I got all inspired to write a "Memoirs of a RAFian" tie-in book along the lines of what gh had done, and I sort of implied to Cloak that I would wait to post it until it would fit into summer/spring in the timeline, but I'm just going to re-write it a bit for fall and post it anyway because I'm way too impatient to wait.
Oh, and this probably will take place, at least somewhat, between books. Cloak will show up in this story at some point, and those chapters will be assumed to fall between-books in Memoirs. The chapters with just me in them might take place during another Memoirs book, I'll leave that up to Cloak to decide which one(s).
Apologies for a short first chapter (and potentially short chapters after that, I haven't really decided what my standard chapter-length for this book will be).
Okay, I'm just rambling now, onto the book!
Chapter 1
Of Knights and Dragons
It was a beautiful day, bright and sunny, without a cloud in sight. There was a slight chill in the air, but it was still unseasonably warm for as late in the year as it was.
Dino was on 'vacation,' off of mission duty and outside of RAF. She was using the rare opportunity to visit her sister, Hydrargyrum. Hydrargyrum, or Hydra for short, was a dragon. She was not a 'hydra,' mind you. She only had one head, Hydra was just her name. Hydra had actually very briefly joined RAF, a long time ago, but had quickly gotten bored of it. She'd only joined as a courtesy to her sister in the first place, so Dino didn't hold it against her for leaving. The point was, Hydra loved Dino, and vice versa, like the sisters they were.
Still not quite sure how I ended up being related to a dragon, Dino mused to herself as she lumbered along through the forest towards the cave where her sister lived. She didn't remember anything from before she had become a
nothlit, so when a dragon showed up, claiming to be her sister, and knowing things about Dino that only a sister could know . . . well, how could she argue with that? As for how they were related, Hydra refused to tell. The dragon seemed very amused by the air of mystery it gave her.
Dino pulled herself out of her thoughts once she could see Hydra's cave through the forest. She tried to quietly sneak up to surprise her sister, but the tremors of her footsteps rustled the leaves of the trees, giving her away.
"So how is my favorite RAFian doing?" came a gentle voice from the dragon's lair, as Dino approached. Hydra blinked in the sunlight as she poked her angular serpentine head out of the shadow of the cave that she called her home.
"I'm doing good! How about y-?" Dino started to say, when she noticed a small, bloodied patch of cloth between the dragon's teeth. "What is that?" she accused. Then she looked a little closer, turning her head to use her good eye (she was near-sighted in her left). She could see the Knights of Humanity logo embroidered on the crumpled square. " . . . Oh god, you didn't. Tell me you didn't."
Hydra brought a claw up to her mouth and picked at her teeth, not sure what the fuss was about. "Oh, yeah, that. Well, look, the guy came to MY cave and was trying very hard to KILL me. One of those idiot 'vanquish the evil dragon for honor and glory' types." She sighed. "And anyway, I
didn't actually kill his dumb ass. The stupid coward weaseled right out of his clothes when I grabbed him, and then ran off in his underpants. A little scratched up from my teeth, but otherwise fine." She grinned, and flicked the patch of cloth to the ground. "Contrary to popular belief, I'm not a monster." Then she made a disgusted face. "And he probably would have tasted nasty, anyway."
"Good, because RAF has enough PR problems as it is. I know you aren't a RAFian, but you used to be, and if that got out, the Knights of Humanity absolutely wouldn't see it as 'self-defense.'"
Hydra humphed as she looked down at the embroidered patch of cloth, noticing the logo for the first time. "Knights of Humanity? I didn't even realize the moron was affiliated with those bigots." Dino wasn't surprised Hydra had heard of the KoH. Despite being a dragon, she watched the news. Of course, she was smart enough to avoid the rhetoric of Bern Bridges and the like, and smart enough to draw the correct conclusions from what she did watch. "The world would be a little better off if I HAD killed him."
"I don't disagree," Dino agreed.
They moved on to talking about other things, but neither of them had noticed yet that the square of cloth had actually been a pocket, back when it was still attached to an article of clothing. And, against all odds, there was still something inside.