An
Excerpt from Wizard's Bridge:
The
creature surged into view from behind the stone walls of the
castle. Its long neck wove a graceful curve as it reared up,
while sunlight glinted off its scales. Alsa ducked behind a
nearby stone, then poked up her head to stare at it in frank
admiration, despite the inadequacy of her cover, and with full
knowledge that the dragon would likely char her on the spot.
It must have extraordinary hearing
to detect her approach from such a distance. She'd tried to
keep her movements quiet and thought she'd succeeded. Wrong.
"Little human!"
The dragon's harsh, grinding voice
boiled like a volcano. Its giant eyes trained on her. Gleams
of colored light whirled in the depths of slitted pupils.
Its sudden laugh had both the
crack and rumble of thunder. "Little human, what do you here?"
it asked. "We have visitors so rarely."
Alsa risked poking her head out
from behind the rock again. "I'm not surprised. Your hospitality
is legendary."
The blast that followed was probably
the dragon equivalent of a chuckle. "Did you come to look at
me? Your people seem to enjoy the challenge. I hear that in
the town they say it's good luck to have looked on the dragon
and lived. Since few do survive, I suppose it can be rightly
said they are lucky."
"I've come to consult with your
master."
"Master?" A puff of steam billowed
from outraged nostrils stretched wide open.
"Perhaps I phrased that badly.
I wish to talk to the wizard. Would you grant your permission?"
The mountain shook as the dragon
bellowed its amusement. "Of course not. But thank you for asking."
"Even if-"
"I haven't had a good laugh for
some time," the dragon went on, ignoring her incipient plea.
"Perhaps I'll let you get as far as the castle door, if you
care to make the attempt. Perhaps. Have you the courage to risk
it, little mortal?"
Alsa abandoned the dubious protection
of the stone, stood up and moved into an open area. "Yes."
"Then walk. You've had no trouble
finding the path so far."
"It's well enough marked."
"The wizard may not like commerce
with your people, but he still has need of food and supplies."
"You'll let me go on?"
"I said 'perhaps.' Take your chances."
"I will then." Alsa said it with
more confidence than she felt, hoping dragons weren't as good
at reading human emotions as they were at hearing human footsteps.
She began to walk up the path toward the castle. And the dragon.
"I like the ones with spirit the
best." The dragon, it appeared, was in a chatty mood. "There
haven't been many over the years. Plenty come to look, but mostly
they turn and run the other way when they see me. Or sometimes
when I loose the first blast of flame."
The dragon reared back and made
a sound like a giant sneeze. A sheet of fire poured from its
mouth. The flame singed grass and trees directly behind her.
Alsa kept moving, trying to ignore it, though the stench--a
combination of sulfur and burning wood--made her gag, and the
heat warmed her cloak more than felt quite safe.
"What did those poor trees ever
do to you?" she asked.
The dragon nodded its head to
one side, the dragon equivalent of a shrug, she supposed. "The
woods need to be cleared out periodically. Encourages new growth.
You're braver than most. That sent the last three who dared
the path running for cover."
"Have you lived here long?" Perhaps
if she kept the dragon talking, he'd forget about frying her.
"What is long? A hundred or so
cycles of seasons. I confess the last few cycles have begun
to feel rather meaningless. I mean, we're born, we grow up,
we flame a few people, consort with a wizard or two, and we
die. What's the point of it all?"
"You're making me cry. Perhaps
if you tried planting trees rather than blasting them, you might
find a clue."
"Do you think so? I've never been
much for gardening. I tend to trample things."
"Your size. I suppose that does
make it difficult."
"Extremely. So, tell me why you're
so eager to see the wizard."
"I have a deal to offer him."
"Oh, ho! Perhaps I will let you
get there. The last person who wanted to make a deal still has
a nest in a corner of the chimney." He paused and one eye half-closed.
"Unless that was the one caught in the trap in the pantry last
week. Oh well."
Alsa refused to consider the implied
threat. "I think I can offer something he wants."
"And how would you know what a
great wizard wants?"
"I've heard enough talk."
"In your puny town. What do they
know about a powerful wizard?"
"There are a few who've had...
rather close contact with him."
Apparently the dragon knew what
she referred to. It grew quiet for a moment, then loosed another
hot, foul-smelling blast of fiery gas that cleared a new path
through the trees, passing no more than three feet from where
she walked.
Alsa didn't stop, didn't even
pause in the process of picking her way around rocks in the
path. "You've really got to do something about that breath problem,"
she muttered, low, though, since she didn't see any use in offending
the creature.
For the last hundred yards or
so, the path rose steeply to the castle door. Rocks littered
the way in such abundance, it became more a stone staircase
than path, except they tended to roll out from underfoot or
wobble when stepped on, making for chancy purchase. Alsa fell
once, scraping a knee, but got up and continued, taking more
care with her steps. She had no more attention to spare for
banter with the dragon.
When she reached an immense wooden
door, she stopped and looked up. The dragon still watched her.
Its huge head and neck were off slightly to her left and almost
directly above, so she had to lean well back to see it. "Thanks
for lighting the way for me," she offered.
Steam hissed from its nostrils
and its body rocked a little. A strange gurgling noise-another
chuckle-issued from its throat before it responded: "The pleasure
was all mine, I'm sure. Best of luck, little human. You'll need
it."
The dragon gathered itself, flapped
enormous wings and launched itself into the sky. The backwash
of air almost knocked her down the hill again. Alsa had to grab
a nearby sapling and cling to it until the whirlwind passed
and the sinewy, gleaming body of the dragon disappeared somewhere
behind the castle.