Dragon's Gift - The Druid Complete series Box Set Page 16
“Well, you know. Just being a prisoner. The usual.” His English accent was strong despite the fact that he’d lived in Magic’s Bend, Oregon for about a decade. “It’s not as fun as making lattes and potions, but it’ll do.”
I looked around for the cats and spotted them nearby, trying to pry a silver medallion off a large wine barrel. “Guys, you gotta get my friend out of here.”
The cats ran over and got to work with their unlocking routine, and I looked back at Connor. He worked at Potions & Pastilles in Magic’s Bend, the coffee shop he and his sister owned. On the side, he made potions. “You’re friends with Lachlan, right? Abducted while helping him?”
“I am.”
“But why did he call you Decker?”
“That’s my last name.”
“So I didn’t know I was looking for you this whole time because of some cool-guy thing, like going by your last name?” I’d thought I was rescuing a stranger, when in reality I was rescuing my friend. I’d never known Connor’s full name. Apparently, I should have asked.
Now I really had to get us out of here alive.
He grinned. “Basically.”
“Ugh. Dudes.”
Muffin wiggled his tail in the lock, and it popped open. Connor stepped out. “Can you get a message to my sister and the FireSouls? I bet they’re worried sick. I don’t know why they haven’t found me yet.”
“This place is blocked with powerful magic. Tracking charms don’t work, so I’m sure that the FireSouls’ tracking power is blocked too. It took the whole Protectorate to find this place.” I touched the comms charm at my neck. “Bree? Can you get a message to the FireSouls that Connor is here with me?”
“Wait, what? Connor?” Shock sounded in her voice.
“Apparently, he’s Decker. That’s his last name.”
“Well, crap. Yeah, I’ll tell them. They’ll be good fire power.”
“Thanks. See you soon. We’re off to look for the spell.”
Bree and Rowan both spoke at the same time. “Be careful.”
I cut the comms charm, and Connor grinned at me. “You’ve got backup coming?”
“Soon. In the meantime, we need to find the ancientus spell that was stolen and also whatever magic is suppressing the power of the Protectorate members who are hunting it.”
“I can help you with the second part,” he said. “I heard the guards talking about a huge dampening spell that the Creeper is running. It’s separate from the ancientus spell, but I think we can take it out.”
“The Creeper?”
“I don’t think that’s his real name. But I’ve heard mention of a lair down by the lake.”
“Great, let’s go before any guards show up.”
We set off through the cellar, looking for the door.
“How’d you end up here if the ancientus spell only just arrived?” I asked. “Weren’t you captured while transporting it?”
“Yeah. But the spell had to go to a sorcerer to be decrypted.”
“Decrypted?”
“Of course. Did you think that Lachlan was sloppy enough to let such a dangerous spell out into the wild?”
“Um, maybe?”
“Well, he’s not. He put a powerful encryption on it so that only the intended recipient could use it. There’s just a few sorcerers in the world powerful enough to break an encryption like that.”
“And I suppose the evil mastermind who built this place knows a guy like that?”
“Or can hire one. I don’t know the details—this is really just all assumption and bits and pieces I picked up.”
“It makes sense, though.” I stopped in front of the door that I was pretty sure was the exit. Everything had looked different when I’d been hanging upside down over the shoulder of a demon. “Do you know where the lake is?”
He shook his head. “I’ve only heard them talk about it.”
“No problem. We’ll find it.” If we could manage it before my friends arrived, they’d have their magic back in time to help us retrieve the ancientus spell.
Slowly, I pushed open the door and peeked outside. The moon hung high overhead, and fortunately it was just a sliver. There was only one guard patrolling—a demon, from the looks of those horns. He was about fifty yards away, pacing near the great wall that surrounded the manor. Almost out of range.
Almost.
I drew a dagger from the ether and got him in my sight, then threw. The blade flipped end over end, glinting in the pale moonlight, before it sank into his back.
