Paper dragon, p.1

Paper Dragon, page 1

 

Paper Dragon
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Paper Dragon


  Paper Dragon

  Coralie Moss

  Copyright © 2021 by Coralie Moss

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, places, objects, and incidents herein are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual living things, events, locales, or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.

  Published internationally by Pink Moon Books, British Columbia, Canada.

  ISBN: 9781989446201

  Cover Design: Elizabeth Mackey

  Created with Vellum

  This one is for my sons:

  Stefan, William, Wyatt, & Dylan.

  * * *

  I am forever grateful for each of you and for the thousands of hours spent reading to you,

  and with you.

  Acknowledgments

  Hand Holders Extraordinaire:

  Meka James and Mr. Moss

  * * *

  Alpha Readers:

  Michelle McCraw and Connie Kuhns, for your questions, comments, and perceptive observations.

  * * *

  Beta Readers:

  Kim Kennard, Laurel Buchanan, and Leslie Mart, for your sharp eyes and for pointing out when details were still in my head and not on the page.

  * * *

  Many thanks to retired Professor of Geology, Mary Lou Bevier, for her insight into the gypsum caves found in the Ternopil area of Ukraine.

  * * *

  Cover Designer: Elizabeth Mackey

  * * *

  Editor: Angela James

  * * *

  Proofreader: Lillie’s Literary Services

  About the Author

  Author Coralie Moss likes to start her Urban Fantasy stories with witches and other Magicals and plunk a surprise or five into their seemingly normal lives. She lives on Salt Spring Island in British Columbia—the site of much magical inspiration—with her husband and two rescue cats.

  * * *

  Join Coralie’s mailing list for book news, giveaways, and the occasional homage to apples.

  All of Coralie’s Books

  Coralie’s latest books center around goddesses and other mythological figures navigating the modern world.

  * * *

  The Goddess & the Woodsman

  Medusa’s Proxy, a paranormal romance novelette

  The Shifters in the Underlands series includes:

  Paper Dragon (book 1)

  Blood Dragon (book 2)

  Moon Dragon (book 3)

  The Sister Witches Urban Fantasy includes:

  Once Blessed, Thrice Cursed is book #1 of the Sister Witches Urban Fantasy Series. Set in Northampton, Massachusetts, it introduces us to Clementine, Beryl, and Alderose Brodeur.

  Demon Lines (book 2) is the continuation of Clementine’s story.

  The Scarab Eater’s Daughter (book 3) gives us the sisters’ continuing adventures from Alderose’s point of view.

  Beguiled, Bewitched, & Broken (book 4) features the middle sister, Beryl.

  The Sister Witches Urban Fantasy Series: Box Set 1 (includes book 1-4)

  Witches Everbound (book 5) completes the Sister Witches Urban Fantasy series.

  The Calliope Jones series of novels includes:

  Magic Remembered (book 1)

  Magic Reclaimed (book 2)

  Magic Redeemed (book 3)

  Magic Restrained, a novelette (book 3.5)

  The Magic Series Box Set #1

  Join Coralie’s mailing list for news & ongoing short stories.

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  What’s Next?

  Paper Dragon

  One

  My best friend and business partner tucked the lower half of her running jacket under her butt. I’d called Catriona first thing in the morning, hoping to get her help with testing my latest bit of surveillance gear. The enhanced lenses I was tinkering with allowed the wearer to see auras given off by witches, shifters, and other beings carrying magic in their blood. I’d set the lenses into normal looking eyeglass frames, one pair for Cat and one for me.

  She perched on the edge of the iron bench and joined me in scanning the handful of mundanes and Magicals braving November’s damp cold. Cat had agreed to help me out as long as we took our mission to a specific field within Central Park, which would allow her to watch her boyfriend coach soccer for a kids’ league. And she’d requested bagels from her favorite deli.

  I was happy to oblige.

  The witch set her paper bag between us and bent forward to adjust the knife sheaths strapped to her ankles and hidden by the loose legs of her running pants. She didn’t go anywhere without a minimum of concealed weapons and a cache of spells in that day’s purse or hip pouch.

  “Jake, these glasses definitely have potential,” she said, glancing over her shoulder at me. “I assume you want my feedback?”

  “Give it to me straight.”

  “I need the lenses to deliver more information. In real time,” she emphasized, stabbing her hand into the bag and fishing for her wrapped bagel. “Because if I’m wearing these in a situation where the lenses are flashing different colors and I’ve got blades in my hands, I can’t be bothered recalling which color goes with what magical sub-set while I’m making life and death decisions.”

  “Life and death decisions as in who to maim and who to kill?” I teased, unwrapping my second breakfast of the day. There was no one I trusted more than Cat in situations where lives were at stake, and because of the work we contracted and some of the Magicals we’d dealt with, our lives had been at stake a handful of times over our years of working together.

