《Cinnamon Bun》Chapter Four Hundred and Twenty-Seven - Acidic Reaction
Advertisement
Chapter Four Hundred and Twenty-Seven - Acidic Reaction
The appearance of a Dragon had a certain gravitas to it.
It was, after all, a dragon.
A skinny green dragon, maybe half-again the length of an adult wyvern, more or less. It was hard to tell how big it was when the dragon was swooping past like a bird of prey, only the sky behind it to give any reference to its sheer size.
The dragon roared, and I folded my ears down at the sheer power of that noise. It felt like it should have been strong enough to blast me right off the deck of the Beaver. The dragon dove down, rushing past the Beaver then back up between the Red Whale and the Firestrike.
I turned towards Caprica, I had to tell her something, urgently. “Contact Raynold, now! Tell him not to let Abraham pick a fight with the dragon!”
“Why would he do that, it’s so stu-- right, let me send them a message spell,” she said.
I turned back around and refocused on the dragon. It was flying slow-looking circles around the Red Scourge. Slow-looking, because it was still faster than any airship that I’d ever seen, but it still felt as if the dragon wasn’t trying very hard, with slow ponderous wingbeats.
“Wait, I recognize that dragon,” Amaryllis said.
I stared at her, then snapped my attention back to the dragon. A younger green dragon... not too far from Port Royal as the dragon flies... “Cholondee?” I asked.
The dragon’s head snapped around to my direction, even though it might have been well over a kilometre away. She did a final loop of the Red Scourge. The pirates onboard the airship were running around in a panic. She looked like they were trying to aim their many ballistae, but I wasn’t sure if they’d do anything to a dragon.
Cholondee flew on over towards the Beaver and I squeaked as it came closer and closer without slowing down much at all.
At the very last moment, Cholondee shifted her wings up and beat them once.
My feet slid on the deck as I was pushed back by the wind. I had to shield my face with both arms against the blast. Amaryllis was sent tumbling back with a squawk, and my other friends stumbled back as well. Caprica was almost thrown over the edge, but she beat her own wings and flew back down to the deck.
There was a loud and very discomforting crunch sound, followed by a draconic ‘oops.’
I blinked, then took in the sight of a large green dragon hanging off the side of the Beaver with her forearms. The rails where she gripped onto the ship were snapped and splintered.
“Cholondee!” I said. “You broke the ship!”
Cholondee’s head reeled back. Then she snaked it in closer to glare at me. “How is it my fault that your ship isn’t welcoming to dragons?” she rumbled. The top of her spiny head was brushing against the canvas of the balloon above, and I was increasingly worried that her horns would rip through.
Advertisement
Then I noticed that she was wearing a hat. A small--for a dragon--fedora.
“Nice hat,” I said.
“Broccoli,” Caprica hissed. “That’s a dragon.”
“Uh... yes? Oh! Right! Cholondee, this is my friend Caprica, from Sylphfree, that’s Calamity, from way up north on the other side of the Harpy Mountains, and I don’t think you met the rest of the crew either.”
Cholondee’s nostrils flared. “A princess?” she asked.
“Yeah!”
A large tongue rasped across draconic lips. “Broccoli, you shouldn’t have.”
“Oh, uh... we’re going to Port Royal to see your brother’s wedding!”
Cholondee blinked twice, then huffed, and I gripped onto my own hat to stop it from flying off. “Well, I wouldn’t be the best sister ever if I ate his wedding gift,” she said.
I suspected that there was a misunderstanding at play. “Caprica’s not for eating,” I said. “She’s a friend. And friends don’t eat friends.”
Cholonee tilted her head to the side to give me a piercing look with one massive cat-like eye. “Well, whatever,” she said. “So are these other ships carrying stuff for you?”
“Oh, no, they’re pirates,” I said.
“Are... you a pirate?” Cholondee asked.
I shook my head. “No. Those three ships, with the red wing symbol on them, have been chasing us for a while. I think they want to rob us.”
