Iron Flame: Part 1 – Chapter 25
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
We race out of the cave and into the morning air, the rising sun hitting us in the face. Throwing up our hands to shield our eyes, we run forward into the knee-high grass that spans the distance from the cliffs to the trees.
âWhere did you get those knives?â Rhiannon asks when weâre halfway to the line of oaks.
âXaden.â It doesnât even occur to me to lie. âHe had them made for meââ
âWell, this is an unexpected delight,â Professor Grady says from behind us.
We spin, and I draw two daggers. Iâd rather visit Malek than go back into that chamber. But I willâ¦for the final exam.
Tairn commands.
Professor Grady grins and sets down his mug as he rises from the chair that sits a few feet away from the door against the rocky cliffside.
Rhiannon strides forward, lifting her sword in attack position with her right arm and extending her left hand. âWeâll take that patch now.â
Dain doesnât look me in the eye at any point over the next few days, and I donât make the effort to talk to him. What could I even say?
âIâm just saying that spending every weekend flying for Samara or holed up in your room with Riorson isnât good for you,â Ridoc says as we climb the staircase of the academic wing with the crowd headed for Battle Brief.
âAs opposed toâ¦â I glance over at him and wince. His cheek is still black and blue.
Thanks to Nolon, thereâs not a mark on me. Itâs anything but fair.
We lost a first-year, Trysten, to Gauntlet practice while we were in interrogation and missed the formation where they called his name on the death roll, too. That isnât fair, either.
âBeing a normal second-year and spending some time blowing off a little steam every now and then,â Sawyer answers for Ridoc from my other side. Ever since the interrogation, my squadmates have barely let me out of their sight.
âIâm fine,â I tell them both. âThis is just what happens when mated dragons bond to riders in different years.â Twenty-four hours from now, Iâll be in the saddle on my way to Xaden.
âItâs why they usually do it,â Ridoc mutters.
âFirst Squad lost someone,â Rhiannon says, coming up behind us as we reach the second floor. âThey just came out of interrogation about an hour ago. Sorrelâs name will be on the death roll tomorrow.â
My heart drops. The interrogation assessment has now taken two second-years.
âThe girl with the kick-ass bow skills?â Sawyer gapes at Rhiannon as she scoots between us.
âYeah,â she says quietly.
A scribe cadet walks by, but I canât see who it is with the hood up. Thatâs odd. Usually theyâre only in the quadrant for death roll or whenever Markham needs extra people.
âDid she break?â Ridoc asks. âOr did they break ?â
âI donâtââ Rhiannonâs words stop short, and so do we when two First Wing squads move off the wall and into our path. âCan we help you?â
Theyâre all second-years. I drop my hands to my sides, close to my daggers. âYou guys escaped, right?â Caroline Ashton asks, lowering her voice. âThatâs what people are saying about the new patch.â She taps beside her own shoulder, where we now wear a circular, silver patch with a black key.
âItâs a classified patch,â Sawyer says.
âWe just want to know how you did it,â Caroline whispers as the crowd pushes by us on the side to get to the briefing room. âRumor is, it took them an entire day to reset the interrogation room after you guys.â
The fact that she calls it a room and not lets me know no one is really talking.
âAll we can tell you is the same advice youâve already been given. Donât break,â Rhiannon tells them.
âStick together,â I add, holding Carolineâs gaze even when she narrows it on me.
âShouldnât you all be in Battle Brief?â Bodhi asks, his voice booming as he comes up behind us. One look sends the other squads scurrying for the door.
âTairn told me he felt Sgaeyl get angry last night,â I say over my shoulder to Bodhi as we continue walking. âAnything I should know about?â
âNot that Iâm aware of.â We separate as we walk through the wide double doors into the briefing room.
My squadmates and I start down the steps, but something is off. The usual hum of the briefing room is approaching a roar of murmurs and outright exclamations as cadets pick up what look to be leaflets lying on every seat.
âWhatâs happening?â Ridoc asks.
âNot sure,â I answer as we bypass the first cadets in our row and find our way to our seats.
I pick up the half sheet of parchment on my chair and flip it over as my squadmates do the same.
My knees weaken as I read the headline.
