Iron Flame: Part 1 – Chapter 16
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
Weâre back in enough time for me to visit the Archives, so I do just that. If I canât see Xaden, I may as well spend my time researching. Itâs late afternoon before I can get cleaned up and make my way down there, and it makes me smile to see Jesinia working at one of the tables with Aoife.
Aoife looks up at the sound of my bootsteps, prompting Jesinia to, as well. They both wave and I return the gesture.
I pause at the study table, setting down my book to return as the two have a quick discussion before Aoife rises and heads to the back of the Archives. Then Jesinia walks over, carrying what looks to be the notebook Aoife brought along during the land navigation exercise.
âWhat are you doing in here on a Sunday?â I sign as she reaches the study table.
She puts the notebook down on the scarred oak surface and lifts her hands to sign. âHelping Aoife transcribe her account into the official report to be filed. Sheâs taking a quick break. Want to see what she chronicled?â She picks up the notebook and offers it to me.
âAbsolutely.â I nod, then take the notebook and skim Aoifeâs neat handwriting. Itâs amazingly accurate, with little details Iâd missed, like the two infantry cadets whoâd offered to be the healersâ aides because thatâs their job for the squad. They have designated roles for each mission. I set it down on top of the book Iâm returning to sign. âThis is incredible.â
âGlad to hear itâs accurate.â She glances over her shoulder, as if checking to see if weâre alone, which we are. âThe tricky thing is to capture the truth and not just an interpretation. Stories can change depending on who tells them.â
If she only knew. How does someone like Jesinia graduate to become whatever Markham has evolved into? âCan I ask⦠What book did Jacek request that got him hauled away and killed?â I sign before I think better of it.
Her eyes widen. âHe was killed?â
I nod. âA few days after we saw Markham take him.â
Her face turns the same shade as her robes. âHe was looking for an account of a border attack that doesnât exist. I told him thereâs no such record, but he came back three times, certain there was because heâd had family killed in the event. I recorded the request and sent it up my chain of command, thinking it would help him, butâ¦â She shakes her head and drops her hands, blinking back tears.
âItâs not your fault,â I sign, but she doesnât respond, and it hits me that I could have been hauled away by Markham last year, but I wasnât. And thereâs only one logical explanation. I glance around us quickly to make sure weâre still alone. âLast year, you didnât record when asked for a book that doesnât exist in your records.â
Her eyes widen.
âDid you?â My hands tremble as I sign. Shit. This is a bad idea. Sheâll be in danger if I bring her into this. But sheâs also the best person who can help me find what Iâm looking for, and we only have .
âNo.â
âWhy?â I have to know. Everything hinges on her answer.
âAt first, because I didnât want to be embarrassed that I couldnât find it.â Her nose scrunches. âThen becauseâ¦I couldnât find it.â She looks over her shoulder at the empty Archives. âWe should have a copy of almost every tome in Navarre here, yet you told me youâd read one that we donât have.â
I nod.
âAnd then I looked up wyvern.â She spells out the individual letters because thereâs no sign for the winged creatures. âAnd nothing. We have no recorded folklore like what you read.â
âI know.â My heart thrums faster. Weâre venturing into dangerous territory. Her brow knits under her hood. âIf you were any other rider, I would have considered that you have a faulty memory and got the title wrong, or even the subject matter. But youâreâ¦you.â
I sign slowly so she doesnât miss a word. âThe title wasnât wrong. I found my copy.â
She takes a deep breath. âWhich means our Archives are incomplete. There are books in existence we have no record of.â
âYes.â And now weâre talking treason. I canât tell her too much, not just for her own safety but in caseâ¦in case Iâm wrong about her.
âI sent requests to other libraries looking for a wider collection of folklore, but the responses made it clear we have the most comprehensive selection.â Her forehead wrinkles in concern.
âYes.â Gods, sheâs catching on without me even having to tell her. âDoes anyone know what you were doing?â
âI implied that it was a personal passion to collect forgotten folklore from the border regions.â She winces. âAnd then I implied that I was considering compiling a new tome as my third-year endeavor to graduate. I lied.â Her mouth tightens, and she drops her hands.
âIâm doing a lot of that lately.â Once Iâm sure weâre still alone, I continue. âHave you recorded any that Iâve asked for this year?â
âNo.â
Great Dunne. If sheâs caught breaking regulation, she wonât just be denied the adept path; sheâll be expelled from the collegeâor worse. Sheâs already risking so much on my account, if sheâs telling the truth.
