Avalee and the Dragon Read online




  Avalee and the Dragon

  by Patricia Hamill

  Kindle Edition

  Text Copyright 2015 Patricia Hamill

  All rights reserved.

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  Acknowledgements

  Cover Art by: Jack Baker Designs

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  About the Author

  About the Cover Artist

  Chapter 1

  Avalee sat on the stone step of her house. Her legs were folded beneath her with her elbows on her knees, cradling her chin in her palms. This time of the year, early fall, the leaves turning but not yet falling, the sun haloed nearby Dragon's Mount well into the day before finally breaking past its jagged form to cast light upon the village. Avalee considered the mountain and the beast who lived within it.

  Today was year ten. Next year the count would begin again. Peace would resume. Her village would be safe and secure in the mountain's shadow. In the dragon's shadow. But not this year. Never the tenth year.

  There was a good chance that Avalee would be chosen to ensure that peace this year. She was the right age, and there weren't many girls who were this time around. Her younger sister, Anna, was too young, only twelve. Her brothers Abe and Alex were safe, being boys. No, the dragon preferred young women. Not children, but not yet of age. Avalee dreaded it, but, as she considered the mountain, her face darkened with a deeper emotion. Not fear, anger.

  And from the anger sparked a decision. "I will not let it take me, not without a fight." She spoke the words in a whisper, but they were spoken and she would not take them back. If she was chosen, she would fight. She would make the dragon pay for the price of blood it expected from her.

  If she was chosen.

  Avalee stood with a sigh, if she was chosen. What made her think she would succeed at such a thing? Ten years since the last girl had given herself over to the beast. Twenty since the first. Before that, her people had fought and lost, crops were burned, and livestock and unwary villagers were taken. Those who trekked to the mountain to challenge the dragon never returned, and the dragon was never long in making its displeasure known following such a quest.

  All until twenty years ago when one man, an elder of the village, made the trek alone and weaponless. Seven days later he returned, his face haggard and deadened. The agreement had been struck. The first young woman was selected and sent crying to meet her fate. Ten years of peace in exchange for her life. The agreement stood the test of time, and it was as if the dragon had never been. The people prospered, but the elder watched and considered, knowing the time fast approached when the next maiden would need to be sent to appease the beast.

  Avalee remembered her, the last girl. She had tried to be brave, almost succeeded, but as the men and the elder escorted her to the fields and the platform built for this purpose, she had broken. Shoulders slumping, a wail of despair escaping her lips, she had collapsed then, unable to face the terror. The men had carried her the rest of the way, leaving her on the platform and rushing back to the village to wait with their families, all but one family grateful for the coming peace—all but one grateful that their daughters would be safe.

  That one family stood on the edge of the field and watched for the dragon. Watched with tears in their eyes for their daughter, their sister. Avalee never saw the dragon take the girl. Her parents had taken her home after the watch began, and they had all hidden beneath the floorboards of their kitchen, in the pantry. The wind had kicked up, heard as a roar even from where they were, and her mother had gripped her tightly, wide eyed in the darkness, the slivers of light just enough to see. Avalee remembered beginning to cry. But she'd stopped when the scream rang out. Shock, even for one as young as she, had silenced her. It had silenced everything and everyone. But her mother held her even tighter, and her father held them both. A single scream and nothing else.

  Ten years and Avalee never forgot. Today, the men of the village were in council. Tomorrow, the sacrifice would be made. Avalee closed her eyes as the sun finally touched her face, its glare red through her lids. She would know her fate tonight, but she repeated her promise, her voice stronger, more confident, "I will not let it take me without a fight."

  She turned away from the mountain to go inside and prepare herself. If she was chosen, she must be ready. The night would be spent in festival, the people honoring the victim one last time, drinking and eating to forget the price she would pay in the morning.

  "Avalee, you're not ready yet," her mother said as Avalee passed through the kitchen. She was baking for the feast—rolls and pies, a cake, too. More baking in this one day than she'd normally do in a year.

  "Don't worry. I'm going now."

  Avalee's mother nodded, her eyes never leaving the lump of dough she was kneading. Avalee saw the moisture in them, but looked away before she could see a tear fall. Her mother was trying to be brave, trying to act as if this were any other day. Avalee felt the lump forming in her throat and brushed a tear of her own aside as she left her mother behind and made her way up the narrow wooden stairs that led to the room she shared with Anna.

  She was happy to find the room empty for once. Her sister was in the village helping with the fire pits. Avalee suspected their mother had sent her away so she wouldn't get in the way of Avalee's preparations. The dress she would wear was already laid out. Plain, simple, but a lovely shade of blue just the same color as her eyes. She ran her fingers over the fabric—soft, brushed cotton—and plopped down on the bed next to it. The simple fact was that she was afraid to put the dress on. Until she did that, none of it was real. It could be just another day like her mother pretended it was. Until she put it on, she was just another girl.

