by S. J. Wist
Contents
Torian Continent
Suzerain Continent
Dragon Aster Trilogy
Copyright
Book One
Texts of Daath
Earth, 6 months ago
Aster, 6 months ago
1: Vanir
2: Beached
3: Gravy Boat
4: Dreaming Flowers
5: Cats and Thread
6: To Hunt a Deathmare
7: Calm Before the Storm
8: Field Rush
9: Prisoned
10: Saved
11: Holding On
12: Bonded Pleas
13: Windy Stars
14: Lovely
15: Scalding Fairy Tales
16: Dancing Flowers
17: Slave
18: Dreaming for Two
19: Fiery Disposition
20: Chasing Mastery
21: Library
22: Reciting Texts
23: Woven Death
24: Loki's Castle
25: Woods Stalker
26: Unmasked Flirt
27: Love's Connections
28: Hide and Squeak
29: Lashings
30: Yri Unravelled
31: A Dragon's Hain
32: Freeze
33: Stars of Promises
34: Gift of Flowers
35: Mer City
36: Rescue
37: Thrown Back
38: Breathless
39: Out of Bounds
40: Rift of Regret
41: Falling Death
Book Two
Texts of Gei
Earth, 3 months ago
1: Aster, present
2: Damek
3: Docks
4: I Want You Here With Me
5: Level of Hell
6: Unicorn
7: Sylvan Tower
8: Destiny Masked
9: Emotions
10: Jasper
11: Gatekeepers
12: Shrine
13: Fields of Death
14: Sentry
15: Council
16: Stormline
17: Pigeon
18: Purpose
19: Bedtime Story
20: Painting Roses
21: Hunted
22: Tangled
23: Whipped
24: Nafury
25: Dressings
26: Fog
27: Glass Dragons
28: Tenu
29: Flesh and Petals
30: Atrum Lord
31: Curses
32: Refusal
33: Alexia
34: Regrets
35: Gargoyles
36: Nephena
37: Cat's Cradle
38: Sacrifices
39: Tides of the Moon
40: Falling Roses
41: Phoenix Rising
42: Nova of Death
43: Sing for Me
44: Fire Tail
45: Blue Light
46: Sword
Book Three
Texts of Tenu
1: Castles
2: Gods of War
3: Wrong Coat
4: Missing Weapon
5: Quills
6: Sleep Stalker
7: Ownership
8: Funeral
9: Repressed Memories
10: Snow Serpents
11: Dragged for a Cause
12: Atrum of the Past
13: Tempest
14: Beautiful in Death
15: Ice and Fire
16: Breakdown
17: Mersael
18: Toria
19: Ghost in the Machine
20: Stormless
21: Fall of the Falls
22: Embrace
23: Last Wishes
24: Height of Warning
25: Fallen Feathers
26: Reflections
27: Winds of the Past
28: Purgatory
29: Shiver
30: Wraiths in the Park
31: Cold Nightmares
32: Kenshe and Prisca
33: Toy Trains
34: Memory and a Farewell
35: Train of Pain
36: Assembly Required
37: Unforgotten Friendships
38: Eclipse
39: Never Be Lost Again
40: Lament
Glossary
About the Author
Also Available
Dragon Aster Trilogy
Copyright 2012 by S.J. Wist
Cover Art: Copyright 2012 by S.J. Wist
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Published by Infinity Dreamt
Author’s website: www.sjwist.com
ISBN: 978-0-9877197-7-5
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters and events portrayed are either fictitious or used fictionally. Any resemblance to any person, past or present, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
BOOK ONE
Between Heaven and Hell there are Fay.
Those in darkness have seen into the future.
Those blessed by the light would shine it on the past.
They see all destinies within the Threads that they touch.
There is a Heaven for each of us,
but I will not find mine here.
–Texts of Daath
EARTH, 6 MONTHS AGO
‘I want you here with me.’
“Where are you? Why can’t I see you?”
‘Because you are on Earth.’
“And you?”
‘Aster.’
“So just what are you?”
The slow beating of his heart grew a steady louder, until it was loud enough to cause her whole body to tremble. It took only moments for it to drown out all other sounds in her ears.
Her heart slowed in turn as Sybl watched the street from the ledge she lay on. It seemed as if the creature speaking to her were powerful enough to stop all Time, as the cars twenty-five stories below stopped.
Then like all her strange dreams, this one was gone on awakening.
The sun came up and touched the rooftop of the highrise as the sounds of the world faded back in. It promised the light of a new day, but Sybl knew there was no light for her future. If she chose to stand up and go back, there would be nothing but an even longer fall waiting for her.
