Origin Exposed: Descended of Dragons, Book 2 (20 page)

BOOK: Origin Exposed: Descended of Dragons, Book 2
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What I saw stopped my heart’s beating.

Eiven had fallen to his knees on the porch, the pain and the force of Stryde’s deadly fire too much to withstand. I watched with wide, horror-stricken eyes as Eiven fell heavily over onto the ground.

Bay threw her head and shoulders back in anguish and sank to her own knees. Hot tears ran down her cheeks, leaving skin-colored streaks among the black she’d collected from fighting the house fire.

Bay continued to scream even as she began to change. Her granny-like features disappeared into hard edges moments before she burst through the roof of the tiny cabin, sending chunks of wood, pieces of the house flying into the forest. She shot toward Stryde with determined fury, but he evaded her. She pulled up hard and chased him into the sky, all the while releasing that mournful cry. In seconds, the two disappeared into the night sky.

I rushed from the house to Eiven’s unmoving form. As I got closer, it was clear he was gone.

The substantial force of Stryde’s fiery attack had decimated my sweet uncle. He lay in a charred black mass on the porch, his outline the only thing still distinguishable.

The smell of creosote, of death, caused bile to pool in the back of my throat and I gagged as sweat formed on my forehead and above my lip. My eyes watered and welled over; whether a physical or emotional response to the grotesque murder of my uncle, I didn’t know.

The old gray robe provided some relief as I covered my nose and attempted to breathe through my mouth. My hands hung limply at my sides as I stood over what was left of Eiven, at a loss for what to do. In the end I did nothing but weep.

A noise in the distance pulled me back to the reality of the volatile situation. If Stryde could obliterate strong, sturdy Eiven, he’d have no problem with me. Resolved to escape, I ran through the woods. The forest was so dense with fallen trees and underbrush that I tripped on the over-sized robe twice in my haste. With raw knees and scraped arms I continued to run, finally making it far enough from the cabin to stop and catch my breath.

Where to go? Not back to Ewan and my friends. And I couldn’t abandon Bay by tracing to the protective wards of The Root. I had to save her, to get her away from Stryde before he killed her, too. It was also essential his damage be mitigated by keeping him far away from people. The woods were the best place for that.

Beads of sweat rolled down my forehead into my eyebrows as I thought frantically, trying to form some kind of plan. When I pulled the sweat-soaked sleeve from my face my back tingled with awareness. Chill bumps began at my scalp and erupted all down the skin of my body. Someone was watching me.

Stryde was suspended silently in the air behind me like a maniacal avenging angel. My knees lost their ability to hold me upright, and I grasped a nearby tree for support.


There you are
,” Stryde said pleasantly. Like he hadn’t a care in the world. Like he hadn’t just killed his own father in a berserk rage.

“Stryde, just let me go.” My voice cracked as I pleaded, “Please.”


Don’t cry dear one
,” he murmured through my mind. “
Everything’ll work out fine. Don’t you see? We can be together now
.”

Enraging him further was a deadly move, so I said nothing. My hands, my entire body began to shake. I closed my eyes in an attempt to compose myself. When I finally opened them again, from the corner of my eye I saw something small and brown rising from the tree line behind Stryde. I dared alert him to Bays approach, but instead worked to keep his attention on me.

“How can this work, Stryde? Tell me.”

He began to ramble nonsensically, going on in partial and scattered thoughts about our fates together. He became agitated again and twitched almost rhythmically, but it had worked. Stryde had no idea Bay’d swooped in behind him.

As she neared several gaping tears in her large wings were visible, as were singed and raw places on her face and spiny back. Her battle with Stryde had been a tough one—for her.

Stryde’s crazed eyes snapped to a squint when he realized my attention was somewhere behind him, and he flung his heavy neck around.


Thought I killed you, old woman
,” he seethed.


Stryde
,” Bay’s voice was hollow. “
How can you be so pitiless? Your own father is dead. I’m the only family you have left, child
.”

Stryde blinked his reptilian eyes rapidly, like he’d been caught in the rain, then raised his wide neck and roared, “
I’m sick of the past
.
Sick of you, of what we call a life. Sick of hiding, of hurting. I deserve a future. And I’m going to make one
.”

After expelling those ominous words he made a deliberate inhale of deadly breath. He opened his hinged mouth to cauterize Bay, too.

