Dragon Speaker

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Dragon Speaker Page 16

by Mugdan Elana A.


  “This way.” Keriya strode down the Noryk-bound tunnel, her footsteps echoing in the vast emptiness.

  The tunnel branched into smaller tributaries, and each time they reached a fork in the road, their path became narrower and darker. She found a piece of rubble coated with bioluminescent fungus and used it as a makeshift lantern. Whenever the tunnel forked, she inspected the directions carved into the walls. She had to hand it to the dwarves—they were excellent artists. Even the smallest renderings of Noryk were recognizable in the dim light of her fungus-rock.

  Her anxiety faded. Somehow, against all odds, she was finding her way. She’d summoned the dragon. She would reunite with her friends in Noryk. From there, it was only a matter of time before they defeated Necrovar.

  “Actions fit for the great hero I have become,” she murmured, recalling the words from the book she’d found in Shivnath’s lair. Something welled against her heart and bubbled out of her, and she laughed aloud.

  “What are you doing?”

  She turned to find Thorion watching her. “I was laughing.”

  “Why?”

  “I don’t know. Because I feel like I’m on the right path.”

  Thorion tilted his head, his eyes roving across her face. She thought she saw something flicker deep within them.

  “Can you do it again?”

  “It doesn’t work like that,” she said gently. “Hopefully it will come again soon enough.”

  But it didn’t, for her happiness evaporated shortly thereafter. Without the sun, it was hard to tell how much time had passed. They walked for what felt like hours. Keriya stopped when she found a small alcove where they could spend the night.

  Her stomach grumbled as she lay on the cold floor. She longed for a hot meal and found herself missing Effrax and his ability to make fires.

  “Do you have any provisions?” asked Thorion, reacting and responding to her thoughts in much the same way Shivnath had. Keriya shook her head. “I require sustenance.”

  She wished she’d considered the issue of food before agreeing to travel through the tunnels. “I don’t suppose there’s anything around here we could eat?”

  “I could eat you,” he replied matter-of-factly.

  Keriya looked at him sharply. “Why would you say that?”

  “Because you are large and warm-blooded, so you would provide me with a satisfactory amount of nourishment; and because you are slow and weak, without the ability to defend yourself or do me harm if I were to attack you.”

  “No, I mean, why would you think it’s okay to say that?” She was appalled that the idea would occur to him.

  “It makes sense.”

  “It’s . . .” Keriya worked her jaw, casting around for an appropriate word. “It’s rude to eat people you’re friends with.”

  Thorion’s ears quivered as he tilted his head. Likely the concepts of rudeness and friends were lost on him.

  “Accepted,” he said unexpectedly. “Your usefulness alive currently outweighs your usefulness as a food source, so I won’t eat you. I will forage.”

  With a flick of his tail, Thorion bounded into the darkness. Keriya scooted under a stone bench and curled into a defensive ball. Not that hiding under a bench would help if the dragon were to change his mind about turning her into his dinner.

  Thorion returned with his stomach sagging. Presumably he had gorged on something she would rather not know about. A dead rat was dangling from his jaws.

  “For you,” he said, dropping the rat in front of her.

  “Oh! How . . . how nice.” Keriya offered Thorion a tentative smile. After a moment he smiled back, his scaly lips twitching at their corners. It was the only identifiable expression she had thus-far seen him make.

  “Why’d you bring it?” she asked, figuring that his lack of emotions meant he couldn’t be thoughtful, generous, or kind.

  “Wise not to allow the guide who may help free my family from the Etherworld to starve to death,” he said, settling down next to her and resting his head on her ankles.

  Regardless of this wisdom, Keriya did not eat the rat.

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  “The distance between bravery and stupidity is measured by one’s motives.”

  ~ Aldelphia Alderwood, Eleventh Age

  After an uncomfortable rest, Keriya and Thorion continued toward Noryk, following the dwarves’ picture directions. She wondered where the dwarves were—why was this place abandoned? She’d only ever read about dwarves in her old books, but if she were a dwarf, she would think this was a fine place to live. It was gloomy, but the architecture was beautiful.

  Keriya called a halt to their journey when they reached a large hall dotted with totem poles. She was tired, hungry, cold, and she couldn’t wander the tunnels anymore.

  Thorion brought her another rat. She hid it—though he wasn’t capable of being offended if she didn’t eat his gift—and fell asleep almost as soon as she lay down.

  With no sun to wake her, she might have slept for days. Fatigue had seeped into her body, running bone-deep. She’d been away from the light too long, and she was in desperate need of food and fresh air.

  “Keriya.”

  Keriya cracked her eyes open. Thorion stood over her, a little too close for comfort.

  “Yes?”

  “There is a water slug nearby. It is probable it will smell us and attack, so I will attempt to kill it preemptively. In the meantime, find somewhere safe to hide.” His bronze scales flashed as he snaked his lithe body around and vanished into the darkness.

  “Mm-kay,” she mumbled to the floor before lapsing into a light slumber.

 

  “What?” she groaned, rolling over and blinking blearily.

 

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