by JA Andrews
Ayda paused. Douglon made a strangled noise.
Alaric’s heart was in his throat, waiting for the jaws to open and Ayda to disappear.
She dropped her hand back down, and the dragon’s nose inched forward. Its head lashed forward, and it snapped its teeth. Ayda jerked back, crying out and grabbing her arm. Blood seeped through her fingers.
“A little help?” Ayda said, bracing herself as the dragon’s snout drew closer again.
“What am I supposed to do?” Alaric hissed at her.
The dragon growled again, vibrating the ground. The breath from its nostrils swirled Ayda’s hair. The dragon’s eyes lit for a moment, watching the golden sparkles from her hair.
Distract it. Right. Dragons liked sparkly things.
Alaric pulled some energy in from the trees near him again and, ignoring the fact that his hands were still throbbing, began to pour energy into the air behind Ayda’s feet. The air warmed and rose, lifting strands of her hair with it. More and more locks lifted and swirled around her head. In the middle of the moonlit grass, she looked like she was surrounded by sparks.
The dragon’s eyes glazed slightly.
Alaric crept forward, feeding energy slowly into the air and gathering more at the same time until he thought he would burst with the pressure of it. When he was right next to the dragon’s neck, he stopped feeding the air near Ayda and braced himself.
This was going to hurt.
The dragon blinked as Ayda’s hair stilled. Alaric pushed both hands onto the dragon’s scales at the base of its neck.
The dragon twisted and lashed out at Alaric, his claw tearing through Alaric’s shoulder. Pain ripped across Alaric’s arm. He dove to the side while Ayda yelled, drawing the dragon’s attention back to her. Alaric scrambled back close to it and slammed his palms against the dragon’s neck.
“Paxa!” Energy surged out through his palms, searing his skin as it poured into the dragon.
The dragon’s entire body relaxed.
Alaric dropped to his knees and fell forward. Blisters formed on his palms, and his arms ached too much to move. Blood was running down his left arm from his shoulder. His head swam, and it took him a moment to realize he was leaning on the dragon’s neck.
He used his elbows to push himself off the monster. Brandson, Milly, and Douglon were staring at him in amazement.
Ayda let out a whoosh of air. “That’s better,” she said, her voice quavering slightly. She reached out to touch the dragon’s snout, but wrinkled her nose when she saw the blood on her hand. She wiped it off on her dress, leaving a dark stain, then set her hand on the dragon’s nose.
Its eyes softened, and it made a sound less like a growl than a purr.
“Yes, I like you, too,” she said kindly. “But it’s time you were going. I’m afraid that we can’t all share this valley and since we have some business here…”
Brandson cleared his throat.
“Oh, right,” Ayda said. “We would appreciate it if you would leave the next valley alone also. It is our home, of sorts.” With a final pat of the dragon’s nose, she turned away.
The dragon blinked at her.
“By the way, what is your name?” she asked, turning back to it. She paused, her head cocked. “Anguine? Well it was lovely to meet you, Anguine. You are a very fierce dragon. I did think the old man you ate would have caused you a bit more trouble,” she said with a crinkled brow. “I guess he wasn’t too calm under pressure.” The dragon shifted, and Ayda fixed it with a piercing gaze. “I see,” she said. “Well, off with you.”
Turning her back to the dragon, she walked back to the others. The dragon shook its head once. The clawed foot near Alaric flexed, and he scrambled back away from it. With one final confused look at the departing elf, it vaulted itself into the sky and disappeared northward toward the mountains.
Chapter 15
Alaric sank back against the nearest tree trunk and watched the red glint of the dragon disappear over the mountains. At least it had flown west toward the Roven Sweep and not south into the heart of Queensland. Although the nomads on the Sweep were going to have a tough time dealing with it.
The gash in his shoulder burned, and his arms hung down on his lap, aching. He gingerly turned over his palms and saw a circle of blisters on each, shiny and taut in the moonlight. He rested his head back on the tree trunk and closed his eyes.