I snapped.

The loss of my kind uncle had cut me deeply. I’d had enough of Stryde’s attempts to manipulate me, of treating me like a damned incubator. While his attention was focused on Bay my dragon rippled to life. I welcomed her power, her speed, her defensive armor. I embraced the sharp tremors that resulted in leashing her need for vengeance.

Stryde’s head swung in my direction with a measured drawl. His wild eyes betrayed no fear in facing two dragons. Only anticipation of the fight, the violence. He was lost; I knew that. But Bay tried one last time to lure him from the jungle of madness he’d wandered into long ago.


Stryde
,” she said gently. “
It’s time to go home, child. Enough
—”

Stryde’s abdomen expanded on another inhale, his great onyx scales glinting in the moonlight.

Without further thought, I roared my fear, my rage, and something inside me cracked. The imaginary fissure that had formed that day in the clearing gaped to expose the entire well of my fire. The magical missile flew from my open mouth with a force so powerful I braced myself to stay upright.

I hadn’t aimed well—hadn’t truly expected for my flame to ignite. But it had, and had set fire to a small stand of trees. The flame missed Stryde completely and only succeeded in pissing him off.

When he thrust his powerful back legs and wings to vault toward me, I knew I was dead.

I always heard that your life flashes before your eyes in the moments before death, but that’s not what happened to me.

The experiences I’d never had called to me like a tragically lost lover from beyond the grave. I yearned for them, lamented the unfairness of losing my life so early in the game—of being snatched away when I was just beginning to scratch the surface of who I was. I loathed Stryde for taking them from me, for snuffing my life so soon. I vowed to return and haunt his demented ass until I drove him completely over the edge.

The morbid, angry thoughts flashed in the infinitesimal time before Stryde bit down on my armored throat. He aimed for my body, too, and the sting of his sharp talons as they penetrated even the tough scales of my side was excruciating. My esophagus constricted beneath his mighty jaws and I saw only blinding white just before my vision went black.

S
tryde’s grip
on my throat had slackened as he opened his mouth in a gasp. I was completely freed when he threw his head back and shrieked in agony. Full mental function hadn’t resurfaced, but I didn’t wait to ask questions and scrambled quickly away.

He was…smoking. He looked to be on fire from the inside out. His long neck thrashed wildly and he clawed at the soft ground, sending chunks of mud and debris through the trees. His crazed eyes were wide with shock, with pain, and—finally—with fear.

Then they held no emotion at all. Stryde’s jade eyes closed just before his big body fell to the forest floor with a thud that shook the trees around us. He didn’t rise again.


Bay
,” I called and rushed toward her. “
You’re hurt.
” She was bleeding in several places, her wings as singed and holey as melted canvas.


I’ll be all right, dear
,” she said, but her eyes had lost the light behind them. They were flat. A million miles away.


Is—is he…dead
?” His body betrayed no real wounds. He wasn’t bleeding; nothing appeared broken. I’d seen him smoking, but it was far different than the death Eiven had faced.

“A
ye,”
she said, her gaze still distant.
“I tried everythin’ I knew. Broken as he was, I loved him still. Poor dear. He didn’t know
how
to pursue happiness.

Her head hung sadly. “
When he came for you—after what he did to my Eiven
—”

Bay closed her eyes as pain twisted her features. She came close to breaking down, but never did. After a moment she went on, “
I knew he’d kill you, too
.” I took no pleasure in nodding my agreement.


But, are you sure he’s gone? He’s not burned. I didn’t see you bite or fight him. What did you do
?”


Tis called the fire within. It’s magic as ancient and evil as we dragons. It’s the nucleus of our own fire called up by a spell. Few have ever manipulated it; even Stryde did not know it. Fewer still ever will, for the dragons are no more.


That’s some wicked shit
,” I thought.

Bay swung her burdened eyes at me and nodded. “
Aye. I’d hoped to never use it again
.”


I—I’m sorry. I know you loved him. I’m sorry for your loss. Sorry you had to do that
.”


I’m so tired,
” she said. “
I’d just like to go home and rest.
” At my shifty eyes and pained expression she remembered what waited for us at the cabin. She heaved a ragged breath and closed her eyes. “
Will ye help me bury them, dear
?”


Of course
.
I’ll carry Stryde, too. You can change back. Try to heal
.”

