The citizenship test for those wishing to reside in Hedotis reminds me of the entrance exam for the Scribe Quadrant, but our test is designed to measure how much a potential cadet has learned, and theirs reads as though to prove how much one has not.
âHedotis: Isle of Hedeon by Captain Asher Sorrengail Chairs screech against the stone floor as Mira, Cat, and I stand. âGet back here!â I shout down the bond, and panic wraps its sharp-nailed hands around my heart and squeezes.
âAlready en route,â Tairn replies.
âIs Chradhââ
âEnraged but not suffering the loss of his rider from what I can tell.â
âHe just set part of the forest on fire,â Andarna adds.
âRiorson, heâs notââ Aaric starts to repeat.
âI heard you the first time.â Xaden hooks his arms under Garrickâs shoulders and hauls him from his chair, then lays him out on the floor and kneels by his side.
âWhat did you put in it?â I ask Faris, rounding the table.
His smile shifts from playful to cruel, but he doesnât answer.
âGet Trager!â Mira orders, and I hear a door open and shut behind me.
Xaden presses his ear to Garrickâs chest. âSluggish but beating.â
âWe need to get him to breatheââ Aaric starts. âHeâs fucking blue.â
âWell aware.â Xaden pinches Garrickâs nose shut, then seals his mouth over Garrickâs and exhales.
Garrickâs chest rises.
I rock back on my heels and stand, finding Talia staring at Garrick with horror-stricken eyes. âWhat was in the cake?â I ask her.
She startles. âNothing.â Her brow furrows as she looks at Garrickâs slice, then reaches for hers. âItâs justââ
âNot for you, my dear.â Faris takes her plate, then winces, tilting his head as he runs a hand over his stomach.
âWhat did you do?â Talia pushes back so quickly her chair falls into the wall behind her, leaving a mark on the pristine surface.
âI tested them as you asked,â he tells her with a loving smile. âHere, in the privacy of our home, where theyâd be comfortable.â
Nairi and Roslyn both nudge their plates away, exchanging annoyed glances as Mira hovers, ready to strike.
âYou poisoned my son?â Talia shrieks.
âYour son was wise enough not to eat it,â Faris replies. âOur isle can be unforgiving. You should be proud, not angry.â
I grab whatâs left of Garrickâs cake and lift it to my nose. It smells like chocolate, and sugar, and maybe a hint of vanilla butâ There. I breathe deeply, catching a hint of something sickly sweet. Like fruit thatâs been left in the sun too long.
âItâs still slowing,â Aaric says, and I glance back to see him lying with his ear against Garrickâs chest as Xaden breathes again for his best friend.
My mind doesnât raceâit flies. It could be anything. Powdered and added to the flour, liquefied and mixed in with the eggs or added to the glaze. It could be indigenous or imported. All I have is Dadâs field guide. Weâre so far out of our depths here that Iâm not even sure Brennan could help.
âViolet,â Xaden pleads as our gazes collide. The panic in those onyx depths jars me like nothing else can.
I take a deep breath and steady my heartbeat to slow my thoughts. âIâll find it,â I promise. âI wonât let him die.â
Xaden nods and breathes for Garrick again.
I smell the cake one last time and set it down, finding Faris watching us with rapt curiosity. Talia slowly backs herself against the curved wall, wrapping her arms around her middle as she watches Xaden.
âIs this the part where you draw a weapon?â Faris asks me, shifting in his seat. âThreaten to kill me if I donât tell you what your hasty friend ingested?â
âNo.â I lean my hip against the table where Talia should be sitting. âThis is the part where I tell you Iâve already killed you.â
Farisâs smile slips. âAnd yet I breathe, and your friend does not.â But his body rolls like heâs trying to contain a belch, and he covers his mouth.
âOh, youâll breathe just fine.â I glance at the other three. âYou all will. Itâs the vomiting until your bile turns to blood that will kill you. Should start in about ten minutes. Donât worry, it only lasts about an hour. Kind of a miserable way to go, but I worked with what I had.â
Nairi lurches out of her chair and drops to her knees, retching onto the floor.
âShit, my timingâs off,â I say to Mira.
âShe had two glasses.â Mira wrinkles her nose and retreats a step as Nairi empties the contents of her stomach.
âYou drank and ate everything we did,â Faris says, the blood draining from his face. âI watched.â
âNot before dinner you didnât.â I drum my fingers on the table. âBefore dinner, it was just the six of us. Are you curious what I gave everyone for an appetizer as we walked down the stairs?â
His eyes flare. âYouâre lying.â
âYou wish.â I glance sideways as Talia slides down the wall, muffling a cry with her fist. âTime for your test. Do you know why arinmint is illegal to export? Why itâs against the rules to take it outside Aretia?â
âThe fucking tea,â Faris hisses, shooting a glare at Talia.
I lift his empty goblet and turn it upside down. âAnd you drank it all.â I tsk at him, then set it back on the table. âIâll make you a deal. I was saving this for the unlikely event we failed your test and needed leverage, but you give me your antidote and Iâll give you mine.â
âYou donât get to beat me.â He shakes his head.
