Twice Drowned Dragon (The Gryphonpike Chronicles Book 2)

Read Twice Drowned Dragon (The Gryphonpike Chronicles Book 2) Online

Authors: Annie Bellet

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Epic, #Sword & Sorcery

Twice Drowned Dragon

 

 

A Gryphonpike Chronicles Novella by Annie Bellet

 

Copyright 2011, Annie Bellet

 

All rights reserved. Published by Doomed Muse Press.

 

This story is a work of fiction. All characters, places, and incidents described in this publication are used fictitiously, or are entirely fictional.

No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted, in any form or by any means, except by an authorized retailer, or with written permission of the publisher. Inquiries may be addressed via email to [email protected].

Cover designed by Greg Jensen with art by Tom Edwards.

Electronic edition, 2011

 

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We all know this tale. There once was a beautiful elven princess who lived in a crystal forest in a hidden kingdom far beyond the common worlds. Her voice was unparalleled among the World-singers and her power brought her all she desired.

Until Wrath and Pride wound their way around her heart, turning songs of beauty and creation into songs of death and violence. For her crimes, she was cast out and cursed to live among the lesser creatures, among the elves and men who had forgotten those who sang into existence the earth they squabbled over. Her voice was stolen; her words taken like ember-waves melt footprints from the glowing sands.

Her banishment and silence will end when she has purged her crime by doing one thousand good deeds. So she joined with a ragtag band of adventurers who call themselves the Gryphonpike Companions.

I am that foolish Singer. These are the chronicles of my path home.

 

* * *

 

Twice Drowned Dragon

Men’s screams pierced the lazy summer air. I shrugged out of my pack, stopping only long enough to re-sling my quiver over my shoulder. Behind me, I heard the thuds signaling my companions were doing the same.

The Barrowroad, which was really a wide and often muddy dirt track, took a turn just ahead, cutting through a grove of bog cypress that reached depressed branches down to comb the road. Drake, his rapier in his left hand and his kukri in his right, ran past me. Makha cursed and clanked up behind, her plate armor glinting in the sun and her shield unslung. She hadn’t buckled her helmet yet and her red hair twisted around her face in sweaty tangles. Overhead I heard the whoosh of Rahiel’s wings as the pixie-goblin sorceress took off. Azyrin, our half-winter-orc shaman, came up along side Makha and I, his falchion in one hand as the other clasped his amulet.

We turned the bend in the road at a jog. Ahead, the trees and brush of the swamp shook and the screams intensified.

“Men, four of them, no, five,” Rahiel shouted down from far overhead. “Just off the road. And… huge spiders!”

“Has to be thumpbrained spiders,” Makha muttered. “Thought the Barrows was supposed to be full of undead. Somethin’ worth fighting.”

“I am certain those men will be glad for help,” Azyrin said.

Drake disappeared into the trees and I followed him down a much wetter, muddier track. Ahead, another scream, this one cut short. Then the cart and its occupants came into view among the mossy trees. One man lay groaning to the side of the cart. Another, wearing much finer clothing than the others, was crouched behind a dead mule still tangled in the harness and tracers. Two others were trying to fend off the spiders using a pickaxe and a sword that hadn’t seen proper care in many winters.

Rahiel hadn’t exaggerated. The two spiders were as big as two horses each with spiny protrusions on their legs and vicious, dripping mandibles. The smell of blood, bile, and something more rotten underneath cut through the thick swamp air and made my eyes water.

I drew Thorn, my bow, back until the fletching brushed my lips. My first arrow slammed into the nearest spider’s thorax and its blood spurted, sending thick black droplets onto the mud. The spider hissed and reared back, slashing out with its clawed front legs.

“Out o’ the way! Get back!” Drake shouldered a bleeding man aside. His kukri bit deep into the spider’s leg, leaving the claw hanging by a gristly margin. Blood sizzled on his blade but I barely registered what it might mean.

I loosed a second arrow past Drake’s shoulder as he ducked another leg swipe. My shot went slightly wide, skidding over the hardened carapace armoring its legs. My next shot took it in the thorax again, this time drenching Drake in the black fluid.

He screamed and leapt back, smoke rising from his clothing.
Splinters
,
their blood would just have to be corrosive
.

Azyrin shouted behind me, and shimmering light bathed Drake, coating his dark skin. His swearing ceased, as did the smoking of his clothes. Blue bolts sizzled down from Rahiel as she flew closer, bursting in the eyes of the injured spider. Its companion darted in and I opened my mouth, trying to yell warning.

Nausea hit me like a giant’s mace to the chest. No communicating. That is my curse. I am mute, and even trying to mouth words or gesture overtly causes horrible pain and nausea to overtake me. Gasping and gagging, I dropped to my knees, leaning hard on Thorn.

My collapse distracted Makha from her charge and she half-turned. She was the only one who could have possibly reached the second spider in time. Drake dodged the flailing legs of the injured spider but ducked right into the path of the second.

It had apparently had enough. It shot a gout of sticky white fluid at Drake, catching him in the chest. Without waiting, the spider leapt forward, grabbed the trapped rogue up in two of its front legs, and bolted for the trees on the remaining six.

I shoved my way to my feet, reaching for an arrow. My shot was tangled in the thick moss and I stumbled forward, spitting bile. A glance at the sky told me Rahiel, now riding Bill, her mini-unicorn, was still busy throwing spells at the injured spider, keeping it off the men in the cart. Makha glanced at Azyrin, and then at me, before she charged into the swamp after the spider that had taken Drake.

I followed her, slashing at the brush with my heavy bow. A roar cut into the sound of battle and ahead I saw the silver-and-black flash of the mist-lynx as Fade materialized, stopping the fleeing spider in its tracks. He crouched, tail whipping back and forth, his snarls driving the spider back. I doubted it had ever seen a cat half its own size before.

