All The Skills - A Deckbuilding LitRPG
Book 3: Chapter 5: The Combat Trio
Book 3: Chapter 5: The Combat Trio
After the dragons sent back to the hive for healing, they now had enough to form a single diamond instead of the previous double diamond. Arthur placed Cressida at the point, with himself anchoring the position in the middle.
Two dragons flew on his direct right and left; a red dragon with the power of fire that, for some reason, bloomed into flowery shapes, and a blue with fine control over salt water. Holding the back line was an orange dragon who, like Arthur and Brixaby, did not have combat power. Instead, their specialty was to create lifelike, and sometimes tangible, illusions. It was impressive for a Common, though the orange could not pull the tangible trick often without exhausting herself.
"Cressida, lead the way to Freeacres," Arthur said.
With the pink pair leading the way, they flew over the city.
Dragons from all twelve hives were thick in the air, diving and throwing card powers to take out scourgelings in groups and singly. But the city environment worked against them, with countless places for scourgelings to hide and the winding, sometimes confusing, streets stopping people from escaping clearly.
Dragons with the Lobos patch and rescue groups from other hives were hard-pressed to lead people out of the way. Other dragons worked in teams to block streets before scourgelings could break past and spill into more populated parts of the city. Unfortunately, this often trapped those who were too slow to evacuate.
Cries for help drifted up from below.
Arthur grit his teeth, wishing he could stop and help. A small but selfishly vocal part of him also wished they dared to fly higher so he didn''t have to hear these screams or see people being chased down.
But for all of the dragons who were helping out on ground level, there was an equal amount fighting scourgelings on the wing in the air. Going higher would make the entire formation a target.
Swallowing hard, Arthur looked firmly ahead and tried not to listen.
Meanwhile, the eruption continued without stopping. The cone had grown by a full third from when they had gotten there a scant few minutes ago, and its base had swallowed up entire buildings
"Do you think that a demi-scourge will erupt?" Brixaby asked. Unlike Arthur, he leaned his neck down and watched the streets avidly.
"I don''t know," Arthur replied. "It''s our job to secure at least one of the card stashes and keep that from happening. And if it does... It''s also our job to help stop it."
Brixaby hummed under his breath, and Arthur was not entirely sure if the dragon was looking forward to that possibility or not.
It got better as they flew towards the edge of the city directly to the east. The worst of the scourgeling eruption had not reached this area yet. People were able to evacuate cleanly, but that didn''t mean they were completely out of danger.
The formation overflew a pack of swiftly running scourgelings which looked like racing hounds with thin bodies and sharp heads. The beasts ran as fast as a horse could gallop.
As they glided over, the red dragon craned her neck and spat down. Bouquets of wildfire drifted down. When the fire touched the scourgelings, it twisted them up into living vines, thorn flames piercing flesh and burning.
"Permission to go down and harvest?" the red’s rider yelled.
"No time," Arthur called back. "Good job, though," he added, “You saved lives there.”
The rider shrugged, disappointment on her face that she couldn’t reap the reward for her good deed. Well, there would be plenty of other occasions to harvest scourgelings.
Soon, the cobblestone roads ended, and were replaced by gravel and then dirt, bordered on both sides by livestock farms. Finally, they came to rolling fields, some thick with harvest.
"Freeacres Estate is dead ahead," Cressida called out.
Arthur gestured sarcastically forward. "Oh, you mean that giant castle?"
"That''s the one," she confirmed.
He figured that was it. It was easily the tallest building outside of the city. The tiny cottages and humble homes surrounding it were small, but their thatch roofs and simple gardens were well outstripped by their lord''s obvious wealth. Not all of them were in good repair, either. It looked like weather and neglect rather than scourgelings.
The castle had four main towers, bracketed by equally large buildings on all sides. It looked like a place where somebody could easily get lost inside — and that was coming from someone who lived in a dragon hive.
