Iron Flame: Part 1 – Chapter 33
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
Shadows blanket the ceiling, blocking any mage lights that could flicker on at our presence, so I put my free hand on the wall as we descend the stairs slowly. Every step is a gamble in the darkness, but miraculously, no one stumbles.
Pale blue light blooms at the bottom of the staircase.
Xaden answers, slipping his hand from mine.
I put my hand up to signal the others to stop when we reach the final step. The space opens into what looks to be a hallway, but Xaden doesnât question which direction to take. He moves quickly to the right, lifting both hands. A crumpling sound follows.
âNow,â he says aloud.
The hallway is maybe thirty feet long and little more than a glorified tunnel supported by carved pillars over a stone floor. It smells like earth and metal and feels dank with humidity. At one end, light shines through an open archway. Glancing over my shoulder, I see that only darkness consumes the other possible path.
âThere isnât even a door?â Imogen asks as we hurry down the hall.
âNo need with wards that strong,â Xaden comments.
âI can feel them.â The thrum of sharp, intense power grows stronger the closer we get. The hair on the back of my neck rises, and my own power surges in answer to what feels like a hell of a threat.
âWe have a few minutes before these two will wake up. I didnât hit them that hard,â Xaden says as he and Imogen drag the infantry guards to the side, clearing the path.
âThose wards are some uncomfortable shit.â Imogen rolls her shoulders.
âThereâs a hum, but itâs not that bad,â Aaric replies as we stare through the warded archway with its intricately carved stonework to the shelves of the small, circular library that lies beyond it.
âThat bodes well for getting past,â Imogen remarks. âAnd youâd better hurry.â
âYouâre looking for two journals,â I nervously remind him, even though weâve gone over this three times.
âThere have to be at least five hundred tomes in there.â Aaricâs gaze skims the shelves, and he sighs.
âYouâll have to searchââ
âViolet!â Xaden shouts as Aaric grips my hand and strides forward through the archway, yanking me along.
Powerful magic ripples over me as I stumble through, pricking every inch of my skin and twisting my stomach with the feel of a hundred-foot freefall as he pulls me into the library.
He releases my hand and I hit my knees, falling forward and catching myself on my hands. Nausea overwhelms every other sense. My mouth waters and my head hangs as I fight back the urge to vomit.
âWhy the fuck would you do that?â Xaden snaps from the other side of the wards.
Aaric ignores Xaden, dropping to a crouch in front of me. âAre you all right, Violet?â
I force air in through my nose and out through my mouth. âTell me you knew it would let me through,â I bite out as the worst of the illness passes. âBecause it sure as hell didnât want to.â
âMy father doesnât have anything warded that isnât worth showing off,â he explains, holding out his hand. âSo, I took a chance that you wouldnât smack into the wards like a wall. And I canât get through these books in the next forty minutes alone. Youâre the one who knows what to look for.â
I ignore his hand and push to my feet despite the smarting pain in my knees from the impact. I turn in a circle, taking the library space in. There are six heavy bookshelves with glass doors lining the circular walls, and a pedestal of cabinetry in the middle decorated with a velvet tablecloth embroidered with the kingâs signet. Above us, mage lights emit a soft glow, the illumination catching on the curves and knot-like lines carved into the decorative ceiling about five feet above Aaricâs head.
The scent of damp earth is gone, and itâs considerably cooler in this room than the tunnel beyond the archway. I scour above me, but there are no windows for ventilation or any visible modifications I can see. Itâs not just the wards. Thereâs magic in this room.
âPull me in. Now,â Xaden demands.
âNo,â Aaric replies without so much as glancing in his direction. âThe only perk Iâm getting out of this whole expedition is knowing how much it must pain you to realize you canât get to her.â
âStop antagonizing him and get to work, Aaric. You start to the left and ignore anything thatâs not handwritten.â I peek through the archway to see Xaden in full mode.
His hands are loose, and shadows rise around him, forming blades as sharp as the one he carries. But itâs the cool, calculating wrath in his eyes that makes me worry for Aaricâs healthâwhich is why I donât insist he pull Xaden in.
I promise him.
âWarrick and Lyra, right?â Aaric questions, already pulling tomes from the shelves.
âYes,â I reply.
I skip the right side of the shelves in favor of the cabinetry. If I had a six-hundred-year-old book that was worth our entire kingdom, Iâd store it where it was least exposed to the elements. I pull open the first drawer, which stores two booksâ
, which looks to be at least half a century old, and , which appears even older.