His mind churned up questions he was too exhausted to consider. A dragon? Here? Where had it come from? Paxa had worked on it—had anyone ever tried that before? Had a Keeper ever touched a dragon before? And survived? He’d have to send the Shield a letter. Alaric closed his fingers slightly, but the blisters shot searing pains across his palms. Writing a letter might have to wait.
“Ayda?” Milly’s voice sounded far away and weak. “Is it gone?”
Alaric heard someone rekindle the fire and realized he was shivering. Part of the pain in his fingers, he realized, was because they were ice cold. The active part of his brain pointed out that was to be expected after pushing so much energy out of them. The exhausted part told it to shut up. He heaved himself forward and using his elbows, managed to get to his knees. The fire flickered through the trees, an impossible distance away.
Then Brandson was there, tugging Alaric to his feet and half leading, half dragging him to the fire. Alaric sank down close to it.
Milly stepped over to him and, with a wary look, handed him a piece of bread. He smiled gratefully at her. The smile she gave back was strained. He tore off a piece of bread that seemed to weigh as much as a boulder. One bite at a time, he ate, waiting for his strength to return.
Alaric could feel blood dripping down his arm. In his pack was tucked a salve that would help. It would help with the burns, too. He eyed his bag all the way across the campsite, another impossible distance.
Ayda would need some, too. He glanced at her, but her arm looked clean and whole. Her dress was spotless and white.
“That was amazing,” Milly said in a hushed voice, glancing from Ayda to Alaric.
Ayda beamed at her. “Thank you. It’s been some time since I’ve seen a dragon, but they are all the same. Always attacking with fire and teeth.”
“They really should attack with something dangerous,” Douglon said.
Ayda laughed a silvery laugh. “Exactly. And I am sorry about the whole tied to the ground thing,” she said, motioning to the tree that Douglon had been stuck under. “But I’m afraid you would have been less handsome if that dragon had singed off your beard.”
Douglon muttered something and stroked his beard, running his hand over the flowers Ayda had stuck in earlier. He brushed them out in disgust. “I guess we owe you our lives,” he said grudgingly.
“You’re welcome,” she beamed at him.
Milly studied Ayda for a moment. “I’ve never heard of anyone who could do what you just did with the fire.”
“Everybody has the same magic,” Ayda said. She gestured at Alaric. “He could have done the same thing.”
All eyes turned to Alaric, and a heavy silence filled the trees.
“So you’re just a royal historian?” Douglon said.
Alaric started to shrug, but the shooting pain in his shoulder stopped him with a gasp. “That’s part of my job.”
Douglon scowled and the others waited.
Alaric sighed. “I’m a Keeper.” The title didn’t feel completely false.
Brandson and Milly gasped.
Douglon’s scowl deepened. “Didn’t it occur to you to mention that?”
“It’s not something we announce,” Alaric said.
“You’re after the gem, aren’t you?” demanded Douglon. “You were going to steal it.”
“Douglon!” Brandson said. “Alaric’s a Keeper! He wouldn’t do such a thing!”
The title didn’t feel completely true, either.
“Yes, he seems very noble,” Douglon said.
Alaric sighed. Turned out having his secret revealed wasn
’t much of a relief after all.
“You, of all people, can’t be upset at someone keeping his personal history to himself,” Ayda said to the dwarf.
“It’s all right,” Alaric said. “He has a right to be angry. I should have told you sooner.”
“Is Ayda telling the truth?” asked Milly. “Could you have done that with the dragon fire?”
Maybe. If he had a thousand years. And a thousand Keepers.
“I don’t know,” Alaric said after a short hesitation. “Certainly not with as much style.”
“Why did you join up with us in the first place?” Douglon demanded.
“I was interested in your group because you lived in Kordan’s Blight, and I was looking for information about Kordan. He was a Keeper.”
“He was?” Milly asked. “The stories of him aren’t very… Keeper-like.”
“Maybe you people don’t know what Keepers are like,” Douglon pointed out.
“Neither Kordan nor I are model Keepers,” Alaric admitted. “But Kordan started out as one. He did leave the Keepers after he lived here, though.”
