1 3 the wolf trilogy, p.41
A Blazing Fury: A fantasy M/M Romance, page 41

Mell R. Bright
A Blazing Fury
A Fantasy M/M Romance
Copyright © 2025 by Mell R. Bright
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise without written permission from the publisher. It is illegal to copy this book, post it to a website, or distribute it by any other means without permission.
Mell R. Bright asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
First edition
Cover art by FemkeneriArt
Editing by Elizabeth Amhearst
Editing by Charlotte Møller
This book was professionally typeset on Reedsy
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Contents
1. Abysmal lack of survival skills.
2. Dragoner for hire.
3. The Tender Caress.
4. Vlomir.
5. The Devils’ Cove.
6. Dragonfire.
7. Orvak.
8. The Dragons’ Bane.
9. The Forsaken Mines.
10. To be alive.
11. The Scorched Land.
12. Falcor.
13. The Green Isles.
14. The game of seduction.
15. Rainstorm.
16. Like fuel to the fire.
17. The sweet nectar of the forbidden fruit.
18. The quest.
19. Wyrn.
20. Smokescreen.
21. Sleepless journey.
22. Myrval.
23. The egg.
24. The bells of Dragonest.
25. Rainbow hues.
26. Madness and destruction.
27. An act of sheer stupidity.
28. The aftermath.
29. Unraveling.
30. Brave the storm.
Acknowledgment
About the Author
Also by Mell R. Bright
1
Abysmal lack of survival skills.
JAYCE
“How is it going?” I ask.
“The green one has her jaw locked around the other one’s neck,” Brogan says. “It shouldn’t take long now.”
I squint toward the horizon, but all I can see are two dark shapes fighting over the mountain in a blazing fury. The sun is setting over West Hargos, turning the sky the purple color of a fresh bruise.
“It better be over soon,” I growl. “They’ve been at it for a day now.”
“Well, they are two magnificent females, evenly matched. I’m not surprised.” He sighs longingly. “What a waste.”
Brogan is a small man in his fifties who dreamed of adventure and found himself on my airship. He’s the new dragoner I hired two weeks ago, and our sixth dragon expert in three years. His lot enjoy reading books and writing manuscripts a little too much, and fieldwork isn’t usually their forte. Most of them quit after a few months—or die unexpectedly from their abysmal lack of survival skills.
Sadly, we can’t do what we do without the help of an expert, and very few of them join fire scrounger crews.
“Yes, yes, magnificent,” I say. “But even more so dead.”
“Captain—” He gasps, horrified by my disrespect. “Oh, well…” he suddenly says, distracted by what he’s seeing in the distance.
“What?”
I steal the spyglass from his sweaty grasp and aim it toward the two fighting dragons on the horizon. Both females have fallen to the mountainside, and the green one is ripping apart the red dragon’s gut with her powerful claws, spilling flaming entrails all over the rocks. Gods or not, there is no coming back from that.
“Finally!” I say, pushing the spyglass back into Brogan’s chest. “Sound the bell, we’re moving.”
“Al—already?” he sputters. “But the other female…”
“She’ll be gone by the time we arrive. And from the look of it, the liquid-fire pouch has been pierced during the final blow; we have little time before everything combusts, and you know it. We need to get to the carcass.”
Brogan is still looking for an excuse not to do his job, so I walk to the bow of my ship and ring the bell myself. The merry sound echoes over the forest where we tied my airship, the Blunder, to the largest trees.
Kuroki—my young pilot and annoying cousin—comes out running from below decks, his dark hair unbound.
“I expect us to leave the ground in less than a minute after I ring that bell,” I say. “You should be at your post.”
“Aye, aye, captain!” He trips over his own feet. “Sorry! I was checking the engine. It’s all… all good.”
I groan. “How many times have I told you to let Wilbur work in peace?”
Kuroki disappears inside his control room at the center of the upper deck, and a heartbeat later, the burner above us spits out flames as hot as a dragon’s breath, and the hot-air balloon overhead swells.
“Cast off!” I roar. “We have a dragon to scavenge.”
Alara and Freddy—the power couple and muscle of my crew—are already untying the lines that secure us to the trees. Seconds later, the Blunder slowly rises in the air. Kuroki fires up the propellers, and we’re moving.
We leave behind the forest as we reach altitude, aiming for the mountain. The temperature drops. In the distance, the victorious dragon is flying low, exhausted after her day-long fight. She’ll hide in her lair to lick her wounds, with the blood of the enemy she felled still dripping from her giant muzzle.
“Poor thing,” Brogan says, standing by my side at the bow.
I snort. “She just tore up the entrails of another female in a territorial dispute. We’re lucky they don’t see us as a threat.”
He sighs longingly again, like a fool in love. The beasts are the size of a galleon—and that’s the smallest ones. “We’re undeserving of the attention of living gods,” he says.
I resist the urge to push him overboard. Brogan is one of the most spiritual dragoners I have hired over the years. A man of science, but who regards dragons as divine creatures.
To me, they’re just colossal beasts who eat, sleep, and shit like us—except on a much larger scale. And fortunately for us fire scroungers, from time to time, they kill each other.
