Wren the Fox Witch (Europa #3: A Dark Fantasy)

Home > Fantasy > Wren the Fox Witch (Europa #3: A Dark Fantasy) > Page 27
Wren the Fox Witch (Europa #3: A Dark Fantasy) Page 27

by Joseph Robert Lewis


  How much power will it take to destroy something like this?

  How much strength?

  How much of the dragon?

  There was no way to know, and no way to guess. But it had to be done.

  All of it then.

  She glanced one last time at the doors of the temple where the Aegyptian man and the strange girl in black were speaking to the guards.

  I wonder. Could she be one of them? She doesn’t look anything like them. Could she be a prisoner? A slave? Probably. Well, she won’t be for much longer.

  Asha closed her eyes, and exhaled slowly, preparing for the dragon. She had so many memories to choose from. The doctor who tortured the people of India and Rajasthan, the foolish parents who neglected their children, the spouses who beat each other, the landowners who reduced their workers to starving slaves, the murderers, the thieves, and on and on. She kept a vast gallery of human monsters and atrocities in the back of her mind, each one fresh and bright and hideous, each one able to inspire some degree of rage in her heart.

  But now, she reached all the way back to the first evil, the very first vision of hateful cruelty in her mind. It was the image of a beautiful young boy lying on a table, his chest carefully opened and his blood dripping slowly on the floor. The surgical knives were arrayed nearby with the wires and lenses and powders and razors. The doctors were coming toward her, leaving the room, leaving the boy alone on the table, his face still contorted in his final moments of agony.

  She had asked them, Why didn’t you save him?

  And they had answered, Because we didn’t want to.

  Asha felt her skin burning and her heart pounding and her brains searing as the tears welled up in the corners of her eyes. She curled her hands into fists and clenched her teeth as her lips rippled in a silent snarl.

  The dragon awoke.

  The soul of the great golden dragon, which slept somewhere deep down within her own fragile spirit and flesh, opened its ruby eyes and opened its golden maw, and from within her own heart, the beast roared.

  Asha opened her eyes and saw the change begin. Her smooth brown skin rippled with golden scales that shone in the late day sun. Her fingertips grew longer and thinner, becoming deadly ruby claws. She felt the warm pulses running down her skin as she traded her human flesh for dragon armor. Her spine throbbed as her slender whip of a tail erupted from her back and began to roll and lash the dusty ground behind her, tossing her pale yellow sari left and right.

  All around her, men and women cried out in fear and surprise and she could sense them running away. Horses and zebras whickered and screamed before racing down the road. A nearby sivathera, a spotted giant with enormous antlers drawing a stately little coach, reared up on its hind legs, bellowing and snorting, and it too thundered off down the street.

  Yes, run away. Run away, all of you. And keep running.

  A terrible heat rose in her chest, scorching her throat as she exhaled, and she saw the air around her nostrils shimmering like a watery mirage on the horizon. Asha pressed her hands to her forehead, knowing what would come next, but still afraid. She’d never let it go this far before.

  From her temples where the golden scales met her thick black hair, two small mounds rose, and rose, and went on rising. The dragon’s horns were round and smooth, and branched above her head like antlers before tightening into ruby-tipped points.

  Asha straightened up and stretched her back and arms, feeling the weight of her golden armor and the power in her legs. Her horned skull weighed heavily on her neck, and her lashing tail tugged her hips left and right. It was all awkward and new, all so much stranger than just the scales and claws that she usually released, but now with the dragon itself awake and raging within her breast, the strangeness felt natural and right.

  She looked up at the temple again as a crimson veil passed over her eyes. The world became a flat landscape of dark reds and light reds, punctuated by the sharp white figures of men and women and animals.

  But through it all, she held on to the image of the boy on the table, and the doctors who had laughed as they walked away from his dead body, and hadn’t cared whether the boy had lived or died.

  He was mine. My first.

  They killed him.

  And I… I watched them do it.

