Read Dragon Magic: Book 3: Prophecy of the Dragons Online

Authors: E. J. Krause

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Paranormal & Urban, #Sword & Sorcery, #Teen & Young Adult

Dragon Magic: Book 3: Prophecy of the Dragons (10 page)

BOOK: Dragon Magic: Book 3: Prophecy of the Dragons
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Chapter 17

 

Ben sat at the planter, the one he and Andi used to sit at when they first met. Not many people ate lunch nearby. Instead, most chose to congregate around either the quad or the cafeteria. Though virtually the entire campus was accessible during lunch, people wanted to see and be seen. Ben and his buddies, who he hadn't talked to, other than in passing or social media, in forever, had been the same way his freshman year. They stayed on the outskirts, but still close enough to the action.

Now he sat by himself, the resurrection spell on his lap. He'd memorized it last night, but there were a few tricky parts he wanted to make sure he had down. He had no worries of having it here, as he magically glued it to his notebook in his backpack when he wasn't using it, and if anyone wanted to try to take it while he was reading it, good luck to them. He had enough subtle magic to seriously mess them up without drawing any suspicion. Though if he got into a fight and was expelled, he wouldn't mind. At least he could hang out with Andi instead of being here. Maybe they could fix this rift between them. Not that she'd admit to there being one.

"I should quit school," he muttered.

"You might as well," a voice next to him said.

He gave a start and found Melissa standing next to him. When had she ever been good at sneaking up on anyone?

"I mean, you used to have friends before Andi, but now that she's gone, you're being a total loner. From what I heard, you're totally smart in your classes, but you're ignoring everyone. Not a good vibe, Benny."

"Why are you talking to me? I told you it could get you hurt."

She gave a dramatic sigh, such a Melissa sigh. "I told you. I'm worried about how antisocial you're being. A ton of people have noticed, and no one thinks it's cool. Well, Trixie McDonald thinks it's kind of hot, but most people think it's weird."

"I do it for the same reason I told you to keep your distance. I'm not safe to be around. I lost Andi, didn't I?" He wished that still wasn't true. He fiddled with his engagement ring. Everything was supposed to be back to normal since the rescue. Well, without Cassie and Lee, it couldn't be normal, but it still should be better than this.

Melissa plopped down next to him on the planter. "You miss her."

He nodded. He wanted his old Alexandria back more than anything. Before he knew what was happening, Melissa hugged him. It shocked him for a second, and then he hugged her back. It didn't feel anything like hugging Andi, and it didn't feel right, but it did feel nice. Melissa had no clue what he was going through, and he didn't have to explain. She knew he felt horrible, and she proved she was a friend by comforting him. At least that was his take on it until she kissed him.

That it shocked him was an understatement. He felt Andi take notice, though she had no clue what was really going on. He should have pushed Melissa away, and doubly so when her tongue invaded his mouth. What was that? Something held him there. Curiosity? Maybe. He'd kissed Melissa when they dated, but that was before Andi. He never thought he'd kiss anyone else like this again.

His power blinked, and he regained control. As soon as he did, he noticed Melissa's hand moving down his arm towards the parchment. So that was her game. How did she even know what it was? He gently nudged her away and stood up. "Sorry, Melissa, but we can't do that."

She looked back at him with eyes that weren't her own – he recognized them but couldn't place them – and gave an evil laugh that sounded nothing like her. Her face then went blank, and when she came back, it was Melissa again.

"Wait, what? Why am I here?" Her eyes went wide. "Are there zombies coming?"

"No. You came over here on your own."

"No, I didn't." She frowned, and he could see the gears turning in her head. "I was sitting with a bunch of people and eating lunch. Jarrod Hancock was there. Do you know how often he chooses to eat lunch with me? Like, never! And you're saying I chose to come see zombie boy?" That was a new one. He'd have to remember to tell Andi. She'd get a kick out of it. "I don't think so."

