Read The Case of the Vanished Sea Dragon Online
Authors: Gareth P. Jones
âDo you know how I could be finding one?' asked Alba.
âWell, you could always try summoning it?' said Mrs Klingerflim.
âHow can I be doing this?'
âAs I recall, you have to spit liquid fire from the Outer Core into a sublimated Sky Dragon's heart. Sounds like a terrible to-do, to me.'
Alba tilted her head to one side, digesting what she was being told. âThis really works?' she said.
âTo be honest, I don't know for sure. Ivor used to tease me, saying it was just an old dragon's tale, but I believe it,' said Mrs Klingerflim. âI've never had the chance to test it. You can't exactly buy liquid fire over the counter from Tesco's.'
âI do not know what is Tesco's but I must be going now,' Alba said, pulling up the blinds in front of the window. âDo you know which direction I could find a humano place called Old Ford Street?'
âOld Ford Street? I'm afraid I don't know it,' said Mrs Klingerflim.
âOld Ford Street in Deptford?' said Archie, finally recovering from the shock of seeing a dragon. âI know where it is; my dad used to have a business down there.'
âWhere can I be finding number one hundred and seventy-six Old Ford Street?' asked Alba.
âI could show you,' he said. âI could ride on your back.'
âIt would be very bad to carry a humano,' said Alba nervously.
âGood luck finding it, then,' smiled Archie.
Alba thought for a moment before speaking. âThis is more important to me than the forbidden divide so I am deciding to let you show me the way.'
âCool,' said Archie, climbing on to the desk and jumping on to the dragon's back.
âOuch, you are kicking me.'
âSorry. My name's Archie, by the way. What's yours?'
âHello, Mr Archie. I am called Alba Longs,' replied Alba.
âWhat fun,' said Mrs Klingerflim, with a wistful glint in her eye. âIf I was twenty years younger I'd be coming along. You be careful.'
Alba opened the window and leapt out.
âThis is so cool,' said Archie. He had never seen the city from this angle before. The sun was setting, turning the cloudy sky pink at the edge.
âWhich way is the way?' said Alba, landing on a TV aerial, crushing it flat.
âBe careful,' said Archie as her tail sent a satellite dish flying. âHead for that pub at the end of the street but
mind the â¦'
His words were cut short by Alba knocking over a row of chimney tops like they were skittles.
As they made their way across the rooftops of London, leaving a trail of destruction in their wake, neither of them noticed that they were being followed.
They had been travelling for around half an hour when Archie said, âWe should be able to see the road from that block of flats.'
Alba made the jump, flying over a moving train that whizzed along a raised track, landing on the top of a building.
âWhere is Old Ford Street?'
âThat one,' said Archie, indicating a long dimly lit road, lined with dirty red-brick factory buildings, rubbish tips and breaker's yards, where old cars were smashed up and sold for spare parts.
Alba flew down to a factory roof.
Archie knew the area because his dad had once started a business further down the street. Archie had gone there a couple of times with him. He had enjoyed playing around the old cars until the business had gone the same way as all his old man's businesses and his dad had wound up in prison.
âThere's one seven six,' said Archie, spotting the number written in red paint on the high gates of a down-beat breaker's yard.
Alba jumped from the top of a factory to a corrugated roof of a small shack inside the yard. Battered cars, with flaky paintwork and no wheels, were stacked up. There were piles of engines, exhausts, tyres and other car parts strewn around the place. In one corner was an upside-down yellow Mini. By the gates was an old reddish-coloured truck with its back doors hanging open, and, in the middle of the yard, was the empty shell of a once-white van.
âYou must get off here,' said Alba.
Archie climbed off her back and pulled out a jelly bean from his pocket. âHere,' he said, offering it to her.
âWhat is this small coloured pebble?' she asked cautiously.
âA jelly bean,' replied Archie. âIt's food.'
âFood? I am starving,' said Alba, taking it from his hand and throwing it into her throat. She swallowed it. Her eyes widened with delight. âThis is delicious. I very like this jelly bean. I very like it a lot. Have you more?'
Archie rummaged in his pocket and pulled out another and handed it to her.
âI do not know how to be thanking you for these jelly beans,' she said, âbut I must go and help for my sister.'
âGood luck,' said Archie.
âThank you, Mr Archie,' she said, jumping down into the yard and prowling around, peering into gutted cars, looking for something.
A male voice called out, âIn here.'
Alba looked around, confused.
âI think it came from the truck,' said Archie.
Alba looked at the reddish-coloured truck. The back doors were open. âThank you, little humano,' she whispered, walking cautiously up the ramp into the back.
âHello?' she called. âWho is in there?'
The back doors of the truck suddenly swung shut and the engine started. Archie tried to see who was in the driver's seat but the angle was no good. The truck reversed, backing into the gates, pushing them wide open, swinging into the road.
Archie felt the corrugated iron roof buckle under the weight of something landing on it with such force that it knocked him off his feet. He looked up to see another dragon. This one had a green underbelly and a red back, and ears rather than gills. It peered at him with yellow eyes and spoke.
âSo this is your friend, is it, Holly?'
Holly's head appeared over the dragon's shoulder. âDirk Dilly meet Archie Snellgrove,' she said.
Archie lowered his voice. âThere's another dragon,' he said.
âI know, it's Dirk,' said Holly, sliding off Dirk's back.
âThere's another dragon,' repeated Archie.
âNo kidding,' said Dirk. âWhere did Alba go? We lost sight of her. What was that truck doing?'
âThere's
another
dragon,' he said for a third time.
âI think your friend might be a bit slow,' said Dirk.
âNo,' insisted Archie, speaking through his teeth. âAnother one. Down there.'
