Soulblade (35 page)

Read Soulblade Online

Authors: Lindsay Buroker

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Epic, #Sword & Sorcery, #Science Fiction, #Military, #Space Marine, #Steampunk, #General Fiction

She didn’t seem to care. She got what she wanted, then released him with another degrading pat on the cheek. “Finish dressing and turn on your machine. I’m ready to go.”

He had no choice but to obey.

• • • • •

Cas did not know whether to be relieved or horrified when Phelistoth landed on the railing of the emperor’s airship and drove his head down into the deck like a steam hammer. It looked like it hurt, but he must have magical protection. Wood smashed and boards flew. Soldiers fired at him, but the bullets bounced off. Phelistoth didn’t seem to notice he was being attacked. Some unexplained fury drove him, and he smashed his head into the ship again, this time into the hull below the railing.

If Tolemek hadn’t been somewhere in the bowels of the craft, Cas would have cheered for the dragon’s frenzy, but he and Kaika had disappeared into the cargo hold a few minutes before. Cas had been watching as she flew around the airship, trying to be a supreme pest to the Cofah to buy her teammates the time they needed to find and kidnap the emperor. She had no idea if that was still feasible. What had been planned as a stealth mission had turned into such a ruckus that everyone on the continent must know about the battle.

Another shot fired from the seat behind her. Colonel Quataldo had such deadly accuracy that Cas was surprised she hadn’t run into him out on the range before. He must practice religiously. She welcomed the help now, since it meant she could concentrate on flying and wreaking havoc with her machine guns while he focused on picking out officers on the deck. A couple of times, when they flew close, she caught him leaning over the side, looking like he might jump out so that he could join Kaika and Tolemek’s incursion, but he hadn’t yet ordered her to get him in close enough for that. They were probably doing more damage from the air than a single man on foot could do.

Naval vessels fired from the waters below, giant shells arching into the air and exploding. Cas and Pimples were careful to stay near the emperor’s craft, flying beside it or above it. Neither the other airships nor the warships in the water would dare risk shooting too close to the vessel holding their supreme political and military commander.

“We’re coming in to help,” Blazer said over the crystal.

Cas glimpsed the captain’s flier cruising toward them from the direction of the city. Duck was right behind her. He didn’t have a crystal, since that was the one Tolemek had removed, but he waved as they approached.

“Watch out, Raptor,” Pimples said.

The massive gold dragon was circling, trying to attack Phelistoth without damaging the emperor’s ship—at least, Cas assumed that was why she hadn’t unleashed as much power as she possessed. However, seeing Phelistoth tearing into the hull and deck must have incensed her. She dove for him, talons outstretched. Before she touched him physically, some force struck him, flinging him from the railing and to the deck. He rolled in an ungainly somersault, his tail smashing into people and cabins. The female landed atop him, fangs snapping for his throat.

By now, Cas knew well that her bullets would not do any damage, but she flew in, anyway, hoping she might distract the dragon. She wished she still had some of the special ceramic bullets Tolemek had made to fight Morishtomaric. But nobody had expected dragon battles over here. It frustrated her to think that this female had flown right over here, seeking out an alliance with the emperor when Angulus, the one who had ultimately been responsible for freeing all of those dragons from that cavern, couldn’t even get Phelistoth to stay loyal to him. Oh, the silver dragon might be fighting against the emperor now, but from what Tylie had hinted at, it was only because the emperor had rejected his deal—or maybe because the female had already claimed the emperor and the empire for her own. Cas couldn’t begin to guess how dragon politics worked.

Briefly, the female was on top, and Cas had a good view of her back. She fired several short bursts.

Surprisingly, they struck the scales. Maybe the dragon couldn’t keep her magical defenses up when she was fighting Phelistoth. Cas could not tell if her bullets burrowed through the scales or did any serious damage, but the female’s head jerked up as Cas flew past. She leaped away from Phelistoth, knocking soldiers aside as she raced for the railing, her head ducked to keep from hitting the bottom of the balloon. She sprang into the air and chased after Cas.

