Total pages in book: 127
Estimated words: 119764 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 599(@200wpm)___ 479(@250wpm)___ 399(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 119764 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 599(@200wpm)___ 479(@250wpm)___ 399(@300wpm)
I just don’t trust anything when my feet aren’t on solid ground.
At least Rabbit seems to be enjoying herself. My hand is sweaty in hers, but she’s enjoying herself, her eyes bright and a wide smile on her face as she peers out the window on her side. “This is awesome!”
No one agrees with her. We’re all too nervous. I remember plane flights, but I never worried the plane was going to lose its grip on the sky and drop us to the ground. I want to relax and enjoy the journey, but my pleasure will come when everyone is happy and healthy and we’re leaving once more.
“Hope this was worth leaving the dogs for,” Aggie grumps.
I get her reluctance. I do. It was a whole thing this morning. Rabbit nearly broke down in tears when she realized that if we left and didn’t come back for several days, the animals would have no way out of the cozy bookstore. It’s been our home for so many days now that there are more cats living under our roof now than out of it, and there’s Stella and her puppies. We ended up propping open the front doors with bricks so that if something bad happened, they’d be able to go in and out, and Rabbit was able to relax and enjoy the trip.
“It’ll be fine,” I say, just as the fort’s infamous car barrier comes into view.
After the dragons came through the rift and decimated most of the world, what was left of humanity took the scraps of our society and built fortresses to protect ourselves. The most common building material is things we no longer need, which is why Fort Dallas’s surrounding wall is built entirely out of old cars. Some are crushed and flattened, some intact, some missing their tires, but there are so many that it creates a high, imposing wall that makes it easy to defend. Perched atop this wall is a golden dragon, and as we skim over the wall itself, the strange dragon peers into the car.
I hold my breath. Just in case.
Then we’re flying over the city, and Thess is gliding downward to a clear spot so she can land. The inside of Fort Dallas reminds me of every other fort I’ve ever been inside. The streets are nothing but mud with plywood tossed over the worst spots, without a single blade of grass. The houses are all a shantytown built out of storage sheds, old school buses, pieces of scrap metal, and even a dumpster. They all pile together to make a series of “buildings” that would probably fall apart in a strong breeze, and yet these are where most people live. I see children playing in the streets, and someone pushing a wheelbarrow past. There’s a big garden on the far side of the fort, with another golden dragon guarding it.
Murr sets our car gently down on the ground, and it rocks for a brief moment before going still. The smell of the fort hits me in the next moment, like old garbage and mold. From the ground, it’s easy to see that there’s garbage in the streets, with someone utilizing a burn barrel nearby. Even so, it stinks and I’m strangely grateful for the weed-strewn parking lot in front of our bookstore.
I never want to live in a fort again. Not now, not ever.
But this is just a one-day visit. I smile brightly at the others and unbuckle my seatbelt. “We’re here! Everyone out and let’s say hello.”
CHAPTER 89
MURR
Dakota wears a bright smile upon her face, but I can scent her dread. Being here in the “fort” does not bring her comfort. She pulls Rabbit close to her, her other hand tightly holding the pack that I know is full of things she carefully gathered: books, batteries, drinking vessels, and dried meat. Aggie and Dottie’s scents are normal, and so is Rabbit’s. My mate is the only one that looks around with fear.
Shifting to my two-legged form, I move to her side and take the heavy, laden pack from her, slinging it over my shoulder. She looks up at me in surprise and pleasure, and I take her hand in mine, letting her know that I am here. “We should get you decent,” she says, fussing, and takes my wrap off her neck, putting it around my waist. Then she takes my hand again, clutching it tight. “So what now?”
Thess reappears, pulling on a dress, her bare feet sinking into the mud. The entire human fort stinks of crowding and waste, but from our conversations with Thess, I was told to expect this. The humans do not actually live in the filth, but it is difficult to control without the technology they used to have. For now, there are clean-up efforts and the dragons that live here take turns flying out entire trucks full of trash so the people do not have to live next to it.