry, it wasn't very fair, was it? You are strong for your kind, in this age where your power wanes. The nothing should have never stood a chance. Why was he able to strike you down?"

"Goblin," Vengaralix hissed. 

"No." The man's yellow eyes glinted from beneath long dark hair. "That was a lucky shot and you know it. The goblin was insignificant. The kra has power, power that his people cursed him for, just because he was different. He's better than you, even better because your people cursed him."

"Wrong ..."

"What's that?" the man put a hand to his ear. "Could you speak up?"

"Living stone are usurpers of what little magic remains," the dragon hissed out, somehow finding the ability to speak returned to him. "The world dies more with each curse that falls on us. They must return to stone or the world can never recover."

"So true," the man nodded. "But power is power. It's what made him strong and you weak, why he won, and you ..." he leaned in dangerously close. "...lost."

"He will die." Vengaralix managed to raise his head shakily, declaring his intent with as much strength as he could muster.

The man's grin was cruelly comforting. "I'm glad you feel that way." He swept down in a low bow. "Many call me the Forerunner. I have a vested interest in seeing this particular nothing made even more nonexistent. You and I seem to have common ground in that regard."

The dragon narrowed his eyes.

"If you want, I can lead you to incredible power, surpassing even the most powerful Kra."

"My people would never allow it," the crippled dragon said.

"What matters more, Vengaralix? The words of other dragons, or putting that wretch in his place?"

"He will die!"

The cruelty in the man's grin gave way to maddening glee. He gestured a black gloved hand for Vengaralix to rise. Compelled to try and stand, the dragon found suddenly that his body was whole once more, rising elegantly off the ground, and out of the crack where he was hiding.

"It's time you met some friends of mine, Vengaralix. They will show you all you need to make the kra regret resisting his curse."

*********

The trek through the wasteland to Black Needles was a long one for the large group. Kra used to move with his clan through Argassa, but a pack of ten dragons could fly to where they were going. Travel times were not so long, treks lasting as long as three days at the longest. Even traveling with just Bink took a little longer than he would have liked

Now, plodding across the wastes with a goblin, three humans, and a dwarf was a stretch of Kra's patience. His pace was practically a quarter of what he could do on his own. He regretted the burden of his curse; if his scales were not so heavy, he could have carried almost all of them on his back. As it was, he carried Bink out of courtesy to the longer legged members of the group, and it still felt like he was dragging his feet.

Yet the trip was enjoyable. Progress was sacrificed for the banter and interaction between these strange and disparate folks. Grif tended to grumble and curse every misstep and trip up that his stubby legs made, prompting Bink to laugh and Nellik to chastise him. When any bickering continued for too long, Wardan broke it up with nothing more than a calm warning. Kra was impressed by how much respect he had from his friends, but was reminded of just how strong the man was one night when he lifted Grif up over his head and tossed him during a sparing session. Throughout it all, Rilea kept up a motherly attitude, herding all of the others like they were cattle. She was always quick to add her thoughts, providing a stream of witty quips and sly commentary 

The one person Kra did communicate with regularly was Nellik. Nellik was a wellspring of information about the Drakvald wastes, and anytime Kra had a question about the flora and fauna of their surroundings he had an answer or anecdote to share with him. The dragon was glad to have another student of the world to talk with, and Nellik seemed to be genuinely happy to have someone else who enjoyed learning for learning's sake.

Bink was happy enough just keeping the group fed day to day. His hunting skills were tested between the demands of four adult humanoids and a dragon, and he seemed to outdo himself every day. The others offered to help him hunt, but he refused even when Kra offered his help. The goblin seemed to have a point to make, and wanted to impress the others to prove that goblins could stand alongside the bigger races. Regardless, he came back from his hunts with food enough for all to share, even Kra. The dragon was eating better than he had in years thanks to the prodigious hunting talents of Bink, and had no cause to complain.

The whole trip lasted five days, but they were five days well spent, as far as the dragon was concerned.

The name of Black Needles was entirely deserved. The valley was a forest of towering stone spires, some of which thrust themselves up past the skyline. The Rivenwall soaked wide swaths of the land in its overbearing shadow. The air was strangely cold and thick, as a heady fog swirled about on parts of the valley floor. Kra sniffed at the mist curiously, detecting an acrid tinge that was not appetizing.

"Careful, Kra," Nellik warned. "This fog has been known to have some odd effects on people who get too close."

"I heard a man and dwarf walked into some of this stuff and disappeared for three days," Grif said. "When they were found, the man had a dwarven beard and the dwarf had gone completely bald!"

"Aw, a dwarven nightmare if ever there was one," Rilea cooed mockingly.

"Hallucinations are common," Nellik continued. "The worst cases are burned by something caustic in the vapors, something we can't identify."

"Something in the soil, no doubt," Kra conceded. "A shame; the vapors are practically pure water without it."

"Really?" Wardan said. "This place is notorious for being inhospitable at the ground level, but it's essentially just water in that fog?"

The dragon nodded. "Feel the soil, it's softer here than anywhere else I've been." He turned to the raider captain. "How well-explored is Black Needles?"

Wardan shook his head. "Not well, at least not on the inside. It's too risky to send in mappers, and it was assumed there wasn't much to gain. We've got a good idea how large it is, after scouting its perimeters, but that's about it."

"So you don't know what's in there," Kra concluded.

"Chiraptor nests, a possible cliff lizard population, and anything else with nowhere to go," Wardan shrugged. "No orcs seen, no goblins, no other threats."

"No dragons then," Kra said.

"Not as far as we've seen."

"Good," he said grimly. "If we do end up staying here, I would hate for there to be complications."

"Wardan," Nellik said, "I believe it's time I should go."

Wardan nodded, to everyone's surprise. 

"Go where?" Rilea demanded. "I was promised three raiders."

"You also promised a week," Nellik told her. "It has been far longer. If you don't want an armed regiment hunting you down for kidnapping, there is little we can do but send a messenger back."

"Will you be returning?" Kra asked, sad to see Nellik leave.

"That will depend on Borlan's response. We have vital news he needs to hear at the very least, pertaining to the movements of the Destructors." He snapped a salute to his captain, who returned the gesture. He turned and did the same for Kra. 

"If not for you, I would be short a captain and a friend. You have my thanks."

Kra's pride warmed in his chest so much that he did not know how to respond. Unable to return the gesture, he placed his paw on his chest and bowed his head.

For the first time since the dragon met him, Nellik smiled. He turned around, wrapping his face in his mask, and started marching toward home.

"Don't worry about him," Wardan said to Kra's forlorn gaze. "He's done a lot of scouting and reconnaissance, and he's certainly no stranger to the wastes. He knows the way home."

"May the Mother keep him safe." Kra said reverently. 

"Come then," Wardan said, making for the heart of the valley. "We have a cult to stop, a home to make, and whatever Rilea's looking for to find."

"At this point, I'd take a canteen of water," she said. "This journey has already become a treasure in itself." Kra could feel her gaze on him through the protective cloth on her eyes. Without knowing quite why, Kra felt the most exposed he ever had under her powerful eyes.

"Does that mean we can go home?" Grif said, his beard shaking slightly as the dwarf shivered. "This place ain't good. Unwholesome, it is."

"Agree with dwarfy," Bink said. "Black Needles bad, new place for home, Kra!"

Kra and Wardan shared a wry look, then turned back to the valley, walking on wordlessly. Rilea chuckled at the whimpering moans of the goblin and dwarf.

If the pace had been slow up until then, it came to a crawl once they were deeper into the forest of stone. This time, it was to account for Kra's ponderous bulk. If his size had not hampered the others, they might have made more headway on their search for the Destructors. As it was, Rilea spent most of her time scouting ahead to find a suitable trail for the broad dragon to follow. 

More than once, Kra managed to wedge himself between the stone columns. He normally had no problem unsticking himself from the problematic pillars, but there was at least one time that he had to avail himself of Wardan's great might to push himself out from between a pair of particularly rigid spires.

Through it all, the fog seemed to thicken the further they traveled into the valley. Thankfully, the rumors about it's toxicity were vastly exaggerated. It became much more of a pure water vapor as they pushed further, as apparently whatever was in the soil at the edge of the stone forest was concentrated there, like a ward protecting some great treasure.

But if there was anything of worth in the Black Needles, Kra had yet to notice it. A fair amount of wildlife crawled, hopped, and darted between spires, but the stillness of the standing stones piercing through the fog haunted the valley, like an unspoken law of silence. The only connection the spires shared was the ground below, the separation seeming unnatural. The ever-reaching towers of rock reached up to the clouds above in silent prayer, asking for salvation from isolation. 

Kra found he liked it here. 

"You sure you want to live here, dragon?" Grif said, gazing around through the fog. "You can barely move around, and vision's bad at best."

"It's quiet," Kra said simply. "Once we've found a more open location, I'll have no trouble. Of course, this is all for naught if Bink finds it wanting." Both dragon and dwarf cast their gaze to the goblin, who upon noticing they watched him tried hard not to shiver.

"Wet," Bink muttered. "Wet and spooky. Bink no like it, Kra."

"What if we found you some shelter, a cave or something?" Wardan suggested. 

Bink sniffled, nodding. "That be good. Hunting here easy, lots of animals, good hiding spots. Water, too."

"But you still don't like it," Kra pointed out.

The goblin shrugged. "No biggie. If safe enough, Bink shut face."

"Maybe we'll find another home we can both agree on, though," Kra suggested. 

"Does that mean we can leave?" Grif asked, peering hopefully to Wardan.

"Well, we're actually not here for home hunting," Wardan said sternly. "If we find them a place before we part ways, that's just icing on the cake. We're still looking for Destructors."

"Ah, right ..." Grif said, shoulders sagging. "Where will we find those scumsuckers, anyway?"

