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“As soon as we’re healed, we have to go,” Voidsong said. “If we don’t rescue Shadowsong before this long night ends, she’ll be Thana’s forever.”
The elder dipped his head. “As you wish.” There was a pregnant pause, and then he continued. “I must apologize. In all the chaos, I didn’t look too closely, and my eyes… They are not what they used to be. A better dragon would have known the ruse those hatchlings—those mimics—pulled.”
Any animosity Voidsong felt for the snapper vanished. “No,” he replied, extending a wing to touch the other dragon’s side. “Shadowsong should have sensed it. I should have sensed it.” A bitter tone pinched his voice. “My sister was the one who noticed it first.” At the mention of his sibling, the nocturne pushed aside his self-pity and hurried over to the other group of dragons. An imperial as dark as a night sky blocked most of his view, but she stepped out of the way as soon as Voidsong approached.
“Night,” he said, ducking low to press the tip of his nose against his sister. “Is it bad?”
Nightsong shook her head, but it was the healer’s apprentice who answered. A wildclaw of vibrant green with eyes of blazing fire stood beside them, and it was from him that the warmth emanated. “She will be well. The injuries she sustained from the fall were minor, and easily healed away with magic.” His gaze flicked over Voidsong. “I will check you after.”
“There is no need.” Voidsong forced himself to straighten, although his bones ached from the effort. “And we haven’t the time. We need to save Shadowsong—our mentor. Every delay only endangers her life further.”
The imperial stepped forward. “Explain yourself,” she said. “I don’t understand.” She glanced at the last member of their miserable party, a lithe skydancer who radiated a faint bioluminescent glow. “We don’t understand.”
Voidsong felt frustration bubble up inside him. Did they not see the importance of time? But then he felt Nightsong’s tail brush against him and he looked down into the deep purple eyes of his sister. The healer’s magic still pressed all around her, and reluctantly Voidsong conceded. They would wait for her to heal regardless; he could spare a breath to explain the situation.
“My name is Voidsong,” he began. “This is my sister, Nightsong. We are apprentices, training to be Singers. Our mentor… Shadowsong. She is a Singer, and she was training us. Tonight was to be our last night.”
“What is it you do?” The imperial furrowed a brow, head tilting curiously. “Do you understand these creatures of mimicry?”
This time Nightsong answered. “The Singers fight them. Void and I have trained to sense their wicked magic, to chase them out of these lands. We knew your clan was under attack, and so Shadowsong led us here to help. It was worse than we expected.”
“Yes.” The skydancer spoke then, voice light and ephemeral. “Those false hatchlings were not the only deception in our clan tonight.”
“We underestimated their strength.” Voidsong lowered his head. “For that we are sorry.” The apology did not last long, however, and a moment later he was looking once more at all of them. “But we cannot linger. Thana is a powerful witch, the wielder of all these beasts. She seeks to claim souls, and if we do not recapture our last ones, they will be trapped with her for all eternity.”
The imperial’s eyes widened. “Our lost ones? You mean our captured clanmates might still have a chance?”
“Yes.” Voidsong felt hope in the sudden fire in the imperial’s eyes. She was a large dragon, formidable in appearance. It would be a relief to have such a dragon working with them. “But it must be tonight, or else all is lost.”
The skydancer turned her piercing gaze on the wildclaw. “Are you almost done, Forest?”
The magic seemed to flicked around Nightsong. Its warmth extended far beyond the glow, and Voidsong felt it from where he was standing. He knew the healing was complete when the warmth receded and was replaced by the cool night air.
“It is done,” Forest replied. He looked once more towards Voidsong, clearly itching to tend to the scrapes and bruises flowering on the exposed bits of the nocturne’s skin, but he did not press a second time.
“Kaltrina, Elune. Will you stand with these young nocturnes?” The snapper spoke for the first time in a while, his voice taking on an authority that only older, experienced dragons could wield. “Will you stand with me?”
The two straightened. “Yes, Commander.” Their voices sounded as one.
“And you, Forest? You are a healer, but tonight you might need to injure.” The snapper sounded almost apologetic at this, but he looked at the wildclaw with the same amount of expectation as the other two.
Forest flexed his claws. “I have not forgotten how to fight, Tsvetan. I will stand with you.” He glanced at Voidsong and dipped his head. “And you.”
Emotion pressed at Voidsong’s heart. “Then we’d best get flying.”
-----Â
The journey was quick. Kaltrina carried Tsvetan, the snapper’s wings not made for the quick journey their constrained time required. The imperial led the way, scales so dark and star-filled that she nearly disappeared in the night sky. Only the gold she wore—shimmering metal glimmering against the moonlight—gave her away. Forest, Elune, and the two siblings flew quickly after, and for such a large group they made excellent time. Kaltrina cut a brutal pace, wings slick against the night air.
Voidsong watched Night fly ahead to shout at the imperial. “We’re getting closer!” she called out, voice carrying back towards him. He sensed it too, that anxious feeling that always came from the presence of a mimic. Thana’s army was many in number, and the weight of all their aura’s was a living thing that Voidsong could feel in the air. It always amazed him that others could not sense it.
