Clyde led four dragons while Alistair led two through the south side of town. There were hardly any people around. Luckily, no one saw us.
âRug Dragons live in flocks. We leave them at the pasture if we donât need them and only borrow them when we do,â Alistair explained.
âEvery town has a group that manages the pastures, itâs convenient since you donât have to return the Rug Dragon to the same town.â
âAai.â
We reached the pasture while talking. There was no fence, but a lot of Rug Dragons were resting in the vast meadow. There was a small hut in front and a large warehouse which seemed to house fodder for the dragons.
âNow, letâs call the manager.â
âKyee.â
âHey!â When Clyde tried to call the manager, the Rug Dragon called out to its group in a loud voice. At that moment, the earth trembled as the dragons gathered together. The dragon shook the basket I was sitting on as it ran towards the group. They were saying, âLet her down.â
âWhat if you accidentally step on her?â Even Clyde was perplexed by the number of dragons that gathered. But, we wonât get anywhere like this.
âPuth me down,â I said, and Alistair took me out of the basket. But, instead of putting me on the ground he held onto me. In the meantime, Clyde removed the basket from the dragon.
âKyee.â The dragon, who was wearing the basket, pushed Alistair and I as if saying, âLetâs go.â
âNo.â
âKyee.â It sounded as if the dragon was replying, âWhy?â to Alistair.
âWe have to go home.â
âKyee.â
I wonder if this is fine.
âSheâll eat properly. She was fine during the trip, wasnât she?â
The dragon stared at Clyde, then at Alistair and snorted, âFine.â I was finally set free.
âIâm surprised that a Rug Dragon would get this attached to a person.â
âOh, Mr Manager. Weâre here to return the dragons we used to go to Kaylie. They came back on their own,â Alistair said as he put me down.
âOh, itâs fine. I saw them walking here before you got surrounded by the dragons,â the manager nodded and looked at me and asked, âAnyway, whatâs with this chibi?â
Clyde and Alistair didnât say anything.
âIâm Lei,â I wanted to stay quiet, but I lost to the pressure and told him who I was.
âWe picked her up near Kaylie. It looked like she was involved in some kind of incident and was all alone at the prairie.â
âI see. Where are your parents?â The manager crouched down and looked at my face.
âYou, this is-,â then he stood up in surprise and looked at Clyde and Alistair.
âShe canât speak properly because sheâs small. I donât know what happened, but we thought that she would be better off with us than the border guards, so we took her with us. Itâs a pain to take her back to Kaylie,â Clyde spoke a lot for a change.
âBut you guys are already targeted because of Alistair.â
Whoâs targeting Alistair?
âThe capital is far west of Kaylie and far from here. It takes two months for a roundtrip. They donât have any right to interfere with Alistair, and itâs probably too far for them to come here. And Lei is tiny and is still only one. Even if they think she could be used for something, we wonât just hand her over.â This is the most Clyde has ever spoken.
âLentforce is a good town. But, be careful.â
âWe will.â
âStill, the Rug Dragons adopted her.â
âAdopted?â
The manager had said a word that he wasnât used to hearing.
âThese dragons will usually make a loose group. If something happens to the group, then they will make a new group with the remaining dragons. Young dragons do this a lot.â
âSo they adopted her?â
âBut, sometimes that would be applied to the babies of other animals and humans.â
âSo thatâs why theyâre taking care of Lei.â
I see.
âBut other animals canât eat the same food as Rug Dragons, so they mostly die in the end. If the dragons had taken her, then she might have died.*
Thatâs scary.
I was separated from father because a Rug Dragon cherished me. But he had protected me from the Hollows by covering me with his body. They didnât let me go toilet, but they were always looking out for me.
âKyee.â
It sounded as if it was saying, âTake care of yourself.â Thank you, Rug Dragon.
âLetâs go, Lei.â
âAai.â
I walked while holding Alistairâs hand. *PLOD PLOD* The town shouldnât be far. *PLOD PLOD*
âHey, Alistair.â
âI know.â
I tried my best to walk, and the two talked about something, then Clyde picked me up.
âNo. I waww.â
I was in the basket this whole time. I want to walk a little.
âSay, Lei. You want to see our house as quickly as possible right?â
I do, but...
âWe wonât even reach there by night time if you continue to totter.â I glared at Alistair as he talked to me from the side.
âIâm noth thoththering!â
âYes, ok. Mm, plodding?â
Thatâs fine.
âHey, Lei. Itâs old, but itâs a big house.â
âAai.â
I was looking forward to seeing my new house, and I enjoyed being in a higher place than when I was held by Alistair.
âHmm. Since Iâm tall. Here you go.â
âAaiighh~.â
He lifted me to the top of his head. Alistair watched me as I shrieked in joy and muttered, âIâll be tall soon too.â But when you get bigger, I will too. Too bad.
When we entered town, I saw a few people who hadnât been there before. One of them noticed Clyde. It was a young woman.
âOh my, Clyde. Long time no see.â
âAh, yeah,â Clyde replied a bit curtly. His body got a little stiff. When I looked up, I saw that he wasnât angry or hated her, he was just nervous.
âOh my. A baby? Donât tell me sheâs yours?â
âSheâs not! We picked her up while we were working.â
âYou did a good thing. Amazing.â
That person grasped her hands over her chest.
âA-amazing?â
âCause isnât it a really nice thing to do? You look nice holding a baby.â
âN-n-nice?â
It is indeed heart-warming to see an adult holding a small kid.
âCome to my general store later with the kid. Iâll pick some things for her.â
âOk.â
âI have to tell everyone! Cya.â
âYup, cya.â
The woman acted like an enthusiastic salesperson whoâd just found a good customer. Clyde spoke softly, âWas she just all over me?â
âNuupe,â I answered straight away. Clyde looked at me in dissatisfaction.
âWhat? The mood was great. I have to tell Kyaro and Mill.â
âCwyde, maybe.â
âMaybe? Whatâs that supposed to mean?â
So naïve people who are easy to deceive also exist in this world.
âWe never understand what Lei says. Letâs go.â Alistair said not caring if she was hitting on Clyde or not. Clyde finally moved. I think theyâre all handsome, so why is no one hitting on them?
âHe doesnât understand woman,â Alistair looked sideways and pointed out in a whisper.
âWhat is it, Alistair?â
âNothing.
The 11-year-old understood.