I ducked out into the hall, almost bowling over Milandra, who stood there waiting for me. Greg and Sabrina chuckled a little and went back to arming themselves, picking out a few daggers and things to round out their arsenal.
When they finished in the armory, they joined Milandra and me in the hallway. The queen handed me a glass globe that seemed full of a bluish smoke and said, “I can use my magic to transport you to the forest where the dragon makes his lair. When you have the creature’s heart firmly in your grasp, smash this globe on the ground and stand close together. The globe will return you to my great hall. I wish you luck.”
Then, with a wave of her hands and a flash of pink and purple faerie dust (yes, really), we were off to slay a dragon.
Chapter 16
Apparently Faerieland dragons live just like you’d expect them to—in caves deep in dark forests. Because that’s exactly where Milandra dropped us, right outside a cave in what looked and felt like a deep forest. The ground was carpeted with thick undergrowth, there was moss hanging from the branches and the mouth of a cave gaped hungrily in front of us.
I stood there for a few seconds getting my bearings (or my courage), then took a deep breath and marched resolutely forward . . . only to trip over Sabrina’s outstretched leg and fall flat on my face into a plant that I really hoped wasn’t poison ivy or something with fingers. I have no idea if I can still get poison ivy since I’m dead, but I wasn’t really interested in finding out. I scrambled back to my feet and whirled to face the grinning cop.
“What the hell was that about?” I demanded.
“Do you have a plan, Brainiac?” she asked.
“Yeah. Go in the cave. Kill dragon. Carve out dragon’s heart. Go back
to the palace. Get the magic plant from Faerie Queen. Eat another faerie chick. Save your cousin. Make trolls stop beating up gay men in my city. Go home. Drink beer. Did I leave out anything important?”
“Maybe how we’re going to accomplish the whole ‘kill dragon’ step,” she said, looking around us as if trying to find something. “Look at the mouth of that cave. Can anything as big as Milandra described get through that opening?”
I had to admit that it looked pretty small for anything dragon-sized. The cave opening was about ten feet tall and maybe a little wider than that. Certainly not as big as I would expect for a dragon’s lair. “Okay, you’ve got a point. So what’s your plan, General Patton?”
She waved an arm at the forest around us. “We explore the whole area carefully, make sure there isn’t another entrance or escape route for the dragon, and then plan our assault.”
I hate it when she’s right. I hate it even more because she’s always right. “Okay,” I said. “That does make a lot of sense. Why don’t I go this way, you and Greg go that way, and we’ll meet back here in about thirty minutes to make a plan.”
“Sounds good to me, but why are you going off alone?” she asked. “It’s not that I’m going off alone, but to be brutally honest, I’m not the most graceful thing in the forest, and neither is Greg. If he and I split up, then anything that hears us will wonder why there are two rampaging elephants rummaging in the forest outside a dragon’s lair. Hopefully the noise will be so distracting that any beasties will decide to leave us alone instead of attacking.”
“Hey!” Greg protested. “I’m stealthy. Like a ninja.” He leaned on the trunk of a tree, which proved to be rotten and toppled over, taking my pudgy vampire ninja to the ground in a crash.
“Yeah, you and Kung Fu Panda, bro.” I headed off into the forest as quietly as possible, which really wasn’t that quiet. I’m a city vampire, despite spending my college years at Clemson, which is about as rural a college as you can get and still have big-time football. I don’t spend a whole lot of time in the great outdoors, mostly because there’s never anybody to eat out there. The wilderness is wild, man. I’ll stick to places with delivery.
I wandered around for about ten minutes until I came to what looked like the front of the cave. Now that looked like something a dragon could get into. The opening was easily fifty feet wide and thirty feet high. The ground in front of the cave mouth was packed hard and smooth, like something really, really big and heavy used this entrance often. I looked up and saw Greg and Sabrina coming around the other side of the hill.
“I guess this is probably the front porch,” I said when they reached me. “Yep,” Sabrina said. “Now what do you think about a frontal assault, Braveheart?”
“Might not be my best idea ever,” I admitted. “What does your plan
smell like, Sun Tzu?”
“Actually, it’s Greg’s plan.” She waved at my partner, who was bringing
up the rear as he fought his way through more of those ass-poking
thornbushes. I’d never been so grateful for a long hauberk as when I walked
through those woods. And yes, I know what a hauberk is. I played D&D. “Then we’re doomed. I’m pretty sure we don’t have the cheat codes for
this boss fight, gamer-boy,” I said as Greg sat down heavily on a boulder. “Maybe not, but I’ve still got a pretty good idea for how to make a
dragon trap,” he panted.
“I’m all ears, bro,” I said.
“No, Jimmy, you’re usually all mouth. But I’ll take it. I saw this in a
movie once, so I know it’ll work.”
My partner’s faith in the world of make-believe is eclipsed only by his
encyclopedic knowledge of bad movies. He pulled a dagger from his belt
and started to sketch out a diagram in the dirt.
“You and I get up to the top of the cave mouth with our swords.
