"Unleash your creativity and unlock your potential with MsgBrains.Com - the innovative platform for nurturing your intellect." » English Books » "Dragonfired Retail" by J. Zachary Pike

Add to favorite "Dragonfired Retail" by J. Zachary Pike

Select the language in which you want the text you are reading to be translated, then select the words you don't know with the cursor to get the translation above the selected word!




Go to page:
Text Size:

To her surprise, the bridge of blue light was still there. The shimmering pathway hadn’t been a vision of the afterlife after all. Instead, luminous sapphire fluid was pouring down from the heights above her and running through the channels that Stennish craftsmen had carved ages ago.

On either side of her, the walkway she stood on fell away into total darkness. Looking up, she could make out the amber light of a distant flame through the tangle of stone pathways, like looking at a campfire through a thicket. It occurred to her that she must have hit most of the stone glade’s branching pathways on the way down in order to survive such a fall. It certainly felt like she’d hit most of them when she struggled to her feet.

That left her with a choice between following the strange light or walking away from it into the darkness. On the surface it was a straightforward decision; her glowstone was gone, her healing items were recently expended, and she couldn’t survive another fall like the one she’d just endured. The only sensible choice was to stay on the glowing trail.

Yet there was something horrible and familiar about the light. Looking at it made her feel as though she’d stepped into a scene from a half-remembered nightmare. Cold dread welled up from her depths, and she felt like it would be better to fling herself into the darkness than follow the flowing light. “I don’t want to remember,” she said, almost reflexively. She wanted to forget the pain, his screams as he died, but more than that, she wanted to never find out the secret of the glowing water. “Don’t make me remember. I⁠—”

He didn’t die so ye could throw yer life away.

“He came back,” Kaitha growled, shoving the despair away. “He came back for me. I can do this. I will do it. I owe it to him.”

Her bow was lost in the fall, presumably on a ledge above her or broken in the depths below. She drew an arrow from her Poor Man’s Quiver and held it like a dagger as she set off. She did not know where she was, or what lay ahead, or the reason for the terror that gripped her heart. Yet she was sure of what had been done for her, and what it cost, and it gave her the strength to walk down the path.

High above the Elf, Laruna was also slowly making her way along a stone path, though her leaden pace had little to do with uncertainty and more directly pertained to the angry dragon hissing at her. But Laruna was also propelled forward by the sense of recent loss, and beyond that, a white-hot rage that she had only recently tamed.

The dragon was only making things worse.

The massive reptile seemed incensed by the idea that a mortal would approach it alone, and even more so by the deliberate steps she took toward it. It spat at her while the tip of its great tail whipped back and forth like a perturbed cat’s.

“What’s it saying?” Jynn hollered from behind her.

“I don’t know. It’s angry!” she shouted back.

“I can see it’s angry!” The wizard ducked behind the pillar as Laruna waved away another blast of dragonfire. “I meant, what’s it saying through the Eye of the Dragon?”

“Nothing!” Laruna flicked the gemstone as one might tap a thermometer to settle the mercury. “I’m not sensing anything.”

“You should be able to tell how it’s feeling!”

“I believe we’ve established the anger!”

“Maybe you should get closer?” Heraldin said.

The thought gave the solamancer pause. Flames held little fear for her, not even dragonfire, but teeth like swords and scything claws were another matter. She wasn’t exactly sure how far the creature’s serpentine neck could stretch, but it seemed like the sort of thing you only got the opportunity to misjudge once.

Yet as Laruna tried to gauge the creature’s reach, she saw a flash of panic in the simmering eyes, and it occurred to her that watching a furious mage advance through a firestorm was likely a frightening sight; it was the last thing many a deceased monster saw before it was summarily executed-slash-cremated. And while she couldn’t bring herself to feel pity for the creature that killed Thane and Kaitha, she could carry herself far enough in that direction to see there was only one way forward.

It was an enlightened thought, and apparently one the dragon had yet to reach. Dorsal spines rose like hackles along its serpentine neck, and it looked ready to strike.

“I see that you are angry,” the mage called to the dragon. “That’s good.” She spread her open palms in a gesture of peace.

The dragon leaned back and snorted, like a schoolboy preparing to do something unpleasant to a teacher. With a flash of crimson along its blackened scales, it vomited forth a dribbling ball of flame, the last of its reserves thrown into one final assault.

There was nowhere to run, no side to dodge. Laruna’s vision went white as the dragonfire rolled over her, and her world was a sea of fury and flame. It felt like both of them would consume her, and she loosed a shriek that almost drowned out the despairing cries of the heroes behind her. Yet Laruna’s wasn’t a scream of pain, or even frustration, but of effort—a grunt of exertion as she beat back the rage—the justified, righteous fury—that threatened to overwhelm her.

Laruna’s universe was a white-hot ball of fire and anger. Yet she was not the anger she felt. She was separate from the anger, and in control of it.

“I am the fire,” she said.

The heat was as warm and welcoming as a blanket; the blistering flame felt like an extension of herself. It didn’t matter where it came from or who conjured it or how much of it was dragon snot by weight—the fire was as much a part of her as she was of it. And like her anger and herself, when she controlled it, it could not harm her.

The hottest flames on Arth coalesced into a small, blinding ball in the mage’s palm, leaving her unscathed but not unchanged. Amid the receding dragonfire, rubies and black pearls boiled to the surface of her robes amid streams of molten gold. The fabric bloomed in black and crimson splotches, like parchment falling on hot embers. When the last of the fire coalesced in Laruna’s hand, she wore the red and black robes of a pyromancer.

“Laruna?” said Jynn from somewhere behind her.

She ignored his questions, eyes locked on the stunned dragon as she stepped over the invisible line that she imagined marked the edge of the dragon’s reach. All it would take was a quick flex of the dragon’s neck, and she’d give the beast a very short dental examination in passing.

“We share the anger and hurt, if nothing else,” said Laruna, still advancing.

The dragon snapped and clawed at the air in a way that didn’t appear very sympathetic.

“You killed my friends!” Laruna took another step forward. “And I ache to get vengeance, but I know that if I let these mortals pass, they’ll shatter the dear stones!”

Her words echoed off the cavern walls, which were otherwise filled with a confused silence. The dragon stared down at the mage as though she’d grown a second head, which didn’t seem that farfetched given the sudden swirl of alien thoughts in her mind.

“Uh, what was that last bit?” Jynn called.

“The mortal can hear a heartstone in my head!”

“That’s not much better!” Heraldin shouted.

The mage shook her head. “I mean I wear its thoughts as of old!”

“Still not there!” Gorm shouted.

Laruna clutched her temple and tried to disentangle her inner voice from the inner voice that wasn’t hers. Memories swirled through her mind, though not in the sort of convenient slideshow of pictures and snippets of voice that could be pieced together into a pertinent montage. It was like standing in the eye of a sandstorm, and she could no more read an individual thought than she could focus on a single grain of sand whipping by in the gale. Emotions, pain, facts, words of languages long dead, faded dreams and musings on their meanings; she was caught in the center of a vortex that threatened to sweep her away, and it was all she could do to keep her balance.

Are sens

Copyright 2023-2059 MsgBrains.Com