The sun combined with the movement direction and velocity of the wind told Rando that he had been running almost non-stop for nearly 3 hours. He just couldn't stop - the feeling of freedom left him numb to his complaining muscles and combined with the urge to get as far away from his destiny as he could, they had no choice but to keep at it. They continued to leap low branches, duck thick boughs, dash through brush, and slide over fallen trunks. Maintain this speed, he constantly thought to himself, do not slow down nor speed up. If I slow down, they will catch up to me, and if I speed up, I will tire myself out too quickly.
Soon, though, even his muscles gave in, and Rando was forced to abandon his method of escape and collapse himself near a spring in the middle of the forest. No worries, it will have been enough, he told himself. He was many miles from the mountainous region and had been traveling southeast most of the way, only turning when something obscured his path. He aimed for southwest because he was aiming for another temple somewhere in the land, and because north would only lead him to the ice-cold climates of the northern regions - somewhere he had learned quite well to avoid for a number of reasons.
He was lost, now. He didn't recognize any of this vast humid forest, nor the species of the dark bluish-green trees with gnarly twisted bark and branches with even bluer arrowhead-shaped leaves that covered most of the sky leaving everything below them in dark shards of light. It didn't matter much, though, because he would much rather be lost in the wilderness rather then back home. Besides, there was always someone or something out there that could give him directions should he need it. It wasn't as though he wandered into a complete and inhabited maze or anything.
Curse you, father, he muttered to himself in frustration as he gulped water from the spring in his hands, you knew I didn't want to be a wind mage. Why didn't you adopt or something so another could take my place so i could be whatever I wanted? Besides, it's not as though anything is going to attack the Wind Temple. We're all at peace now. The shadow threat is no more! Why do we even NEED guardians now?
He splashed the icy water in his face. Autumn was coming, and the snowfall was going to come in a manner of months. It got very cold atop Mount Wie in that time, but he was used to it now. He just had to keep moving in the cold temperatures and not let his body temperature fall too much. It usually required that he eat a lot of food so he would have enough energy to do this, and he did this. He even learned to salvage food like berries and roots from forests, studying what was edible and what wasn't, and how to identify such things.
He learned this from Maloonia's father, the town's alchemist. In a sense, he was like a second father, taking him in whenever Manya angered him and calming Rando down with either a task or a book on his trade. He actually enjoyed Rando's dedication and interest to his work, saying that Maloonia just didn't take as much time and attention to it as he did. It was understandable - she was only 8 and still too carefree to think about the future and her taking over her father as an alchemist. Though it wasn't as if he wasn't interested in it altogether. She would pick some herbs and mix them with other simple and familiar ones to cause easily reversible effects like skin color changing and shrinking just for a few laughs. Rando, of course, knew that alchemy was a lot more then just sticking herbs into a vial and drinking it. It was a pity that they couldn't help him now.
He stopped to catch his breath from almost drowning himself in the water, and instead resorted to looking in it. His familiar perfect blue eyed, perfect nosed, perfect mouthed, perfect everything-in-betweened face starred back, half covered in totally imperfect, messy brown hair. Just the way he liked it. Made him look tough, mysterious, and quite attractive too. Every time he entered a city or populated area, he purposely shot random looks at beautiful girls, making them blush, look away, and start giggling to whoever is nearest to them who is preferably standing in the opposite direction. He never really went on any dates, though. Just wasn't all that interested in actually intermingling with them. No matter what he did, whether it was a wink, a sneer, or an altogether funny face, the result was always the same, so he would always try something new with unfamiliar faces. Several times, he felt he should've written a journal about it or something.
The ripples in the water died away, and he saw small fish swimming around the waters, confused by his rejuvenating splashing and not knowing whether or not to approach it or stay away. Tempting them to the side was a number of long slender reeds, just beckoning something in the water or otherwise to have at them. Fish, insects, herbivores, anything that would cut them down to a more manageable size.. The water also reflected things as much as it revealed them. Copies of insects like dragonflies and Imvin Flies already close enough to the water to make it ripple. Clones of the rocks protruding from the edges creating a sort of barrier for smaller creatures. Duplicates of the heavily leafy trees that held their ground over-head, hogging up as much sun as they could over the lower plants.
It also revealed something else. The reflection of the young 7 foot long dragon across the stream, staring directly at him.