Nightsong seemed to scan the ground, then come to a decision. She flicked a wing to get Kaltrina’s attention, then began to dive down towards the forest below. The rest of the party followed after, Nightsong leading them to a clear strip in between the thick of the trees.
“Night.” As soon as Voidsong neared, he glided towards his sister. “We need a plan. We don’t have the arsenal that proper Singers would, and that puts us at a disadvantage.”
The others gathered near, and Night spoke quickly. “I know,” she said, brow furrowed in thought. “But… I think it is also an advantage.”
“How do you mean?”
Nightsong shook her head. “Thana will not expect us to be so bold as to fly to her lair of mimics. We are untrained, as you said, and thus cannot take her on as a full Singer could.” She looked to the four outsiders. “But we have allies, and know-how. We don’t need to kill her, not tonight, but we can maybe get away with stealing back our friends.”
The two siblings shared a look, and it seemed as if they held an entire conversation in that one look. At last, Voidsong turned away. “Perhaps you are right.” He paused, then looked to the others. “Can any of you summon magic?” To Forest: “You can, yes? As a healer? Is any of your magic offensive?”
Forest nodded, unbothered by the violence Voidsong was asking of him. “Yes,” he replied easily. “Fire can burn as well as warm.”
“I have magic as well,” Elune said. “Although only a squire, I have trained many druids before joining this clan.” Budding vines seemed to weep gently out of her feathers, flowers blooming in the fur of her neck. The pretty stems quickly grew thorns, all coiling around her limbs. She did not seem bothered by the press of them.
Nightsong looked absolutely delighted by this, and perhaps any other night she would have peppered the skydancer with a dozen questions. On this night, however, she only nodded, then looked to Voidsong. “And we still have some tricks up our sleeves. We may only be apprentices, but we are also Shadow born. We will put up a fight.”
“Then we are ready?” Tsvetan asked. “Shall we march on them like an army at their gates?” At their expressions, he rumbled out a laugh. “Oh, be calm. I meant it only in jest. I’m sure you’ve already got a way to sneak our way in, hm?” He looked at them with twinkling eyes.
“Yes,” Voidsong said reluctantly, flicking his gaze over to Kaltrina. “And it relies mostly on Kaltrina walking very steadily.”
 ----
 The plan was perhaps foolish. It was the kind of plan that could only be devised by a rag-tag group of strangers being led by not yet fully trained Singers.
“If this works, I will eat my own tail.” Nightsong’s void was barely more than a whisper, and yet it still managed to annoy Voidsong just as much as if she’d shouted.
“Shh,” he hissed, flicking her with his tail. “It will work.”
All five smaller dragons hid carefully underneath Kaltrina’s wings as she slowly crawled along the earth towards the lair. Her dark wings were stretched far out, with the two nocturnes on one side, and the other three on the other. Kaltrina was practically sliding on her belly, keeping so low to the ground that even the smaller dragons were forced to duck.
Of the limited magic that nocturne apprentices were expected to know even in training, the most useful skill was masking their presence from the mimics. This was taught for safety, not just of themselves, but for those they were expected to save. It worked well now, and even though Voidsong felt many mimic auras around him as they entered Thana’s camp, not one drew closer to their group.
This was the mimic’s secret, and the Singer’s, too: mimics could not see what they could not sense.
Once within the camp, not even Nightsong made a sound. Whatever their clan excelled in, the four outsiders also made no sound. Kaltrina did well to mask her own wings and tail with that of the wind, as if they were nothing more than a breeze stirring the grass.
Voidsong felt out with his magic. The aura of the mimics was congested in the center of the camp, and that was where he expected Thana to be. This was also where the captured dragons would be held, kept close to Thana so that she might quickly absorb them once the night passed and her magic achieved its finality.
Nightsong sensed her too, because they both shared a look before Night pressed her nose into Kaltrina’s wing and guided the imperial closer to the massive tent that made up Thana’s personal quarters.
The tent itself closely resembled a circus tent, a canvas stretched tight in an angular circle and flags catching the breeze. It towered over them all, even Kaltrina, and was easily three times the size of even a large breed dragon. It was a daunting sight, but Voidsong nudged his sister along, and although she hesitated a moment, she did continue to lead the others inside the tent.
Within, all was dark. The bare moonlight that illuminated the way outside did not seem to penetrate the thick canvas that made the walls of the tent, and once the flap fell closed behind them, they were alone in a dark room.
Or at least that was what it felt like for a moment before Elune’s glow resurfaced and the room was illuminated in the pale green light of her body. “Sorry,” she whispered. “It is hard to control.”
“No apologies needed,” Voidsong whispered back. “I’m grateful for it.” He squinted around the room, trying to figure out their surroundings. It looked like a food supply room, crates stacked high and smelling of rich meats and spices. Thana’s spirit had a vicious hunger, but so too did her stomach it seemed.
