《Fox’s Tongue and Kirin’s Bone》74. Safe Travels (4)
Advertisement
It went for Adelaide first, which was a thing she probably wouldn’t like him feeling grateful for, but there it was. She jerked her horse’s reins towards the forest. Almost made it, too. But the dragon got there ahead of her, her path predicted, talons broad enough to crush boulders outstretched. They hunted with their hindlegs, a part of Aaron’s mind noted, in a glance over his shoulder before he went back to minding where his own paws were racing. Its forelegs were tucked to its chest, its wings stretched above it. It was a brilliant copper, now that it wasn’t trying to camouflage itself against the sky.
It was bigger than the dragons that had attacked Salt’s Mane, but nowhere near so big as the stories said they grew. A second year? Older?
Adelaide’s horse was screaming behind him. Another look back, and he saw the horse on its side, legs kicking, his sister already rolling back to her feet. The mare had balked under the dragon’s shadow, maybe. Had saved both their lives, definitely. The dragon, its mark missed, had apparently opted to take this fight to the ground rather than risking its prey disappearing into the trees before it could dive again.
It wasn’t out to doppel them. Not with the force it hit the ground, the dirt and rocks thrown aside in its wake, the lines rent in the road from its passing. It dug its talons into the road, all four paws now, and bled its momentum through claws and wings, going faster and farther than they could have run. As demonstrated by it passing Aaron. Well. That had been the wrong direction to bolt, then. He veered.
There was a bend in the road ahead of it. Just a slight one, but enough to put the line of carefully roped stones in its skidding path. It leaned back, like a Twokin’s kid who’d started sliding down a rock face, and only now realized the bottom wasn’t so soft a landing as expected. It stopped itself just before the stones. And sat there, a moment, panting.
One of its toes had nicked an old rope. Already frayed with weather and age, it slid to the ground.
That was the first Aaron saw the leshy. The first the dragon saw it, too. It was just… there. Standing among the old trees, directly in front of where the dragon had almost crashed into the Lord of Seasons’ forest. The forest guardian was twice as tall as a human. Half as tall as a second-year dragon. It stood on two legs, in the rough shape of a human, since humans always thought human-shaped things were after their own image. Draping lichen hung like fur over the old gray wood of its bones, strung together by the thick corded vines that moved the rest. There was a place atop its shoulders that could be called a head, but there were no eyes that Aaron could see in that leafy mound. Nor ears, nor mouth. It stood there, just behind the stone and right under the dragon’s nose, as if it had grown in the place years ago.
The dragon removed its offending claw from the stone, slowly. Scooted backwards on its rear a good few feet before, equally slowly, getting its feet back under it. Whether it had personal experience with this forest, or only its dam’s memories as warning, it knew enough to be cautious.
The leshy continued to stand there. The dragon might have kept standing awhile too, except that Adelaide drove her sword into its wing as high up as she could reach and just—dragged it down, a long and final line, like a seamstress cutting cloth.
Advertisement
Right. Because grounding the dragon with them was exactly what they needed.
…Actually, that would make it significantly easier to evade the thing. It would still be fast, but not dive-from-the-sky fast. And there would be no more spotting them from above. Now if Aaron could just get his sister running. But Adelaide’s horse had found its feet, then promptly found the road away from all this, which… did make it rather hard for her to outpace even a grounded dragon. She was retreating into the forest—the human side of the forest—but it was to hamper the dragon’s movements between the closely spaced trees, to fight on more even terms. Not to run. There was a village near, and she was a blood noble.
He wasn’t responsible for Adelaide Sung. He barely even knew her, even if she was putting a rather absurd amount of effort into getting to know him. Which was not a thing people generally bothered with. And if she survived—as she had on the balcony, and at least one time before that, given the Michael situation, so really this was a pattern with her—if she survived, and he’d run off on this fight, well. It wasn’t best to let powerful people he’d betrayed also remain alive. More prudent to keep such things to one or the other: the betrayal, or the still-breathing.
And Aaron did not actually want his sister dead. Also, he had an idea, which was the stupider of those statements.