Bay found a large scrap of the robe I’d worn and attempted to cover herself with it.

Stryde’s body had begun to cool, and had reverted to his human form. His face was so peaceful in death one would never suspect the trauma he’d just endured or the madness he’d displayed moments before. His sleek black hair lay scattered over the side of his slack face.

I clasped his limp body as gently as I could with my back legs and extended my wings in flight, carrying him along the tops of the trees toward the cabin hideaway.

Chapter 29

A
t the sight
of my uncle Eiven’s incinerated body my grip tightened on Stryde. Being angry would do no good now, but I couldn’t help the feeling. Such a tragic, stupid loss—untimely and premature. And now the family I was so happy to discover, that I had such high hopes for, was reduced to only one: my granny, Bay.

She’d be alone now in this reclusive hideaway. Alone with her grief. No one could be expected to deal with that loss, on top of everything else she’d endured, and come out normal on the other side. I wasn’t sure what I could do to help, but was committed to finding some way to comfort her.

The task at hand, though, was laying my uncle and his son to rest.

There was an area large enough just west of the cabin, and I lay Stryde down there.

Withering into my normal self, I stretched my aching back and arms. My body was tight from the overwhelming stress of the night.

Inside the house was one of my uncle’s old shirts, a pair of shorts, and work boots. A nearby storage shed held shovels, and I drug them to the burial site.

Bay ambled into the clearing as I stood over Stryde attempting to estimate how big the hole should to be.
Could Bay and I even dig a grave
? I thought. Shoveling was tough work. I knew from the days of gardening with my mother.

My mother.
She would want to know her brother had died. Hell, she’d want to know that her own mother still lived. But I couldn’t tell her. There’d been no word from her in the weeks since she’d left.

But while the scars I had from her abandonment were still tender and pink, they were healing, and I didn’t cry when I touched them anymore. I hoped she’d found some peace. I hoped she’d been able to work through her issues. I hoped she’d come to the conclusion that she was wrong to leave, and come back. None of this seemed likely, but an eternal optimist can hardly just stop hoping.

“You picked a fine spot, dear,” Bay called, pulling me from my reverie. Her voice was hollow, perfunctory as she sank onto one of the log-hewn seats around the fire pit. She seemed unfathomably old at that moment. And tired. Her shoulders hunched so far that her neck disappeared into her body. She sat unmoving and I didn’t disturb her. Instead I supported myself on the handle of the shovel and relived the few memories I had of Eiven, and even of Stryde. Bay was likely doing the same.

With obvious effort she finally stirred and limped toward the cabin, reemerging in her own clothes.

“I don’t know how—do I just start digging? I’ve never done this before.”

“Aye, I’ve experience enough for us both,” she said. “One shovel of earth at a time, dear. That’s how you do it.”

And so we dug. Bay’s weary body was resilient, determined. Together we carved a small, deep hole.

“That’ll do,” she said.

“But, it’s not nearly big enough. I can keep going if you’re tired.”

“I’m tired, it’s true. But Stryde is already starting to wither away, and Eiven—”

Bay’s voice broke and she fell to her knees. I didn’t rush to her; leaning on someone for support wasn’t her style. I looked away and let her grieve in as much privacy as I could offer.

She finally let go. She wailed and gnashed at her hair and neck. She bent to the ground and beat her fists into the rich, black earth until she could move them no more.

Eventually she dragged herself back up, and her arms hung loosely at her sides as she knelt in the dirt. She turned her face skyward leaving her misery open to the heavens.

“Eiv—” Bay cleared her hoarse throat. “We’ll have to gather Eiven’s remains and bring them. We can sprinkle them over Stryde. He’d like that.”

At the reminder I glanced at Stryde’s body, but couldn’t make sense of what I saw. He had reduced to a dense lump, his body turning in and shrinking like melted plastic. Bay’d been right. He would fit in the hole.

She gathered Stryde gingerly and placed him in the grave, then closed her eyes in silent goodbye. I followed her to the porch for Eiven.

“Will ye get the smaller tarp from the shed, dear?” Bay asked.