Dirk craned his neck round to see a brown-backed, caramel-bellied Shade-Hugger stepping out of the shell of the once-white van, covering his eyes from the last rays of daylight.
âKarny,' muttered Dirk.
âDo you know this one too?' asked Archie.
âHe's an old friend,' said Holly.
âStay here, and keep quiet,' whispered Dirk, flying down to the yard, landing on Karnataka's back, catching the Shade-Hugger by surprise, pinning him to the ground.
âCool uncle,' said Archie, grinning.
âYou can't tell anyone,' said Holly.
âWho would believe me?' he replied, watching the two dragons struggling with each other.
âHow's it going, Karny?' said Dirk in Karnataka's ear.
âDirk Dilly,' he responded, in his usual nasal whine. âI order you to release me.'
âOrder me? You're getting ideas above your station,'
replied Dirk. âAll this power has gone to your â¦'
His words were cut short as a metal cuff slammed shut around his neck and his head was smashed into the side of a rusty Ford Capri.
âI think you'll find my station exactly matches my ideas, these days,' said Karnataka, âseeing as I'm Captain of Dragnet now.' He stood up and brushed himself down. âGood work, Officer Grunling.' He turned to Dirk and said, âBalti here is my most trusted officer.'
Dirk pulled his head out of the dent it had made in the car door to see the dirt-brown Drake, whom he recognised as Dragnet Officer Balti Grunling.
âOh, it's you,' said Balti to Dirk. âYou owe me pepper.'
Dirk had bribed Balti the last time they met with the promise of some pepper to liven up his otherwise rather plain mud diet.
âI'll get you all the pepper you need,' Dirk said.
Balti dragged his head into the car again, denting the dent, then he puffed out his chest and said, âAssaulting Captain Karnataka the Fearless is an extremely serious offence. Shall I read him his rights, sir?'
âNot just yet,' said Karnataka. âI need to speak to him in private. Leave us. I'll call when I need you.'
âI'm sorry, sir,' said Balti pompously, âbut that would be most irregular. This criminal attacked you.'
âAs your captain, I order you to give me that chain and leave. Me and this dragon have business,' said Karnataka.
âWell, it's very unorthodox,' grumbled Officer Grunling, begrudgingly unhooking the chain from his tail, handing it to his superior, and walking into the shell of the once-white van. He muttered something in Dragonspeak that caused the rock beneath his feet to lower him into the ground.
Karnataka yanked hard on the chain, sending Dirk flying into the upside-down Mini, causing it to spin around on its roof and whack the back of his head.
Crouching on the corrugated iron roof, Archie whispered, âI thought he said they were friends.'
âWe need to help him,' said Holly.
âIt's too high to jump down,' said Archie.
Holly slid to the back of the roof. âDown here,' she said, disappearing over the edge.
Archie crawled to where she had been and looked down to see that Holly had landed on a large pile of tyres at the back of the building.
âCome on,' she mouthed.
On the other side of the shack Karnataka pounced
on Dirk, pulling the chain, yanking his head back.
âSpill the beans, Dirk,' he said in his nasal whine. âYou've found out, haven't you?'
âWhat beans? Found out what?' said Dirk, struggling to breathe.
âYou must have found out how to contact a Sky Dragon by now.'
Karnataka had dragged Dirk's head so far back that Dirk was looking at him upside down. The angle was incredibly painful and not the most attractive view of Karnataka. Dirk could see right up his nose. So it was with great relief that Dirk watched a heavy lump of metal smash into Karnataka's head.
âOw,' exclaimed the Shade-Hugger, loosening his grip on the chain.
A second piece of car engine collided with his head. Dirk took the opportunity to twist round and send a burst of fire into Karnataka's face. Karnataka screamed in pain and Dirk jumped up, reversing the situation, landing on top of him. He glanced up to see Holly and Archie standing nearby, poised with more bits of car at the ready.
âThanks,' said Dirk.
âNo problem,' replied Holly.
Dirk reached behind Karnataka's wing, retrieved a
key and undid the neck cuff, while holding Karny down with his other three sets of claws.
âLet me go,' said Karnataka.
âFirst things first,' replied Dirk. âSomething here doesn't add up. I found the line of ash after Alba had been to see you.
âSo what?'
âSo how do you know about the Sky Dragons?'
âHow? I ⦠I ⦠I'll tell you how. It's my job to know these things, that's h ⦠how,' stammered Karnataka nervously.
âBut if you knew about the Sky Dragons, that means â¦' Dirk stopped mid-flow. Somewhere inside his head a cog clicked into place. âYou set the whole thing up, didn't you, Karny?'
âI don't know what you mean,' said Karnataka, trying to avoid his gaze.
âYou sent Alba to find me and lead me to her sister's cave. The ash outline wasn't real, was it? The idea was to make me think her sister's disappearance had something to do with a Sky Dragon. Shute was right. No Sky Dragon has materialised in hundreds of years. You tricked me. I bet Alba doesn't even have a sister.'
Karnataka writhed, trying to get free, but Dirk held him firmly.
âDelfina is real enough,' said Karnatka, âreal and in prison, arrested by Officer Grunling on some trumped-up charge of spying for the Kinghorns. You know how overzealous these Drakes can be with their arrests? When Alba came to me to plead for her release I came up with the plan to get her to hire you. I knew that your first stop would be the last place her sister was seen and that you'd find the outline of ash I made in her cave and assume that a Sky Dragon was responsible for her disappearance. Then it was only a matter of time before you found out how to contact the Sky Dragons.'
âI'll kill her,' snarled Dirk.
âDon't be too hard on her. I told her that if she failed I would banish Delfina with the other Kinghorn traitors, so she was trying to save her sister ⦠save her from the Inner Core.'
âWhy Sky Dragons?' asked Dirk.