"Rilea's got a good idea of where to look," Wardan said, gesturing to the distant form of the thief, made indistinct by the fog. "If they're here, she'll find them. I want them out of our lands."

"'Our lands'?" Kra wondered aloud, drawing the gaze of the dwarf and man. "You make it sound as though there is still a kingdom to defend in such a desolate wasteland."

Wardan grinned unexpectedly. "You have yet to see Norheim, friend. I can hardly blame you for thinking anything else."

"Do my ears deceive me, or was that an invitation?" Kra said, leveling a wry gaze at the warrior. 

Wardan furrowed his brow, then nodded. "I suppose it was."

The dragon chuckled, despite himself. "I doubt I'd be welcome."

"We'll ask Borlan," Grif said. Kra tilted his head in curiosity. "He's the leader of Norheim Raiders. We've seen what you can do, we'll tell him. If Borlan will vouch for you, there might be a home for you there. He has a good deal of influence with the council; if he likes you or thinks you could be useful, he'll likely keep you around."

Kra scoffed, but deep down his excitement pounded in his chest. It was certainly something he never expected. The possibility, however unlikely to come true, was perhaps a step toward that beautiful thought he had in the cave he still held onto in the back of his mind.

Night came, and the stillness in Black Needles made the dark disturbingly silent. They managed to find an open clearing among they spires, suitably large enough for a camp. Grif and Bink informed to rest that they would keep watch, for the sake of everyone's rest. Kra had a feeling that poor Bink might be too scared to sleep, and that Grif's disposition was not too far from the goblin's, but they hid such sentiments well if they were true. 

Perhaps Kra was reflecting his own opinions onto his friend, as he found sleep came slowly. The air was saturated with water and silence, there was no wind or other sounds he normally associated with night. When sleep finally came, it was fitful and restless. No visions in his dreams but voices, completely unlike the ones that followed him. They seemed to be all around, looking for things that could never exist. They called to him, asking for the answers they would never find. Their cries were so sorrowful he awoke, his heart heavy and his scales dripping with condensation. 

He arose, quietly as he could, to have a look around. He spied Bink and Grif at the edge of the camp, both dozing off back to back against each other. It seemed he would need to finish their watch, not that he minded. He would not be sleeping again this night.

He checked in on his other two companions. Wardan was stretched out on his back, one arm resting across his eyes as his chest heaved gently in the throes of slumber. However, Rilea seemed to share Kra's distaste for sleep, as she was not in the spot she laid down last he saw her. 

"Looking for me?" Rilea's voice surprised the dragon, coming practically from behind him. He turned to see her facing away from him, her shrouded gaze fixed on the opposite side of the camp from the two alleged guardsmen. "I couldn't sleep either."

"Do you see so well that you can read thoughts?" Kra asked.

"I heard you move," she tapped her ears. "You move quiet for something so big. Still, I could hear your slightest move thanks to those scales grinding together."

"Did you have dreams too? Is that why you are awake now?"

She shook her head. "I keep hearing my own blood move. I hate that sound. Normally I can tune it out, but it's so dead quiet here, I didn't even get a chance to dream before I scared myself awake. I saw our stalwart guards had wavered in diligence, so I thought it would be best for me to watch."

"I can take over, if you'd prefer to rest," Kra offered. "I never used to sleep much anyway."

"I'd rather have company," she said, looking back at him and grinning, gesturing for him to join her on watch.

The dragon shifted uncomfortably. "Perhaps I should stay on the other side, to spread out our watch."

She chuckled. "This ground might be soft, but it's springy. I'll feel anything coming long before we see it, no matter which direction it comes from." She gestured to her side once more, insistently.

Kra sighed, and obliged her as quietly as he could. Her face crinkled in consternation as his movements drew closer.

"Do you feel that when you move?" she asked.

"No. I've long become numb to my own scales' roughness," he responded evenly. She seemed about to ask another question, but hesitated. He nudged her gently with his nose prompting her to speak her mind. 

"It's just ... how can I put this ..." she trailed off, in search of the right words. "You speak like you're from another time."

Kra considered her words. "Dragons have a strong oral tradition, even before the Wasting. Human language is prone to transform even between shorter generations. I speak the way my parents did, the way my friends did, much as you learned to speak. Our cultures are still quite different, despite our tongues being practically identical."

She laughed coarsely. "You even have a term for something we forgot collectively ages ago," she said. "The Wasting?"

"Do not misunderstand," he told her. "We don't know what happened to cause this; our world simply started dying. We only have a name for it, though many dragons feel that we are responsible in some way."

"I happen to know some things about your kind," Rilea said. "None of those things make me think you would have done this to yourselves."

Kra nodded. "That belief is uncommon, but still no less credible than others I've heard."

"You must have heard much in your time," Rilea said. "I can only imagine how old you actually are."

Kra allowed himself a smile. "You'll find such thoughts might be deceiving."

Rilea fixed him with a wry look. "You're at least twice my age, I'm sure of it."

"Unless you are but a decade old, you are mistaken."

Rilea's look of awe was satisfying somehow. "Are you kidding? You're only twenty years old?"

"Twenty-two in a month, actually."

The rogue shook her head. "You must be lying. There's no way I'm ten years older than you."

"Why not?" Kra asked.

"I remember being that old, I remember what I was like, and I had to grow up fast," she said. "There's no way you have so few years behind you and such a terribly old soul." Her voice trailed away again, and she seemed to look past him ... no, through him. "Unless your so-called "curse" meant much worse for you than you've said." Kra turned his gaze away, but her hand came to rest on his neck. "You've said the Twisted are exiled for being Gifted, but there's more to it than that. You told me before that you had to survive, when this curse is designed to kill even the strongest dragon."

"I must," he declared solemnly. "It is my duty."

"Your duty? To whom?"

"My parents. The elder of my clan despised himself for what he was doing when he cursed me, as he sympathized with my goals. My father had been his offspring, after all, he wants to see their vengeance realized as much as I."

Rilea kept quiet for some time. Kra's heart beat hard in his chest. He had never spoken of this to anyone else but his clan elder. He started to feel as though he had said too much, but there was a weight missing from his mind that had long made him feel that much heavier.

"Is that the only thing keeping you fighting?" Rilea asked, her voice even, attempting to hide some emotion.

Kra considered her words. "Perhaps if you asked me weeks ago, I might have said yes, and it would have been enough."

"So things have changed for you?"

"I believe they have."

She stepped in front of him, forcing him to look at her. "What about your gift?"

Kra grunted, trying to turn away, but Rilea put a hand on his muzzle and turned him gently back to face her again. Kra glared at her covered gaze, wanting to snap away her blindfold and ask her how she felt about her so-called gift. "Do you know why you have a gift?" Kra asked, his voice sour. "Where it comes from?

"No, Kra, I don't. No one does. It's random, it can happen to anyone at any time." Rilea pointed to her eyes. "This is not a curse, no matter how much it may hurt. If there were still gods, this would be a blessing."

"Do you really believe it is so random? Before the Wasting, my kind could breathe fire. They could grow to enormous proportions, sometimes eclipsing cities. That power we believed to be a birthright was taken from us. What if it was taken for a reason?"

The thief scoffed. "Are all dragons that arrogant? You truly believe that dragons alone were the cause of the Wasting?"

"Regardless, that magic died with the rest of the world. Now it is coming back somehow, in strange ways, and we are afraid: If our magic is coming back, how much further can we fall?"

Rilea's face contorted and a mixture of confusion and anger. "What of us, then? Humans, dwarves, goblins, we all have that power too. We would be lost now without the Gifted."

"You had magic before, the dragons did not own it solely," Kra explained. "We had so much, Rilea. We were impossible. We could have broken this world if we wanted. For all we know, we did."

"That's ridiculous," Rilea spat.

"That's history," Kra growled. "Those with power bring suffering to others, time and time again. Can you blame us for wanting to stop spreading pain and hate through the world?"

The woman shook her head. "You can't mean that you wanted this curse of stone. I don't believe it."

Kra considered himself. "No. I did not want this. But you must see that it is necessary..."

"No, I don't, and you shouldn't even have imagined such a terrible thing." Rilea's voice seemed to tremble, for the first time since the dragon met her. "Power is not wrong, and it is not evil. In this world, it could mean the lives of hundreds could depend on your actions. You can kill, yes, but you can also save. I've done both, I know."

Kra stayed silent. Arguing now seemed pointless, he had only made her angry. 

"I've known you a week, dragon. In that week, we've shared meals, we've talked, and we've walked a long way. You have a friend who would give everything to see you smile. You saved one of the most powerful raiders in Norheim from one of your own kind. You gave us your home when we needed to heal. You pray to a goddess who may or may not hear your words anymore, and you want me to believe that your death sentence is somehow necessary?" She folded her arms. "You may as well tell me to join the Destructors, because that's not happening either."

Kra glared at her, trying to refute her words as they circled in his mind. He only did as he must, he needed to survive. He was not a hero, he was a dragon. He was not benevolent, he was dangerous. He was not pious, he was penitent. She was wrong, he was right. He had to be right, or everything he believed to be true was a lie.

"You'll see soon, I know you will," Rilea told him as she turned away, walking to the other side of the clearing. "You could change the world Kra, all on your own."

Flustered, the dragon leaned against a spire and thumped back down to the ground. Surely she could understand, all his gift did was harm, and her gift caused her harm if left unchecked. Their power came with a price, and that price was suffering, personal or otherwise. He would rather his own suffering than others, and if his curse accomplished that, he would accept it. But he still needed time, so he would survive.

But a tiny doubt, a little questioning voice in his mind asked him something he could not answer. Other kra died within weeks of their curse. 

He had been cursed ten years ago.

"Why do I still live?" he whispered to the dark and fog. If Rilea heard him now, she made no sound. 

