Hiya! I’m here as Holly today š Do you know what day it is today? It’s No Socks Day š„³ and I wrote a story.Ā Mated to the Fire DragonĀ was released on the 6th. I feel a bit overwhelmed at the moment.
If you’ve followed me for some time, you know my mother passed away back in November #fuckcancer. This is me processing that, with an added aversion to socks, dragons, and a certain blacksmith because why not?
It’s not a sad story, and no one dies, but Zale is very ill, and he is preparing to let go.
So there is illness and grieving what will never come to be, unless you find a sock-less dragon, of course.
I came home yesterday evening after having been in Mum’s house clearing out things. AND Mated to the Fire Dragon was released on her birthday. She would’ve turned 64 on the 6th of May. So I’m a little raw and a little weepy, but the story isn’t!
It’s all about life, about finding a miracle, living for several hundred years, and embracing love.
Everything you want can be yours. All you have to do is mate a dragon. It’s simple š
To Mum š„
Mated to the Fire Dragon
Zale wanted to see a dragon. He never expected a miracle.
Zale Hagan is dying. He doesnāt have many days left, but he wants to see a dragon before he leaves the world behind. As a fisherman, heās seen where land ends many times, but he wants to visit the town where the human realm ends and the dragon realm begins.
Albus the Abomination is a blacksmith on Dragon Row. As a white dragon, he has no status and does his best to keep out of the way of the other dragons living there. But one day Zale steps into his smithy, and everything inside Albus catches fire.
Albus can tell Zale is very ill, but he canāt let him die. Dragon mates donāt get sick, and they live for a long time. Albus tries his best to get one of the other dragons to mate with Zale, but when no one wants to, Albus is at a loss. He could breathe fire into him, but then Zale would have to live his entire life with a white dragon, and no one wants that, do they?
NOTE:Ā Mated to the Fire DragonĀ takes place on the same street asĀ The Book Dragonās LairĀ but can be read as a standalone story.
Buy links:
Paranormal Gay Romance: 38,392 words
JMS BooksĀ ::Ā AmazonĀ ::Ā books2read.com/MatedToTheFireDragon
Chapter 1
Albus the Abomination never wanted to come to the human realm. Heād dug his claws in for as long as he could, but when heād heard his mother discuss how to make his death look like an accident with a group of her friends, heād grabbed his sodalite and flown off the tower without another word to anyone in his family.
Why she wouldāve bother to make it look like an accident, he didnāt know. Sheād never kept quiet about wanting him dead.
Heād gone. Left everything he knew, went through the portal, and started a new life. It might not be the kind of life he dreamed of, but he wanted to live, and crossing over into the human realm upped his chances of survival considerably.
Dragons loved fiercely. They worshiped beauty, adored everything sparkly, revered gemstones and precious metals. The darker the skin, the more important the dragon. Albusā family came from a family of dark blue skin. Perhaps it was why he loved his sodalite stone so much because it reminded him of home? Dark blue with little veins of white, a symbol of how he dirtied the bloodline. In the stone, it was beautiful, in the bloodline, not so much.
He shifted his throat and mouth to be able to breathe fire and blew a flame at the iron in front of him, watched it glow a pretty orange, then swung his hammer.
Heād been a disgrace to his family from the moment heād driven his egg tooth through the shell. Maybe it had taken a bit longer. He didnāt think his parents had been able to see the color of his skin through the first crack.
He swung the hammer again. The clang of metal hitting metal helped disperse some of the shame, not all, but some.
There was no color more despicable than white, and when heād emerged from the egg, his parents had been horrified. His mother had wanted to drown him right away despite the hard work of laying and tending to an egg, but his fatherās mother had stopped her. Sheād said to at least give it a summer to see if his skin changed in the sun.
It did. It turned an angry red, stung, and flaked a few days later. The new skin emerging was as white as it had been before. Pale white. Egg shell white. Plain as can be.
He swung the hammer again. The metal was too cold for it to do any good, and if he wasnāt careful, heād break it. He always had to be mindful of his strength, but it was one of the things he liked about being a blacksmith. He could warm the metal, make it soft and pliant, but if he used too much force, it would break.