“You gave them a bloody nose already,” Cholondee said as she snaked her head around to look back at the three ships. The Red Scourge was still untouched, but the other two were trailing smoke.
“It’s not enough to stop them yet,” I said. “The other little ship, the Shady Lady is a friend’s ship. They’re helping us, but we’re in a spot of trouble, I think.”
Cholondee turned back to me. “You’re much stronger than when we last met, riftwalker. It’s hard to tell how strong little people are, though, can’t you crush them all on your own?”
“Uh... well, I guess some of my friends and I are pretty strong, but we’re only so strong, and there are a lot of pirates, plus a few of them are probably strong too. They’re pirates, after all, so they probably fight and do bad things all day long, which means that they’re probably pretty good at that sort of thing.”
“Hmm,” the dragon said. “Give me a moment.” She launched herself off of the Beaver’s side, splintering more of the ship’s rails and making the entire ship shift to the side.
“That... might be bad,” I said.
“I imagine the pirates are thinking the same thing,” Amaryllis said. “No one wants to fight a dragon. You especially don’t want to fight a dragon in the sky.”
Caprica came over, then stepped closer to where Cholondee had gripped onto the Beaver. “It made a mess of the ship’s side,” she said. “You know, the Sylphfree navy have fought back dragons before. We’ve even killed a few.”
I held back a gasp. Not in shock, but more in pity. It... hurt to know that people would want to hurt dragons, but then again, dragons were a little hard to befriend compared to some others.
Advertisement
“What were you telling it?” Caprica asked.
“Was I talking in dragon?” I asked. At their nods, I went over the discussion again. Caprica didn’t seem happy that Cholondee had sniffed out her princessness, but otherwise, there wasn’t too much bad news. Cholondee was nice, if a little... brusque, so I couldn’t see her doing anything too mean to us.
The damage on the Beaver’s hull, aside.
“What is it doing?” Calamity asked as he followed the dragon with his gaze.
“She,” I corrected.
“Right, she,” he said.
“And, uh, I have no idea.”
Cholondee circled around the other ships for a moment, then she came flying down along the side of the Red Scourge. Her chest puffed out, swelling even as something glowed within her and illuminated her green scales and outlined her ribs.
Then she breathed down at the ship while roaring past it.
Billowing clouds of green smoke washed out ahead of her and rolled across the Red Scourge’s topdeck. It was so thick and heavy that the smoke came pouring off the other side of the deck like viscous waters.
I held my hands over my mouth as I watched the tiny distant figures of the pirates running around in a panic. The ship turned hard, and one of the ballistae at the back fired, but its bolt went wide.
Then the crew seemed far too busy running around to take care of Cholondee. She flew around the back of the ship and spat at one of its larger engines. There was a small explosion a moment later.
Cholondee returned to us, looking smug, like a cat who’d caught a mouse.
“Will they be okay?” I asked.
“The pirates?” Amaryllis asked. “Green dragon breath is poisonous in large concentrations. And acidic. That gob of spit probably melted the engine back there. So they have a fire, acid burns, and a poisoned crew to deal with, I’d be surprised if...” Amaryllis looked at me for a moment, and her satisfied look faded before she cleared her throat. “I’m sure they’ll be fine, don’t worry about it, Broccoli.”
I sniffed. It was nice that Amaryllis was willing to lie to make me feel better.
Cholondee slowed down well before reaching the Beaver this time. By the time her forepaws crunched into the rails again, the pirates were in full retreat.
The Red Whale and Firestrike were still smoking, though it looked like their crews were working to patch the ships up. The Red Scourge was limping away, only slowly turning back the way they’d come.
That was probably for the best.
But it did leave us with a curious dragon to deal with. “Thanks, Cholondee,” I said.
She shrugged her shoulders. “It was easy. Besides, I don’t like pirates much.”
“You don’t?” I asked.
She shook her head. “They’re bad for business. See, my guys extort people in the port, and if pirates get to people, then they bring in less stuff, so I can’t take as much from them.”
