Saturday, March 14, 2026

Flash Fiction #710 --A Second Tale of the First Alliance/8

 

Kono wondered what the Council was doing in her absence. Nothing good, she was sure.  Their attempt to hire Tsak had failed, and they might already have word of his betrayal_.  They would not be any wiser for it.  Nothing had made them wiser.

 

She was tired of walking.

 

"I rule a small land," she suddenly said.  Tsak gave her an odd look, but Callum and Ryson nodded.  "Why have we been pulled into this trouble?  Or am I only here because I was with my cousins?"

 

"You think we are more important than you?" Ryson replied with a shake of his head.

 

"Your land is the linchpin for the borderlands," the Gryphon said, ignoring their byplay. "You sit between the human lands and the magic domain, and you accept both.  You are the portal through which we connect."

 

Kono felt an odd surge of understanding.  She had never looked at the situation in terms of both sides.  Everyone was equal to her, but it had not always been that way with earlier rulers.  The council kept trying to draw them back to an older time where humans thought they ruled everything they saw.  How could they be so blind and so damned egotistical?

 

Were they ever going to reach somewhere? Then what would they do?  Let Callum talk to the dragons?  Why not?

 

"You need the Dradeni -- the humans as part of your alliance," Tsak suddenly said.  "You cannot keep the peace if all you hold is magical allies.  I believe we have come to an agreement on the terms.  Who can write it out?"

 

"Callum."  Kono waved in his direction.  "He has had my permission to create such documents as an ambassador.  He hasn't disappointed me with the results."

 

They spent the next several miles talking through the points. They rested about midday, and Callum produced paper and ink from a pack he had still been carrying.  He took his work seriously.  He found a flat stone and wrote out the document.

 

Kono napped.

 

She awoke with enough time to read and sign the treaty, Tsak doing the same. By then they were ready to move on.

 

"Ryson, I would like you to keep the treaty," Kono said.  Tsak nodded.  "I trust you to keep it safe if we encounter trouble."

 

Ryson gave a short laugh.  "We are not merely going to encounter trouble -- we are running headfirst into it."

 

No one argued.  Ryson took possession of the Queen's copy of the treaty and put it inside his jacket.

 

The Gryphon left to scout the area. The others bunched together and kept silent.  There was a feel of danger nearby, and Kono feared she heard drums echoing through the forest behind them.

 

Snow fell that afternoon.  The Dradeni muttered, but they didn't slow.  They spread out around the main group, though sometimes Ryson joined them as a guard.  The terrain became rockier, and the trees thinned. 

 

Kono wanted them to reach their destination and be done with this trouble. She didn't want the Dragon Core to fully wake, but had the feeling they would deal with dragons, anyway.

 

The wind blew harder, shaking the few trees around them.  She almost cursed when ice hit her face.  Kono reminded herself that this wasn't any different from a walk on the battlements at home.  Maybe it wasn't so much the wind and cold as it was the sound of the trees moving.

 

Moving.

 

One glance back confirmed her fears.  "Wood Trolls!"

 

They instantly prepared for battle.  It was no use trying to run on this rocky terrain.  Wood trolls with their multiple limbs had the advantage in movement.  Most of them were larger than humans, too.  Watching them gallop toward the attack stilled her with blade in hand.

 

Callum and Ryson took their usual positions at her side.  That gave her more confidence.  The three of them had faced other troubles together.  Wood trolls were dangerous, but so were the three of them.

 

A flurry of limbs snapped out at them, but they were thin, new growth, and easy to slash apart.  From what she had heard about wood trolls, this was a feint to wear the enemy down.  It would have worked if there had been fewer people fighting with Kono.

 

The drums were coming closer. Enemies everywhere.

 


Saturday, March 07, 2026

Flash Fiction #709 -- A Second Tale of the First Alliance/7

 


Callum couldn't decide if he or Ryson was more surprised by the Queen's admission.  Tsak and his people pushed ahead by a few yards and left the three to deal with this problem.

Then Callum rethought it.

"Everything went well," Callum announced before the other two could start arguing.  "That Kono knew is good.  She knows you well, Ryson. She would spot a problem."

"And now is not the time to debate something that has already worked," Ryson added.

Kono looked surprised, but she nodded in agreement.  Callum kept out of that exchange.  They would get to him eventually.  After all, they had not discussed his magical ability yet.

And maybe now was the time to use his power to make this journey work.  The dragons were not awake in the core yet -- at least not the majority of them. He lifted his hand and tested the air, feeling out the small tendrils of magic that were normal in the wilds.   Then he found one stronger than the others and traced it to a close trail.  It was not a dragon trail, but something powerful had used it and was heading upward, just like them.

"Callum?  Can I have my own horse now?" Kono asked with a hint of frustration.

