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Voices of Dragons

Carrie Vaughn




  Carrie Vaughn

  Voices of Dragons

  To Mom, Dad, and Rob

  Contents

  1

  Her parents were going to kill her for this.

  2

  Nothing happened. No one found out. That didn’t stop her…

  3

  Kay had an atlas, one of those picture-book-type deals for…

  4

  They met again the week after that.

  5

  Kay didn’t know why she should be so nervous. She…

  6

  The weather turned cold. Snow fell, and the edges of…

  7

  On clear days in January, Kay continued hiking out to…

  8

  Kay started doodling dragon wings in the margins of her…

  9

  The sun was low, marking afternoon. It was much, much…

  10

  “Kay, honey. Wake up.”

  11

  Kay returned to the book, Dracopolis, continuing to try to…

  12

  Human voices echoed through the trees ahead. Kay couldn’t make…

  13

  The next day at dawn, three dragons perched on a…

  14

  At home, she tried to call Jon, but his phone…

  15

  The dragons circled. The next morning, three of them flew…

  16

  The Federal Bureau of Border Enforcement building had been part…

  17

  Kay and her mother drove home from the meeting in…

  18

  She almost hated to cross the border again, now that…

  19

  The Alpine diner was more crowded than Kay thought it…

  20

  He was right where she’d asked him to be, near…

  21

  Kay was able to run faster and farther without carrying…

  22

  Kay stripped off her coat, used paper towels to wash…

  23

  Kay made one more call that evening. After digging out…

  24

  As soon as Artegal flew across the border, the requirements…

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  1

  Her parents were going to kill her for this.

  Kay Wyatt adjusted her grip, wedging her fist more firmly into the crevice. A scab on her knuckle broke and started bleeding. The pain of it wasn’t worse than any of the other minor injuries she was subjecting herself to, clinging to the side of a pile of weathered boulders, slowly creeping up with only her hands and feet to support her. Free-climbing in a remote area alone? Yeah, her parents were going to kill her.

  As if that wasn’t dangerous enough already, she had to do it right on the border with Dragon. Not that she looked at it that way. She figured no one would notice; this really was the middle of nowhere. No Jeep trails, no hikers or campers—no one came here. It seemed like a good place to go when she didn’t want to be found. She really didn’t want to be found at the moment. She had to think of what to tell Jon about homecoming. He’d asked her out, and she should have been thrilled. Anyone else would have been. But she had to think about it.

  The dragons only ever came close enough to the border to appear as specks, soaring in the distance, deep in their own territory. She’d be safe.

  She’d found this place by studying topographic maps and wondering about the steep hills that lined the river. She’d climbed all the sanctioned rock faces, rafted the local rivers, hiked the trails. She’d grown up out here. But she wanted to see someplace new. She wanted to get out on her own. She wanted to do something.

  Over the summer, she and Jon had gone kayaking on the Silver River south of town after dark. Being on the river under a full moon had been amazing, but her parents had caught her driving home with a wet kayak at midnight and chewed her out about how dangerous it was, how she could have gotten hurt, and whatever. Then there was the time she free-climbed the wall at the rec center, just to see if she could. She’d have gotten away with that one if the manager hadn’t found her.

  She’d stashed her gear in the Jeep the night before so her parents wouldn’t ask questions, left the house after breakfast, and didn’t tell them where she was going. Planned rebellion. It didn’t matter that the first rule of any outdoor activity was tell someone where you were going. She’d decided she just didn’t want to. And if something happened? If she managed to fall and break herself? She could imagine the brouhaha when she turned up missing—then when they figured out exactly where she’d gone. Searching the area would cause an international incident. She might actually start a war if she fell and needed to be rescued. Which was all the more incentive not to fall.

  But nothing was going to happen. She’d climbed more difficult rocks than this. Free-climbed, even. She wasn’t doing anything she hadn’t done a thousand times before. Only the context had changed.

  And nothing was going to happen to her because nothing ever had happened to her except getting grounded. Like she’d told her parents after the kayaking-at-night incident, at least she wasn’t doing drugs. Her father, the county sheriff, hadn’t been amused.

  The irony of the whole thing was that both her parents were supposed to protect the border. Her dad was a cop, her mother the assistant director at the Federal Bureau of Border Enforcement. They didn’t guard against the dragons—the military would be called in for that. Instead, they were supposed to keep people out, be on the lookout for curiosity seekers and die-hard romantics who wanted to see dragons and thought they could sneak over the border, and the warmongers who wanted to get close enough to go hunting for dragons. The government took protecting the border very seriously.

  So, if they knew about this, her parents would kill her for more reasons than she could count.

  Balancing on her toes, Kay found a grip for her left hand. Joints straining, she edged another few inches up the rock. Then a few more. Her hands were dry with chalk, cracked and bloody. Her lips were chapped. Her whole body was sweaty. The sun was baking down on an unseasonably warm day. But really, this was bliss. Just her body and the rock, with nothing but the sound of a few birds and the nearby creek tumbling down the hillside.