His claws left furrows in the dirt as he pivoted. The dragon was forcing its way through the trees behind him, trying to get to his sister. Its head was held awkwardly low under the branches of trees maintained by and for humans, its wings pinned to its sides by their trunks, its lunges and strikes hampered enough for Adelaide to avoid, so long as she stayed on her guard. Perhaps the foresters’ villages weren’t so ill-defended afterall. Or perhaps the dragon didn’t feel free to break trees or start fires, not with a leshy so near.
Aaron raced past them both. He wanted nothing to do with claws or teeth or the potential for it to change its mind about that fire. He ran out into the road, and latched onto a far less deadly target: the dragon’s tail. Which he bit, right near the end, where wolf jaws could wrap all the way around and clamp tight. He jumped clear again, just as quick.
The dragon’s tail whipped out. Aaron hadn’t drawn blood through its tooth-jarring scales, but slamming one’s finger in a door didn’t typically draw blood, either. He imagined wolf bites felt about like that, under all its armor. It didn’t actually turn towards him for more than a murderous glance—thank you, sister, for the continued distraction—which made the tail’s lashing easy enough to dodge. It thumped down just outside the line of rocks.
The leshy kept standing there, dust from the hit drifting over it. A bit closer, then.
Which would be difficult, with the dragon so focused on Adelaide.
Less so, when he remembered that Adelaide was a person who was, nominally, on his side. He could just… work with her.
He stood in the road where she could see him, and woofed his most annoying woof. She looked. He jumped a step back towards the rocks, and the leshy. Wagged his tail, for good measure.
She looked away, with no change in expression. His tail stopped wagging.
But when next the dragon swiped a claw at her—it wasn’t trying to bite, and Aaron wondered if the dragons passed around their own stories about her—his sister ducked it, and used the opportunity to run. Back into the road, to the line of stones, where she cast Aaron another glance before firming up her stance and raising her sword.
Advertisement
The dragon was after her as soon as it had worked all its limbs free of the tree line. It did not charge heedlessly at her, or anything so exploitably stupid. It glanced to the forest behind the stones, and stalked rather carefully forward, slanting the long length of its body along the narrow road to cut off her retreat back to friendlier woods. It held its wings in tight, and kept its tail to itself, because a second-year dragon was only slightly thinner than the wagons this road had been made for.
Aaron didn’t have the bulk necessary to shove the creature past the stones. Not without his griffin cloak, which was however far down the road in a fleeing mare’s saddlebags. But dogs twitched when fleas bit, and men went mad over a mosquito’s buzz by their ear. Aaron leapt up, and sunk his teeth into its wing. By the base, on the side of the Lord of Seasons’ forest. It flared its wing.
And clipped a tree, cracking a branch clear off.
Aaron dropped back to the ground and, in proper Twokins fashion, vacated the scene of the crime.
The dragon drew back its wing. Tried to. But another crack sounded, of a different sort; not of breaking, but of growth. The snapped branch regrew so fast that its bark crackled as it expanded into place, years of growth rings expanding outwards in an instant, piercing through the membrane of the dragon’s wing even as it moved. The beastie shrieked and tried to pull away harder, faster, an instinctive reaction to such sudden pain. This would have worked better, had not the new growth been branching again and again past the point of the piercing, leaves shiny with their newness growing through, flecked with blood as fresh as they were.
The leshy continued to simply stand.
The dragon thrashed with claws and snapped with teeth, tearing into branches and trunk, its other wing beating at air and ground, its hindlegs digging into the road for purchase as it tried to cross back over the stone line. The tree broke, and regrew. As did the others it maimed, until wood spiked through it at every offending point.
Its screams covered the sounds of the bear’s approach, if there’d been any. It did not appear from leaves and shadows as the leshy had. It walked, as mortal things do, for each Lord of Seasons died when its time had passed. And the Lord of Winter’s time had passed: meltwater drenched its fur like sweat, as the frost-speckled ice dam on its back gave way under the new season’s warmth. Its sides were gaunt, its ribs heaving out and in with each over-strained breath. Around its reddened eyes grew the flowers of spring, looking on it like the most pustulant of sores. Oft scrapped at like the irritants they were, until their petals were torn and stems crushed; grown back, just as surely, in the same tear tracks that pus would have followed. It wept spring, and found no relief.