“Uh, you extort people that land at the port?” I asked.
She grinned, which reminded me that dragons had big teeth. “I’ll let you have a discount,” she said.
“What’s the dragon saying?” Caprica asked. I explained real quick, which set Caprica to frowning. “But that’s extortion.”
“I only take a percentage,” Cholondee reasoned. “If I take too much, then the merchants won’t come back.” She’d switched languages, from dragon to something my friends understood, which was nice. Talking in dragon was hard on the throat.
“That... that’s still extortion,” Caprica said.
“Don’t you have taxes where you’re from, princess?” Cholondee asked. She sounded genuinely curious.
“Of course, but those taxes go towards improving infrastructure and keeping citizens safe!” Caprica said.
“My port is very nice and strong, so that I can walk around it, and I keep people safe,” Cholondee said. “Just ask those pirates.” She gestured back with her head towards where the pirates were running.
The gesture punched a hole clean through the tarp of our balloon, and a loud hissing sound filled with air.
“That was there already,” Cholondee said.
“Awen!” I shouted. “We have holes!”
“Awa?” Came Awen’s reply from within her ball turret. “G-give me a minute! I’ll be right there.”
The Scallywags were a little worried about Cholondee at first, they seemed like they wanted to hide more than help, but then the hole just continued to hiss and Clive cleared his throat from the helm. “Captain, don’t mean to urge you on, but we’re losing altitude.”
That got them moving, because dragons might be a little scary, but so was crashing.
Cholondee watched the crew get to work patching up the few holes we’d gotten. “You know, there’s people in Port Royal that can fix your ship up for you.”
“Ah, but we need to make it to Port Royal for that to matter,” I said.
She hummed. “You should grow wings. Flying is much nicer than riding around in one of these flammable airboats.”
“I think I would like to fly,” I said. “I’ve flown on dragons and wyverns and of course on airships, and they all seem like nice ways to get around, though I wonder what it’d be like to fly under my own power. Maybe next time, instead of growing some ears, I’ll get some wings!”
The dragon nodded, then she glared up at the balloon which was forcing her to squeeze in. “Right, I’ll fly around for a while. Maybe head back home or grab something to eat. You should add a perch if you insist on flying in this thing.”
I nodded. That was a good idea. Maybe Awen could make a deployable dragon perch?
I said my goodbyes to Cholondee who launched herself off the Beaver’s side. Clive came up to me a moment later. “Hmm, didn’t wanna mention anything while the dragon was here, but the weight wasn’t helping us keep afloat.”
“Really? I guess that makes sense. And to think, she’s the youngest dragon I know. Her mom is bigger than the Beaver, I think.”
***
Advertisement
- In Serial22 Chapters
Viridescent Core
Some mortals see dungeons as a plague to destroy. Some mortals see dungeons as a resource to manage and harvest. Some mortals see dungeons as a place to train and advance. However, all of them agree on something. Dungeons are unnatural and deadly. Places where death stalks every corner and monsters thrive. What mortals forget, in their hubris of tools and civilizations, is that Mother Nature is often the deadliest of all. Feel free to write any comment, suggestion, or criticism. I read and appreciate every single one! Releases are on Mondays and Thursdays. With occasional bonus chapters on Saturdays. Have a nice day ^^
8 244 - In Serial28 Chapters
Warlock's Gate [DROPPED]
In the empire of Orinthian, Fallon Gaumond, a young Warlock, is determined to be free from her father’s controlling demands and become a Sentinel. At her side, cloaked in shadows, is her Dementher familiar, Asmodeus, who is equally committed to seeing the Warlock grow to reach her full potential. But dealing with her overly hungry companion while keeping her secret, illegal visits to Highguard’s city dungeon hidden is the least of Fallon’s problems. As a Praeditus, she is expected to serve alongside her father and the rest of Highguard’s Praefecti to resolve the growing problem of refugees fleeing an adversary even the strongest Sentinel dare not face alone. The Gates which strike Orinthian with ever-growing frequency and pour upon these war-hardened cities merciless invading hordes of monsters from other dimensions who seek to pillage, burn, and slaughter everything that stands in their way. Please Note this is my first attempt at a litRPG. I also ask that you keep an open mind as I will be diverging, in my own way, from many of the litRPG stories I have read. For those of you who missed it, this is a Multiple Lead Characters story, hence the tag. I should also mention that this will get crunchy as far as numbers go and please pay attention to the Profanity tag.
