Chasing the Dragon

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Chasing the Dragon Page 20

by Jason Halstead


  Thork took the barbarian's sword and looked at it. He shrugged and tossed it in the chest. "Okies."

  Garrick blinked. "Okies?" he echoed in a whisper. Mordrim smacked him in the thigh to shut him up. The barbarian sheathed his new blade.

  "Good luck bashin da dragon!" Thork said. "Remember to drink dem potions and get lots an lots of drinkin when yous done runnin."

  "Drinking? Why?" Alto asked.

  "Yous gonna see," Thork chuckled. "Yous isn't gonna want to eat nuffin either."

  "Are these safe?" Patrina asked. "It's not going to turn us purple and yellow, is it?"

  Thork laughed and slapped the table hard enough to knock a few potions over. "Nope, no colors. Just remember dat everyfing is faster, dat's all."

  "Everything?" Kar asked.

  Thork grinned and nodded. "Now get going. Dem trolls out dere is stupid. Dem's gonna forget yous came in wif me."

  "We're in your debt," Alto said.

  "Fank Jarook. Thork's just da messenger," the troll said. He grinned and shook his head as he changed his mind. "No, don’t do dat, Jarook might send yous nightmares den!"

  Karthor grimaced but kept his mouth shut while Alto led the way back out of the hut and into the jungle.

  Chapter 26

  They’d hurried away from the trolls and worked their way west around the swamp and away from the frogger breeding grounds before Alto called a halt. He took out the clay flask Thork had given him and broke the wax stopper free of the end of it. "Well, let’s see what these do."

  "You’re daft," Kar muttered. "Trusting that troll’s haphazard alchemy skills?"

  "Kar, has Thork ever done us wrong?" Alto asked the wizard. "He’s crude and he serves Jarook, but he’s helped us out time and again without asking for anything in return."

  "You forgot ugly, untrained, uneducated, and frighteningly powerful," the wizard offered.

  Patrina voiced her disagreement immediately. "I wouldn’t say uneducated. That man knows more about what’s going on around us than we’ve ever been able to figure out. He always has an answer for our questions, but it’s our job to figure things out."

  "It shouldn’t need to be our jobs," Kar disagreed. "Ask a question, get a simple answer. That’s how it should work!"

  Garrick, Carson, and Mordrim all nodded their agreement with the wizard. Karthor, on the other hand, intervened. "An answer without understanding is not an answer. It’s words on a page, nothing more."

  "What’s there to not understand about that?" Kar snapped at his son.

  "Seven people are killed in a war, just a number that doesn’t mean anything. Even if they aren’t fighting in the battles, they’re just a statistic. Casualties. Not important," Karthor said.

  Kar shrugged. "Yes, so?"

  "Those seven people had families. People who loved them. Brothers, sisters, mothers, fathers, and friends."

  "Everyone has those. Get to your point already!"

  "Fine," the priest said with patience that only made his father scowl. "What if those seven people are all related to another?"

  "Fewer people to miss them," Kar spat.

  "And what if there are survivors? What if two of that family survived, but one of them is now in mortal danger and the other is struggling to save her? Are they still simple answers? Just words in a book?"

  Kar’s eyes narrowed and his nostrils flared. He turned and looked at Alto, prompting everyone else to do the same. Kar nodded his head and then turned back to his son and sighed. "You devious on of a bitch," he said with a smile. "You might be my son after all."

  Karthor shook his head but couldn’t hide his own smile, however faint. The priest turned to Alto and opened his mouth but Alto waved him silent.

  "Simple words that remind us all there is much more to the deeds we do than even we can see," Alto said. "I will risk the troll’s potion if it can help the girl in Karthor’s story."

  Rather than speak, Patrina lifted her own flask and drank the potion down. She grimaced and stuck her tongue out. "Tastes like wet dog."

  "You’ve tasted a wet dog?" Carson asked while Garrick was already drinking his.

  "No, I mean how one smells—" Patrina stopped talking and her eyes widened. She staggered a step to the side but caught herself before Alto could raise his hand to grab her. "Hurry," she said. "I need to run!"

