War In The Winds (Book 9) (5 page)

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Authors: Craig Halloran

BOOK: War In The Winds (Book 9)
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She shuddered a sigh.

She curled up between them, lay down, and closed her eyes, absorbing the warmth between them.
I might not have a rock to my name, but I have them, and that’s everything I need.
Her heavy lids began to close.

Scratch. Scratch. Scratch.

Her eyes snapped open. Something gnawed on something somewhere.

Rats!

She jerked and shimmied. A yellow glimmer caught her eye. A tiny creature gnawed at the bonds on her feet. No bigger than a mouse, it had tiny wings and bright yellow eyes.

Her heart leapt inside her chest.

A dragon!

Its little claws sawed through her bonds. It let out a dragony squeak.

Sasha gazed down at her metal-clad and tethered hands.

Its wings buzzed to life, and it floated over to Samaz’s feet. A second tiny dragon, cherry colored, joined it. In seconds, the cords were cut and Samaz’s feet were free.

The gnawing continued at her wrists. The cords snapped at her waist, and she freed her arms.

The two continued to the cords on Rerry’s ankles. The boys woke, blurry eyes filled with wonder. The two tiny dragons sat in front of them and started marching toward the front of the cave.

“What do we do?” Rerry whispered.

The dragons stopped and turned. The red one let out a tiny roar then turned and marched onward again, straight for the guards at the cave entrance.

Meanwhile, a third tiny dragon, cobalt in color, landed on one of Sasha’s metal gloves. It spat a glowing blue substance onto the metal, which dissolved.

Before the tiny blue dragon even landed on her other hand, Sasha pressed her newly bared hand into the dirt. As she at last tapped into the world’s arcane energies, exhilaration rushed through her. After a while, she stood up and whispered, “Let’s go.”

Silently, they crept toward the silhouetted lizardmen at the cave entrance.

The tiny dragons buzzed in front of the lizardmen, who tried to shoo them away.

Rerry sprang behind one, Samaz the other. Rerry slipped the lizardman’s sword from its scabbard and chopped it down. Samaz pounced on the other’s neck and choked it to the ground. It was quiet. It was quick. It wasn’t without notice.

A bolt of power blasted into the cave rock, singeing Rerry’s hair. Sasha’s eyes locked on the lead acolyte. His head glowed, and his eyes blazed with fire. Lizardmen rushed up the slopes. Acolytes muttered and moaned. Sasha understood their ways. They channeled energy into the small, ghostly leader in plum robes.

We’ll see about that!

Raising her hands above her head, she flipped her fingertips out. Bright shards of blue light sprayed from her hands and cut through the mass of men. The leader howled in rage and flung an arc of power up the hill. It slammed into the three of them, lifting them from their feet and back into the cave.

***

Dazed, Rerry shook off the blow and popped back on his feet. Steel swords from the guards filled both his hands, and he twirled them with grace and ease. Two more lizardmen arrived at the mouth of the cave.

“Ah, what a pleasant surprise,” he said. “Dying lizardmen.”

The lizardmen lunged with barbed spears.

Rerry hopped high over them and struck, sinking his blades in one chest each.

“So nice to meet you.”

***

Samaz rolled past a lizardman’s lunging sword. Catching it by the wrist, he wrenched the blade free, cranked up the pressure, and broke its wrist. The lizardman’s large mouth of sharp teeth snapped at him. Samaz drove his boot heel into its jaw and laid it out on the ground.

The second lizardman sliced at his head. Samaz crouched beneath the decapitating blade and launched both fists into the soft spot in the lizardman’s belly. The swords dropped from its hands, and its jaw fell wide open. Samaz roundhouse kicked it in the jaw and watched it collapse on its nose.

***

Acolytes and lizardmen fell. The dragonettes swarmed. Bright sparks of lightning and lancing acid burned through robes and skin. Smoke from the red one caused sluggishness and confusion. Though tiny, their attacks were nevertheless a whirlwind of terror unleashed on evil.

***

Sasha rushed down the slope with power-filled hands. The greasy acolyte greeted her with his own power. Mystic forces collided. Weak and starved, Sasha fell to her knees. The haunting man cackled.

Sasha swayed on the ground and watched the man come closer.