“How did you know we were looking for Kordan’s gem?” Douglon asked.
“I didn’t.”
“You expect us to believe you just happened to come across a group looking for a treasure you’re also looking for?”
Alaric shook his head. “I know. The chances of that are… nonexistent. But I had no idea who any of you were or what you were looking for. I have no explanation.”
Douglon gave him an incredulous look.
Alaric’s hands were throbbing, but the bread was starting to help. “I will offer you what I promised for the gem.”
“Why so generous?” asked Douglon.
Alaric hesitated, but there was nothing to be gained from secrecy. “Because the gem we are looking for is that valuable to me. To all the Keepers. I believe what we are going to find is called a Wellstone. To you, it is a treasure, and a treasure is worth money. To me, it is an artifact to be studied.”
Douglon harrumphed and turned his scowl toward the elf. “What did you do to the dragon?”
“I befriended it,” Ayda answered.
There was silence for a long moment.
Ayda shrugged and gave a small, self-conscious smile. “Everyone likes me, if they just get close enough.”
Douglon snorted, but the words had the ring of truth in them. Everyone did like Ayda. Even Alaric liked Ayda, despite, well, despite everything.
“Do you think the dragon will return tonight?” Milly asked Ayda.
“Oh, no. He agreed to stay away as long as we are in the valley.” The elf scrunched up her nose. “I suppose I didn’t tell him to leave us alone after we left, but I don’t think he’d try again.”
Alaric reached for a skin of water, but the tear in his shoulder sent a lance of pain down his arm and he groaned.
“Alaric,” Milly said, rushing over, “I forgot you were hurt.”
She worked the ripped fabric away from his shoulder and cringed. The cut was deep and ragged.
Ayda stepped over and glanced at it. “That’s not too bad.”
“It feels bad,” Alaric said.
Ayda reached past Milly and pushed her hand against the wound. Pain knifed through his shoulder and he gasped. But a warmth flowed out of Ayda’s hand along with a tightening sensation, and the wound knit itself back together. In a moment, the pain was gone, and Ayda stepped back, smiling. There was nothing on his shoulder but a white scar and a lot of leftover blood.
Alaric rotated his arm gingerly. There was no pain at all. He looked up into Ayda’s face, stunned. How had she done that? It took the body days, weeks to heal a wound like that. The amount of energy expended was enormous. Yet Ayda had done it effortlessly.
“We do not have the same magic,” he said.
Her face darkened, and an odd look crept into her eyes.
“Yes, we do. Just in different amounts.” She caught sight of Alaric’s palms and frowned, “Those I can’t do much with. A cut just needs to be cleaned out and pulled back together. But a burn is different. I could heal them, but it will leave terrible scars. Scars you might not want on your hands.”
Alaric had met a man once with a burned hand. The scarred skin didn’t stretch right, he couldn’t grip anything well. Alaric thought of not being able to hold a pen. “I’ll just wait for them to heal.”
“I can do something about the pain, though,” Ayda said. She set her hands on Alaric’s palms. Her fingers felt cool against his flaming skin. A numbness spread across his hands, and the pain receded. He let out a sigh of relief.
Milly brought over some strips of fabric and began to bandage Alaric’s hand. At his questioning look, she gave an apologetic shrug. “One of Gustav’s shirts.”
“I can’t believe he’s gone,” Brandson said, poking a stick into the coals.
It had all happened so quickly. So finally.
“If the dragon had to eat anyone,” Ayda said, “I’m glad it was the wizard.”
“Ayda!” Brandson said, aghast.
“It’s true,” she said. “I’ll take the next watch in case that dwarf did follow us and decides to attack us tonight as well.” She wandered over to the edge of the trees. “Although, after the dragon, a dwarf will be boring.”
Brandson stared after her.
“You can’t expect too much from her,” Alaric told him. “Elves don’t attach to anyone who’s not an elf. It’s astonishing that she stays with you at all, but she won’t feel the same sort of bond to the group that you do. No matter how long she spends with you.”
“I’m not sure that makes me feel any better,” Brandson said, watching Ayda disappear between the trees.
