by Bill Tiepelman
Beard, Boots, and Baby Dragon
Deep in the heart of the Widdershins Woods, where the moss grew thick enough to hide bad decisions and the mushrooms leaned in like gossiping aunties, lived a gnome named Grimble Stumbletoe. Grimble was small, round, boot-heavy, beard-heavy, and blessed with the sort of face that looked like it had argued with weather for sixty years and lost only twice.
He wore a sagging brown hat embroidered with mysterious patterns, none of which meant anything noble, although Grimble once claimed they were βancient runes of protection.β In truth, they were stains, threadbare patches, and one burned spot shaped suspiciously like a duck. His beard tumbled down his chest in great silver waves, magnificent enough to earn admiration from respectable woodland folk and flammable enough to keep everyone concerned.
His boots were another matter entirely. Large, brown, battered, and apparently built from the hide of some extinct beast with attitude problems, they announced his arrival before his mouth did. Which was impressive, because Grimbleβs mouth was famous for arriving early, staying late, and insulting the furniture.
But for all his questionable hygiene, unreliable manners, and lifelong commitment to being a nuisance, Grimble was not alone. Curled against him, clinging to his arm, or occasionally trying to chew the buckles off his belt was Sizzle, a baby dragon no larger than a plump house cat but already convinced he was the blazing doom of kingdoms.
Sizzle had slate-blue scales, a gold-plated belly, horns like little crooked candle flames, and wings so brilliantly orange they looked as if autumn itself had been slapped onto leather and told to behave. He also had a mouth full of tiny teeth, an enthusiasm for chaos, and the emotional restraint of a drunk pixie at a cake auction.
Together, Grimble and Sizzle were the most troublesome pair in Widdershins Woods. Some called them heroes. Some called them menaces. Most called them from a safe distance.
The Little Menace Beneath the Foxgloves
Grimble found Sizzle on a morning that had already gone poorly.
For starters, his left boot had filled with rainwater overnight, despite there being no rain. His kettle had been stolen by a raccoon with the dead-eyed confidence of a professional criminal. And old Miss Frumpel, the mushroom widow who lived beneath a red-capped toadstool, had posted yet another notice on the community stump reading:
βResidents are kindly asked to refrain from shouting profanity at squirrels before breakfast.β
Grimble had responded by shouting, βSquirrels can read now? Well, that explains the smug little bastards.β
It was while searching for his kettle, his dignity, and possibly breakfast that he heard the rustling beneath the foxgloves.
Now, sensible woodland folk do not investigate strange noises beneath foxgloves. Foxgloves are beautiful, yes, but they also tend to attract bees, witches, enchanted beetles, dramatic frogs, and once, briefly, a wandering accordion player who refused to leave until someone praised his βemotional range.β
Grimble, however, had never been accused of being sensible by anyone sober.
He shoved aside the pink bell-shaped flowers, squinted beneath a mushroom cap, and found a tiny dragon curled in the damp moss like a forgotten coal from a magical fireplace. The creature blinked one enormous eye at him, then the other. His wings were wrapped tight around his body, his tail tucked beneath his chin, and his expression suggested that the world had disappointed him already.
βWell,β Grimble said, scratching his beard, βarenβt you an ugly little bugger?β
The baby dragon sneezed.
A puff of flame shot from his mouth and set Grimbleβs beard on fire.
For three full seconds, the Widdershins Woods knew peace.
Then Grimble shrieked, slapped his own chin, rolled through a patch of wet moss, kicked over a mushroom, insulted four generations of imaginary dragon ancestors, and finally sat up smoking from the mouth down.
The baby dragon stared at him with bright, curious eyes.
Grimble stared back.
Then he laughed.
Not politely. Not gently. Grimble laughed like a rusty hinge being tickled by a goblin. He laughed until the squirrels fled. He laughed until Miss Frumpel slammed her tiny round window shut. He laughed until the dragonβs ears perked up and his little spiked head tilted sideways in what might have been confusion or judgment.
βAh,β Grimble said, wiping soot from his mustache, βyouβve got spirit. Terrible aim, but spirit.β
The dragon opened his mouth again.
βNope.β Grimble held up a finger. βYou scorch the beard twice before noon, and weβre no longer friends. Thatβs a boundary, that is.β
The dragon sneezed again, this time sending only a tiny curl of smoke into the air.