He stumbled forward and fell flat on his face, then lay still.
“Blimey, you’re good at that.”
“Thanks.” I continued to scout the grounds, but no one else came. I didn’t see a lake, either.
Hopeful, I tried calling on my magic. It sputtered weakly inside me, still clearly influenced by the spell that was affecting everyone at the Protectorate.
Come on!
Whatever light Arach had seen inside me needed to get to work. I had to find this lake, and my new power could come in real handy for that. I gave it my all, focusing every bit of energy I had on my magic.
Briefly, it flared to life, but it didn’t tell me anything. I was hoping it would turn out to be like the FireSoul power, where they could ask it to help them find stuff and it would.
That didn’t seem to be the case.
“Since it’s not back here, let’s try the other side of the house.”
“Let’s go, then.”
We left the cellar and crept along the side of the building. It was quieter over here since we were down by the working part of the winery and it was night time. There was no gate to get out of the walls, though, so we had to go around the side.
The Cats of Catastrophe had disappeared somewhere, but maybe it was better that way. I wasn’t sure that one or more of them wasn’t a bit drunk off the wine. I drew another dagger as we snuck toward the corner of the house.
The night was silent, just a ripple of breeze, but it made the hair on my arms stand up. There had to be a lot of guards at a place like this.
No sooner had I thought it than one of them stepped out from behind the corner of the house. My heart jumped in my throat. He turned, eyes widening. We were so close that I could see his pupils and smell the rank scent of his dark magic.
I raised my dagger, but Connor was faster.
He punched him right in the nose. The demon reeled, and I struck, stabbing him in the heart with my blade. Connor punched him again, just to make sure he didn’t scream. Or maybe he was just pissed about the whole captivity thing.
The demon crashed hard to his back, twitched, and then lay still.
“Good teamwork,” Connor said.
“Yeah, I’ll fight with you any day.”
I knelt briefly to check his pockets, hoping for a cool weapon or maybe a transport charm. I came up empty, so I stood, eyeing the side of the house and the wall that was about twenty yards away. A guard sat on the ground next to a small but strong-looking gate, fast asleep.
He hadn’t even noticed the commotion as we’d killed the other one.
“The lake probably isn’t within the walls, is it?” I asked.
“Unlikely. This place is big, but that would make it crazy huge.”
“Let’s run for the gate, then. Maybe that guard will have a key.”
“I like it. On three?”
“Just a moment.” I drew a dagger from the ether. I got the sleeping guard in my sights and threw the blade. It pierced him in the neck, as expected. “Now you can count.”
He grinned and counted up, and we ran, sprinting across the grass. My lungs and muscles burned in tandem, and I prayed that no one was looking into the fields at this hour.
We reached the demon guard, who was already dead and starting to disappear to the underworld, and I patted him down for a key, finally finding one in his chest pocket. Muffin and his gang were nowhere to be seen, so this was lucky.
Quickly, I shoved the key into the l
ock, and we slipped out through the heavy iron gate. Then we started running again, racing to reach the woods that were about a hundred yards away.
I sprinted across the vineyards, running between twisted rows of dormant vine. By the time I stumbled into the shelter of the trees, I felt like I was about to pass out.
I propped my hands on my knees, panting.
Connor grabbed my arm. “Come on. Guards patrol these woods.”
“Don’t I know it.” I gasped raggedly. I straightened and we set off, keeping to the shadows of the trees as we made our way to the front of the house.
The lake that glittered there made me want to fist pump. It was nestled in a valley below, pressed up against the woods. We’d have a bit of cover all the way there.
As we neared the lake, the sense of dark magic grew. It stank like a wet buffalo who’d been dancing with rotten eggs.
“We’re close,” I muttered. “But where is this Creeper’s lair?”
“Under the lake, I think.”
I swiveled to look at him. “Under?”
14
“Yeah, under the lake. Creepy, right?” He grinned.