He shifted one hand into a dragonās claw, ignoring how his skin almost luminesced in the dim light, breathed fire, and twisted the metal before dunking it in the bucket of water.
āHoly shit! Why did you do that?ā
Albus glanced over his shoulder. He hadnāt heard anyone enter the smithy, and it took him a moment to realize no one had.
Outside, in the early morning light, stood a male, a human man Albus hadnāt seen before. He didnāt know the humans in Edgeādidnāt know the dragons either. They avoided him, and he could understand why. The same rules might not apply in the human realm as back home, but no one wanted to ruin their reputation by being seen with an abomination.
āDo you need medical care?ā The man didnāt enter the smithy, but he was hovering on the doorstep. Normally, Albus closed the door. He was sure heād closed the door this morning too. Maybe not. Heād woken from a nightmare and had come straight here.
āNo.ā The short word came out snarly and harsh.
The man frowned. āAre you sure? You touched glowing metal.ā
Hadnāt he seen him breathing the fire? Dragons werenāt harmed by fire as long as they were in dragon form, and heād changed his hand.
Albus turned around, and the man gasped. Heād stopped wincing, at least visibly, at peopleās reactions to him. He was the freak on Dragon Row. All the other shops dealt with gemstones and precious metals, Albus dealt with iron. There was no iron in a dragonās treasure cave.
āHoly fuck! Youāre a dragon.ā
Albus didnāt think Reverend Goodwin would appreciate this young manās language, but then there wasnāt much the reverend liked. Albus could relate. One of the things he liked the least was the reverend himself. He wished someone would eat him.
When Albus had first arrived, heād learned the reverend arranged matings. Albus had been excited by the prospect. Heād always known he wouldnāt have a mate, no one would mate a white dragon even if he survived long enough to reach mature age, but it all changed when he came here. A joy heād never experienced had bubbled in his chest, but then the reverend had changed his mindāor someone else had changed his mind.
Heād come by the smithyāit hadnāt been a smithy then, Albus hadnāt decided what heād do on this side of the realm yetāand told him there were no available mates. Albus had been disappointed but had accepted it. He hadnāt walked around Edge. He didnāt know how many humans resided there. It was possible they all were paired up already.
It wasnāt until a few years later when Nithe the Nefarious had arrived, and the reverend had hurried to present mates to him, Albus realized there were mates. If you were another color than white, there were mates.
It was nothing new, but it hurt that heād allowed himself to hope.
āRight.ā The man bounced on the heels of his feet. āI didnāt realize⦠I guess Iāve reached Edge?ā
Albus shifted entirely back into human form and nodded. In response, the manās face split into a grin.
āReally?ā He took a step into the smithy and spun around. āWow. Is it yours?ā
Albus nodded again. He never allowed anyone into the smithy. He had his shop; people were welcome to browse his creations thereānot many didābut this was where he worked. It was private, his personal space.
āAmazing. I believed dragons only did useless things. No offense, but youāre working. A real job, I mean.ā
Holding his breath, Albus tried to come up with a way to answer. Was it an insult? He wasnāt trading gemstones, there had already been several shops doing that on Dragon Row when heād arrived, and no one would trade gemstones with a white dragon if they could do it with a red or a blue. Who would go to Albus the Abomination when they could go to Saxon the Sinful or Mort the Monstrous?
āI didnāt mean to interrupt.ā The human sent him a blinding smile, and Albusā heart made an effort to escape his body. No one ever smiled at him. This man would stop too once he talked to people in the city.
āWhatās your name?ā
āZale Hagan, at your service.ā The man bowed, then all color drained from his face, and he reached out to steady himself on a wrought iron bookshelf Albus had yet to finish. The iron parts were done, but he needed wooden shelves and he didnāt know where to find a woodworker. He could do them himself if he got hold of wood, but he didnāt know where to go.
āFuck.ā Zale breathed in deeply. Gone was the smile and bubbly energy.
āDo you need medical care?ā Albus believed there was some kind of healer on this side of the veil. He flicked his tongue to taste the air and winced. Zale was sick, sicker than anyone Albus had met before.