8 253 - In Serial59 Chapters
Silent Luna
After a terrible car accident when she was seven, Eirenae's life got turned upside down. Her father changed everything, becoming rotten and abusive to the point it caused her to stop speaking entirely. Eleven years later and she still lives by his rules, trapped under his thumb. She has nowhere to go; no life outside the awful one she's forced into at home, and any time she tries to speak, her voice fails her. Without much hope left, she suffers in silence. Until moving to a new town changes everything. Arriving at her new school, Eirenae immediately catches the attention of six students. They're the nicest anyone has ever been to her, but everything about them strikes her funny: they're naturally perfect, have insane athletic reflexes, and they keep using strange words like "Alpha", "Luna", and "pack". On top of it all, their eyes horrifyingly seem to change color and no matter how much she runs or gives hints she should be left alone, they won't stop being overly friendly. No one seems to be willing to explain anything to her, so maybe it's time to bring her life back into her own hands, discover what has been hiding from her past, and let herself be rescued. . . and maybe not particularly in that order!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-Book 1 of War of the Wolves-Precedes "Fatal War"-Started: August, 2018- Completed: May 1st, 2019-#1 in Abuse: 9/21/2019-#1 in Mate 10/5/2019-#1 in luna 10/16/2019-#3 in Werewolf 12/26/2019-#1 in Whitewolf 1/28/2020-#1 in Mute 2/9/2020-#2 in Telekinesis 4/25/20-#1 in Royalwolf 3/15/22
8 249 - In Serial200 Chapters
13 reasons why • gif imagines
gif imagines about characters from the netflix series '13 reasons why'.[ CHECK OUT BOOK TWO ]
8 159 - In Serial14 Chapters
The Core of a Factory
An abandoned steampunk arms factory, in the middle of a conflict torn former state of the Empire it served, gains a soul. This transforms it into a Lord, capable of turning land into power. Beset by enemies on all sides it must figure out how to win the war its creators lost a century ago. This is a progressive Dungeon Core novel (which is to say the core will progress and expand in scale, eventually) across multiple dimensions with different characteristics (e.g. steampunk, magic, mythological). It has rationalist leanings (paragraphs of reasoning) and litrpg leanings (there are stat blocks). The core game mechanical idea is something like "what if different flavors of magic power actually did come from controlling land" and then the story is: "what if there was a flavorless (artifact deck) dungeon core". Chapters will be relatively short (my aim is that in three column format each would fit on a wide screen monitor), the first few chapters - setting up the main character and mechanics - are currently the longest in the entire series. I write chapters in blocks, and then release them one a weekday (M-F; 6 PM GMT, unless RoyalRoad's publish thing screws up) until I run out. There may be a few days of gaps here and there if someone finds an egregious error I have to re-write around or if I am behind. In general though one can read this once a weekend. I may do slight retconns and edits, I'll make sure to put it in an authors note if I do.
8 89 - In Serial23 Chapters
There can be Darkness without Light
This is an story of a being that after all the destruction and the killing it had done, finally wanted peace.Follow the story of Hisrom, the so called Eternal Monster.After finally being reborn all he asks for is an peaceful life.But sadly fate had other plans for him.------------------------------------------------------------------------------The grammar gets better after chapter 5. The late chapters will be edited in the near future.Yo. This story will contain mature content so i warn ya, be 18 or more if you don't want me to come and spank ya. Or read at your own risk. The prologue chapter are a mess when it comes to the grammar and i do plan to edit it, so don't let them fool you. Come and check the story out.
8 146