"I don't know what to tell you." He didn't think explaining that someone possessed her would go over very well. He also didn't think telling her she kissed him would be a good idea, either, though he wasn't sure whether she'd freak out more over the fact that it happened, or that she couldn't remember it. Either way, he kept it to himself.

"Whatever. Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to go see if Jarrod can forgive me for abandoning him."

Once she wandered off, he plastered the resurrection spell back on his notebook. Whoever possessed her wanted it. Maybe Andi could help him brainstorm. He sighed and looked around for the best place to get out of here. The other side of the math building should do it.

As he headed over there, he thought of something Lee had said a couple of nights before they visited the Stronghold for the first time. He said that dragons couldn't beam up anywhere like Star Trek. Ben chuckled at the thought, but also felt his heart grow heavy. If Lee could see him now. He concentrated on Andi's room, where he knew she was lying on her bed, probably reading a book, and materialized next to her.

"Whoa! What the heck? Since when could you do that?"

"I've taken you to other realms like that."

"Yeah, but this is…shut up."

He winked at her, and they both laughed. She stood up and ran her hand gently across his chest. "So what's up? I felt your shock a few minutes ago. What's wrong?"

Instead of answering, he kissed her, which she responded to instantly. Yes, this was a real kiss, one that was meant to be. He lifted her off her feet and lovingly dumped them both on the bed, where their frantic make-out session continued for a few minutes. When they slowed down and he nibbled on her neck, she asked, "So what happened? Why did I detect a little twinge of guilt during that?"

He sighed. The truth would be best. He hadn't done it on purpose. In fact, he had the feeling he'd been bewitched, so it wasn't his fault. Right?

"Ben?"

"Melissa kissed me at lunch, and I didn't push her away as fast as I should have. She was possessed, and whatever possessed her put a spell on me. Once my magic figured it out, I blocked it and pushed her away. I think they were after the parchment with my resurrection spell on it. She was reaching for it when I woke up. Or wised up, anyway."

Andi frowned. "Who would know you had that spell at school? And why did you have it there in the first place?"

"What? I need to master it. How was I to know someone with enough power to possess Melissa and whammy me would be there? I thought the worst case scenario would be a bully trying to take it, and I have a full arsenal to deal with someone like that."

"That would be kind of fun to watch," she said, a slight smile on her lips. "As for who has enough power to whammy you, as you so succinctly put it, that is a puzzle. As for who could possess Melissa, that broadens the field a bit. I think even I could do it if I tried hard enough."

"Hey now, you're selling yourself short. With her, you wouldn't even need to try very hard."

She giggled and kissed him, lingering on his bottom lip, which drew a moan from him.

"So you're not mad?"

"Sweetie, I have a built in lie detector for you, like you do for me, so I know you're telling the truth. Besides." She raised her eyebrows and pointed first to her, then to him. "Dragon-Dragon Guard. Do I need to expand upon that?"

He chuckled, said, "No," and moved in for another kiss when it hit him. That laugh and those eyes. He did recognize them.

"Andi, I know who it was. It was Sasha."

Her mood immediately darkened, and she pushed him away. "Quit making things up because of the lies the council is feeding you."

That took him a second to wrap his head around, and even then he wasn't sure he heard her correctly. "Wait, what?"

"Timothy and Sasha are the good ones. It's the rest of the council that's corrupt."

Not just her words, but her anger, her conviction, took him by surprise. As she said, they were living lie-detectors for each other, and he sensed with one-hundred percent certainty that she believed those words absolutely. Neither said a word. She glared at him, not in hate, as she could never hate him, as he could never hate her, but with a deep anger that she'd never before directed at him. What if she were right? What if the council had somehow corrupted him? They knew, after all, that he had the resurrection spell. His magic would ferret it out, but…

Before either had to break the silence, and before he could dig too deep into the problem, Felix knocked on the door. He and Andi dropped their gazes and said, "Come in," simultaneously. Felix did, a slight smirk on his face.

"I expected you to use the front door, not teleportation, and not again for a couple more hours."

"Something came up, and I needed to see Andi." He didn't elaborate, and Felix didn't ask.

