📚 the eeper and the dragons Part 21 of 19
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SCIENCE FICTION FANTASY

The Keeper And The Dragons Ch 21 22

The Keeper And The Dragons Ch 21 22

by charlyyoung
9 min read
4.85 (8200 views)
adultfiction

Chapter 21

Emory, Washington

The queen of the McNeil Coven, Birdy Penrose, walked away from the meeting with Althea with her jaw aching with the effort to hold in the sudden rage that blossomed after Althea had revealed what she'd been up to.

The two coven leaders had known each other all their lives. They had played together as little girls. Flirted with the handsome crafter boys as teens. Gone through the thirteen harsh levels of the magic training together—but it still shocked her when each of them came to different conclusions when faced with the same information. Now, with the seers predicting the coming chaos of the Manna Surge, those differences, once tolerated, now became unbearable.

Althea was out of control. Instead of attending to her coven duties, she was freelancing in Oldtown, of all places. Her meddling was sure to attract the attention of the Sidhe.

Three months ago, the covens had barely escaped the attention of two faeries who had been playing with their emotions like some mad fiddler. They had finally convinced that mother damned Red Queen from the ruling convocation that there was nothing to see here—and now Althea started another adventure. She just didn't seem to realize just how lucky they were to avoid the blood-witch disaster.

Birdy bitterly regretted her decision to lure Lachlan Quinn to Emory three months ago. Like Althea, she had a foolish thought that they would easily handle the boy. Unlike Althea, she soon realized that hope was a smoke dream. The covens had to deal with a novice keeper with a naïve world-view and poor impulse control. A dangerous young man who had good reason to hate and distrust the covens.

His latest request that they go against custom and train a shifter whelp in the arts was a long step too far. That could not be borne. It threatened both covens very existence. If the news got out, and it would, the witch-crafters gossiped like magpies. The Red Queens back in Salem would instantly assemble and blast them all off the face of the world.

She was still muttering to herself as she crossed the threshold of her house on Emory's north side when she sensed that someone had tripped her security wards. after a hastily muttered cantrip, she found that the intruders who had tripped them were still in the house. She called up a combat spell, walked in and found Charming Delancy and the mother-damned alpha of the Chelan Pack calmly sitting her kitchen table. Two teacups sat on the bare wood. Birdy frowned. She was a stickler for order. Everything belonged in its proper place. Birdy's world view was black and white. She had no patience with shades of gray. Most witch-crafters were like that. High-level magic did not forgive sloppy thinking or practices. Now, seeing her pristine white oak table stained by spilled tea caused her rage to flare anew.

"Charming, you stupid woman, why did you bring him here? You're going to ruin everything."

"HE demanded, I had no choice. Besides, the timing is right, Lan drove off to Oldtown a couple hours ago."

Thomas Harmala Chelan, the alpha of the Chelan Wolf-Kin Pack, was a handsome, burly bear of a man with a distinct vulpine cast to his face. He had a mane of swept back silver hair and was wearing a black suit that fit him like a glove. As usual, he wore a supercilious smirk on his face. Birdy longed to spell it off his face every time she saw him.

As he caught the coldness in her eyes, a scowl replaced the smirk.

"Listen, witch, you are the one who contacted me, not the other way around. I need the girl for my own purposes. I have no time to waste on your indecisiveness."

Birdy ground her teeth in frustration. "Alpha, I don't like this. My experience tells me that hurried changes in plans lead to mistakes. But the time is right, I suppose. Very well, you may proceed. Do not harm the girl named Charlie. She is one of ours."

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The shifter abruptly stood and walked out with his cell phone in hand, muttering orders.

"I cast the dice, for good or ill," Birdy muttered to herself. The fine hairs on her neck prickled with sudden foreboding. "Althea, you left me no choice."

Chapter 22

Emory, Washington

Three wolf-kin of the Chelan Pack watched from the hide they had crafted in a dense blackberry and salmonberry thicket across the gravel road from Keeper House. The two younger wolf-kin, Timor and Luka were barely out of their teens. Bored and eager to get back home to Lake Chelan, they chaffed under the iron discipline of the eldest, a six foot twenty something, named Jarvi had the leanness of a long-distance runner. He had had to discipline them for breaking cover several times. It wouldn't do to let that Keeper fellow see them. As a result, they both bore bruised faces and blackened eyes.

