
A masked figure walked out onto the ledge, close to where the squadron was supposed to meet. He was nearly half an hour early, but he figured that it was better than being late, especially with first impressions as a leader. The wind cut across the mountains, howling softly as he looked out to the sea of trees below, then up at the clouds above. The first rays of dawn had started to paint the clouds in golden hues, and began to illuminate the clouds beneath.
A large creature slowly strode up alongside him, claws clicking against the stones of the mountainside, the rays of sunlight illuminating scales of dark bronze as it approached the masked man. Slowly, near-silently, it moved it’s head alongside the young man, and with a relative gentleness for it’s hulking form, brushed against the young man’s cloak.
The sensation was enough to draw his eyes away from the sight before them, causing him to turn his head enough to see the dragon’s own expression, and what he figured to be concern. Slowly, he raised a hand, and placed it atop the mighty creature’s head, and gently scratched it’s scales to comfort the great beast.
“I am fine, Tir. Merely thinking.”On some level, it felt strange that he’d be leading a squadron. Five years ago,
Caleb imagined himself somewhere behind the fight itself, pouring over maps and talking grand strategy with his family, letting others lead the charge where bravery and might were more prudent than supply chains and overarching goals.
Still… he was an Evermoore, and Evermoores always did lead back home, with no need or objective too small to escape their concern. Ready or not, it was his responsibility now to lead these people. The best he could do was put on a stern face, to which end the mask certainly helped.
The dragon interrupted his thoughts again with a slight shake, not much movement, but enough to attract Caleb’s notice as deliberate. He looked across the form of the noble creature, the dragon Tir’verkalin. The young prince had learned in these past couple of years how his dragon seemed to know his feelings better than the prince himself did. It was all still so new to him. However he realized if he was to have any chance at the justice his family deserved, this was step one. Caleb straightened himself out, thankful the mask and cloak made reading him a far greater challenge. It could cover the slack if even a slight amount of his nervousness at meeting the hardened warriors he’d be leading to battle leaked out.
And yet, there was one thing that he could feel in the back of his mind, as if being reminded by someone he knew. This was his first stint of proper leadership, and it meant the warriors under his command were wholly his responsibility. And, if he failed, it was solely his fault. Such was the weight of leadership. But still, this was his task. And it was his path to avenging what he lost. He would’ve rather cast himself off this same cliff than refuse it.
Off in the distance, he saw forms he recognized. Distant, and wouldn’t be here for at least another fifteen minutes, but the silhouette of a dragon was a bit hard to miss once one knew what they were looking for. He spared himself a brief smirk beneath his mask, before he turned back towards Tir’verkalin.
“Right. Time waits for no man. Nor dragon, for that matter. Let us go.”He spoke with a slight comforting warmth to his voice as he walked alongside Tir’verkalin towards the saddle across the dragon’s back. The dragon lowered itself to aid his ascent up it’s back, as he mounted the noble beast with slow and deliberate movements that would almost seem lazy to an outside observer.
The dragon then stood up from where it laid, and started to back up, each step covering several yards as it prepared itself. The dragon eventually coiled itself like a cat ready to pounce, before launching itself forward. The dragon’s running start towards the ledge was a series of thunderous steps, claws biting into stone to help the dragon pull itself along just a little faster, before it flung itself and it’s rider from the cliff. The initial leap cleared twenty feet directly off the ledge before the dragon fully opened it’s wings, and the pair took to the skies.
The force of the wind ripped Caleb’s hood back for a moment, revealing his bright red hair, and the burn scar on the left side of his head that ran from his eye to his ear. Once the pair had hit a more consistent speed, Caleb pulled his hood back up, as the pair climbed in elevation towards their meeting site; a plateau atop this same mountain. It was there he’d meet them, and it was there his first real steps on this journey would begin.