A strange smell tickled Kra's nose. He assumed at first that it was Rilea's emotion, but slowly began to recognize it as something else. He blinked, looking about for the source when he noticed a tuft of grass poking out of the soil nearby. He considered it a moment, and placed his paw over the tuft, flattening the grass to the ground. He lifted his paw and drew it away. The blades of grass slowly but surely began to rise back up, defiant of their plight. He was about to squelch it again when, from where the center of his paw had been, a tiny white flower seemed to have grown from nowhere. It blossomed before his eyes, opening up to the sky in search of light and moisture.

The dragon tucked his paw away once more, laying his head down next to the grass and staring in defeat at the impossible flower.

*********

Morning came, cold and misty. Bink and Grif had managed to rouse themselves during the night, acting as though they had been awake all night. Wardan seemed to crack every joint before finally standing up from the hard ground. Rilea scarcely moved from her own vigil, as though concentrating on something in the distance. 

Kra remained where he had lain last night, focused on his tiny white flower. It leaned toward him now, as though expecting command or instruction.

"Kra!" Bink shouted. "What you want for breakfast? I see if I find, yes?" The little goblin marched over to the dragon's resting spot. Upon standing next to his friend, he noticed the tiny flower. "Oh... You make?" he asked, gesturing to the specimen.

Kra did not answer.

Bink knelt down, observing the flora and sniffing it. "It very nice," the goblin offered. "Pretty, maybe show to Rilea?"

Kra cracked a big smile, in spite of himself. "Cliff lizard, if you can find it."

Bink nodded, standing back up and scrambling off to harass Wardan. Kra considered the goblin's retreating back. Why did the diminutive creature bring him such mirth?

"He lives by your hand."

"You saved him. He loves you."

"And maybe you love him, too."

Kra wanted to deny the voices any truth, but not in this matter. They were absolutely right. Bink, and many of his tribe, were alive now through their combined efforts. There was no denying they were friends now, learning from each other and holding one another up. Bink offered all he had to give on a daily basis, and his selflessness encouraged Kra to return the effort. If not for Bink, he never would have been here in Black Needles, companion to two humans and a dwarf. 

"You are wiser than I give you credit," Kra admitted as quietly as he could. "Is my gift such a boon, as Rilea says?"

His hopeful question yielded nothing but silence. The dragon furrowed his stony brow. His voices might have been wise, but their advice was not freely given, it seemed.

"Dragon!" came another shout from the clearing. Kra snapped his gaze toward the source of the shout. He glowered as Wardan waved at him, beckoning him to come forward.

"Do not refer to me as 'dragon', if you please," Kra grumbled, standing up and skulking over to Wardan's spot. He was about to ask what was issue, when Wardan causally drew his sword.

"Fight me," Wardan prompted, holding up his weapon.

"What?" Kra asked, bewildered. He backed up a step, unsure of how to proceed.

"Spar with me," Wardan clarified. "The last time I fought a dragon, I lost. Before I met you, I thought there was no foe I could not best, no fight I could get out of unscathed. You're the closest thing to a challenge I've had in years, and I need to get better."

"Find another," Kra said tersely. "I will not."

Wardan half grinned. "This isn't some machismo thing. I truly just want to become a better warrior."

"Don't." Kra told him plainly. To the soldier's confused face, he added, "War is not something to excel in, it is something to endure."

"And endure I shall," Wardan said. "I'll do it better knowing I can hold my own with a dragon."

"What will that prove?" Kra said. "I barely qualify for that title now. Even if I did, the next dragon you fight could easily be stronger. What would you do then?"

"Lose, and learn more, if I lived," Wardan said. "I can only be so prepared, but it's still my duty to be the best fighter I can for my people."

Kra frowned. He was not used to these human ideals. So many humans were too weak to fend for themselves, and needed the strength of others to hold them up. As curious a trait as that was that there were those of them that were so devoted to protecting the others, it was odd to the dragon that they could not all keep themselves safe.

"You are brave, and that should suffice," Kra said.

"I found out the hard way that it doesn't last week," Wardan said. "The raiders need leaders they can rely on to take out the worst of the Wastes. You're the strongest dragon I've met so far, I'd rather not pass up this opportunity."

Kra sighed. "So be it." He widened his stance, lowered his head, and fixed his gaze on his challenger.

Wardan grinned. "That's more like it, dragon."

Kra snarled, snapping his head forward in a brutal headbutt. Wardan reeled as the dragon smashed into his chest, but managed to retain his footing. Kra had to blink away stars from his vision, the raider was far more resilient than he anticipated. He backed up a step, anticipating Wardan's retaliation.

His instinct proved true, as his nose was clipped by the point of Wardan's blade as it swung past his face, Wardan stumbling forward into the awkward blow. A tiny chip of stony scale flew off, landing in the dirt some distance away. He hardly felt it, but it gave him a good idea of how truly strong Wardan was. 

He was far from intimidated, though. It only meant he did not need to hold back as much as he thought. 

Before Wardan could reverse his momentum for a backswing, Kra swept his paw out slapping the raider's arm wide. He leaned his shoulder in, punching with his wing and forcing the raider further off balance. Aiming to end the bout with a third and final strike, he raised a paw up and slammed it down on the raider.

He was startled as he met a surprising amount of resistance. Wardan had somehow regained his footing, and was holding back Kra's paw with both arms. Curious, Kra lifted his other front paw and placed it on the first, pushing down with his full weight. He heard Wardan groan from exertion, but he did not crumple as the dragon predicted. 

"Are you made of iron, or just numb?" Kra asked.

"I can't feel my shoulders," Wardan grunted.

Kra smirked. "Then rest!" He shifted his weight with a quick twist, pushing the raider to the side and dropping him to the ground with the sudden change of direction.

Wardan just laid on the ground for a moment before letting out a cough. "Only... one swing..."

"Try for two next time," Kra offered, moving next to him. The exhausted warrior barely moved, and the dragon had a strangely satisfying notion. He maneuvered himself over the raider, and before Wardan could protest he rested himself down on the raider's lower half.

"Are you sure it's not lead on your scales?" Wardan groaned. "I've had a mountaintop fall on me that was less heavy than you."

"I'll let you up when Bink returns with breakfast," Kra mumbled, yawning. "I could really use a nap."

Wardan tried to push him away futilely. "You're a harder teacher than any dwarf. Who taught you to fight, anyhow?"

"I only learned what the Wastes taught me," Kra mumbled, barely feeling Wardan's struggles as he drifted away into a self satisfied nap.

********

The morning came and went with a carefree breeze. Time found its way through Black Needles the way others did, it seemed; directionless and dreamily. Kra found himself enveloped by the haunted charm of the fog and brooding stoicism of the spires. The others were similarly effected, he could see it in their eyes as they stared into the fog for perhaps longer than they should. It was in their voices, a hush that betrayed their hesitance to break the silence. 

However, it was the one thing the dragon did not sense in the fog was the one thing that made him feel this could be a home. For as intimidating and isolating as the valley was, fear was empty from the environment. The silence was serene, not terrified. The solitude was peaceful, not subjugated. Part of him believed that he did not belong in such a place, fearing the destruction of this pocket of tranquility. But certainly if he would not be welcome amongst the humans and dwarves of Norheim, he would at home here, at least for a time.

He often looked to the north, at the looming shadow of the Rivenwall, and wondered how long it would be until he was driven even further away from home. 

Once the travelers had broken camp, they continued into the fog. Going this day was no quicker than before, but the way was clearer. The spires stood further apart, leaving space for the fog to thicken. 

Kra could smell the cold clearness of the water in the fog, and was reminded of his cave back in Argassa. If the water pooled, it would make for a delightful bath. Even the mist swirled pleasantly against his scales, dousing him with dew.

The landscape shifted the further into the valley they went. The ground began to rise and fall, forming broad hills and slopes that further obscured the surroundings and made the way treacherous. Rilea never faltered once in her search, she read the land as though a map was etched on the back of her eyelids.

Just as Kra thought the mist and maze of hills would never end, they came to a place that was clear of all but a faint trace of fog. A broad ridge of stone swept up from the ground in front of them, and from beyond it rose a plume of smoke. Kra's nose crinkled in disgust as he recognized the smell.

"Well, we've found them," Rilea said, her voice hoarse. Kra wondered for how long she had been able to smell the smoke. 

"You don't happen to know how many there are, do you?" Wardan asked.

"About as many as at the fortress. This seems to be a different group from before, though. I don't think that ... woman is with them."

"We'll find her eventually," Wardan assured her. "We just need to keep seeking these bastards out, one camp at a time."

"Where do they hail from?" Kra asked.

"Beyond the Rivenwall," Grif explained. "Still not sure how they did it, but they seem to have some sort of power at their disposal, not to mention a bunch of Gifted folks. We don't even want to give 'em a chance, and take them out where we find them."

"We have an attack strategy?" Wardan asked, turning back to Rilea.

"They're fortified from the North side, less so on the south. There's another rise across from our side, as well."

"Very defensible, probably why they picked it." Wardan said, motioning for them move to the south. "Is there a lot of space in there?" 

"Enough for a hundred or so warriors to live comfortably," Rilea said, hurrying forward. "Shall we get this over with? I'm quite eager to be rid of the smell."

Warden nodded. "Right. All to the south side of the rise, then we strike as we see fit."

Kra paused. "You three go on. Bink and I will go our own way." Bink looked up at the dragon in confusion.

Wardan scowled. "Strange, I didn't figure you more cowardly than the goblin."

The dragon turned a dour gaze to man. "You would do well to quell such foolishness. I am merely considering an alternate route."

"The north is too well defended," Rilea said. "You're better off with us."

"The north is not where my eyes are," Kra said, glancing to the top of the rise. "Go and begin your assault. I assure you we will not be far behind."

