Chapter 1
The Invasion
Fourteen-year-old
Cedrik raced over to where his dragon burned a finish line in the grass. In the
shadowy forest, he ducked under loose vines and climbed over grey rocks. By the
time he reached the burn mark, his dragon friend was half hidden in the late
morning sunlight, sitting on the soft green grass. Cedrik sprinted past the
finish mark, stopped, gripped his knees, and started panting.
"You always win." He
telepathically told him.
“I know the forest by heart, you know. It is
impossible to beat me. Plus it helps that I am a lot faster than you.” Grere said back, almost smiling.
Cedrik smiled,
then started walking in the direction of home.
"Come on, we need to be home by
noon."
His loyal
companion followed him, flying over everything in the way. When they got to the
house, Grere ran and leapt nimbly to his favorite perch, on a fallen cedar
tree, now just a log and brush that used to be branches. Cedrik ran up to the
small shack, noticing that his trip wire across the doorway was limp, meaning
someone or something was inside.
Grere looked at
the attentive Cedrik. His ears perked up, curious.
"Is everything okay?" The
dragon asked.
“I think so. I wonder who visited our home
in the middle of nowhere. I hope Sucron’s spies aren’t here.” Cedrik said.
Cedrik cautiously
stepped up to the wire, then over it. He walked in the room and was startled by
an old man.
He was gruffly
greeted by the old man, somewhere in his fifties.
"Hello,
boy." The man said.
Cedrik ignored
the greeting with questions. "Why are you here? Who are you, and where did
you come from?" He said, while studying the man. He was dressed as a
peasant, but Cedrik knew he wasn't because he was very round. He gasped as he
recognized the man that killed his father. The man ignored the three questions
with a grunt. “Recognize me, kid? You
are the last of the Pennings. You are to come with me now!" Cedrik jumped
at the command and ran out of the house. He ran to his dragon, suddenly afraid
of the man that was trying to grab him unsuccessfully.
"Let's go Grere! We have to try to get
out of here! You see the medal hanging from his neck? He is the man that killed
my father!" He said as he climbed awkwardly onto the dragon's back.
The older man
stumbled and fell.
"Get him
men! He's getting away!" He said as he panted, obviously not used to
chasing youngsters.
Grere brought him
to the edge of the clearing, then lifted off and then flew in and out between
the trees, knowing the fastest way out of the dense, green forest. Suddenly, a
loud trumpet blast alerted Cedrik of at least twenty men, all individually
riding on what looked like fire dragons.
This is a dream. It has to be! Cedrik
thought wildly.
They weaved in
and out between the brown trunks of trees, occasionally brushing against
branches. Eventually, the fire dragons slowed then stopped one at a time,
because the forest was too dense for them to keep up.
"I think we lost them. I wonder why
they wanted you." Grere said suspiciously.
My
father said as he was dying to go to Ben, my father’s best friend, when
Sucron’s forces show up. Well, they did, so I think we should go, right?
“Alright, but next time think it through a
little longer. Do you have your father’s sword?” The dragon said.
“Yes. I have it right here.” He said
while pointing to his back scabbard. “Let’s
go see Ben.”
An hour later…
Grere came to a halt in midair, and then dove
downward toward a small clearing in the forest. When he landed, Cedrik climbed down, and then
ran to the old farmhouse. He knocked on the door, then waited. He knocked
again. He waited impatiently. He tried to open the door. Locked.
“I think I am in big trouble.”
Grere snorted,
then said something.
“The fire dragons are about a mile away. We
should go soon.”
Cedrik ran over,
readjusting his scabbard on his shoulder. He jumped onto Grere, then felt
himself elevate as the dragon traveled up.
“How close are they now?” Cedrik asked.
“They are about a minute away, if they go as
fast as they can.”
Cedrik relayed
that into his brain. I think we have a
fight on our hands. Grere crouched, then sprung himself into the air.
Cedrik drew his sword, gleaming silver-gold in the afternoon sun. “I have no idea how to use this.”
“Pretend you do, Cedrik.”
Cedrik raised it
once the fire dragons came into distinguishable sight. The dragons swept
towards Grere, their rider's swords shining.
Grere let loose a
fire blast, smacking into the first of the pack. The dragon that was fireballed
fell to the ground, screeching the whole way. The rider plunged, his clothes in
flames. Cedrik cringed. He did not want to kill anyone. Obviously, his dragon
had no problem with it. “Grere, you
should just fly away. Can’t we outfly them?”
“No. Unless…”
“What?” Cedrik demanded impatiently.
“Unless there is an opening. They have us
surrounded.”
“Perfect.” Cedrik
mumbled.
The biggest dragon and his rider flew toward Grere
and Cedrik, a fireball plowing the way. Grere dived beneath the bigger, more
experienced dragon. Cedrik accidentally scraped his sword against the belly of
the bigger dragon, and the dragon screeched.
The dragon's
nostrils flared, smoke and sparks coming out. The dragon turned, then let loose
a torrent of fire.
Grere dived,
climbed, and swerved to avoid the fire. Cedrik held on, not used to such a
rollercoaster ride. Suddenly, but not unexpectedly, a fireball grazed Grere's
tail, and Grere yelped. Cedrik thought of something horrible.
“We can’t stand a chance, Grere! We have to
get out of here before the slower dragons catch up to the others.”
“Cedrik, there is something I haven't told
you about me yet. I am a Forest Dragon, as my mother was, but my father was one
of the few Speed Dragons.”
Cedrik stared at
his friend. A forest dragon was rare enough, but the speed dragon was the
rarest of them all, much less the possibility of a Forest/Speed dragon. He then
stared even harder. No wonder Grere was able to outrun the other dragons so
quickly.
“Okay, get us out of here now.”
Grere threw himself
into a screeching dive, faster than anything Cedrik felt before. The other
dragons followed them down, not as risk-taking as Grere. Grere folded his wings
in and traveled even faster. He arced into a loop when he neared the ground,
and Cedrik's dark brown hair blew about wildly.
“Now
what? Challenge fifteen dragons more powerful than you or me?"
“No, but I was going to try”.
Cedrik rolled his
eyes. Overconfident dragon. He thought.
"I heard that."
He mentally
kicked himself. Eavesdropper.
"I heard that too."
A fireball
rocketed past them. They swung around then flew to the tree line. Grere landed
softly in the forest, and tried to hide himself with his natural green camouflage.
Cedrik hid his sword underneath some leaves, not risky enough to have the sun
reflecting off of it.
"So this is what you had in mind."
“Yes. They will find us pretty quickly, so
stay quiet.”
“I am being quiet.” Cedrik joked.
“You know what I mean.”
Cool, I like the names :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, I thought they were pretty cool too.
ReplyDeleteWow, that 's an interesting story! I can't wait till chapter 2! When will you post it?
ReplyDeleteEventually... lol
ReplyDeleteI haven't exactly ended writing the story... I have around seven chapters done, so I will post them maybe one every two days. And when I finish a new chapter, I will post it.