ZOLYA FALLS TO DRAGON FIRE THE THIRD LARGEST CITY IN THE BRAEVICK PROVINCE HAS FALLEN TO THE BLUE FIRE DRAGONS AND THEIR RIDERS. THOUGH THE CITY AND ITS DRIFTS FOUGHT VALIANTLY, THE TWO-DAY BATTLE ENDED IN POROMISH DEFEAT. ALL WHO DID NOT EVACUATE HAVE PERISHED. AN ESTIMATED TEN THOUSAND LIVES HAVE BEEN LOST, INCLUDING GENERAL FENELLA, THE COMMANDER OF BRAEVICKâS GRYPHON FLEET. ALL TRADE ROUTES TO THE CITY HAVE BEEN BARRICADED TO PREVENT FURTHER LOSS OF LIFE.
Two days ago.
My hand trembles, and I twist around toward the back of the room, my gaze jumping from one third-year to the next until I find Bodhi and Imogen.
âOh gods,â Rhiannon whispers beside me.
Bodhi and Imogen exchange a panicked look, and then our gazes collide. What the hell are we supposed to do? Bodhiâs tense shake of his head tells me he doesnât know, either.
Drawing the least amount of attention to myself seems prudent, so I turn back to face the map and slide into my seat.
âIs this real?â Sawyer asks, turning over the parchment to examine it.
âLooksâ¦real?â Ridoc scratches the back of his neck as he sits. âIs this some kind of test to see if we can discern official proclamation leaflets from propaganda?â
âI donât think so,â Rhiannon says slowly, staring at me.
But my eyes are locked on the recessed floor and Professor Devera, who has just been handed a leaflet.
Her eyes widen, but I only see them for a second before she turns to face the map, her head tilted back. Iâd bet my life that sheâs staring right where I am now, at the little circle at the foot of the Esben Mountains along the Stonewater River that marks where Zolya standsâ
. Itâs maybe a four-hour flight from our border.
âViolet?â Rhiannonâs voice rises, like itâs not the first time sheâs called my name.
âWhat is all the commotion this morning?â Markham shouts over the briefing room as he descends the steps. Someone hands him a leaflet.
âWhat do you think?â Rhiannon asks.
I glance from my squadmateâs furrowed brows to the leaflet and force the roaring in my ears to quiet as I make a quick study of the parchment. âParchment looks like ours, but Iâve never personally seen any made outside the border. Typeset is standard to every printing press Iâve ever seen. Thereâs no seal, Navarrian or Poromish.â I run my thumb over the larger, scrolling block letters of the headline, smudging the ink. âItâs less than twenty-four hours old. The ink hasnât cured.â
âBut is it ?â Sawyer repeats his earlier question.
âThe chances of someone hauling in all these leaflets from the border are next to nothing,â I tell him. âSo if youâre asking if it was printed in Poromielââ
My head jerks up, and I see Markhamâs face blotch red as he says something to Caroline Ashton on the aisle. She jumps from her seat and runs up the stairs, disappearing through the door.
âIt was printed here,â I whisper, fear twisting my stomach into knots. Whoever did it is as good as dead if they left any trace.
âSo itâs not real.â Sawyer lifts his eyebrows, the freckles on his forehead disappearing into the grooves of his skin.
âJust because itâs printed here for public dissemination doesnât mean whatâs on it isnât real,â I explain, âbut it also doesnât mean that it is.â
âWe wouldnât do this,â Sawyer argues. âThereâs no way we send a riot to annihilate a city of civilians.â
âAttention!â Markham shouts, his footsteps thudding as he strides down the steps.
The noise doesnât dissipate.
âIf someone was trying to get news out, theyâd send one leaflet like this to the printing press to be approved by scribes,â I tell my squadmates quickly, knowing our time is short. âOnce approved, it would take hours to set the blocks to print unless multiple scribes worked on it. But this isnât official. Thereâs no seal. So either itâs fake and printed for just this classâwhich is of workâor itâs realâ¦and not approved.â Itâs exactly what I would say if I didnât know the truth, and to be honest, Iâm not certain this leaflet the truth.
âRiders!â Devera yells, turning to face us. âQuiet!â
The room falls silent.
Markhamâs at the front of the classroom now, his features schooled in a mask of serenity as he stands beside Professor Devera. If I didnât know him better, Iâd say he was almost enjoying the chaos, but I do, and heâs rubbing his forefinger against his thumb.