  “Exactly.”

  I bit into my bagel and studied Cat’s movements through my set of glasses. Glowing lines in two shades of brown traced her entire body. Light brown signified her intrinsic witch magic, darker brown her specialty earth magic. I was pleased to see the magic tech didn’t blur or otherwise alter the clarity of the lenses.

  Cat was right. A clusterfuck of colorful moving lines would not enhance her formidable fighting skills.

  “How about a pop-up message that says, ‘werewolf’, or ‘dragon’?”

  “That would be a start, plus it would be useful to users with color vision deficiency.” She leaned back and shook out her pant legs. “I’d want to know the target’s specific magic, whether they were a plant witch or blood witch or whatever. If I was looking at a mage, I’d want to know their base element.”

  “You want me to get granular with the information.” Wiping my hands on a recycled paper napkin first, I pinched the 3D-printed frames and pulled them away from my face. If I made the earpieces slightly wider and thicker, I could insert whatever bit of micro-technology we wanted. Command buttons could lie flush to the plastic or wood or bone or whatever material would best compliment the user’s magic. In my excitement, I stood up and almost started to leave the park for my design lab.

  “Yep, I want you to get granular. The more information you can pack into the diagnostic capacity of those glasses and the faster you can get that information up on the lenses, the better.” Cat surveyed the couple dozen shifters approaching from our left and waved to her boyfriend, an Argentinian jaguar shifter and former soccer star. Luciano veered toward us, pulled Cat up and off the bench, and captured her mouth with his. All while twirling her in a slow circle, sliding one hand to the back of her head and the other to the small of her back, leaving Cat to pirouette on the tips of her sneakers.

  The shifter kids in Luc’s charge reacted like any other kids under the age of ten and registered their disgust. I reacted like any romance-desiring adult and imagined what it would feel like to be the one being held, and the one doing the holding. Someday, I’d break through the multiple blockages keeping me an unattached dragon and share a kiss like that.

  “I got it.” I doubted Cat heard me as I stretched across the length of the bench to catch the paper-wrapped bagel falling from her grasp.

  Someday, I’d kiss someone so hard they’d drop everything for me.

  Someday, I might be willing to fall.

  “Cara mia.” Luciano gently lowered Cat until her feet met the ground, reached over to slap the side of my arm, and stumbled backward, hands on his heart and eyes only for my friend. I watched Cat devour her lover with her gaze as he rejoined the passel of rambunctious kids and proud parents now veering toward the nearby expanse of dormant grass.

  “That man has such a nice ass,” she declared.

  “Maybe I should take up soccer.”

  Cat plunked down on the bench and kicked sideways, nicking the side of my calf with her lime green running shoes. “Stop ogling my man’s assets. And you’re built more for rugby. Or being Henry Cavill’s stunt double.”

  That wasn’t the first time someone had compared me to the muscular actor. “I was admiring Luciano’s assets. Do you have any idea how hard it is to fit these monsters into normal pants?”

  I flexed my thigh muscles. Cat glanced over and shook her head. “Good thing you dragons have your own tailors. And as I was saying” –she waggled her fingers at me until I returned her bagel— “the more granular the information the more gold in your pocket.”

  “You do know I don’t actually keep gold in my pocket.” l was an urban dragon. I kept my gold in my fifth-floor aerie and in a vault in a sub-basement of the building’s garage and paid for purchases with the app on my phone. Or cash.

  “Very funny. Put your glasses back on. Don’t forget we have a thief to catch.”

  “Who’d want to steal stuff from kids’ backpacks?” Keeping an eye on the pile of packs and gear bags during soccer practice completed my deal with Cat. Luciano mentioned there had been a recent spate of missing items, and she volunteered our services. While the soccer kids dropped their stuff and tore off after each other, we finished our bagels.

  “Jake, I thought of another thing. Voice commands. Keyed to the wearer.”

  “Like, ‘highlight werewolves only’?”

  “Yup.” Cat scanned to her left, then right. “Okay, so is amber the base color for cat shifters?”

  “Correct. Did Luciano mention which clans he was coaching?” I added a couple notes to my phone, along with a question about the frame material’s durability under prolonged exposure to natural elements.

  “Mostly leopards, cheetahs, and cougars. The bigger cats have their own league to keep it fair for the kids.” She stuffed the empty wrapper into the paper bag and sighed. “I can’t wait to see Luc in a tux tonight.”

  “I’m just glad you’ll be there. I need at least one ally.” Today was my birthday. I didn’t want a party; my parents wanted an extravagant, dragons-only event. They were distressed I was turning twenty-nine without a marriageable love interest in sight and wanted me to expand my social circle beyond Cat and my demon friends and business associates in the Reformed Realm.