She continued to watch the street, as her brown waves fluttered like torn strips of a sail against the wind. Time was normal again. If she didn’t have a shot at a miracle, she might have tried to see if Fate could be stopped twice. But it was that miracle of a heartbeat who stopped her grief from taking her over the edge.
Again.
The fact that they had not fixed the lock to the roof was proof to what was truly going on. For now she knew that her mother hadn’t thrown her into foster care for being crazy; but because Sybl was no longer loved.
‘Stop it!’
She sat up and rested her legs on the side of the ledge and took hold of the trinket the creature had left behind after saving her. The golden fairy was listening to her thoughts, and somehow, sending them to the voice in her head. Now it was refusing to let her talk herself down. He was real…wherever he was. She held the proof right in her hands. For if she had at any point wanted to buy something so beautiful in her unawareness, she would have had to mug someone first.
The dark brown claws that had caught her could have easily torn her to pieces if it wanted, but didn’t. Maybe, it even felt sorry for her.
Or maybe, the fairy in her hand led to a world of heartbeats sim
ilar to his.
A world of dragons.
She waved the gold before her face, trying to pierce it deep enough with her eyes to open a path to such a place. Nothing happened.
When the door to the rooftop opened by her worker’s hand and voice in follow, it was clear that there was only one set Fate before her now.
One without her say in it.
ASTER, 6 MONTHS AGO
The pluma charged down the hall for Cirrus and Nafury. The giant brown cat carried its razor-sharp feathers at its sides like fans of colorful knives.
Cirrus grabbed his Prince by the back of his gold-plated armor and pulled him against the stone wall as the berserk creature raced past. The Regal having missed, let out an angry snarl as it stretched its wings and turned around to try again.
He didn’t let Nafury go just yet, as the Prince waited trustingly for his judgement on this one. Cirrus used the aeri in the air around them to cloak them from sight, by bending the light of it within to match the color of the brown corridor wall. With the right amount of concentration, Cirrus alone had a talent that served to make them invisible.
The winged cats had made it to the center of their home now; crazed and disorientated enough to lose memory of their inborn senses. This one didn’t so much as bother to sniff them out, before giving up and leaving to continue its war stomp through the Dragon Caverns.
Cirrus quietly let go of Nafury and hastily walked after it. Somning into his dragon form that held his invisibility as he did, he caught up and lifted himself onto his hind legs. Then he took aim with the precision and balance of a snake to strike the cat’s curiosity.
As his white mist solidified behind the Regal, the pluma turned around too late to see the white claws come directly for its face with a piercing grip. Cirrus then brought down the full force of his hand, crushing the skull of the cat against the floor of the mountain corridor. It died instantly from the force. Moments later, a stream of blood from the Regal’s Fate retreated through its mouth and ears, streaking its heavy brown mane red. The blood joined the aeri-infused water on the walls, before spreading upwards against the slow-falling water to the ceiling. After a minute, the whole hallway glowed red.
“Insanity has made them faster, but not smarter,” Nafury said as he pulled his wavy brown hair behind his ear, where it settled over his shoulder. The corpse of the brown cat that lay at his feet was twice his height in his human-appearance. “Did my father pay them a personal visit as of late or something?”
“Not that I’m aware of. Aragmoth must think we’re getting soft to be letting these vermin in.” Cirrus stepped back, and the form of his Ancient phased out of the hallway. It passed harmlessly through Nafury.
Loki appeared in his pale green dragon form from around the corner. “Let me guess; you remembered how to be pretty again, only to forget at the first sight of blood?”
Ignoring the comment, Cirrus asked, “How many are left?”
“We have them on the run, no worries.”
“I’m not as concerned with these plumas as much as I am with what has made them lose their minds. Regals are guards—not front-line attackers.” Cirrus looked at Nafury then, as his Prince still didn’t somn into his dragon form. Instead, he stood silent, as he let his psi drift off in search of all that was going on. “Can you see anything?”
“It looks like we have them under control. I also found my father. He’s still back at Toria and just found out about this attack now.” Nafury opened his sapphire blue eyes as his psi returned to him from his castle that also housed the Soph Aur.
Cirrus led the way to the wind tunnels, not taking any chances, especially with Simera still several hours off. He unsomned into his human-appearance and entered the wide section of the Caverns as his long, blond hair settled against his back. As his Ancient released the last essence of his soul and vanished, his light blue eyes lost their otherworldly glow.