"No," he replied, and then rushed on.  "We are all going to walk. Something powerful is moving along a path close to here. It is heading upward, and I can't believe that is a coincidence.  A feeling in the air whispers of trouble, and more than us are heading for the core."

He slid off his saddle and caught Kono as she came down.  No one argued. Two of Tsaks people took the horses in hand and headed back to join the others.

No one questioned what Callum had said.  He found that more troubling than the problem they faced. How could they think he was an expert on any of this?

Who else did they have?

Callum led them to the new path with no trouble.  Whatever had passed here had made no attempt to hide its magic or the footprints in the soft earth.

"Gryphon," Tsak warned and shook his head.  "We don't want to get too close.  Nasty claws and never happy to see humans.  I suggest we keep our distance, at least until we find out what is going on.""

"I think it is moving at a good pace," Callum added.  "I am more than willing to let it face any trouble without us."

So they didn't rush forward.  Callum found it easy to track the creature and knew when they got too close.  The gryphon stopped shortly after sunset.  Callum and his companions were glad to do the same. After setting up camp, Callum wrapped a blanket around himself and slept.

And awoke to morning light and the face of the gryphon looking down at him.

"You are the slowest humans I have ever seen," it proclaimed. The deep, rumbling voice awakened the others.  "Can we go now? Or should I get a head start and see if you ever catch up with me today?"

The others were starting to sit up. The three desert men who had been on watch stumbled back to the fire, looking dismayed and afraid.

"Magic," Callum said as he stood. The gryphon was barely an arm's reach away, and he was huge.  "You used magic to make us sleep.  I didn't even feel it."

"I thought if you got some sleep, you might move faster today.  We still have a long way to go to the core."

"You know why we are here," Ryson said as he stood.  "Why are you?"

The gryphon took a few steps back, rustled his wings, and sat down.  Something was bothering him. 

"Gryphons and dragons do not get along," the gryphon admitted.  "Granted, we don't get along with humans either, but that is a different problem. Long ago, a young gryphon male stole a dragon egg and disappeared into the wilderness. They were never found."

Kono stood and tried to straighten her clothing.  She looked at their visitor. "A gryphon took the eggs again? Or do you suspect others?"

"I suspect every creature in the world. We will have to narrow the list down."

Callum still felt uneasy about the magic that had made them sleep, but he could admit to himself that he felt better for it.   The gryphon could have done worse than make them sleep.

But Callum mistrusted it.  

Friday, February 27, 2026

Flash Fiction #708 -- A Second Tale of the First Alliance/6

 

Ryson turned to follow Callum and Kono.  The drums grew louder, and if he didn't keep control, they would drag him back in again.  He cursed softly and hurried out to join his companions, including Tsak and Rimal.  Six others were on horses, and Callum had Kono with him, which was good and bad. It kept her safely in sight and under some control, but it meant Callum wouldn't be ready for trouble.

Ryson would stay close.  Focus on protecting them.  Block out the drums.

Why were they back again?  Were they working for the dragons still?  It had seemed to Ryson that they were wild cards the last few years, perhaps forgetting their oaths to the dragons while the glorious creatures slept in the core.

Could someone have lured them away from that service?  They had assumed someone had taken dragon eggs away from the core, and they would awaken now and destroy half the world looking for them. 

Ryson mounted his horse, tied his bag on the saddle and rode up to keep pace with Callum and Kono.

"I want my own horse," she demanded.

Ryson ignored her.  "Would a broken oath bring the dragons out of the core?" he asked.  

"Who has command of the berserkers?" Kono asked.

"Oaths sworn to dragons take on a power of their own," Callum answered.  He looked troubled, and Ryson felt a new thread of worry. "Except in the century when the dragons are active, they rarely leave their secret valley.  Is that right, Ryson?"

They were already leaving Lord Tsak's camp behind, but the sound of the drums followed them.  He snarled in that direction and then pulled his wandering thoughts back.

"A century is a conservative guess," He replied and called on all of his court training to stay focused.  "They took to their core -- their nest -- well over a century ago, but humans didn't realize they had retreated for over fifty years.  Maybe we shouldn't apply human time to them."

"Which means we can't guess if they are coming out or not," Kono added.

"Best to assume they are," Callum replied.  He shifted as though uncomfortable.  "I spent some time at the Temple of the Stars and learned a path to magic from the All-High Priest Bryten.  He found me on a backwoods trail between two nameless villages in the south.  He said there were things I needed to learn, and it wasn't all magic.  Bryten also taught me how to communicate with dragons. He knew I would be here."

"And what does that mean for us?" Kono asked.

Callum looked over the group, although Ryson wondered what he actually saw.  There was distance in that stare, but no one tried to call him back.

