The Confliction (Book Three of the Dragoneers Saga) (Dragoneer Saga)

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The Confliction (Book Three of the Dragoneers Saga) (Dragoneer Saga) Page 7

by M. R. Mathias


  Jenka was healing faster than the rest of them, due to a lingering effect of a restorative spell Jade had cast on him long ago. Jenka remembered that first meeting and cringed. He was nearly killed, and had he not saved Jade from those trolls, Jade wouldn’t have been able to save him in turn. He was glad for the encounter, though. Jade was as much a part of him as his hands or feet.

  Tkux and his ogres were almost finished with the saddles. Clover’s design was clever and allowed for satchels of gear to be tied on near the rider. Jenka and Jade tried one and it was amazing how much more maneuverability Jade had when Jenka was strapped in. They went upside down and took wild whipping turns without losing anything they carried. It was incredible.

  Young Jade was growing strong. Dragons of Jade’s age yearned to roam the world and stretch the limits of their being. It pained Jenka to know that they were not done battling the Sarax. Jade deserved better than to be forced to fight for a race that had hunted his kind since they arrived, but the dragon did it willingly for his bond-mate. Jenka kept his mind from getting caught up in the dismal state of things by thinking about his wyrm and the quality of the link they shared. Then he began to ponder the Sarax.

  The idea that sea water scalded the alien beasts was a welcome one. Jenka remembered the bladder drawings Rikky was talking about, and they found other sketches Clover had made of it in her study. The ogres were already making their own version of the weapon for the Dragoneers to test.

  Jenka learned that Zah’s lung had been pierced and that she would be a long time in recovery. Zahrellion’s information on the ‘life manna’ the druids were extracting and feeding the Sarax was disturbing. The higher druids were spelling the souls out of living people and making them into a tasty human meatloaf.

  Zahrellion cursed the whole Order between coughs and struggled to tell Jenka about it. Her grandfather had worn the red robes and was a renowned inventor of things arcane. The Order, at least in her eyes, had once been noble. Lanxe and his cronies had destroyed everything. The Order of Dou, and anything good for which it stood, was nothing more than a memory. These things pained her deeply, but Jenka didn’t understand it, nor did he try.

  Mysterian and her witches had all but taken over Clover’s castle. They were brewing, and reading, and bewitching everything around them. They had forbidden Marcherion to get out of bed. His dragon wasn’t much better off, but the rest of the wyrms were healing from the battle well enough, even Crystal.

  The only good news, other than Zahrellion not being a captive anymore, was that Mysterian and her brood had confiscated many of the journals detailing the past experiments performed on the Sarax. The witches kept the gist of what they found to themselves, but the grim nature of it seeped out in the way they looked at each other and went quiet when the subject came up.

  Aikira and Rikky flew over the Outlands and on discovery flights over the foothills around the keep and the ruined Temple of Dou. The few people who remained there were locked in as tight as a drum. Mysterian was supposed to fly to Avlron with Aikira soon. As soon as they finished brewing potions for Herald, they were going to try and find the rest of the witches who left Mainsted by ship.

  “Something’s coming!” Rikky shouted down from the top of the spiral stairway in the rotunda. “I think it’s a witch-wolf!”

  This had Jenka fighting his aching bones to go see for himself. Luckily, Mysterian had shown him and the other Dragoneers how to activate several magical portal openings that they hadn’t known existed before. Clover’s castle was far more than Jenka could have imagined it to be. Jenka touched a silver Dragoneer symbol mounted on a stone on the wall, and all of the heat was sucked out of the den he was in. The upper half of the outer wall disappeared, revealing a gorgeous view of the snow-covered valley below.

  From the rotunda, Jenka’s healing ears heard Rikky’s peg-leg clop-clop-clopping down the spiral stair and then across the marble floor. Jenka was reserved about leaning out and looking down. Being that the top half of the wall had just vanished, he didn’t want to chance leaning on the bottom half.

  “Do you see it?” Rikky came into the den in a rush of excitement and huffing breath. Aikira was right behind him.

