he won’t stop. Through the breaks in the trees, I see something big dart across the sky.
“Please tell me you’re not calling another dragon for a play date.”
Kera cocks her head, listening. “He’s made strange noises a couple of times, but that one was different. I think it may be a challenge.”
I glare over my shoulder. Blaze’s chest is puffed, and he’s searching the sky. “Ready to assert your dominance, are you, big boy?” I jab my finger in his direction. “Stop it. Bad dragon.”
Blaze drops his head and snuffles an especially fragrant huff.
Reece suddenly stops. “Dylan.”
His call is softer than what it should be, and it raises the hair on my arms. I position Kera by Blaze. “If anything bad happens, get on him and go.”
Her lips pinch together mutinously, and I point my finger at her. “I mean it.”
“But I’m just as able to—”
“Please do what I say for once without arguing.” I don’t wait to hear what else she wants to say. When I pass Signe, I tell her to join Kera.
Reece has worked his way forward to the edge of the trees and is low to the ground. The bridge isn’t that far off. More than a Hail Mary football throw away, but seeable. What I didn’t expect is the sound of logging and the building of shelters all along the edge of the Unknown. There are all manner of creatures roaming around, and a few appear innocently human.
Farther in, I see inky black ribbons, their shape smokelike. In the center of it all stands a man I know all too well.
Kera comes alongside me. I close my eyes and groan. “Why can’t you stay put?”
“Is that Granel? What’s he doing here?”
She doesn’t know he left without a word to anyone. “I don’t know, but something’s been bugging me since Ainsbury Cross. I think one of the dark souls is Navar.”
Kera gasps. “I saw a face that resembled him, but I didn’t think it was possible.”
We both saw Navar’s face? A creepy feeling settles in my gut. “Granel must have seen it, too. That’s why he left. He has issues that have warped his sense of loyalty.”
“He’s going into that building.” A thoughtful expression settles over Reece’s face.
Signe cranes her neck to see past us. “How are we going to get to the bridge? They’re everywhere.”
“We’re not,” I say.
“How are we to leave, then?”
“Blaze. I’ll send you and Kera back first. Then call him back for Reece, then me.”
“What about Baun?” Kera asks.
“I’ll stay as long as I can and wait for him.”
Reece is staring off into the distance. I don’t think he’s paying attention until he asks, “What does your dad look like again?”
“Light hair. Tall. A lot like me. Only older and scruffier.”
“Like him?” Reece asks and points.
A man with shaggy hair and wearing ragged clothes stumbles out of the woods across from us. Cuts along his arms and torso ooze blood. All around him, small lights zip in and out, harassing him forward.
Reece’s attention jumps from Baun to the enemy camp, where dozens and dozens of creatures roam the area. “He’s going to bring attention to himself and then us if he’s not careful.”
Baun is being oddly careless. Not at all what I expect from him. He suddenly trips and falls, splaying out his arms as if searching for something, but he only crawls along, grunting at each cut that appears on his body from the
“He’s blind,” Kera says, close to tears. “He’s been underground for nearly two decades. Who knows what’s been done to him. Do something, Dylan. They will see him any minute.”
The more I look at him, the more damage I see. Dark circles ring his squinting eyes and there’s a sickly hue to his skin, like it’s never seen a speck of sun. He pushes awkwardly to his feet, his arms stretched out in front of him searching the air for any obstacles. He’s a mess. But worse, I actually feel pity for him.
Before I think better of it, I call on clouds to gather overhead. It’s not easy. The Unknown doesn’t want to obey me. Finally the clouds darken, and the rain I let loose sheets the air, swamping the ground in no time. The enemy does exactly what I expected. Half run for cover and the other half hunker down on the spot, burying their heads under whatever is available.
Baun does what I had hoped he’d do. He stops. And then he does something I don’t expect. He lifts his head up to the sky and laughs. His enjoyment seems to irritate the
“Stay here,” I tell everyone, and then I take off, pushing around the underbrush, my eyes glued to my dad and those evil little monsters.
I settle behind a clump of foliage as near to Baun as I can get without drawing attention. Thunder shakes the Unknown and Baun curses at his torturers. “I am no longer your plaything. I have been set free. Leave me be.”
I can feel his frustration as if it were my own. I actually hate the
That sends the little beasts into a buzz, but they do something out of character, yet familiar. They settle all around him, on his shoulders, his head, along his outstretched arms. I remember them doing so in a dream. I thought Baun was controlling them, but maybe it was their way of controlling him. Baun turns his head left, then right. “What’s going on?”
“How fond are you of your little friends?” I ask.
“Not at all.”
No hesitation and no asking who I am. But then, I think he knows. He always seems to know.
“Stand real still.” I call down bolt after bolt, zapping the
The downpour I’ve created is causing a rush of water toward the bridge. It’s strong enough to knock Baun off his feet. He skids along the ground, floundering as the water pushes him closer and closer to the enemy camp. It’s crazy to see him so defenseless. He’s a different man than I expected, and one I can’t just leave. I run forward and pull him to his feet.
“If you keep going like you are, you’ll run right into a slew of ugly.”
“What does that mean?”
“It’s a southern term. I don’t have time for a full explanation.” I guide him to the trees and lead him toward the others. “Let’s just say a human friend of mine got a hold of some
Baun yanks me to a stop. “He’s mad.”
“Pissed
“How many are with you?”
“Three. You and I make five.”
“Our combined powers are our worst asset, yet our greatest.”
“Only three of us have power.”
Baun’s jaw flexes. “Two are human?”
“Yep. Like me and Kera.”
“Not exactly.”
I don’t like the look on his face. “Exactly like us.”
“They have power?”