Anger prickles along my skin.
âAnd you donât get to poison my friend with impunity.â I tilt my head, refusing to let any of the panic curdling in my stomach show on my face.
âYour friend will be dead in the next twenty minutes, and I will still have forty to see you slaughtered by my guards. You think we wonât find the antidote in your room?â His voice rises.
The house shudders, and an ear-splitting roar rattles the forks against their plates.
âI wish you the best of luck.â I manage to keep my voice level. âYou have mediocre guards. I have ten lethally trained riders and fliers, four gryphons, and seven pissed-off dragons. The odds are in my favor.â
Faris blanches. âHow do I know youâre not bluffing? That what youâve given us is deadly?â
âYou donât.â I shrug. âBut as soon as you or your wife starts vomiting blood, Iâm afraid the antidote wonât do you any good. Timeâs ticking.â
The door swings open behind us, slamming into the wall.
âOh fuck.â Drake immediately sidesteps out of the doorway and Trager rushes in, the others close behind.
âWhat did they give him?â the flier asks, dropping to his knees opposite Xaden.
âWorking on that,â I tell him. And Iâm failing.
Faris isnât responding to a threat to his own life, or even his wifeâs. It goes against every base instinct I have. I would have forked over the antidote as soon as Iâd realized Xaden was in trouble.
âStop thinking like you,â Tairn orders. âThink like him.â
âHeâd rather die than lose.â Fear drips off the edges of every word. âHeâs not going to tell me.â
âThen stop asking him.â
âViolet!â Xaden shouts.
âWe have to get his heart beating stronger.â Trager puts one hand on top of the other on Garrickâs sternum, then forces all his weight down. âKeep breathing for him.â
The door opens behind Faris, and a servant gasps, then slams the door shut and screams.
My gaze swings to Mira. âI need you to handle everything else in this house that can kill us.â Then I look toward the doorway and find Dain standing behind Cat and Ridoc. âGet my dadâs book on Hedotis. Itâs in my pack on the right side of my bed.â
Dain nods and takes off running.
âWe seal the house now,â Mira orders. âThere are three doors on this level. Cordella, take the front. Cat and Maren, handle the back by the patio. Iâll go for the side. Ridoc and Aaric, stay with Violet.â She draws her daggers and charges past the two sick women and through the servantsâ entrance to the kitchen.
The cook.
âRidoc, with me!â I call back over my shoulder, then race through the door Mira left open and into the kitchen.
Five servants stand around a large, cluttered table, their hands up at their shoulders, palms facing outward. There are two more at the hearth, one at the wash basin, and two by a stone oven.
âWhere is the cook?â
They stare back at me.
âWhere is the cook,â I repeat, switching to Hedotic.
The female servant who just found us trembles as she points to a doorway on her right. I draw two blades and trust Ridoc to watch my back as I storm past the workers and intoâ Itâs a pantry.
Shelves with jars and baskets of fruits line the walls.
The spindly man startles and nearly drops what looks to be a jar of pickled eggs.
âWhat did you put in the cake?â I ask in Hedotic.
âWhat I was instructed to.â He slides the jar back onto the shelf, then reaches below and draws a knife from the block.
âDonât do that.â I lift my blades. âJust tell me whatâs killing my friend and you live.â
He charges me and I throw my daggers in quick succession, embedding them deep within both his forearms. Blood streams to his elbows and he drops the kitchen knife, then bellows, staring down at his arms as his hands shake.
âI told you not to do that!â I take three steps, then yank out both of my daggers by their hilts and kick him square in the stomach.
He stumbles backward into the shelves.
Debilitating pain explodes in my side, and I gasp, tensing every muscle like that might somehow rewind the last thirty seconds and spare my broken rib. Fuck, I did not think that through.
The cook brings his trembling hands together in a plea, revealing blue half-moons under his nails. âPlease. No. I have a wife. And two children.â
Blue.
He hadnât been using a blue-edged towel. Heâd been scrubbing the blue off his hands.
I back out of the pantry slowly and find Ridoc guarding the door, flight jacket unbuttoned, sword drawn. âWeâre looking for something blue.â
âYou telling me thereâs actually something colorful on this isle?â We both stare at the pots, pans, and dishes covering the newly deserted worktable, then move toward it. Ridoc sheathes his sword, picks up a pot, checks its cream-colored contents, and sets it back down. âEven the freaking birds are whiteââ
Errisbirds.
Blue nails. The scent of overripe fruit.
Thatâs it. âI know what itââ
The cook yells as he storms out of the pantry, and both Ridoc and I whirl.
My heart seizes as I catch sight of the cookâs kitchen knife mid-flight. I dodge right, then surge forward toward the cook, walling off the pain like it belongs to someone else, and pull a move from Courtlynâs book. I throw the dagger with a snap of my wrist and pin the cookâs bloodied hand to the fucking doorframe.
He has the nerve to howl like he doesnât deserve it.
âStay there,â I order in Hedotic, then turn back toward Ridoc.
Air gushes from my lungs as Ridoc looks down.
The cookâs knife is lodged in his side.