βThere we are.β Grimble nodded. βProgress. Low standards, but progress.β
He named him Sizzle by lunchtime, after the little dragon bit into Grimbleβs stolen kettle, sneezed inside it, and cooked the rainwater into steam. Grimble took this as a sign of usefulness. Sizzle took it as a sign that metal was delicious. Neither of them was completely right, but that rarely stopped them.
From that day forward, Sizzle followed Grimble everywhere. Through fern thickets. Across mossy stones. Into abandoned badger tunnels. Behind taverns. Under bridges. Occasionally into situations that had no business involving either of them, especially after dark.
Grimble raised the baby dragon as best he could, which is to say poorly but with conviction.
He taught Sizzle how to sit, although Sizzle preferred perching on his shoulder and digging tiny claws into his vest. He taught him how to hunt beetles, though Sizzle preferred roasting them first and making the entire clearing smell like burnt nutshells. He taught him how to glare at strangers, steal sausage ends from unattended plates, and avoid eating mushrooms with spots shaped like screaming faces.
βThose ones make you see tomorrow,β Grimble warned him once. βAnd tomorrow is usually unpaid bills and back pain, so donβt bother.β
Sizzle listened. Mostly.
Every morning, Grimble would stomp out of his hollowed-out tree, stretch until his joints sounded like a bag of dropped spoons, and inhale deeply.
βAh, smell that, Sizzle,β heβd say. βFresh moss, damp stone, wildflowers, and something dead behind the brambles. Natureβs perfume.β
Sizzle would sniff, blink solemnly, and give a small approving chirp.
Breakfast was whatever could be found, stolen, bartered, trapped, traded, or bullied away from something smaller than Grimble. Mushrooms were common. Stale bread was a luxury. Acorns were only eaten under extreme circumstances or after losing a bet. On rare fine days, Grimble would cook root cakes over a small fire while Sizzle hovered nearby, trying to help by breathing flames at everything except the cooking pot.
βNot the hat,β Grimble snapped one morning as Sizzleβs nostrils glowed. βAnything but the hat. This hat has seen things. Mostly because I was wearing it when I saw them, but still.β
Sizzle chirped and flapped his wings.
βDonβt give me that innocent face. You have the innocent face of a weasel in a pie shop.β
By midday, they usually wandered. Grimble claimed he was patrolling the woods. Miss Frumpel claimed he was avoiding chores. The owls claimed nothing at all, but only because Grimble had once threatened to charge them rent for staring at him.
There were paths in Widdershins Woods, though none could be trusted. Some moved when you werenβt looking. Some led in circles out of spite. One path near the western creek led only to an apologetic shrubbery and a pair of shoes nobody admitted owning. Grimble knew them all, not because he was wise, but because he had gotten lost on each of them often enough to form opinions.
βA map is a cowardβs blanket,β he liked to say.
βThatβs because you canβt read one,β Miss Frumpel replied once.
βI can read plenty.β
βYou held it upside down and used it as a napkin.β
βMultifunctional literacy,β Grimble said, and Sizzle sneezed smoke like he agreed.
For all his bluster, Grimble loved the woods. He loved the dripping stone walls half-swallowed by ivy, the mushrooms glowing faintly under moonlight, the purple foxgloves nodding along the trails, the secret hollows beneath tree roots, and the endless damp green smell of things growing where they absolutely pleased.
And, though he would deny it loudly and perhaps throw a pinecone at anyone who suggested it, he loved Sizzle most of all.
He loved the way the baby dragon tucked his head under Grimbleβs beard during thunderstorms. He loved the way Sizzle growled at shadows twice his size and then hid behind a boot when the shadow moved. He loved the way Sizzle tried to roar every evening at sunset, producing a noise somewhere between a kettle whistle and an insulted chicken.
βTerrifying,β Grimble would say gravely. βAbsolutely bone-chilling. Somewhere, a turnip has fainted.β
Sizzle would puff himself up, delighted.
That was their life: moss, mushrooms, insults, smoke, and occasional petty theft.
Until the morning Grimbleβs left boot disappeared.
A Shiny Young Fool and a Path That Lied for a Living
Grimble discovered the theft with a scream that startled birds from three trees, woke a sleeping badger, and caused Miss Frumpel to spill tea down her front.
βMy boot!β he bellowed. βMy left boot! Agnes is gone!β
Yes, Grimble had named his boots. The left one was Agnes. The right one was Mildred. He claimed they had personalities. Agnes was loyal, dependable, and smelled faintly of onion. Mildred was suspicious, judgmental, and had once been used to stun a troll. Whether this counted as personality or merely fungal damage was a matter of debate.
