by AJ Searle
Ronan knelt so that he was eye level with the changeling. “You would not fight. You would hide until danger was gone. You are the one who would not be killed, the one who could warn Robusk and Merisgale that the dark forces were raging against them.” Ronan leaned closer. “I would hope you would manage to swipe the sword before it fell into the wrong hands. You are a thief. I imagine you could do it quickly and quietly when no one was looking.”
“I could!” Mikel nodded excitedly. “I could do it and be long gone before any of them could realize it was gone. I’m an excellent thief.”
“There, you see.” Ronan smiled as he rose back to his feet. “A hero can be anyone who knows how to use what they have for the good of man.”
“You think I can teach these people something?” Mikel’s voice was no longer deflated. It was filled with hope and eagerness.
“I think between your tactics and Arien’s weapons, they would better off against their enemies.” Ronan nodded. Mikel tilted his head for a moment then scampered off to join Arien.
“And odd bunch you travel with, Ronan,” Yarro called from the door of his hut. Ronan turned and nodded in greeting to the leader.
“Indeed they are.” He stepped toward Yarro, crossing his arms.
“You offer them positive leadership. A wise man does not rule over those he commands. He speaks to them on a level they understand without talking down to them. You lifted the spirits of that little changeling.”
“I do what I must for them. Each have played a pretty important role on this long journey. But I admit I will be thankful when it is over.”
Yarro nodded. “It is a big responsibility.”
“One that I will be grateful to be rid of,” Ronan admitted. “I suppose I should tell you that I mean to ask the great wizard Robusk to help me dig a river from Merisgale to Johran. It would provide our people with a water source that will insure foliage and eventually wild life.”
“Food,” Yarro murmured and Ronan nodded. “But it will not be easy. The Dragols will not be so easy to convince.”
“Dragols?” Ronan raised a brow.
“You don’t know? They rule the moors between Merisgale and Johran.” Yarro stared at Ronan when he shook his head. “The moors are the home of the dragons.”
“Dragons?” Ronan repeated. “I thought there were only few left in existence.”
“A little more than a few but it is true there are not as many as there used to be. They reside on the moors. It is why we must cloak our village. Like us, they hunt what they can. We hunt in numbers of three or more. We are less likely to become prey if there are many.”
Ronan ran a hand over his face and scratched the hair on his chin. “Dragons,” he said again. “Are they hostile?”
“Sometimes. Sometimes not. They are unpredictable and moody. One never knows the nature of a dragon.” Yarro sighed. “We lived in peace with the Dragols for many years. But these are desperate times. They face extinction. They do what they must, as do we, to survive.”
“A river would probably benefit them as well,” Ronan thought aloud. “In the same ways it benefits the Johran. Perhaps an agreement of peace can be made with the promise to help them survive.”
“If it can be done then it would ease our worries,” Yarrow said. “You are a unique individual, Ronan. The centaur said you would be speaking on his behalf to the great wizard too. Do you try to help everyone you meet?”
“No more than anyone else, I imagine.” Ronan shrugged.
“You are an asset to the Johran people. Until now we’ve never had anyone of our kind who did great deeds. You are our adventurer and hope for our future.”
Ronan did not respond. The words embarrassed him and made him fearful in the same moment. He was just a blacksmith. He didn’t want to be more than that to anyone.
“Why did you agree so quickly to allow me to join the tribe? You could not know I wasn’t lying.” Ronan said after a moment.
“I could if I were looking for the truth. It is not easy to spot someone who means to do harm. But it is much easier to spot a man who does not. Your soul is clean. It was even before you ate of the flesh.” Yarro clapped him on the shoulder. “You proved me right when you had your sorceress feed our people and again when you commanded those you traveled with to offer wisdom for us to survive.”
Ronan sighed heavily. “Your words are kind.”
“My words are honest,” he argued.
Ronan spoke again after a few moments of comfortable silence stretched between them. “I want to leave at dawn.”
