Ember and the Ice Dragons

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Ember and the Ice Dragons Page 1

by Heather Fawcett




  Dedication

  For all the girl scientists,

  whether human or dragon

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Prologue

  One: Magicae Et Scientia

  Two: The Orpheus

  Three: The Firefly and the Doorknob

  Four: Montgomery Turns to the Left

  Five: The Boy From Nowhere

  Six: Ember Makes Another Enemy

  Seven: Thieves and Grimlings

  Eight: Ember Gains Two Seconds

  Nine: The Hunters and the Hunted

  Ten: Sabotage

  Eleven: Thieves in the Night

  Twelve: Through the Falcon’s Cage

  Thirteen: Penguins

  Fourteen: The Stolen Heartscale

  Fifteen: South

  Sixteen: Land of Night

  Seventeen: Misfits

  Eighteen: Aquamarine

  Nineteen: Rose Gold’s Riddles

  Twenty: The Prisoner

  Twenty-One: The Killing Grounds

  Twenty-Two: Fire and Ice

  Twenty-Three: All the Colors in the Rainbow

  Twenty-Four: The Prince’s Gift

  A Note on the World

  About the Author

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Prologue

  Lionel St. George, aspiring Magician and Stormancer, was fed up.

  For two days, he had been traveling through peat bog and prickly moorland. His exhausted horse had started to stumble, so Lionel had left it to wander its way back home at the edge of Muckross Fen, a particularly wild and desolate corner of Wales. Muckross Fen was exactly what you would expect from a place of that name—smelly; filthy; the air sharp with biting midges. There was also no sign of the magical storm, the sole reason he had come to the forsaken spot in the first place.

  Lionel—just turned eighteen, with swirls of yellowish hair tumbling over his forehead and a series of pimples spread across his cheeks like indecisive punctuation marks—set his lightning bucket down in the heather and sat on it. He was tired, his feet were soaked, and it was a long hike back to the ramshackle tavern that his map optimistically labeled a village.

  The sky began to drizzle. The storm he had been chasing through the Gwynedd Mountains had vanished.

  Lionel decided he would hike to the nearest peak to survey the area before admitting defeat. And rather than trying to pick a path around the enormous fen, he simply plunged himself, clothes and all, into the murky water.

  Green mountains loomed over him, clouds clustered at their peaks like frowning eyebrows. Lionel shook his storm compass, a small wooden box containing a moonstone and a single feather. How could the storm have dissipated so quickly?

  Not all storms were sources of magic, but some were—that was why Stormancers chased them. If he had caught up to one that size, he could have drawn enough power from it to cast a dozen spells—or, perhaps, one very large spell.

  Lionel’s supply of magic was too low for the spell he wished to cast—a spell that, if it succeeded, would be the talk of the country, and surely that would be enough to change the minds of the professors who had rejected his application to London’s Chesterfield University of Science and Magic.

  He had scored highly on the written exam, but the practical test hadn’t quite come off. He had cast an excellent firelighting spell—if only he had stopped there! But, wanting to impress the grim-faced professors, Lionel had shaped the fire into a giant floating orb. Unfortunately, a bee had chosen that moment to land on his shoulder, and Lionel—terrified of all insects—had lost his concentration in a spectacular fashion. By the time the fire had been put out, the professors were clothed in burned rags, and one had lost her eyebrows.

  Lionel shuddered as a leech burrowed into his calf. The wind whispered past his ear. Wind had a language, like anything else, though no human could speak it—not even Lionel, who spoke to storms. But he thought he detected an undercurrent of anger.

  Lionel hauled himself out of the muck on the opposite bank. He had lost a shoe somewhere, he noted absently, not particularly troubled. Lionel was rarely troubled by anything, not for lack of troubles (he had plenty), but because his thoughts were usually elsewhere. He wandered up the hill, heather prickling his bare foot and the leech gnawing away contentedly, its presence already forgotten. Then he stopped.

  On the other side of the hill was a dead dragon.