Rando stayed calm. This day and age, dragons were mostly domesticated, living as pets, companions, or their own individual souls. Only a few wild ones remained, scattered all over the world, trying to survive in the wilderness by themselves. They were a threat, but banned from hunting as their existence also helped naturally control the pest population. Besides, wild dragons hardly attacked humans unless angered by their teasing and taunting.
Served any humans mauled by a wild dragon right.
This one certainly looked wild. Its dark blue scales had a number of serious scratches and dents all over with a few patches where they were missing altogether. The left of its primary head-bashing horns was snapped off, probably naturally, and was yet to finish growing back. Long black claws were dirty, ruffled wings pulled into a resting state, muscles and belly thin from malnutrition, and underbelly and long spiked tail covered in mulch and grass.
Rando slowly stood up with a brave smile on his face, trying to make himself look ready for anything should the dragon attack. It was simple enough to test whether or not it was wild, and if it was, he could probably get directions from it or just leave it. If not ... well, it's not as though he's had to outrun something possibly faster then him before.
"Hello, Sir Dragon." greeted Rando. If the dragon could speak the common tongue, then it's had some domestication.
The dragon leapt back in shock, rearing his head up by turning its long spiny neck to a 90 degree curve.
"It TALKS!" it shouted in total realization, eyes wide and tail curved up in surprise.
Rando tilted his head in confusion. He was no longer sure of how to tell if this one was tame.
"Yes ... yes, I talk. I am human." said Rando fairly slowly.
"Ah, hello Human. I am Mitzol." replied the dragon.
"Ah." replied Rando. Good, it at least had a name. "My name's Rando."
"No, it's not." it quickly said, shaking its head.
Rando blinked, "I'm sorry?"
"Didn't you just say 4 seconds ago that you are Human?" it asked suspiciously.
"Yes, but I AM a human. You are a dragon." Rando explained.
It began mumbling to itself for a minute, but then suddenly remembered Rando was there.
"No I'm not." it quickly replied, "I am Mitzol."
"Yes, that's your NAME. I am Rando, the human. You are Mitzol, the dragon." he tried.
It then looked confused, then instantly bewildered, "I have a last name?"
"No, you ARE ... ok, yes. Yes, your last name is 'The Dragon.'" Rando said, giving up. Maybe it'll realize its mistake.
But no, it stamped the ground in joy and ran around in happy circles.
"Yippee! I have a last name now! I have always wanted a last name! Thank you so much, Rando the Human!"
"Yeah ... no problem." replied Rando.
"I'm so happy I want to give you something." it offered.
"No thanks." Rando politely declined.
"Oh, but I must!" replied Mitzol.
Letting curiosity give way to humanity, Rando accepted, "What do you have?"
"I have ..." started Mitzol, "... um ... uh ..."
It then proceeded to look around himself quickly, lifting its feet, shaking its tail, scratching its body with one claw, scanning for a bag or something which it apparently didn't have. Rando immediately took to the conclusion that it didn't have anything, and its search will end in tears.
"You don't have-"
"DON'T TELL ME. Don't tell me. I will figure it out on my own. Let's see ... what do I have ..."
Rando knew that this search as going to take forever, so he decided to give Mitzol an option.
"How about a dead rabbit?" he asked.
Mitzol immediately stopped searching and nodded obediently at Rando like a dog, "GREAT idea! Great idea! I'll get that for you! You wait right there! I'll go find one!"
With that, it turned and dashed through the forest, laughing almost maniacally to itself.
Rando just stood there. This dragon was not wild or tame, it was completely MENTAL! But maybe he would at least give it a chance. It knew what a rabbit was, and dragons were fearsome hunters. Besides, he was a little hungry, anyways, and he didn't really have anything else to do.
About half an hour of waiting, Mitzol came lumbering back empty-handed and nearly fell in the stream.
"Sorry, Rando the Human, I couldn't find a dead rabbit. The only ones I found were all alive." he shamefully said, dropping its head in self-discipline.
"That's OK." said Rando, "... uh, while you were gone, a dead rabbit came up to me and I ate it for lunch, so now I'm full. Thanks for the effort, though."
"Aw, you didn't save any, did you?" it asked.
"Sorry, it wasn't very much, and I was hungry." he replied.
"What about the bones? Can I have the bones? I know nothing eats bones, but they just feel so WIERD in my mouth!" it said.
"Yes, but they're ... uh ... invisible now." he replied, "Sorry, there was nothing I could do."