Alaric managed to stand and get to his blanket. He sank down and rested his head on his pack.
Douglon crashed and clattered around on the other side of the fire, moving Gustav’s belongings out of the way so he could move his own sleeping roll closer to the fire. He dropped Gustav’s shovel on his foot and swore before throwing it into some nearby bushes. “I thought wizards were powerful, but Gustav obviously wasn’t. That Mallon turned out to be a fraud, too. Wasn’t he killed by a forest fire?”
“Mallon was not a fraud,” Brandson snapped. “He controlled whole cities, killed thousands with his armies and sent diseases that—” Brandson’s voice broke. He took a deep breath. “Diseases that murdered thousands more. Among them, my parents.”
The clearing went quiet. Douglon cleared his throat. “Mallon never came near the dwarves. We knew he had an army and was attacking your cities, but I didn’t know…”
“There are few families in Queensland who didn’t lose someone,” Milly said. “Mallon seemed unstoppable.”
Alaric nodded. “There are some wizards with power, but not many.”
“Aren’t Keepers wizards?” asked Douglon.
“Not primarily. We know how to manipulate energy, but it’s not our first priority. Actually, historian is closer to the mark. The official term used by the crown is ‘Advisor and Protector of the Realm.’ We see magic as a tool, one of many, that can be used to keep Queensland safe.” Alaric was surprised that he had said ‘we.’ And that he had meant it. It had been a long time since he had thought of Keepers’ ideals in a positive light.
“Most minor wizards, like Gustav, are independent. Some are Shade Seekers, a group who use what the Keepers, and probably most everyone else, would call darker magic. The magic is more important to them than anything, and they are not against killing for it. Mallon was a Shade Seeker, but no one had ever heard of one as powerful as he was. We had no defense. He controlled or destroyed at will.” He looked into the woods after Ayda. “Ayda must know what happened, but I don’t know what the elves did. We didn’t know of anything that could stop him. I assure you whatever killed Mallon the Rivor, it wasn’t a forest fire.”
“Maybe Ayda killed him,” Milly whispered.
Alaric felt a chill.
“Ma
ybe Ayda ate him and stole his power,” Douglon whispered.
Milly stifled a giggle.
“Why do you call him the Rivor?” Douglon asked.
“The first town that Mallon took over was along the edge of the Scale Mountains,” Alaric said. “It was home to the gem cutters’ guild. Mallon entered the town alone, found the town leaders and… turned them into his instruments.
“The people reported to the king, and the word they used for it was riving. It’s the word for when a gem cutter cracks or damages a stone so deeply that it’s worthless. It was an accurate description for what he was doing to people’s minds. The name stuck.”
Douglon looked troubled. “Seems the dwarves underestimated him.”
Silence fell over the group. Alaric’s eyes closed. He felt like he was falling, falling through the earth, falling into sweet, inescapable sleep.
But his mind still spun. Ayda, dragons, Gustav, Mallon. Thoughts chased themselves pell-mell around his mind.
His perfectly clear mind.
Alaric’s eyes snapped open. He was tired, unbelievably tired, but his mind was alert. Not the least bit of fuzziness remained. He looked again in the direction Ayda had gone and took a deep breath, reveling in the new lightness. Was she done trying to influence him? He should have fought a dragon with her days ago.
His eyes sank closed.
Despite the events of the night before, Alaric stirred with the others at dawn.
“This is the day!” Douglon said. “We’ll find the gem by lunch. Let’s take another look at that map.”
“After we bury Gustav,” Milly said firmly.
Everyone paused.
“What would you have us bury?” asked Douglon, eyeing the charred bit of grass where the wizard had met his end.
“Well, fine, not bury then,” said Milly, “but he deserves some sort of funeral.”
“Yes, he does,” Brandson agreed.
“Can’t we pretend the dragon was a grand funeral pyre?” asked Douglon.
Milly gave him a withering look.
“Brandson,” she said, “please go find something we could use as a tombstone. And go help him, Douglon. We’re going to do something for the poor old man.”