A Dragon’s Tale Ch. 10

Ağustos 10, 2024 Yazar admin 0

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CHAPTER 10: A “shocking” development

* * *

Kendra looked around the tavern and rolled her eyes. It was full of slightly drunk, slightly unhappy, and very irritable men. There was a roaring fire in the hearth, wrought iron chandeliers lighting the room, and enough beer and mead flowing to keep the patrons from remembering their woes.

She shifted in her seat to resettle her clothes. She’d chosen some simple peasant attire to blend in, but it weren’t as comfortable as what she preferred. She adjusted her jet black hair to keep her eyes off her face so she could listen in peace.

She took a deep breath, closed her eyes, and listened for all the conversations in the bar. It was a cacophony, but also a good way to stay informed.

“Lord Delmar just signed a treaty with the Marcadians”

“The crops this year have been great.”

“My crop was hit by locusts.”

“I wish the emperor would do something about the-“

“The emperor is just a puppet.”

“-dragons near Arcanum.”

Kendra inclined her ear so she could hear this specific conversation better.

“Lord Delmar’s right about these rouge dragons,” a gruff voice said. “We should kill the whole lot of them; dragons ain’t much good for nothing but dying anyway.”

“Bah, he’s just after their gold,” A slurred – probably drunk – voice said.

“Stuff it man,” the gruff voice said. “You’re drunk.”

“I swear to drunks I’m not God.” The slurry voice said, and then hiccupped.

“Damn right about them dragons,” a deep voice said. “They’ve been killing us for hundreds o’ years, why hasn’t nobody done nothing about it?”

“They’re too scared,” the gruff voice said. “These damn lords spend all day safe in their castles and leave the real work to us folk.”

“Hey pretty lady,” someone said way too close for Kendra’s liking.

She opened her eyes to see someone staggering over toward her table. He was at least fifty pounds overweight and very drunk. His tankard sloshed beer onto his pants and shirt with every unstable step, and he wore a look of unrestrained lust as he undressed her with his eyes.

Kendra sighed; same shit, different tavern.

“You want I show you some much good times?” The drunkard slurred as he reached her table.

“I doubt you’re capable,” Kendra replied with an icy stare.

The man was either too drunk or too stupid to take the hint. He leaned over the table and started reaching for her chest, “I be so good bitch, you-“

Kendra interrupted his hand and his sentence by grabbing the back of his head and introducing his face to the solid oak table; hard. The man fell to the floor with blood pouring out his nose.

Kendra checked to make sure her necklace was still concealed under her shirt before glancing down at the man and muttering. “I was wrong; that was fun,”

She then noticed that the tavern had gone completely silent and all eyes were on her. None of them looked happy.

“He had it coming,” Kendra said, and then turned back to her mead.

The hair on the back of her neck stood up.

The tavern was still silent. No one moved or made a sound except the drunk man at her feet who was groaning in pain as he held his nose. Everyone was staring at either her or the gutter trash at her feet.

“That was Morkleth,” one of the men said. “He’s a pillar of this community.”

“Then this community has some rotten pillars,” she retorted.

This pronouncement was follow by a definite souring of the mood. The men started leering at her, and not in an ‘I-want-a-piece-of-ass’ way either. Several of them closed their hands into fists and one brandished a hefty walking stick in a threatening manner.

Kendra sized up the crowd.

There were about two dozen men in the bar, all of whom outweighed her by at least fifty pounds, and many double that. Half of them looked angry, the other half looked livid. Most of them were simple town folk and didn’t carry themselves like fighters. A few looked like that had experienced, but one of them – the only one without hatred in his eyes – looked like a stone cold killer.

There was something about bearing and demeanor that screamed dangerous, though few but her would have the skill to recognize it. She’d met men like him before. You spend enough time in her line of work and you learned to recognize others who shared your very particular set of skills. They always carried themselves that way unless they were undercover.

She raised her eyebrow at him.

He sized her up, then shook his head subtly and made a deliberate show of going back to his drink. Kendra grinned; with him no longer a threat, this bunch of ignorant hicks wouldn’t be a problem. Still, discretion is the better part of valor…

“He was an ass and I defended myself,” Kendra said. “I’m not looking for a fight.”

They weren’t buying it.

The tavern folk took a collective step forward. Kendra sighed, stood up, and activated her strength-enhancing vambraces. She briefly considered taking care of these antalya escort bullies without them, but didn’t feel like a real workout.