“Totally.” I inspected the lake shore, looking for some kind of passageway. All of the ground was undisturbed, though, revealing no clue of a trail leading to an entrance.
So I followed the dark magic, going to where the scent was the strongest. There was one section where it was even a bit hard to breathe. The ground was undisturbed, but there were a number of flat rocks clustered around the edge of the lake.
On a hunch, I began to step on them. Connor looked at me quizzically for a moment, then joined me.
When I stepped on a rock that depressed beneath my foot, I grinned. Magic swirled on the air, a faint sparkling feeling against my skin, and the ground gave way in front of me.
A hole opened up, the dirt parting to reveal a rustic stone staircase leading into the earth.
“Nice,” Connor said.
I drew my sword from the ether and handed it to Connor. “Know how to use one of these?”
“I’m not bad.” He took the sword.
I drew two daggers, then descended the steps, raising my lightstone ring so that I could see what lay ahead. The stairs descended about two stories underground, leading to a passage that went straight toward the lake. It was made of stone and packed dirt, all of which was a bit wet. Everything smelled of damp earth.
I swiped my finger against the slimy wall to my right. “Does this feel like a death wish?”
“Yes.”
In silence, we crept forward. With every step, I prayed that the lake wouldn’t burst through these crappy walls and take us out.
As we walked, magic began to prickle more strongly against my skin. The farther we went, the worse it hurt.
“Feels like ant bites,” Connor said.
“The Creeper clearly doesn’t want visitors.” I gripped my daggers, searching the passage ahead of us. Light gleamed at the end, green and sickly looking.
We crept forward, our footsteps silent. We were almost to the glowing green light when a massive spider lunged into the passage.
My lungs seized as fear chilled my skin.
The beast was the size of a small car, with fangs as long as my arm. Multifaceted eyes glared at us, and the thing charged forward. I threw my dagger right at one of its glittering eyes.
The dagger bounced off.
“What the heck!”
Connor charged past me, sword in hand. He dodged the striking spider’s fangs and sliced at one of the legs. The limb fell off and exploded in a poof of black smoke.
I hurled my dagger at the spider’s face, avoiding the eyes. The blade plunged into the middle of the monster’s head, but it kept moving, darting for Connor as he danced around with the blade, going for the legs.
But the one he’d sliced off had already grown back.
He sliced off another, and it, too, began to regenerate. I raced toward them, calling on two more daggers. Two of my longest ones. It was a shame I didn’t have two swords.
I crouched low to peer under the spider, and caught sight of a man with scraggly black and white hair standing in the room beyond. He seemed to be dancing in the middle of the cave-like room ahead of us.
Yeah, he had to be the Creeper. The name just fit too well.
As he danced, the spider struck out. Connor dived under the belly, so the spider came for me. I jumped left, avoiding the sharp fangs. Raw horror opened up inside of me at the sight of its mouth so close to my head.
I sliced at a leg with my dagger, trying to distract it while I figured out what the heck was going on and how we’d kill the thing. It was made of magic, clearly. The poofs of black smoke made that obvious.
But how could we destroy it when a dagger to the brain wouldn’t do the job?
As I dodged the spider’s blows, Connor attacked from the side.
I stole another glance at the man called the Creeper. He kept dancing, making strange movements with his arms and legs.
He actually kind of looked like a spider himself.
A pale white stone glowed around his neck.
The spider struck again. I dived low, sneaking under the belly and praying he wouldn’t sit on me. As I slid beneath the spider, I caught sight of a glowing white stone set into the beast’s belly.
Just like the one around the Creeper’s neck.
Oh crap!
He was controlling the spider. And the stones linked them.
I dived back underneath the spider and stabbed up with my blade. It pierced the glass crystal, and the beast exploded in a poof of powdery black ash.
“Whoa!” Connor cried. “Well done!”
“Thanks.” I scrambled upright, spitting out the black powder and whirling to face the Creeper.