  “Where?” Jenka asked.

  “Coming out of the canyon across from where the ogres are building.”

  Jenka saw it then, a lone witch-wolf, longer and grayer than any natural wolf he’d ever seen. It was loping toward the castle with speed and purpose.

  Lemmy was as cold as he had ever been. He’d buried himself in a snow burrow when he spotted a band of trolls and a few goblins coming toward him. The steepness of the valley he was traversing didn’t allow for anything else. He hadn’t figured the beasts would make camp there for the night.

  He was waiting for full dark, when the trellkin would be sleeping in knotted groups in snow burrows just like his. At the moment they were still carousing and carrying on. He hoped he could make it a while longer. He needed to survive so that he could tell the Dragoneers, or at least the witches, what he’d seen.

  He’d fled the Sarax after the battle at the temple and made his way to Kingsmen’s Keep. Ranging out from there, he befriended an ogre whose parent was collared by the druids. On one trek, into the deeper mountains a few days east of the Temple of Dou, they found a valley full of cocoons; some of them were empty, but some weren’t. With the help of some other ogres they found two more similar valleys. They tried setting them afire, but the stuff wouldn’t burn in the snow.

  It seemed that the ivory-antlered trollish things were crawling out of cocoons all over the place. Over the weeks that passed, Lemmy saw that hundreds of them had already emerged and fortified themselves. They were each gathering trolls, goblins, and orcs into bands, just like Gravelbone had done.

  It made sense to him. All the Sarax that had escaped the star ship had fed and were now cocooning. The ones that were emerging might have been cocooned for centuries. Soon the Sarax swarms that had escaped would be morphing. By the time winter passed the threat might no longer be the terrible aliens, but the antler-headed trolls and the bands they quickly took command of. The Sarax were worse, of course, but the pupae drew in vermin, and thus were a viable threat of a different sort.

  There were many ogres ready to rid the land of the otherworldly things, but only with the help of the witches and the Dragoneers could they prevail.

  Finally, the chattering goblins and arguing trolls were silent for a while. Lemmy felt confident enough to dig himself out of the snow burrow. He clenched a dagger in his trembling right hand as he broke the surface and peeked out. He saw nothing but white and relaxed. He took his time creeping away from the area, even though he was dying to feel a fire’s warmth.

  After a time, he ran and let his exertions warm him. When he topped a ridge, he found a big belled-out fir tree. After inspecting its branches for spiders, he made himself comfortable and cast forth a hissing blue druid’s fire underneath. He was three days from Clover’s castle. He didn’t want to make the journey alone, but going back to the keep to get help after coming this far would take too long.

  When dawn came, Lemmy set out through the heart of the Orich Mountains to warn the Dragoneers.

  Chapter 15

  Mysterian and the witch that had arrived as a wolf went into one of the halls the witches had laid claim to. They stayed there long enough that the fire needed wood twice before they emerged. Now they wanted to be flown, at first light, to the Outlands. Aikira volunteered to carry one of them, and Rikky the other. The witch brought news from the queen that had Mysterian all stirred up, but she remained tight-lipped. Jenka wanted to go just to find out what it was all about, but he was needed. Someone had to watch over Herald, Zahrellion, and Marcherion, and someone had to keep testing Tkux’s saddle modifications while guarding the encasement from the freed Sarax that remained.

  Mysterian did tell them some news that was strange and disturbing. Linux was alive. He’d soul-stepped a guard and escaped King Richard’s
wrath back in Mainsted. He was in the service of Queen Alvazina in the Outlands, where they’d landed.

  The next morning, as Jenka watched Golden and Silva flying away to the west, he wondered what the poor man who’d filled Linux’s place had felt. Then Jenka decided that he sort of understood how Linux could do such a thing. It was man’s nature to survive, no matter the cost. The druid was only doing what came naturally.

  “Are you feeling any better?” Jenka asked Zahrellion as he poked his head through the cracked door. One of the witches was there spoon-feeding her. By the sour look on Zah’s face, Jenka guessed the stuff didn’t taste any better than it smelled. She nodded, though, and forced a smile.