"Aw! That smells!" said Mitzol, and turned away sadly. Rando was about to try to cheer it up when it suddenly just started mumbling random words to itself, changing its emotion over and over. Then it glanced towards the pool, yelped, and jumped back, spreading its wings ready to fly if needed. It wouldn't have happen though - Rando saw that the right wing was torn and bleeding. This was a fairly recent injury.
"What?" asked Rando, "Does it hurt?"
"There's a DRAGON in there!" shouted Mitzol.
"What?" Rando asked again, this time for clarification rather then resolve.
"In there! There was another dragon. It always happens when I try to drink. It's so scarrrrrry!" it replied with an unnecessary dramatic tone in its voice, pointing with a claw right into the water.
Rando looked in the water, then beckoned Mitzol back to the stream after relizing that the only things it must have seen was its own reflection.
"That's not another dragon, that's YOU." he said, smiling humorously.
Mitzol hesitated, then slowly strode over and looked again in the water with extreme caution.
"Oooohhhhhhh!" it said, relaxing, and then nervously waved with one claw, "Hi, me!"
This can't be happening, mumbled Rando.
"... wait, wait just a second here! Everybody wait!" shouted Mitzol, calling out to a non-existant crowd of somethings.
"If I'm down there ... then who is THIS?" it demanded, pointing at itself, "This must be an impostor! I MUST DESTROY IT!"
"That's you as well." Rando quickly replied, fairly annoyed.
"Oh, thank goodness. I thought I had been possessed or something ... uh ... no. that doesn't make sense. There can't be two of me, that's just SILLY. How is there two of me?" it asked.
Rando took a few slow deep breaths. His father was the more patient one, not him.
"There is a reflection of you. A picture, in the water, that looks just like you, but it not really you." he replied.
"Ooh, you mean like a painting?" it asked, "I've seen one of those. It looked weird, so I ate it. Tasted horrible."
It then started mumbling illegibly to itself again.
"Yes, just like a painting." replied Rando, nodding and surprisingly eager to see how it will react now to this realization.
"That one's very nice! ... I want it!" it said, and it jumped into the water, trying to claw at its own reflection and splashing about.
Rando watched it practically begin to drown itself, looking for the 'painting' underwater, and decided that it would forever haunt his conscience if he just let it drowned. So, after taking a running start, he jumped right over the lake, grabbed the dragon by the tail, and heaved it away from the water with all his might. Thank goodness it was so light from not eating enough or he would have been pulled in as well.
It gasped for breath, confused and cold, "Whew. I thought my body forgot how to breathe for a second there."
"Uh, listen, Mitzol-" Rando began.
"That's ME!"
"Yeah, uh, don't you have any parents around here? Like a mom or dad looking for you or something?"
"Nope, no one here but me and you."
"Ok, do you have a mom or pop at ALL?"
"Nope. They fell asleep and wouldn't wake up, and I was bored and hungry, so I left them back at home to go find some new ones. But I couldn't find anything."
"That's too bad. I'm so sorry."
"What are you sorry for? ... unless ... did YOU make them fall asleep like that?!?"
"No I didn't! I didn't do anything!"
"I wonder if they woke up yet- AH!"
It flexed its wings, the the injured one squirted some blood, causing it to flinch in pain.
"You're bleeding."
"No, I'm Mitzol."
"No, no. There, on your wing. You have blood coming out."
"Yeah, I know. It's leaking. Some guy in white clothes made it leak, and it didn't feel good, so I stepped on him in discipline. That's what my mom did to me if I was bad. Made him leak, too."
"Here, lie down. I'll ... stop the leaking for you."
Rando pulled off his backpack. He mainly hunted for his food, so all that was in it was a spare quiver of bolts for emergencies, some money, assorted tools, and a first aid kit. He pulled out the small white container and picked out a large roll of wrapping bandage. Than, after mixing some medical herbs together into a small mortar and dipping the bandage in it, he proceeded to wrap it around Mitzol's primary wing bone. The skin attached to the secondary bones easily contracted when he folded his wings, so Rando also taped them together with extra bandage so he wouldn't accidently extend them and rip off the bandage.
"That feels weird. I like it." it said.
"It'll sting for a minute, but then it shouldn't bother you much anymore. Just don't move your wings for a few days while it heals." explained Rando.
"Sting? Did you put bees in my wings?" it asked, a little frightened.
"No, it's medicine-"
"OWWW! IT FEELS LIKE THERE'S BEES IN MY WINGS!" it shouted, shaking its head in pain.
"It's OK! When it hurts, it means your body is getting better!" said Rando.
"It shouldn't be like that. That's a dumb system! OWW!" replied Mitzol.
