The Dragons of Ice and Snow
Page 1
Tales from the New Earth: Book 3
The Dragons of Ice and Snow
By
J. J. Thompson
Text Copyright © 2015 J. J. Thompson
All Rights Reserved
Trust not in the word of dragons,
For they are sly and know only treachery.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Afterword
Links
Chapter 1
“Have I mentioned lately how much I hate the cold?”
“Yes, master, you have.”
“About two minutes ago, actually. Now would you please stop talking and save your breath for running?”
Simon O'Toole, former middle-aged I.T. specialist and now young wizard, was pelting across a barren, frozen lake, his feet slipping and sliding under him as he tried to move with as much speed as he could and not land flat on his face.
On either side of him ran his two companions, neither more than a foot tall; an earth elemental named Kronk and an air elemental called Aeris.
Aeris was actually floating at shoulder height while Kronk's little legs were moving so quickly that they were only a blur. His rocky feet on the ice sounded like a tap dancer in a foot race.
The lake stretched out for miles in all directions under an icy blue sky, and a bitter wind blew across it from the west, to the left of the little group.
Simon was bundled up in a heavy, ankle-length coat lined with fur, but he had it opened to the waist as sweat rolled down his face, stinging his eyes even in the sub-zero temperatures.
He was gasping for breath, the air so cold that it burned his lungs, and his run had turned into a stagger.
The wizard finally slid to a stop and bent over, grasping his knees and sucking in great lungfuls of air. Sweat dripped from his face and pattered to the blue-black ice.
Kronk skittered and tripped and then ran back to look up at the wizard.
“Master, we must keep moving! There is no cover here. If the dragons return, you will be exposed.”
Aeris floated back to them and stared at Simon with a deep frown.
“He's right, you know. Without your staff, your spells aren't powerful enough to do much harm to even a lesser dragon, especially not the whites in their natural environment.”
Simon began to speak and then just held up a hand weakly as he tried to catch his breath and slow his racing heart.
“I, I know that,” he finally managed to gasp. “But you two don't need to breathe. I do. Running won't do me any good if I have a frigging heart attack, now will it?”
Finally, his breathing slowed down enough for him to begin moving again, slowly.
“Are we still heading in the right direction?”
Kronk pointed ahead.
“Yes, master. The closest shore is that way. I can feel it. Beyond, the land rises and twists into hills and low mountains. There is a cave there that runs deep.”
Simon picked up the pace a bit at these encouraging words.
“And you're sure that there's a connection from that cave to a dwarven tunnel?”
“I can feel it, master,” Kronk repeated patiently.
The wizard glanced at Aeris, who shrugged.
“If our earthen friend says he can feel it, then he can. That is his power, after all.”
Kronk gave the air elemental a little smile of appreciation and Simon nodded.
“Okay,” he said. “Good. Now we just have to get there in one piece.”
He let Kronk take the lead and Simon and Aeris followed closely behind him.
“As much as I disliked the thing, I'd feel better if you still had that cursed staff,” the air elemental said. “I told you not to depend on that weapon too much, but you didn't listen. Now see where we are.”
Simon snorted.
“Constantly saying 'I told you so' isn't exactly helpful, you know. Bene-Dunn-Gal was a useful tool. Besides, aren't you the one who told me that all of the best wizards used staves back in the old days?”
He looked over at Aeris who was frowning. The elemental nodded reluctantly.
“That's true. But their weapons weren't semi-intelligent the way yours is. Was. And I don't remember them storing spells on their staves either. That was both the blessing and the curse of that staff, I suppose.”
The wizard moved forward slowly but steadily and watched the icy surface under his feet.
“It bought us the time we needed to get away,” he said with a touch of sadness. “I know that it was just a staff, but I almost feel like I've lost a friend today.”
“And that isn't very healthy, my dear wizard,” Aeris said with a sideways look at Simon.
He didn't answer, just thought about the ill-timed meeting with the white dragon with regret.
He'd had no choice but to use Bene-Dunn-Gal the way he had. And, as always, the staff had not let him down.
But now he had only himself, his spell-book and his wits left to defeat untold numbers of dragons. Simon looked at his companions and smiled a bit. And the elementals, of course.
The best pace the wizard could manage after his extended head-long run was a jog and he kept it up as well as he was could as they made their way across the bleak landscape.
Behind them, there was still no sign of pursuit, but he listened closely for the sound of flapping wings or roars of rage. As the three of them retreated from danger, Simon bitterly recalled the circumstances that had brought them to this desperate situation.
It had been six months, give or take, since he had defeated the primal green dragon. Tricked was actually the more accurate term.
