To Light the Dragon's Fire

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by Margaret Taylor




  To Light the Dragon’s Fire

  Book 1 – Dragons, Griffons and Centaurs, Oh My!

  By Margaret Taylor

  To Light the Dragon’s Fire

  Copyright June, 2014 Margaret Taylor

  Cover Art by: eBook Cover Designs by Carey

  Formatted by: Author’s HQ

  All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights reserved under copyright above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the copyright owner and publisher of this book.

  This a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, bands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication of these trademarks is associated with or sponsored by the trademark owners.

  This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook may not be resold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this eBook with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. Thank you for respecting the hard work of all people involved with the creation of this eBook.

  Table of Contents

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  About Margaret Taylor

  Dedication

  For my Mother, who always believed in my talent and never let me quit.

  May you rest in peace, Margaret P., December, 2003.

  I would like to acknowledge and deeply thank my cousin Jana for all her loving support and belief in my work. Without her I'd have given up long ago…

  To my Cover Designer, Carey, I love you…you get me! Thanks for that.

  And to Ms. Grace, for always being patient with me! You are the best!

  And thanks to Dr. Monica for helping with the blurb! Love you darlin’!

  And to my very lovely Beta’s: Robin, Frances, Patti, Karen, Anna and Jana! Thank you ladies, you ROCK and make me want to keep writing! Love you!

  Chapter One

  “Tell me again why we’re doing this?”

  Terra Heggan chuckled softly, searching the rock wall above her for a crevice with the fingers of her free hand. She found one, set the piton in a groove of the ancient stone then tied off. Relaxing back into her harness, she turned, shining the head lamp over her shoulder. It landed on her sister, Lanni Heggan. “Because it’s fun. Because it’s the only place left in this world to get an honest adrenaline rush. Because…”

  “Because it’s also the only place Nolan can’t or won’t follow you,” her younger sibling mocked.

  Terra climbed another ten feet, hoping the snarl in her next words wasn’t as telling as it sounded. “That’s a perk, not a reason.”

  She heaved herself up by the fingertips, grabbed the next crevice and for just a moment hung suspended nearly two hundred feet in the air while she set a piton. Tying off, she watched her younger sister carefully, ready to grab the rope joining them and take up the weight if there was a problem. Seeing her sister set her own piton, she relaxed. “It’s no one’s fault that Nolan Harrington V was raised a mama’s boy and has no desire to muss his manicure.”

  Lanni’s reply was breathless as she brought herself up to Terra’s level. “Then why in the world are you marrying the guy?”

  “Because we need the money,” she said. “Mom and dad are on the verge of losing everything and the Harrington’s are loaded.”

  Lanni reached across the space between them, laying a hand on her forearm. “That’s a perk, not a reason,” she said, throwing her own words back. “You don’t love him, Ter.”

  “No, I don’t.” She shifted the hard hat back and wiped the sweat off her brow with a forearm. “But it doesn’t matter. I’m well past the age where love matters all that much. My families security,” she stared her sister in the eye. “Your security, means a great deal more to me than some fanciful notion of love.”

  “Ter,” Lanni said.

  She raised a hand. “No, no, I’m honest enough with myself to admit I’ll never find love, not true love anyway, so what’s the point of keeping that hope alive. I’m settling and I know it, but it’s ok.”

  Lanni gave her a skeptical look. “Uh huh…”

  Her sister shrugged when she didn’t comment further and took the lead for a bit, scampering up the rock wall like a monkey in the jungle.

  Not that she’d ever actually seen a monkey scamper, but she’d read enough books on the subject and had enough of an imagination left to get the picture. They only had another 100 feet or so left on this adventure. Soon they’d reach the ledge marked on the map she’d obtained before arriving in what was left of the Grand Teton Mountains of Wyoming. It was one of the few places on earth that hadn’t been overrun with humanity in the last hundred years or so. As she’d said, one of the few places left on earth where an honest adrenaline rush could be obtained without the aide of cybertronics.

  She smiled softly and followed her sister up the wall, setting pitons along the way until they reached the ledge of rock. It wasn’t really a ledge, but an entrance to a cave. A dark, musty tunnel yawed before them and she swung her head left and right. The lamp barely penetrated the darkness though and she was tempted to explore it, despite its ominous presence.

  “What now?” Lanni asked.

  “Let’s explore.” Swinging her pack off, she set it down in the dirt and pulled out a heavy flashlight. “Feeling adventurous sis?”

  Lanni shrugged. “Sure, why not, I mean it’s not like we’ve got anything else to do right?”

  She smiled widely at the prospect. “Right!”

  The cave was marked on the map but no other details were readily apparent. No hand drawn tunnels leading off of it, no marking to indicate whether it was dangerous or not. Probably because no one had bothered to take a closer look.