“I do have to keep you alive,” he said, “but only barely. Let’s have some fun, shall we?” He raised his arms in the air—

Sasha sprang to her feet and locked her fingers around his neck.

“Yes, let’s have some fun, shall we?”

She channeled her sorceress energies. The veteran acolyte twisted and fought. His hands locked on her wrists, burning them. Sasha held on.

“No you don’t!”

A torrent of energy coursed through her.

The acolyte gaffed. His eyes shone like moons. His body stiffened, cracked, and turned ashen.

Sasha shoved him away. His body fell and broke into pieces.

Gasping, she searched for her sons. The first thing she saw was the draykis. Armored to the neck in heavy metal, horns twisting on its head, it engaged her sons once again. Rerry’s blades glanced away. Samaz’s punches and kicks were futile. The dragonettes were discharging everything they had. Nothing slowed it.

It struck hard.

Rerry fell.

Fast.

Samaz collapsed.

It flicked the dragonettes away and faced off on Sasha.

“Don’t you hurt my sons again!” Sasha said.

It cocked its head and strolled right at her with a demonic look in its eyes.

She summoned everything she had left, lifted her arms over her head, and unleashed it at him.

The draykis stopped.

Nothing happened.

The draykis laughed and came right at her again. She sagged to her knees.

Rerry came. Samaz came.

The draykis pounded them down with supernatural strength.

Crying out, Sasha rushed over and covered her boys.

“It’s too late for them,” the draykis said. “It’s too late for all of you.”

The tiny citrine dragonette blasted lightning in its face.

“Argh!”

The draykis swatted it away.

“Fleas! Be gone! I have death to deliver to these other feisty ones.”

Its sword scraped from its scabbard. The metal glinted in the moonlight.

“For Barnabus,” it said, raising the sword up high.

A shadow dropped from the sky.

Whump!

A cherry-scaled dragon landed behind the draykis. The draykis was to it as a dog is to a horse. The draykis spun and struck. Its steel glanced off the dragon’s armored belly. Fast as a snake, the dragon’s maw clamped over the draykis entirely. Metal and bone crunched. The draykis squirmed then squirmed no more. The crimson dragon slung the mangled corpse into the dirt. Fire surged from its mouth. It disintegrated every evil being in the camp.

Sasha gaped when the dragon turned to her. Its belly was a lighter shade of red, and it had small twisting horns and long black eyelashes. “Th-Thank you,” Sasha managed to say.

The dragon dug its claw into the earth and made a circle with two slashes through it. Sasha knew that symbol. Bayzog had shown it to her before. A thrill rushed through her. It was the sign of Balzurth, the Dragon King.

 

 

CHAPTER 9

 

 

Gorlee the changeling stood guard inside the cage of The Deep. He was one of half a dozen, guarding just outside the rim of the well that led down there, past the phantom, into the realm of the damned. He wore a uniform of Barnabus and was in the form of a man, the same as all the other guards. Now, he stood near the lip of the stone pit, staring into the blackness.

“I wouldn’t get too close,” one man said. His face was rugged and sad. “The phantom’s been known to snatch guards once or twice.”

Gorlee didn’t respond. His eyes were fixed on the blackness.

The guard grabbed him by the shoulder, saying, “Young fella, you’d be wise to listen to me.”

“Huh?”

“I said, get back from that pit,” the guard said, “and that’s an order.”

“Oh,” Gorlee said as the older guard hooked his arm and pulled him away. “Sorry.”

“You’ll be sorry alright if you wind up down there. Nothing but a city of torment down there.” The guard wiped his forearm on his brow. “Say, what’s your name, anyway?”

Gorlee didn’t have an answer to that. He didn’t know. All he knew was what Selene told him. “Uh, Jason,” he said.

“Well, Jason, stop being so stupid.” Some of the other guards laughed, but the moment was cut short by a frightening wail that came from within The Deep. “Great Guzan, I hate this place,” the guard said. “The entire world’s run by monsters now.”

Some of the guards gave the older one a disapproving look. Others looked away.

“Yeah, I said it,” the guard said. “You’ll say plenty more of what’s on your mind, too, if you ever get to be my age.” He glanced at the pit. “And I don’t think my words will wind me up in there. But I might get fed to a dragon nest, maybe.” He cracked his neck and slapped Gorlee on the shoulder. “You’re young, Jason. You should be marching the borders. This is just a dead end here.”