It still didn't sit well with Simon that he'd had to lure the dragon into a trap and use its own weapons against it. But he had been desperate. The green dragon's chlorine breath was deadly and he simply could not be sure that his own magical shield would completely block that foul gas in battle.
So he had baited the great wyrm into attacking him at his tower and then had closed the tower's defensive wards with the dragon inside, cutting off all air and making the beast breathe its own chlorine breath, gas that was deadly even to itself.
That had been last summer. Since then, Simon had been working hard; doing research on the last three primal dragons, trying to increase his own magical skills and seeking allies out in the world.
And he had found them. Using his Magic Mirror spell, the wizard had discovered Changed humans like himself in and around several of the former major cities of the world.
In London, Hong Kong, Sydney, and Moscow, there were small groups of Changlings who could directly use the magic that now permeated the New Earth.
A brother and sister who had Changed into mages lived in London, along with a dozen or so warriors. In Hong Kong, two women, enchanters, were trying to protect a colony of survivors. They were quite powerful and it had taken weeks to convince them to meet with Simon face to face.
A group of about twenty Changlings, some from Australia, some from
New Zealand, were living on the shores of the sea near the ruins of Sydney. No wizards, but a mage, a witch and a cleric led the group. They were all in good spirits and optimistic, and very pleased when Simon reached out to them to tell them that he was on the trail of the primal dragons.
And finally, there were the survivors in Moscow.
Simon slipped on the ice of the lake and slowed his pace, moving more carefully as he recalled the events of the last few days. Kronk looked back over his shoulder and the wizard gave him a reassuring smile and motioned for him to continue. The little guy nodded and Simon went back to his bitter thoughts.
Moscow. What had he been thinking when he decided to meet the woman in Moscow?
You were desperate, Simon, his inner voice told him. You were offered aid against the primal white dragon and you jumped at the chance.
Yeah, the wizard thought darkly. I was desperate. But also arrogant.
Believing in his own powers and magical strength, he'd gotten careless. And now Simon might have to pay the price for that with his life.
He had sent out a large group of air elementals similar to Aeris to search the world for survivors of the dragons' attacks. That was how they had discovered the small groups that had been fighting to adapt to the new reality of life after technology.
Simon was sure that there were other pockets of humanity around the world, but he had concentrated on the ruins of the great cities as a place to start. The last of the elementals to report back had come from the former country of Russia.
The air elemental had told the wizard that a handful of Changlings were hiding and fighting back against the white dragons that had claimed Russia and the rest of northern Europe as their own.
The primal white dragon had originally destroyed, not only Moscow, but the rest of the Russian cities as well and then had retreated to the far north, leaving its servants to clear out the remnants of humanity. They had been very efficient.
“I searched all of the cities in that former country, sir wizard,” the elemental had told Simon. It had taken the scout more than two months to complete its task. “I found no other survivors except for a half-dozen on the edge of Moscow.”
The Russians were led by a woman and the scout confirmed that the leader was a paladin, a warrior blessed by the old gods of Light.
“She had powers of some sort?” Simon had asked excitedly.
“Indeed she does. I saw her lay her hands on one of her followers who had been injured in a fall. The bones knit and the skin closed while I watched. It was...impressive, I would say.”
“And this paladin wants to meet me?”
“Yes, sir wizard.”
The elemental had drawn an amazing likeness of the leader of the survivors and presented it to Simon.
“Her name is Liliana. She will receive your call if and when you wish to contact her.”
The wizard had thanked the scout for the fine work and released it back to the realm of air.
He had immediately used the Magic Mirror spell to call the paladin and had been impressed by her sense of purpose and authority.
Liliana confirmed that she and her little band were striking back at the white dragons when and where they could, but needed all the help that they could get.
Simon had arranged for a meeting and received the coordinates for a spot on the northern edge of Moscow where he could use the Gate spell to transport himself, Kronk and Aeris.
Unfortunately, when they'd arrived, it had proven to be a trap.
Simon spotted a dark line ahead, rising out of the lake like a mirage. It pulled him out of his bitter memories.
“Is that the shoreline, Kronk?” he called weakly.
“Yes, I believe so, master,” the little guy said over his shoulder. “We should be there in a few minutes.”
“Good,” Aeris said with some relief. “Then we can find you some cover, my dear wizard.”
Simon's answer was cut off by a distant, echoing cry from far behind them. It reverberated across the frozen lake and sent a shiver up his spine.
“Dragons, master,” Kronk said, stating the obvious.
“Yes, thank you,” Aeris replied dryly. “We never would have figured that out.”
The little earthen gave him a sour look and turned back to continue leading their retreat.
“I still don't believe that the paladin and her people set you up, Simon,” Aeris told him as he floated along beside the wizard. “It is quite possible that they were followed to the meeting place and driven off before we arrived.”