“So soon? Can you not stay longer?” Yarro’s disappointment was apparent.
“The sword must be taken to Merisgale quickly. Too many work against me to linger in one place for very long.” Ronan turned to Yarro. “I give you my word that I will return. If Robusk refuses to help me then I shall find a way to dig the river myself.”
Yarro smiled and shook his head. “You do not need to try and convince me, Ronan.”
“It is important to me that you know,” Ronan insisted. “I will not forget.”
“Nor will I.” Yarro held out his hand and Ronan took it. He blinked when Yarro leaned in and embraced him.
“I will walk you to the border of Johran tomorrow,” Yarro said before releasing Ronan. “I will see you on your way.”
“That means a lot to me and I appreciate it.” Ronan nodded and turned to look out at the others again. For the first time in a very long time, and in the oddest kind of place, Ronan felt an overwhelming sense of finally being somewhere he could call home.
* * *
Monty breathed in the air deeply. It was going to rain, he thought with relief and rose to his full height, stretching his legs. His green eyes slid across the moors to his brothers. They were playing with their children and Monty smiled. Two rains in one week had lightened the mood of many in his family.
His gaze drifted to the landscape. Food had become sparse. The Dragols had been forced to hunt outside the moors. He didn’t like it, preying upon those that inhabited other places. But if they did not, their kind would die out and he could not allow that.
His eyes drifted back to the youngest of his brother’s children. If the Dragols were to survive, those little ones had to be given a chance. They must be fed. He had appealed to Merisgale on the rare occasion that he was allowed an audience with the council of the wizards.
Monty scowled. He’d asked that the Dragols be given another place of residence. The only reason those few times had been granted was because man feared dragons. So Monty had been allowed to speak but they’d made their decisions before they ever heard his plea. And always he was denied.
Man had no need of dragons anymore. They did not care if the species disappeared completely. They ruled Meris. Centuries ago it was the Dragols who granted audience to man. But those days were long gone and the wisdom of the Dragols was forgotten.
A sudden sound caused Monty to snap from his thoughts and his head to jerk around. His spine stiffened as he sensed someone and his large nose found their scent easily. Yarro. His trained eyes searched the horizon then rested on the tribesman that appeared in the distance.
Monty crouched then took a running start. He leapt into the air, wings flapping powerfully around him, silver scales glinting brightly in the sunlight as he flew higher and then dipped toward the man who he recognized as the leader of the Johran people. But he was not alone.
Monty’s eyes narrowed on the man that stood ahead of the others at Yarro’s side. And then to his surprise the man lifted his eyes and looked directly at Monty. He lifted a hand and pointed at him.
Curious now, Monty dipped lower and landed, legs pumping in a run. He slowed and then stopped completely before those that stood at the edge of Johran land. Six cowered behind with wide, fearful eyes but Yarro and this man who was obviously a leader as well did not even flinch.
“Who are these that you bring here, Yarro? What is the meaning of this?” Monty demanded in a voice tha
t vibrated through the air.
“This is my brother, The Stone Wizard Ronan of Johran,” Yarro introduced and turned to the man. “And this is Dragol Montecu.”
“Explain yourself!” Monty raised his voice, causing the earth to tremble beneath their feet. Yarro winced but the one he called a wizard did not. Interesting. Either he was very brave or very stupid.
“I am here to bring peace between the Dragols and the Johran.” It was the wizard that spoke. “Peace comes in the form of a river that will twist through the moors and empty into a lake in the Johran Hills.”
“A river?” Monty snorted loudly. “A river would take decades to dig.” He studied the man. Tall, solid build, dark hair and eyes. His hand rested on the hilt of sheathed sword. Surely he did not think that such a simple weapon would save him if Monty had it in his head to make a meal of him.
A dragon’s scales were as hard as the most solid stone. The blade of a man’s sword would bounce off of a dragon’s back easily. That was the only reason man had not turned their back on Dragols completely. Because they knew to fight the Dragols, even just the small number left, would mean a great many deaths to their own.