  “This’ll put her back under soon enough.” The elderly woman set the bowl on the table by the bed and made for the door. “Say what needs sayin’ now, lad. She’ll be out a while.”

  Jenka hated that they were keeping Zah in bed, but he agreed that if they didn’t, she would do too much and slow her healing. The witch-brew was potent, for Zah was already yawning and rubbing her eyes.

  “Linux is alive,” Jenka said when he sat on the bed beside her.

  “They told me,” she answered softly. “He’s insane.”

  Jenka wasn’t so sure he was a raver. Alive is what he was. When Zah yawned, Jenka had to fight one of his own.

  “Love you.” She squeezed his hand and drifted into slumber just like that.

  Jenka ran his fingers through her hair for a while. He blinked, and when he did, he thought he saw the tattooed shapes on Zahrellion’s cheeks and forehead flare blue. After rubbing his eyes, he decided it was a trick of the wavering lamplight.

  He looked in on Marcherion and found another witch feeding him from a similar bowl. March seemed to like the stuff, and only after he drained the bowl with a dramatic slurp did Jenka knock politely on the open door.

  “You going to walk again?” Jenka asked.

  “When these blasted witches say I can, I will.” March gave the woman a look, but she pulled down his blanket and rolled him onto his side so she could wash his arse with a rag. Marcherion looked flustered, but he had enough manners to do as he was directed.

  “You’ll love the saddles,” Jenka said. “Is Blaze ready?”

  “I think he is.” March nodded his appreciation. “If he goes out with you, take it easy on him. He will try and hide the pain. Plus he tells me he has no balance with the tip of his tail gone.”

  “He lost more than the tip.” Jenka chuckled as he nodded that he would. It was hard keeping a positive look on his face, but he did it for the others. He was heartbroken over Herald’s grim condition, and he felt as if he were failing as the leader of the Dragoneers. He made his way up to the landing. By the time he was at the top of the stairs, the scar up his abdomen was burning, but he ground his teeth and ignored the pain.

  Winter was turning. The sun was out and Jade wanted to fly as much as Jenka did. Crystal was still recovering. The frost wyrm’s flesh was healing, but she had several bite patches where her scales hadn’t grown back yet. It was clear that Blaze wanted to fly. When Jade leapt into the sky, the fire drake followed, if gingerly.

  Tkux’s saddle adjustments were perfect. Now, not only could Jade fly without concern, he could do it comfortably. Jenka was marveling at how easy it was to handle his sword now that he didn’t have to worry so much about falling. It was amazing. He knew that when his shoulder and stomach were fully healed he would be far more formidable in a sky battle. They sped on Jade’s ever-strengthening wings over a ridge and down across the snowy treetops. They flew for a while, gaining speed as they went. Then they curved sharply back around. Jenka had to fight a dizzying blackness due to the force of the turn.

  For a short time, all the trouble in the world around him was forgotten. Worries were replaced by frigid wind, fears by thrilling bursts of exhilaration. Alone in the sky, just he and his dragon, was one of the most peaceful and fulfilling places for him to be.

  Jade eventually carried them back over the star ship’s crater. He passed over Tkux and his helper and saw that they were waving their bare green arms at him wildly. He figured they were just excited about their last maneuver, and went arcing into a nearly straight up climb.

  Jenka could feel the newfound strength in Jade’s wings. His dragon was growing, and the long weeks of rest and heavy feeding had him bursting with energy. They paused fleetingly at the apex of their flight, and Jenka took in the crisp beauty of the world. His heart ached for Herald, but the thought didn’t detract from the moment. Herald would be getting busy, not dwelling on the way things were.

  Then they were diving. Jenka’s stomach went wild with fluttering tingles as they dropped in a headfirst fall. He had to fight to keep his head from being forced back by the wind. He saw the ogres below, growing larger as he and Jade sped toward the ground. Tkux’s persistent waving made Jenka realize they were trying to get his attention.