Simon sighed with what little breath he had left.
He wanted to believe that. He really did. But when the Gate had dropped them knee-deep in crusty snow and a lesser dragon had swooped to attack, it had certainly felt like a setup.
Thankfully he had reached a point in his magical development where casting his Shield spell was now almost a reflex. He had cast it without thinking as a blast of freezing air pounded down from above and blew Simon off his feet.
The elementals went flying. Kronk skittered across the frozen ground like a hockey puck on ice and Aeris shot away as if he'd been hit by a truck.
Neither of them was hurt, fortunately, and recovered quickly enough to get back inside the wizard's shield before the dragon banked around for a second pass.
The beast had been a pure, blinding white, scales reflecting like mirrors in the bright winter sunlight. Fifty feet in length, the dragon was horned and fanged and altogether a creature out of legend.
It was also furious and bellowed in rage as its breath was reflected by Simon's shield.
“Move, master!” Kronk had screamed. “It is going to smash you!”
The dragon was arrowing out of the sapphire sky and looked like it was indeed going to slam straight down into the wizard.
Simon knew that his shield couldn't stand up to such a tremendous blow and looked around frantically for some sort of shelter.
The area that they had Gated into, on the outskirts of Moscow, was surrounded by the ruins of old office buildings and warehouses. Gutted by fire and frozen in the bitter winter, they loomed like the skeletal remains of dinosaurs, twisted and grotesque.
The wizard had spotted the twisted open doors of an old loading dock. The darkness inside offered at least temporary shelter and he took off running, calling for the elementals to follow him.
He leaped into the cavernous building just as the ground convulsed with the impact of the dragon's landing. Another blast of sub-zero breath shuddered the air behind him as Simon ducked to the right and rolled into cover. A decrepit iron staircase hung drunkenly against a far wall and he pounded up it, trying to stay upright as it swayed alarmingly under his feet, squealing like an injured animal.
Kronk and Aeris were hot on his heels, the earth elemental's tiny stone feet ringing on the metal steps as they reached the second floor of the warehouse.
It was dark and still in the depths of the building. Mysterious machinery and abandoned packing crates were scattered randomly in Simon's path and he had to creep cautiously around these barriers to avoid making any noise.
Above him, the corrugated metal ceiling was warped with extreme cold and a huge icicle, six feet long and razor sharp, hung threateningly from a hole that had been smashed through it.
The walls and floor were covered with frost and patches of glittering ice, making movement difficult and treacherous. Simon crept slowly in the semi-darkness, searching for cover.
From outside, the sounds of the dragon's rage had faded away and the wizard had the uncomfortable feeling that the beast was listening closely, trying to discern his location so that it could tear through the walls of the building to rip him apart.
He crouched down behind a heavy press of some kind and gestured for the elementals to huddle up close.
“I think it's waiting for us to make some noise,” he whispered to them.
Kronk nodded silently, his red eyes wide.
Aeris hovered next to Simon's head and
glanced past the wizard in the direction of the dragon's location.
“I think you're right,” he muttered. “Any suggestions on our next move?”
The wizard slipped Bene-Dunn-Gal off of his back and gripped it tightly in his gloved hand. Even wearing his thick, fur-lined coat and gloves, the cold was quickly seeping into his body and Simon began to shudder with the chill.
“I'm not sure,” he replied softly. “Why isn't that thing tearing this place apart? It's a big building but it couldn't stand for long against a dragon.”
Kronk looked around and pointed at several parts of the room.
“This entire building is made of metal, master. It is dense and frozen. Even a dragon could be injured forcing its way into this place; perhaps mortally wounded.”
Simon nodded as he looked at the thick steel beams that criss-crossed the ceiling.
“Good point. I wonder what they made here, back in the day?”
Aeris snorted softly.
“Something dangerous, I would guess. Perhaps weapons of some sort?”
The wizard crept over to the nearest pile of cardboard boxes and peered into one. It was empty and unmarked, giving no hint as to what it had been meant to hold.
“Whatever,” he muttered. “But now we're at an impasse. We can't leave and the dragon can't reach us. Maybe I should just Gate us home and try to figure out what happened?”
Kronk nodded vigorously but Aeris' expression was doubtful.
“What?” Simon asked him.
“I just thought that we should try to find out what happened to the paladin and her people. They aren't here, obviously. They might be injured and need help, if they survived at all.”
The wizard sucked on his lower lip and stroked his staff unconsciously. There was still nothing but silence from outside.
“Or they set us up,” he said quietly.
“What do you mean?”
He shrugged.
“We arrived and were immediately attacked. What are the odds that a random dragon was just flying overhead as we Gated in? Slim, I would say.”