Sabrina goes back around to the back door and sneaks in with her bow. She
shoots the dragon in the butt with a few of those nasty arrows, and when it
comes running out the front door, we jump on its head and kill it. If we each go for an eye, we should be able to stab straight into the brain and drop the
beast without any fuss or bloodshed.”
“At least on our part,” Sabrina said.
“Yeah, shedding a whole lot of dragon blood is sorta the plan,” Greg
agreed.
I hated to admit it, but it sounded pretty solid, especially the part where
Sabrina stayed back and didn’t get in the way of the teeth and claws part of
the fight.
“What about the whole fire-breathing thing?” I asked. “Won’t the
dragon just turn around in the cave and roast Sabrina?”
“I’ll have to scout it out. Hopefully there’ll be a crevice or a crack in the
wall I can hide in.” She didn’t seem too concerned about going into a cave to
shoot a dragon in the ass, so I figured, let her go for it. I was the one
volunteering to jump off a cliff onto the same dragon’s head, after all, so I
didn’t have a whole lot of room to talk about good decision making. “All right, boy genius. Do we do this now, or wait ‘til dark?” I asked. “I don’t know. I have no idea if dragons are nocturnal or diurnal,” Greg
replied.
“Since I have no idea what that second thing means, I guess I don’t
know either,” I said. I’m not really an idiot, but Greg is really well-read and
likes to show off in front of girls. I do too, but I do most of my showing off
by hitting things very hard.
“Diurnal means that a creature is active during the day,” said a new
voice directly behind me.
I jumped about eight feet in the air and landed eye to very, very large eye
with the golden-scaled head of a dragon.
Apparently dragons can move very quietly when they want to. I
scrambled backward, and out of the corner of my eye saw Greg and Sabrina
doing the same thing. I tried hard to stay directly in the monster’s field of
vision as they moved out to flank the
creature’s head.
“Good afternoon, heroes. I am Tivernius. Welcome to my forest. I do
wish you would put that away, my dear. I would prefer not to incinerate you
quite this close to my home. After all, only we can prevent forest fires.” Sabrina put down the bow and the arrow she had been trying to slowly
draw, and Greg and I sheathed our swords.
“Thank you. Now please, come into my home and we can continue this
conversation in a more civilized setting. I give you my word that I will bring
no harm upon you as long as you do not attack me.” With that, the head the
size of a Mini Cooper pulled back into the cave on a long, scaly neck. We stood there for a moment looking at each other until finally Sabrina
started walking toward the mouth of the cave. “Where are you going?” I
almost shouted.
“I’m going to do as he asked,” she said. “If he wanted to kill us, we’d already be dead. He caught us completely flat-footed, and let us off the hook. I’m going to give him the courtesy of a conversation before we fight, at least.” With that, she leaned her bow and quiver against the cave mouth
and followed the head into the side of the hill.
I looked at Greg, who shrugged back at me and followed her. I waited
there for just a moment before I realized that they were in no hurry to come
to their senses, and followed my friends into the dragon’s lair.
Chapter 17
The passage was long and deceptively winding. We walked for a solid five minutes down the tunnels until the passageway opened into a huge room that made Milandra’s great hall look like a college dorm. The ceiling vaulted high above our heads, at least fifty feet into the air, and at a glance, I figured you could have fit a couple of football fields in the room with space left over for at least half a racetrack to boot.
Everywhere around us was opulence decked in gold. The floor was made up of marble slabs set in place and lined with gold. The walls were covered in enormous tapestries in amber, gold and orange hues. The ceiling, almost high enough to have its own weather, was sculpted to look like there was a canopy of trees, all covered in golden leaves.
I was almost disappointed not to see a huge lizard lying sprawled on piles of treasure, but there was no huge pile of booty. No fire-breathing monster running its talons through piles of gemstones, no priceless works of art carelessly piled around the room. There was just a sparsely, expensively decorated hall, with a large table near one wall. Seated at the head of the table was a tall, well-built man who rose when we entered and beckoned us to him.
Something about him looked familiar, but I couldn’t put my finger on it. He was dressed entirely in shades of gold, with long blonde hair tied back in a ponytail. He wore golden chain mail, which must have weighed a ton, but he stood and moved with the grace of a ballet dancer. A long sword hung at his belt, and judging by the way his biceps bulged under his armor, he knew how to use the thing. At a glance he looked to be in his late twenties, but something in his eyes made him look far older.
“Come, my guests. Sit, be welcome, and I will have food summoned.” We sat at the table, and our host took his chair at the head of the table. “Welcome. Thank you for agreeing to join us. Now, please, what can I do to help you?”
“I’m sorry if I’m missing something, pal, but wasn’t there a dragon in here a few minutes ago?” I asked, sipping from a goblet that appeared in front of me, full of rich red wine. The wine had a coppery tang to it, as though there was a little blood mixed in. I wasn’t going to complain, but I had my concerns for Sabrina if we were all drinking from the same carafe.