It was not so big as a dragon. Bigger than any other bear, surely, twice or three times as big, but still small next to the length of one of the world’s largest beasts. The bear lumbered closer, breaths heavy. The dragon lashed at its face. The Lord of Winter cracked the taloned foot between its jaws.
Things proceeded from there, in a way that was somewhat hard to look away from, and entirely inadvisable to turn one’s back on. Or to move too suddenly away from, in any manner that might attract a predator’s gaze.
The dragon did not go down without a fight. Its teeth cracked through the remaining frost on the Lord of Winter’s shoulders, into the ice beneath, until real blood welled through. Its talons tore fur and flesh from those gaunt ribs. It had even tried its fire. But the leshy had turned towards the fight, just slightly, and the flames had been smothered under new growth until the tar beneath only smoked. The dragon died with vines in its mouth and a bear’s jaws around its neck. The Winter Lord shook its prey one last time. Then dragged it fully across the line of stones, and began to eat.
And as it ate, like a thing whose hunger had too long festered, its wounds filled in. Not with frost or fur, but with grass and ferns. The blood on its sides began to run clear; the coppery tang on the air turned sweet as newly tapped sap. More things of spring, more parasites of the changing seasons. It had stopped bleeding, its torn flesh knitted over by the filaments of roots, but this was no healing.
Adelaide had begun taking careful steps towards Aaron, as the bear tore and crunched. Towards Aaron, or maybe just towards the path’s end, and the road away. He’d not have blamed her for the latter; it was certainly where his own paws were edging.
The bear snorted, and jerked its reddened muzzle towards them.
The future duchess froze. Then, in what had to be some manner of noble reflex, she bowed to the forest’s lord on bended knee. She even shot Aaron a stare, like he should do the same. He did not. For one thing, he was a wolf, and he wasn’t about to take off his cloak when all it would do was make him slower. For another thing, well. He’d only ever bent the knee to one person.
The bear huffed, and returned to its meal. Aaron gave it the respect of not turning his back on it until it was well out of sight.
* * *
“It generally doesn’t hurt,” Adelaide said, when they were out on the main road, and rather far away. “Showing respect to things like that.”
He padded a few paces. Then unclasped his cloak, and walked a few more. The sky above them was clear again, and not in the sense of clouds.
“If it can understand that kind of respect,” he said, “don’t you think it can tell when a person means it? That was not my king.”
She looked at him a moment. “Orin’s lucky to have you,” she said, like she was understanding something.
He didn’t correct her.
“Your first instinct is always to run, isn’t it?” she said, because apparently they were still talking about this. “Thank you for coming back.”
“How about you stop making a habit of this, and I’ll stop needing to decide,” he said.
“Seems we both have something to work on, then,” she said, with a smile.
“That wasn’t a joke,” he said, for clarity’s sake, and she laughed.
A little further down the road, she worked free her wooden arm. It had been as useless in battle as she’d said: flopping around, hitting trees as she dodged, hitting her side just as often. She was lucky it hadn’t gotten tangled up in anything.
Still. He raised an eyebrow, at the one-armed woman holding an arm.
“Don’t you have to carry that now?” he asked.
The look she gave him was withering enough to wilt a leshy on the spot. She pointed at him, with the half-curled fist of the prosthetic.
“I’m not sure I’m going to like you, brother,” she said.
“I don’t have much experience with sisters,” said Aaron, “but doesn’t that mean I’m doing it right?”
This was a joke, but she didn’t laugh. That was fine: he could smirk enough for the both of them.
They made it to the next village just after sundown. There were no walls to keep them out, no matter how disreputable they looked. The villagers let them stay in one of those empty longhouses the forester villages had. Made, he realized, for travelers not actually welcome in their homes. They stayed in the same room, and neither said anything on the topic. They stayed in the room farthest from the line of roped stones outside, which required even fewer words.
He wondered if a leshy could regrow a tree from the wood of their walls, and went to sleep with those thoughts.