  A few more inches, stretching spread-eagle on the rock in her quest for the next purchase. Then a few more, legs straight, hanging by her fingertips. Looking up, the rock was a solid granite wall stretching before her forever. One inch at a time, that was how her father had taught her. You can’t do anything but worry about the few inches right in front of you. So she did, breathing steadily, making progress until, almost suddenly, there was no more rock, and she was at the top, looking down the hillside from her vantage. She’d done it, and she hadn’t broken herself.

  After resting and taking a long drink of water, Kay changed from her climbing shoes into her hiking boots and went back down the rock face the easy way, off the back side where it joined the forested mountainside, sliding down the dirt and old pine needles, bouncing from one tree to the next. It had taken her an hour to climb up and only ten minutes to fly down, to where the boulder field continued on to mark the edge of the creek. She’d follow it to where it branched south and then, before anyone noticed, cut across to the trailhead where she’d parked her Jeep.

  She stopped by Border River, a couple yards wide and a few feet deep, to soak her hands in the icy water. She had new blisters and calluses to add to her collection, and the rushing water numbed the aches. For a long moment, she balanced on the rocks, letting her hands get cold, enjoying the calm.

  She’d been so careful the rest of the time, she never expected her foot to slip out from
under her when she moved to stand up. The rock must have had a wet spot, or she hit a crumbly piece of boulder—gravel instead of stone, it slid instead of holding her foot. Yelping, she toppled over and rolled into the creek.

  The chill water shocked her sweaty, overheated body, and at first she could only freeze, numb and sputtering, hoping to keep her head above water. The current carried her. These mountain creeks were always deeper and faster moving than they looked, and she tumbled, dragged by the water, buffeted by rocks. When she finally started flailing, struggling to find something, anything, she could grab to stop her progress, she found nothing. Her hands kept slipping off mossy rocks or splashing against the current. She’d always discounted the idea of someone drowning after getting swept away in one of these creeks, when they could just put their feet down and stand up. But she couldn’t seem to get her feet under her. The current kept snatching her, turning her, dunking her. She was already exhausted from her climb, and now this.

  When something grabbed at her, she clung to it. A log, some kind of debris fallen into the creek. That was what she thought. But her hands didn’t close on sodden bark or vegetation. The thing she’d washed up against was slick, almost like plastic, but warm and yielding. And it moved. It closed around her and pulled. Water filled her eyes; she couldn’t see. The world seemed to flip.

  Then she washed up on dry land. She lay on solid, gritty earth and smelled dirt. She spent a long moment coughing her lungs out, heaving up water until she couldn’t cough anymore. Hunched over, learning how to breathe again, she got her first look around and realized she’d ended up on the north side of the creek. The wrong side of the border.

  A deep, short growl echoed above her. She rolled over and looked up. She was in shadow, and a dragon hunched over her. A real dragon, close up. Two stories tall, a long, finely wrought head on a snaking neck, and a lithe, scale-covered body. It was gray like storm clouds, shimmering to ice blue or silver depending on how the sunlight hit it. Its eyes were black, depthless black. Bony ridges made its gaze look quizzical, curious.

  Or maybe it really was curious.

  It sat back on its haunches, its clawed hands resting on the ground in front of it, the wing membranes running down its arms tucked neatly back. It wasn’t doing anything—not breathing fire, not tensing its muscles getting ready to attack. It wasn’t even making noise anymore. That first huff of a growl had been to get her attention.

  They regarded each other. Her heart was racing, getting ready to burst out her ears. The trouble she was going to get into over rock climbing by herself was nothing compared to the trouble she was going to get into over this. This…this was epic trouble. She waited for the thing to eat her.

  But it just kept looking at her. She shivered and realized she was in its shadow. A great, huge shadow. And he wasn’t even a big dragon, if she remembered her facts right. Only as big as a bus. Not, say, a house. Adolescent, the word crawled out of her hindbrain. It was young.

  The growl came again, and with it a word. “Well?”

  It sounded deep, echoey. Like the word didn’t come out of its mouth, but reverberated through its entire sinus cavity. It gave the voice weight, an ancient dignity. She didn’t know how to respond.

  “W-well what?” Her voice was tiny and trembling.

  It blinked, and the ridges above its eyes shifted. It no longer looked curious, but wry. Amused, even. “Well. Are you?”

  Another word crawled out of her hindbrain. Something in the tone or in the way it arced its brow. Male, she thought. It was male. He was asking if she was all right. She nodded quickly and swallowed back a scream. Oh my God, it’s talking to me….

  It gave a snort and a satisfied nod.

  The dragon had plucked her out of the river. Saved her life. The screaming part of her brain wanted her to get up and run, but she didn’t move.

  “Thank you,” she said finally, “for helping me.”

  The dragon’s neck snaked back, dipping his head in a nod. The scales flickered gray and blue in the sun. Too graceful for words. She expected him to leave. Or maybe she hoped he would. She ought to be running. Or were dragons like bears in that running only made you look like prey and encouraged them? Maybe she should wait until he was gone.

  But he seemed ready to sit and watch her all day.