  Lionel’s breath froze. Like most people, he had never seen a dragon, though the Natural History Museum had some remarkable skeletons—they were perhaps twice the size of a horse, with thinner, serpentine frames. Someone—hunters, no doubt—had removed the creature’s scales, every last one. What remained was red and raw.

  Though it was a dragon, a monster, Lionel felt a stab of sorrow. The sight of the fearsome creature sprawled awkwardly in the mud and stripped of its glorious scales felt wrong.

  He found the second dragon—they usually lived in pairs—over the next rise. As he gazed at it, a tear opened in the clouds, and sunlight poured through. It tangled in the muddy grass, where something sparked. Lionel drew the object from the mud, brushing it clean with trembling fingertips.

  It was a heartscale.

  His mouth fell open. Everyone knew that the heartscale was the most important part of a dragon. An arrow through the heartscale, located at the back of the neck, would kill instantly. Most hunters preferred to avoid this, however, for the heartscale was exceptionally valuable. Half the size of Lionel’s palm, it glittered with a color richer than rubies, deeper than amber, and threaded with veins like fired gold. The hunters wouldn’t have left it behind knowingly—someone must have dropped it.

  Pocketing the heartscale, Lionel stood, shivering in his wet clothes. This far north, the wind was woven with frost even at midsummer. He heard a faint sound.

  Lionel brushed aside a clump of gorse. A baby dragon stared back at him.

  He started back with an undignified yelp. The dragon blinked rapidly, but it showed no sign of fear. Its gaze was calm and unsettling, neither human nor animal, but simply dragon. It lay on its side, barely breathing, still half in its shell.

  “All right there,” Lionel found himself murmuring, once he’d regained command of his voice. It clearly wasn’t all right—the creature looked to have hatched within a day or two, perhaps just after its parents were killed. Now it was exhausted and likely starving. He removed the remnants of the shell, and the dragon stretched, though it made no move to get up.

  Lionel worried his lip between his teeth. He couldn’t simply leave the creature, though it was a beast that, fully grown, would think nothing of tearing him limb from limb. The best course, then, was to put it out of its misery.

  The dragon made a faint sound in its throat. It was about the size and shape of a hairless cat, all sinuous lines, with scales the rich orange of molten lava. Lionel could have bought half of Chesterfield University with the profit from those scales, though the thought never occurred to him. He would bury the creature, scales and all, next to its mother.

  At that moment, thunder exploded in the sky, and the clouds broke open like cracked eggs.

  Lionel was instantly drenched. A small river ran past the dragon’s snout, and it sneezed. Hesitantly at first, then eagerly, it began to drink.

  The dragon wasn’t as close to death as he’d thought—as it drank, its eyes lost their filmy quality. It fumbled around in the mud, as if to stand, and immediately fell over. It turned to Lionel and let out a surprisingly loud mewl, as if the entire situation was his fault.

  Well, that settled it.

  The young Magician stripped off his cloak and s
waddled the dragon with it. The beast gave a satisfied snort and lay quiet in his arms, absorbing the heat from his chest. Lionel tried not to think about its proximity to his throat, but the dragon showed no interest in devouring him. It closed its eyes and slept.

  After snatching up his knapsack and the lightning bucket from the muddy bank, Lionel hiked back in the direction he had come. He was covered in filth, and his clothes were so wet they made a strange slop-swish-slop sound as he moved, as if he were some mythic creature risen from the bog. He attempted to arrange his cloak around the dragon so that it would have the appearance of a human baby. A Magician wandering off into the moors and returning with an infant was certainly strange, but it was within the realm of eccentric Magician behavior, while dragons were not. Unfortunately, the creature’s tail kept slipping free, ruining the disguise.

  Lionel’s thoughts churned. What was he to do with a dragon? He could feed it and restore it to health, but what then? He couldn’t offer it to another dragon to raise—even if such a thing were possible, there were few fire dragons left. Only a handful remained here in Wales. The newborn could well be the last of its kind.