Connor and I stood at the entrance to the room. The Creeper stood in the middle, just twenty feet away. Rage lit his face. All around him, the cave-like room glowed an acid green. It looked like a mad scientist’s lair, full of tables and shelves that were packed with magical tools and potions. A massive cauldron sat at the back, over which a glowing crystal was suspended. Blue smoke twined around the crystal.
Connor nodded at it. “That’s the spell.”
“Do you think you can figure out how to stop it while I hold him off?” I whispered. He was the potion master; I was the fighter. It only made sense.
“I’m on it.” He started to inch toward the cauldron.
“I’ll cover you.” I lunged toward the Creeper, hurling a dagger right at him.
He dodged, fast as a snake, and threw a potion bomb at me. The red glass ball hurtled through the air, and I dived to the right, sliding across the floor. The bomb smashed into the stone and dirt wall behind me, exploding. Dirt and rocks flew outward, and I peered back to see a giant hole.
Crap!
That was one of the strongest explosive potions I’d ever seen.
I scrambled upright, calling on another dagger. I threw it, aiming for the chest, the biggest target. He was too fast for anything else.
He scuttled left, just like the spider we’d destroyed, and my dagger flew past.
How the heck was he so fast?
He grabbed another potion bomb off a table and flung it toward me. I dived behind a wooden table. The bomb hit the right corner of it, and the thing lit on fire. The various potions on top began to pop and explode, sending off sparks of all different colors.
One emitted a huge blast of wind that blew me into the wall. Pain flared in my back as I slammed into a stone. The sound of a roaring storm filled the room, making my head pound. The noise was so loud that it became hard to think. It came from one of the potions that had been destroyed. A herd of white antelope exploded from another potion and leapt off the burning table. They stampeded around the room, then galloped through the tunnel, heading for the exit.
What the heck had been in some of those potions?
Through the chaos, I could see Connor racing around, grabbing
vials off the tables and pouring them into the massive cauldron under the crystal. The smoke turned from blue to red. I had to guess that he recognized the spell and was trying to counteract it or something.
Thank fates he was here, because I’d have had no idea.
The Creeper was in the middle of the room, freaking out. He pulled at his hair as he turned his attention from me to Connor.
“Stop!” he shrieked. “You’ll ruin it all!”
“That’s the point!” Connor yelled. He tossed vials of potion into the cauldron.
The Creeper grabbed a red glass potion bomb off a table. Red.
That was the same one that had exploded the whole wall behind me. If it hit Connor, he’d be dead as a doornail.
I called a dagger from the ether and hurled it at the Creeper’s back. This time, he couldn’t see it to dodge. The blade sank into his shoulder, and he screamed, falling forward. His potion bomb exploded against the ground, blowing up in a massive cloud of smoke and debris.
Red debris.
The remains of the Creeper.
I cringed backward, gagging.
“Connor, are you okay?” I shouted as the smoke dissipated.
“Almost done!”
The smoke cleared enough that I spotted him chucking two more potion bombs into the cauldron. It began to boil and fizz, and Connor sprinted around it, racing for me.
The bubbles shot upward, surrounding the crystal that hung over it. When they splashed back down, the crystal was gone, devoured.
Strength and power flowed through my veins, feeling like an intravenous shot of magical espresso.
I gasped. “Whoa.”
“Did it work?” Connor asked.
“I think so.” I flung out my hands, envisioning my usual pale white shield. The shield burst forth, strong and true. “It worked!”
“Good. Because we’re in trouble.” He pointed toward the ceiling.
I dragged my gaze from the white shield and looked upward. All of the explosions had made an impact. The ceiling had begun to pour water through a crack.
The lake was breaking through.
“Run!” I turned and sprinted from the room, Connor at my side.
Behind us, a great crack and splash sounded. I looked back. The ceiling had fallen away, and water was pouring into the room. It rushed toward us. I sprinted harder, but soon it was lapping at my boots.