The Villain Keeper

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The Villain Keeper Page 1

by Laurie McKay




  Dedication

  For my mom, who read this fifty-one times, and my sister, who read it fifty, and my brother, who read it twice. For my family and friends, who’ve supported me. And especially for my dad, who we all loved and who we all wish could’ve read it, too.

  Dedication

  1. THE RED HAZE

  2. A LAND WITHOUT DRAGONS

  3. THE MISSING

  4. THE FOSTER PRISON

  5. THE SORCERESS AND THE SAND

  6. THE MATH TYRANT

  7. THE WAY DOWN

  8. THE LOST NECKLACE

  9. THAT WITCH BINDS

  10. THE BLOOD DAGGER

  11. THE MONSTERS OF ICE

  12. THE VILLAINOUS TEACHERS

  13. THE SPAGHETTI TOSS

  14. SHE WHO CHOOSES

  15. THE LAND OF THE BANISHED

  16. TRUTH AND CONSEQUENCES

  17. THE FUTURE ELITE PALADIN OF ASHEVILLE

  18. THE TEACHER KEEPER

  19. SPEAKING IN TONGUES

  20. THE EXPLODING DOOR

  21. ONE IS SILVER AND THE OTHER BLUE

  22. TIME IS SHORT

  23. THE SORCERESS AND THE NAP

  24. THE REPENTANT LIAR

  25. THE ELF’S TEARS

  26. WHITEOUT

  27. THE GIRL IN THE SAND

  28. THE LUNCH WITCHES

  29. SCHOOL GOES ON

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  About the Author

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  For the second time in Caden’s life, King Axel hugged him. Caden’s bed was unmade from when his father had roused him. The embers in the fireplace crackled. In the flickering light, his sword and staff collections cast odd shadows on the stone walls.

  When his father let him go, he stood in shadow and spoke in whispers. “Gather your things quietly and leave. Slay your dragon. When you return, I’ll name you an Elite Paladin like your brothers.”

  Suddenly, Caden was fully awake. “You’re sending me on my quest?”

  “Yes. Now, hurry.”

  Caden didn’t hurry. He yearned for the honor that came with the title Elite Paladin more than all else, but such quests didn’t start at night and in secret. When his seven older brothers had left for their quests, it had been under the bright winter sun and to the cheering of crowds. They’d all been at least fifteen turns, not twelve. Now the kingdom was asleep. Until a moment ago, Caden had been asleep.

  For such a large man, King Axel moved on silent feet. He kept glancing to Caden’s door like he expected a crypt devil to snatch Caden and drag him to the catacombs. “By the final chime of the night bell, you are to be atop your horse and beyond the castle wall.”

  Outside, the night was black and cold. Caden was supposed to leave like his brothers, under the blinding sun. His father’s face was supposed to be bright with pride, not hidden in shadow.

  “Why not wait until morning?” Caden said.

  “Yours isn’t the place to question your king.”

  It was Caden’s sworn obligation to serve his father, the king, and protect the people of Razzon. That didn’t include following orders blindly. His father knew that. He was the one who had told Caden that. Caden did the proper thing, and reminded him.

  King Axel kept his voice low, but Caden felt the iron in it. Like all royals, the king had been gifted at birth with an ability to help him through the challenging life ahead. His was resolution. His will was absolute. He never changed his mind once he’d made a decision. “Tonight, it’s your duty to do as I say,” his father said as he strode toward the hall. “I’ll free your horse. Leave through the Southern Tower.” At the doorway, he turned. “Make me proud.”

  Caden felt his words catch in his throat. Before he could say he would, the king was gone. For a moment, Caden stared at the doorway. Then he dressed and packed.

  His coat was the color of the dimming sky, the color of Razzon’s royal family. The imperial Winterbird was embroidered in silver and gold threads on the back. Strapped across his back, he felt the comfortable weight of his best sword. The blade was sharp enough to split gilded armor.

  In the distance, he heard the low, soulful bellow of the night bell. He squared his shoulders and hurried to the far side of the castle and the upper entrance to the Southern Tower.