  His thoughts circled and wheeled around the problem until, because he was Lionel St. George, they turned to magic again. How was he to impress the professors at Chesterfield now? He was beginning to doubt that his idea of an exceptionally powerful delousing spell would be enough. (Many of Lionel’s spells involved eradicating insects.) If he wasn’t admitted to Chesterfield, that was the end of everything he had ever longed for. Lionel was poor, and an orphan—his only living relative, his sister Myra, was in prison. Chesterfield was the sole school to offer free tuition to those of significant magical ability.

  As the dragon began to snore, Lionel had the first inkling of an idea. It was stranger and more impractical than any idea he had ever had, and so it appealed to him immensely. The wind moaned and the rain pelted, and still the baby dragon slept on, oblivious to both the returning storm and the whirl of Lionel’s thoughts. It burrowed its snout into the Magician’s cloak, its tail twitching from some dream, as Lionel turned and walked back into the wind and thunder and hail, his cloak billowing and the storm compass flickering to life.

  One

  Magicae Et Scientia

  The largest fire dragon ever documented inhabited the Lithuanian marshes: it was twenty-four feet from nose to tail tip, with three-foot horns and a fearsome set of teeth. . . .

  —TAKAGI’S COMPENDIUM OF EXOTIC CREATURES

  Twelve years later

  Ember St. George sat in the smoking ruin of what had been her father’s office, lost in thought.

  “That wasn’t very good, was it?” said the shadow in the corner.

  Ember shushed it. The shadow, used to her habits by now, fell silent. This lasted about a minute.

  “I don’t care for these incidents.” The shadow examined its sleeve, as if the fire might have scathed it. “Just look at this place. The furniture is ruined.”

  “You don’t use the furniture,” Ember said icily. She hated being interrupted when she was thinking.

  “I look at it.”

  Ember didn’t reply. Lionel St. George’s office at Chesterfield University was cluttered with instruments—telescopes and scales and sextants, both magical and scientific, and books piled upon books. She had spent many afternoons curled up in the chair by the window, lost in an encyclopedia or watching the globes spin. Her favorite was enchanted, orbited by a model of the moon that accurately waxed and waned. Now it was all ash. She picked up the tiny moon, and it drifted apart like the head of a dandelion. Tears welled in her eyes.

  “I would prefer if you could warn me when you’re going to catch fire.” The shadow folded its arms. “It’s most alarming.”

  “I’m sorry that it bothers you.”

  “It’s not the sort of thing you see every day,” continued the shadow, which had no concept of sarcasm. “A twelve-year-old girl bursting into flames—of course, you’re not really a girl. How did it happen this time?”

  Ember tried to sift through her guilt. She had been sitting by the window, reading a book on oceanography. She hadn’t noticed the sun as it crept around the side of the building, spilling golden light across the page. Until her skin began to tingle in an awful, familiar way—

  “The curtains,” she said. “The servants must have left them open.”

  Ember didn’t know why sunlight made her burst into flames. Nor did her father. It was a flaw in the spell that had transformed her from a dragon into a girl, a flaw he hadn’t been able to fix. The episodes were random—some days, she could spend hours in the sun without incident. Other times, brushing against a sunbeam made her go up like dry tinder. What they did know was that she was far more volatile in summer. This made some sense, for fire dragons’ powers were ruled by the sun—their flame burned fiercest on midsummer days, when the earth tilted toward its star. At night, or in winter when the sun hung wan and feeble in the sky, Ember was fine. Safe.

  The shadow paced the room, on the lookout for leftover flames. But there were none—when Ember ignited, it was brief and white-hot. Next to the charred fireplace stood Lionel’s favorite chair, a towering throne of oak and velvet, now a rickety skeleton. Ember picked at the remnants of her dress, which was missing a sleeve and half the skirt. Her hair had caught fire, too—it had been short before, from previous immolations, but now it clung to her scalp like the bristles of a brush, the blond hidden under all the soot.

  “I don’t want to leave,” she whispered, so quietly that the shadow didn’t hear. It was true that she’d been bursting into flames more often these days, and going somewhere with less summer would probably be wise. Her father would sometimes muse about moving them to Greenland or Svalbard—which, while no doubt interesting places, were not home.