The next day brought them to a messenger waypoint. Adelaide’s horse had arrived ahead of them, and had spent the night surrounded by the luxury of new hay. The sweat of her fear and flight had been meticulously curry-combed away by a stablehand who scolded them for leaving the poor creature in such a state, and all alone besides. But also could they tell him every detail of what happened, because the stablehand gossip network was very real and very hungry, and this was the most exciting thing that had happened since that time a stablehand on the coast had missed a kelpie in her stalls.
Adelaide glared at the man, already leading her new horse away, her old saddlebags on its back. The man did not repent.
Aaron thought a moment. “Saw a bear eat a dragon,” he said. “A few trees helped.”
And then he led his own horse away, past the desperate pleas of gossip-monger who’d glimpsed a feast, and would soon starve on these crumbs.
The last forester village they stayed at was the first he’d ever seen. The twin babes Orin and Rose had blessed were doing well. Not a scream out of them in days, not even when their tired mother was slow at getting them to her milk. Apparently they’d been quite colicky before that.
“They’ve been sleeping well, her little cubs,” someone commented. “Winter must be feeling full.”
They left the forest behind them. Entered the mountains, and started the winding way up, until they crossed through a pass and found a familiar plateau in the distance, tucked between the sheltering teeth of greater peaks. A day more brought them to the gates of Onekin, and the castle itself, where Aaron was recognized and greeted and generally welcomed home, in a way that made him think that home was a thing that he had. The guards and staff certainly seemed to think so. Adelaide entered with him, upon his introduction; it had been too long since she’d last come here for her to be recognized on her own merits.
And so the future duchess of the south was inside the palace, among all the southern lords who’d not been trusted on parole anywhere near their troops. And her father, too, who was locked up in the O’Shea’s basement.
It occurred to him, then, that perhaps this trip hadn’t just been about brother-sister bonding. And also, that he was exactly as poor an advisor to the king as he’d thought.
Advertisement
- In Serial181 Chapters
The Reaper's Legion
Earth: An advanced inhabitable world in the ideal colonizable range. Moderate temperatures and consistent weather patterns make this planet an incredible resource, along with a wealth of animals and wildlife beyond most worlds. Inhabited by the sentient species designated “Humans,” Earth would likely have joined the galactic community of its own accord. Levels of technology in local populace indicate a sharp trend towards interstellar travel, but still needs to make the last push to acquire reasonable interstellar technologies. Up until quite recently, Earth has not been a fully classified planet and was largely unknown. Due to biotic activity in the quadrant, however, attention has been drawn to Earth and many other possibly habitable planets in the regions, primarily for quarantine and control tactics. Matthew Todd was not a particularly unique human being before the meteors struck the earth. Average athletics, above average intelligence, but somewhat gifted in marksmanship, the post-apocalyptic earth has been a trial by fire for him and many others. Creatures that resemble bastardized wolves roam the land in packs numbering in the thousands. With entire cities decimated, those that remain are left with the harsh reality that they may be witnessing the end of humanity. And yet, there is a chance. Humanity knows they are not alone in the universe - the wolves are case enough for that - but what they do not know is that they are not alone in their plight. They are not without aid. Obelisks descend from the sky, giving the people a means to fight back. With tools ranging from guns to advanced mechanical apparatus and more bizarre tools, the people must cull the Biotics. Or, be consumed by the ever growing and mutating threat. Join Matthew in the fight to exterminate the Biotic threat, and to ensure the survival of human kind!
8 191 - In Serial53 Chapters
The Lucky Clover
Clover's a rather unfortunate guy who's been named rather poorly by his parents. As a result he's been a social outcast all his life. In short his life sucks. Then a tragedy strikes and his world is turned upside down. So begins the epic adventure of the Lucky Clover. A story filled with swords, action and perhaps a little romance on the side.