"Don't move your wings, or it will just hurt more!"
Mitzol immediately and without reason changed emotions from pain to eagerness.
"I want a dead rabbit. Can you help me find one?"
"What? oh, uh ... OK, sure."
Rando no longer knew if he was annoyed, entertained, or just plain sorry for this pathetic creature. But in reality he really was getting hungry, as he didn't have anything to eat besides a non-existant rabbit half an hour ago.
He pulled out his crossbow and started sneaking quietly into the thicker forest around the stream, careful not to disturb the wildlife enough to get a clear shot at something with meat on it. Mitzol seemed to think otherwise.
"Can I watch? Where do you find dead rabbits? Do they grow on bushes or hide in rocks or cracks or something? I can sing 'Merry Dragon Fires of Fie' really well. Wanna hear it?"
"Be quiet!" Rando hissed, thinking fast, "Dead rabbits are very shy. If you make ANY noise, they will disappear into thin air."
"Oh, no WONDER I never find them! I'm always tried to introduce myself with my new last name!"
Something other then Mitzol made a noise, and Rando aimed his crossbow towards the brush. A speck of movement ... a change of color. That's all that was needed. Mitzol decided to start mumbling to himself once again, but at least it was quiet enough for him to concentrate. He scanned the area around him with one quick sweep of his crossbow, focused for a minute, stooped down, grabbed a large pine cone, and hurled it to a certain area.
Something dashed through the brush and Rando fired. The swift metal bolt scored flesh and something small hit the ground.
"I think I found one." Rando quietly announced.
"You did? Where? Where is it?" Mitzol loudly whispered.
"Right over there. It's got a bit of metal in it." replied Rando, pointing, "Go get it, but remember to stay quiet, or it will vanish!"
"Yes, yes, I'll do that!" replied Mitzol, and it crawled through the forest stooping as low as it could. It looked rather ridiculous.
While he was running towards the fallen creature, Rando fired again, but all the way to the right. Another something small and alive dropped to the ground, completely devoid of life. He saw the sudden change of color, and instinctively reacted appropriately.
This one was an adult, and well-fed, meaning there was quite a bit of meat on its bones. He struck the heart, causing a quick and painless death without it having to suffer. Didn't really know why people actually did that. Probably just a show of guilt or something. Himself, he did it just so that it would immediately die and wouldn't continue to evade him. He was used to the deaths and killing of creatures large and small, so nothing ever seemed to bother him anymore. His father could probably die and he wouldn't feel much remorse towards anything.
He was about to start skinning the rabbit when a happy Mitzol came trotting back, an already torn apart rabbit in its mouth, squirting blood all over inside and out.
"You're right! Dead rabbits stay when you ARE quiet! You are so smart!" it proudly said with its mouth full.
"Thanks." Rando said, half sarcastically.
___________________________________________________________
The small specks of sunlight shining through the trees were beginning to dim away into a darkening orange-red color. Soon, it will become a faint rose, and then go out altogether, leaving the forest shrouded in total darkness.
Rando and Mitzol travelled down the stream, pausing often mainly so that Rando could show Mitzol something completely alien to him. Once, Rando had to calm it down because a fly went right into its face and he went into sudden panic and once Rando had to dive into the stream because it thought a live hornets nest was a chew-toy of some kind, leaving Mitzol to, as he quickly advised, follow suit, but the argument that he was not dirty lead to his seemingly endless punishment. Finally, Rando couldn't hold his breath any longer and yanked Mitzol in by himself. There was even one moment where they encountered a large, bear-like beast creature. Mitzol hid behind Rando in fear and Rando defended himself with several crossbow bolts to the assailant's head.
Rando did feel rather sorry for it, and even though it appeared to be trying to, it was barely making any progress at all. It probably had a physically mental condition, say from getting hit on the head once too hard. After all, he knew how to speak, and even a number of words Rando had to think back to remember the actual meaning behind them. It would've been impossible for it to have learned to speak this well if it was mental to begin with.
Well, it was easy enough to get it to follow him. The hard part was trying to get away from it.
"You're amazing! Can I follow you? I got nowhere else to go."
"Um, no thanks. I really can't have a dragon following me because I'm on the run."
"I can run too."
"No, I'm ON the run. Like, right now. Because I'm on the run, I can't have anyone or anything following me."
"But you're walking!"
"I'm trying to ... get away from somewhere I don't want to be."
"You're not there anymore, are you?"
"Uh ... no."