âYouâre looking for something. I knew it the second you lied about preparing for a debate.â She searches my eyes. âYouâre a horrible liar, Violet.â
I laugh. âIâm working on it.â
âCan you tell me what youâre looking for? I wonât record your requests, not if youâre thinking the same thing I am.â
âWhich is?â
âThat our Archives are incomplete, either by ignoranceâ¦â She breathes deeply. âOr intention.â
âHelping me could hurt you.â My stomach sinks. âGet you killed. Itâs not fair to bring you into something dangerous.â
âI can handle myself.â She lifts her chin, and her next gestures are sharp. âTell me what you need.â
What can I tell her without endangering her further? Or risking our exposure? I have no idea if sheâs capable of shielding Dain or any memory reader from her mind. So clearly nothing about battles or venin. But thatâs not what I need, anyway. âI need the most comprehensive texts you have about how the First Six built the wards.â
âThe wards?â Her eyes flare.
âYes.â Itâs the simplest request that could be messily explained by wanting to research how to strengthen our defensesâ¦if she tells. âBut no one can know Iâm asking, that Iâm researching. More than my life depends on it. The older the text, the better.â
She looks away for what feels like the longest minute of my life. She has every right to pause, to think, to realize just how badly this could go for both of us. This isnât a slip of memory, simply forgetting to record a request from a friend. This betrays her quadrant, her training. Her eyes meet mine. âI canât risk Aoife seeing right now, but Iâll find you this week with the first tome Iâm thinking of. One is all I can risk going missing. Saturdays are usually the day I work the Archives, when itâs quiet. Bring it back then and Iâll give you another if the first doesnât have what you need. Only Saturdays.â She lifts her brows as she signs those last two words.
âWhen itâs quiet.â I nod in understanding, my stomach flipping with a mixture of hope and fear that Iâm going to get her hurtâ¦or worse. Glancing over her shoulder, I see Aoife walking our way. âAoife is coming,â I sign, keeping my hands where the other scribe canât see them. âThank you.â
âBut thereâs something I want in return,â she signs quickly, angling her back so Aoife wonât see.
âName it.â
âYou think Sloane has a shot?â Rhi asks on Monday as we watch the first round of challenges be called out.
My stomach churns with nausea like Iâm the one whoâs going to be summoned to the mat. Fuck, Iâd actually feel better if it was my name I knew they were going to call instead of Sloaneâs.
âSheâll win,â I answer truthfully.
I pocket the latest letter Xaden left me on my bedâIâve already read it four timesâas Aaric takes his place on the mat. I glance around and see Eya waiting with First Squad and offer a fast smile, which she returns. Ever since she helped me after my near burnout, weâve developed a weird sort of relationship. Weâre friendly, if not friends, at least.
Turns out Xaden has known Eya since they were ten, according to the letter. Her mother was active in the government of Tyrrendor, holding a council seat even though she was a rider, which is uncommon. In fact, most of the aristocracy chooses to serve in the infantry, just like Xadenâs father, because riders are discouraged from holding their familyâs seats. Not only are our commissions lifelong instead of the few years an infantry officer can agree to, but too much power in one person terrifies any king.
âYou forgive him yet for whatever it is he lied to you about?â Rhi darts a meaningful look at my pocket, then folds her arms and glares at a pair of first-years shoving each other near the edge of the mat. âStop fucking around!â
They instantly halt.
âImpressive.â I grin, but it falls quickly. âAnd itâs hard to talk something out with him when we only see each other once a week.â
âFucking first-years,â she mutters, then glances over at me. âThatâs a good point. But you should get some time this weekend. Hey, did Ridoc tell you he saw Nolon yesterday?â
âHe just said he had to take one of the first-years to the infirmary,â I say, raising one eyebrow in question.
âTrysten.â She nods. âHeâs the one with the floppy hair that never quite stays out of his eyes.â
âWhatever his name is. The guy who shattered his forearm.â I donât want to know his name. I already feel responsible for Sloaneâwho is currently swaying back and forth nervously across the mat. Emotionally attaching to any more first-years is just reckless. âRidoc said that Nolon couldnât even them until after dinner, and there were only a handful of other cadets in the infirmary.â
âAnd when he walked out of that secretive room heâs got with Varrish in the back of the infirmary, he was with an air wielder who looked just as haggard,â Ridoc chimes in as he sidles up between us. âSo clearly Nolon isnât doing his best work. Guy needs a month off.â
Aaric delivers a punch to his opponentâs jaw that makes the guyâs head snap back.
âI give that a seven,â Ridoc heckles from the sidelines.