The Alpha had called and ordered them to proceed. Finally, it was time to act. Lev was relieved. He was just as impatient as the pups, just better disciplined. He ordered Luka go pick up their van that was parked in the parking lot of the Thriftway in Granite Falls. With a grin, the pup shifted and disappeared across the field. He'd be back soon; it was only fifteen miles.

When he returned. The older shifter gave the two of them a steady look. "Okay, you two, listen up. Luka, you come with me. We are going to cross over to the house and hide in that vine maple thicket. Timor, you wait here until you see the girls and the witch who accompanies them. You follow up behind them. The witch is supposed to cooperate, but if she doesn't, take her out before she can cast. Don't take any chances. If she gets time to cast any sort of spellcraft we're dead. The Alpha wants this little wolf girl bad, so don't fuck up. Do not let them get inside the house. If they do, we fail and the Alpha will kill us. Do not whatever you do, go into that house. You won't come out. One more thing, you see that big old growth cedar behind the house? Do not go beyond that, that's the border of the Opari. All the stories you heard about that forest are true. You go in there and you will never come out."

*****

Charlie was chattering away about a scene from Gilmore Girls to a listening Katrinka and the amused young sixteen-year-old acolyte who had picked them up at school. Jeffery was only half listening. He was watching. He was too soon out of a slave-torc to not be habitually hyper-aware of the environment.

He was the one who spotted the wolves hiding up by the house.

"Charlie, shut up. We have trouble," he said.

"What do you mean shut..." Charlie replied, only to have her hands snatched up by Katrinka and Jeffery.

"Run."

Elsa, the young witch who had picked them from school, hadn't really heeded Althea's order to be on guard. As a result, she wasn't prepared when she looked back and spotted an enormous gray wolf coming at her with breathtaking speed. She tried her best to call up one of her attack spells, but too late. The wolf's jaws snapped like a bear trap around her throat and crunched. It shook its head once—then again—and dropped her lifelessly to the road.

The wolf stopped and stared at the lifeless body, seemingly surprised at what he had done.

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The delay gave the three children a head start.

The wolf jumped to the chase.

"Jeffery," Katrinka shouted. "Go to the forest. Remember what Uncle Lan said. Go find Ozz and Oild and hide. I run fast. I'll try to lead them away. Go quick."

Jeffery obediently changed direction. He and Charlie disappeared behind the old growth cedar and entered the Opari.

As Katrinka ran back toward the road, she looked back and saw two wolves emerge from a thick stand of alders on the east side of Keeper House fully shifted.

Her ploy worked. They were coming for her.

She knew she could have run faster if she shifted, but she was still a little uncertain just how to do it. So she ran as hard as she could, trying to keep as much of the head start as she could.

That's when she spotted her Aunt Dorotea's car idling alongside the road and ran toward it.

"Aunt Dorotea," she panted, "wolves. We need to run."

"Calm yourself, girl. Come here. Your aunt will take care of you."

One hand seized the little girl's hand and jerked her off her feet, the other held a syringe. Katrinka felt a needle's poke. Then blackness rolled in.

*****

As soon as they cleared the enormous cedar, Charlie spotted a small brown hob gesturing madly from a copse of tall ferns. She wasted no words, just pulled Jeffery toward the small creature. The hob led them to a cave-like opening between three gnarled vine maples. They crawled in and found Ozz or Oild crouched there. The hob put a finger to his thick lips, the universal signal for silence.

*****

Timor, the youngest wolf, paced back and forth in front of the cedar that he had seen the children duck behind. The elder wolf's warning echoed in his mind. Trying his best to think, he studied the forest in front of him while absently licking at the witch girl's blood dotting his muzzle. He smelled two of them close by, along with the scent of something else. Something alien. A weird scent he'd never smelled before.

Impulsively, he paced into the forest. He looked around curiously. This place didn't seem all that bad. The stories were just to scare kids. He could smell that the kids were close by and moved closer, an anticipatory snarl curling his lips.

That's when he spotted two creatures out of his worst nightmare come out of the bushes—unbelievable pain as they went for his throat—then darkness.

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