“Lieutenant,” Quataldo warned. “There’s a—”

“I see her,” she said, taking her flier out of there at top speed.

The dragon followed them, pouring fire from her maw.

Cas dipped toward the trees on the north side of the bay. Flames crackled in the air above her head. Her tail smoked, but she had evaded the brunt of the attack. Booms erupted from the ships in the water, and a cannonball sailed by less than a meter off her port side. Now that she had moved away from the emperor’s ship, the rest of the vessels were opening fire on her.

Gunshots came from behind her. As good as Quataldo’s aim was, Cas doubted it would do any good.

The dragon continued after them, gaining ground, far more agile in the air than a flier. Cas expected another burst of fire. Instead, a wave of power slammed into her. Her tail flipped over her nose, and the harness dug into her shoulders as gravity tried to dump her out of the flier. Trees blurred past, then the sky, then trees again. The flier frame groaned under the abuse. Cas managed to right herself. Her first thought was to pull up and put a safety margin between her and the trees that skimmed past, almost brushing her belly. But the dragon was still behind her. Instead, she made her wings wobble, then bucked, hoping the dragon would believe the craft was damaged so severely that a crash was inevitable. She dove between a couple of trees, twisting her wings to avoid striking the branches.

“Lieutenant,” Quataldo said again. “This is a ruse, right?” A note of concern had entered his generally calm voice.

She was too focused on flying to answer. She dove under branches and between trees, searching for a landing spot. When she had dropped fully below the canopy, she switched the power from her propeller to her thrusters, trying to slow herself. She would surely crash if she tried to navigate between the densely packed trees at full speed. As quickly as she could, she settled on some fern-like plants under a tree. She cut her power and spun in her seat, looking past Quataldo’s head. Had the dragon fallen for it?

His face pale, he also looked back, his gaze riveted. Cas couldn’t see anything through the canopy, but nothing parted the leaves and came crashing through the branches to chomp on her.

“Raptor?” Pimples asked over the crystal, uncertainty tinging his voice.

“We’re all right. Did the dragon stop chasing us?”

“Yes, she’s heading back here again. Phelistoth has been hurling imperial soldiers over the sides of the airship railings, but she’s charging in to stop him again.”

Cas turned her thrusters back on. “Coming.”

“You might want to hurry.” Even though Pimples now knew she was all right, the concerned tone hadn’t left his voice. “Kaika blew up the boiler in the emperor’s airship, and it’s going down. Also, Tylie says the emperor has Tolemek.”

Cas cursed. What could she do to help with all
that
? “Can you relay a message to Tylie?”

“Yes,” Pimples said.

“Tell her to tell Phelistoth to do something
useful
. Like getting Kaika and Tolemek.”

Chapter 15

S
ardelle paced back and forth while Bhrava Saruth lay in the grass on the side of the road. He’d had to change out of his dragon form three times while they had been waiting for Therrik to return from checking on this new village. Even though it was still early, and they were more than a half mile outside of town, they had come down from the Ice Blades and into more populated areas now. This road saw much more foot and horse traffic than any of the others in their journey.

An irreverent part of her—perhaps a part she had developed after meeting Ridge—wanted to tell Bhrava Saruth to remain in dragon form as people passed by, and she would simply lean an elbow against his side and nod and say good morning, as if wayside dragons were perfectly normal.

Yes, I’m sure these farmers and ranchers will simply nod back,
Jaxi said.

Sardelle stretched out with her senses for the fifth or sixth time, checking to see if Therrik was on his way up the road yet. With her greater reach, Jaxi had already informed her that Ridge wasn’t in the village. Sardelle had almost asked Bhrava Saruth to continue on, to head straight back to the capital, but she didn’t want to assume anything and risk missing him. What if the person with the flier hadn’t let him borrow it and Ridge had proceeded on foot? Or what if something had happened and he hadn’t made it to the village?

Like what?
Jaxi asked.
A sorceress was standing on the side of the road with a dragon, and it ate him?

