Author's Note:
The Dark Chronicles is my version of one of the world's great myth cycles. I play fast and loose with the more established versions of the myth (of which there are many) by introducing new characters, changing names, changing events, and generally writing it my way. Commentary along the lines of, "but the stories don't tell it that way" will fall on deaf ears so please, don't even bother. Besides, it's all written.
I am publishing it all in the Sci-Fi and Fantasy category because of its over-arching mythical theme. It is mostly heterosexual in flavour, but has incest, a bit of gay male, some anal and various fetishes. So if you don't like those elements, I suggest you back out now. There is no non-con and nothing extreme, other than blood in several scenes.
For those that know my work, this prologue is a promise, for those that don't know me, it's a tease.
It is presented as a complete work, made up of ten chapters, this Prologue, and an Epilogue. The myth cycle itself is more extensive, this is the core story. Additional self-contained parts might happen in future, but no promises on that.
Prologue - The Dragen Wakes.
I was there.
The day the earth roared louder than thunder and ash and floating rock fell into the sea all around the ship, and the sea rose and dropped five huge times, I was there.
The voyage had been long, south down the long coast of Shi, aboard a tall ship made by the Emperor, three galleys high and sails wide, his gift for my voyage. I made the Emperor a map when I returned from the mountain gone from the sea, and that was my gift in return and my thanks. "I did not know other kings' lands lay beyond the frozen mountains and long deserts; these are not my people," he said, as he marvelled upon the map. "How many years did you say, travelling here?"
Two hundred men rowed when the air was still and the ship made head to the south. I had heard tell of the smoking island; captains and commanders sailing up from the south, from Banteen and Baatuwara, landed and told stories in the ports, and they were always the same, these stories. "High from the sea," they told. "The mountain grows high from the sea, the height of two tall men each year." The stories made me curious and I thought upon brother Plinius and his boat, and the cloud rolling down the high mountain that he saw, swift as water and dreadful, both cities gone and the earth alive.
This was a bigger dragen coiled in rock and fire, molten rock in its blood and smoken ash in its breath. I was curious and made my way south. "We will stay on the water," the captain said, "and not make landfall there. The craft will be safe, but the shore is not safe." The commander I found to discover the place was the sixth seaman in a long line and his greatest scare was to sail close to the land. "I'll not do it," he said. "I'll sail off the shore the distance where the mountains are small and far away." He was certain. "My grandfather taught me this, and his grandfather before him." I trusted him, and the ship turned once around the mountain so I could see with mine own eyes that the stories were true.
The mountain was tall, perfectly shaped like the high Fuuj near the castle of Prince Shotogku in Japon, but the top was rock and rubble and not snow, and I could see with my eyes that no bush or grass or tree grew there. Smoke rose, a straight long column climbed high into the sky until the wind and the clouds tore it apart. "You see it, sire, and I wish it behind us." The captain's nervousness crept upon me, and I am used to rooks and ravens and tall stones and do not get nerves. But even I could feel the low breath upon the air, beneath our hearing all a giant throbb upon the water, strange ripples shimmering in circles on the surface of the sea. "See it, sire, and we shall make our way off. There are no birds here and the fish are gone too. Let us not stay long." The captain was nervous, and I shared it, so we made our way off, until the top of the mountain only could be seen, the horizon a long darkness against the westering sun, and the cap smoking there, its long thread climbing highest to the sky, and lingering up high, threading smoke through the finest clouds like sand in a stream.
That night, a storming rain surrounded the ship and the clouds dropped low. The captain kept small sails aloft so the ship could still make head, but its movement in the water was slow, just enough to steer. The captain kept towards morning, and the sea shuddered and pulsed beneath the hull, and far off from the land we could hear low groans and echoes. Nobody knew the meaning of the sound, it was uncertain and unregular.
"Look toward the west, sire, I think the dragen awakens and we might see it roar." In the galley and on the poop, the men were hushed and low songs began. These men had no words on their fingers, no pens, but with their songs the stories and remembering began, and the tells would pass down from father to son. Just like in my home land, but the longest trails there sing from mother to daughter. It is different here, I am not so familiar with it.
"Look, sire, the sky is different."