Dragon Bones And Tombstones (Book 2) (6 page)

BOOK: Dragon Bones And Tombstones (Book 2)
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CHAPTER 11

 

 

I let the goblin go. Well, abandoned him to his bonds, actually. But that gave Brenwar and I enough time to distance ourselves from him. 

The journey around the mountain was long, the brush heavy, the bugs becoming more irritating the deeper we ventured. I’d already spit three bugs from my mouth. But, my leg wasn’t so bad now, not with Brenwar carrying most of the burden again, and it was getting better. After all, I healed pretty fast.

“What are ye thinking, Dragon?” Brenwar asked, pushing past some vines.

The Clerics of Barnabus.
That’s what I was thinking. Fiends of all kinds. My enemy of enemies. The mere mention of them left a fowl taste on my tongue. It was like swallowing hot vinegar every time I heard them mentioned. I clenched my teeth and balled up my hands. I hated them.

“The Clerics, Brenwar. We need to put a stop to them. We need to crush them all.”

“I know.”

It seemed every poacher in Nalzambor was paid by the clerics now. Kings of the Dragon trade. The Clerics enslaved the dragons. They killed the dragons. They tortured them as well. They wanted the dragons' magic. It was the remnants of dragons that they sold: bones, talons, teeth, scales and even parts from the flesh within. The power within dragons allowed them to cast many spells. The thought of it all lit a fire in my belly.

I continued.

“Everywhere we go, they turn up. We need to track them down one day, Brenwar. We need to save the dragons from their clutches, once and for all.”

Brenwar stopped me with a disapproving look and sniffed the air. I could smell it, too. We were closing in. The goblins were close, just a few miles ahead now, I’d say.

I gritted my teeth and took the lead.

“Time to free the dragon.”

***

The travel around the mountain's base was long. From where I stood, I couldn’t see the peak for all the trees, but the mountain wasn’t so big, not as big as Dragon Home, the Mountain of Doom. I had to admit, I missed that grisly exterior more now than ever. I even wondered what my father was doing. Was he worried? Mad? Or had he given up on me entirely? It all tugged at my heart.

I climbed up onto a crag above the trail we’d followed the goblins on. Below was a wonderful view of the valley the goblin poacher had told us about. It was miles away, but I could still see the birds darting in and out of the tree tops, and I could smell the water that ran down the mountain to form a lake or swamp down there. Most likely a swamp. Goblins have a penchant for stagnant water, but for the most part they drink a homemade concoction called Swill. A cup of dirt would taste better, judging by the smell.

“We need to see its face,” I said, as Brenwar crawled up the rocks beside me. Dwarves didn’t like to climb. They’d rather just carve a tunnel through a mountain than go above or around it. They swore it would save time in the long run, which it might, but we couldn’t take years to dig a tunnel.

“Sun’s setting.” Dark clouds had formed about. “Storm’s coming. Best we get moving. The face will be black as coal in the dark, assuming there is one.”

In less than an hour, we made it to the bottom of the mountain and saw the goblin hide-out for the first time. The rain was a heavy drizzle now. I shielded my eyes from the drops.

The mountain was flat on this side. A cliff face. A network of ledges and doorways. So far as I could tell, the mountain hideout could harbor hundreds if not thousands of goblins. Finding a dragon in there would not be easy. But at the moment there was a greater concern.

“How are we going to get in there?” I asked. “There are no stairs or footholds that I can see.” I held my hand over my eyes. “But I don’t see any guards, either. Do you?”

“No. But, I bet I can find a way in,” Brenwar said. “If there’s a secret door in the stone, I’ll find it. There could be another entrance they use, too. We’ll just have to go back and follow the trail.”

Just like in the Mountain of Doom, there could be a well-concealed entrance. But walking right up to it wasn’t the best idea. I was certain there would be guards or a guardian. Probably not anything we couldn’t handle, but alerting them of our presence would be the problem.

“I have an idea. Follow me.”

We pushed our way through the forest until we came across the stream that came from the mountain and formed a waterfall that plunged into the valley. The water was clear below, a small lake surrounded by a lush and beautiful forest. It was unlikely goblins ventured in the valley, not near such crystal clear water. It was a break.