Wardan gave the dragon a curious look, then glanced at Bink. The goblin glanced furtively between the human and dragon, shrugging and sputtering his lack of understanding. Finally the soldier pointed to the dragon. "Do what he wants, Bink."

"Always do for Kra," Bink said, scrambling up on top of Kra's back. 

Kra nodded his thanks to the warrior. Wardan waved him away and drew his sword, turning back to the south. The dragon waited until his companions were out of earshot, and with a powerful beat of his wings rose into the air. He brought himself and his goblin passenger to the highest point of the rise, where he could easily see the Destructors camp. The northern end of the camp was indeed fortified, with heavy barricades and trenches blocking the way. At least two dozen of the cultists were stationed there, among them several archers. The south was also blocked, by a wall seemingly crafted just high enough to give them peace of mind. 

The rest of the camp was a series of tents and small huts, punctuated several small fires and one large bonfire. The smoke sickened the dragon, but filled him with rage as well. He clung tightly to the top of the rise, so that his body was mostly hidden behind it. He tapped with his wing where he wanted Bink to stay. The goblin climbed up from the dragons back to the ridge, seemingly unaffected by the smoke. Kra was thankful, at least someone would be spared its pungent waft. 

Bink surveyed the camp, and noted the wall with a small measure of panic. "We go tell them Kra," the goblin said in a manic whisper. "Wall at south, they no get through!"

"That wall is no worry," Kra insisted. "For now, we just wait."

"What we wait for?"

"Our little ashrabbits to come hopping along," Kra said, his eyes betraying his anticipation.

Bink looked down below just in time for an earsplitting crack to echo through the ravine. The wall came tumbling down as Wardan came charging through it. All the huts emptied of their occupants, most of them rushing in toward the commotion. 

Bink's face lit up with glee as he glanced back to the dragon, who returned his mirth with a smug grin. "Look Kra, all the little birdies out in the open."

*******

Wardan brushed off the bits of the boulder he just charged through, drawing his sword as he glanced up. His gaze was met by a couple dozen cultists staring in awe of his powerful display, scrambling to form some kind of defense. He looked back at the wrecked wall, to see Grif hauling himself over the rubble and Rilea already leaping down after him. 

He turned back around just in time to meet the blade of the closest cultist. The sword caught him in the neck, and he felt the steel bend as he trapped it between his neck and shoulder. The cultist's exclamation of befuddlement was cut short as Wardan's swing sent him flying away in a sprawl. 

There were still more than twenty cultist heading his way, and more behind them. He was about to lead the charge when he heard Rilea cry out. He turned back to her and was just able to catch her as she fell over. 

"Smell ... too strong ... I'm ... sorry ..." she gasped, choking on her own breath.

"Grif! Get over here!" Wardan yelled. The dwarf trundled over, noticed the thief's condition, and immediately jumped in front of her. The destructors were advancing on them now, there was no time to change the plan.

"Soon as you can, get her out of here, Wardan said. "I'll keep them busy."

Rilea held up her hand. "I'll be ... fine ... just need a moment."

"We'll give you time, lass," Grif said, punching his palm. 

The first wave of cultists fell upon them moments later. Seeing the vulnerable state they were in, they surrounded the trio. A group of spearmen stabbed at them past the sword wielders in front. Wardan fought defensively, batting away strikes when he could and taking strikes only if he had to. He was tough, but he knew that he could be hurt, and all it took was a blade to fall in just the wrong way. 

Griff, having wrested a blade away from an unlucky cultist, still managed to cause devastation despite the odds.  The mad dwarf lunged at knees and groins when the opportunities presented themselves, but for every hit he purchased he paid in backstepping to his position near Rilea. His risky fighting style cost him a few slices and stabs as well, he was not in his element and it showed.

Wardan's heart sank when he saw another crowd of Destructors close in. The first group tightened their circle, sparing the trio no quarter. Rilea looked about ready to stand, but her aid would mean nothing if they were pinned down. It was looking like it was surrender or die.

A pair of cultists managed to knock Grif over, a spearman striking perfectly the same time a swordman swept his legs. The swordman was poised for his killing blow, Wardan unable to reach him in time. 

The blow never fell, and the swordman and spearman lay sprawled on the ground in the space of a breath. Crude javelins protruded from their back and throat respectively. That was when Wardan noticed a curious shadow over the second crowd. 

The crash of a stone dragon diving onto the cultists was deafening. 

Kra rose up from the ground. The cultists unfortunate enough to have been underneath him were never to rise again. The dragon spread his wings, reared back, and roared in the faces of the nearby cultists. In the sudden change of the battlefield, none of those cultists that remained expected stone wings to buffet so quickly, so fatally. 

In two deadly strikes, Kra had reduced the enemy forces by a third.

Wardan saluted the dragon briefly, then took his opportunity to strike. Left and right, cultists were sent flying by his sword and fist. Still shaken by the dragon's drop, the surprised cultists offered little resistance to the raider's sudden onslaught.

Grif was in brawler's paradise, his punches, sword swings, and kicks never without a target. He surrounded himself with enemies, crippling or devastating them on the spot. He cut a swath through the cultists to rival the dragon's in a matter of seconds. 

Wardan turned back momentarily to check on Rilea, only to find she was no longer on the ground. Swinging back around to the massive melee, he could see her darting through the crowd, her claw slicing down the men and women she deemed fit for death. All the while, a stone headed javelin would hurtle down from Bink up on the ridge, pinning a target to the ground like a bladehawk skewering an ashrabbit. 

The Destructors began fighting back, most pushing away from the dragon and out of the little canyon, perhaps in an attempt to widen the circle and entrap them again. Wardan stood in front of the hole he made in the wall, acting as a human wall against those who sought to pass by. He wanted to keep as many of them near Kra as he could. They could overpower him or Grif, they had no chance of doing that to a dragon.

Soon, Wardan began to notice a strange smell. It wasn't the strange wood that the cultist were using, it was something else. It was coming up from the soft soil, like a buried memory. 

"Wardan! It's Kra!" Rilea shouted across the battlefield. Wardan turned to the dragon and a wash of cold dread fell over him.

Kra's red eyes had begun to glow.

********

"They are dead."

"They never had a chance."

"They were the only ones who could have saved us."

"Shut up," Kra growled through clenched teeth, the smell of the bloodwood holding him paralyzed.  He had ignored it for his first attack, but now that he was so close to it, he could feel the blood within him boiling with rage. He feared a single move would destroy the very ground he stood on.

He wanted that to happen so very badly now.

"We only want to help, Tyradus."

"Don't release it, you could hurt the new friends!"

"Get away, far away!"

"They must pay," Kra hissed. 

"It was never us, only you!"

"The plants are yours to control, but you must be calm!"

"We only helped you bring them out, we can't stop it if you let it go now!"

"Then DIE!" 

Kra's scream echoed throughout the valley. There was a shaking as he raised his paw, and he could feel the life beneath the ground growing stronger. The voices of the spires filled his mind again, and their sadness drove his paw back down to the ground. 

The moment his paw hit, the earth exploded with vines, tendrils as thick as a man's arm. They reached up from the soil, and burst out from the stone walls. In a breath, they were upon the Destructors, and the screaming was horrific. Vines swung back and forth, slamming the cultists around like ragdolls. Slender growths wrapped around legs and arms, dragging them to the ground and then deeper, their horrified faces swallowed up by the soft earth. Limbs were torn from bodies, torsos ripped from legs, entrails spilling everywhere. Some were pierced through as though by spears, others had their heads squeezed off like a rodent under the grasp of a serpent.

Kra reveled in it. He had more power than anything else. Life was his to command, to give or to take. In this moment, he was a true dragon.

As suddenly as it began, it was all over. Any cultist that was not slaughtered by the vines had fled. The vines receded, and with them Kra's bloodlust. Cold silence met his ears, and he panicked. 

Where were his friends?

"Wardan?" he called weakly. "Grif? Rilea?" He turned back and forth, looking for a sign of them. Only corpses did he see. He glanced upward, to the ridge he left the goblin. "...Bink? Are you there?"

"Rock's Blood!" came the rambunctious cry from across the battlefield. Kra spun as fast as his thick body would allow, to see Grif lifting himself out of a pile of rubble. He had wounds all over, the most telling of them being the spearlike head of a vine sticking out of the dwarf's meaty arm. Despite his condition, the dwarf wore a contented grin on his face. "Gods, that was fun," he said, tearing the writhing vine out of his arm and tossing it away carelessly. 

Kra heard more commotion behind him, and turned again, hope in his heart. Wardan emerged from under his own little sanctuary, a wall he had salvaged from one of the exploded huts. Pushing it off of himself, he brushed off his jacket and shook his head, stumbling as though he could not keep his balance. Rilea rose up from behind the Destructor's barricades, seemingly unharmed but shaken. 

"Where's the goblin?" Grif shouted. "I owe him a drink. Maybe a couple more. Hell, we'll finish a cask together."

"Bink?" Wardan shouted. "It's safe now, where'd you go?"

There was no response save for the stillness of the spires and the swirl of the fog as it reclaimed the little canyon after the fire was blown out by the vines arrival.

Kra beat his wings powerfully, ascending to the top of the ridge once more. Each push of his powerful wings was punctuated by his panic and fear. He reached the ridge at the top of the rise and his blood ran cold as he realized Bink was no longer at the top. 

The dragon dove down behind the wall into the mist pooling at the base, and searched frantically around for a trace of the goblin. Maybe he had only been knocked clear of the action. Maybe he had the good sense to hide. Maybe, just maybe, the little goblin was safe.

Or maybe Kra had crushed his friend against the wall like a cherry bug under a boot. 