  No surprise there. Given the current state of the world, not many humans took the time to enjoy the simple pleasures in life. No one rock climbed much anymore, at least not in the real world. No one spent time away from their computers and videos and various and sundry available cybertronics. Why expend the energy to do something when you could get the same effect through a vid-helmet and never had to leave the comfort of your own couch!

  Humans had become extensively lazy in the last millennia. As technology had improved, the need to do things for oneself had been lost. There were robots and computers to do for you these days, so why expend unnecessary energy.

  That was the thinking of most at least…

  Some, like her, still preferred the old fashion way. She loved working up a sweat and the sense of accomplishment she got for a completed project. She scooped up the pa
ck again, slinging it over her shoulders and pointed the flashlight ahead.

  It barely penetrated the darkness, but she wasn’t worried.

  There was no indication this was dangerous.

  With a smile and a shrug, she led the way down the tunnel. Lanni followed and a companionable silence fell between them.

  Lanni finally broke it when the passage narrowed. “I don’t think we can go any further.”

  Terra waved the light over the enclosing rocks. “Sure we can, just one at a time.” She pulled a coil of rope from her belt and tied one end to Lanni’s waist.

  Her sister’s voice was full of nervousness. “It’s probably a dead end. Let’s go back, Ter.”

  She laughed. “Not on your life, Sis. Come on. If it gets any tighter, we’ll head back, I promise.”

  “Ok.”

  Lanni still sounded worried, but she wasn’t about to be outdone. Not today. This was her last chance, her last gasp as it were, to do as she pleased and she wasn’t about to give that up. Not without something to remember!

  She took the lead and within moments of starting down the passage, her upper arms scraped against the rocks on either side. With every step the walls were closing in and she was thankful she wasn’t claustrophobic. Her gear rattled, pitons and d-rings clinking together, mingling with her heavy breathing as she worked her way along.

  Lanni’s equally labored breaths made her grin and she realized how lazy she’d let her sister become too. But, it was too late to change. In just a few days, she would be married and not allowed to sneeze without an ok from her husband.

  The walls seemed to shift another inch closer and she sucked in her stomach, wriggling through a surprisingly tight passage. She pushed through it and the press of rocks expanded again. She took a step and the sand under her boot gave way.

  She screeched as the weight of her pack shifted unexpectedly, as if an unseen force had shoved her in the back and sent her further along in a rush. She grabbed for the rocks to slow her progress but they’d turned slick with condensation. Her stomach knotted with fear as she rushed forward. Her feet had a mind of their own and continued to churn through the sand working against her attempts to stop.

  The rope around her waist tightened, jerking her progress to a halt.

  “Ter? You ok?”

  She straightened, panting slightly and twisted the flashlight and helmet lamp around. “I’m fine,” she called back. “Just stumbled.” She paused, judging the new opening for a moment. “Come on through. Watch your step though, the sand is loose…”

  Lanni, not as fleet footed on land as rock apparently, slammed into her back with a grunted oomph.

  “Back there…” She chuckled, turning to give her sister a hand in gaining her balance again. “You ok?”

  Lanni laughed, the sound light but still holding an undercurrent of nervousness. “Yeah, just wasn’t expecting that dip.”

  She swung her lamp back the direction they’d come. “Dip?”

  Lanni nodded quickly. “It, it,” she stuttered. “I felt like I was being pushed down a hill.”

  She’d felt much the same but nothing behind them seemed out of the ordinary. And, with a new cavern ahead, there was a definite itch to explore further. “Well, we’re fine. Come on, let’s keep going.”

  Her voice echoed off the stone and swung the flashlight here and there, trying to get a feel for how large this new cavern might be. It seemed massive and never ending. She took a step forward, intrigued and didn’t see the slope until it was too late…

  Her scream bounced off into the darkness, propelled along as she slid wildly down the sand. She kicked her feet and rolled onto her stomach, grappling with the soft surface, hoping to slow her descent. Finding nothing, she kicked herself onto her back again, watching the flashlight bounce along at her feet with a weird sense of awe and dread of an inevitable death settling in the pit of her stomach.

  Would she plunge off a cliff in the end and fall into a dark pit, never to be heard from again?

  Would she continue to gain speed, slamming into hard rocks that would break every bone in her body?

  Would she drag Lanni along to their deaths?

  Would anyone ever find their bodies?

  She’d made a classic spelunking mistake and not left behind any sign of where they’d gone. Other than the pitons they’d need to climb down again, there was no indication they’d entered the cave…

  “Lanni! Grab…” she tried to warn but was too late.

  The rope at her waist pulled taut, driving the webbing up into her ribcage and a second scream pierced the darkness. The air forced from her lungs in a rough whoosh and she barely had enough time to draw in more before she slid to an unexpected halt in a tangle of arms and legs against something…soft?

  Lanni wasn’t far behind and once more slammed into her back, booted feet narrowly missing her head.