I soon discovered the need for the tarp, for once we disturbed Eiven’s remains they crumbled to dust and small, dry chunks. Together Bay and I slid the flat canvas under Eiven’s charred remains in an effort to salvage them for transport. The process took a long time, though the task itself wasn’t labor intensive. Each time we began, Bay would stop for several hard moments and breathe in an effort to regain her composure. She had difficulty looking at the black mass, but dealt with the task at hand as she did most things: with utilitarian, purpose-driven efficiency. I envied Bay’s ability to remove emotion from necessity. But I didn’t envy the countless heartaches and trials she’d endured in order to develop the ability.

I felt her pain, her sorrow—along with some of my own—and my emotions manifested with force as I worked, though she never said a word.

We folded Eiven’s remains into the tarp like a flag ceremony at a soldier’s funeral. She held them reverently to her chest and carried them to the grave site before unfolding them onto Stryde’s shriveled body. We both stared into the grave unmoving, not speaking.

M
y legs gave
out with exhaustion, but I caught myself before I fell down completely. Bay sought my gaze, but remained stony.

“What now?” I whispered.

“Now we replace the soil, dear.”

At the thought of moving earth, a scratchy vision began to play behind my eyes. It was something I’d seen Gaspare do. Something I never dreamed I’d do myself. In the premonition I used a magic I didn’t know I possessed to cover the grave with a wave of my hand. The vision then expanded to reveal Bay’s reaction to my magic, and her acceptance of it. She lay her eyes closed and nodded a weary encouragement.

The premonition gave me the confidence, the permission I needed, and I returned the heavy soil to the hollow, closing the grave of Eiven and Stryde Drakontos.

She didn’t address what I’d done, but said, “You’re tired, girl. Will ye stay here?”

I suspected she asked as much for herself as she did for me. “Yes,” I said. “Thank you.”

A
groan left
my aching throat as I approached consciousness. It was less a result of the awkward position I woke in than the sore muscles from the night before. Hastily changing into several forms, a fight for my life, the digging of a grave—all events I’d rather not be reminded of, but my aching body had different ideas.

Bay was in the kitchen, a kettle of coffee over an open flame in the old stove top. She sensed my awareness but didn’t look at me. “Coffee and bacon’s on the stove,” she said. “Be done in a jif.”

I nodded and pried myself from the couch.

“I’ll be leavin’ after we eat,” she said.

“What?” I croaked and looked up. “Where’re you goin?”

She finished drying her hands and lay the worn dish towel on the counter. She’d pulled her gray hair back into a bun—practically the only granny-like thing about her. She dragged her dull green eyes in my direction and combed her hair back nervously with her fingers.

“I’m goin’ to find yer mam,” she said. “Goin’ to yer world.”

“My world—why? What do you mean?”

“I canna stay here,” she said firmly. “There’s nae reason.” Her accent was thick—whether from emotions or exhaustion, I didn’t know. “With Eiven and Stryde gone, I’ve nothin’. I willna stay here alone.”

“But,” I stuttered. “I’ll stay here with you. I won’t leave you alone, Bay.”

“Nae, dear. Ye canna be seen with me, and ye know it well.”

“No one will know,” I argued. “I’ll go to school each day and return in the afternoons. I’ll think of some excuse.”

“No. I willna have ye sacrificin’ for me. My mind’s made. You and Edina are all I have left. I know yer safe at The Root, where ye belong. But I dinna know where my Edina is.”

Her eyes softened and her speech slowed. “I’ll find her, help her remember who she is. I’ll bring her back.”

I stepped toward Bay and reached to run my hands around her shoulders. I’d never tried to hug her before—nor she me. But I held her to me like I’d lose her, too. She exhaled a weary breath and squeezed me back.

“You don’t know where to look,” I said as I held her. “Let me go with you.”

“No, dear,” she said, in control of emotions once more. “I’ll go. I didna make it this long without a good head on my shoulders, and a few tricks up my sleeve. I’ll be fine. And it’ll be best if I find her alone.”

She was right, but it still seemed so sudden, such a rash decision after the horrific loss she’d suffered.

Though a change of scenery might be best.

“Okay,” I said. “Okay. And when you find her…tell her…tell her I miss her. That I’m fine; I’ll make it, but I miss
her
.”

Bay looked up at me, and the wrinkles of her face had doubled overnight. They carved deep lines across her forehead, around her tired eyes and down sunken cheeks.

She nodded her gray head and wiped a single tear from my eye with the pad of her thumb.

BOOK: Origin Exposed: Descended of Dragons, Book 2
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