He finally focused on Ryson and gave a nod.  "We need to reach the dragons as soon as possible."

No one argued, although none of them thought it would be easy.

Ryson felt an odd sense of dread as he watched Callum leading them up the nearest mountain trail. His cousin had rarely taken a leadership role in the past, and doing so now seemed odd.

Why did he want to protest? Had he expected that position, or did he distrust Callum? 

"Stop brooding," Kono said as she reached over to tap his leg.

"I am not brooding.  I am arguing with myself."

"There is a conversation that would drive all of us mad," Callum added.

Ryson gave a short laugh of agreement.  He stopped listening for the drums -- the others would hear them, too.  It was not just his problem this time.

"Lord Bear -- the answer to who leads the Berserkers.  He and I do not get along."

"He was the one who captured you," Tsak said.  "He wanted access to your queen and your cousin."

Ryson felt a chill go through him as he turned back to their companion, but Tsak lifted a hand in a gesture of peace. Ryson had moved his horse so that he was between the desert man and his friends.

"That was more than a lucky guess," Ryson said, his voice calmer than expected.

"You were not their only prisoner.  We freed three others.  I doubt you remember that part."


"Others," he whispered.  They were gray shapes in a dark scene in his mind. Blood ran down his face.  Someone growled --

"Ryson," Kono said, calling him back.

He blinked as he looked at her, pulling Kono's face into focus.  Callum remained a blur, as if Kono was his only link to the real world.

"I told you not to trust me."

"You have given me no reason," Kono replied.

"I was in the hands of the berserkers.  I don't know how long they had me.  I can't be certain I didn't give them what they wanted."

"You never turned on us," Callum replied.  "You had time and chances."

"We found you already escaped from them," Tsak added.  "Don't you remember?  I think you are the only one who ever got free on his own."

"I remember little, and most of that is ... unpleasant.  I can see you sometimes.  I wanted to die.  You would not let me."

"And I will do the same again, if needed.  Lord Bear is coming for you because you are the only one who got away."

"But you saved others."

"We got them free, but the drums called them back.  We killed them rather than let Bear use them against their own people.  They were not as strong as you, Ryson.  They couldn't hold out."

"How could you trust me?"

"It was a slow process."

"But they told me.  It was my decision to keep working with you," Kono added.
 

Friday, February 20, 2026

Flash Fiction #707 -- A Second Tale of the First Alliance/5

 

Kono stood by the entrance to Tsak's tent.  Men and women moved around her with no trouble, and no one looked bothered. These were people used to trouble.  Kono watched until her cousins disappeared and then followed Tsak into the tent.
Swords, shorter blades, bows and arrows, and shields lined the interior of the dark tent.  A few people gathered at a table, scooping food onto plates. They made room for Tsak and Kono.  She took a little of almost everything, uncertain of what might not agree with her, especially now.

Most of the people sat cross-legged on the carpeted floor, but Tsak led Kono to a table with two chairs.

"We must be conscious of our dignity," he said, and pulled out a chair for her.  "One does not sit on the ground to eat with the Queen."

"Can you teach that to Ryson and Callum? They don't seem to think much about my dignity."

"You wouldn't change them," he replied and nibbled on some bread and honey. "They do what is right. Ryson is doing far better.  It was time the three of you formed your team again.  You have proved it by being here and not in the hands of your council. And now we can discuss an alliance.  Eat your food.  We are going to be on the move soon."

Kono wondered whether he had deliberately tried to confuse her.  More likely, she was exhausted and not following the conversation well. She forced her attention away from the opening of the tent.

Then they talked business, from trouble with the council to berserkers and dragon cores.

And finally they got to the part about the alliance.

"Won't your people protest such an arrangement made with your hold on power precarious?"

"The council will cause trouble, but they are not as popular as they think.  They protested my alliance with the sprites, but even with this journey taking me away from the castle, they have not tried to end that agreement."

"You know this."

"All treaties and such require the queen to take a magical oath.  If that oath is broken by either side, I will know." She toyed with a piece of cheese. "But you knew this."

"I knew rumors," he corrected.  "Having it confirmed explains some odd behavior by members of your family.  Ryson and Callum --"

"It only affects the ruler of the snowlands."  She smiled suddenly.  "Those two don't need anymore oddness.  However, you can trace some of their actions back to things I told them."

Tsak fell silent and gave Kono a chance to eat more of the excellent food.  She stared at the opening to the tent, hoping to see Callum and Ryson return. It wasn't that she didn't trust them -- after all, she sent them on missions all the time.

Ryson worried her.  Callum had let her know who had captured their cousin, but they had not spoken about it further. She wante to speak with Ryson --

"They will be back soon.  Let us talk about becoming allies," Tsak said.