âThese are all journals,â Aaric says. âLooks like every commanding general of the armies since the Unification.â
âKeep going.â I check the next drawer, then the next, and so on, until Iâve opened three-quarters of the storage. Itâs an exercise in self-control not to open every book and devour its contents. There are tomes here on the early wars, the history of the individual provinces, mythology of the gods, and even what looks to be the earliest tome Iâve ever seen on mining practices. My fingers itch to turn the pages, but I know better than to damage the parchment.
âThis shelf is all journals of the commanding generals of the riders?â Aaric lowers his hood and glances over his shoulder at me.
âThey used to be separate positions.â I move to the last section of the center pedestal. âHealers, infantry, or even scribes could be the General of the Armies until about two hundred years ago with the second Krovlan uprising. After that, the commander of the riders commanded all Navarreâs forces.â
âYou know that no rider has ever been named king, right?â Imogen asks through the archway.
âThatâs not entirely trueââ I start, opening the top drawer.
âIf youâre asking if I give a shit about being second in line, then the answer is no,â Aaric says over his shoulder at Imogen. âItâs Haldenâs destiny to be king. Not mine.â
âDoes Halden know?â I ask, reading over the titles in the top drawer. âAbout whatâs happening out there?â
âYes,â Aaric says quietly.
âAnd?â I look over at him.
Our eyes lock for a heartbeat before he replaces a tome and moves to the next. âIâm here, arenât I?â
Understood. Halden isnât going to help. âGuess we have that in common.â
âI still canât believe you kept his secret all these months,â Imogen says.
âI kept yours, too,â I remind her, opening the next drawer. This entire section seems dedicated to historical records.
âIâve known Violet longer, which is why Iâm surprised she kept yours.â He looks my way and moves to the next set of shelves. âThe rift between you and Aetos was what caught me off guard. You two were inseparable when we were kids.â
âYeah, well, kids grow up.â I bark out the words, shutting the drawer with a little more force than necessary. âYou canât trust him, you know.â
âFigured that out by that little exchange that went down between the two of you on the mat.â He pulls out another tome. âThese are the generals of the healers.â
âUseful but not what we need.â I crouch to open the last drawer. âFuck. More records.â
âWeâre down to twenty minutes, and we need ten of those to get back to the door,â Imogen warns, her tone tight with urgency.
The collar of my armor tightens a little more, and I tug it away from my throat.
âThese are the scribes,â Aaric says at the fourth case.
âAs carefully as you can, glance through the earliest ones. Try to only touch the edges of the pages.â I close the bottom drawer and stand. There are two more cases to search. âLook for anything that mentions wards or wardstones.â
He nods and pulls the first one down.
My attention shifts to the sixth bookcase. âHalf of these look like Tyrrish history,â I tell Xaden.
âFascinating. Weâll come back and study up after we win this war,â he replies. A guard rustles and we all pivot, but Xaden has him knocked out again before he so much as opens his eyes. âHurry, before I do permanent brain damage over here.â
âThis is dated six AU,â Aaric says, shutting the journal. âThe wards were well in place by then.â
âShit.â Frustration expands the knot in my throat. âStart the next one.â I pull a promising, cracked-spined tome, but itâs a fucking almanac.
âArts and crafts?â Aaric shows me the painted cover of one.
âViolet,â Imogen warns. âThat giant-ass door is going to seal us in here in fifteen minutes!â
This is how this was supposed to go, but isnât that the story of my life these last couple of months? The propaganda should have opened the eyes of other cadets. Mira should have believed me. Andarna should be awake.
Xaden orders.
I concentrate on lowering my heart rate, on keeping the panic from consuming me, then tilt my head to the side and read the spines of the collection in front of me that pertains to the isle kingdoms.
âAstronomy,â Aaric says, dropping down to read the bottom row of titles.
I close my eyes, draw a deep breath, and find my center. Then I open them and step back from the shelves. ââIn the storage of ancient documents,ââ I recite from the Scribe Manual, ââit is not only temperature and touch that must be monitoredâââ
âGlad to see you havenât changed that much.â Aaricâs mouth curves into the first smile Iâve seen from him in years.
âââbut light.ââ I glance up. ââLight will steal inkâs pigment and crack the leather of spine and cover.ââ
âOne time, I heard her recite the entire unification agreement while climbing the battlements in Calldyr,â Aaric notes, moving to the top of the next bookcase.
Light. Theyâd have to be hidden from light. I start searching for track marks in the floor that might signal another hidden door, or cubby, or .
âThought we werenât talking,â Xaden drawls.