  I was opposed to the idea of being forced to find a life partner. But as my parents explained, I’d missed the all-important draconic rituals that accompanied turning twenty-eight because this time last year, I’d chosen to go skiing in Chamonix.

  I’d never told them why I was in France—I stopped there on a whim on my way to Ukraine to begin the search for my birth parents. And I’d never told them what happened—I’d been kidnapped by a twisted family of fae who were collecting unusual Magicals.

  According to Audrey and Eli, the sooner I found a mate and completed the mating bond, the sooner I would become a fully functioning dragon.

  The moment the words “fully functioning” had left my father’s mouth, he looked like he wanted to snatch them back. He and my mother knew I was desperate for a set of working wings to miraculously spring from my back when I shifted. Where my human form had changed in completely appropriate ways as I aged—muscles, bones, and other body parts grew; my voice deepened; more hair appeared where it was supposed to—my dragon form had not. The mythical flying beast all dragon shifters aspired to remained stuck in a state of wingless arrested development.

  And that right there was a major reason for my nonexistent dating life. The more Human Jake grew and matured and the longer Dragon Jake spent stuck in early adolescence, the less connected I felt to the other half of who I was, of what I was. The widening chasm between the two was an ongoing source of pain and shame.

  I really didn’t want to wallow in that place. I refocused my attention on the playing field and watched Luciano and his assistant coach measure out a kid-sized rectangle, drop orange cones in each corner and down the sides, and anchor a collapsible goal net at either end. As soon as they finished, a bright blue aura entered my field of vision from a nearby cluster of trees. The non-feline Magical centered itself behind two adults chatting close to the pile of gear bags and backpacks. I rose to my feet and stuffed our trash into the nearby receptacle.

  “Did you catch that blue aura?” I reached my arms overhead to stretch and winced as I glanced skyward. Sleet was heading toward our region, and the changes in barometric pressure would bring a headache for me if I was caught off guard. I ran my fingertips underneath my knit cap to make sure my therapeutic ear cuffs were firmly in place. “I need to get closer for the lenses to differentiate whether it’s an avian or reptilian shifter.”

  “Then let’s go.” Cat drew on her gloves, never taking her gaze off the field.

  Strolling side-by-side, we picked up our pace when the blue glow began to move among the bags. Neither parent standing there appeared to notice. Either they were completely engrossed in watching their kids, or the inquisitive Magical was cloaked.

  “Head around the goal net on the right,” I said to Cat, keeping my voice low. “I have a feeling they’ll try to hide underneath the pile or go for the trees.”

  The closer we got, the more I could see of the interloper. I peered over the top of the eyeglass frames. The hazy outline of the ground hugging creature disappeared, affirming my suspicion some kind of magic was keeping it out of sight.

  “I think it’s a crocodile. You go right.” I peeled away from Cat and made it to the far end of the makeshift field before banking right. I dove into a flying tackle when the crocodile shifter noticed me coming and scurried toward the snaggle of nearby bushes.

  “Don’t move.”

  I grabbed its snout and held tight, avoiding the multitude of short, curved teeth and the side-to-side lashing of its thick, scaled tail. Cat crouched, placing herself between its stubby-legged body and the bushes. The possible robber was extremely agitated and smaller than I expected. I almost felt bad for over-reacting.

  Keeping one hand clamped on its peculiar snout to avoid puncture wounds, I scrabbled to my feet and tucked the reptile shifter under my arm.

  “Now what?” Cat asked. “Everyone’s looking at us.”

  “Let’s see if we can get this one to talk.” I slid the glasses off and handed them over. “Can you take care of these?”

  “Sure.” Cat swept her gaze over the field. “I’ll keep mine on in case they’ve got a friend.”

  “Do you have anything we can use as a leash?” On closer inspection, the little fella looked like a miniature version of the gharial shifters working as lobby attendants and maintenance crew in the building my parents owned.

  “Nope. But you do. Hold still.” Cat deftly worked the heavy string out of my hood and tied it around the shifter’s neck. “We’re not going to hurt you,” she cooed. “We just want to know why you’re interested in that pile of stuff.”

  The shifter blinked its pale yellow eyes. A garbled squawk sounded in its throat before it jerked its snout to the side.

  “I think it wants us to go in there.” Cat indicated the tangle of azalea bushes. I tightened my hold and clambered to my feet.

  “After you.”

  Neither of us was prepared for the onslaught of brambles woven through the azaleas. My legs got scratched up and Cat swore as thorns snagged her clothes. We broke through the natural barrier, leaving the players’ and parents’ grunts and shouts behind. The bundle in my arms stopped wiggling once we stood in front of a leafless sycamore tree.

 

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