  The Southern Tower held the quarters of the first queen, the mother of Caden’s brothers. Fifteen years after her death, only the king ever entered. The door creaked as it opened, and Caden felt unease as he stepped through and onto the staircase.

  The stairs were cut into the stone walls and carpeted with silk-trimmed blue wool. The banister was carved with reliefs of dragons and knights. He peered over it. On the ground floor, set in glittering gold and silver tiles, was a giant mosaic of the imperial Winterbird—the same symbol adorning Caden’s coat.

  The second chime of the night bell rang out, and Caden dashed down the steps. He paused at the bottom, his feet on the Winterbird’s wing. A portrait hung on the expanse of the wall. The first queen stood beside young versions of his brothers, lined up from first-born to seventh-born: Valon first, then Maden, Lucian, Martin, Landon, Chadwin, and, finally, Jasan. She looked kind and was smiling at them.

  He felt out of place beside the painting. There were no portraits of Caden’s mother, the second queen. No closed-off towers were dedicated to her memory. She’d been sent away soon after his birth and no one would speak of her, not the servants or guards, not his father or brothers. The portrait made him wonder if she ever smiled at Caden like the first queen smiled at them.

  The third chime of the night bell bellowed. Caden left the portrait and ran.

  Outside, the snow fell in soft chunks. Razzon was the land of winter. Always, it snowed. Caden whistled and his horse, Sir Horace, charged from the night. His coat was the color of dim-lit frost, but his mane was blinding and white. Breath fogged from his nostrils like smoke. He was the eighth finest horse in the realm, a Galvanian snow stallion trained by the Elite Guard, a horse befitting a prince.

  The king might not share his burdens with Caden, but Caden could change that. He could make his father proud and show he could be trusted. He could slay a dragon. Then his seven older brothers would finally accept him as one of them. Caden reached up to pat Sir Horace’s mane. “We will prove ourselves,” he said.

  In obvious agreement, Sir Horace raised his magnificent head and whinnied.

  Caden glanced back at the castle. It was a tall shadow against a black sky. He swore that when he saw it next, a dragon would be slain by his hand, and he would be named an Elite Paladin like his father and brothers.

  He rode through the night then for the next two days. He traveled up and down the great slopes of the Winterlands, through ice-covered forests that tinkled like green glass, stopping only for sleep and meals with Sir Horace. It was on the third day that he found hope. In a fishing village near Dark-Eye Lake, he saw a collapsed house and burned-out field. He heard rumors of a dragon.

  Dragons were the side effects of bad magic. The villagers claimed one had formed from the anger and hate as a spellcaster and his rival fought. Unleashed, the dragon was ravenous. It devoured the spellcaster and his rival, destroyed the house, and then disappeared into the mountains.

  Caden rode to a high slope to survey the area. In the distance, he saw the beginnings of the Springlands, home of the meadow gnomes and tree elves. Home, too, of his childhood playmate, and occasional tormentor, the thief and sorceress Brynne.

  She was the daughter of the powerful spellcasters Madrol and Lyn, and heir to the mind magic of the night mages. Often, Caden’s father contracted her parents for jobs unfit for the honorable Elite Paladins, jobs requiring magic and questi
onable scruples. Always, she caused Caden trouble. He rubbed his back, remembering the time she’d spelled him to grow a snow fox’s tail. Such was the dangers of spellcasters. When they weren’t losing control and spawning dragons, they were causing mischief and fluffy white tails.

  He shook off the memories. With luck, the dragon hadn’t traveled beyond the snows yet. Better to fight a beast born of magic in the Winterlands, the lands of the Elite Paladins, than in the magic-infested Springlands. Caden scanned the border. Just before the soft snowgrass gave way to lush meadows of yellow and purple violets, he spotted a scorched trail in the snow.

  “A fire dragon,” he told Sir Horace. “I was right.”

  Sir Horace seemed unsurprised. Unlike Caden’s brothers, Sir Horace knew Caden’s judgment was sound. He trusted Caden.

  They followed the singed trail along the border. It was night when Caden caught sight of the dragon. Its scales were smoldering embers, its teeth molten iron. Its eyes were cinder black and it smelled of smoke. Dragons were known to take on the qualities of the emotions from which they were born. Those born of anger often had the character of fire.