“If you have a problem, let’s do this,” she said. “Otherwise I’m going back to my drink.”

One of the bigger fellows scowled at her, took a step forward, and aimed a powerful haymaker at her head. She leaned back just enough to make it miss and grabbed his arm as it passed. She continued his momentum and stuck out her foot. The man was carried forward, tripped over her foot and smashed face first into her solid oak table.

Out of the corner of her eye, she saw someone else join the attack. She continued the spinning movement she’d used to put the first man down and brought her foot up in a crescent kick to the second man’s face. He didn’t even see it coming. He hit the floor groaning in pain and barely moved.

Thank Illuminar for strength enhancing enchantments.

Everyone else in the tavern was frozen solid. The men she’d just knocked out were twice her size and clearly in decent shape. No one else seemed to know what to do.

Finally a braver man – who was leaning up against one of the vertical support beams – drew a large knife. He hefted it threateningly, his confidence in the weapon displayed on his face. The rest of the tavern folk also seemed to take courage from the glistening blade.

She chuckled.

With a flick of her wrist, she sent one of her concealed throwing knives into the pillar beside the knife-wielding man’s head. With a satisfying ‘thunk’ sound, it sunk deeply into the wood less than an inch from the man’s head.

He blanched.

The change in atmosphere was palpable. All of the confidence in the crowd evaporated in an instant. Suddenly, instead of a group of angry and tipsy thugs, she was looking at a bunch of grown men behaving like kids who were caught stealing sweet cakes.

“Bring me my knife,” Kendra said to the knife wielding man as she slipped another throwing knife out and let it hang from her fingers. The implied threat was very effective.

The man hesitated, then sheathed his own knife and – after a few tries – pulled her knife out of the support pillar. He walked over to her and held it out at arm’s length, clearly trying to stay as far away from her as possible. Kendra took the knife, returned it to its concealed sheath, and then looked at the crowd.

“Now, I think we should all go back to our drinks,” Kendra said as if they were discussing the weather or some other trivial matter. “Don’t you?”

Everyone nodded or mumbled in agreement, though their shoulders were hunched and they didn’t quite meet her gaze. The one exception was the stone cold killer who’d declined to get involved. His face was unreadable. He raised his tankard and gave her a slight nod of respect, which she returned.

Kendra sat back down and took a sip of her mead. After a few moments, the rest of the tavern folk went back to what they were doing. A couple of guys helped the trio of men at her feet get away from her, though they gave her as wide a berth as possible.

She just sipped her mead.

She waited until the tavern was almost back to normal, then paid her bill and slipped out, leaving a decent tip for the owner. She stepped outside to see the stone cold killer in front of her. Just by the way he stood – the way he seemed perfectly relaxed and calm – she could tell he was dangerous. He was certainly as dangerous as she had initially guessed, maybe even more so.

They stood there for almost a minute, neither moving nor speaking as Kendra analyzed him. He was neither tall nor short; thin nor muscular. Like her, everything about his appearance was designed to blend in; his clothes, his hairstyle, his beard; everything. He was the kind of fellow you would see in a crowd and completely forget moments later.

She resisted the temptation to ready a weapon. You didn’t provoke someone like this; not if you valued your life. She might be able to take him, but certainly not without injury. So she waited.

“Good evening,” he said eventually. Even his voice was nondescript.

“Evening.”

“You didn’t kill them,” he almost sounded disappointed.

“The guards are more likely to ignore a tavern brawl than a triple homicide.”

“Indeed,” he said, and then fell silent.

“Did you want something?” Kendra asked after several seconds.

“How long, and how many?”

“Too long… and too many,” she answered honestly, thinking about all her missions and the dragon’s teeth on her necklace.

“You’re a hard woman to find… Kendra.”

“Obviously not hard enough.” Thinking back, it wasn’t too surprising that someone had finally found her. She had been getting lazy lately. Moving every week was growing tiresome and she decided to stretch it for a while. Obviously that was a mistake.

“I have a job for you,” He said.

“I’m out of the business.”

“Hear me out?” it was a respectful request, not a command.

“Listening.”

“Lord antalya merkez escort Delmar has had some troubles with a young dragon recently. Given your history, I thought I could persuade you to come out of retirement.”

“Still listening,” She succeeded in not reacting, though it was a struggle. She had heard about the bounty and been sorely tempted, even though the reward was a pittance compared to her usual fee.