She thought he had meant just to distract her, but before long, Kono could tell he was serious about the alliance.  Before long, Callum and Ryson arrived and joined in the conversation. It was a pleasant reminder that they were better trained than the council at dealing with others.

"Part of my people will remain here to clean the area and bury the dead. They will catch up with us.  I also have matters to handle before we leave.  I suggest the three of you rest while you can. There are pillows and blankets in the corner.  No one will bother you."

Kono thought she should help in some way -- but this was not her place.  Callum and Ryson waited until she had settled in a little nest of soft warmth, and then they took their places as her guards.  She hoped they slept.  There would not be a safer place.

"Wake up, Kono," Callum said.  He even dared to shake her by the shoulder.  "We have to go, Kono."

"Throw her over your shoulder and get her to the horses," Ryson ordered.  "I will be right behind you."

Kono tried to push herself out of the blankets, but Callum lifted her and carried her out, though not over his shoulder.  She caught a glimpse of Ryson gathering things he shoved into a pack while others stripped the tent and packed everything away.

Tsak shouted something to his people.

And somewhere close by she could hear thousands of drums.


Friday, February 13, 2026

Flash Fiction #706 -- A Second Tale of the First Alliance/4

 

Blades appeared in three hands.  Ryson and Callum took places at the Queen's side.  Ryson was glad to see Kono's hand stay steady as she held the knife she usually wore hidden in her belt.

Lord Tsak looked at them with open amusement as if they were children dressed up and playing games.  Ryson didn't like it.  He had known Tsak for years.  So had Callum, and neither had ever had anything bad to say about him.  This was ...

Not what it seemed.

"You have the Queen.  What does the Council want you to do with her?" Ryson asked.

Tsak grinned brightly.  "You know, they were in such a hurry to hire us that they never actually said what to do with her. I suggest a leisurely trip down to the desert.  The area is lovely this time of year, and I know of a wonderful secluded cabin by a watershed stream.  My people will finish up here."
Blades disappeared again.  Tsak walked with them as if they had never drawn a weapon on him. The battle had quieted for a moment, but came back in full force now, giving Ryson a chance to vent a bit more frustration before they reached the guarded camp where they were suddenly surrounded by calm.

Kono brushed ineffectually at her clothing and hair. She gave up.

"Did the council happen to mention why the Ice Sprites came to us?" she asked.

"Something about treachery, your cousins, evil --"

"Dragon Core awaking," Kono said.

That did stop Tsak.  He looked at the three and frowned this time.  "That would make sense of the berserkers, wouldn't it?  They were always the first line of defense for the core."

"That is not part of our lore," Callum said.

"We have made an art of finding out what we can about the dragons.  We live on the edge of their land.  While they sleep, it is no trouble.  If the core is waking --"

Tsak paused and appeared to consider the news in more detail.  Ryson knew that feeling.  It also occurred to him that, except for some incidental matters like the berserkers, they had no sign of dragon trouble.

"The sprites said the core is waking," Ryson said.  "We all know it is not their time.  The only thing that would wake them early would be --"

"No one would steal dragon eggs, would they?" Kono asked and looked appalled at the idea. "I know there are always tales of fools who make the attempt, or a rumor of an egg turning up somewhere.  No one takes it seriously.  Do they?"

"I always dismissed them," Callum replied and frowned.  "Tales told in village taverns, usually with a lighthearted ending. Maybe others aren't taking the danger seriously enough."

"And putting the entire world in danger," Kono added.

"It is a possibility," Tsak said with a dark frown.  ""And that means we have to go check."

No one, including Tsak and his guards, looked happy with that idea.   No one argued against it, though.

"We will spend the night cleaning up the mess here," Tsak said, as though they had all agreed to the plan.  "Create a map to show the way, if you would.  We are desert people.  I know few of the mountain paths."

Ryson thought that sounded wise.  The drums were almost silent, and Ryson listened as first one, then another died out.  One left, but it soon fell silent as well.

Callum caught him by the arm when he swayed.  "It's done?"

Ryson listened for a moment longer and then gave a true nod of relief.  "Done," he agreed.  "I am going to make certain the drums are dead.  There might also be information we want to see.  Who put them in action?"

"I will go with you," Callum said.  "Kono, you might tell our host about the meeting with the sprites and the trouble with the council."

She looked likely to argue but quickly changed her mind.  

"I am sending Rimal, my son, with the two of you.  This is not a sign of distrust," Tsak said.  "I only want to be aware if you fall into trouble."

"We appreciate the help," Ryson answered, surprising his two companions. "I have known Rimal for years, as has Callum.  We all know this is more than just us in danger, and it doesn't help that we don't know what is going on."

"Is there anything you can tell me about this mess?" Rimal asked as they walked away.

"One thing," Ryson answered.  His hand went to his face. "I wouldn't trust me."