âOut of ten? Solid eight,â Sawyer counters from the other side of Rhiannon. âPerfect form.â Then he lowers his voice and adds just for the four of us, âAnd Iâm still going with the torture theory. I bet theyâve got gryphon riders in there or something.â
âYou think heâs really torturing people back there?â Rhiannon says, lowering her voice even more.
âI have no clue.â I blink as Aaric elbows his opponent in the throat with a quick jab that even Xaden would respect. âI would think theyâd use the main interrogation chambers if they were doing something like that. The ones beneath the school.â
âThatâs a fucking nine,â Sawyer calls out.
âNine!â Ridoc agrees, throwing up his hands with all of his fingers spread out except a thumb.
I laugh, then gasp as Aaric breaks his opponentâs nose with the heel of his hand, ending the match. Emetterio declares him the winner, and the first-year has the decency to make it off the mat before dropping his hand away from his gushing nose.
Thatâs a lot of blood.
Sawyer and Ridoc break out in applause, both shouting scores.
âGods, can that one fight.â Rhi nods slowly in approval as Aaric takes his place in the squad.
âWell, when youâve had the best tutors,â I whisper, grateful heâs one secret she knows about.
âDaddy hasnât come looking for him?â She glances my way.
âApparently not.â
Challenges around us come to an end, and the professors call out the next batch.
âSloane Mairi and Dasha Fabrren,â Emetterio calls out.
âHey, Rhi?â I swallow. Squads shift, but ours keeps our mat. Thatâs the benefit of holding the reigning Iron Squad patch from last year.
âHmm?â
âRemember how I said Sloane was going to win?â
âYes, I remember a comment from ten minutes ago,â she teases. A couple of our first-years pat Sloane on the back and offer what I hope are words of encouragement as she walks out onto the mat in front of us.
âRight. Wellâ¦â Shit, if I tell her, will she feel honor-bound to report me? She wouldnât, and thatâs the problem. Sheâd help me break into the fucking Archives if I wanted.
. But this is another thing I donât have to lie to her about.
Dasha joins Sloane on the mat, her shiny black hair braided in a single line from the tip of her forehead to the nape of her neck. Sheâs petite and still has the pallor of a first-year who hasnât seen enough sun, but sheâs nothing close to the shade of green Sloane is turning.
Thereâs a slight crimson tint to Dashaâs lips that lets me know she had one of the frosted pastries from the tray Iâd placed on her squadâs breakfast table before they arrived this morning. Now that Iâm looking, all of the members of her squad have that same hue to their mouths.
Oh well. It wasnât like I knew which one Dasha would eat.
âIf youâre going to change your mind and say sheâs going to lose, then donât tell me.â Rhiannon shakes her head. âIâm nervous about this one.â
âMe too,â Imogen says, taking the empty spot on my right.
âThat makes three of us,â Quinn says next to her. âSheâs not just a first-year.â
âNo,â I agree, noting that even Dain is watching from the next mat over. And to think, last year, Iâd actually hoped Iâd be in a with him. âRhi.â I lower my voice. âSheâs not going to lose.â
Her gaze narrows. âWhat are you going to do?â
âIf you donât know, you donât have to feel guilty about reporting it. Just trust me.â I slide my hand into my pocket as nonchalantly as possible and uncork the small glass vial as the two girls nod, each taking a fighting stance.
Rhi searches my eyes, then nods as well, turning back to the match.
The first-years circle each other on the mat, and I carefully turn the vial in my hand, letting what I know to be a colorless powder fall from the glass into the creases between my palm and fingers. I withdraw my hand in a fist, keeping it tight at my side as Dasha delivers her first blow, a punch straight to Sloaneâs cheek.
The blondeâs skin splits.
âFuck,â Imogen mutters. âCome on, Mairi, hands up!â
Someone screams from the mat behind us, and we all look over our shoulders to see a first-year staring lifelessly up at his opponent. Shit. Killing an opponent during a challenge isnât cheered. But it also isnât punishable. More than one grudge has been settled on these mats in the name of strengthening the wings.
I suddenly feel a lot less guilty about my plans.
The girls circle again, and Dasha kicks high, catching Sloane on the unmarked side of her face so hard that her head snaps sideways, and then her body follows, turning as she falls to the mat, landing on her back.
âThat was faster than I expected,â Rhi notes, worry lacing her tone.
âMe too.â I lift my closed fist to my mouth and shift my weight, making sure that I look as worried as I feel as Dasha follows Sloane down to the floor. The pair is only a few feet away, so at least I wonât have to skirt my way around the mat. âCrouch,â I say under my breath to Imogen.
She drops without question. âCome on, Mairi!â
I lower myself, too, panic creeping up my throat at the look on Sloaneâs dazed face as Dasha lands another punch, then another, and another. Blood spatters the mat.