As we get closer to the mountain, the dead dragon’s shape gets more defined. Brogan is right; she’s an impressive specimen. Twice the size of the Blunder, with a jaw large enough to swallow a grown man without chewing. She fell on a rocky ledge, which will make scavenging her organic matter trickier. Kuroki will have to maneuver the ship close to the mountainside to allow us to pull out the ramp.
As predicted, the dragon’s entrails are still on fire. The sac has been ruptured, the precious liquid leaking and burning. If we act fast, we might salvage most of it.
We’re pressed for time, and Alara and Freddy know it. The petite woman and her bear of a husband are readying the ramp.
Kuroki brings us closer with surprising skill. The kid was only nineteen when I hired him two years ago on a whim, but he turned out to be a gifted pilot. Especially considering airships are still fairly recent inventions. He came all the way from the Green Isles, where we’re both from, and appeared on my deck one day, following my dear aunt’s directions on where to find me. We share the same hair color—raven black—and almond-shaped eyes. But the similarities end there. Where Kuroki is small and slim, I’m tall and broad-shouldered. My mother fell in love with a northerner—a sailor.
I grab a rope, an iron stake, and a hammer before running along the deck and jumping over. Brogan shouts as he watches me fly over the deadly gap and land on the rocky ledge. Freddy does the same on his side, nimble despite his size, and we both hammer the stakes into the ground to tie the Blunder to the mountain. It won’t hold in strong wind, but the weather has been mild so far.
Alara throws us more rope, and we pull the ramp to the ledge. I cross the ramp back to my ship and pull on my dragonhide gloves. I wear a long coat made of the same fire-resistant leather. Alara, Freddy, and Brogan put on aprons, the same kind blacksmiths and metalworkers use. We can’t risk getting close to a dragon without such precautions.
Brogan hesitates halfway over the ramp, and I know he’s about to bolt back to the Blunder, so I give him a little shove. He screams woefully while launching himself the rest of the way.
“I could have died!” he shouts as pass him by.
“Of course not. I wouldn’t have let you fall,” I say. Maybe. “Get to work. We have little time. Show me where to dig.” I gesture toward the burning entrails. “I can’t make out anything in this mess.”
Brogan’s eyes are wide as he surveys the dead dragon. Her thick skin is the deep-red color of blood. Impressive specimen or not, she’s far from the biggest beast we’ve encountered, but she’s only the second job he’s working on with us.
“Better than seeing drawings in your books, eh?” I told him last week when we tracked his first carcass.
He puked all over his shoes.
“So this is part of her large intestine.” He points toward the gory mess. “And this… this is a lung! So the sac should be somewhere over here.”
Freddy has already come to me with the contraption we use to suck the liquid-fire. Then we’ll put it into thick glass bottles, safely stored in the cargo hold. I lower my goggles to protect my eyes from the heat and step over the spilled organs. I use a long, rigid pipe t o pierce the disgusting pulp.
Behind me, Freddy pumps. We suck only blood. I curse, but we fill the bottle. Dragon’s blood is still valuable. Apothecaries love to use it in their weird concoctions.
Once Freddy has loaded another bottle, I try again, closer to where Brogan is now pointing. After two pumps, a golden liquid pours into the container. Unsurprisingly, it’s on fire. But as soon as Freddy puts the cork on, the flames die out from the lack of oxygen. The bottle will stay hot for a day or two and will need to be stored carefully.
This bottle alone is enough to fire a steam engine for an entire month. That is why we risk our lives in the dragons’ territories. Most new inventions rely on liquid-fire to function efficiently. Coal is now regarded as a dirty fuel.
While we fill eleven bottles—not bad for a dragon this size—Brogan helps Alara with the hide. She’s cutting a big slice through the dragon’s flank with sharp tools, her blonde hair tied in a messy bun on top of her head so it doesn’t get in the way. We’ll store it in the cargo hold and sell it to tanners as soon as possible, before it has time to smell.
Once the bottles are safely on the Blunder, I survey the carcass. The flames are still burning high over the entrails. More liquid-fire than I thought must have leaked inside her chest cavity.
“We can’t linger on that one,” I announce. She might explode at any moment from the pressure and the heat building inside her ribcage.
Brogan nods eagerly. He can’t wait to be done with his precious ‘divine’ corpse.
I fill more bottles with blood, this time alone—blood is less volatile than liquid-fire—while Freddy pulls out a few of the dragon’s giant teeth. They’re as tough as diamonds and sell for a good price, too. He uses the hammer to dislodge them from the jawbone, his thick arms bulging. Sweat glistens on his dark skin. This close to the dragon, the heat is unbearable. The female just died; her body temperature is still high enough to bake a cake inside her throat—we might have tried it before, with a more curious dragoner.
If we had more time, we could suck some brain matter for the alchemists, too. The dragon’s carcass is still fresh enough for that. But drilling through the skull takes hours we don’t have. The dragon’s belly looks more swollen than before already.
“Okay, guys, time to scrap before she explodes,” I say. There’s a significant risk she might.
In a matter of seconds, Alara and Freddy are ready to go, but Brogan fumbles with his tools, the ones he used to take samples for his personal work. It’s the reason he took the job in the first place. He wants to write a book about the different uses of dragon organic matter. It’s a growing market.