  Alto’s eyes narrowed. "What did you say?"

  "Why are you talking so slow?" Patrina asked.

  Alto looked at the potion in his hand and then at Patrina. "The potion sped her up. Everything about her."

  Garrick laughed and looked around at them all with wide eyes. "This is great!" he said in a very fast voice.

  Alto drank his potion, signaling the others to follow suit. Kar was last, grimacing as he lifted the bottle to his lips. The wizard gagged when he finished it and looked around at the others until his eyes began to shift all around erratically.

  Alto felt a warmth rush through him and leave him tingling. He flexed and relaxed his hands, anxious to do something. The potion had worked, he guessed, although he wasn’t sure exactly what it was supposed to do. He looked at everyone else and saw them shifting about just like he was doing. Patrina and Garrick had slowed down though, or perhaps he had sped up? "Are we ready?"

  "Let’s go," Garrick said.

  Alto nodded and turned away. He took a few experimental steps before breaking into a jog. The trees and ground seemed to rush past him as he ran. He turned once and saw the others keeping pace with him. He started to turn back when he crashed into the trunk of a tree and bounced off it, only to land and roll across the jungle floor.

  Alto rose slowly, or as slowly as his quickened body would allow. He shook his head and looked around. Patrina and Karthor looked concerned. Everyone else had smirks on their faces or they were laughing at him. Alto grinned and rubbed at his cheek where he’d bruised it against the tree. "Guess we’d better watch where we’re going."

  "You’re okay?" Patrina asked.

  Alto nodded. "Yeah, just hurt my pride."

  She relaxed and burst out laughing. Karthor chuckled as well and even Alto had to admit it was kind of funny. Patrina’s laugh stopped abruptly and she grabbed at her stomach. She groaned and looked around. Her eyes settled on Alto and she moaned again.

  "What’s wrong?"

  "I’ve got to go!" she grimaced.

  "Go? Go where?"

  She held out her hand and rushed past him and around a tree.

  "Trina? Are you okay?" Alto started after her.

  "Alto, stay there!" she cried out.

  He could see a flurry of movement as an elbow or a hand appeared around the thick tree she’d hidden behind, but beyond that, he was all the more confused. A moment later, his confusion was blown away by a sound that echoed through the forest. Several more wet and equally rude noises followed. Alto stared at the tree with his mouth hanging open.

  He’d heard noises like that coming from the jakes after a soldier spent too much time celebrating the night before, but he’d never heard them from a woman! He didn’t think girls were capable of such noises.

  A groan and a curse from behind him caused him to turn in time to see Garrick moving to squat down himself. He stared, amazed, and then felt something twist in his belly. The twisting was replaced with a hot dagger poking him in the bowels. He gasped and staggered over to the tree that had felled him a few minutes ago. He reached out to it and held on while sweat broke out on his forehead.

  Alto shook his head and bit his lip, and then realized he couldn’t stop himself much longer. It took every bit of control he had. He stiffened every muscle in his body and tried to ignore the agony in his belly. His fingers flew to the clasps on his armor, prying and tearing at them to remove enough to keep him from soiling himself. He succeeded, but only by the barest of margins.

  "By the saints," Patrina groaned several minutes later.

  Alto looked in her direction, terrified of what she’d heard and fearful that she might look ar
ound the tree and see all of them in the final stages of whatever sickness had overcome them. "Stay there!" Alto warned her.

  "I can’t," she gagged. "I, uh, I’ll just move away a little bit. Tell me when you’re all okay."

  "Damn that troll!" Kar bemoaned.

  "Fastest I’ve ever almost shat myself," Garrick said with a chuckle.

  Alto grimaced and risked standing up. He felt fine, aside from the nausea caused from the combined odors coming from the jungle floor. He sorted his clothing and armor out and then wiped the cold sweat from his forehead. "That was miserable," he muttered.

  "That’s why he said we shouldn’t eat," Carson mused out loud. "Everything goes faster, he said."

  Kar made a rude noise, this time from his mouth. "Even our bowels."

  "Especially our bowels," Patrina offered.