Sizzle waddled in a circle, sniffing the moss near Grimbleβs sleeping stump. He lowered his scaled snout to the ground, inhaled dramatically, and sneezed hard enough to singe a beetle.
βWell?β Grimble asked.
Sizzle pointed one claw toward the northern brambles.
Grimble narrowed his eyes. βGoblin stink.β
Sizzle nodded.
βAnd onion.β
Sizzle nodded again.
Grimble clutched his remaining boot to his chest. βTheyβve taken Agnes.β
From her toadstool porch, Miss Frumpel sighed. βPerhaps they mistook it for a dwelling.β
βCareful, Frumpel,β Grimble snapped. βYouβre one lace away from a strongly worded gesture.β
βYou havenβt strongly worded anything in your life. You just swear until birds leave.β
βEffective communication comes in many forms.β
Sizzle hissed at the brambles.
Grimble jammed Mildred onto his right foot, wrapped his bare left foot in a rag, grabbed his rusted dagger, and stomp-limped toward the trail.
βCome on, Sizzle,β he said. βNobody steals a gnomeβs boot and lives peacefully with both nostrils.β
They had gone less than half a mile before they found the young man.
He stood in the middle of the path wearing shining armor, a polished breastplate, silver-trimmed gloves, and a helmet so clean it looked like it had never been introduced to weather. He held a map upside down, which immediately made Grimble dislike him less than he expected.
βExcuse me!β the young man called. βGood sir! Might you know the way to the Great Elven Temple?β
Grimble stopped. Sizzle stopped. A squirrel stopped, sensing entertainment.
βGood sir?β Grimble repeated.
βYes.β
βYou talking to me?β
βI believe so.β
Grimble looked down at his bare rag-wrapped foot, then at his soot-streaked beard, then at the dragon perched beside him, chewing thoughtfully on a twig that had done nothing wrong.
βBoy,β Grimble said, βyour judgment is already in the ditch.β
The young man swallowed. βMy name is Cedric Larkspur, apprentice of the Order of the Gilded Fern. I seek the Temple of Lethandriel, where the Silver Lantern of Kindly Directions has been stolen by goblins.β
Grimble blinked.
βThe what of what now?β
βThe Silver Lantern of Kindly Directions,β Cedric repeated. βIt is an ancient elven relic that guides lost travelers home.β
Grimble barked a laugh. βWell, that explains why the path behind the creek led me to my own backside yesterday.β
Cedric frowned. βI beg your pardon?β
βKeep begging. Youβre dressed for it.β
Sizzle gave a tiny chirp that sounded suspiciously like laughter.
Cedric leaned sideways to look at him. βIs that a dragon?β
Grimbleβs expression changed.
It was subtle, but Sizzle noticed. Grimbleβs hand lowered to rest lightly on the baby dragonβs back. His eyes, usually bright with mischief, narrowed into something old and sharp.
βNo,β Grimble said. βHeβs a cabbage with wings.β
Cedric flushed. βI only meantβheβs magnificent.β
Sizzle puffed up immediately.
βDonβt encourage him,β Grimble said. βHe already thinks heβs the flaming doom of breakfast.β
βThe goblins who stole the lantern,β Cedric continued carefully, βwere seen near Snarglecap Hill. There were rumors they had other stolen goods as well. Boots, bells, silverware, a priestβs wig, several enchanted spoons, andβ¦β
βBoots?β Grimble said.
βYes.β
βWhat kind of boots?β
βI didnβt ask.β
βOf course you didnβt. Nobody ever thinks to ask the important questions.β
Cedric lowered the map. βWill you help me?β
βNo.β
Sizzle stared at Grimble.
βAbsolutely not.β
Sizzle continued staring.
βDonβt look at me like that.β
Sizzle blinked slowly.
βHeβs a shiny lad with a lantern problem. We are boot people.β
Sizzle pointed one claw toward the north.
βFine,β Grimble muttered. βBut only because Agnes may be involved. Not because I care about elves, lanterns, or this polished spoon of a man.β
Cedric straightened. βYou have my gratitude.β
βKeep it. Does it buy lunch?β
βNo.β
βThen itβs useless.β
So the three of them set off: Cedric in his shining armor, Grimble in one boot and a rag, and Sizzle trotting between them with his wings half-spread, thrilled to be included in something that smelled like danger.