Kra slammed his head against the wall in useless rage. "Where are you, stupid goblin?" He roared, choking on his words. Tears began to trickle down his rocky face. What had he done?

"mmph."

Kra's eyes shot open, and his heart skipped a beat. Was that coming from under the stone? His eyes scanned the wall, finding a large crack that wasn't there earlier. The dragon tore at the stone with his claws, panicked and hopeful at the same time. He broke down the edges of the crack, beating his claws bloody in his frantic attempt to drive away the stone holding his friend. 

There was a surprised but muffled yelp from the crack, and Kra peered through the gap he had made. Sure enough, Bink was there, stuffed in like so much goblin putty. His mouth had been squeezed from both sides by the tight confines of his stony captors.

"Bink stuck," the goblin mumbled through his squished cheeks.

Kra reached in with his head, and snagged the goblin's coat with his teeth. He gently yanked Bink free of the wall's earthen grasp. 

"Are you alright?" Kra asked, voice cracking with emotion.

Bink took a deep breath and sighed. "Big wiggly vine came, snatch up Bink. Dragged me down, but no kill." He patted the dragon's nose gently. "You good, Kra, pulled Bink down to keep him safe." He leaned in close. "Next time, not so tight, yes?" he chuckled. The goblin sprawled back against the wall, taking big breaths and wiggling his toes and fingers.

Kra silently watched his friend, who trusted him so much. He laid himself down, burying his hands in his paws, weeping silently and uncontrollably. 

"Well this is quite the mess, wouldn't you say?" said a voice, one that Kra did not recognize. "At least they still breathe."

Kra opened his eyes, seeing a man clad in green with a wide brimmed hat leaning on a crooked staff, a smile on his lips. Behind him was a most amazing dragon of silver that seemed to glow in the mist.

"And that's all that matters," The dragon said, his voice deep and clear like a cold stream, as he locked eyes with Kra. "Isn't it, friend?"

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

The Best Sheep Ever

This might be the silliest story I've ever written. I had a lot of fun writing it (maybe too much fun, as this took me three damn months to finish. I hope you enjoy!

A plague of Gray Boils struck the land of Fenndwell, almost overnight. The people were struck ill, save for a lucky few. Lucky, that is, if you consider having to clean up everyone else's burst boil juices and vomit lucky. But the people were not the only ones affected by the outbreak. The herds of glimmersheep, the enchanted beasts that made Fenndwell famous, were stricken as well. The boils soiled their silvery fleece, ruining most of the magical wool.

Before falling ill, Lord Tambis IV sent out a plea for help to the governing country of Harkenal. The Harkers, a guild of adventurers and explorers, received their message but were disallowed to help by the Council of Seven. Gregory Klask, the Grandmaster of the Harkers, understanding all too well the dire situation facing the people of Fenndwell and unable to win over the hearts of the Council, sent word out to the only two people he knew could help without actually breaking his word to the Council.

They were mercenaries known on several dimensions, some of which they were legally allowed to return to. Not only were they both dangerous combatants in their own ways, they were expert investigators, famously having solved mysteries such as The Missing Emeralds of Talran, The Haunted Song of Bollanhall, and The Dread Panty-Snatcher of West-Iverland. To those who knew what to call them, they were known as ... Danger Beasts!

The first of the two was Branth. Once a man, he was now mostly wolf due to a terrible curse that was not as bad as it seemed. What was supposed to render him a savage, frothing beast only served to give him gray fur and a deep voice. Not to mention claws, which he often declined to use in favor of the ancestral sword he carried with him.

The second was Crimsalin, sorceress, genius, dragon. Definitively the brains behind Danger Beasts, she stumbled upon Branth's world when her experimental gate spell dropped her unceremoniously between him and his undead foes. A quick explaination and another spell later they were both drawn into yet another realm, unfamiliar to both.

Thus began their amazing adventures across planes, dimensions, and time. Soon, they were known for their exploits all across existence, and their foes would call them Beasts. They embraced that title, after intercepting a Nazi message that said only "Danger Beasts Are Coming" they began using it to refer to themselves.

Eventually they began to sell their services as mercenaries across the planes. Not many people knew their names, but those who did spoke of them as legend incarnate. The ones lucky enough to call upon them learned quickly that there seemed to be no problem they could not solve. Those unlucky enough to stand in their way discovered how well deserved their name was.

"So let me see if I understand you correctly," Crimsalin said to the nervous young man in front of her who spoke for the lord. "You want us to ... cure your people?"

"In a manner of speaking, ma'am," the man said.

"Cut to the heart of it, boy," Branth said, yellow eyes glaring. "You are aware we are no healers."

"Kinda the opposite, actually," Crimsalin said, flashing a sharp-toothed grin. Branth returned her knowing look with a smirk of his own. "So what does your lord think we can do for him?"

"He believes the plague is a curse, brought on by a witch." the young man said.

Branth's ears flattened and his eyes narrowed. "A witch?"

"Now, now," Crimsalin said, putting a hand on his shoulder. "Not all of 'em want your fur for a potion."

"She said aphrodisiac, thank you very much," said the wolf man, shivering. "I'll not have any of that, thank you."

"Rumor is she wants our glimmersheep, and if she can't have them, she won't let us keep them either."

"Those fancy colorful things out in the fields?" Branth said. "What does she want with those?"

"Their fur is magic, sir,"

Branth sighed. "Magic sheep. Still a better stock than Maine."

"I've not heard of that land, sir," the young man said.

Branth put a clawed hand on his shoulder, and gestured with the other to the horizon. "Picture your hills, but instead of sheep, it's potatoes. Potatoes as far as the eye can see."

"And a shoreline, stinking with oversized crayfish," Crimsalin added.

"That's horrible," the young man said. "How do their people live?"

"In cold and polite bitterness," Branth growled. "I've never seen a population so miserable."

"But we're not here to talk about backwater worlds and their unreasonable rules about vigilantism," Crimsalin said. "Where is this witch? We might as well pay her a visit, see what she has to say for herself."

"Her manor is to the east," the young man said. "You may want to start there. Now if you'll excuse me," he picked up a mop and a bucket, "the lord's vomit won't clean itself up."

"Good luck, kid," Crimsalin said, somewhat sympathetically.

"Come on, then," Branth said to his partner. "We were paid in advance, let's not waste any of Klask's time."

They found themselves at the manor in no time at all. It was a sturdy cottage atop a hill, dark and rustic but strangely alluring. All around the estate the hill was covered in a thick, overgrown garden, fenced in by a high cobblestone wall. A beautiful stone archway and wrought iron gate was the only discernible entrance.

"Could you just fly over that, right into the manor?" Branth said, gesturing to the wall.

Crimsalin smirked. "Right into a magical trap? No thanks. Rule number one when dealing with other magic users, remember?"

Branth nodded reluctantly. "Keep a low profile, I know."

"And rule number two?" Crimsalin prompted.

"Have a plan, of course." Branth said, approaching the gate. "What's the plan, then?"

"Glad you asked," Crimsalin said, taking out a pair of spectacles and placing them on her snout. She gestured to her new accoutrement, as if expecting Branth to respond to them.

"Is that a new perscription?" he asked. "Quite nice, I thought you needed new ones."

"These are enchanted, you goat-yodler. Witches are known for enchantments and illusions. This will let me see what's real and what's magical misdirection."

"...Witches are also known for transformative magics," Branth said. "What happens when she turns us into fish?"

Crimsalin scrunched up her face in thought. "Right, I knew I was forgetting something."

"We'll think of something," Branth said, pushing open the gate. "Maybe we'll surprise her."

They trudged through the garden, down a flagstone path that wove drunkenly through the collection of vibrant and aromatic buds and blossoms that filled the overgrown garden. Branth had to cover his nose for the walk, the combination of many strong aromas did not do his canine sense of smell any favors.

They came upon a hedge made entirely of an exotic flower, which Branth at first mistook for a white rose. As he grew closer, he noticed the edges of the petals turned orange in the middle, and red at the tips. Their scent was warm and dry, much like cinnamon.

... Did that flower just turn toward him?

Branth barely had time to leap back as a gout of searing flame consumed the air that once surrounded him.

"Flowers of Fire! Crim, stay back!" he shouted, warding her away. He pulled his shield from its place on his back and slid it onto his arm in one fluid motion.

"Branth ..." she started to say, but he held up his clawed hand.

"Patience, girl, let me concentrate." He strode forward again, holding the sturdy shield between him and the dangerous plants. They once again unleashed a torrent of immolating flames, but they were repelled by the magic in the shield. Dashing with inhuman speed, he was soon past the treacherous topiary. Some of the flames had singed the fur of his snout and feet.

"Crim, I'll throw you my shield, it'll keep you safe," Branth said. He removed the shield from his arm and was about to toss it to her when he noticed she was walking calmly through the fire as though nothing was wrong.

"I'm a red dragon, remember?" She said to his astonished gaze.

"Oh yes. Quite right." Branth replaced the shield on his back, frowning in embarrassment.

She pointed at his nose. "You got a little black there, buddy."

"I am aware, thank you." He brushed off his nose halfheartedly.

They continued unimpeded up the path, reaching the house. The stink of incense and rot permeated the air around the heavy wooden door. Branth nodded to Crimsalin, and she nodded back adjusting her spectacles. He pushed the door open, revealing a dark room. They stepped inside, and Crimsalin brought magical light to her hand. At once, the darkness was flushed away, revealing a dozen copies of the two mercenaries standing all around them. Branth snarled and pulled his sword and shield, watching as all the other Branths did the same.

Crimsalin held him back before he could charge into the fray. "Whoa there, furface. You wanna take another look before you leap?"

Branth slapped his forehead as he realized he had just drawn his sword on a room full of mirrors.

Crimsalin patted his shoulder. "Now, now, no need to beat yourself up over it."

