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“My Lord, you must see to your guests,” I heard Renner’s voice insist.
“I have only been away a short while, Renner, and will return in a moment. I’m sure they understand that the danger in the borderlands is more pressing,” the dragon lord replied.
“Has something new been heard?” Renner asked him.
“Yes. The scouts have brought news of more raids by these new clans.” I heard the faint shuffling of papers followed by the sound of wooden chair legs sliding against rock floor. In a moment a shadow appeared at the window. I held completely still and prayed the rope would do the same. When next he spoke his voice was hardly above a whisper. “Five villages were lost during this last raid.”
“And still we know nothing about these dragons?” Renner wondered.
“They are barbarians from the north driven down by unknown forces. That is all the scouts could surmise,” he told his servant. His shadow moved away from the window.
“Let these matters rest for a while, My Lord, and enjoy yourself. You have been tense far too long,” Renner advised.
A deep sigh came from his master. “Perhaps I have. I will join the others and see their choices. I believe the young Cayden had his eyes set on your favorite.”
“Merely an oversight on my part, My Lord. A lapse of bad judgment that shan’t happen again,” Renner assured him.
In a few moments the candlelight was extinguished and I heard a door shut. Now was my chance. I slid down the remaining distance. My feet touched solid ground and I hunkered down. The grounds remained deserted. They all celebrated their triumph of us and talked their insane talk about rival dragon clans.
I hurried straight across the grounds in a line perpendicular with the castle and rushed into the woods. It was at that moment that I heard shouts from the castle behind me telling me they must have found my empty room and the bedsheets. I rushed down the hill, but chanced a glance over my shoulder. A dozen men poured from the gate with torches in their hands. One of them shouted orders and they spread out across the open grounds and road.
I wanted to see no more, and rushed down the hillside. The path was rocky and muddy from the recent rain, and many times my feet threatened to slip from beneath me. Below me the town twinkled with festive lights, no doubt from the Maiden choosing. The whole place was madness.
The woods weren’t as friendly close up as they were from afar. The thick limbs of the ancient trees blocked out the moon, and there were no paths. The brush made my penetrating the forest difficult. Their brambles clawed and scratched at my clothes, tearing and filthying them.
I persevered and thirty feet into the woods I was rewarded with a dirt path made by wild animals. It arced around the perimeter of the castle and followed the road. I followed the path and kept a close eye on the castle, watching for signs of the search team approaching.
The animal path veered from the road, but that was good. A dozen men on horses galloped down the road. By the light of their torches I saw they bore the crest I’d seen on the chests of the gate guards.
I let the path lead me away from them and down to the small glen a mile away from the road. The glen was a sunken meadow through which ran a bubbling creek. The waters fell from a small, steep hill to my left and into a circular pool of water. Above me was the clear night sky, and around me was a quiet serenity.
I collapsed against one of the larger boulders that bordered the water. My feet were glad for a rest. I leaned my back against the hard stone and sighed. My body ached with tension and the exercise. My heart drummed to a quick beat. My drowsiness was surpassed only by my hunger, and I regretted not taking provisions. However, the soft gurgle of the stream calmed my thoughts somewhat, and I closed my eyes. I would take a short nap. Maybe the sun would be up soon and I could escape through the brush.
“What do you mean by this transgression?”
I jumped to my feet and spun around. Across the pond stood the dragon lord, the one to whom I was supposed to belong. Most of his form was concealed in partial shadows, but his eyes glowed with an unnatural green light. They were also narrowed, and at his hip was a sheath and sword. One of his hands lay atop the hilt of the sword.
I snorted. “You’re the one who’s transgressed. Several kidnapping laws, if I’m not mistaken.”
“You cannot escape me. Return with me to the castle at once,” he ordered me.
I looked around for a weapon of my own, and snatched a smooth river stone from the ground. I held it up in a throwing position. “Get away! I know how to use this!” I shot back.
I was surprised when his eyes widened. His grip on his sword hilt tightened. “Let down the stone. You don’t know what trouble it can cause here.”
I scoffed at him. “Like I’m doing that.”
His eyes narrowed again and he stepped fully into the light of the night sky. It was my turn for shock as the light revealed a pair of large, red, dragon-like wings at his back. There was the unmistakable canvas-like skin with the thin bones to which they were attached. They were folded behind him, but I could still see that their wingspan must have been enormous.
The dragon lord unsheathed his weapon and made a dash toward the pool. I saw he meant to attack me, so I struck first. I launched the rock at him, but my aim was-well, as reliable as ever. The stone fell short and to the side so that it plopped into the pond near the base of the waterfall.
A gurgling arose from where the stone had dropped in, but it wasn’t air escaping. The bubbles continued to rise and flowed over the rest of the pool in a large wave. The dragon lord skidded to a stop a few feet short of the bank and stumbled back. The ground shook in unison with the bubbles. I stumbled backward. My heel tripped on a rock and I fell onto my rear.
A column of water burst from the pond and rose twenty feet into the air. It twisted into a giant spindle shape that spun faster and faster. The width of the column shrunk with each turn, but the width didn’t stay consistent. Rather, it took the form of a human.
The excess water drained into the pool, and in a moment what water remained of the tornado burst outward, showering the Lord and me with its wetness. I covered my face with my arm to shield my eyes from the damp, and when I looked at the pool again my jaw dropped open.
There, floating five feet above the surface, was a beautiful woman. She wore a long blue dress that flowed around her like the waves of the ocean. Her skin glistened like white alabaster and was without blemish. Her long, thick hair lay across her shoulders and streamed down her back, and was the dark color of the shallows. The woman’s eyes were the color of the clearest waters, and they were focused on me.
When she spoke her voice held an echo like those in seashore caverns. “Why have you transgressed me?”
The dragon lord stepped forward and knelt on one knee. He lay his sword in front of him and bowed his head. “She meant no harm, My Lady. She is ignorant of this world.”
The woman half-turned to him, but her eyes remained on me. “Then she is a Maiden.” It was a statement rather than a question.
The dragon lord nodded. “Yes, chosen only this evening by me.”
A ghost of a smile crossed her lips. “I see. She must be very bold to have escaped the Castle so quickly.”
The lord’s eyes flickered up to me and he pursed his lips. “Yes, very bold, but I will punish her in a fitting manner.”
Anger makes one forget their predicament, and mine was no exception. I jumped to my feet and glared at him. “Like hell you are! I’m not going back there, and you’re going to let those other-” My not-so-eloquent speech was interrupted by the twinkling of laughter.
The woman between us tilted her head back and smiled at me. “My my, Dragon Lord, but you have chosen a wild one.
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