[This Book 1 was first published some years ago under my original author's name of Spencerfiction, but was deleted when I found I was unable to update the original with this version. i have now completed the draft of Book 2 and should have completed editing in the next couple of weeks. Book 3 is a short epilogue and still in note form but I hope to complete in the fall.
The Dragonskin Chronicles
By Tonyspencer
BOOK THE FIRST
TWO REALMS
Chapter 1
Blearn Mountain
Orc blood!
To Lord Korwyn the hint on the breeze registered metallic on his tongue, Orc blood!. He stopped his stealthy climb up through the sun seared rocks to listen, to better hear what was befalling upwind. Yes! It was clear now. The unmistakable chink of steel on steel accompanied that rancid scent, somewhere to the right side of his selected route up the side of the mountain. Perhaps some other desperate merk had been sent on this fool's errand, to save a princess from a fate worse than death. The battle might provide him welcome cover to slip unnoticed past any Orc guards and into the bowels of the mountain, he mused, to where the Princess Myr's amulet was still giving off a faint signal. But rather than move on, he hesitated ... just for a moment.
***
"Clive! Clive! Wake up," Carole insisted, shaking Clive awake none too gently by his shoulder, "honestly, five minutes after you've had your tea and you're away off into your own little world of goodness knows where again."
"Well, I can dream can't I?" he muttered, adding to himself, 'It's the only place around here where I can get any respect.'
"Well, shift your arse, sunshine, we've got parents' evening at the school with Michael's form teacher in twenty minutes. He needs to get on if he's going to pick up a decent job when he leaves school."
Day dreamer suburbanite engineering office order processor Clive was reminded by talk of jobs to worry about the possibility of his own redundancy, with half his department having departed over the past few months already. Two of his ablest staff had taken the less-than-generous redundancy package that had been offered in the first round of job cuts, knowing they already had other more secure jobs to go to, and one other departure left through the natural wastage of accepting early retirement.
Clive had been bullied into accepting the previously unacceptable situation by his boss. Aware that there were no replacements coming, he was told he needed to make himself more efficient, that was the message coming down from on high. It would mean cutting back on tailoring work to better fit clients' individual needs, it meant fewer checks on products and less attention to detail, even though, Clive pointed out these cuts would lead to poorer quality product, more spoilage, missed delivery dates, and a lot less customer satisfaction. In their turn this will inevitably result in fewer orders coming in, through which to share unavoidable fixed costs, leading to spiralling decline which will inevitably end in closure or takeover. Clive pointed out that the admin costs for half the throughput was the same as double the quantity, so we needed to sell more product, not less in order to be more profitable; the previous voluntary redundancies had lost the firm their best estimator and best telesales operator, so they now had less accurate estimates, leading to more materials wasted, less competitive prices and falling sales which imbalanced their ratios of produce to overheads. Clive's boss didn't seem to grasp the concept of how to run a business and Clive was told, "That was what the company apparently wants, so that was what we are going to get."
Clive couldn't see himself moving until pushed, he had fourteen years invested in the company, shipping out now would lose the inevitable redundancy payment due.
His wife Carole has a PhD in maths but, after taking time out from her career for their three kids, Michael, Katie and CloΓ«, was filled with disappointment by having to accept a local school teaching post last year and finding her return to work both tedious yet unnecessarily more stressful. The nearest decent university was too far to commute to, as she needed to be home in time to look after home and children.
She continually took her frustration out on Clive, so he decided to keep potential flash points like the company closure and redundancy risk from her. That was now proving his undoing.
Carole felt stuck in a rut, so she extended this to the home and the less adventurous holiday destinations forced on them by having young children. Now the kids were a littler older, she wanted to book an expensive Caribbean holiday, as well as spend a further six grand of their meagre savings on largely cosmetic work on the downstairs cloakroom, that only the kids and occasional guests seemed to use anyway.
At least she had the church activities to keep her occupied, while he had his garden and his vivid imagination to escape to. The garden shed was his man-cave, where he could daydream on swashbuckling with pirates, exploring new worlds or, like his current on-going daydream fantasy, rescuing a damsel princess in distress from inhuman beasts against impossible odds.
"Michael really needs to work harder on his English if he is to..." droned on the most boring teacher's voice that Clive could remember, at least since he left school twenty odd years ago. The teacher was barely out of short trousers, yet was trying to lord his mastery over his pupils' parents. Clive shook his head and closed his eyes, just for a moment.
***
No, he couldn't do it. Korwyn couldn't just leave the Orcs to kill this poor merk knight, be he man or dwarf, in service of the High King of the Dwarves. He felt the ache in his left shoulder every morning as testimony to his impetuosity, but that was how he was made.
Once he had decided on his course of action, the need for quiet progress had passed, and urgency spurred him on over the broken terrain of the mountain. The sounds of battle grew louder as he scrambled across the rocks in the direction of the fracas. He spurned the new Dwarf blade hanging from his belt, gifted by an unknown but insistent crone on his way into the Dwarf Palace, and gripped the familiar handle of his double-headed axe strapped to his back, a well-practised tug on the rawhide knot fastening, releasing the fearsome weapon into both his willing, waiting hands.
Several orcs had their backs to him, but he laid them all low with a single mighty swing of the double-headed axe, like they were ripened sheaves of barley, without them even uttering a sound. An Orc on the other side of the battle yelled out a guttural warning, before it too was slaughtered, in its momentary distraction, by the original fighter who was still the main focus point of the one-sided battle.
The fighter had its back to Korwyn, but it took only a glance by him to realise it was an Elf, a female one at that, to whom he had come to rescue. Her long green hair, tied in a pony tail, swished back and forth as she meted out mortal blows to her enemies. The tiny wings on her back, either side of her stowed longbow, were keeping her just off the ground while she did her best to make many Orcs' mothers weep, although Korwyn doubted they had any mothering affection for their hideous hatchlings.
The sight of the Elf longbow, even though it was not currently in use, sent a sharp stab of pain through Korwyn's old shoulder wound from ten years previously.