  Jade sensed Jenka’s thought before it was fully formed. He corkscrewed them into a slow spiraling descent. Then the powerful green dragon’s wings were churning them into a sharp hover just above the snow. Jenka found himself looking eye to eye with Tkux. The ogre was huge, as tall as the trees at the valley’s edge.

  Jenka started to ask them what was the matter, but couldn’t find his breath. After a few deep sucking gasps, he gathered himself. “What is it? Uh … Grem Hrux?”

  His ogrish was terrible. Without Lemmy or one of the girls there to translate, he barely understood a word of what they were desperately trying to convey.

  “Gome,” Tkux finally managed. “Gome frollow.”

  The big green-skinned creature went stomping away toward the star ship crater. Jade carried Jenka, and soon they overtook Tkux. They went deep into the cavern before they passed the old witch who had been attending Zahrellion. Seeing her in the cavern alarmed Jenka greatly. Jade picked up on Jenka’s concern and hurried them right up to the milky encasement before landing right behind were Zahrellion was now standing.

  Jenka couldn’t fathom what was happening. He’d just left Zahrellion sedated in the castle.

  Zah had her arms raised and was in the process of casting a spell. A wavering field of energy was forming as she traced her finger through the sky frantically. Jenka slid off of his dragon and ran to her.

  “Nooss,” Jade hissed and then opened his wing and swung it around to pull Jenka into him.

  Jenka managed to stay upright and was only mildly angry at being swept away from Zah by his dragon.

  Zahrellion’s spell released then, and the world was but a bright gut-thundering whoosh for a few heartbeats. A moment of silence, so complete that it was painful, followed, and then the encasement started crumbling away around the breach that Jenka had recently sealed.

  “What are you doing?” Jenka screamed at Zahrellion as she crumpled to the rocky floor like a limp sack of bones.

  He rushed to her side as even more of the encasement flaked and fractured apart. The tattoos on her head were fading, but they’d been glowing a bright shade of blue only moments ago. He didn’t know what to do, so he scooped her up and went running for Jade. Already the deeper thrumming hum of the Sarax trapped inside the star ship could be felt. The hive was stirred, and very little was holding them back.

  Jade lowered his body, and Jenka sat Zah in the saddle in front of him. First one set of black dagger-claws came bursting through the breach, then another.

  Jade had little room to get airborne. Gliding into a cave was far easier than taking off in one. He hop-stepped, flapping his wings as they ran away from the emerging threat. Zah’s head lolled to the side, and Jenka saw that her facial tattoos were still glowing, if faintly.

  Jenka was angry at her, and confused. He had no idea why his lover had just freed the Sarax, but he was determined to save her so that he could find out.

  Chapter 16

  King Blanchard, in Linux’s body, was sitting at a table alone in the Ornery Ogre Tavern in the Outland city of D
elton. The urge to get violent suddenly came over him. He attacked the worst possible person he could have when he punched the local road warden in the face. If he had been in his own body, he would have laid the man out cold, but as it was, he wasn’t strong enough to even break the man’s nose. He ended up in a tangled knot formed of his own limbs, but just as soon as his boot heel touched his mouth, he was released and left looking at a circle of startled Outlanders.

  One of the Hazeltine stormed in then, and the king felt his forehead throbbing.

  “Why’s his head glowing?” the bar-wench screamed.

  “He’s a devil,” said a man.

  “Back away fools!” the witch snarled and did a whirling circle, sending sparks and sizzling embers around her and the king. Needless to say, all of them moved back—all of them save for the road warden.

  “What is he?” the huge tanned-skinned man asked. “Why’d he hit me?”

  Even though the witches of the Hazeltine seldom visited the Outlands, they had a reputation that was substantial enough to keep the warden from getting too cocky. The rumors about Dragoneers, and the recent Sarax attacks, had all the wardens, and the city councils that commanded them, seeking to forge tight alliances so that they could defend themselves well. Queen Alvazina and the witches were there doing the same.

 

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