  Asha dashed forward, ignoring the cries of the people and beasts all around her, and she sank her claws into the stone wall of the temple. The ancient blocks cracked apart and when she yanked her claws out the entire corner of the temple crashed down into the road, hurling up a massive cloud of dust that swallowed the street and everyone in it.

  She surged forward again and leapt high onto the side of the temple, and then leapt again all the way up to the top of the stone fortress where the grand wooden pagoda began. She had seen such buildings before in Ming, and while it did strike her as wholly out of place in this western city, it held no other fascination for her. Ashe smashed the wooden columns, and the beams, and the panels, and the planks. She ran around and around, and climbed higher and higher, tearing and breaking and rending everything in reach. From time to time she saw the flash of a frightened face or the bright light of a drawn seireiken, but they were all as slow as insects trapped in amber. She raced by them all, her mind bent only on the next thing she could drive her ruby claws into and tear to pieces.

  Somewhere deep inside the temple, surrounded by splintered beams and collapsing walls, Asha stopped. The entire building was keening and moaning and creaking.

  It’s dying. This place is dying. Soon it will fall and take all of its vermin with it. All of the killers and slave drivers. They’ll all be dead soon.

  Asha ran back toward the outer wall, her tail lashing at the remains of the walls, her claws shredding everything within reach. She burst through the last wall and leapt out into the cool evening air high above the city street, and fell. She crashed down onto the stone lip at the top of the lower fortress, and then slid down the sloping wall, smashing out the ancient blocks as she descended toward the street.

  By the time her feet touched the ground, Asha was exhausted. Her arms and legs were aching, and her back was throbbing from the constant writhing of her tail. As she straightened up, she saw through the swirling clouds of dust to the slender white outline of a woman with the smaller white shape of a mongoose on her shoulder in the alley across the street.

  Priya.

  The memory of the dead youth faded, and Asha lost her grip on the anger and the hate. She was tired, and suddenly she realized that she didn’t want to be there anymore, not in that city, not even in that part of world. Destroying the temple seemed petty and pointless.

  It’s just a building. They can always build another.

  The dragon raged on, and she could feel it wanting to destroy and devour, to lash out at the world and indulge in every little whim of her flesh. Asha blinked.

  I take refuge in life.

  I take refuge in the forests and the rivers, the mountains and the seas, and the deserts.

  I take refuge in the trees and deer and the tigers and the eagles.

  I am not a dragon.

  I am Asha.

  She blinked and the reds and whites were gone, and her skin was her own again. The world was brown and gray and blue, and everything was moving so fast. People were running and animals were bolting, wagons and carts were overturning, and chunks of wood and stone were falling from the sky.

  “Asha!”

  She blinked again. Priya was yelling at her.

  “Asha!”

  She looked up at the temple and her heart nearly stopped. The entire wooden pagoda, all five stories of it, was toppling forward in her direction, its walls and roofs cracking apart as the entire structure collapsed. Asha ran.

  She crossed the road in a flash of yellow and black, wrapped her arms around Priya, and carried the blind nun down the alley away from the collapsing temple. When the dust cloud caught up to them, Asha knelt down, wrapping her arms around Priya’s head.
<
br />   I’m so stupid. What was I thinking? She shouldn’t have been here. She could have died. And then what would I…

  The dust blew past them and Asha felt a few small splinters patter on her back and a few small pebbles rolled past her feet. When the noise died down, Asha looked up. As the dust cloud thinned away, she saw a ragged shape emerge into the last red rays of the setting sun. The pagoda was gone. Bits and pieces of it lay atop the rubble, but nothing larger than a man’s leg. The fortress had collapsed on two sides, falling in upon itself and then spilling out into the road.

  I did that?

  She looked down at Priya. “It’s over. Are you all right?”

  “I think so,” the nun said. She opened her arms and revealed the huddled furry ball of Jagdish. “I think we’re both just fine. Was anyone else hurt?”

  Asha looked back at the devastation of the street.

  My gods. Why didn’t I wait? Just an hour or two. Just until sunset, when everyone would be home, out of the road, out of danger.

  “Stay here. I’m going to see if anyone needs help.”