Branth glared at her, growling in disapproval. "There's no need to be snide. I must be ready for anything."

"You certainly aren't ready for mirrors," she grinned. "C'mon, there's a gap here. I think it's some kind of maze."

The stepped between two mirrors, and sure enough found themselves in a tight hallway lined with dozens of mirrors. The path split in two, each way leading to its own collection of corridors and passages.

"Shall we split up?" Crimsalin asked

Branth arched an eyebrow. "What for? To break everything faster?"

"We'll find the exit faster that way, dog-noggin." She took the path to the left. "Shout out if you find the exit!" Branth sighed and started down the path to the right.

Never a fool, the experienced warrior knew a trick for navigating mazes. He kept his hand to the right wall, following it at all times. The maze seemed to be devoid of any traps or other threats, so the going was slow but easy.

Pretty soon, he found himself smelling the incense and rot of the front door. He had found his way back to the beginning of the maze. He frowned, realizing that he had picked the wrong side of the maze. He gazed down Crimsalin's chosen path thoughfully, stroking his chin. Should he follow her?

A moment later, the sorceress appeared from around the corner. Branth crinkled his snout in confusion. "Did you not find the exit?"

"You mean you didn't either?" Crimsalin said in disbelief. "Ioun's third eye, you gotta be kidding me!"

"This maze must be enchanted," Branth grumbled. "Didn't you see anything with those magical glasses?"

She paused, taking off the glasses and inspecting the frames before looking quite sheepish. "My bad, these are the new prescription."

Branth's groan sounded like a whine of frustration.

She rummaged through her belt pouch, pulling out a second, almost identical pair of spectacles. She replaced the old pair with the new and glanced around. "Which way you want to go now?"

"Your way first," the wolfman growled, "and if we find the exit, you owe me lunch for a month."

She scoffed. "Whatever. It won't be on my side, I still would have found it without the glasses. My senses are attuned to magic, I live in the aether every second of the day! I can sniff out an illusion easier than you can sniff out a cheese sandwich."

She stopped a moment later glancing to one side. She put her hand on a mirror, and it passed right through.

"That's the door, isn't it?" Branth said, smugness dripping from his tone.

"Shut up," Crimsalin grumbled.

"Looks like steak for a month for me, while it seems you've got a taste for your own words."

Her eyes narrowed and her nose scrunched up. "I hope you choke on it, flea-feast." She stomped through the mirror to the other side, shattering the illusion  as she passed through. On the other side was a short hallway leading to another old wooden door.

Branth shook his head as he chuckled to himself. As he did, he caught strange movement in the corner of his eye. One of the mirrors behind him cast the reflection of a young woman standing beside him, her sharp gaze sending a chill down the wolf's spine.

"Crim, there's ... " he turned to her but she didn't even turn to face him. He looked back to the odd reflection, but it only reflected his image once more. With furrowed brow and narrowed eyes, he followed the spiteful dragoness.

The room beyond the new door glowed with sweltering warmth. Bright green light poured into the room through big oil lamps hanging on the wall. A long table filled the center of the room, covered in alembics and retorts. down the center of the table sat a planter with various species of plant, ranging from tiny colorful flowers to masses of tangled vines.

"Some kind of lab?" Branth mused. "This would explain the monstrosities in the garden."

Crimsalin moved to the table and leaned in close to the planter. the plants stirred at her closeness, and some of them began to lean toward her. "Yep," she said, "Definitely magical. Probably the planter, that would be easiest to maintain." She turned back to Branth. "Shall we burn it?"

He scowled disdainfully. "If we were going to do that, we wouldn't have used the front door. We're mercenaries, not savages. We will give this witch a chance to explain herself, and if we don't like what she has to say, then we can burn and stab as we see fit."

"Always such a people person," Crimsalin sneered. "You did say you were an officer in that army."

"More of an Alliance, really," Branth said. "But never mind that, if this room is not dangerous, we move on to the next."

Crimsalin's tail swished as she eyed the tables, seemingly irritated. "Nope," she said suddenly, leaning forward and unleashing a wave of fire from her maw. The flames licked at the table and apparatus.

"Blood of the Ancients, woman!" Branth cursed as he leapt away from the tables. "What's possessed you?"

"Her fireflowers singed your lovely fur," she said simply. "I don't want her to make any more, and now she can't, regardless of whether or not she lives."

"Such carelessness," he growled. "If you're so concerned with my fur, why breath flame so close to me?"

Crimsalin's grin was wicked. "When I do it, it's funny."

Branth shook his head. "A real menace. I'm only lucky you like me."

Suddnely, the flames fizzled out, revealing that the tables and plants were untouched by Crimsalin's wrath. Branth arched an eyebrow at the dragoness, who stared in disbelief at the table.

"Tell me, dear," Branth said. "If you were working on magical plants that made fire, what's the first thing you would do to your other plants and your workspace?"

Crimsalin sighed, her hand rubbing the space between her eyes. "Shut up. Why didn't you finish mage school, anyway?"

Branth was about to answer when a bright flash and puff of smoke filled the room, following the pop and rush of magical energy. When the smoke cleared, a tall, gnarled wooden figure stood before them. It made a low grumble, like the creaking of an ancient tree, as it swung its heavy clublike arm into Branth's chest, winding the warrior and pushing him back. The stubborn wolf remained on his feet, but dazed.

Crimsalin tossed a ball of flame at the creature, which puffed against its bark harmlessly. She growled in disgust as the wood monster's fist clocked her in the jaw. Reeling, she tried to line up another spell, but the magical bolt whizzed past the wood man's form.

It was about to strike her again, when it suddenly stopped, its face looking somehow surprised. It and she looked down, seemingly at nothing at first, but then Crimsalin noticed its top half slowly sliding forward off its bottom. It fell to the ground in two gangly heaps.

Branth stood on the other side of the creature, his sword gleaming in the green light of the room.

The warrior wolf bowed his head toward her. "My apologies. I shouldn't have let it hit you."

"Damn right, you shouldn't have," Crimsalin grinned, stumbling back into the table for support. "Do you think you could stop the world from spinning as well?"

"It will pass," Branth reassured her. "Shall we move on?"

Crimsalin nodded, but glanced over the table once more. She spotted a glass case, filled with samples. One of them she recognized, a clump of wool that shimmered in the light with a myriad of colors.

"Come on then, here's the door," Branth called to her.

"Yeah, coming ..." she muttered. Shaking her head to clear the last of her dizziness away, she caught up the Branth by the next door. He nodded to confirm he was ready. She nodded back, and together they kicked in the door.

On the other side of the door, a young woman with blonde hair in an elegant blue robe and steepled hat sat at a crystal ball.

"Made it, did you?" She said snidely.

"Silence, witch!" Branth snarled, his sword leveled at her. "We know about your wicked plans." He narrowed his eyes as he recognized her. "So it was you I saw in the mirror."

The witch nodded, gesturing to the crystal ball. "You weren't quiet or anything. I had plenty of time to do that."

"Never mind that," Crimsalin said. "I know your tricks, dearie. You've plagued their sheep, haven't you? I saw the sample in your lab, and I can guess what you've been doing."

"Enlighten me," the witch said, raising an eyebrow.

Crimsalin straightened up, smugly. "You're channeling your cursed plague through the sheep's magical fleece."

"Wrong," the witch said. "My 'wicked' plans involve creating the most lovely plants with which to win the Fenndwell Festival's Fairest Flora competition, magical plants division."

Crimsalin scoffed."You expect me to believe that your interests go no further than flower arrangements? Why else would you need a clump of the glimmerwool for working with herbs?"

The witch chuckled. "Maybe because I created those sheep? I work with more than just plants."

"We're supposed to believe you made those foolish things?" Branth said. "Why would a witch make magical sheep?"

"I was paid quite nicely to do so." The witch said. "My father thought they would do Fenndwell some good for tourism, but it turns out they're quite useful for practitioners of magic and make lovely clothes to boot."

"Your father?" Branth asked.

"Yes, Lord Tambis. I'm his daughter, Mezzia Tambis." She cocked her head. "Furthermore, this is the first I've heard of a plague."

"But we were told you were the cause!" Branth insisted. "And if you are the Lord's daughter, why do you live so far from the town?"

"Because my fellow Fenndwellians are a dopey lot, and I don't want them trampling my garden by accident. Especially when my plants might hurt them." She gestured to Branth's nose. "Had a run in with my fireflowers?"

"But... but your ..." Crimsalin looked defeated. "You really didn't even know about the plague? Then we just barged in and ... I almost ruined an innocent witch's lab?"

"And you broke down my door," Mezzia said pointing behind them. "I hope you can fix it, if you can't pay for it."

Branth grumbled, sheathing his sword. "If you truly aren't responsible for the misdeeds at Fenndwell, we have run out of leads on this case."

"Nevermind your case, what about this plague?" Mezzia asked. "I find it hard to believe it's affecting the sheep. My babies should be immune to disease."

"They call it the plague of gray boils. It makes the afflicted break out in puss filled boils and causes plenty of other fluids, from the sounds of things," Crimsalin told her. "Sounds like a standard magical plague, if you ask me."

Mezzia stroked her chin. "Sounds more like an alchemical affliction. Lots of fluids and such. Magical diseases have fewer ... mundane symptoms."

"Right, right," Crimsalin said, shaking her head. "I always get those confused."

"Did you do no research before you came to accuse me?" Mezzia chided. "There's an incredible difference between a witches' potion-making and true alchemy. I couldn't have pulled this off if I wanted to. Who are you two anyway?"

"Well, right now I'm feeling like we're the worst heroes," Crimsalin said.

"We are the Danger Beasts, multiplanar mercenaries," Branth said. "My name is Branth, and my colleague here is Crimsalin. We were asked by Grandmaster Klask to aid Fenndwell in stopping this plague."