The northern path was not friendly.
It twisted through fern beds and thorn tunnels, over slick stones and beneath arching roots. The trees leaned close, murmuring in creaks and leaf-whispers. Somewhere overhead, owls watched with the solemn disapproval of unpaid judges.
βDo the trees always sound like that?β Cedric asked.
βOnly when theyβre bored,β Grimble replied.
βAnd are they bored now?β
βYouβre asking a gnome with one boot and a baby dragon. Take a guess.β
They crossed a creek where the water ran backward every third minute. They passed a ring of mushrooms that bowed politely until Grimble warned Cedric not to bow back.
βWhy not?β Cedric whispered.
βBecause then they think youβve accepted office.β
βOffice?β
βMushroom politics. Nasty business. Too many committees. Too much damp.β
Sizzle paused at the mushroom ring and sneezed sparks. The mushrooms recoiled.
βThatβs my boy,β Grimble said proudly. βDiplomacy.β
By afternoon they reached the old stone wall that marked the beginning of goblin territory. It ran crooked through the woods, half-collapsed and moss-eaten, with purple flowers growing between its cracks. Beyond it, the trees seemed shorter, meaner, and more interested in watching people trip.
Cedric lifted his sword.
Grimble lowered it with two fingers.
βFirst rule of goblins,β he said. βDonβt point the expensive shiny thing unless youβre ready to lose it.β
βWhat should I do?β
βLook poor.β
Cedric glanced down at his gleaming armor.
βToo late,β Grimble said.
Sizzle sniffed the ground again. Smoke curled from his nostrils. He let out a low growl, deeper than his usual squeaks, and Grimbleβs jokes faded for a moment.
There, pressed into the mud beside the wall, was the print of a goblin foot. Beside it was the square, deep impression of a boot heel.
Agnes.
Grimble knelt slowly and touched the print.
βThose green-nosed little pantry rats,β he whispered.
Cedric looked uncomfortable. βIt is only a boot.β
Grimble turned his head.
Cedric took one step back.
βOnly a boot?β Grimble said softly. βThat boot carried me out of a troll wedding, across the Mudfen Flats, through the cellar of the Crooked Goat Tavern during a cheese riot, and away from three tax collectors who were faster than they looked. Agnes has seen more life than your entire helmet.β
Cedric nodded quickly. βA noble boot.β
βDamn right.β
Sizzle pressed his little snout against Grimbleβs shoulder.
Grimble gave him a rough pat. βDonβt worry. Weβll get her back. And if theyβve scratched the buckle, Iβm doing something dramatic.β
βWhat sort of dramatic?β Cedric asked.
βI havenβt decided yet. But itβll involve yelling.β
They followed the tracks until dusk draped itself over the woods. Ahead, through the tangled branches, they saw firelight flickering against stone. They smelled smoke, stew, wet leather, cheap ale, and goblin confidence.
They heard singing.
It was bad singing.
Not ordinary bad, either. Goblin bad. The kind of bad that sounded like someone throwing a sack of spoons down a stairwell and insisting it had a chorus.
Grimble parted the leaves and peered into the hollow below.
There, beneath Snarglecap Hill, sprawled a goblin camp. Dozens of crooked tents leaned around a smoky fire. Loot lay piled everywhere: silver plates, jeweled combs, cracked mirrors, rusty helmets, temple bells, a priestβs wig hanging from a spear, and three crates labeled Definitely Not Stolen.
At the center of it all, raised on a flat stone like a throne, sat a goblin chief with a nose like a rotten pear and a crown made of bent forks.
And on his lap, filled with soup, was Grimbleβs left boot.
Agnes.
Grimble made a noise so quiet and furious that even the owls stopped judging.
Sizzleβs spines rose along his back.
Cedric whispered, βIs that your boot?β
βThat,β Grimble said, βis a declaration of war.β
The Goblin Hoard, the Stolen Boot, and the Roar That Finally Found Its Teeth
The goblin chief lifted Agnes to his mouth and drank from her.
Grimbleβs left eye twitched.
βIβm going to peel him,β he said.
βWe need a plan,β Cedric whispered.
βThat was the plan.β
βA better plan.β
Grimble glared at the hollow. βFine. You walk in first, all shiny and noble. They get distracted by your expensive kneecaps. I sneak around the side, retrieve Agnes, steal the lantern, insult someoneβs mother, and then Sizzle sets fire to something emotionally important.β
Sizzle chirped approvingly.