"Then you've already gotten away. You don't have to run anymore, meaning I can follow you."
"Ok, fine."
Now they were both sitting around a pile of wood Rando gathered with the help of his trusty hatchet. Rando was trying to light a fire with his miserably ineffective firebox, which he barely got working earlier to cook his dead rabbit, while Mitzol was ...
"What are you doing?"
"There's a BIG, EVIL SNAKE trying to bite me! I gotta catch and kill it before it harms us!"
Rando rolled his eyes.
"... that's your tail. You're just running around in circles trying to catch your own tail."
Mitzol twisted around so its head faced the sharp protruding spike on the tip of its tail. It looked for a second it was going to impale itself.
"Oh? Hey ... well, what do you know? I THOUGHT it looked familiar somehow."
The unfortunate bear-like creature Rando slew lay dead in a crumpled heap nearby. Rando had gotten Mitzol to carry it as they travelled so that they would have some food for dinner before turning in for the night. It wasn't tough, but it did have Rando sacrificing some of his dignity and reffering to the term "piggy-back ride" several times just to get the idea in its head. Thank goodness no one was watching them.
Perhaps running away has brought him some very bad luck. First, he got lost in a forest he didn't recognize, when he got stuck with a dragon with the brain of a 4 year old and the memory of a gnat, and now his firebox wasn't working so he couldn't even light a fire to keep him warm during the night. It was a nightmare. If I ever get through all this, thought Rando, maybe I SHOULD return home to be a wind mage.
He slowly turned and looked at Mitzol, who took to singing to the darkening forest. Maybe he didn't have a firebox, but it wasn't as though he couldn't use the real thing. After all, it wasn't leaving him for any reason, so he might as well make some use of it.
"Hey, Mitzol?"
"And let the moon rise, to ward off the light, so the dragon can hunt through the dark starry night ..."
"Mitzol?"
"Mitzol? That's my name! My NAME! I hear my name! Ooh, I LOVE it when I hear my name!"
"MITZOL?"
"Ohh! Rando the Human wants me. I love my name! Yes, Rando?"
It was worth a try, thought Rando. If he was to stay warm through the night, he was going to have to take this slowly and patiently.
"Do you breathe fire?"
"What's fire?"
Dang it! NO dragon should have to ask that.
"Fire. It's like this glowing orange stuff. Very hot. Goes like foom." Rando explained with appropriate hand gestures.
"Ooh! Yes! Yes! I know what that it! It's Fihrihn."
"It's wha- oh, of course. Dragon-speak."
"Yes, I did."
"Ok, then. Do you breathe fihrihn?"
"No, I breathe air."
"No no, CAN you breathe fihrihn?"
"Sorry, there's none here."
"No no ... um, can you MAKE fihrihn??"
"I can with a firebox, like that one you have."
"NO ... can you make fihrihn come out of your mouth? Like your parents do?"
"Ohh, you mean like make flames shoot out of my mouth and burn stuff in front of me."
"YES! Can you do that?"
"No. My parents did it for me."
Rando was about to snap, but another thought brought him back to sanity. Dragons that breathed something other then fire were extremely rare, but they did indeed exist. Perhaps he was just so lucky ... or unlucky enough, to stumble across one of these rare dragons.
Only one way to find out.
"Well, what CAN you breathe?"
"Air."
"No no, what can you make come out of your mouth that it not air."
"This stuff. Check it out."
It reared its head and inhaled deeply, and Rando jumped to the side to avoid getting ... well, whatever was going to happen. Once Mitzol reached its fill lung capacity, it thrust its head forward and bellowed, But it wasn't fire that came out. In fact, Rando could have hardly called it an element.
A thick, amber-colored liquid-like gas poured out of its mouth, hovering over the directed area in the campsite. It covered a large area in the strange amber fog, and Rando backed away almost into the forest to stay away from it. It covered the campsite, crept up into the tree canopies, and even surrounded the oblivious Mitzol. Finally, Mitzol stopped blowing it out and gasped for breath. Little by little the gas dispersed, revealing its effect to a shocked Rando.
The campsite and everything in it was reverted to dust. The grass, te shrub, the surrounding trees, even the logs for the fire and their would've-been dinner. Nothing remained in that now-barren, life-less area except for Mitzol, who looked impressed with himself and had some fun kicking up dust around him.
"WHAT, in the Lord Wie's name, was THAT?" he demanded, coming out of his hiding spot which was a good distance into the forest. The air in the barren area smelled very stale. Not even the wind's nutrients survived the draining.