Mezzia's eyes lit up. "Oh, Klask is the one who convinced me to get my witching degree! I love that old buzzard!"

Branth and Crimsalin shared a look. "Then, perhaps you'd like to help us?" Branth suggested. "Lord Tambis is among the afflicted if that means anything to you."

Mezzia smiled politely. "More worried about the sheep, to be honest."

"Is your father a cruel man?" Branth asked sincerely.

"No, no, he's sweet as a box of kittens," Mezzia said. "He's just an idiot. I can't stand idiots."

Crimsalin teleported the three of them back out to the hills of Fenndwell, right near a flock of the sheep. Mezzia walked out to one of the sheep, which ambled right up to her as though the witch was her mother. She inspected the glittering animal, paying close attention to the dark blotches on its fur.

"How bad is it?" Crimsalin asked. "We didn't have a chance to take a closer look at the sheep before we left."

Mezzia frowned. "It's jam."

Crimsalin tilted her head. "What do you mean, 'jam'? I could scrape a piece of toast on the side of the sheep and have a lovely snack?"

Branth dipped his claw in one of the boils, and sniffed it. His ears perked up and he licked his finger. "Blackberry! I love blackberry!"

"So, the sheep aren't sick, just made to look ill?" Crimsalin said.

"You seriously just blundered in to this job, didn't you?" Mezzia sighed.

"Now look here, little miss criticism," Crimsalin growled, "We had no reason to suspect what we were told might have been untrue. Do you think you could do this better than us?"

"I don't know, is that a job offer?" Mezzia grinned slyly.

"What?" Crimsalin blinked.

Mezzia shrugged. "Just a thought. It seems like you need an inquisitive mind, one who can ask the right questions and do all the research."

Crimsalin shared a glance with Branth, and turned back to the witch. "We'll consider your application."

"That didn't sound like a no," Mezzia said smugly. "So are you satisfied that my sheep are not the cause?"

"Clearly, but whoever did this took great pains to convince us otherwise," Branth said, licking the rest of the jam off his claws. "Who would want to frame you?"

"I don't know, but who could resist blaming a plague on a witch?"

"Wait," Crimsalin said, her fingers on her temple. "You said that you were going to enter some kind of festival contest with your magical plants. Does that mean that the other townsfolk know about your abilities?"

"I'm the lord's eldest daughter, top of my class, and the most learned person in town," Mezzia said flatly, "I don't know if there was a way I could be more popular."

"But didn't the lord's aide insinuate her in the spread of the plague?" Branth asked Crimsalin. "Why would he do that, if everyone knows who she is?"

"He was the only one we talked to ..." Crimsalin said, slowly realizing.

"What aide are you talking about?" Mezzia asked. "Was it an old man?"

"No, a young man, perhaps mid twenties," Branth said.

Mezzia's eyes narrowed. "That's not father's servant. Harvian would never try to incriminate me."

Branth's yellow eyes flared angrily. "We've been had! Lied to this whole time!"

Crimsalin turned her gaze toward the town, then back to Mezzia, her face a deliciously sinister grimace. "Mezzia, dear, would you like to punish the fool who would dare besmirch your name?"

Mezzia's wicked grin practically mirrored the dragoness'.

Minutes later, they were at the lord's mansion in town. The opulent building neatly dwarfed the rest of the ones in town, but was still quite plain as far as mansions went. The door broke neatly open under Branth's mighty foot. The stunned guards' protests were silenced as the lord's daughter entered behind the wolf man, followed by Crimsalin, her smug glare daring them to try their luck.

Branth hoisted one of the guards up by his leather armor. "I demand to know where the lord's aide has gone."

"Kurtz? The new kid?" The guard squealed. "He's up on the top floor -- third floor! -- tending to Lord Tambis!"

"We'd best hurry," Crimsalin said to Mezzia.

"Sorry, boys, I'll see you compensated for the trouble," Mezzia said to the guards as they hurried up the stairs.

They flew up the stairs to the third floor, and Branth crashed through the door Mezzia pointed to. Within, the young man they met earlier stood over the lord in his bed. There were tubes protruding from the sickened ruler, apparently syphoning his blood into a series of alchemical beakers and distillers. The young man cast them a dour gaze, perturbed at the disturbance.

"You've seen through my little disguise, I see," he said drolly. "Not that there's anything you can do about it now."

"What the Ever Loving Fruck are you doing here?" Crimsalin blurted out.

"He's using my father as a vessel for his plague," Mezzia scowled, "incubating it in his body and removing it from his blood to purify it."

"And putting it in the same water I brew the tea in!" the young man shouted, cackling. "And all of these stupid townsfolk think that tea will make them healthier, it's so perfect!"

"Dastardly scoundrel!" Branth snarled.

"Whoa, language!" Crimsalin scolded.

"What are you hoping to accomplish?" Branth growled, ignoring his partner's tease. "Ransom? Infamy? A wealth of glittering sheep?"

"With the plague? Nothing," the young man said, spreading his hands. "Once I stop administering it, it will fade away over a couple of days, leaving no trace."

"Then what was the point?" Branth roared.

The man raised his hand again, this time, a pistol was held in it. "You were, Danger Beasts. This was all to draw you here."

"Wait, seriously?" Crimsalin said. "This was an attempt to get our attention? But we almost didn't take the job. We literally decided if we would with Rock Paper Scissors."

"And yet you're here, like the do-gooder fools I took you for!" the man shouted.

"But why do you want us?" Branth asked from behind his shield. "What did we ever do to you?"

"I forgot to introduce myself. My name is Lieutenant Hansi Kurtz!"

"Hansi ... ?" Branth said absently. "That sounds familiar."

"Branth..." Crimsalin said warily. "Look at his pistol, it's a luger!"

"Wait, I know you now!" Branth said, recognition dawning on him. "You were in that Nazi occult lab we trashed a while back!"

"The fuehrer sends his regards," Hansi said coldly. "You have a lot to answer for, Danger Beasts. We were one step away from achieving immortality, and you ruined everything!"

"So it's just revenge?" Crimsalin said, unimpressed. "You crossed dimensions and planes beyond all of Earth's knowledge, and all you do is try to punish a couple of punks that busted your amateur magic lab?"

"It's more than that," Hansi snapped. "We can finish the ritual. All I need to do is bring you back, and the fuerer might still live forever!"

"Won't happen." Crimsalin scoffed. "You're basic, bitch. We're too pro for you."

"These anti-magic silver bullets say otherwise," the Nazi snickered leveling the pistol toward her. "I don't need you alive."

Branth was in front of her before the trigger was pulled. There was a click and the two braced for the explosion of sound and burning pain of a bullet.

Nothing happened.

"Do you know what kind of place Fenndwell was before I created the glimmersheep?" Mezzia said, holding a piece of glimmerwool in her hand. "It was a dry land, always in danger of flash fires. My sheep ward and dampen flames nearby. That's some kind of blunderbuss, if I'm not mistaken, and black powder needs fire to work." She smiled slyly. "I suppose I've pulled the wool over your eyes."

"Damn fine sheep," Branth said, lowering his shield and striding forward to Hansi. The nazi tossed his gun away, sweeping up a vial from the table beside the lord. "This is the purest form of the plague, undiluted!" he shouted. "If a drop of this touches you, it would kill you instantly."

Branth sighed, rolling his eyes. Without hesitation he snatched the vial from the startled fascist, and swallowed it in a single gulp. He then glared at the Nazi, crushing the vial in his paw.

"You... You should be dead!"

"I'm a werewolf, you ponce," Branth said. "Immune to diseases of the flesh, magical or mundane. And you call yourself an occultist." The werewolf knight backhanded the man with his shield, knocking him to the floor where he lay unconscious.

"That was exciting," Mezzia said, walking over to her father to inspect his condition. "You do things like that all the time?"

"More or less," Crimsalin said. "Though we typically don't deal with nazis anymore. Churchill won't pay his tab."

Branth hoisted Hansi over his shoulder effortlessly. "We'll ask him about it again when we drop this idiot off. Would you like to visit England, Mezzia? They have smashing tea."

"I'd say Japan has better," Crimsalin said. "Oh! We should go there next, the cherry blossoms will be falling next week!"

Branth shrugged. "Sounds like a holiday to me, perfect to celebrate our new hire" he glanced knowingly at the witch, who grinned back. "If you still want the job, that is."

"I warn you, my consultation rates can be steep."

"For protection from dragonfire? I'll suffer the cost," Branth chuckled.

Monday, August 11, 2014

Loss of the Sky

I got a prompt on Tumblr from ldragon72, who also runs Dragon Dungeon and its library. This is the result. I hope you enjoy!

*********

As a child, Kolthan believed that clouds held up the sky.

Now, he could only pray that the thunderhead he was tumbling through would somehow slow the fall of his burning, battered body.

"What happened?" he wondered, only vaguely conscious of his situation. He remembered oncoming enemies. Darting, weaving through their ranks, scattering them with freezing breath and slicing claws. A brief glance to his rider, Lueran, to see if the elf was safe.

Then, there was fire, and pain. Such gruesome, twisted agony unlike anything the silver dragon had felt in his considerable life consumed his consciousness until there was only a starless void in his eyes.

That void once again filled up with the world, and slowly he began to realize his plight.

Why was he still falling at this speed? His wings should have slowed him, and even now he was pumping them as hard as he could ...

Below him, the fires of the battlefield spread out to the horizon, the most brutal, bloody conflict Arkyneth had ever seen. Dragons fought alongside many races, not always on the same sides. His kin sided with the elves and men they had grown up with, some with the dwarves, others still with orcs and goblins. All for the light of one star.