  Asha headed back down the alley and stepped out into the shadowed devastation. There were sounds everywhere. She heard the soft crackling of falling rocks, the grunts and cries of frightened animals, and the coughing of weary and battered people.

  “Is anyone hurt?” she called out. “I’m an herbalist. Is anyone hurt?” She stood still for a moment, listening, trying to peer through the last traces of the dust. She wondered if her accent was making her Eranian difficult for the Aegyptians to understand her. “Anyone?”

  Someone cried out. A woman, young and weak. She was speaking, but Asha couldn’t understand the language at all. She hurried over the rubble, nearly twisting her ankle twice, and found the young woman lying on the ground, half-covered in small bits of wood and stone, and lots of dust. But through the debris, Asha could see the young woman’s black dress and red hair.

  Oh gods, what have I done?

  Asha swept the boards and rocks and dust away as fast as she could, and eased the pale girl onto her back. She leaned over her mouth and listened to her breathing, which was slow and dry. Then Asha gently pried the girl’s eyelids open, and discovered that she had golden eyes, that contracted slightly in the fading light.

  Asha sighed.

  She’s alive. She’s going to be fine.

  Asha’s gaze traveled up the girl’s freckled face to her curling red hair to the black scarf that had blown loose on the girl’s head. Asha gasped.

  Standing high on the girl’s head, pushing up through her hair, were two tall triangular ears covered in red and white fur.

  Fox ears? Who is this girl? What the hell sort of place is this?

  Continued in THE CITY OF THE GODS

  About the Author

  Joseph Robert Lewis enjoys creating worlds in which history, mythology, and fantasy collide in unpredictable ways. He also likes writing about heroines his daughter can respect and admire. Joe was born in Annapolis and went to the University of Maryland to get a very lucrative degree in English Literature. He lives in Maryland with his wife and children.

  www.josephrobertlewis.com

  Table of Contents

  Wren the Fox Witch

  Maps

  Chapter 1. Reunion

  Chapter 2. Doors

  Chapter 3. Onward

  Chapter 4. La Rosa

  Chapter 5. Rumor

  Chapter 6. Fog

  Chapter 7. Prisoners

  Chapter 8. Witch

  Chapter 9. Torture

  Chapter 10. Fear

  Chapter 11. Negotiations

  Chapter 12. Rescue

  Chapter 13. Battlefield

  Chapter 14. Pain

  Chapter 15. Running

  Chapter 16. Death

  Chapter 17. Nightmare

  Chapter 18. Morning

  Chapter 19. Plans

  Chapter 20. Furies

  Chapter 21. Shelter

  Chapter 22. Stamballa

  Chapter 23. Whirlwind

  Chapter 24. Sisters

  Chapter 25. Slaughter

  Chapter 26. Wreckage

  Chapter 27. Peace

  Chapter 28. Aftermath

  Epilogue: Alexandria

  Preview of The City of the Gods

  Chapter 1. Asha

  About the Author

  Table of Contents

  Wren the Fox Witch

  Maps

  Chapter 1. Reunion

  Chapter 2. Doors

  Chapter 3. Onward

  Chapter 4. La Rosa

  Chapter 5. Rumor

  Chapter 6. Fog

  Chapter 7. Prisoners

  Chapter 8. Witch

  Chapter 9. Torture

  Chapter 10. Fear

  Chapter 11. Negotiations

  Chapter 12. Rescue

  Chapter 13. Battlefield

  Chapter 14. Pain

  Chapter 15. Running

  Chapter 16. Death

  Chapter 17. Nightmare

  Chapter 18. Morning

  Chapter 19. Plans

  Chapter 20. Furies

  Chapter 21. Shelter

  Chapter 22. Stamballa

  Chapter 23. Whirlwind

  Chapter 24. Sisters

  Chapter 25. Slaughter

  Chapter 26. Wreckage

  Chapter 27. Peace

  Chapter 28. Aftermath

  Epilogue: Alexandria

  Preview of The City of the Gods

  Chapter 1. Asha

  About the Author

 

 

 


‹ Prev