Cedric looked horrified. βThat is not a plan. That is a crime with choreography.β
βMost good plans are.β
Before Cedric could object further, a new sound rose from the far edge of the camp: wheels creaking over roots, horses snorting, and a man complaining loudly about mud.
A carriage rolled into the hollow, lacquered black and trimmed in brass. Two exhausted ponies dragged it through the muck. On the side, painted in gold letters, were the words:
Lord Prundle Coppersnatchβs Traveling Collection of Rare, Dangerous, and Financially Promising Creatures
Grimble went very still.
Sizzle pressed closer to him.
From the carriage stepped Lord Prundle Coppersnatch himself, a tall, narrow man wearing a velvet coat, white gloves, and the expression of someone who had never been punched by nature but richly deserved the introduction. He held a silver-tipped cane and walked as if the ground was lucky to be beneath him.
The goblin chief hopped down from his stone, still holding Agnes.
βYou bring gold?β the goblin demanded.
Lord Prundle sniffed. βIf you have brought me what you promised.β
The goblin grinned, revealing teeth like broken corn. βLittle dragon. Blue scales. Orange wings. Baby. Rare. Worth lots.β
Sizzleβs pupils narrowed.
Grimbleβs hand closed around his dagger.
Cedric whispered, βThey mean him.β
βAye,β Grimble said.
There was no joke in his voice now.
Lord Prundle removed a small golden cage from the carriage. The bars shimmered with spellwork. βA hatchling drake,β he said, almost purring. βExcellent. Properly trained, displayed, and branded, it will be the centerpiece of my autumn exhibition.β
Sizzle made a tiny, terrified sound.
Grimbleβs face hardened into something the woods had not seen in years.
For all his foul jokes, petty theft, and general resistance to behaving like a civilized creature, Grimble Stumbletoe had rules. Not many. Not tidy ones. But rules all the same.
You did not steal a gnomeβs boot.
You did not serve soup in Agnes.
And you absolutely, under no circumstances, put Grimbleβs dragon in a cage.
βChange of plan,β Grimble said.
Cedric swallowed. βTo what?β
Grimble stood up.
βTo dramatic.β
He marched straight into the goblin camp.
For a moment, nobody moved. Goblins paused mid-song. Lord Prundle froze with his cage in hand. The goblin chief looked down at the soot-bearded gnome stomping into camp wearing one boot and one filthy rag.
Then Grimble pointed at him.
βYou,β he said, βare drinking soup from my wife.β
The hollow went silent.
Cedric closed his eyes behind the bushes.
The goblin chief blinked. βBoot wife?β
βDonβt judge what you donβt understand.β
Lord Prundle looked disgusted. βWhat is this creature?β
βThis creature,β Grimble snapped, βis the last bad idea youβre going to have today.β
Sizzle stepped out beside him, wings spread, orange membranes glowing in the firelight. He was still small. He was still young. His claws sank nervously into the dirt. But he lifted his head and bared every tiny tooth he had.
The goblins stared.
Lord Prundleβs eyes lit up. βThere it is.β
Grimble moved between him and Sizzle.
βThere he is,β Grimble said. βAnd there he stays.β
The goblin chief cackled. βSmall dragon. Small gnome. Big soup boot.β
He raised Agnes again.
That was his mistake.
Grimble flung his dagger.
It did not hit the goblin. Grimble was not that accurate. It did, however, slice through the rope holding up a rack of stolen pans, which crashed down onto six goblins, a barrel of turnips, and one unfortunate fiddle.
Chaos exploded.
Sizzle launched himself into the air with a squeak of fury and spat flame at the nearest tent. The tent did not catch fire, because it was too damp and miserable, but it did begin smoking in a way that deeply offended everyone inside it.
Cedric charged from the bushes, sword raised, shouting, βFor the Temple of Lethandriel!β
Grimble shouted, βFor Agnes, you soup-sucking goblin twits!β
The goblins shouted several things, most of them grammatically unstable.
Lord Prundle shouted, βDo not damage the merchandise!β
Sizzle heard that.
His little head snapped toward the collector.
Smoke curled from his nostrils.
Grimble saw it too, and pride flashed across his soot-smudged face.
βThatβs right, lad,β he said. βNobody merchandises you unless you get royalties.β
A goblin lunged at Grimble with a club. Grimble ducked, grabbed a ladle from the soup pot, and smacked the goblin across the nose.