  She bit her lip, not hard, but enough to hurt; her eyes closed tightly as her hand fisted the cloth. "It's just a dress. Just a dress. Just put it on." Avalee's hand relaxed, and her eyes opened, then she hurriedly followed through before she could lose her nerve. She slipped the dress over her head, and it flowed down and around her like water. A beautiful shroud.

  Hair was next. Avalee drug the worn comb through it, the tangles from the previous night making the task difficult. She hadn't been up for long. Despite the late hour, her mother had not come to wake her, and neither had her sister. It had been like this for the last week. The closer the day came, the worse it had gotten. If anything, it had made the whole thing harder to bear.

  Avalee tied her hair back into a loose pony tail and slipped her feet into the newly made shoes to go with her dress. All finished, she looked around the small room, taking it all in. Memorizing every crack in the floorboards, every cherished possession. Her sister's doll, made of rags and well loved, reclined on Avalee's b
ed. Her sister had come back and left again while Avalee had been watching for the sun—the doll her way of comforting her older sister. Avalee wiped a tear from her cheek and picked up the doll, hugging it close to her.

  They were already saying goodbye, no matter that the girl hadn't been chosen, no matter that Avalee might not be the one. She gave the doll one more squeeze and placed it on Anna's bed. Anna would need it more than Avalee would if the worst happened. It didn't make Avalee feel any better. It made her feel alone.

  She went downstairs, but avoided the kitchen, taking the front door outside rather than face her mother's dodging eye and thinly veiled sorrow.

  Outside, Avalee headed down the street, not towards the festivities. She had another destination in mind, one more suited to her goal. The creak of the wooden sign swinging in the breeze drew her eye to the charcoal-black image of an anvil and a hammer that had been burnt into it. The real anvil and hammer were silent, the blacksmith in town with the rest of the village, preparing for the announcement and the festival that would follow.

  Perfect, Avalee thought to herself. She slipped inside through the open door and let her eyes adjust to the dim light inside. When they did, she found what she was looking for—a short sword the smith had made one year just to show his son how it was done. Arter didn't take to the art like his father had, and so there was only the one, but, it was enough for Avalee. She only needed one.

  She picked it up and ran her finger along the edge, drawing back and sucking her injured finger. A grim smile lit her face despite the pain. The blade would do just fine. She set it down and lifted her skirt to get to her under-dress and ripped a strip of it off to tie around the finger. That done, she grabbed the hilt and held the sword out and away from her body just slightly to protect her dress while she searched for a suitable sheath.

  She wasn't surprised that the smith hadn't bothered to make one for the sword, but she searched anyway. Finally, her eye landed on something promising. The heavy leather of the smith's apron felt hard and unyielding under her touch, perfect. On a workbench, she spotted a knife the blacksmith had left behind. It looked new. She hoped he'd taken the time to sharpen it, but wasn't about to test another blade on her own fingers. Luckily she didn’t need to. She laid the leather flat on the bench with her free hand and then placed the sword on it.

  A low rumble of voices erupted from the center of town, distracting her. She looked up and over towards it as though she would be able to see the source. The council. They must have decided. She was late. No time to do much else, she rolled the leather over and around the sword, then used the apron strings to tie it shut. Using the knife, she cut off the extra lengths of the ties. Pulling up her skirt and under-dress once more, she used them to tie the wrapped sword to her leg and then allowed the fabric to fall back to cover the weapon.

  No trace remained. Unless she lifted her skirts again or held them to her leg, no one would know. Another mass eruption of voices from the center of town told her she had no more time to waste. But, with the heavy blade strapped to her leg, she made her way towards the sound at a sedate pace. They wouldn't have made the announcement already, would they?

  When she entered the square, the voices fell silent one after another as the villagers saw her. Many looked away; some covered their mouths or eyes as they did so. Some few watched her with serious eyes. Avalee tried to ignore what those things might mean for her. The crowd seemed to part before her, and she saw the other girls of her age standing alongside the bare ground in the very center of the square—a space usually reserved for dances and weddings. The girls, all dressed finely for the occasion, stared at Avalee with wide eyes and colorless faces.

  Then they looked away, each one in a different direction.

  Avalee swallowed hard over the lump in her throat, ignoring the sting of tears trying to escape her eyes. She looked at the elder, at the council, at her father, who refused to look her way. She was already dead to them. She was already dead to all of them.

  The elder reached out to her and she allowed him to take her hand and lead her to the place of honor. Numb, disbelieving despite her preparations, Avalee watched as the festival began. All for her. A final goodbye.

  Tomorrow she would face the dragon.

  ~~~

  Chapter 2

  Avalee wanted nothing more than to go home and forget all of this, but the festival was in full swing. Besides the food, there were competitions, dances and skits. The skits, in particular, were not helping Avalee in the least. Each one featured the history between the village and the dragon. Each one added more kindling to the spark of dread that was burning in her heart.

  The first featured several young men from the village, with three playing the part of the dragon in an enormous costume that covered all of them. The others played the first men from the village to encounter the dragon. Avalee fought to keep from hiding her eyes as the dragon chased the screaming villagers around the circle of bare earth, swiping each one dead until the very last. In the histories, only one had survived to bring word to the village.

  The next was one the children had been practicing for months. Most of them were dressed in fluffy sheep costumes. Avalee's sister played one of the sheepherders, being too tall to be one of the sheep. Like before, the three men in the dragon costume destroyed all in its path, and even took a swipe at Anna the sheepherder before sweeping off the stage and into the crowd, accompanied by the squeals and gasps of the onlookers in its path, startled because the dragon's direction was unpredictable.

  But those weren't that bad. Worse were the ones that featured the last two girls sent to the dragon. For each one, two eligible girls had been chosen to play the star role. Two in case one was the chosen one for this year's offering. Avalee hadn't wanted anything to do with either skit then, and she didn't want anything to do with them now. But she had no choice but to watch with the constant companionship of two of the councilmen to either side of her; she wasn't going anywhere they didn't want her to go. Avalee knew there would be guards overnight as well. They would take no chances that she would make a run for it and put their own daughters in the position she was in.

  The first maiden's story encompassed everything from the return of the elder from Dragon's Mount to the maiden's march to the platform. But it seemed they had tried to make the maiden's role one of brave sacrifice, having her volunteer for the duty. Avalee could barely hide her disdain at the failed attempt to make it seem anything but what it had been. She knew that the girl had been grabbed from the crowd and dragged from her family. She had cried the whole way. In the end, the men had tied her to a post in the center of the platform because she kept trying to run and leap from it. Avalee knew this because her mother had witnessed it and had described it to her one year when asked.

  The next maiden's tale was no better, though the brave march was more accurate in this case. Still, Avalee herself had witnessed this part of it, and what the young actors and actresses portrayed was far from reality. The young maiden made it the whole way and gestured for the men to stay at the bottom of the platform so that she could mount its steps on her own. Chin lifted high, she stood in the center of the platform, glancing around at the watching villagers with a knowing look. She would be their savior, and she relished it.

  The whole thing made Avalee sick to watch. Only a few paces from her destination, the girl had collapsed in a faint. Avalee remembered the men carrying her up to the platform and dumping her there like a sack of flour. They hadn't even bothered to tie her as they had for the first one. By this time, the top of the platform had been renovated to include a four-foot tall railing and a locked gate. Even when the woman came to, she wouldn't be able to escape. But still the audience ate it up, cheering the brave girl on stage all the way up to the point where the dragon rushed through the center and swept her away.

  At least they had the decency to fall silent for a moment at that part. Despite the positive spin the skit put on it, everyone here but the very youngest kne
w the truth, though they would prefer not to. Even that didn't last. Soon the props were cleared, and the dancing began. The dragon men stayed in costume, weaving amongst the dancers and scaring the small children with leaps and growls. Maybe it would have been fun, not so bad at all, if such things were in the distant past with no looming sacrifice the next day.

  Avalee watched it all with a straight face, wondering how they would portray her in years to come. The sword's bindings cut into her leg painfully, but she found the sensation comforting. In fact, she embraced this reminder of her promise. She hoped to be the last victim of the agreement. Her hands might be held primly in her lap now, but tomorrow, once she was alone on the platform, they would hold steel. She stopped watching the revelers and in her mind's eye watched herself fighting the dragon in various ways.

  Instead of the flames of the bonfire, she saw herself plunging the sword into the dragon's eye. Instead of the fake dragon cavorting among the dancers, she saw herself driving it into the dragon's heart and dodging to the side to avoid its fall. Instead of the young women spared this year's sacrifice, each one dancing with a young man of the same age, Avalee saw herself slashing at the dragon to hold it at bay and then, as it swept in to swallow her whole, piercing the roof of its mouth with the sword, the steel burrowing deeply into its brain. But even with all of these scenarios, Avalee was a practical girl. None of them ever quite worked out in her favor.

  If she took out an eye, the dragon would likely survive and destroy her before moving on to take its vengeance on the nearby village. She imagined it burning the homes and businesses to the ground and rounding up the rest of the villagers. If she stabbed it in the heart, the best result would be that her aim was true and the beast would crush her beneath it as it perished. But the more likely outcome would be that her aim would miss the soft flesh over the heart and skid off the adjacent scales instead. That would end in the same way as the attack on the eye. And, of course, the final scenario involved holding her ground as the dragon consumed her. She wanted to believe she could do that. Wanted to believe that she could stare her death in the mouth and angle the sword just right to take the dragon with her. But she knew that it would be just that, her death. The dragon's teeth would rip her to shreds and likely clamp down on her as soon as the sword pierced its flesh. Despite her intentions, her body would fail her then, and she would be consumed. The sword probably wouldn't even hurt it.