Zale waved the hand he didnāt use to cling to the shelfāgood thing it was sturdy. āNothing can be done. Iāve been to all the doctors I could find, but they canāt help me. I wanted to see the edge of the world before my demise.ā He gave Albus a sorrowful look. āI guess itās time to embrace my fate.ā
āAnd what fate is that?ā What a weird human.
āMy death, I mean. Itās time to accept I donāt have much longer.ā
An invisible fist curled around Albusā soul. He was aware humans died young, but the man didnāt look to be more than⦠it was hard to tell with humans, but thirty-five maybe. āYou should wait a bit longer.ā
Zale barked a laugh, still holding onto the shelf. āI wish I could.ā He sobered. āIām ill. Something is growing in my belly, and itās eating me from the inside.ā
Albus shuddered. āA parasite?ā
Zaleās eyes grew wide, then he shook his head. āNo, nothing sentient, though it has a life of its own.ā
It took effort not to take a step back. Dragons couldnāt be infected by human diseases, but Albus didnāt want to have anything growing inside of him.
* * * *
Zale watched the dragon, and longing welled up inside of him. He wished heād have time to get to know a dragon, but he feared he had little more than days left. It was a miracle heād made it this far. Heād fully expected to die on the way, and heād been forced to remain in a few cities along the trip, had spent a few nights in hospitals.
There was nothing that could be done, so as soon as he could stand on his own, they let him go and heād continued his travels to the end of the world.
He was done. It was over. Heād set his affairs in order, had sold his half of his boat to Dylan since he refused it as a gift. Heād get the money back when Zale died. It was all in his will. Heād sold the rest of his things, and heād used the money to get here. He still had some left. It would go to his parents once he no longer was around, and he assumed theyād give part of it to Bay, his brother.
Heād said goodbye to his friends and family, but he wanted one last adventure. Heād sailed to the horizon until there was nothing but him and the waves. Heād seen the end of the land, but he wanted to see the end of the human realm. Edge. He assumed there were other portals leading to the dragon realm, but heād never heard of one. So heād packed a couple of changes of clothes, kissed his mother goodbye, engulfed his father in a wordless hug, and walked away.
The last theyād see of him was, if not a healthy man, then at least a mostly healthy-looking one. One who could walk on his own, who wasnāt bed-bound and lost to fevers and pain. He spent days lost in fevers and pain. They came more and more often now. Heād lost his strength, his legs didnāt carry him for any long walks anymore, and he had to rest several times a day. What precious time he had left was overtaken by fatigue.
At least heād spare his family what was to come, what had already come. He had no appetite anymore and had lost a lot of weight. Seeing a dragon had sparked enough joy to fight off the lethargy for a few glorious seconds, but now he was fading fast. He needed to sit.
āIām sorry, but do you have a chair or a stool or something?ā
The dragon looked around, as if seeing the room for the first time. Zale looked too. There was no hearth or whatever a blacksmithās fireplace was called. A dragon blacksmith. He wished he could tell Dylan.
āI donāt think I have one, but itās time to open the shop, anyway.ā
āRight, Iāllā¦ā He allowed his legs to fold, but before he landed on the floor, strong arms wrapped around him. Zale gasped in surprise. Damn, heād moved fast.
āThe floor is dirty.ā
Zale glanced down and realized the dragon was barefoot. āYouāre not wearing shoes.ā
He looked away so fast, Zale feared heād inadvertently insulted him. Maybe dragons didnāt wear shoes.
āWhatās your name?ā Zale did his best to ignore being carried. A month ago, no one wouldāve been able to carry him, both because heād been too heavy, and heād been healthy enough to fight off anyone who tried. Now he could accept being carried, or spend part of his day sprawled on the dirty stone floor in a smithy.
It took a few seconds before the dragon answered. āAlbus the Abomination.ā
Zale didnāt think he imagined the wince, and he did nothing to hide his own. Who in their right mind named their kid Abomination? Heād heard dragons had weird names, but often they were called something with strength or⦠They valued strange things. Heād heard of one dragon named Frightful, Finn the Frightful, or something similar. āDo all dragons have alliterations in their names?ā
āYes.ā
āWhatās your motherās name?ā
āOrinda the Odious.ā
Zale chuckled. āItās not.ā
Albus looked down at him, his pupils changing into cat-like slits and his eyes glowing red like rubies. Magnificent, but fear blocked Zaleās throat. Shit.