βYou call that a swing?β Grimble barked. βMy gran hit harder with a knitting needle, and sheβd been dead three days at the time!β
Another goblin leapt onto his back. Sizzle swooped low and bit the goblinβs ear. The goblin shrieked, released Grimble, and ran in a circle yelling, βTiny devil! Tiny devil!β
βHe prefers dragon,β Grimble shouted after him, βbut your terror is appreciated!β
Cedric, to his credit, fought better than Grimble expected. He swung his sword with practiced precision, knocked clubs from goblin hands, kicked over a crate of stolen candlesticks, and once accidentally reflected firelight off his polished breastplate so brightly that three goblins ran into each other.
βUseful armor!β Grimble called. βAnnoying, but useful!β
βThank you?β Cedric shouted back.
βDonβt get sentimental. Iβm under stress.β
Lord Prundle advanced toward Sizzle with the golden cage open. βEasy now,β he crooned. βEasy, precious little specimen.β
Sizzle backed away.
Grimble saw fear flicker through the baby dragonβs eyes, and something in him cracked open like old bark.
He remembered finding Sizzle beneath the foxgloves. Remembered the first beard fire. Remembered the little dragon sleeping in Agnes during a cold rainstorm, curled in the boot like a scaly coal. Remembered the first time Sizzle had followed him into the dark, trusting him without question, as if Grimble Stumbletoe of all people was a safe place in the world.
Grimble had been called many things: nuisance, thief, drunkard, mushroom menace, public language hazard.
But safe?
That one was new.
And he would be damned before he let some velvet-coated collector take that away.
Grimble grabbed Agnes from the goblin chiefβs hands, dumped the soup over the chiefβs head, and shoved his bare foot into the boot with a wet, awful squelch.
βOh, that is vile,β he said. βThat is emotionally vile.β
The goblin chief wiped broth from his eyes. βMy soup!β
βMy boot!β
βMy dragon!β Lord Prundle snapped.
The camp went quiet again.
Even the fire seemed to lean back.
Grimble turned slowly.
βSay that,β he said, βone more time.β
Lord Prundle lifted his chin. βThat dragon is an unregistered magical creature. By royal collectorβs privilege, I have the right to claimββ
Sizzle roared.
It was not the squeaky kettle-whistle roar from sunset practice. It was not the tiny chirp that made frogs look concerned. This roar rolled out of him with heat, smoke, and the sudden ancient weight of mountains remembering they used to be volcanoes.
For one shining second, Sizzle was not a cat-sized baby dragon clinging to a gnomeβs sleeve.
He was fire with wings.
The flames that burst from his mouth did not strike Lord Prundle. They hit the golden cage.
The spellwork shattered.
The bars melted.
The collector screamed and dropped it, stumbling backward into a crate marked Rare Snails: Do Not Agitate. The crate broke. The snails emerged. They were indeed rare. They were also deeply agitated.
Goblins scattered.
Cedric seized the Silver Lantern of Kindly Directions from a pile of loot, only to have it shout, βLEFT, YOU FOOL!β in an elegant elven voice.
βIt talks?β Cedric cried.
βEverything talks in these woods if you annoy it enough!β Grimble shouted.
Sizzle landed on Grimbleβs shoulder, trembling with excitement and fear and the aftershock of his own roar. Grimble reached up and held him steady.
βGood lad,β he whispered. βGood bloody lad.β
The goblin chief, still dripping soup, tried to rally his troops. βGet them! Get boot gnome! Get dragon!β
Grimble looked around quickly. He saw the smoky tent, the overturned turnips, the melted cage, the panicked ponies, the scattered lantern light, and the rare agitated snails advancing with slow, terrible purpose.
Then he saw a sack of powdered puffball mushrooms.
Grimble grinned.
βSizzle,β he said, βremember diplomacy?β
Sizzleβs eyes brightened.
Grimble kicked the sack into the fire.
A cloud of glittering mushroom powder erupted through the hollow. Goblins coughed. Lord Prundle wheezed. Cedric sneezed into his helmet so loudly that the Silver Lantern shouted, βBLESS YOU, BUT WITH RESERVATIONS!β
Sizzle flapped his wings, pushing the sparkling cloud across the camp.
And then the puffball powder did what puffball powder from Widdershins Woods always does when heated, disturbed, and exposed to goblin panic.
It made everyone brutally honest.