"How much time left on the quest?" Arthur called out.
Joy craned her head to answer back, "Five minutes, thirty seconds."
They had traveled miles in those fifteen minutes, faster than he could have ever traveled with a galloping horse, but it still wasn''t fast enough. They had only minutes left.
Arthur looked around anxiously, then scolded himself. It wasn''t as if there was going to be a sign stating: Card Library here.
The cards were likely well defended within one of the buildings. Possibly underground.
Yet... why was there only a few minutes left on the timer? There was no sign of life. Only a few scattered sheep on the hills. No horses or goats or the shepherds to attend to them. Not even any herding dogs left to manage the lone sheep. Had they all evacuated already?
As they got closer, Arthur got a vague sense of the strength of their cards. "A rare and two uncommons?" he asked Brixaby.
"I think so," Brixaby replied. "But those two Uncommons have their cores stuffed with cards."
This was definitely a combat trio, then.
Arthur reached down to touch Shadow''s neck. "If we get in trouble, could you shadow teleport us out?"
"Only to another shadow, and the biggest one is by that castle. I''m told that it''s dangerous," Shadow added, almost sarcastically.
"Well, let''s not push them," Arthur said.
Thankfully, the silver started to slow his descent when it became obvious that Arthur was there to greet them. As all the adult dragons were of the typical body style—two wings and four limbs—they didn''t have the ability to stop and hover like Brixaby did.
As a result, all of the dragons slowly circled each other as the riders spoke. It felt exactly as ominous as it likely looked.
"This castle and all its contents are now the property of Blood Moon Hive," the silver''s rider called out. He was a beefy man atop a beefy dragon with glinting claws. Silvers were usually pure magic dragons, but Arthur had the feeling this one was combat focused.
"The card library, you mean?" Arthur asked. He saw no reason to play stupid.
“Call it what you want, kid,” the silver rider called back. "We are here on our Hive Leader’s orders."
“So am I,” Arthur said. “I’m Arthur, with Brixaby.” That name should get some recognition, at least.
"I''m a Legendary," Brixaby said, just in case they didn’t get it. "And that means I outrank all three of you. Now go away."
The silver dragon snorted, sending Brixaby tumbling end over end with a minor wind power. "You haven''t even graduated training yet, hatchling.”
The flame-tipped red’s rider called out. “What''s the matter? The kids haven''t learned how to land your dragons yet?"
"You shouldn''t go down there,” Arthur said. “One of our group members has a forewarning card. We have reason to believe that the castle is dangerous."
"Of course it''s dangerous. We''re in the middle of a scourge eruption. Stand aside, we have the rank," replied the silver’s rider.
Brixaby bristled. "No, you don''t.”
"They do," Shadow said on a sigh. "You haven''t graduated yet, and Blood Moon is one of the top hives. Wolf moon is, well, on the bottom."
“Thanks for that,” Arthur muttered, wishing Shadow had kept quiet.
The other red snarled. "Do you hatchlings intend to stop us?”
Brixaby growled and flexed his claws.
Arthur shook his head. "I''m warning you, don''t go down there."
The silver’s rider seemed to have had enough. He made a quick chopping gesture. With practiced synchronization all three dragons folded their wings and dived as if they expected to be stopped by card powers.
Arthur didn''t bother, though inwardly he was frustrated.
Yes, the castle had set off Brixaby’s danger-sense but he suspected that whatever those three combat dragons faced, they could handle it.
Probably some scourgelings lying hiding in the shadows, he thought.
They were on the verge of failing the quest, but at least the card library would be protected from the scourgelings. That was the important thing.
Surprised by the diving dragons the rest of his class in diamond formation scattered and flew to the sides to give the much larger adults room.
Either that wasn’t good enough for the silver or they wanted to really send a message because a gust of wind blew several of the slower sharply to the side.
The three dragons swooped to land in the middle of the courtyard.
And in the next moment, the entire castle exploded.