The scorched earth was speeding by below him. His momentum was carrying him so far, further than he would have thought. He fought furiously for altitude, but nothing he did helped. A battalion of white and gold, the colors of his legion, halted in their march as he passed over their heads. They pointed and called out, though their words were lost to the rush of air as he plummeted to the ground.

*******

"Why?"

Those were the first words to pass Kolthan's lips when his eyes slowly opened again. His head thundered at the amount of light in his surroundings. All of him ached. He wondered how he could still be alive, the fall that should have killed him made him wish that it did.

He scanned his environment from his prone position, too enveloped by pain to even lift his neck. The alabaster walls and low hum told him enough, he was in a healing chamber of an elven Vox Temple. There was only one temple large enough for a dragon close enough to the battlefield, The Astral Song. More of a monastery than a temple, but its services were likely commandeered by the army.

He tried to move, ever so slightly. He could feel piles of velvety pillows shift underneath him, and a soft cloth binding his forelegs to the floor. He attempted to stretch, but something was missing. Slowly, he picked his head up from the floor, and turned to face behind.

The tip of his tail came into view first, and he was able to twitch it without much strain. His hind legs were splayed out to either side, but remained solid. But nothing could have prepared him for what he saw when he reached his back.

His wings, the pride of his life, and the swiftest in the battalion, were nothing more than stubs on his back.

He tried to roar, to cry out a lament as any dragon would. But his voice caught, and it came out a sob. Even as a child, Kolthan had never cried. His mother said he was strong, his father was so proud of him. Now hot and terrible tears poured down his long face, as he wept alone in his chamber.

Sometime after his tears were spent, the door opened behind him. He lay perfectly still, even as someone walked into the room. An elven man, aged and wrinkled, wearing the robes of a priest walked out in front of him, standing before him with a calm expression.

"You are Kolthan of Whitespire, correct?"

Kolthan only blinked.

"Your regiment sends its regards. Are you aware of what happened to you?"

Kolthan lazily averted his gaze from the elf's. He did not want to talk about this.

"An enemy catapult shot laden with black powder hit you mid flight, I am told. The battalion of the Crystal Lotus marked your descent and sent a squad to investigate. They recovered your body and sent word to us, and you were brought here with the help of the wizard Janus."

The elf paused. "I am Delinath, High Chord of the Voice. I oversaw your recovery personally. The King himself wished to speak with you if that is acceptable."

"It is not," Kolthan rumbled weakly.

Delinath cocked his head in curiosity. "He only wishes to pay his respects. You have sacrificed much to ..."

"I will not let Ser Rauvin see me in this state."

The old elf's eyes softened at the dragon's words. Kolthan wished to leap from his bed and tear the elf's eyes out, so sickened he was by the priest's pity.

"Your wings ..."

"Not a word more," Kolthan said with as much energy as he could muster.

"They could not be saved. Nothing remained to save."

"I've heard druidic magic can regenerate limbs," Kolthan spat, "did you try that?"

"Every effort at our disposal was expended in your recovery, Kolthan." Delinath placed a hand on the silver dragon's snout, looking him directly in the eyes once more. "Please believe that."

"My comrades are waiting for my return, how can I let them down?"

Delinath shook his head. "Your fighting days are done, my friend. That attack crippled more than just your flight. Your strength will never return in full, and your time with the military is over. Your commander was here not an hour ago with notice of your discharge."

Tears returned to Kolthan's eyes. "What of my rider?"

The pity in Delinath's eyes returned tenfold, and Kothan's stomach churned. "I am sorry."

It was as though he had not spent all his tears moments ago. "Then why? Why did you let me live? What do I have left?"

"That is for you to decide," Delinath said softly. "For now, the Voice has spoken, and its word is that you shall live. You are welcome here at the temple, for as long as you need."

Kolthan continued to weep, and Delinath left the room again. His eyes burned with salted sorrow, even as sleep fell over him once more and the question came to him.

"Why?"

*****

Kolthan stared up into the sky, watching the clouds drift by. He had walked on clouds with his father and brother long ago, as naturally as he would over a field of grass, as though he belonged in the sky, with the birds, and the mountaintops. If he closed his eyes, he could feel the cold dampness of the cloud underneath his paws, and see the sun from atop the storm clouds.

His eyes opened again, and the grass beneath his feet tickled his paws. The banter of priests could be heard all about him as he lay in the courtyard of the Astral Song. He had been out here for many hours.

He remained there after nine weeks. He had only been able to walk on his own for three of those weeks.

Delinath strode up to him, a loaf of bread in his hands. He offered it up to the dragon, a friendly smile on his face. The old priest spent as much time as his duties would allow with Kolthan.

"I can procure you more, if you like it," the elf offered.

Kolthan took the bread in his mouth gently, nipping at it absently. "It will be enough."

"I have heard of the strange appetites of silver dragons before, but never did I believe that even a young one like yourself would need to eat so little."

Kolthan took another tiny bite out of the bread. It was honeyed and soft, quite satisfying to his palate.

"You have been gracious to your guests, I have been told," Delinath continued, sitting next to the dragon with crossed legs. "I did not expect to hear of that."

Kolthan shrugged. Many other casualties like him had come and gone since he had awoken, either returning to the battlefield or leaving for their home. They spoke to him, offering news of the war, their own struggles and scars, and the plight of the Dragonstar. They were kind to him, and all regarded him with the same pity in their eyes.

He hated that pity, but never enough to turn them away. They all meant well.

"There is one I wanted to introduce to you myself, if that is reasonable to you," Delinath said.

"You should not waste their time," the dragon rumbled. "I have nothing to offer."

"On the contrary, on learning there was a dragon at the Astral Song, this patient was quite eager to meet them."

Kolthan sighed. Those who worshiped dragons seemed strange to him, he never understood what other races saw in his kind that drew them to dragons. They were not so different, after all, and certainly not all that special. They were simply large lizards when all was said and done. And he was definitely not anything to be worshiped.

Still, if that was all they wanted, he could give them that. "I will see them, if that's all they want."

Delinath grinned. "After you've finished eating. Trust me, you will not disappoint them."

After his meal was done, Delinath lead the dragon back into the temple. He was lead past the recovery rooms to a part of the temple Kolthan had not been to. It was smaller, but still open enough for him to enter. The room beyond was filled with beds, too small for soldiers, every one filled with sleeping bodies.

"This is our children's ward," Delinath explained to the dragon's curious gaze. "The war sees many die, not all of whom were fighting in it. We find it is best to keep the children together, to let them see one another as they heal."

Kolthan looked about the room, to the tiny, delicate faces resting on pillows. He dared not even move or breathe loudly, lest his presence stir just one sleeping creature.

"Come, your guest awaits further in," Delinath told him. "His condition is somewhat contagious, and keeps him solitary, unlike the other little guests. Do not worry, you and I are in no danger of contracting his illness."

Kolthan crept ever so gently across the room, to a pair of double doors that lead to a small, warm chamber with a simple bed. Toys were scattered about the floor, as well as several books. Upon the bed sat a young boy, perhaps no more than eight years old. His pale skin was marked by nasty red pock marks, almost matching his strikingly ginger hair. He seemed to be absorbed by the book in his hands.

"Ardence, you have a guest," Delinath said, getting the boy's attention. The boy looked up, and when he saw his new guest, his green eyes became wide as a smile spread out from his lips that brought a new weakness to Kolthan's heart.

"A dragon!" he said, the awe in his voice filling Kolthan to bursting. "I never thought I'd ever meet a dragon in my life!"

"His name is Kolthan, formerly an aeroknight with the Crystal Lotus," Delinath said.

The boy sat up, turning to the edge of his bed. Kolthan bit back a gasp, and fighting to remain composed. The boy was missing his right leg.

"It's a pleasure to make your acquaintance, Kolthan," Ardance said, his hand reaching to his shoulder in a short bow. "My name is Ardence Westing."

"The ... the pleasure is all mine, Ardence," Kolthan managed to say.

Delinath nodded him over to the boy, and the dragon stepped gently into the room. Ardence's gaze followed him the entire time, as though he was in the presence of divine power. The old priest stepped out of the room once the dragon had sat down next to the boy's bed.

For a time Ardence simply stared at the dragon, and he reached out tentatively to touch Kolthan's scales. Kolthan leaned his chest forward to the boy's hand. Ardence beamed as his hand met silvery scales. "So smooth, just like a mirror!"

"And strong," Kolthan said. "My scales have turned aside spears, axes, swords, and even shadebeast claws."

"Wow," the boy gasped. "So you fought in the war? What happened to you?"

"I ... lost my wings," Kolthan said. "I fell from the sky with a dear friend. He no longer lives."

"I'm sorry," the boy said, looking down to his own missing appendage. "I lost my leg to a spear wound when my village was attacked. I'm getting a wooden leg when my Itching Pox goes away."

Kolthan regarded him curiously. The boy so matter of factly accepted his loss with a stoicism that shamed the dragon.

"My papa is fighting in the war too. He's just a human though, nothing special like you. But I'm still proud of him for fighting."

"I am not so special," Kolthan said, his voice trembling.

"What do you think is special, then?" Ardence asked.

"You," the dragon said, his tears kept back only by a thread of his remaining will. "You are not as big or strong as a dragon, no claws, no fangs, no wings, but still you and those like you fight for all you hold dear. You, just a little boy, lived through something that many soldiers die from. That's far more 'special' than just being a dragon."

"You really think so?"

"I certainly do." Kolthan placed a paw on the boy's head.

"I still think you are amazing," the boy said, stroking the dragon's chest once more.

"Only because you believe it," Kolthan said, his tears falling past his smile.

********

Wanna read more?

Click here for the last story chapter I did, Dragonstorm ch. 1, New Job!

Click here for the first chapter of my longest story, The Living Stone!

Click here to find me on tumblr, where I sometimes post writing journals, and other times post pictures of dragons and stuff!