âWasnât talking to you.â He glances at Imogen.
âSo, itâs not all marked ones you hate,â she replies, folding her arms across her chest.
âWhy would I hate you?â Aaric puts the tome back. âYour parents led a righteous rebellion, and from what I can tell, youâre just trying to do the same. I hate for killing my brother.â
âFair enough.â Imogen starts to tap her foot.
âWhere would your father keep his most precious possession?â I ask Aaric. âHeâd want to show it off, right?â
âHeâd keep it within easy reach,â Aaric agrees. âAnd are you going to tell me what it is you guys are trying to ward? Itâs a rebel outpost, isnât it?â
Xadenâs eyes meet mine as I prod the wood pieces between the drawers on the center piece, looking for a pop-out compartment.
King Tauri would keep the journals within reach.
âItâs the only logical thing to do,â Aaric says, dropping to the floor and looking under the center pedestal. âTo establish your own wards that arenât dependent on Basgiathâs because you know youâll be waging war on two fronts. Thereâs nothing under here.â He stands. âWhere is it? Draithus? Thatâs the most logical choice. Close to both the Navarrian border and the sea.â
âViolet, we have to go,â Imogen warns, walking toward the guards and rolling up the sleeves of her cream robes.
King Tauri would want to show them off.
I reach for the velvet tablecloth and pull it off.
âThere!â I point to the circle of glass set in the top of the pedestal. âAaric! Beneath the glass!â Two leather tomes, barely larger than my hand. Perfect for keeping in a rucksackâ¦while riding the first dragons.
âNot glass. Another set of wards.â He leans over the cabinet and reaches in, then lets out a sharp hiss, his face contorting in pain as he pulls out both books. âFuck!â He sets them on the edge of the cabinet, then holds his hands up.
I watch in horror as blisters the size of my thumb swell over every inch of skin that passed through the wards.
âI think those wards know I wasnât him.â He grimaces. âLetâs go!â
I unbelt my robes and reveal the two cream satchels Jesinia gave me for this exact reason, then carefully put one tome in each.
âTwo minutes!â Imogen shouts from where sheâs kneeled next to the guards, her hands on the larger oneâs head.
Xaden drops two wineskins into their laps, and I snatch the tablecloth from the floor, then throw it over the case.
âZihnal may love you, but letâs not test him,â Aaric grits through his teeth, holding out a blistered hand.
âItâs going to hurtââ I protest, tying my belt tight.
âAnd Iâm not leaving you in here.â He grabs hold of my hand and grunts in pain as he pulls us through the wards and into the hallway.
My hand is sticky when he lets go.
âWe have to run.â Xaden gestures down the hallway, and I do exactly that. Run.
When the robe gets in the way, I gather the fabric in my hands and sprint, following Xaden as he races up the stairs.
âBet youâre glad weâve been running every morning!â Imogen calls from behind me as we turn and turn and turn, the staircase dizzying me by the time we emerge into the classroom.
Xaden reaches for the lever Jesinia used, and as soon as Imogen and Aaric are clear, he pushes. We wait only long enough to see that the entrance begins closing before taking off again.
My chest heaves as we run down the hallways, Xaden taking every turn Jesinia did, never once questioning himself. Either heâs really certain of the path or he knows we canât afford the time to even debate.
We reach the main library and the bells ring out, signaling an hour has passed. âFaster!â Xaden demands.
They peal once.
There is no , but I donât have enough breath to snap back at him. Our boots pound against the marble as we race between the tables.
Twice.
âRun!â Sawyer shouts from the entrance.
Oh the door.
Three times.
Itâs closing on its own, and the locking mechanism wonât allow it to open until a full twelve hours passes. The muscles in my thighs burn in protest.
I skid as we turn at the last of the tables, sliding into the end of the bookshelf and hitting my shoulder hard enough to wince.
A fourth.
Xaden falls back to run at my side, but heâs the faster of us.
âTake the books!â I shout between gasping breaths. âYou can make it!â
A fifth.
âYou stay, I stay!â He lifts a hand, sprinting with it outstretched, and shadows fly from the walls to push against the closing door as we pass the study table.
Sawyer clears the narrow path that remains between the thick steel of the door and its casing.
The bells ring out a sixth time.
Xaden pushes me through the doorway first, and once Iâm in, I look back, my breaths ragged and my heart pounding so hard I can feel it in my head.
Imogen races by, and Xaden reaches into the doorway as the seventh bell peals.
Oh gods, heâs going to lose an arm, and Theyâre not going to make it.