āIt is.ā
Zale nodded his agreement. It was, of course, it was. Could someone name their kid Albus the Abomination, someone else could name theirs Orinda the Odious.
āMy motherās name is Ocean.ā
Albus blinked at him, his eyes turning human again. āOcean?ā
He nodded. āMy brotherās name is Bay.ā
āAnd your father?ā
Zale grinned. āGeorge. Heās not from the coast.ā
āYouāre from the coast?ā
Zale nodded.
āAnd when youāre from the sea, you have sea names?ā Albus bent to open the door to one of the narrow, tall houses on the street. It was like stepping into a fairytale. An entire street of small, tower-like houses. They had to be at least four floors. Some towered over the others, but no house appeared broader than another.
āWow, this road isāā Zale didnāt have time to say anything else before Albus stepped into the shop. There were things everywhereāshelves, large wooden boxes filled with what looked like hooks, coat racks, wine stands, tables without tabletops, room dividers, but most of all there were candle holders. Wall mounted, floor standing, chandeliers hanging from the ceiling, and some scattered around the floor.
āHoly fuck!ā
Albus jumped at his outburst.
āDid you make all these?ā There were too many things to give them justice, and there wasnāt any order to where things stood or how they were organized, which was too bad. The more Zale looked, the more amazed he became. āYouāre an artist.ā
āI donāt deal in art. Itās too risky.ā
āBut you sell these. These are your things, your shop?ā
Albus grimaced. āOn this side of the veil, everyone is paper-note dragons. If I get enough paper notes, I invest in gemstones, but my treasure is still small.ā
Zale tried to process what he was saying without much luck. All dragons on this side of the veil collected money? Humans did too. āHave you been on this side of the veil for long?ā
Albus put him on an iron-wrought stool by the counter, next to the brass cash register. āDid you make this too?ā
Albus looked at the cash register with narrowed eyes. āI donāt like working in brass.ā
āOh. But could you make one?ā
For a second, scales covered his throat before smoothing out into skin again. He flicked a forked tongue as he moved away, which made Zale freeze. Shit, he hadnāt known they had forked tongues. Knowledge about dragons wasnāt widespread, and not much reached small seaside towns like the one he came from.
āToo many details.ā
Zale nodded his understanding. Buttons, and he assumed there were a lot of cogs and stuff inside. Not things you made in a smithy, perhaps.
āIāll go clean up.ā And then he was gone.
Zale slumped against the counter, the pain in his stomach gnawing at him. He closed his eyes for a moment, wishing for more time, but he was so tired.
There was a chime of a bell when the door to the shop opened, and a priest entered. He looked around in distaste, and when his gaze landed on Zale, he stilled. āWho are you?ā
Where he came from, they werenāt big on formalities, but hospitality was important. āZale Hagan.ā
The manās eyes narrowed and something close to a sneer crept onto his lips. āAnd what are you doing here?ā
He was saved from replying by Albus entering the shop. āReverend.ā
The sneer bloomed. āAlbus the Abomination.ā
Since Albus didnāt move a muscle, Zale assumed heād foreseen what kind of greeting heād get.
āWhy is there a human on that side of the counter?ā
Rude. Zale wished heād had the energy to stand. He wasnāt as strong as heād been, his muscles fading with each passing minute, but he was taller than the reverend, and something inside urged him to stand united with Albus against him.
Albus didnāt answer, his eyes had changed to the glowing red color Zale had seen earlier, but it was the only indication heād heard the reverendās question.
Zale used the counter for support and stood. He did his best not to show what it cost him and smiled at the reverend. āHow can we help you?ā
āWe?ā The reverend slid his cold gaze over Zale. āI donāt know who you are.ā
Did he know everyone in this city? Maybe he did. Zale was unsure of how big it was, but it was a tourist town. He couldnāt possibly keep track of the people coming and going.
āIām with Albus the Astute.ā He gestured at Albus so there wouldnāt be any confusion about who he meant. Albus hadnāt shown much emotion before, but now his face grew into a blank mask.
āYouāre his mate?ā The words dripped with distaste.