“I am going to Merisgale and will speak to the great wizard Robusk. With his magic, he can dig the river in only moments.”
“Robusk?” Monty cocked his silver head to the side. “Have you not heard? The wizard Robusk is missing.”
“Missing?” One of the women, the younger one Monty observed, stepped forward forgetting her fear of him. “What do you mean missing? When did this happen?”
“Weeks ago.” Monty used his magic and made himself smaller, shrinking down to the size of the centaur. “You are those carrying the sword to Merisgale.” The realization hit Monty hard and he almost took a step backward. That was not just a mere sword on the wizard’s hip. That was the King’s Sword.
“Yes,” the wizard answered, his brow pulling with a frown. “Is he missing or was he taken?”
Monty’s eyes narrowed. “He was taken but how did you guess that?”
“I had a dream several nights ago. Someone was pleading with me to hurry, to save Merisgale. I could not see him but somehow I knew it was the great wizard. He was in a dark place, chained to the wall. There was but one door and it was locked,” he supplied.
Monty sniffed. “You wizards do communicate between one another like that. I suppose it is natural. So without Robusk, you can give us no river.”
“He has given his word that he will do it even if Robusk does not help,” Yarro said quickly and then surprised Monty by stepping over the boundary between their lands. “I believe him. He has joined the Johran tribe and has worked with our people to grow food. Look into his eyes, Monty. He does not bring us lies.”
Monty’s green eyes slid back to the wizard. Yarro was no fool. He would not trust so easily. And this wizard didn’t have the look of a wizard at all. Wizards were cocky by nature, proud because of their power. No this one, this Stone Wizard, was a different breed and perhaps the only hope for saving both the Johran and Dragols from starvation.
“I suppose this promise of a river would require we give you pass across the moors?” Monty watched the wizard nod. “Very well. I will tell the others to steer clear of you.”
“Especially me. I’m too small for a good meal anyway.” A runt of a man called from atop the centaur’s back.
Monty slowly smiled, revealing his razor sharp teeth. “You are just big enough to pick the rest of them from my teeth. A bit of mint, I would call you.” Then he turned, smirking at the look of fear that flashed across the little man’s face. He took off on a run and then sprung into the air, resizing himself to his normal size.
Yarro’s lowered voice found his ears, “We are fortunate to have caught him on a good day. It could have gone much uglier.”
“Every day that it rains is a good day!” Monty called back before rocketing skyward.
* * *
Robusk smiled in the darkness of his prison. The blacksmith now knew some of what was going on. He sat very still and waited, a smug smile planted on his thinned lips. He may be dying but Ronan Culley would save Merisgale.
The lock across from him turned and the door slammed open. “Good day to you. Or is it evening? I’m afraid I’ve quite forgotten the time.” SleaganSleagan was furious. Dark magic sparked all around him, filling the air with nervous electricity.
“You’ve been talking to the blacksmith all along,” SleaganSleagan accused.
Robusk’s smile widened. “Perhaps I was not as weak as I allowed you to think,” he admitted taking pleasure in seeing SleaganSleagan’s eyes darken with rage.
“You dishonor the code of wizards.” SleaganSleagan’s backhand was unexpected and sent Robusk’s head snapping into the slick wall behind him. “Wizards cannot call for a wizard to help them!”
“No, but we can warn them of trouble in Merisgale.” Robusk spat blood on the floor of the cell. “And that is all that I have done.”
“Do any more and you shall be begging me to put you back in this dungeon,” SleaganSleagan’s voice lowered in a dangerous threat.
“I doubt it. The sooner I am out of this place, the happier I shall be.” Robusk wrinkled his nose as his eyes slid around the narrow space of his cell.
“If you are counting on a rescue, it will not happen,” SleaganSleagan told him. “Merisgale does not send an army out to look for you.”
“I wonder why they haven’t?” Robusk shot back sarcastically and received another blow to his jaw.