He peered at the dozen of High Guard of various colors standing ready to take on the next wave. Many of them hadn’t so much as bothered to suit up their Sylvan bodies in armor. They were either awakened too fast into action or were not overly concerned by the plumas’ attack.
Never had he so much as heard of the winds that protected their underground entrances stopping like this. Without Aragmoth’s harsh breath that only a dragon could navigate safely through, the plumas could easily walk in if they wanted. But the dragons had proven to be not-top of the fear-chain today; second only to insanity.
“Should we try and cut them off from outside?” Lintrance, his older, dark-green scaled cousin suggested.
Cirrus closed his eyes and listened to the Threads, before Nafury shuddered on seeing what vibrated through them first. He caught the Prince’s arms and looked into his psi.
Then the sound of a loud crack reached their ears and pulled him right out again, followed by the panicked cries of the daorans and young behind the protection of the Fay Wall.
Where they had just left.
The dragons unsomned and ran back down the halls, only to be met by a swarm of smaller plumas that had found another way into their mountain. Their dragon forms were unable to all cram into the hallway to deal with them. They were forced to fight by steel and unsomned. The screams continued to cry out for help from behind their enemy in a deafening grip of terror on their psis.
Then another crack sounded through the Caverns, stopping many of the blood-covered dragoons in their tracks in shock.
Cirrus shouted the attention of those he could reach back into the fight, before they could be killed by the overwhelming number of plumas. The final crack froze him in fear. It was followed by the sound of giant stone-slabs of death colliding against the ground in life-taking shatters. The pieces of the Great Dragon’s wing-bone continued to fall on all those who tried to get through the plumas and out of the Halls of Aragmoth in time.
Then all was swept quiet with a cloud of white dust.
The plumas that weren’t killed had seemingly recovered their senses. They agilely avoided the enraged strikes of those who followed their escape. Most of the dragoons were still in a state of repent on their knees before the rubble, that had been turned into a burial tomb for their loved ones.
Only a few broken cries of psi remained on the other side.
Cirrus found himself able to move again, and immediately began calling out for Nafury. The dragoons scrambled together to get to the few survivors out in time over the bodies of cats, rock and their felled soldiers.
Nafury’s psi came back to his own as safe, and Cirrus began to look for those of his own family. Lintrance. Loki… He pushed through the commotion and took up his younger cousin’s side, helping to dig out the debris closest to where Loki had heard his mother last. The younger dragoon was crying too hard to see his choices of stones. “Get away, now. Move!” Cirrus hauled the frailer dragoon away from the rubble. Then he used his aeri to pull the wind on the other side of the rocks towards him. The weaker spots revealed themselves by the smell of his lavender reaching through, and the dragoons quickly targeted them.
When they were through, the devastation on the other side twisted the hearts of the dragoons enough to turn their stomachs on them. Many of the daorans and young were crushed. Those who had tried to fight in their dragon forms now lay dead either by claws or fallen stone in their Sylvan forms. The spirits of their Ancients hovered around their bodies in the hope that their hosts might still be saved. In all his life, he had never witnessed death on such an overwhelming, silent song.
Loki found his mother, but it was too late. Both her and her unborn child had been buried at the back of the former Hall. She could have only been one of the last to flee.
The light-green haired dragoon collapsed in a heap of tears over her, letting them drip to where the blood of his mother’s memories and unborn sister lay underneath the ruins.
The Great Dragon had ruled on their Fates with this punishment, today.
For now they were truly alone, and godless.
1: VANIR
“Master Kas, you know I would give anything for this conflict to be over, but getting you killed is not included in this,” Jru said as he stopped before the start of the courtyard that led to the main gates of the Atrum. His long, black dreads fell away from his old, red eyes as he looked up at the castle that towered over them. The estus-infused purple light that rose from within it hit the sky as a beam, before spreading across most of the Suzerain Continent through the atmosphere.
Jru’s deep wrinkles fell further into his dark skin, as the Armsman tried to remember back to a time when things were much different. When the towering black stones of the Atrum didn’t make it the center pillar for Vanir’s warfare. When it was a place of hungry growls from a united populace trying to fend off starvation and the cold. Now it felt as if the somnus the Atrum Lord ruled over had traded their simpler sufferings for the price of all the decency left in the souls.
Overhead the damp, heavy light continued to drown out anything that might allow the memories of such a time to resurface. “Your father wants the Sanctus to burn, not be a part of his Empire.”
“No, today it is something else,” Kas replied as he came to a stop and his escort of Custos behind them did the same. His mentor’s melancholy thoughts were all heard and felt in his own psi.