βI never liked this crown!β one goblin sobbed, throwing down a fork.
βI canβt read!β shouted another, holding up a stolen recipe book.
βI only joined this gang for dental coverage!β cried a third.
The goblin chief clutched his soup-stained tunic. βI am lonely and my leadership style is mostly yelling!β
Lord Prundle staggered backward, covered in glittering spores. βI have no friends because I collect living things instead of forming meaningful relationships!β
Grimble pointed at him. βThere it is.β
Cedric, also dusted in powder, turned to Grimble. βI was terrified the whole time and I polished my armor because I thought confidence could be buffed onto metal!β
βThat one we knew,β Grimble said.
Sizzle sneezed once and released a puff of smoke shaped vaguely like a rude gesture.
βAnd you,β Grimble told him, βare perfect.β
Sizzle froze.
Grimble froze too, realizing what heβd said.
βPerfectly annoying,β he added quickly. βPerfectly bitey. Perfectly likely to burn down something I just paid for.β
Sizzle nuzzled into his beard anyway.
The battle, if it could still be called that, collapsed into goblin confession, snail vengeance, and Lord Prundle trying to apologize to a pony. Grimble took advantage of the confusion with the efficiency of a man who had never respected property boundaries.
He retrieved Agnes properly. He pocketed three coins, one silver spoon, a whistle shaped like a frog, and a bottle labeled Do Not Drink Unless You Mean It. He helped Cedric gather the Silver Lantern, several temple bells, and a scroll that kept sighing.
Then he found, tucked behind the collectorβs carriage, a small bundle of shed dragon scales tied with red string.
Sizzle sniffed them and whimpered.
Grimbleβs jaw tightened.
βWere these yours?β he asked softly.
Sizzle touched one claw to the bundle.
Lord Prundle, still covered in glittering spores, raised a weak hand. βI bought those from a reputable goblin.β
βThat sentence had three crimes in it,β Grimble said.
Cedric stepped forward. βBy authority of the Order of the Gilded Fern, I declare Lord Prundle Coppersnatch under arrest for trafficking magical creatures, conspiracy with goblins, and misuse of velvet in a woodland environment.β
Grimble looked impressed. βThat last one official?β
βIt should be.β
βYouβre learning.β
The Silver Lantern glowed brightly and shouted, βSOUTHWEST FOR JUSTICE! ALSO, SOMEONE PICK ME UP PROPERLY!β
By midnight, the goblins had fled, Lord Prundle was tied to his own carriage with curtain cords, the rare snails had claimed the chiefβs throne, and Cedric stood in the hollow looking far less polished than before. There was mud on his armor, soot on his cheek, and a dent in his helmet shaped like a goblin pan.
βYou did well,β Grimble said.
Cedric smiled. βTruly?β
βDonβt make it weird.β
βRight.β
Sizzle climbed onto the stolen loot pile, spread his orange wings, and attempted another mighty roar.
This one came out half-roar, half-hiccup, and ended with a spark that lit the priestβs wig on fire.
Grimble watched the burning wig sail into the night on a sudden gust of wind.
βMajestic,β he said.
The next morning, they returned the Silver Lantern of Kindly Directions to the Temple of Lethandriel, though not without incident. The lantern criticized Grimbleβs route the entire way, calling him βgeographically feralβ and once suggesting that even moss had better instincts.
The elves, who were tall, serene, and nearly unbearable about both qualities, thanked Cedric with a formal bow and thanked Grimble with visible hesitation.
βYour assistance,β said the High Keeper of the Temple, βhas restored balance to the northern paths.β
βGood,β Grimble said. βBecause yesterday one of them tried to lead me into a pond.β
βThe lantern will prevent such confusion.β
βWill it prevent goblins from making soup in my footwear?β
The High Keeper paused. βNot specifically.β
βThen your magic has gaps.β
Cedric coughed into his hand.
As a reward, the elves offered Grimble a silver medal, a blessing of safe passage, and a small purse of coins.
Grimble took the coins.
βNo medal?β Cedric asked as they left.
βMedals are just shiny responsibility.β
βAnd the blessing?β
βIβve survived this long without being blessed. No sense confusing the universe now.β
They parted at the old stone wall. Cedric bowed to Grimble, then to Sizzle.
βI owe you both my life.β
βProbably,β Grimble said.