I looked at Brenwar, who said, “I know what you’re thinking, Dragon. I like it. Let’s go.”

It took a little bit of time before we made it to where the valley bottomed out and the waterfall formed the lake. It was dark now, the warmth of the sun gone, replaced by a chill in the air. The sound of the waterfall was loud, steady and soothing. Not a bad place to sit and fish for awhile. I’d have to remember to come back here one day, when all the goblins were gone.

I climbed over the rocks, Brenwar at my back, and we plunged underneath the water of the falls. I shivered. The water was cold coming from the mountain top, and being cold wasn’t one of my favorite things. Behind the waterfall, it was pitch black. I pushed my wet hair from my face and drew Fang from its sheath. A soft illumination reflected off the damp stones behind the falls. I squinted my eyes, peering in the dimness.

“I don’t see anything.”

Brenwar huffed. “It’s because you don’t know what to look for.” He ran his hands over the stones, feeling, pushing, probing nooks and crevices. Anything below the ground or leading into it the dwarves are experts of. If there was a way under the mountain, the water would lead the way, but it was dangerous if you didn’t know what you were doing. Plenty of adventurers drowned this way. I really hoped we wouldn’t have to swim to get into this cave, assuming I was right and there was one.

“Here it is,” Brenwar said. One second he was standing in the light, the next he was gone. 

“Where’d you go?” I asked.

“Come on, will you!” his voice echoed from behind the dripping rocks.

“Huh,” I muttered, squeezing through a dark crevice I’d overlooked. I’m a dragon. I’m not very keen on dull rocks and such things.

It was muddy and damp by the time I traversed the crevice and made my way inside. The cave was small, just a little taller than me, with passageways in several directions. Brenwar took a deep draw in through his nose, moving from one passage to the other. He tipped his chin and led, boots splashing. 

Now, of all places, I was stuck in a series of caves beneath the mountain with a glowing sword in my hand, fighting for footholds and hand grips, not being able to tell if we were going up or down. I had to trust Brenwar with that. But I’d be lying if I said the dark caves didn’t worry me. I wanted to get back outside already. I’ll take the rain over darkness any day.

“I hope it doesn’t flood,” Brenwar said.

I could see the waters rising at my feet.

“What do you mean?”

Brenwar looked down at the water and said, “The rains must be getting heavy now.” He shrugged. “Nothing to worry about now, we're flooded in.”

My breath grew thin.

“What?”

 

CHAPTER 12

 

 

 

Twist. Turn. Crawl. Climb. Scrape and sweat. It was like that every agonized step of the way. I wiped the mud from my face and accidentally rubbed it into a scrape I’d gotten on my cheek. I could only imagine what a mess my hair was now. I should have tied a few knots in it. I felt like I was suffocating down here, too. 

“Are we there yet?” I asked. It might have been the hundredth time for all I know. I lost count after thirty.

Brenwar didn’t slow, climbing up over a ledge, plodding through a shallow lake, whistling a cheerful tune. He couldn’t be more happy underground. He was like a pig in mud. Me, I couldn’t get out of there fast enough. I’d rather fight a hundred goblins. Something about being in these caves with no sense of direction got the better of me. I wasn’t in control, and without Brenwar I might get lost, probably would, actually. 

Now, you’re probably thinking that dragons live in caves, and that’s true, many do, and it’s not so bad when you have a lot of room, and you know your way through. But this, no thanks. I liked having the open air to look at and everything beyond.

“Here,” Brenwar said, standing in a spring of water burbling at his feet, pointing upward.

I could see a faint light, a brown hole you might say, among the all-encompassing black. It flickered. My heart leapt in my chest. A torch or lantern was near.

“You think we're at the top?”

“Think? I know it. Just twenty yards below that hide out.” He thumped his chest. “I told you so.”

I sheathed Fang and allowed my eyes to adjust to the darkness. I could see the ceiling better now. A circle of dim light. It illuminated the both of us now.

“What do you think that is?”

Brenwar pointed.

“A well. See all these stones?”