"Max texted. He wants us to head to Rico's realm as soon as possible. I told him we'd leave once you were home from school, but unless you're going back, I can let him know we're on our way."

Ben shook his head. "I need to go get my truck, but that's it. We can be on the road in ten minutes."

"Sounds good. Alexandria and I will wait out front."

*****

The drive to Orangeville Acres, the best amusement park anywhere as far as Ben was concerned, and the entrance to Rico's realm from this part of the world, was a frosty one. Andi insisted Felix sit in the passenger seat so she could be in the small backseat of Ben's truck. She chose the spot right behind Felix because it gave her the best view of Ben's eyes in the rearview mirror so she could stare daggers into him the whole way.

Half of Ben didn't care that she glared at him. Her overall love for him outshone any anger she carried at the moment. The other half of him, however, did worry. The more he thought about it, the more he realized the problem had to be with her. How ludicrous would it be for the entire council to be corrupt except for Timothy and Sasha? Was it possible? Sure, anything was possible. But was it probable? No, not in the least. Every bit of him screamed that. Though his powers didn't point to anything being wrong with her since she got back, his mind certainly did. Maybe that was the same thing.

During the drive, Felix said nothing, but he wore a grin the whole way. He did his best to keep it to himself, but Ben couldn't miss it. The annoyance coming from Andi, separate from what she felt towards him, proved she noticed, too.

Once they parked in the half-full lot and exited the truck, Ben said, "What's so funny, Master?"

That got Felix laughing. Ben only called him "Master" in sarcastic tones. He meant no disrespect – after all Felix had done for him, he'd never show him disrespect – but sometimes the sarcasm was necessary.

"You two," he said. "I've been around dragons and guards most of my life, and whenever they get mad at each other, it's always a quick flare up and then forgiveness, usually in the form of lust. I've never seen the anger held onto this long."

"I guess we're exceptional in that account, too, then," he said.

Andi added a "Hurmph."

Felix said, "That's my point," and let out a deep belly laugh. After he looked around to make sure no one was staring at them, Ben allowed himself a chuckle, as well. Andi's answer was an eye roll, but at least her smoldering anger mostly died. Ben thought about reaching for her hand as they made the short walk to the front gates, but decided to wait.

Once inside the park – Felix had an annual pass, too, since a few of their training sessions had been conducted here – they headed for Reach for the Sky, the roller coaster that launched the train out at one-hundred miles per hour, through a loop, and up a ninety degree section of track. All other passengers would then plummet back down and run through the course backwards. The three of them, however, would continue moving up towards Rico's realm at the apex of the climb.

As they headed to the ride, Ben did grab Andi's hand. She glared, thought about pulling away, but instead melted into him. Felix smiled at him and winked.

Being a school day, it wasn't busy, but the crowd was larger than he expected. Andi mentioned that some schools in other parts of the country had spring break, and that made sense. Still, the line for Reach for the Sky wasn't bad. They waited about ten minutes, and though Andi still wouldn't talk to him, she did nibble on his neck at one point when no one was looking. They'd get this all sorted out sooner rather than later. Maybe this mission to retrieve the recording device, assuming they were leaving right away, was a good thing. They could focus on doing something else before they needed to tackle this problem of their differing views of the Dragon Council.

When they boarded the train, Felix volunteered to say the incantation, and they blasted off. Despite all the different directions Ben's mind was pulling him, he remembered to brace for launch. He still lost his stomach, but got it back well before the loop. By the time they began their ascent, he had both Rico's realm and Felix speaking the incantation firmly in his mind. At the top of the track, instead of hurtling back down, he, Andi, and Felix continued climbing, though no longer physically.

They landed in the large cavern that was Rico's office. It literally was a cavern, with its rocky walls, ceiling, and floors. All that jarred that image was Rico's extra-large, executive-style desk and plush swivel chair right in the middle. Swanky caveman might be the best way to describe it.

BOOK: Dragon Magic: Book 3: Prophecy of the Dragons
4.89Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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