Wings of the Veiled Mountain
Wings of the Veiled Mountain
Kael has always heard odd sounds behind the clouds that hang heavy over his village. As a teen who dreams of dragon flight, he can’t help but wonder what’s up there. One stormy night, light cracks the sky. Kael stares at the mountains, heart thudding. Is this one of those legends?
His grandmother sits by the fire, stringing shells. “There’s no climbing that,” she warns with eyes wary from old stories. Still, Kael can’t rest easy. Though warned not to, by morning he ties his boots, slings his pack, and heads for the clouds. Who else here would brave hidden paths, scales glinting in dusk?
He’s not fully alone. His little sister, Mirin, tags along with a stubborn glare, refusing to stay behind. “You’ll need someone who thinks ahead,” she snaps, holding up chalk. Kael groans, but a soft grin plays on his mouth. Could you leave your sibling if you saw this spark?
Along the ridge a familiar boy appears: Tamir. Tamir’s from a hunter’s family, always faster than anyone else, brown eyes darting around the fog. “If there’s a dragon, maybe it can help my brother’s fever.” Kael nods tight. Loss sits between every word here.
Three figures, three goals—each drawn by wish and worry. They climb in silence, rain tapping bowed heads. When they crest a saddle, the world turns strange. Clouds part for a huge black peak, almost too slick to climb.
There’s a debate at the first crag. Mirin challenges Kael: “Why trust those old tales?” Kael shakes his head, remembering the heat on scales he once found, warm in a creek bed. What would you believe?
The ridge cracks open. Inky blue ferns brush their legs. Mirin scribbles tally marks into rock. Weird deep humming fills the air. Tamir—quick with a knife—keeps to the edge, “Keep talking, guys. Things are not what they look like up here.”
Naturally, something watches them: star-bright eyes flash in dark. Scaly shadows flicker in the corners. The friends press forward, guided only by small signs—old burn marks deep in the bark, tufts of silver hair snagged on brambles.
Kael hears a low growl, but it rumbles like thunder. Then, a deep, proud voice: “Why do mortals climb Veilcrest if they fear what lies above? Speak your wish.”
Tamir stammers. “I… want to heal my brother!” Mirin, wide-eyed, spurts out, “We want the truth. Kael, say it!”
There is fire. It doesn’t burn, only lights. Shadows dance on huge wings. The dragon unfolds from night, its snout battered, an ancient horn chipped. It pins each child with its gaze.
“I’ve seen ages. Why should I grant wish or truth? Give me a piece of joy—a real memory.” Kael thinks—the creek, the warm scale, song with his grandmother. He holds out his joined hands, and recalls that moment. The dragon dips its head, all power, all grace.
The mountain moves. Wind bowls Kael back, almost knocks Mirin over. Kael calls out, “I once sang to lost things so they wouldn’t feel alone.” The beast tilts its vast head. Soft breath surrounds little Mirin’s chalk.

Mirin tilts her palm to reveal marks—lines tracking dreams each time Kael came home. “Dreams count, right?” The dragon surveys Tamir. It’s harsh, hurt, and tired. “Show me why your heart beats hard for hope.” Tamir says, just so: “My brother’s the reason. I fear what happens if he’s lost.”
The beast leans close. Kael feels scales as cold as dawn, yet not unfriendly. You ever feel wild and safe at once? The wind swirls, pulling clothes tight. There’s old starlight or maybe old tears pressed inside each scale.
The dragon’s verdict is simple. “Travel south tomorrow, before moonrise.” A single scale lands at Kael’s feet. Mirin jumps for it, almost tumbling off the ledge.
But something moves underfoot—too quick to grab. Shouts ring down the mountainside. Kael seizes Mirin’s hand, Tamir yelling warnings above. The mountain shakes. Cracks eat into black stone. The sky outside fills with a second light. Another dragon?
Wind lifts Kael, shoves him against glittering rock as voices and roars echo below. Mirin is separated—Kael feels the grasp slip. When he cries for her, stone crumbles. The world goes white with wings ahead.
The cliffhanger is set: will Kael reach his sister in time? Is this new beast friend or foe? Memories, wishes, hearts—what do all the pieces mean once they’re scattered by dragon flight? Would you have made the climb?