Yeah, thatâs enough.
I wait for Dasha to exhale, then open my palm slightly and cough. Hard.
She breathes in and gets one more hit.
Then she shakes her head and her eyes glaze over.
âGet up, Sloane!â I yell, looking her dead in the eye.
Dasha falls back on her ass, blinks rapidly, her head wobbling as if sheâs been at the pub for the evening.
Sloane rolls to her side and plants her palms on the mat.
âNow,â I order her.
Anger fills her eyes, and she lunges forward toward Dasha.
Dashaâs fist curls, but her swing doesnât make contact as Sloane buries her shoulder in Dashaâs stomach. At that angle, she had to have knocked the breath out of her.
Good. She only has another moment. Maybe two.
Sloane scrambles behind Dasha and then yanks her up and into the weakest chokehold Iâve ever seen. But hey, if it works.
âYield!â Sloane demands.
Dasha bucks upward, her strength and focus returning.
âYield!â Sloane yells this time, and I hold my breath.
Gods, if I judged wrong and Dasha gains the upper hand againâ¦
Dasha finally drops her hand to the mat and taps twice.
My shoulders droop in pure relief as Emetterio calls the match.
âWhat did you do?â Imogen whispers without looking at me.
âWhat needed to be done.â We both stand as the first-years do, but unlike them, we donât stumble as we gain our feet.
âYou sound like Xaden,â Imogen says.
My gaze swings toward her.
âRelax. Itâs a compliment.â She smiles. âLiam is immeasurably grateful right now.â
I swallow past the lump in my throat.
âNot half bad,â Rhiannon says, glancing sideways at me before watching Sloane take her place with the rest of the first-years in our squad. âNot good, either.â
âIâll give the match a six,â Ridoc comments. âI mean, she didnât lose, so clearly that rates above a five.â
The next pair takes the mat.
Once todayâs challenges are over, I look at Imogen and nod toward Sloane before heading that direction. âGive me a second,â I say over my shoulder to Rhiannon.
Imogen jogs to catch up.
âMairi,â I say as we round the corner of the mat, crooking my finger at her.
Sloane lifts her chin in the air, but at least she comes. This isnât exactly the kind of discussion I want to scream across the gym.
âOuch.â Imogen points to her right eye as she approaches. âThatâs going to swell shut.â
âI won, didnât I?â Her voice shakes.
âYou won because I took Dasha out for you.â I keep my voice low and spread my palm wide open, where thereâs a trace amount of the shimmering powder left on my skin.
âNo.â She shakes her head. âI won that fair and square.â
âGods, do I wish were true.â I huff out a breath. âArdyce powder, when combined with an earlier dose of ground lillybelle, disorients someone for a minuteâmaybe two, depending on the dose. Similar to being drunk. Alone, theyâre mildly upsetting to the stomach. Together?â I lift my eyebrows. âThey kept you alive.â
Sloaneâs mouth opens and shuts once. Twice.
âDamn.â Imogen grins, rocking back on her heels as cadets shuffle past, heading for the door. âIs how you got through those first challenges last year? Devious, Sorrengail. Fucking brilliant, but devious.â
âI did that for your brother,â I tell Sloane, keeping eye contact even though the hatred shining through hers hurts like hell. âHe was one of my closest friends, and I promised him while he was fucking dying that Iâd look after you. So here I am, looking after you.â
âI donât needââ
âWrong tactic,â Imogen lectures. ââThank youâ is appropriate.â
âIâm not thanking her,â she seethes, her eyes narrowing on me. âHeâd be here if not for you.â
âThatâs some bullshit!â Imogen snaps. âXaden orderedââ
âYouâre right,â I interrupt. âHe would. And I miss him every single day. And because of the love I have for him, itâs okay that you hate me. You can think whatever you need to about me if it gets you through the day, Sloane. But youâre going to train. Youâre going to accept help.â
âIf itâs Malekâs will that I join my brother, then so be it. Liam didnât need help,â she retorts, but thereâs a touch of fear in her eyes that lets me know most of this is bluster. âHe made it on his own.â
âNo, he didnât,â Imogen argues. âViolet saved his life during War Games. He fell off Deighâs back, and it was Violet and Tairn who flew after him and caught him.â
Sloaneâs lips part.
âHereâs the deal.â I take a step closer to Sloane. âYouâre going to train so you donât get yourself killed. Not with me. I donât need to be part of your development era. But you will meet with Imogen every single day if thatâs what she wants, because I have something you want.â
âI highly doubt that.â She crosses her arms, but the effect is ruined by the rapid swelling of her eye.