"Neat, huh?" asked Mitzol, "I call it the Duster because it makes stuff into dust! ... aw, the dead thing vanished! We must've been too noisy. We must remember to stay very quiet or we won't be able to eat them!"
"Yeah, uh, it did." said Rando, still recovering from the experience, "Let's, uh, find another clearing and turn in for the night."
The firebox won't work, so he would have to do it the old fashioned way after hunting once more.
________________________________________________________
Mitzol understood it easily. He stay there and keep singing while Rando bring back more dead things. Simple enough for him.
Rando was quite impressed with Mitzol. Once it knew how to do something, it did it well, and Rando had no trouble finding his way back to the new campsite from following Mitzol's loud, almost illegible lyrics.
"That was 'Ballad of the Volcanic Swans'. Did you like it?"
"Yeah. Uh, fantastic."
The boar wasn't much of a challenge. A quick shot to the brain while it charged and it slid right past Rando, no longer able to turn and pose the threat it intended to be. It was the carrying-it-back-to-the-camp that was the challenge. Rando lit a fire using the old-fashioned method with rubbing specially cut sticks he sliced with his knife and got it to a manageable point before slicing off some of the boar for himself and cooking it. Mitzol just tore right into the large remainder.
"I haven't eaten anything this good and dead for ... lots long." Mitzol said with its mouth open. Rando ignored it and tucked into his own portion, which as usual tasted like he truly earned it. A pity he forgot some of his dad's spices; some vinetiza and a sprinkle of iminitian weed would've made the boar meat taste just perfect. But it didn't really matter. His mind was too distracted by unanswerable questions to fully grasp the flavor.
What was that gas Mitzol just breathed? Where were they? Would they ever get out of this forest? Why hasn't he encountered at least a search party yet? How long would he last alone out here? What was his Dad and fellow neighbors thinking that he wasn't following tradition right now?
Rando shook his head and lay down atop his sleeping bag. It was completely dark now, and the only light came from the large, seemingly never-ending fire. Sounds of insects and night-life created a tranquil background around them, helping lull Rando down to sleep. Nearby, Mitzol made one final mumbling to itself before laying down on its back - a position dragons usually didn't go into due to underbelly exposure. At least he was able to relax, thought Rando jealously. He just stared up at the trees above, trying to at least find a star or two or even the moon from amidst the leaves.
"Rando the Human?"
Rando turned his head. Mitzol was looking right at him, his back on the ground and claws numbly in the air.
"Yeah?"
"You're so cool. I'm glad I met you."
That felt good.
"Thanks."
"... could you please be my dad?"
That didn't.
"Beg your pardon?"
"My dad didn't wake up after sleeping, and I don't have a dad or mom at the moment, so I was wondering if you would be my dad until he does wake up. You know, like a temporary replacement."
Yep, definitely had to have been a head injury not too long ago.
"But ... I'm a human."
"So? Humans hunt, and so do dragons. Humans breathe, and so do dragons. Humans talk, and so do dragons. If you need to, pretend you're a dragon or I'll pretend I'm a human. I don't mind. So can you be my dad? Pleeeeeaaaaase?"
It was forbidden for dragons and humans to be directly related with each other in most areas. Sure, they could be travel companions and best friends, but they couldn't actually be soul-mates or related to each other. If he accepted this offer and someone overheard his new status, he could be in deep, deep trouble, even if it wasn't real and they weren't related in any way. But if he accepted, he would have an 8-foot dragon that could disintegrate even bone at his disposal and under his total command. He would be unstoppable against anything that threatened him.
Well, what the heck? He was in trouble as it was, anyways. It wasn't as though the baby he was going to be having with the girl of his dreams sooner or later is going to be any different. Besides, this would be good training for him. And he's always wanted a pet. Heck, it would probably even forget all about this in the morning if he was lucky enough or wander off and become separated from Rando.
"Sure. I'll be your ... 'dad'." Rando replied, smiling.
"Thanks, Dad. G'night!"
And just like that, Mitzol was asleep.
Rando closed his eyes. This was his first day as an outcast, and he had expected it to be a colossal nightmare - trying to sleep in the cold rain with a number of vicious carnivores eying him to the point where he would let down his guard instead of sleeping cosily near a large fire nearby a dragon that now called him 'father'. Its loud snores would definitely keep all predators away, so he would hardly have to worry about not completely falling asleep.
Now, if only he actually COULD sleep amidst all that snoring ...
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