The Confliction (Book Three of the Dragoneers Saga) (Dragoneer Saga) (22 page)

BOOK: The Confliction (Book Three of the Dragoneers Saga) (Dragoneer Saga)
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Richard roared out as well, only his was a roar of frustration. This was not the end he had imagined. He should have flown east and gathered more mudged. He sucked in a breath and gritted his teeth as his armor melted away enough that the slime could start eating into his skin. The tentacles were shifting now, tearing flesh from bone as they did. Suddenly, one of them closed over Richard’s head and his face began to burn as he was suffocated.

He tried to make peace with himself, but he couldn’t find it through all the pain.

As he succumbed to the bile, he hoped that Jenka, his brother, would find a way to end this thing. This confliction of wills to survive, he knew, would be a battle to the end. Then he felt as if he were being ripped apart.

Part VI

Climax

Chapter 28

Andoal, the Mountonian earth elemental, rolled through the ground like a wave. Jade carried Jenka, alongside Crimzon, through the sky above. Crimzon had surprised Jenka when he leapt into flight at the sight of Andoal and perched on the Mountonian’s shoulder like a sailor’s bird. They had wasted no time. Only hours ago they had left Clover’s castle.

The alien was about to feed on something large in the northern part of Delton. The elemental’s flowing surge of earth swept right up to it and rose into its Mountonian form. Like a man throwing an object over hand, Andoal’s punch hammered down into the alien creature. The master alien was blubbery and the Mountonian’s gigantic fist sank halfway into the thing, causing it to jiggle and move back. It dropped the gooey, slime-covered meal it was about to chug down and opened a mouth big enough to swallow Andoal’s head. Slime flew like spittle from the undulating maw, and Jenka had to heel Jade away to avoid the rusty alchemical stench that threatened to gag him.

The master alien formed quickly into an eight-legged thing, its back half shaped like some sort of ox, its front half clawing forth with four terrible limbs. Above them, two giant eyes, flaming orange and blue, dominated the alien’s spherical head.

Andoal knew this thing wasn’t of this earth, and that he had to destroy it, but he didn’t know quite how to attack something that absorbed his might so easily. Then, what was blubbery a moment ago was stiff and sharp, and now raking into his middle. Andoal didn’t feel the damage as pain, but the sensation of having part of himself gouged away was no less agonizing.

Andoal slapped his humongous stone-formed hands together, in an attempt to squash his opponent’s head. His hands impacted substance this time, and the way the alien’s unsettling eyes nearly bulged out of its melon, he knew it took injury.

The alien stepped back as if to retreat, but then lunged forward, this time wrapping its upper body around the Mountonian. A score of tentacles protruded from the alien, like swiftly growing vines, and came wriggling around. In less than a moment, Andoal was completely entangled.

Jenka was watching the battle, but only halfheartedly. His pulse was racing, he couldn’t find Zahrellion, or any of the Dragoneers, and it scared him.
There!
He cranked his neck around. It was just a dark, stunted mudged lifting from its meal. He kept searching and searching for any sign of the Dragoneers. He saw none of them; nor did he see Crimzon.

His attention was brought back to bear on the battle between the two gargantuan beings.

Andoal spread himself outward, first with his elbows, then, as his arms tore through the blubbery stuff, with his forearms and hands. It was almost like watching a man pull a shirt off, the way the Mountonian reached over his shoulders and peeled the alien’s tentacles from his back.

It was hard to say which creature was bigger, for the alien kept shifting forms.

Andoal did something different, something that surprised the alien, and Jenka as well. As if being poured out of a giant mug, the Mountonian sank back into the earth. Behind the alien, an arm and shoulder rose up out of the ground and snatched a hold of the thing. Houses, corpses, and a pair of feeding Sarax were all suddenly falling into a giant pit as the earth began to crumble away underneath the suddenly shapeless creature.

White-skinned wings stretched forth and tried to hold the massive alien in the air, but Andoal’s grip was true and the alien joined the Mountonian in the pit. Using the displaced ground itself, Andoal began slowly pulling the earth back over the two of them, thus burying the alien deep.

Jenka saw a flash of red scale, and his heart leapt. Jade darted that way and Jenka took in the fact that darkness was creeping up on them. There was no doubt that it was Blaze. He could see the shortened end of the fire wyrm’s tail.

The battle in the now refilling hole was being fought in rubble and shadow. What buildings the vermin hadn’t destroyed were being rattled, crumbled, or just plain overturned as unseen violence took place beneath the surface of the earth. Jenka hoped that Marcherion and Blaze were alive. Not long ago the whole city had been overrun with trellkin, orcs, and Sarax. The arrival of Andoal, and the earth-quaking battle, had frightened nearly every living thing away. There was no movement in the wreckage below, and Jenka’s heart was sinking as he approached Marcherion’s stilled fire wyrm.