  “Oomph!” her sibling grunted. “What the hell?”

  She scrambled to right them both and searched for the flashlight. Its faint glow under the pile of sand they’d brought down with them drew her eye and she reached for it. Digging it free, she passed the cone over whatever had halted their progress. It seemed to be a wall of some sort, but it glittered in the light, a faint sheen of condensation creating tiny rainbows as she swept it back and forth.

  Then, it moved. Literally.

  The sparkling rainbows shifted, undulated and parted to reveal…a giant…eye.

  “Holy, shit,” Lanni whispered. “Is, that a dinosaur?”

  The reptilian eye blinked once then focused sharply.

  Terra scooted backwards, air stuck in her lungs as a voice vibrated across every fiber of her being.

  “I am not, a dinosaur,” it said. The wall moved a second time, drawing away from them and turned, revealing two very large nostrils and an equally long snout. “I, am a Dragon.”

  She exchanged a stupefied look with her sister, at once on the verge of screaming hysterically yet fascinated by what her eyes were seeing and her brain was telling her couldn’t be true.

  A Dragon? An honest to God’s, real, live, Dragon?

  White smoke coiled out of its right nostril in a huff and its majestic head lowered, turning to see them. The lids narrowed and his voice rumbled against the ground. “And what might you be?”

  The simple question shook Terra out of her stupor. “We’re human,” she answered much more calmly than she should.

  The long snout jerked up and back, his voice reverberating with what might have been shock. Or awe, she couldn’t really tell. “Human? Humans!? Here? Oh, no no no…flagnok and double flagnok!”

  Without pause, the thing uncoiled its long body and rose onto four short, thick looking legs. A claw as large as the rented SUV they’d left at the cavern’s entrance, reached out and scooped them together into its palm, talons as tall as she was, curling around them.

  “Oh no, no, no,” it muttered, turning away from where they’d slid to a halt and heading off down a passage his body had previously blocked. “No, no, no…it’s too soon! You weren’t, you can’t! It’s not yet time!”

  Tossed off her feet, Terra worked onto her knees, shouting up at the thing. “What the hell?” She pushed at a nearby talon, trying to move it and slip free. “What are you doing?”

  He said nothing and they emerged from a tunnel into the bright sunlight a few minutes later. With care she didn’t know a beast so large would be capable of, it set them down again in some knee-high purple grass and started pacing.

  “What to do, what to do!?” it muttered, talking more to itself than them. “I can just, no, not that. I could,” he paused and shook his head. “No, no, that won’t work either. There’s always,” Another pause and another shake that rained sand and pebbles down around them.

  She covered her head and caught Lanni out of the corner of her eye, doing the same.

  In the bright light she got her first good look at the creature and was filled with a sense of its majesty. Fro
m nose to tail it was easily the length of two football fields and almost as tall as a three story building with scales the size of a modern day vehicle. The surface of its body flickered through a rainbow of colors as it paced back and forth, rattling the ground under their feet with each step.

  “No, no, I can’t do that either.” It spun to the left, turning a bright pink and its scales rippled as it drew in a long breath. “Maybe I could…” It spun around to the right, a wave of bright blue rolling along its body. It stopped and yet another band of color twisted down its length. The rainbow finally settled on a mix of bluish-green and it rose up enough to clap its two front feet together. “That’s it! Come on, climb up!” it ordered excitedly, lowering its head to the ground. “Hurry, hurry now,” it added when neither of them moved.

  No longer in awe, Lanni stepped forward, her normally diminutive sister bristling with anger. She stomped a foot and crossed her arms. “Now, see here! We’re not going anywhere with you until you start making some sense!”

  She intervened, putting herself in front of the creature’s massive maw. “Easy, sis,” she warned. “I’d really hate to get eaten a couple of days before the wedding.”

  The dragon’s head jerked back, white puffs of smoke coiling out of its nostrils and spoke in an incensed tone. “Eaten? Eaten? Why, I, haven’t,” it sputtered, sending a rain of spit into the air. “I would never!” It put a paw to its breast and tears pooled in its eyes. “I’ll have you know, I’ve not eaten another creature in three hundred Suns!”

  Chapter Two

  Draven Taraxus stared out his window, only half-listening to Jarex Copsa and Kyde Phara, current Regents of the Griffon and Pegasus population go at it.

  “I will not stand by and let you insult my Roost, horse, much less my people,” Jarex squawked. His short beak clacked together a couple of times and his wings expanded, flapping loudly. “I demand you withdraw these accusations, at once!”

  Kyde snapped a hoof against the stone floor of his private conference room, sparks shooting off in several directions. “I will not!” His large head nodded toward the table and he snorted. “The evidence of the Griffon’s involvement in the raids is right there! Your Majesty, I implore you to not only sanction Roost Baltus, but all the Griffon Houses.”

 

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