Makha charged and bashed her great shield into the protruding spinnerets in the spider’s rear abdomen. Sticky fluid and black blood splashed her and she fell back with a cry.

I strafed to the left, closing in and shooting arrows into the spider’s exposed abdomen as quickly as I could draw them. Drake was still alive, struggling beneath the creature, and I tried to put arrows where its acidic blood wouldn’t rain down on him. I couldn’t shoot into its soft belly from this angle, especially not without damaging Drake, so all my arrows did was slow and anger the spider. I winced as the wooden shafts smoked and started to dissolve beneath the coating of its blood.

A hideous scream rang out behind us and a moment later something pink and green flashed overhead. Rahiel. Blinding white light zinged from her fingertips, lancing into the spider’s gleaming black eyes. It shied sideways, but didn’t release the rogue.

“Kill it! Kill it with fire!” Drake yelled.

“No angle!” Rahiel yelled back. “You will burn.”

We needed the spider to drop him but it was hanging onto its prize with stubborn tenacity even as we surrounded the creature. I aimed another arrow at one of the legs gripping Drake, but the wedged broadhead arrow only gouged the tough hide. Makha was on her feet again and leapt for its injured spinnerets, but the spider twisted and spit a gob of black fluid at her. She brought her shield up just in time. The poison splattered and smoked on the metal.

I reached for another arrow as an idea hit me. This time I drew one of the snake-tongue arrows. The heads were special, forked like a snake’s tongue that gave them their name, with sharpened edges on the inside. Taking a half step forward as I gauged the distance the arrow needed to spin, I aimed for the joint between the upper and lower part of the already gouged foreleg.

My arrow flew true. The sharp fork sliced into the joint, severing the leg completely. Not daring to breathe between shots, I aimed, shifted, and sent another at the other leg holding Drake captive. The spider had no chance to react before that arrow severed its other leg.

Drake dropped and rolled free with a shout of “fire now!”

Rahiel’s spell started as a gleaming red bead sparking its way through the damp swampy air. It hit the spider and turned into an immolating ball. The creature shrieked and curled in on itself, crumpling into a steaming black ball the size of a small cottage. It smelled no better dead and burning, unfortunately.

I threw Thorn over my shoulder and drew my dagger, moving to cut Drake free. The spider’s silk was a sticky mess but sullying it with mud did the trick and we got him loose.

“No saving this shirt, eh?” Drake sighed and yanked the tatters off himself.

“Looks as though your chest hair made the sacrifice as well,” Rahiel pointed out as she and Bill flew down to level with our faces.

Drake brushed flaking black blood off his chest and winced at the patchiness of his dark chest curls. His bark-brown skin was red and pink where the acid had burned him. “Son of a bitch.”

“You’ll heal, knucklehead.” Makha wiped her shield off with a handful of muddy leaves. The metal was pocked by the acid, but looked otherwise undamaged. “Azy stayed with those men?” she asked Rahiel.

“Yes. We took care of that other spider.” Rahiel turned Bill and started heading back.

“Heal my ass. What if it never grows back?” Drake muttered. “The ladies’ll weep.”

Makha and I both shot him a look and then set out after Rahiel.

Azyrin had the wounded man loaded onto the cart by the time we walked back. The man who had been cowering behind the dead mule was cowering no more; instead, he was arguing with our shaman.

“Thank you for your help, adventurer. But we’re fine. Garl and Pibbsen will find that other pesky mule and we’ll be on our way.”

“What’s the problem?” Makha asked, coming up alongside her husband.

“I offered escort to Coldragon. This man, he say no.” Azyrin’s blue lips were pressed into an annoyed line. I got the impression the man had said more than no. It took a lot to annoy the very patient half-orc.

The two men who had tried to defend against the spiders earlier reappeared, one leading a sweat-soaked mule. A wide, shallow cut marred the mule’s shoulder and I guessed he had panicked in the traces when they were attacked, cutting himself as he bolted free. Why they hadn’t all tried to run for the main road, I didn’t know. Apparently this was the only creature among them with sense.
Typical humans and their bravado
.

“Thank ye for your help,” the older of the two men said gruffly. They both ducked their heads and then went to the front of the cart, one pulling a knife and starting to free the dead mule from the tangle of harness.

The mule rolled the whites of his eyes at the smoldering corpse of the first spider but the man in fine clothing took its lead and it instantly quieted, the muscles beneath its dun hide going tense and very still.

“We were planning to detour to the honey monks, but it’s truly no trouble to go straight on to Coldragon. If spiders like that will come attack in broad daylight, no telling what else might wander out of the swamps. Mister, eh. . .?” Drake put on his bright smile and held out one mostly clean hand.

The man sneered down his thin nose and folded his arms. Rings glinted on half his fingers, the gems looking warmer than the man’s eyes. “Master Ziarnys,” he said, emphasizing the title as though it meant more than just that he was probably an elder in his town. “Go on to the honey monks. I am quite sure we require no more assistance.”

He turned away and started directing the men in hooking the remaining mule up to the cart as though the five of us weren’t standing here. Undaunted, Drake pulled out a flask and stepped up to the back of the cart where the injured man rested against a pile of empty burlap sacks, his hand pressed against a crude bandage over his belly.

“That an elf?” the man asked with a nervous glance at me as he waved away the offered flask. “And what’s she, eh? In the gown with the wings? And is that a pink unicorn? Awful teeny, ain’t it?”

“Shh, don’t tell him that.” Drake winked at the man which coaxed a wan smile from him. “You a mason?” Drake asked then, motioning to the shovels, spades, and other work equipment piled in the back of the cart. The whole of it was coated with grey rock dust, like one might expect from a work site.

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