I wait for him near the ramp, ready to take the stake off the ground to leave. But as he turns toward me, one of the dragon’s organs bursts. It’s not a real explosion, but it’s loud and sudden, enough to take our skittish dragoner by surprise.
Brogan screams and runs as if the fires of hell are behind him. I raise my hands to warn him to slow down, but he rushes under my arms and reaches the ramp. His foot slips, and before any of us have time to say ‘oh, shit’, he’s falling over the edge and into the emptiness below. He doesn’t even scream as he falls. But seconds later, there’s the unmistakable sound of impact.
I close my eyes, defeated.
Did we just lose another dragoner?
“Oh, there he goes…” says Alara from her position on the Blunder. “He was a funny guy. That’s a shame.”
His tools are on the ground. He disregarded them during his mad escape.
I rub my forehead. “For fuck’s sake…”
I guess I’ll have to put out another job offer. To Dragonest we go.
2
Dragoner for hire.
HARLOW
Ihurry through the busy docks of Dragonest. The job offer was clear: the first dragoner to present himself gets the job. I run my free hand through my sweaty strawberry-blonde hair. I should have gotten a haircut before leaving—my wavy strands tickle the back of my neck—but there was no time.
I’ve been waiting for such an opportunity for weeks. Fire scroungers’ crews are rare; it’s a risky job. The offer appeared on the wall of the local bar late last night. Luckily, I paid the bar owner handsomely for him to keep me informed.
It’s six in the morning, but the fishermen are coming back from their night of work to sell their catch and I have to push my way through carts and hollering buyers. Even at such an early hour, Dragonest is as warm as a dragon’s backside.
Luckily, the airdocks are less busy. Airships are expensive to build and maintain, and they’re mostly owned by the richest people of the city. They like to go on cruises or have fancy dinners high-up in the sky, with the birds as their only witnesses.
The job offer said that they have the Blunder—a strangely named airship—anchored on the fifth airdock. I run along the empty walkways, my heavy bag pulling at my shoulder muscles.
“No way…” I breathe out as I reach the end of the airdock.
The Blunder is unmistakable, as the other two vessels are evidently cruise airships. She’s… quite literally a ship. A frigate, to be precise, if my naval knowledge is any good. A hot-air balloon has replaced her mainmast, and they installed propellers at the bottom and on the side of the boat. They cut out the underside of the hull at the front to install a round observation window. A metal structure has reinforced the entire ship to help her resist gravity.
A risky enterprise, certainly. Now her name makes terrible sense.
The Blunder floats a few meters above the water, and the only way up is by a narrow ramp connecting with the airdock. The early morning sun reflects on the dark hot-air balloon.
I push my glasses on my sweaty nose. “Is that…?”
“Dragonhide, yes,” someone says behind me.
I turn and come face to face with a young Mandinkan. His almond-shaped eyes crinkle with joy and pride as he looks up at the Blunder. His black hair is pulled back and braided in the style they favor in the Green Isles.
“The entire balloon is made of stitched dragonhide,” he continues. “It’s heavier and harder to work with, but it’s fire resistant. It’s really a given when you work around dragons.”
“Oh,” I say, looking for words. “It’s… She’s the Blunder, right?”
The man grins. “Yeah! Are you our new dragoner? You have the look of one.”
I don’t know if I should take offense or not, so I just nod.
Technically, they haven’t hired me yet. But it looks like I’m the first.
“Neat,” he says. “I’m Kuroki. Nice to meet you. Need a hand with that?”
Before I can say a word, he has pulled my bag off my shoulder and he’s carrying it over the ramp and I’m forced to follow.
As my feet land on the deck, I stare at the dark paint all over the wood. It’s kind of flaky and…
“You’ve got a good eye,” Kuroki says. “It’s dragon blood. Fire-resistant too, but you already know that. We painted the entire ship with it, then coated it with wood lacquer to make it last longer. Good luck setting the Blunder on fire.”
“Brilliant.”
“Thank you, it was my idea,” says a deep voice.
A tall man is coming down the steps leading to the bow. His long, dark hair falls below his shoulders in a luscious curtain on one side, and shaved on the other. My eyes widen as I notice the burn on his left cheek, right below his eye. I wonder if a close encounter with a dragon is the reason for his scar. A phantom pain pulls at the tender skin of my back.
He’s wearing a long black coat made of dragonhide—it must cost a fortune—and a devilish smile.
I have no doubt that he’s Captain Jayce Hawkins, the man who put out the job offer.
My heart speeds up as his dark eyes roam over me, taking in the ‘adventurer’ outfit I purchased weeks ago when I decided to join a fire scroungers crew. Supple cotton pants with pockets, leather boots, and a brown vest. I also bought two extra pairs of glasses that I stored in my bag. I’m as blind as a bat without them.
“Let me guess…” he says with a raised eyebrow. “Dragoner?”
Again, I’m not sure if I should take offense or not. I know I have the look of a bookworm, but still…
“Yes. Harlow Prince at your service,” I say with what I hope doesn’t look like a tense smile.