“Come,” Nightsong urged, leading the way to a wide archway. It towered over her, and it occurred to Void how they all seemed dwarfed by the building. It seemed strange to him, seeing as he had never seen another dragon with Thana, and she herself was a nocturne as well, the same size as the rest of them.
Carefully, the group glided through the tent. They were guided by Nightsong through twisting corridors, and she in turn was guided by the strong sense of nearby mimics. Like a hound sniffing out a meal, she led the way with an acute certainty.
Voidsong felt the strength of the mimic’s auras as they drew nearer, and when he thought his head might burst from the feel of it, Nightsong stopped short. She seemed to stare ahead, eyes out of focus, before blinking and coming to.
“Something is wrong,” she whispered, turning sharply. “We should turn ba-”
“Oh, nonsense.” The voice was high and ringing, seemingly coming from every direction at once. A light flashed on from nowhere at all, illuminating the group in a circle of white light. The walls had disappeared, and suddenly they found themselves in the center of a circular ring. It had been an illusion.
“A shame you figured it out, dear,” Thana crowed, “because it was such fun watching you all stumble around in the dark like freshly born hatchlings. Really, you Singers provide no end of entertainment for me.” There was a pregnant pause, and then the sneering voice continued. “Oh, but you aren’t Singers yet, are you? A pity. And a waste.”
Shapes twisted out of the shadows. At first, they were shape only, then Voidsong saw as they took on the shapes of dragons. With dawning horror, he realized he was looking at himself. And there was Nightsong, although her eyes were all black. He turned in a circle and saw duplicates of their entire party, all with eyes filled with void.
“The Shade?” Tsvetan asked, the old dragon sounding uncertain. “Does she work with that fowl darkness?”
“Darkness?” The voice tutted. “No, no. Can’t you see? They do not shy away from light.” The moon of light spread out wide, and suddenly the entire room was lit up. They were in the center ring of a circus show, their doppelgangers encircling them. Beyond, seats were stacked high and full of writhing mimics. It was a miracle the weight of their auras hadn’t suffocated Voidsong or Nightsong, but it occurred to Void that Thana might have been concealing the mimic’s energy just as much as the apprentices were concealing their own.
“Surprised?” Thana tittered and laughed. “You thought to trick me, apprentices? With four outsiders?” Her voice dropped an octave. “Or did you forget I know all your tricks?”
“We could never forget, betrayer.” Voidsong knew she was goading him, but he gladly took the bait. Anything to spit in her face.
“Is that what they’re calling me these days?” Thana’s voice was right behind him, but when he whipped around it was only to see himself. Her voice came from the mimic’s mouth, and it was strange to see himself speak another’s words. “You want to know what they used to call me?” The mimic trotted around Voidsong before grinning at him.
“Darksong.”
Void turned to see his sister, her face stony after uttering the name. She looked at Void, and he back. “Darksong,” he repeated.
Thana’s voice came from all around them again, amplified. “Darksong! The Dreamer!” She laughed, the sound pitched and strange. “I do not dream any more, apprentices.”
Voidsong found courage. “Release our mentor,” he called out. “Release their clanmates. Have you not feasted enough this year?”
The mimics in the stands roared and rioted suddenly, their cries feverish. The dragons in the ring jumped at the sudden commotion, and it was a moment before Thana deigned to silence them.
“Enough?” she barked out, her echoing voice silencing the mimics. “It is never enough, apprentice. Do you know what it takes to fill a void?”
A shape descended from the rafters, utterly black and nearly too quick to catch. It landed in the center of them all, and all six dragons turned to look upon it.
Thana stood on her hind legs, turning her face to the apprentices. Her body was nothing at all, and watching her move was strange. She was a lack of space, a thing of nonexistence. She had no shape, only the outline of a body. Where a dragon was supposed to stand, only a black void remained.
The shape’s mouth moved, and from it came Thana’s voice. “It takes everything.” She took a dangerous step forward, and the weight of her aura sent a splitting migraine through Voidsong’s head. “And I will at you all raw.”
[pm] Me neither? But apparently the rent was bothering him more than I though. I’m a really horrible brother And ok, I’ll see when he’s free too and I’ll get back to you! This would be really cool it this works out.
[pm] I’m glad he did, beats sleeping in an abandoned building that at one point used to be your home. Well, like I said, I don’t actually have a job yet, so it may take a bit for me to be able to contribute to the rent. That sounds good, thank you again. Not many strangers would be so willing to help out someone they don’t know.Â
[pm] Um. So Hunter said he would consider it! He just wants to meet you and ask you some questions first. Are you free anytime this week?
[pm] Shit really? Wow, I admittedly wasn’t expecting him to be interested in the proposition for some reason. That’s a very reasonable request. I don’t really have an official daytime job yet, so I’m free during the day every day this week.Â
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
âś“ Live Streamingâś“ Interactive Chatâś“ Private Showsâś“ HD Qualityâś“ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming