Our trek towards Elijiah continued, as Ikol and I were at long last leaving the forest that touched Hoggdin’s mountain range.
We just needed a nice spot to sleep each night, preferably covered, with a sturdy object for Ikol to lean against. It was one of the few things I took care of as I could move much faster than him when it came time to look for shelter at night; Lords forbid we slept out in the open. I imagined in Ikol’s mind that the open sky somehow posed a threat. Ikol also couldn’t sleep unless at least our tails were touching because he would be too scared to fall asleep. Also, we had to be careful if it was thundering because what if it began storming and we got wet? Miril clearly shielded him at least a bit; Ikol was useful for getting food though. I was enjoying being able to tell him what to do without one of the adults lecturing me on how I shouldn’t boss Ikol around. That was the part of the
“Chef! Look! Plains!” Ikol chimed excitedly as we got even closer to the edge. He still couldn’t remember to call me Lux half the time though.
“Yes Ikol, we are finally getting out of the forest.” I agreed as Ikol did happy little hops around me.
“Do you think we can start running faster?” Ikol inquired. I mean, our pace had been steady, not fast.
“We are making sure we have time to hunt and find shelter each day. We can’t tire ourselves moving at our full speed.” I informed him yet again. We only did our full speed between lunch and dinner so far.
“But it’s so flat. And open.” Ikol observed as he kind of shot his head forward and back to emphasize the flat part.
“What if we can’t find a meal? We are not in a hurry.” I retorted. Ikol mulled it over.
“Rumma rumma would be bad.” Ikol agreed after a solid ten seconds of thinking. I fought the urge to sigh as I knew what he meant.
“Also, when we do run we’ll be able to cover more distance as we’re not moving around the forest floor.” I pointed out which made Ikol do another happy hop.
“Chef is so smart!” Ikol cheered. Hmmmm.
We kept moving forward, having finally reached the plains. Given we were barely out of the forest I imagined we had a lot of distance to cover; it was noticeably getting warmer than where we started now. Unlike by the mountains where the fields were a gold color, the grass was a bright azure color here. The scent was a tad sweeter as a rolling breeze swept across the plains, making the grass move in a way that resembled waves. The two of us continued our trek, walking into the plains where the rolling fields were up to my shoulders. Luckily, the sky was nice and clear, making a bright sunny day to walk through the plains. Were these the Synbca Plains? Did we somehow miss that incredibly hard to pronounce mountain? I checked the
As the two of us were traveling into the plains, there was a roar from some kind of dragon that clearly was nowhere near the size of Hoggdin in the vicinity. It sounded close to us, but probably was not meant for us by how far off it sounded. Ikol and I paid it no mind as we continued to trek across the plains and admiring the new terrain we were walking through. I was not that familiar with plains, was Ikol? Hopefully he was familiar with what we needed to hunt here to actually eat. I did a bit of a scan around as we walked, just seeing what was here. There were very few trees, let alone something to not be sleeping in the open. There were numerous little things that might make Ikol a headache to deal with when it came time to sleep. Maybe I was worrying over nothing; maybe these were concerns that were valid.
Stolen from its original source, this story is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.
I looked around the plains while we continued forward, trying to gauge what was around us for shelter or food. What was there to eat out here? I didn’t see any wildlife or birds at the moment. As for shelter, the sparse trees were looking like our only options outside of making a burrow of some sort. I was not sleeping in dirt, so under the tree or sky was going to win out. Hopefully the weather remained nice and clear until we were out of the plains. Which was worse, going hungry for a day or so or dealing with Ikol sleeping in the relative open? It seemed ill advised to start running without knowing our food situation first though. We needed a plan before we enjoyed the ability to sprint virtually unimpeded. My hopes were being kept tempered until I had better information to go off of.
From my scanning around I saw a crimson-colored dragon flying towards Ikol and me. Was this thing picking a fight with us? The dragon that was nowhere near the size of Hoggdin barreled towards us, being maybe a quarter of Hoggdin’s more casual length and possessed nowhere near the muscle Hoggdin possessed. The horns on this dragon were far less imposing than the ones that Hoggdin possessed as well.
It landed in front of us, looking annoyed that we were walking in the plains. For now, avoiding fighting was likely the smarter move as it may have had friends nearby nor did Ikol and I have a food plan. I also just didn’t want to waste the time as the dragon seemed fairly weak. What was the rule again? Beings that had been on their
“We are passing through on our
“So am I.” the dragon replied with a toothy smile. Well. That made this technically fair, I guess.
“Noted.” I replied as I went to keep walking with Ikol.
“I never said you could go by, fox.” the dragon snapped at us. Fox? It really wanted to fight to call me that.
I told him mentally. He sat down and just looked at the dragon.
“Are you laying down?!” the dragon snarled, as he interpreted the action as insultingly as I had hoped.
“I dislike being challenged by weaklings, so I told my friend here to wait a minute for me.” I taunted the dragon.
“Weakling?! I am n-” the dragon began to roar as I struck.
I immediately coated my claws with
“I surrender!” the dragon cried out as I was pummeling him.
“Why should I spare you? You chose this fight, and ooku ooku.” I asked as I temporarily stopped attacking. Ikol shot up, hopped over, and kept his eyes on the dragon.
“I made a mistake!” the dragon groveled, clearly in quite a bit of pain.
“I tried being peaceful, but you insisted for a fight. You even called me a fox; I’m not sure you have sufficiently learned your lesson.” I taunted the dragon, slowly leaning my
“What do you want?!” the dragon inquired as he realized he was not in a good negotiating position.
“My friend and I are going to Elijiah first. You flying us there would save us a lot of effort.” I answered with a smile.
“Fine. How long?” the dragon conceded in a bitter tone.
“I think you should be talking to me in a nicer tone as I didn’t just barely win. I think until I feel the insult has been sufficiently repaid you’re going to transport us.” I answered the dragon. He nearly protested, but I pressed the
“Yes ma’am.” He sighed. The dragon looks so infuriated at the moment.
“And if you think of trying something like fleeing or sneak attacking either of us, I take permanent action, so it doesn’t happen twice.” I threatened him with my best smile.
“Yes boss.” The dragon replied, looking irritated.
“That is yes Chef!” Ikol corrected him. I swat Ikol before that stuck.