  She was bruised, soaking wet, and starting to shiver. The sun was setting, and the shadows of the trees were growing longer. Slowly, she pushed herself to her feet, backing away from him at the same time. If she walked upstream a little, she should be able to find a narrow place to cross the creek without too much trouble. She’d look kind of stupid trying to wade in after having been plucked out on the verge of drowning.

  “I should get going,” she said, pointing over her shoulder. Now, the instinct to run, to get out of this situation, was almost overpowering.

  A low huff from the dragon stopped her. “Wait.”

  He leaned forward, crouching on all fours now, bringing himself closer. She could see herself reflected in his eye. His breath was warm and smelled like a campfire. She kept herself from whimpering.

  “Stay? Practice speech,” he said.

  “Practice—” Speech. Language. He was learning English. He wanted to practice. She almost laughed. But she shook her head. “No—no, I can’t, I’m not supposed to be here, you’re not supposed to be here.”

  “But we are.”

  Had he been sitting here, waiting for someone to happen along so he could practice his conversation skills? Did he come here a lot? She boggled to think that there could be some dragons as fascinated with people as some people were with dragons.

  She’d just been trying to get to the one place she knew there wouldn’t be any people around. She hadn’t even considered that a dragon could be here. A dragon who would save her life.

  “You—you sound like you speak the language pretty well. I don’t think you need my help.”

  “Not need. Want.”

  “Why?” she said, but hadn’t meant to. What happened to running away?

  He gave a soft snort that might have been a chuckle. “Because—not supposed to.”

  She hadn’t expected him to give her a reason at all, much less a reason she could understand so well. The scales around his mouth and eyes shifted. Was he smiling?

  “Yeah. Okay,” she said, unable to stop herself. “But—”

  “Yes?”

  “Maybe another time. I should go home, get dried off before I freeze.”

  He sat back on his haunches again, curling his neck into an S. “Tomorrow?”

  She had school tomorrow. What would he do if she said no? Roast her? Could he really breathe fire? “How about next week instead?”

  “How many days?”

  Dragons didn’t have weeks. “Seven,” she said.

  He looked up at the sky, then back at her, and nodded. He was checking the position of the sun, she realized. “Yes,” he said.

  “Okay, then.” Had she just agreed to come back? She didn’t have to, she supposed. She’d have said anything to get away.

  Again, they were back to staring at each other, not moving. It occurred to her that he’d never seen a human being up close, the way that she’d never seen a dragon.

  Then he said, “Help you.”

  He moved, turning on his haunches to reach back into the trees. A long, undulating tail lifted and straightened as a counterbalance. Something so large should have been ponderous when it moved, clumsy, all bulk and no grace. Instead, he gave the impression of speed contained. Of power.

  He backed toward the water, pulling a fallen log with him. The claws at the very tips of his arms were prehensile. With an echoing huff, he shoved it across the creek. It didn’t quite reach to the other bank, but it settled against the rocks and provided an adequate bridge. And it would still be here next week.

  “Thanks.”

  “Seven days,” he said, with a lilt that made him sound like he wasn’t sure she’d really come.

&nbs
p; “Okay.”

  She stepped across the bridge, happy not to have to wade and risk another fall. When she reached the other side, the dragon nodded again, then turned and crept into the woods, managing somehow to slip his bulk around the trees. He didn’t fly—anyone in town would spot dragon flight this close to the border.

  In seconds, he was gone. She’d been so anxious to run away a few moments ago, but now she was almost sorry to leave.

  She sneaked in quietly, stowing her backpack full of gear in the garage, then ducking around to the front door, which she opened slowly, only as far as she needed to to squeeze in. She shouldn’t have worried. The house was dark. No one had turned on the lights when the sun had started setting. Dad wasn’t home yet, and Kay could hear by the tapping on the computer keyboard that Mom was in her office, working. Moving quickly now, she darted to the hallway bathroom. After a hot shower, the mud, sweat, and blood would all be gone, and she wouldn’t have to explain herself.

  When Kay left the bathroom, wrapped in a towel and hair dripping, Mom was still in the office, in the spare bedroom in the front of the house.

  “Is that you, Kay?” she called.

  “Yeah.” Who else would it be? she thought. If it had been someone else, wouldn’t it be at all worrying that a stranger had come into the house and used the shower?

  “I’ve got stuff to make mac and cheese in the fridge. Can you get it started? Dad should be home soon.”

  As promised, Dad came in through the garage door just as the casserole dish came out of the oven. Kay had even set the table. They usually managed to eat dinner as a family, however busy they got—that was one of Mom’s rules. Conversation involved Mom and Dad trading a few words about work and the standard round of complaints about coworkers and annoyances. Kay mostly tried to stay quiet. Her mind was full of dragon, and she didn’t want to let word of that slip.

  Inevitably, though, her father turned to her. He was almost the stereotypical picture of an Old West sheriff: tall, broad across the shoulders, straight-backed, and confident. He had a square jaw and bright smile, and his brown hair was going gray. He even went around in a cowboy hat and boots. The tourists loved him.