There was part of a formation that had crumbled at the base. It was possible that the people who had built the hideout abandoned the place once the source of water dried up or was destroyed. Most ruins had thrived at one time or another, but time, war, famine and the elements destroyed the greatest cities in the world. It happens as sure as the sun and moon set in the sky every single day.

“So,” in the dark I said, “how do we get up there?”

“I brought us here. It’s up to you to do the rest.”

“You don’t think there’s another entrance farther?”

“No. There’s no other entrance at all. This is the one. Trust me. I know.”

I rubbed my chin and gave some serious thought to this one. I couldn’t jump twenty feet in the air, and I couldn’t fly, either.

Brenwar growled, fumbled through his pack, and pulled something out. A rope. A grappling hook was attached to it.

“You could have mentioned that you had that among your assets before. It would have spared me troublesome thoughts.”

“Do I have to think of everything, Dragon? What would you do without me?”

“I guess I would have just gone through the front door.”

“This was your idea,” he huffed.

Brenwar whirled the hook on the rope and slung it upward toward the hole.
Clank.

I slapped him on the back.

“Great shot!”

I tugged the rope and nodded.

“You go first,” he said. “I’ve done more than enough already.

Up I went, hand over hand, foot after foot until I could clearly see the outline of the well that once stood. I hung in midair and listened. I always gave it sixty seconds or so. You had to make sure the coast was clear. No sounds, no rustles, no footsteps or voices. It seemed we’d found as good a place to enter as any. I climbed over the mouth of the well and shook the rope. I could hear Brenwar coming, but it would take him awhile. Dwarves aren't the fastest climbers
―or the fastest anything, for that matter. But I couldn’t complain. So far, so good.

That’s when I heard voices. My hand dropped to my hilt. Goblins. Two of them, chatting back and forth, coming my way.

“Guards!” I whispered into the well. Brenwar only had about ten more feet to go. “Drop if you have to.”

“I’m not going to drop—”

“Shssssh!”

The room I was in was big, at one time a common area of sorts, long abandoned with very few places to hide. I glided towards the wall farthest from the well and squatted in the shadows. Yes indeed, the goblins were a patrol, making their rounds. I suspected it, but my wishful thinking had gotten the better of me. I couldn’t let them see the grappling hook or Brenwar. I had to stop them, or the alarm would be sounded and the entire hideout would swarm with goblins.

Here they came, side by side, both big, the size of men, wearing helmets and armed with spears. They didn’t look my way, but one was carrying a torch, the other’s yellow eyes were fixed on the well.  

I reached for my bow, then thought the better of it. I could hit one, but I couldn’t kill it fast enough. Its screams would send a warning.
Drat!
That left me with Fang. Oh, if I could just sneak up and chop them down it would be so easy. That wouldn't be such a good idea, either. Too risky. That left me with my wits. My brain. Oh …  and my dragon arm. What wonders would it allow me to get away with? Could I get away with it in time?

“Huh. You smell something, Brother?” one goblin said to the other.

It sniffed the air.

This was it. They’d be onto us any second. I had to spring.

Then, the speaking goblin farted and said, “I bet you do now. Heh-heh.”

The other took a deep snort and said, “I can do better than that,” and let one rip.

I didn’t know whether to laugh or be sick as the foul odor wafted to my nostrils.
Yech!

They both let out some rugged chuckles and took seats on the well's stony rim, the grappling hook right between them, and farted again.

I don’t think Brenwar’s going to like that.

“Ah! Ah! Ah! Oooh!” the goblin laughed and patted his belly. “I’m hungry.” He reached inside a pouch, stuffed some bugs in his mouth, and crunched them up. “Mmmmm. Take some.”

I needed to kill them now. I wanted to kill them now. And the foul smell started to make my eyes water and my stomach nauseous. What I really wanted to do was run. I had to escape the stink.

“What is this, Brother?”

Oh no! The goblin had discovered the grappling hook.

“Eh … hmmm, that looks like a—
urk!

It looked like one of the goblins was sucked down the well. The other opened its mouth to scream. I flew across the room and cracked it across the jaw before the first syllable came out. Its yellow eyes rolled up in its head just before Brenwar jerked it down inside the well and climbed out.