  Alto spun around and saw her standing beside a different tree nearly twenty feet away. "You’re supposed to wait for us!"

  She shrugged. "My love, we’ve truly been through it all together now," she said.

  Alto’s face turned red but he didn’t deny her. "They might not have been decent."

  "Some of them have never been decent," she countered. "But that doesn’t mean I don’t love them like brothers."

  Garrick grinned and started to reply. Alto cut him off, "Where Patrina and I come from, brothers and sisters don’t love each other like that."

  Carson and Karthor laughed at the large man who was left standing with his mouth hanging open.

  Alto adjusted his armor a final time and then let out a deep breath. "Okay, let’s try this again."

  Patrina took a long drink from her skin and gasped. She capped it and tied it to her belt before she smiled at him. "Let’s go get her."

  Alto felt the warmth in his chest grow hotter for Patrina. He smiled and started off at an easy jog that moved him faster than a speeding horse. Patrina fell in behind him and the others started as well.

  "First the snow bears, now your own family? You northlanders are sick!" Mordrim muttered for Garrick’s benefit before he took off at a run.

  Garrick gasped and then snarled at the dwarf. He ran after him, anxious to return the insult at the first opportunity.

  Thork’s potion gave them all the energy to run for hours, even the aging wizard. Alto called for a couple of stops to allow them to drink and once to refill their skins at a brisk flowing stream, and then they ran on until they left the jungle behind with only a few hours until dusk.

  "The road’s over there," Mordrim pointed to the north on their right. "Due west is Deepstar Lake. Legend tells that the Allfather plucked a star from the sky and cast it to the ground ages past so the dwarves could learn from it. Some of the saints were jealous and wanted it hid from the dwarves; they called for rain the lasted ages until it filled the hole left behind."

  Alto swallowed the final drops of water from his skin and stared up at the sky. Ominous clouds were approaching from the southwest, darkening the sky before the day was over. "Too deep to swim down to?"

  "Aye, but on a rare clear night the stars shine back in the lake as if they’re calling out to a lost brother. Some have claimed they even seen the fallen star shining back from the deep."

  "A rare night?" Garrick asked. "These saints still making it rain?"

  "So the legend says," Mordrim confirmed.

  "We just spent the day in a rain forest; the rain had to come from somewhere," Kar pointed out.

  Alto cleared his throat to stop the pointless conversation. "Does this help us get Caitlyn back?"

  The dwarf chuckled. "No, but either we go around the lake to the north and take the road or we go around it to the south and lose half a week of travel."

  "Even running as fast as we are?"

  Mordrim frowned. "A day?"

  "Look at yourself," Kar cautioned. "Feel how your clothes and armor fits."

  Alto glanced down at himself and shrugged. He turned and looked at Patrina and saw that she looked much the same. Sweat glistened on her skin but she looked healthy and beautiful, like always. He turned to glance at the others and then looked back at Patrina. He asked, "Skinnier?"

  "I see it," Carson agreed.

  Garrick grunted. "Patrina’s armor’s not falling off but it should be."

  Patrina looked down at her chest and then looked back up, her cheeks flaming red. Her armor was magical and had resized itself without her realizing it. Garrick was right; she had lost some weight off her top.

  Alto looked at Garrick sternly. "You noticed her cheekbones were standing out more, did you?"

  "What?" Garrick asked. Mordrim smacked him in the thigh, causing him to grunt. "Oh, yeah, cheekbones. Yeah, I mean her cheeks lost some weight. That means the rest of her did too, right?"

  Patrina sighed and shook her head. Alto scowled at the barbarian and then turned back to Kar. "How long will this potion last?"

  "Nobody asked the troll that, did they?" the wizard grumbled and looked around. "We don’t dare eat even though my belly is playing peek-a-boo with my backbone."

  "You’re always hungry," Karthor dismissed his father’s claim.

  "It’s my brain!" Kar protested. "All this thinking and all the things I know take a lot of food to keep working in top shape."

  Karthor wasn’t the only man to snort at the wizard’s boast.

  "Thork wouldn’t give it to us if it was going to kill us," Alto reasoned. "It must run out soon. Let’s go around to the north and get as far as we can. Unless anybody’s tired? We’ve already made up more time than we lost."

  "Tired, yes, but still full of energy," Patrina said. "It’s an odd feeling."

  Alto nodded. He could feel it too. His body was being worked beyond anything he’d done before, but the magic of the potion gave it energy to keep working. He wondered what would happen when the potion wore off. "Then let’s go."

  Without another word, they started off again. Mordrim took the lead, his shorter legs moving so fast they were a blur as he set the pace. They paused once more to fill their skins at a watering hole just off the road, and then Mordrim led them away from the road and into the hills that began to rise up ahead of them. By the time the sun had set and clouds obscured the sky to the south, a cool breeze blew against them. Raindrops began to blow over onto them, followed by lightning striking across the sky and leaving thunder trailing behind.

  "It’s going to be too dark to run safely," Mordrim shouted to the others over the increasing noise of the storm.

  "How much farther?" Alto asked.

  "We’re in the hills already," Mordrim said. "Dwarves patrol them, but the storm has driven them to their homes. Even running full-out, we’d be most of another day to the mountains, two days by horse or wagon."

  "Let’s go as far as we can," Alto said.

  "We’ve damn near done that!" Mordrim insisted. "That storm’s headed this way before the hot air from the desert turns it back south and east. There’s tornadoes and worse likely to come. Garrick, you should draw your sword and point it to the sky, but run a good thirty or forty feet behind us, all the same."

  Garrick reached for his blade and then stopped when he realized the dwarf meant to use him as a lightning rod. He sneered at Mordrim and was about to respond when Alto interrupted him.

  "Where would you have us go? I don’t see a place to shelter," the young leader said. He’d heard of tornadoes but they were rare in the northern reaches where he’d grown up.

  "Come on," Mordrim turned away and said. "I know a man who might help us."

  "Might?" Alto repeated. It was too late; Mordrim had already started to run again. A fresh crack of lightning spurred Alto and the others into action. The rain was falling harder and promised to be a downpour in no time.

  They ran on, their feet soon splashing through puddles and slipping on mud until Mordrim could find the right hillside to guide them to before the full fury of the tropical storm struck.

  Chapter 27

  "You must be chilled to the bon
e," the dwarven woman clucked over Patrina after she let her and the rest of the companions in. She shut the door behind them and hurried over to a chest on the floor.

  "I’m fine, but I thank you," Patrina said, speaking carefully so the dwarf could understand her.

  "Aye, a little water’s done us no harm. Even washed the stink off the northlander," Mordrim said. Garrick scowled at the dwarf as he continued. "Is Taroak due back soon?"

  Gemma tutted again and fetched a blanket from the trunk. She insisted on wrapping it around the scantily clad princess, ignoring the dwarf until she had no other choice. "He’s checking the tunnels to be sure there’s no leaks. Does it every time and not a one yet. Waste of time."

  "It is until the one time he finds one," Mordrim said.

  She harrumphed. "That’s what he says."

  "Then he’s a smart man."

  "Smarter than his brother, at least," Gemma said.

  Mordrim sighed. "I always said he got the wits in the family."

  Garrick looked back and forth between them and then grinned. "Your brother?" he asked, speaking too quickly for Gemma to understand.

  Mordrim nodded.

  Garrick chuckled. He slowed his speech and asked, "If he got the wits, what did you get? Not the good looks!"

  Gemma’s eyes widened. Mordrim glared at Garrick and opened his mouth, but was spared a retort by the sound of a door opening deeper in the underground home. A moment later, a dwarf humming a tune stepped into a doorway and stopped abruptly. A jagged scar ran down the left side of his face from his brow to his jaw. The wound was broken only by the patch the dwarf wore over his eye.

  "Oh," Garrick muttered. Mordrim had gotten the looks, it seemed.

  "Mordrim!" Taroak started forward and then stopped and glanced at his wife. She turned away and stepped to some shelves where she could busy herself with some plates.

  "Brother, it’s good to see you," Mordrim said.

  Gemma cleared her throat and asked, "You’ll all be staying for supper then?"

 

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