“I am sorry, my friend. I should have realized that you were not from our land. I am Tivernius. I am the dragon.” I looked sharply at the man and could see just a faint hint of scale at his eyebrows. As I looked closer, I saw that the golden tinge to his complexion was more than just a reflection off his armor, he actually had golden skin. I shook my head and reminded myself that we were in Faerieland, after all.
“Sorry. I thought you’d be bigger.” When in doubt, quote Roadhouse. It’s a philosophy that has served me poorly for many years, but I’m too stubborn to change it.
“We have multiple forms, my vampiric friend, just as you do,” Tivernius said.
“Huh?” Greg said. “We don’t have multiple forms, we’re just
vampires.”
“Then you have been poorly taught indeed, or are very young for your
kind, not to have discovered your other shapes,” said the dragon-man, a little
surprise coloring his voice. “But it is not for me to teach you. Why are you
here? Are you also here for my head, like the others that Fae-witch has sent
in the past?”
“Well . . .” I looked for a delicate way to put it and couldn’t come up
with one. “Milandra did send us, but I’m really hoping that we can come to
some type of non-violent agreement.” Mostly because I couldn’t think of a
single way that we could fight this guy in dragon form that didn’t end up
with my femurs being used for toothpicks. I thought we might have a chance
at him in human form, but then I looked at his arms again and that sword,
and I wasn’t so sure.
“And how do you suppose we do that, vampire? She sent you here,
didn’t she? And she told you that the only way to get her help is to bring back
my head? She’s been doing this for months, ever since the last time our
negotiations broke off.”
“Actually,” Sabrina interjected, “we’re only supposed to bring back
your heart. She didn’t say anything about your head.”
“Well, isn’t that just perfect,” the dragon-man fumed. “She refuses to
marry me. Then she sends bounty hunters and assassins to rip out my heart.
Like she hasn’t done a good enough job of that herself.” He stood up
abruptly, toppled his chair over backward and paced back and forth at the
head of the table.
We all jumped to our feet, hands on sword hilts, as I fully expected to
be flambéed at any moment.
“Well, maybe . . . nah, I got nothing. Sorry,” Greg said after thinking
for a minute.
“What were you going to say, vampire?” Tivernius picked up his chair
and sat back down. He put his elbows on the table and leaned forward,
running fingers through his shoulder-length blonde hair. The dude really did
have a serious gold-tone thing going on.
“I was just thinking . . . nah, it just doesn’t work out.” Greg tried to
start again, but gave up.
“Spit it out, bloodsucker. I’m sorry, that was uncalled for. I’m just so
frustrated by the whole thing that I don’t know what to do.” He leaned
further forward, his chin in his hands. If I didn’t know that he could turn
into something big enough to swallow bison whole, I would have thought he
was just another schmuck with girl troubles. As it was, he was a schmuck
that could level entire city blocks with girl troubles.
“Well, why don’t you tell us the story? Maybe we can come up with
something to help,” Sabrina said. “After all, we’re here, and we don’t really
want to try to carve your heart out, and we’re in no hurry for you to
barbeque us or whatever, so what harm can come from it?”
“That sounds like a fair idea, young human. Have some more wine.”
He waved a hand and two carafes appeared. The larger red carafe for Greg
and me, and another carafe of white for Sabrina.
“Stay outta the red, Sabrina. Just trust me,” I said, filling my glass. She gave me a look, but didn’t say anythi
ng.
“It all began at a party,” Tivernius began. “I attended a ball in the lands
of House Cintharion, a neighboring realm to Armelion. The King of
Cintharion was ailing, and he wanted me to meet his daughter, in hopes of
building an alliance marriage. But she was a harpy with a terrible disposition
and a huge nose, and I wasn’t interested. I may weigh seven tons and have
scales, but I have my standards. She was a truly unattractive human, not in
appearance but demeanor, entitled and possessing a ridiculous sense of
self-importance. So I was standing at the bar being miserable, because that is
where one stands at a party to be miserable, when Milandra walked in.” “Cue harp music,” I muttered, earning myself a sharp look from
Sabrina but a chuckle from Tivernius.
“Exactly, vampire. The moment I saw her, I was awestruck by her
beauty, her carriage and her very rightness. Even at her young age I had never
seen anyone so suited to rule. She was not yet queen but already the most
regal thing in the room. I introduced myself, and we spent the rest of the
night talking about everything under the sun and moon. We connected on a
deeper level than I have ever connected with any living being, human, faerie,
sanguine or dragon.”
“I was in love, if you can imagine. Me, who had seen seventeen
centuries without ever giving my heart to another creature, completely
smitten in one glance. And by a faerie, one of the most capricious races in all
the realms. It was inconceivable, but we continued to correspond, and to
build a relationship, and we began making plans to marry.”
“Wait a second,” I interrupted. “You were going to marry Milandra?” “Yes, of course,” answered the dragon. “We were very much in love.” “But she’s a faerie. And you’re a lot of things, but faerie isn’t on the
list.” “Don’t be speciesist, vampire. It’s petty. Any creature of magic can
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