“Great goblin farts!” Brenwar exclaimed, holding his nose, stamping his boots.

“Quiet,” I warned, holding my nose as well. “I wouldn’t call them great.”

“Well, what would you call them?”

My stomach wrenched in my belly, and I spit up into the well.

“The words evade me; now let’s get out of this stink hole.”

As I stepped away, Brenwar jerked me back.

“Let’s lighten the load,” he said, slipping off his pack and setting it over in the shadows.

I tossed him mine. Brenwar set them side by side, unfolded a cloth that got bigger and bigger, and covered the packs up. He muttered some words, and our covered packs blended in with the stone. It was another one of those delights he’d brought from my father’s throne room: a Cloth of Concealment, and it was helpful all the time.

He lumbered over, swinging his arms, war hammer ready.

“Better get going; it won’t be long before they miss those two.”

I looked back at the well. I’d say we had an hour at most.

“Let’s go.”

The hideout was a network of rooms and tunnels, some lit, some not, carved from stone. From room to room, corridor to corridor, there were sparse furnishings, few decorations, and here and there, runes were written on the walls. Nothing extraordinary. It seemed many races had used this place as a hideout over time, though. We moved in the shadows, darting from alcove to alcove avoiding the light and the sounds of anything coming. Other than the two guards we’d encountered, there was nothing. No chatter, no shuffling of feet, not even the crick of a cricket or the scurry of a rodent.

I stopped a moment and gathered my thoughts. The goblins must have felt safe in their hideout, and maybe only a couple of guards were needed to make the rounds. Still, it was weird. It wasn’t usually this easy sneaking into any place, and even though we had put some thought into it and come through the utmost back door, something was eating at me.

Brenwar jostled me with his elbow and sniffed the air.

“Smell that,” he said.

Ah, indeed I did. It was goblin brew. The making of swill. The mix of sweat. We were getting close to the goblins, but where was the dragon? “Follow me.”

Now, when it comes to saving dragons, there is only one thing you need to concern yourself with: getting them free of the net, shackles or cage they're in. If you pull that off, any dragon is smart enough and fast enough to do the rest on his or her own. In a flash, they’ll be gone, which probably explains why they never thanked me or stuck around to help. Which always bothered me. After all, I was putting my life on the line, and I had the scars to show for it.

“TUMBA—TUMBA—TUMBA—TUMBA … ”

It seemed the goblins were singing, or celebrating, perhaps. I’m guessing that dragon, a rare Blue Razor, would be very valuable. But they weren't going to collect a single coin. I would see to that. I swore it!

We squatted down behind a balcony that overlooked a great hall. Peeking over the ledge, I could see boiling vats of goblin gruel and swill bubbling on beds of red hot coals. There was a throne at the end of the hall, where a massive humanoid sat, covered from head to toe in deep purple robes. The goblins ate, drank, sang and wrestled with one another… at least thirty of them that I could see. It was a celebration.  

“That’s a lot of goblins,” I said.

“Aye.”

I felt a knife in my heart when I noticed the dragon curled up inside a heavy iron cage. A girl, at that. My keen eyes picked up the lighter belly and long dark eyelashes. That made me sad and mad at the same time.

“Let’s move,” I said, unfolding my bow, Akron. Its workings snapped to, the bowstring coiling around the wood and into place. I was ready. I was ready to take them all on.

Brenwar grabbed my elbow and pulled me back. I jerked away.

“Easy, Dragon. Give them more time to celebrate. They’ll by drunk soon enough. Easier to strike them.”

Well, soon enough wouldn’t be soon enough for me, but I conceded.

“And what happens when the patrol doesn't return?”

“Well, let’s hope they don’t remember.”

I kept my eyes on the robed figure on the simple stone throne. Mysterious and powerful he or she seemed, yet unmoving. The figure felt evil, though. I felt compelled to launch a magic arrow into that hooded skull. Take down the leader and they all fall down. Darn that need not to kill! I resisted, slipped my arrow back in my quiver, and against all my compulsions, I waited.

BOOK: Dragon Bones And Tombstones (Book 2)
10.44Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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