Andoal was starting to realize that this thing was far more capable than he’d imagined. The alien was emitting harsh pulses of sound. The frequency, the vibration that the wavelengths produced, began to loosen the fibers of the Mountonian’s being.

Suddenly, Andoal couldn’t get out of the earth fast enough. As if he were a swimmer struggling to reach the surface, Andoal pulled himself upwards through his domain. When he came bursting out of the rubble, he found that the alien’s vibrations had grown deeper and stronger. The huge slabs of solid rock and compressed earth he was formed of were crumbling away.

The Mountonian called upon the wind and water to aid him in this fight, but they didn’t respond. The alien’s drone most likely drowned out the call. Andoal roared in aggravation and reached out, launching at the blobbish alien form. Before he could grasp hold of it again, his physical form came completely apart and fell to the earth in a heaping pile of scree.

Aikira, Golden, and Linux watched the parts of the battle that took place above ground to the north of them. The presence of the massive entities and the violence that was taking place had driven all the vermin away from their part of the city. Even from such a great distance, where they were huddled and invisible, they felt unsafe as the earth around them rumbled and shifted.

Golden had spotted Jade and Jenka in the sky, and started to roar out to them, but Aikira hushed her wyrm. If she could have communicated with him, she would’ve pointed Jenka toward where Zahrellion went down, where Rikky had gone to see about her; but she didn’t dare make her dragon vulnerable by breaking the spell. Golden couldn’t fly, and until there was another dragon there to protect her, Aikira knew they should stay unseen. She grew excited, as did Linux, when Andoal pulled the alien into the earth. For a few long moments it seemed as if the otherworldly monster might just stay underground.

Then the thing began humming, turning bedrock into gravel. Andoal emerged and crumbled into a pile of rubble. For those watching, hope seemed to crumble with him.

When the alien shifted into a long, loping feline form and raced away southwest along the road to Pvurn, Aikira realized that this battle was just beginning. She pulled herself away from her dragon, causing them all to become visible again.

A strange hissing pop sounded. She wasn’t paying attention as she was concentrating on her spell. She cast a streaking yellow flow high into the air toward Jenka and Jade. When she knew he had seen the display and was coming their way, she dropped back down to the cobbles and wiped away the tear running down her cheek. If that thing made it to Pvurn, it would feast on twice as much life as it had consumed here.

“You have to go after it, Jenka.” She sang out the words in a sorrowful wail that carried up to where Jade had just come to a hover. “You can’t let it get to all those people. There are thousands upon thousands of them.”

“Marcherion is down, just over there with Blaze,” Jenka yelled down excitedly as he pointed. “Neither of them was moving much, but both were drawing breath. Have you seen Zahrellion or Rikky? She wasn’t at the castle.” He looked around the wreckage and then back to the ebon girl below. “Tell me it didn’t get her.” His voice choked as he said it.

“It took control of her again,” Linux said from Rolph’s body. It took Jenka a moment to realize who he was talking to. “She was struggling, and Crystal carried them east. If it did to her what it did to my true body, then... then...” He shook his head. “Rikky went after her.” Linux sucked in a breath. “Let him deal with her. You have to stop that thing. If it feeds on any more people it will grow so much more monstrous as to be unbeatable.”

“Is that the queen?” Jenka asked, thinking that if the alien were confined on the mainland then it would eventually run out of food. He suddenly understood Richard’s harsh actions then. He’d been protecting those who could be protected, not running to the islands to save his skin.

“King Richard left her with us.” A fire in Aikira’s eyes was threatening to overcome her sadness. “That thing caught him just before you arrived.”

“It tossed him, I think,” Jenka called down, as Jade went banking away.

Jenka looked like he wanted more than anything to race off after Zahrellion. He didn’t, though. A terrible glaze of resolve filmed over his eyes and he and Jade began climbing in the sky while working their way to the south and west after the alien.

It looked like they might have a coffin chore to do.

Chapter 29

Rikky saw Crystal as the light of day sank away. She would have blended into the shadowy snow-covered field around her had there not been a long dark gouge from where she’d slid across the ground to try and protect her rider when they crashed. Rikky spotted Zah then, and his heart swelled up into his throat. One of her legs was bent over her body, and her heel was touching her cheek. She was dead.

He had Silva land, and after unbuckling himself from his seat, he slid the short distance his wyrm left him to the ground.

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