Bhrava Saruth yawned, flopped over on his side, and stretched on his back in the grass.

It would have had to be a more bloodthirsty dragon than this one
, Sardelle said.

Back when I had followers
, Bhrava Saruth said, looking at Sardelle from an upside down position,
some of them used to rub my belly.

For luck?
Sardelle touched the pocket that held Ridge’s dragon charm, and she smiled, wondering what he would think of rubbing an actual dragon before flying into battle.

Because their god thought it felt good.

Oh.

Somehow, even with his head upside down, Bhrava Saruth managed to look hopeful.

I believe that look is for you.
Jaxi smirked into her mind.
Swords aren’t good at rubbing things.

In the light of all the favors he could ask for in exchange for his help, this is an innocuous one.

Sardelle walked over to the supine dragon, hesitated while she debated where to rub, then simply went for a convenient spot. He could correct her if he wanted something else. Bhrava Saruth laid his head back on the grass, crooked his forelegs, and rested there contentedly. The tip of his tail twitched now and then.

Did your romance novels ever mention that dragons liked belly rubs, Jaxi?

No. I think you found yourself a unique dragon.

Unique. That is one word for him.

Sardelle did not find the experience quite as soothing as patting one of Fern’s cats or the friendly dog her brother had kept, perhaps because the scales were cool, with a stone-like feel. Not quite as appealing to touch as fur.

He would probably turn into a ferret—or a dog or a cat—if you asked. Or if it got him more belly rubs.

Hm.
Since the dragon was more relaxed than she had seen him, unless she counted the time he had slept on her shoulder in ferret form, Sardelle decided to ask something she had wondered about since his reappearance.
Bhrava Saruth? What happened to the crystal we pulled out of the mountain? You all wanted it so badly that I assumed it had invaluable information in it, but you made it sound like you didn’t learn much at all.

I hid it.

He had been uncharacteristically terse when she’d asked about the crystal before, and it didn’t sound like that had changed.
So the others can’t find it?
she asked.

Correct. Under my arm, please.

Sardelle moved to the suggested spot, and he grew quite relaxed. Perhaps he would open up more now.
Did you find the information you sought in the crystal?

His leg twitched with contentment as she continued to rub his scales.

I did. Twelve hundred years ago, there was heightened volcanic activity in what we call the Scales and Ridges Mountains, and it caused the temperatures to drop globally for several centuries.

The seemingly random information puzzled Sardelle, but she nodded.
The Little Ice Age. We have records of it. The glaciers in the Ice Blades extended all the way into the foothills and valleys around the range.

Yes. My kind do not flourish in the cold. We can fly through the mountains and spend time in freezing temperatures, but we are not fertile in such environments.

That will teach you to give a dragon a belly rub
, Jaxi said.
Now you’ve got him talking about fertility.

Actually, I’m rubbing his armpit.

Perhaps that’s a sexually sensitive area for a dragon.

Sardelle frowned down at Jaxi.
Ssh. I want to hear the rest of the story.

My kind gravitated toward the equatorial regions,
Bhrava Saruth continued,
but they grew crowded with so many territorial dragons in such a small space. There were wars and daily battles. A group of bronze dragons who were tired of being on the bottom when it came to resources and mates got together and studied other planes of existence. Over the course of a century or two, they experimented and finally created a portal that allowed travel to one of these other existences, one that may or may not have been less crowded. They had no way to know since it was a one-way trip. Unless someone was able to build a portal on the other side, any dragon who went through could never come back.

But they risked it anyway?

Actually, they tricked everyone else into risking it. They pretended that it was a big secret while leaking information about it, information that promised a bountiful and warm climate with room for all the dragons in the world. Like mindless lemmings, the dragons sailed down to the arctic where the portal had been made and flew through it.
Bhrava Saruth sniffed.
Had I been awake at the time, I wouldn’t have fallen for that ruse.

All of the dragons went through? What happened then?

Not all of them. The six bronze dragons who had created the portal closed it, buried it, and kept Serankil for themselves.

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