âI have fifty of the letters Liam wrote for you.â
Her eyes widen.
âOh shit.â Imogenâs head jerks toward mine. âSeriously?â
âSeriously.â I donât look away from Sloane. âAnd at the end of every week that you attend and participate in whatever Imogen thinks you need, Iâll give one of them to you.â
âAll of his things were burned,â Sloane sputters. âThey were sacrificed to Malek as they should be!â
âIâll definitely apologize to Malek when we meet,â I assure her. âIf you want his letters, youâll train for them.â
Her face turns a mottled shade of red. âYouâd keep my brotherâs letters from me? If they still exist, theyâre . You really are a piece of work.â
âIn this case, I think Liam would more than approve.â I shrug. âItâs up to you, Sloane. Show up, train, live, and get a letter a week. Or donât.â Without waiting for whatever snarky response she can come up with, I turn and leave, walking back toward where Rhiannon is waiting with the upper years of our squad.
âYou. Areâ¦â Imogen shakes her head as she catches up to me. âI see it now.â
âWhat?â I ask.
âWhy Xaden fell for you.â
I scoff.
âTruthfully.â She puts her hands up. âYouâre fucking clever. Way more clever than I gave you credit for. I bet you keep him constantly annoyed.â A smile beams across her face. âHow glorious.â
I roll my eyes at her.
âAnd you got Sloane to agree to show up tomorrow morning after chores,â she tells me. âIt was a risky move, but it worked.â
Now Iâm the one smiling.
Jesinia brings me the next day, which is not only a three-hundred-year-old text but marked Classified in the endpapers, and I keep my side of the deal, handing over .
Then I hide away at every available second to read her book, when weâre not being lectured by Professor Grady about our inability to check our egos or getting what feels like pointless Battle Briefs.
But while it goes into detail about the complex interpersonal relationships of the First Six, and even a little of their battle experience during the Great War, it simply labels the enemy as General Daramor and our allies as the isle kingdoms.
Not exactly helpful.
The book Jesinia gives me on Saturday is , by one of Kaoriâs predecessors, and goes into why Basgiath was chosen for the location of the wards.
âGreen dragons, especially those descending from the line of Cruaidhuaine, have an especially stable connection to magic, which some believe is a result of their more reasonable, defensive nature,â I repeat in a whisper as I pack to head to Samara that night.
Thereâs absolutely nothing that could ruin my evening. Not when Iâm about to see Xaden in the morning.
My eyes widen when I open the door and find Varrish standing there instead of Bodhi, flanked by his two henchmen, and immediately remind myself to thank Xaden for the wards that deny him entry. A quick step backward puts me out of his reach.
âRelax, Sorrengail.â He smiles like he didnât nearly kill me with his little punishment. âI just came by to check your pack and walk you out to Tairn.â
I slip my pack from my shoulders and hold it out to him, careful not to let him touch my skin so he canât slip through the wards. Then I keep my eyes locked on his henchmen as they dump my belongings instead of glancing to my bookcase to be sure my classified tome is hidden.
âItâs clear,â the woman says, and sheâs enough to put my things away.
âExcellent.â Varrish nods. âThen weâll just escort you to your dragon. You canât be too careful around here, given the rash of attacks these last few weeks.â He tilts his head. âFunny that most seem to be focused on those of you who disappeared during War Games, donât you think?â
âNot sure Iâd ever call assaults âfunny,ââ I reply. âAnd I donât need the escort.â
âNonsense.â He steps back and gestures into the hallway. âWe wouldnât want anything to happen to the daughter of the commanding general.â
My heart bolts at an unsustainable rhythm.
âItâs not a suggestion.â His smile slides.
I check my sheaths to be sure my daggers are in place, then walk into the hallway, feeling the tug of Xadenâs wards as I leave their safety. Every step I take for the next fifteen minutes is careful, deliberate, and I make sure Iâm never within armâs reach or striking distance.
âI noticed your squad didnât have flight maneuvers this week,â Varrish says as we approach Tairn on the flight field.
Tairn promises, and I start to breathe normally.
âWe had a few injuries that needed to recover after running landings.â
âHmm.â He gestures toward Tairn as if inviting me to ride my own dragon. âWell, it was noted, as youâll soon see. I guess Iâll meet your little golden next week.â
Andarna.
Tairn says.
.
I mount quickly, my pulse settling as I strap into the saddle.
He rolls his shoulders and launches.
When I get to Samara, I understand why Varrish warned that Iâd see why heâd noted our lack of flight maneuvers.
I might be here, but Xaden is on twenty-four-hour duty in the operations center.
And I donât have clearance.