“Watch your tone, old man,” SleaganSleagan warned.
“I will and you be sure to watch your back. I have a feeling our little blacksmith will not be so easily led as you think.” Robusk did not flinch when SleaganSleagan drew back his hand. In fact, he welcomed the darkness that swirled around him from the impact of his temple hitting the wall.
* * *
“It is only a suggestion but I believe it would do you good to practice your powers,” Ula began with a cautious tone. “Maybe you could create fire for our campsite.” Ronan frowned. His mood had become testy and he knew she was waiting for him to explode. Instead, he sighed and gave her a little nod.
“Do not concentrate. Just think to yourself that you would like the warmth of a campfire,” Ula encouraged softly. The others lifted their eyes to him and Keegan put down the stones he’d found to start a fire. He took a step backward and grinned when Ronan looked at him.
“Just don’t want you to direct that magic at me.”
“Flaming horsemen are not on the menu tonight.” Ronan closed his eyes and thought as Ula instructed. The temperature around them became warmer and he opened his eyes but there was no fire.
“It’s a start,” Ula smiled softly. “Try again.”
Ronan shifted then closed his eyes again, this time imagining a small fire. When he opened his eyes, he found it had worked though the flames were so small he didn’t think it could really be called a fire. With a bit of pushing, he made the fire larger.
“That was great.” Ula smiled broadly and Ronan shrugged.
“Not sure what good that was since Keegan would have had a fire in half the time.” Ronan watched her pat his hand.
“You must learn to control this magic of yours. The only times it has surfaced when you needed it was when it flared on instinct. The more you practice, the easier it gets and the larger the manifestation you can create.” Ula glanced up at the gray clouds of the night. “It looks as if it may rain.”
“I can’t stop the rain,” Ronan growled. “And even if I could, I wouldn’t. This place needs a good soaking.”
“But you could construct a shelter for those of us who do not wish to be drenched,” Ula suggested.
“Out of what?” Ronan looked around at the few plants. None were big enough to provide any kind of shelter.
“You build it with your mind with materials that you conjure up,” Ula explained patiently. Ronan frowned. If he could do that, he would just
conjure up a replica of his cottage.
“I don’t think I can.” Ronan looked up at the others but they were all staring past him. His hand dropped to the sword at his hip as he turned. His own eyes rounded as he stared at what looked like his cottage door.
“Did I do that?” Ronan whispered as he rose to his feet and faced the stone house. “I didn’t mean to.”
“A bit more control,” Ula reminded. “But I would say you did well. It will beat sleeping on the ground.” Ronan reached forward and pushed the door open. A fire burned in the hearth and his tools hung on the far wall.
“Nice.” Fiona stepped in front of him and peeked in before stepping inside. “This is your home?” She looked back and Ronan nodded, moving forward.
“There are not enough bedrooms,” He told them as they each entered behind him.
“Then add on some more.” Keegan shrugged.
Ronan closed his eyes and imagined the cottage with three more rooms. When he opened his eyes three new doors stood open to the front room.
“What’s in there?” Fiona reached for one of the original doors but Ronan rushed forward placing himself between her and the door.
“No. You can’t go in there,” He said.
“Ronan?” A voice called form the other side. “Ronan, what have you done? Unlock the door.” Ronan closed his eyes. No. No. She wasn’t there. He placed his hands on his ears.
“No!” He shouted. Stillness. When he opened his eyes the cottage was gone. The others were staring at him as if he’d lost his mind. Maybe he had…a little.
“No beds?” Keegan asked.
Ronan willed three Johran huts for them. “This will have to do.” He turned and walked abruptly away. No one argued or called after him and for that Ronan was thankful. But someone was following. He looked back to find it Fiona.
“Who was that?” she asked when he turned and faced her.
“My mother.”
“You keep your mother locked away in a room at your home?” Fiona stared at him with sudden disgust but Ronan shook his head.