No matter what he says next, this wasnât his plan.
âApparentlyââhe gestures to us, his palm facing upwardââwe are not ready for todayâs exercise. We were going to follow up on our discussion about propaganda, but I can see now that I overestimated your ability to judge a simple printing like this without hysteria.â The insult is delivered in unemotional monotone.
Suddenly, I feel fifteen again, my self-worth determined by this manâs opinion of my intellect and control.
âDamn.â Ridoc sags in his seat. âThatâsâ¦harsh.â
âThatâs Markham,â I say quietly. âYou think only riders can be vicious?
Words are just as capable of eviscerating someone as a blade, and heâs a master.â
âOn the off chance that we actually did this and someone leaked the information?â Rhiannon asks, glancing my way. âYou know him better than we do. Whatâs his next move?â
âFirst, I donât think weâd target civilians across the border.â Thatâs the truth. We just wonât do anything to help them, either. âBut if he didnât print the leaflets, heâll discredit, deflect, then distract.â
âAs it is, we have two much more pressing matters to discuss,â Markham lectures, his tone still cool. âSo, you will now pass all pieces of propaganda to the left, where they will be collected to discuss on a day when youâre capable of being rational.â
A ripple passes over the room as everyone hurries to do as he asks. Iâm reluctant to let mine go, but itâs not worth drawing attention.
Professor Devera folds hers with quick, precise movements and pockets it.
âHonestly.â Markham shakes his head. âYou should have been able to spot those leaflets as propaganda within seconds.â
Discredit. I have to admit, heâs good. The stacks reach the ends of the rows, and then the cadets hand them forward, the pile growing and growing as it descends toward the floor.
âWhen, in the history of Navarre, have we ever flown a riot comprised only of blue dragons?â He looks us over like weâre children. Like weâve been found wanting.
Heâs so fucking clever. With the leaflets collected, every cadet in the room will question the exact wording. Every cadet except the riders who know the meaning of that entire paragraph came down to the placement of the word .
âBut as I said.â Markham claps his hands together and sighs. âWeâll return to this lesson when weâre ready. Right now, our first order of business is here, and celebration is in order.â
âI wasnât sure this day would come, which is why I hope that youâll forgive us for keeping the months of Colonel Nolonâs hard work a secret. We didnât want to disappoint you if he could not pull off what will arguably be the greatest achievement of any mender in our history.â
Didnât want to disappoint us? I barely manage to keep from rolling my eyes.
Markham raises his hand toward the doorway and smiles. âHe was crushed under the weight of a mountain a few months ago, but Nolon has mended bone after bone to return him to your quadrant.â
Crushed under the weight of a mountain? It canât be. My stomach hollows, and the noise of the room muffles under the sound of my own blood rushing through my ears to the cadence of a drum.
âNo fucking way,â Ridoc says, breaking through my panic.
I canât bring myself to look.
The clipped, tense tone reminds me of Resson.
âJoin me in welcoming back your fellow rider, Jack Barlowe!â Markham claps. The entire briefing room joins in, the loudest cheers coming from First Wing as two figures walk down the stairs.
I force air through my lungs as Rhiannon grasps my hand and holds tight.
âItâs him,â Rhiannon says. âItâs really .â
âYou brought down an entire cliff on his unhinged ass.â Sawyer claps slowly, but itâs only for show. âHow the fuck was there anything left to mend?â
Dragging my gaze left, I finally work up the courage to look.
Same bulky frame. Same blond hair. Same profile. Same hands that nearly killed me during a challenge last yearâ¦before I killed him during War Games the first time my signet flared.
He turns a few rows down, walking past other second-years as Caroline Ashton escorts him back to his squad. It all makes sense now. The secrecy. Her visiting the infirmary. Nolonâs exhaustion.
Jack pivots as he reaches an empty seat, turning slowly and nodding as the applause carries on. The look on his face is almost humble, like a man whoâs received a second chance he definitely doesnât deserve, and then he pivots, looking up the rows to find me.
Glacial blue eyes meet mine. Any doubt I had dies a swift death. Itâs him. My pounding heart jumps into my throat.
âMaybe he learned his lesson?â Rhiannonâs voice pitches high with empty hope.
âNo,â Ridoc says, letting his hands fall to his lap. âHeâs definitely going to try to kill you. Again.â