āWhatās it to you if I am?ā Oh, shit. He didnāt mind pissing the reverend off, though he should play nice with the church considering where he was heading, but he didnāt want to offend Albus. Would having a male mate make him less of a dragon? Heād heard the dragons coming here often took human mates, but maybe it was a bad thing in the eyes of a dragon too?
āIām the one handling the human-dragon matings and Albus the Abominationāā he emphasized Abomination āāhasnāt been approved.ā
The growl coming from Albus had Zaleās heart quicken, and he fought against the need to sit.
āWhat Albus the Adroit does is not your business. Now, how can we help you?ā
Red painted the reverendās face as he spluttered. āYou canāt change his name!ā
Zale glanced at Albus, who still held on to his blank face. āI donāt see how what I call Albus the Adept is any of your business. Did you have a reason to grace us with your presence?ā
What little energy Zale had was quickly leaving him. He needed to sit, or his legs would soon go out from under him, but he didnāt want to show any weakness. He didnāt mind if Albus knew he was hanging on by a thread, but admitting defeat to the reverend would sting more than Zale wanted to admit.
āA nozzle on one of the churchās candlesticks has come off, and I was wondering if you could attach it again.ā He dug out a heavy-looking bronze candle holder from the bag he was carrying and then held up a small plate-like thingāthe nozzleāfrom his pocket. āIf you could weld it back into place.ā
Weld? Zale didnāt say anything. This was Albusā field of expertise, so heād sit this one out. And sit he did. It still hurt to have to lower himself in front of the reverend, but he made it look as nonchalant as he could, as if heād lost interest now when they were talking shop.
āI can fix it.ā Albusā voice was growly, and when he stepped forward to grab the candle holder Zale was struck by how big he was. Not only was he more than a head taller than the reverend, but he was also twice as broad. Blacksmith, lots of heavy lifting.
āCan you do it now? I need to get back to the church.ā
Albus nodded, and he plucked the nozzle from the reverendās hand.
āI can take your payment while Albus is working.ā Zale didnāt know what all the buttons meant, but there was one that was bigger than the rest, and he wanted to push it.
āItās for the church.ā The outraged tone had Zale fighting a grin. He wasnāt normally this petty.
āYes, and the church will want to show their appreciation for Albusā hard work, not to mention how important it is to keep a dragon fed. If all he has to eat is the customers daring to enter the shop, there will be a problem.ā
Albus whipped around and stared at him, but Zale ignored him.
The reverend more or less threw a bill on the counter, which Zale quickly picked up. āThank you.ā He placed it in one of the slots and closed the drawer with a grin. The reverend glared, but Zale didnāt care. He wouldnāt be here long enough to have to suffer any repercussions, and he hoped he hadnāt made things harder for Albus.
It didnāt take many minutes before Albus came back into the shop and handed the candle holder to the reverend. āDone.ā Then he walked in behind the counter without so much as looking at the reverend. Zale bit the inside of his cheek and waited until the bell above the door chimed before he chuckled.
He reached out and patted Albusā arm. āIām so sorry if I made things harder for you, but he wasnāt pleasant to talk to. It was childish of me.ā
Albus studied him for a second. āHatchlings are rude?ā
Hatchlings? Ah, childish. āThey can be.ā
Albus nodded as if it explained everything. āYouāre young, so it makes sense.ā
A laugh bubbled out of Zale. āIām not young. My mother would be appalled by my lack of manners.ā
Albus didnāt reply. He had a faraway look in his eyes, which made Zale suspect heād said something wrong. āHow old are you?ā He didnāt know if it was rude to ask, but at least it was a different topic.
āTwo hundred thirty-four.ā
āAnd yet you donāt look a day over forty.ā Zale grinned, but it was soon replaced by a sigh. Two hundred and thirty-four years. Wouldnāt it be amazing? Or maybe you grew bored. Life was precious because it was limited and always a little too short. In his case, a lot too short.
āHow old are you?ā
āThirty-eight.ā
āA hatchling.ā There was something similar to fondness in Albusā eyes, and it had a lump forming in Zaleās throat. He wasnāt sure his voice would carry, so he nodded instead and did his best to blink away the burn in his eyes.
When the silence grew too long, he cleared his throat. āA dying man.ā
Albus was saved from answering by the bell above the door.