  The last few years had not been easy for Lionel St. George, and having to worry about Ember’s sudden infernos surely didn’t help. He was one of the most famous Stormancers in the country. After graduating from Chesterfield and being offered a professorship, he had rescued a duke from a group of bandits with a spell that made leaves sprout from the bandits’ noses—which, while not particularly deadly, had been so disturbing that the bandits had run off. But he had also been arrested for an experiment that enlarged a frog to the size of the house. The sight of it hopping across the countryside had sparked a wave of terror and inspired horror stories that were still used to frighten naughty children. Chesterfield hadn’t fired him for that. They had fired him for giving one of his students the ability to fly—unfortunately, that was all she could do, and so she was forced to walk around with her boots weighted with rocks to keep from floating away. That was the third time he had been fired, and Chesterfield had only grudgingly (after pressure from the rescued duke) taken him back last month.

  “What about the lightning bucket?” the shadow asked fearfully. “Is it all right?”

  Ember gasped. She raced over to the closet where Lionel St. George kept his extra magic. The door was scorched, the handle half melted. Fortunately, on the other side of the door, the bucket was unscathed. An unassuming thing of yew with a leather handle, it sat on its shelf, humming gently.

  She patted it, relieved. No one was born with magic, but Stormancers were born with the ability to shape it. They gathered it from thunderstorms, which theologians thought were created when the gods fought among themselves up in heaven, accidentally spilling their magic in the process. Lionel, who didn’t believe in gods, thought that magical storms were a natural phenomenon as old as the earth. This was perhaps why he didn’t treat magic as reverently—or carefully—as other Stormancers, keeping it in a simple bucket rather than a gilded chest or elaborate nesting trunks.

  Ember shut the door. She had no idea what would have happened if she had burned the lightning bucket, releasing the magic from its protective spells. Perhaps it would have unleashed a magical storm upon her father’s office, which was just about the last thing she needed r
ight now.

  Puff wandered into the room, nose twitching at the smoke. The unfriendly cat was fond of Ember (or perhaps cats preferred dragons to humans generally) and followed wherever she went. She was about the weight of an ordinary cat, but appeared almost perfectly round. Years ago, when Lionel St. George had been experimenting with language spells, he had given the cat the power to speak. Puff had been so startled that her white fur had stood on end. Somehow, all the magic in the air had made her stick that way.

  “Now!” the cat said. This was her favorite word, which she applied to almost every situation. Cats had little interest in conversation and spoke mostly in commands.

  “Now what?” Ember said.

  Puff sniffed up to a teacup left on the desk. “Eat!” This was her second-favorite word. “Now now now now—”

  Ember hushed her.

  “I live here, you know,” the shadow said, folding itself back into its corner. “If you could try to be less dramatic—”

  “I’m not dramatic,” Ember said. “If I could stop this, I would.”

  “It’s almost summer.” An ominous note entered the shadow’s thread of a voice.

  Ember swallowed. Her hand went to her ring. The setting held a fragment of red fireglass, which Lionel St. George had recovered from the place where her parents had been killed. It had likely come from her birth father.

  She needed to get away from the shadow, to go somewhere she could think and plan and plot. Thinking her way out of bad situations was her special talent.

  She was afraid, though, that there wasn’t a way out of this.

  “Lionel?” came a voice from the hall. “There’s a dreadful smell. Are you at one of your experiments again?”

  The voice was an elderly woman’s—one of the other professors, no doubt—and it came from just beyond the door.

  “Oh no!” Ember breathed. “What do I do?”

  “How am I supposed to know?” The shadow sounded irritated. It was Lionel St. George’s shadow, or had been at one time. Once shadows were detached, they were their own people, and nothing like their former owners. The shadow in the corner was fussy and uptight and occasionally menacing, though it liked Ember and her father well enough, in its curmudgeonly way. Ember often wished her father had never detached his shadow—he hadn’t intended to do so, but as usual, one of his experiments had gone awry.

 

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