8 129 - In Serial10 Chapters
Bleached Nightmare
500 years into the future, technological progress has stagnated. Wracked by a series of problems like climate change, lack of resources and the innate human lust for war, the geopolitical landscape of planet Earth is radically different, and quality of life is far from what it was in the past. While technical development and research into realistically feasible space travel has made leaps and bounds, this has come at the cost of a world that is reeling from centuries of technical stagnation in other aspects of life. The establishment of a mining colony on Mars has led to the discovery of a new, rare material called sarinium; though it is extremely tensile and durable, it has a very low melting point. The discovery of this metal leads to large mechanical infantry- dubbed 'Spirit Striders', they are six to ten meters tall and as famed for the pride they provide a nation as they are a lethally mobile heavy weapons platform. The story follows the character of Marilin, who must both figure the enigma that is her past, and what this means for her allegiances in the future. Despite her genetically physical frailty, she seeks to gain power through a vessel that will channel her wish to change the world- the Spirit Strider. --- I hope you all enjoy my work. This is a story that I began writing over four years ago in my beginning years of high school, and have cast aside unfinished in the past two years. Though it is not up to my current standards, I hope you all may find some enjoyment in it. Happy reading.
8 183 - In Serial351 Chapters
The Paths of Magick
Credits: Story by Xcaliburnt. Cover Art by @Bervolart. Magick, the power to bend the laws of reality. All because of a mystical substance known as mana. Mages follow the Paths to achieve power, for there is no more addictive chase. Each Path winds and twists, forcing mages through the flames of adversity and challenge. Though the operative word is "path", the reality is far less straightforward. Instead of a road, Paths are like the branches of world trees, erupting into the heavens, intertwining, and ending in sharp snaps. Only the strongest reach the sky. There are several Paths, and many Ways to walk them—variations of the same Path, and like the stars, they are endless. Magick is the sacred flame that scours the fat, rendering the truest self. Superfluous flesh melting away to show the skeleton of one's being. A chance for ascension—apotheosis. Though not every mage works to godhood, if they survive long enough, It is inescapable. Witness the lives of those that tread the knife's edge of self-destruction. Each one intertwined in their search for answers, revenge, and, most of all: power. These individuals have all lost something precious—irreplaceable—and In search of filling the void left behind, they have taken up the mantle of a mage. Per aspera ad astra. Ad mortem vel divinitatis. (Through adversity to the stars. To death or divinity.) There is no consistent release schedule except my consistent inconsistency. Besides, there’s like a thousand pages worth of content, how can—you already read it? Goddamn. Oh, and there is a very long hiatus between volumes as I intend to edit and rewrite a lot. What to Expect: This story is progression fantasy, so expect a healthy dose of training. It's also heavy on slice of life, and it isn't entirely overarching-plot-driven. Expect characters to live their lives, and not always be on some quest to save the world. There's a lot of magic theory and discussion about it in the story. So, if you don't like impromptu lessons on sorcerous theory by traveling monster slayers, this might not be for you. But if you do like it, rejoice! For there is a lot of it. This is also heavy on prose, purple as a bruised eye. I use outdated, uneccesarily collegiate-level terms and play around with the writing style just for the heck of it. I find it fun to wax and wane poetic, and that might grate on you—I don’t plan to change this aspect of the Paths much if at all. Onto the viewer discretion is advised parts: This is grim-dark/ grim-heart. Take the tags seriously. There will be combat scenes that are brutal and horrifying. Fights to the death tend to be. This is a tale about medieval mercenaries (quite literal killers for hire), man-eating monsters, and eldritch gods beyond the material plane. Beside that, there will be traumatic events that are best left unread. I do not detail certain acts I find heinous enough, instead leaving some parts unwritten but still alludded to if not outright stated; there is simply no graphic narration thereof. This is not for the faint of heart.
8 282 - In Serial25 Chapters
Mage Blood : Rite of Death
Peter was a servant in Portos castle. One day, he learned his father was a mage. Hoping to find more clues about his father, Peter went on a voyage with a group of people. However, their ship sank as a huge storm hit. Stranded on a remote island, they have to face dangerous adventures. Together with Borin, his best friend, Anna the healer, Susan the mind-reader, and Pogna the hunter, they must unravel the mystery behind a long-lasting human sacrificial rite.
8 152 - In Serial13 Chapters
Undead Nightmare
A young high school student is thrusted into the zombie apocalypse and must survive with a group of his fellow students. They must fight through hordes of the undead in order to find sanctuary in this new nightmare world.
8 135

