“Working with wisps,” Valrinda grumbled. “I’m telling you,
this will go bad for us.”
The wisps were bustling around, setting up a camp for the
night. They’d spent the morning flying, and then Beckett had spent the
afternoon passed out against Valrinda’s side. He’d nearly froze to death, and
for what? To avoid these cute little characters who were skipping around and
putting up colorful tents while chattering at each other? Everything they had
was bright, or stitched with metals and stones that reflected the dying light of
the sun.
“They don’t seem like bad people,” Beckett said. He grabbed
some food out of his pouch and snuggled back against Valrinda’s side. He didn’t
need a tent, or the fire that was too warm just an hour before but was getting
more welcome as night fell and it grew colder in the desert.
“Not bad. Bad for you. Bad for me. Wisps only look out for
their troop, and outsiders are not wisps. They say they’ll help, but that doesn’t
mean their help won’t actually hurt us in the end.”
Beckett shook his head, taking a drink of water to wash down
the bread that was going stale. “Are you always so cynical of others?”
“Yes.”
He rolled his eyes. “We’re going to make the best of our
helpers.” Who knew dragons could become jealous so easily? If Beckett didn’t
know better, he’d worry Valrinda was gonna turn into Valery, a fucking annoying
girl from his sophomore year who’d whined constantly to go together to a dance.
He didn’t dance.
“You’re my guide; they’re just helpers.” He put more effort
into soothing Valrinda than he did Valery. He’d shouted at her to leave him the
hell alone, and she’d ran off crying, so of course he’d landed in fucking
detention. Maybe he was a little more mature now.
“Fine.” Valrinda was still huffy, but Beckett ignored it.
The stones of the road were hard under his ass, but he wasn’t about to sleep in
the sand. Not after Valrinda told him about burrowing eating creatures.
Their first argument about traveling the next day was when
Beckett said he’d walk with the wisps instead of riding. Maybe it was risky,
but he wanted to talk to them. Find out how they knew about him, where he was
going, what he was doing. How else was he going to figure things out? It’d come
to him, as he lay there trying and failing to sleep.
How did every fairytale creature in this place seem to know
he was there, that he was a human, and that Parallax had lost his star?
He had been told not to trust everyone, but everyone he’d met
had done nothing but help him so far. Where was the great conspiracy? The danger?
So far it’d been nothing but a walk in the park, as it were.
In the end, neither of them were happy. Beckett walked and
Valrinda flew. He flew so low he kept sweeping up fine clouds of sand so Beckett’s
eyes watered and talking was made difficult. Plus talking to the ore wisps was
like trying to understand chattering chipmunks. They spoke in fragments, talking
over each other, and half the time it didn’t make sense. He persisted anyway
and got a headache for his efforts. It wasn’t the quiet walk he’d had before or
the flights Beckett had taken with Valrinda. What he wouldn’t do for a soda and
chips, maybe a nap in a field of cold grass. Nope, all he had was a flask of
water.
Endless water. He was so hot and sweaty, his feet sore, and
Beckett was getting cranky. He was starting to think about calling Valrinda
down so he could ride instead when the sky darkened.
Not the shadow of Valrinda’s wings as he swooped down over
them again, it was bigger than that, and the scream that pierced the air sent
the air wisps scrambling to hide, collapsing flat.
“What the fuck!” Beckett fell backward, staring up and then
at the wisps burrowing into the sand at the side of the road in complete
silence, something they’d never been.
Something huge, and bone white with sickly green claws was
flapping leathery wings just above them, barely missing where they’d been
standing. “Valrinda!” Beckett screamed.
“I’m coming!” Valrinda roared. Beckett watched as Valrinda
arrowed, his wings folded tight to his body as he darted at the beast attacking
them. He opened his jaw and shot blue fire, forcing it away.
Both the beast and Valrinda beat their wings hard, rising to
crash together, clawing and screaming. The scent of burning flesh and acid,
blood and fear and the horrific sounds of their battle drowned out the sounds
of the desert.
The beast reared its head back and stabbed its horrific beak
toward Valrinda’s neck.
“No!” Beckett screamed. Valrinda reared back, beating his
wings sharply and pushed off with his claws, so the beast’s beak glanced off
his scales instead of stabbing in deep.
Now free from Valrinda’s grasp, the beast swooped again, reaching
for them, but instead of going to Beckett, it tried to grab a wisp.
“You shall not feed here!” Valrinda roared. He sent a blast
of flame at the beast’s head, and it dropped the wisp who fell a dozen feet
back to the sand. Beckett hoped it was okay, because it wasn’t moving. He didn’t
want to move and draw that thing’s attention, but how long could he lay here?
The stones were blazing hot, and the sounds of the battle could be drawing who
knew what to them.
Valrinda pressed his advantage of being higher than the
beast and went for the back of its head, neck, and wings, blasting his fire and
racking his claws down its back. The beast screamed, and one of its wings bent
awkwardly. It was flying, but erratically and not well. It took off, warbling,
and quickly disappeared into the desert.
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