  Caden felt his heart tingle and his breath hitch. His quest would be done in moments. Above, the moon shone brightly and illuminated a band of thick clouds and falling snow. He dismounted and drew his sword—the sound of metal scratching metal sliced into the night.

  The dragon turned. Its breath burned the green and white grasses. Nearby frosted tulips caught fire. The leaves of the blizzard oaks melted.

  Before Caden and the dragon could battle, though, the frozen ground under Caden’s boots cracked. The snow glowed the sickly red of bad magic. Beside him, Sir Horace reared up. Ten strides beyond, the fire dragon cocked its smoldering head and watched. Dragons were mere memories of beasts much greater than themselves. They might be the side effects of magic, but they couldn’t do magic. The fire dragon looked as confused as Caden felt.

  The sickly glow curled around Caden’s legs and waist. He dropped his sword and grabbed for Sir Horace’s reins, but it was too late. The ground broke as if there was no mountain beneath it, and the red magic tugged him down.

  Head over feet, Caden fell. Beside him, Sir Horace went around and around, tail over muzzle, his frightened whinny piercing and loud in the red haze.

  Within moments, a figure plummeted down beside them. Her hair trailed behind her like a train of dark fabric. She seemed as caught as them, and they became three: Caden, his horse, and the girl, falling into red.

  Like a braid of blood and fire, the bad magic seemed roped around her waist. She thrashed and tugged at it, and her hands glowed gold.

  With one hand, Caden caught Sir Horace’s reins; with the other he reached for the girl. No one should die alone. Not Sir Horace, not this girl. “Grab my hand!” he yelled.

  She looked up and clutched for him. Their fingers locked. Their tumbles evened to a fast fall.

  Caden felt air roar by his ears. Wind rushed against his back. They sped toward something. Their end, he feared. When his sixth-born brother, Chadwin, had been killed six months ago, his father had cried. Caden tried not to think of the pain and disappointment he’d cause by dying.

  The girl squeezed his hand and shouted, “We’re stopping!”

  They weren’t stopping. Never had Caden moved at such a speed, and the pull from the magic seemed to be only growing stronger. “What?”

  He’d but a moment to wonder when the golden glow from her hands flared. It burned through the red haze like a small sun. Like rocks thrown from tower walls, they slammed into hard ground.

  Caden hit back first. He gasped for breath. Above him, the sky was dark and star filled. No snow fell. Sir Horace landed at his side. His flank rose and fell with hard breaths. The girl crashed on her stomach with her cheek pressed to the ground.

  She stumbled to standing. Caden rolled over and did the same. They were on a road, but a strange one. It was smooth like pressed dirt, yet hard like stone. To his right, he saw a bookshop. To his left, a wide window with a display of chocolates. He recognized the wares but not the language on the signs. On the walkway beside the road, the streetlights weren’t lit with magic or fire. They seemed to have captured lightning.

  He turned to the girl and, now free of the haze, knew her at once. It was Brynne. He’d known her since he was four and she’d irritated him for just as long. Last he’d seen her, her people had been traveling toward work in the Summerlands. He frowned. That was also the last he’d seen of his prized gnomish dagger.

  She was dressed in the silvers and golds of spellcasters. The practiced magic of their order always shone in those colors. Her sleeves and high collar were embroidered with red and blue threads, reminders of the sister colors of the dark magics. Red for magic born of hot emotions like anger and jealousy. Blue for destruction and indifference. It was always these magics and dark motives that loosed dragons. From what Caden had seen of sorcerers and dragons, it was a warning too rarely heeded.

  With a blink, the dazed look in Brynne’s eyes disappeared. It seemed she also recognized him. “You!” she said and peered at him. “This has to be your fault, prince.”

  Caden had been moments from slaying a dragon, from returning home to his family. He was the one who should be angry. “What have you done, sorceress?”

  “Me?” she said. “I was napping”—she motioned to the ground and to the sky—“and then I was ensnared. With you.” She pointed at Sir Horace. “And it.”

  “Sir Horace is not an it,” Caden said and crossed his arms. “And neither he nor I cast this trapping spell.”