“A young, steel-gray dragon and his wood elf companion have managed to elude Lord Delmar’s men for nearly two months now. They assaulted and murdered several of his guards and slaughtered nearly a whole airship crew he sent after them. The dragon was also implicated in the death of an innocent girl less than a week ago.”

Kendra grimaced; he knew how to push her buttons. “Lord Delmar eh? Rumor has it he’s working with a dragon.”

“Is that a crime?”

“You didn’t answer the question,” she observed.

“No, I didn’t,” he replied simply. “Are you interested? Lord Delmar is willing to pay double your usual fee. Quadruple, if you bring the dragon in alive.”

“Alive?” Kendra raised her eyebrow. “That’s… unusual. I thought the bounty was for a dead dragon.”

“Things change.”

“Oh?”

He narrowed his eyes. “Lord Delmar now has… plans for this dragon; plans that would be greatly improved if he were delivered alive.”

Kendra suppressed a shudder. Death would be far more merciful than whatever Lord Delmar had in mind for a live dragon. Suddenly, she was far more interested in taking the job.

“What was the dragon’s last confirmed location?” she asked.

“Arcanum, the Arena, four days ago.” He replied. “We suspect he fled the city in an airship that he stole from Lord Borden.”

“Heading?”

“Unknown; likely north toward the gold mines,” He replied. “Good hunting.”

Kendra nodded, and then the man turned and walked away. He disappeared into the shadows with barely even a footprint to mark his passing. She looked after him for a few moments, and then headed back to her room. She grabbed her pack and a few provisions, then went into the forest to where she’d hidden her tiny airship.

“Hello beautiful,” she said when she had deactivated the enchantments that protected it from prying eyes.

At barely twenty feet long, it wasn’t large. However, it was plenty big enough for her. It looked a lot like a canoe, only the stern ended flat like larger sailing ships. The lower mast was pulled up behind the vessel to allow it to land.

She stowed her things and activated the weight logs strapped to the inside. Once it had risen high enough, she dropped the lower mast and secured it in position. She turned the ships toward Arcanum – which fortunately wasn’t too far – and deployed the sails. A gentle touch plus a little bit of mana and the enchanted sails changed color from natural white to black as midnight.

As the ship caught a breeze and began moving, Kendra started planning. It had been a while since she’d been dragon hunting. She touched the necklace which was concealed under her shirt, feeling each dragon tooth as she went. She stopped at the most recent – and largest – one

“This one’s for you,” she said as she thought about who the beast had taken from her.

It was payback time.

* * *

Hailey decided that Ethan was the most confusing man she had ever met. Alana and Rachel didn’t make much sense either. Those three had just spent most of yesterday strategizing on how to could kill a dragon to free Taloni.

Kill a dragon!

The dragon was at least twice Ethan’s size – which was bad enough – but they actually seemed to think they could do it. Hailey found herself shaking her head so much she might’ve resembled a bobble-head from back on Earth.

It was sheer lunacy.

Yet, that hadn’t stopped them from meeting outside the captain’s cabin and resuming the conversation before dawn. The sun was just cresting the horizon and they show no signs of letting up. It just didn’t make sense to her. I mean, Taloni had saved Ethan’s life and all, but to risk your life with a slim chance of success for someone you’d just met?

Hailey shook her head again and leaned her willowy frame against the rail as she listened anyway, because there wasn’t much else to do.

“You’re sure your fireballs won’t do much?” Ethan asked Rachel.

Rachel sighed. “Like I said the last dozen times you asked; dragon scales are naturally resistant to heat. They’re virtually immune to it.”

He opened his mouth, but Rachel cut him off. “And no my ice attacks aren’t very effective because he can just pull heat from his breath to offset the cold.”

Ethan turned to Alana. “And your arrows won’t do much because he’s enchanted his scales to be stronger, according to Thaltien.”

The wood elf nodded. “And if he’s the size everyone says, they won’t penetrate deeply enough to cause a mortal wound anyway,”

“There’s got to be something else we can do antalya otele gelen escort that’ll help,” Ethan mused.

Raklan scoffed. “Just leave the Fey bitch behind; problem solved.”

Ethan growled at him. Hailey had noticed he’d become very protective of Taloni, almost as protective as he was of Alana.

“Raklan,” Serif said, then shook his head slightly. Raklan scurried off like a bolt of greased lightning. Lightning…

“Hey,” Hailey said. “What about magical lighting attacks?”