“I think I would like that,” he said. “I think.”

“Well, you really need to work on the
thinking
thing. I wish
I’d
done more thinking when I was younger.” He sauntered away and said to another, “What are you looking at?”

Thinking. That was the problem. Gorlee had become a dullard. Without purpose. Drifting. The High Priestess Selene controlled all of that. Whenever she called, he went. Whatever she ordered, he did. But none of what she asked came easy. Something inside of him resisted. Something within himself had led him here, to this pit. There was still a remnant of whoever he really was hidden inside him, and he wanted to find it.

Taking a position between the pit and the cage, he teetered on his feet. He’d been imitating many people. Their manners. Habits. Voices. All in pursuit of something. His memories. Selene and Kryzak had taken them. He knew. He could remember parts of that day. They’d taken almost everything , but not gotten all of it, and tucked it away. He’d played along for months, but every day he felt more parts of him fading away. He had to find his memories. Fix what they’d done to him.

The Deep. It was the perfect place to hide what they had taken. And he could sense that his memories were down there. He edged closer to the pit again.

“What did I say?” the older guard said, marching over. “You don’t want a kiss from the phantom, son. Now stay back. All the way to the bars!”

“Sorry,” he said. “Just curious.”

“Just stupid is more like it.”

Gorlee felt stupid. There were only bits and pieces. It stirred him. He saw Nath Dragon’s face.
There is something wrong with what I am doing. I can’t live like this any longer.
He edged toward the pit.

“Fine,” said the guard. “It’s not as if you aren’t expendable.”

 

 

CHAPTER 10

 

 

Focus. Focus. Focus!

Nath had no wings. Nothing changed. Thoughts rushed through his head.

Will this fall even kill me?

Through the evening darkness he plunged, headlong toward the street.

I’ll know soon enough.

He covered his head with his arms. Something jerked him up by the ankles, snatching him a few feet from impact with the cobbled street. People screamed. Then up, up, up he and Selene went. Nath crossed his arms over his chest and scowled. Selene dropped him back on the balcony.

“You are an evil lady,” he said.

“Am I?”

“You might have killed me,” he said, gathering his legs under him and standing up again.

“Maybe, but I don’t want you dead. I want you alive. I want you to embrace the dragon within, and I must say, you seem reluctant to do that.”

“I’m not reluctant. I’ve always wanted to fly.” The feline fury cruised to his side. Nath dug his fingers into its mane. The fur was thick and soft. The cat that had tried to kill him before had become his only comfort. “I’ve always wanted to be a dragon.”

Selene’s wings collapsed behind her back and disappeared.

“I was taught these things when I was a little girl. I imagine things were easier then. More of a second nature. Your problem is still the same. You think more like a man than a dragon. You need to stop that, Nath.”

She was right. He’d spent most of his life fitting in with people, not dragons. He simply got along with people better. The dragons had shunned him for some reason. Up until now, anyway.

“I just don’t understand why your father withheld so much from you, Nath,” she said, coming closer. She kneeled in front of the feline fury and petted it. “He had plenty of time to show you. Why would he hold you back? Gorn Grattack pressed me from the moment he first saw me. I mastered the magic within when I was young.”

“Good for you,” he said. It ate at him that his father had never taught him these things. He didn’t understand why. He turned away. “I’ll see you later.”

“You are departing from me so soon? Oh Nath, don’t leave.”

He kept going.

“Nath, wait!”

He stopped and bent his ear over his shoulder.

“Next week, Nath. We’ll take leave. We’ll see the cities. The wide open spaces will do your scales good. I think there’s a good chance things will come alive for you out there.” She approached and patted his shoulders. “Just a little longer. Rest till then.”

He rolled his eyes.

“Don’t be so hasty. You don’t want to miss Sasha, do you?”

He turned to face her.

“You expect her back. When, exactly?”

“Any day now. Perhaps that will help you relax, seeing an old friend.”

“We’ll see,” he said, leaving. “We’ll see.”

***

When the heavy double doors slammed behind Nath, Selene caught her breath. Deceiving him wasn’t easy. He doubted her despite all she did. She scratched the fury’s head and said, “Keep close to him. He needs a friend.”

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