  She put her hands on her hips. Her cheek was scraped. “Well, I didn’t do it,” she said.

  “You’re the only spellcaster I see,” he said.

  Around them, the city sparkled. There were square buildings of metal, stone, and glass. Many had red or brown canopies above the walkway. Come morning, the area would likely be busy.

  Where the road forked, there was what looked like a small park nestled between the buildings and roads. The gentle sound of running water came from within it. Sir Horace rolled to his feet and trotted toward it, his tongue hanging from his muzzle.

  Brynne narrowed her eyes. “That magic wasn’t mine,” she said, but her words came out weak. Her face paled. “My magic saved us.”

  Caden rushed to catch her as she fell. Truth be told, red glowing magic traps didn’t seem like the work of her or her people. But if Brynne hadn’t ensnared them, who had—and why?

  Like an afterthought, his sword clattered down beside them. He lowered Brynne to the ground and glanced around once more. Around them, the air was strange and cold. This was most certainly not their world.

  Nothing was more important to Caden than slaying a dragon, and he needed to get out of the strange city and back to doing just that. He’d been so close to his goal. He bit back his frustration. All quests were ripe with obstacles. He would overcome this one.

  In the morning light, the city around him seemed more foreign. It was surrounded by mountains, but they were small and worn and looked shades of blue and gray. They weren’t the sharp, snow- and rock-covered slopes of the Winterlands. The buildings were also small—most a mere three to five stories—and many had simple geometric ornamentation. Even the tallest, a glass and metal structure, failed to touch the clouds. They were nothing like the soaring towers and ornate castles of the Greater Realm.

  On the road between the park and the walkway, a smelly metal transport puttered by him. The streetlights turned off by themselves, seemingly aware morning had broken. People began to trickle into the area.

  Caden was stiff from sitting on the bench and keeping guard. At least his enchanted coat kept him warm. He stood, loosened his muscles, and straightened his posture. His brown hair, which he kept regulation short like the Elite Paladins, was mussed, and he flattened it in hopes of a more dignified appearance.

  In the night Brynne had snuggled close to a kneeling Sir Horace. She’d rest
ed long enough, though. Caden nudged her with his foot. “Wake up, sorceress.”

  She snapped open her eyes and frowned like it took a moment for her to place where she was. Sir Horace was also rousing. He pushed to standing and his shadow fell over Caden and Brynne.

  Brynne stood and was silhouetted by the winter sun. She was as tall as Caden, and at twelve years, ten months, and two weeks, she was one day older, a fact she never let him forget. Her dark hair hung to her waist. Her gray eyes glinted silver like she was born under the moon. With a glare, she sniffed her sleeve. “I smell of horse,” she said.

  She’d no reason to complain. Horse was a good smell. “The sooner we get home, the better for us all,” Caden said. “Magic us back.” He could still track and slay the dragon. He knew where it was, knew of its fire character. If they hurried, the dragon could still be his.

  Brynne bit at her bottom lip and glanced around. “Let me think on things.” Then she closed her eyes as if trying to sense the unseen. Her brow broke with sweat. After a moment, her cheek twitched, she opened her eyes, and rocked on her feet. Caden reached out to steady her, but she shoved him off. “The spell that brought us here was strong, but it’s fading. I’m not sure I can track it and find a path back.” She twisted her hands together. “And I’m not sure how such a return spell would even work.”

  Caden frowned. “I thought you were skilled.”

  Brynne put her hands on her hips. “Magic isn’t that simple, Caden,” she said. “And the magic that brought us here was powerful and dark.” She motioned to the road and shops around them. “I can’t just wave my hands and bring us from here to home. I don’t even know where here is.”

  Perhaps she could be more useful with more information. “I can find that out,” he said. He was tired of sitting and waiting. It was time to speak with the locals. “Wait.”

  Brynne looked annoyed with the order, but plopped down on the bench and waited. Across the road, there was a shop with paintings of cats in the windows. A woman was unlocking the door. She wore a green coat and balanced on shoes with sharp-looking heels. While Brynne and Sir Horace watched from the small park, Caden approached her. Best he stay on guard. Obviously, the shoes were weapons.

 

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