Rachel snorted. “Yeah, and I’ll pull an army out of my back pocket too.”

“Wait, you’re telling me there aren’t any magical attacks using electricity?” Ethan asked.

Rachel cocked her head to one side. “What’s electricity?”

It was Hailey’s turn to snort.

“It’s what lightning is made of,” Ethan explained. “We actually use it to power machines where I come from.”

Alana and Rachel gaped at him.

“You can’t be serious,” the wood elf said.

“That’s impossible,” Rachel said at the same time.

“Not impossible.” Ethan shook his head and smiled. “We may not have magic, but we can still do some pretty cool stuff.”

“But harnessing lightning?” Rachel raised her eyebrow. “That’s like, the idle dream of the world’s master magicians. That would be like finding the Holy Grave.”

“The Holy Grave?” Hailey said. “Don’t you mean the Holy Grail?”

Rachel looked confused. “What’s a Holy Grail?”

“A religious artifact on our world that’s been missing for centuries,” Ethan explained. “And yes we figured out how to harness electricity, which is what lightning is made of.”

“But, how could people without magic harness Illuminar’s own weapon?” Alana asked.

“Come again?” Ethan wore an amusing look of confusion.

“Illuminar, the God of light, everyone know that lightning is his weapon,” Alana replied as if she was explaining that water was wet.

“Oh, yeah. God of light, lightning. That actually makes sense.” He said.

Rachel was still picking her jaw up off the weather deck. “You harnessed electricity without magic? How is that even possible?”

“Science,” Hailey replied.

“Science?” Rachel looked like someone had just said water wasn’t wet. “You mean that field of ‘study’ where they try to figure out how stuff works by cutting it up? Seriously? Those dullards figured it out?”

Ethan and Hailey both nodded while suppressing laughter.

Rachel shook her head. “Scientists can’t even figure out how a Golem operates; mages can. So pardon my skepticism.”

Hailey looked at Ethan, and saw her disbelief mirrored on his face.

“Culture shock,” he said.

“Yeah,” she nodded.

“So how do you harness lightning?” Alana asked.

“You… Uh… I’m not sure,” Ethan said scratching his head. “It wasn’t something I studied.”

“Uh-huh; sure,” Rachel said, her voice dripping with skepticism.

“I’m serious,” Ethan said, then looked at Alana. They were both silent for several moments, then the wood elf spoke up.

“I believe him,” she said with absolute conviction.

“Wow, you just went from skeptic to true believer in five seconds flat,” Hailey said. “What are you smoking and can I have some?”

Alana looked very confused, opened her mouth to respond, then closed it and looked at Ethan. After another few seconds, she nodded at him like she understood something, and then turned back to Hailey.

“I’m not smoking anything and I’m certainly not a ‘pot-head’,” she said. “He just made a really good case.”

Rachel shook her head and looked at Ethan. “Okay, it sounds preposterous to me but I don’t think you’re a liar. How would we use lightning against the dragon?”

“I have no idea,” Ethan replied. “Like I said before, I’m not really sure how to generate enough to be useful.”

“You could always throw bat shit at the dragon,” Raklan called from across the deck.

“Yeah, that was part of the plan.” Ethan rolled his eyes. “We’re just trying to how stack the odds as far as possible in our favor.”

“You’re going to fight a dragon with bat shit?” Hailey scoffed. “Like, that’s actually part of your plan?”

“No, not bat shit; gunpowder,” He replied. “We already have sulfur and charcoal on the Argo. We collected some guano a while ago so we can make gunpowder.”

“Saltpeter… isn’t that potassium nitrate?” Hailey repeated trying to remember where she had heard of that before. “I think I used some of that in high school. It’s a white powder right?”

He nodded.

Hailey bit her lip.

The cooks at her former owner’s estate had used it to preserve food and you could buy it in the marketplace cheap. If she told them, they’d go back to Arcanum and she’d have a chance to see that bastard again. All she’d need was a few hours at night and a knife…

Subconsciously, she put a hand over the long scar on her stomach. Her other hand clenched into a fist so tight her knuckles turned white. It was everything she could do to keep her face neutral.

“Are you okay?” Alana asked her.

Hailey nodded. “Bad memories.”

She couldn’t tell them about the saltpeter. If she did, they’d go after that dragon and probably get themselves killed.

“Anthiel,” Ethan called up to the quarter deck. “Did you get that second pot so we can boil the guano water down?”

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