βIf ever you need aid from the Order of the Gilded Fernββ
βDo they cook?β
βNot well.β
βThen weβll manage.β
Cedric smiled, less shiny now and better for it. βFarewell, Grimble Stumbletoe. Farewell, Sizzle.β
Sizzle chirped.
Grimble waved one hand. βTry not to get lost on the way out.β
The Silver Lantern, now hanging from Cedricβs belt, shouted, βHE ABSOLUTELY WILL!β
Grimble laughed all the way back through the woods.
When they reached their clearing, Miss Frumpel was waiting with folded arms, a stern expression, and a fresh notice already nailed to the community stump.
βResidents are kindly asked not to return from adventures covered in goblin soup, mushroom glitter, and legal complications.β
Grimble read it twice.
βThat feels targeted.β
βIt is,β said Miss Frumpel.
Sizzle waddled up to her porch and dropped a silver spoon at her feet.
Miss Frumpel blinked. βFor me?β
Sizzle nodded.
Her stern face softened, just a little. βWell. Thank you, dear.β
Grimble gasped. βHe steals one spoon and gets praised. I borrow three pies and Iβm a menace.β
βYou borrowed them from a windowsill.β
βThatβs where pies go when they wish to travel.β
Miss Frumpel shook her head, but she was smiling when she shut her door.
That evening, Grimble and Sizzle sat together beneath the foxgloves where they had first met. The old stone wall glowed softly in the sunset. Mushrooms dotted the moss like tiny umbrellas. Somewhere in the distance, goblins were probably reconsidering their lives, Lord Prundle was definitely composing an apology he didnβt mean, and Cedric Larkspur was learning that heroism involved far more mud than expected.
Grimble cleaned Agnes as best he could, muttering apologies to the boot for the soup incident.
Sizzle curled against his side, wings folded, eyes heavy.
βYou were brave today,β Grimble said.
Sizzle looked up.
βDonβt get smug. Brave and smug are cousins, and one of them gets punched at weddings.β
Sizzle blinked.
Grimble sighed and leaned back against a mossy stone. βBut aye. You were brave.β
The baby dragon rested his head on Grimbleβs belly.
For a while, they listened to the woods breathe.
Then Sizzle opened one eye and gave a tiny puff of flame that warmed Grimbleβs beard without burning it.
Grimble smiled.
βThere you go,β he murmured. βGetting the hang of it.β
Above them, the first stars pricked holes in the deepening blue sky. The flowers nodded. The mushrooms glowed. The forest settled around them, wild and green and full of problems waiting patiently for morning.
Grimble knew there would be more trouble. There always was. Some lost fool would wander in with a quest. Some goblin would steal something sentimental. Some elf would make a ceremony too long. Some squirrel would look at him wrong.
And Sizzle would be there for all of it, tiny teeth flashing, orange wings blazing, eyes bright with the terrible joy of being loved by someone just irresponsible enough to make life interesting.
βTomorrow,β Grimble said, βwe practice roaring without setting wigs on fire.β
Sizzle made a doubtful chirp.
βFine. Without setting important wigs on fire.β
Sizzle seemed satisfied.
Grimble pulled his hat low, tucked one arm around the baby dragon, and closed his eyes.
So the tales continued through Widdershins Woods: of Grimble Stumbletoe, the gnome with the glorious beard, the questionable boots, and the mouth that could curdle cream at twenty paces; and of Sizzle, the baby dragon who was small enough to sleep in a boot but fierce enough to melt a cage, humble a collector, scatter a goblin camp, and warm one cranky old heart that had pretended for years it didnβt need warming.
They were not proper heroes.
They were too rude for that.
But they were loyal. They were ridiculous. They were dangerous in ways no respectable villain could plan for.
And in Widdershins Woods, that was usually better.
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Bring Grimble and Sizzle Home
The artwork behind Beard, Boots, and Baby Dragon captures Grimble Stumbletoe and Sizzle in all their wild woodland glory: the tangled silver beard, the battered leather boots, the mossy mushrooms, and one gloriously loud little dragon with wings like firelit autumn leaves. Bring their mischief home piece by piece with the jigsaw puzzle, turn a wall into Widdershins Woods with the tapestry, or add a bold fantasy focal point with the canvas print. For a softer dose of dragon-powered nonsense, the throw pillow delivers cozy charm with just enough goblin-level attitude. Whether you love gnomes, dragons, woodland fantasy, or art with a mischievous grin, Grimble and Sizzle are ready to stomp, snort, and mildly threaten the mood of any room.