Iron Flame: Part 2 – Chapter 43
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
My neck aches as I stare up, and up, and the Cliffs of Dralor to where they disappear into a thick layer of cloud cover.
Itâs been four days since we struck the deal with Tecarus. Three nights ago, we delivered the luminaryâa ring nearly as tall as Sgaeyl of vibrant blue crystalsâto an offshoot of the valley above Aretia where the new forge is located. Yesterday, all cadets were ordered to get a good nightâs sleep, pack for a three-day mission, and assemble for flight formation at four in the morning, and now weâre standing in a field west of Draithus, eyeing the drifts gathered on the other side of First Wing as the sun burns off the early morning haze.
âHe canât be serious,â Ridoc says beside me in formation, his neck craned at the same angle as mine. Between the hundred Aretian cadets and an equal number of fliers packed into this grassy field, Iâd guess ninety-five percent of us look exactly the same, gawking at the steep, barely visible, narrow trail my brother just pointed at with absolute incredulity.
The series of ledges and switchbacks carved into the granite cliff looks more suitable to a mountain goat than a gryphon and blends so well into the terrain that itâs no wonder the Medaro Pass has been kept secret.
Until now.
âAgreed.â Visia nods. âHe has to be kidding. Thatâs not a trailâitâs a death trap.â
The path Brennanâs so excited about isnât wide enough to support a full wagon, let alone the width of a gryphonâ¦and he wants them to hike it? For us to hike it with them while dragons fly patrol?
âPretty sure heâs serious or we wouldnât all be here,â Rhiannon says over her shoulder.
âWhat the hell does he expect us to do besides climb with them?â Aaric asks, keeping his voice down.
âCatch them if they fall off?â Ridoc suggests.
âRight, because weâre capable of catching a gryphon,â Imogen remarks.
My brow furrows as I study the steep trail. Itâs not the narrow path or even the gryphon traps Brennan described that worry me, but my own endurance. Twelve hours of constant climbing is going to torture my knees and ankles.
Xaden warns, his voice already fading as he flies east with Sgaeyl on a mission Iâm not privy to.
As if his personal recommendation would help the lack of trust between our two colleges.
I remind him, feeling him slip away.
Thereâs a rush of warmth, and then it fades along with his shadowy presence in my mind.
Ahead of me, Baylor covers a jaw-cracking yawn with his fist as Brennan continues to lecture us about the length of the journey ahead from where he stands on a bound stack of crossbolts, amplifying his voice over the field. âThe journey should take you twelve hours, though I recommend taking time to rest along the trail.â His gaze scans over us, as if gauging our reaction, which is mostlyâ¦speechless.
The only sound is the fall breeze rustling the leaves from the scrub oak trees at the south end of the field. Even the dragons and gryphons fall silent around us, as if they canât quite believe whatâs being suggested, either.
âSo they can push us off?â a rider from Third Wing asks, and I donât think heâs joking.
âThat question is exactly why youâll be going with them,â Brennan says, avoiding my gaze entirely as Syrena climbs up the pile of bound crossbolts to stand with him. âNot only have the wingleaders been given the locations of the gryphon traps to disarm them, but you need to learn some mutual respect and trust before you can be educated together. No rider will respect a cadet who hasnât crossed the parapet.â He gestures at the trail behind him. âBehold a parapet for them to cross.â
âItâs narrow, but itâs not that narrow!â Ridoc calls out, earning a few scoffs of agreement from the riders around us.
âAnd if we were just risking ourselves, perhaps it would be appropriate to deem it inferior to your death bridge at Basgiath,â Syrena states, clasping her hands behind her back and facing the ridersâ half of formation. Sunlight catches on the palm-size metal rings that fall at the fronts of her shoulders, connected to the leather above. âBut consider while you climb, while you decide if youâll truly accept fliers into your ranksââher gaze catches mineââthat while this trail is perfectly safe for humans, itâs perilous for gryphons. And ask yourself if you would risk the lives of your climbing a trail built specifically to kill them into hostile territory so you can learn how to better destroy your enemy with the very people you considered your enemy up until last week.â
Riders all around me shift their weight.
I tell only Tairn, since Andarna is more than a three-hour flight away, no doubt in the midst of her morning training with the elders. Yesterday she almost managed a full wing extension. Almost.
I can feel his eyes roll.
ourselves.
âEach squad will be paired with a drift of equal strength to make the ascent,â Brennan says. âHopefully by the time you reach the top, youâve found some mutual ground on which to build a framework of partnership.â
This is all in the spirit of comradery?
âHighly doubt it,â Ridoc mutters.
âIn the meantime, your dragons will remain close,â Brennan asserts.
Tairn promises.
I hold him to it when weâre given our assignmentâCatâs drift.
Three hours later, my calves are screaming from the constant climb, and the silence in our small, forced group has grown from uncomfortable to painfully awkward. Removing my right hand from the sheer rock wall, I adjust the weight of my pack on my shoulders to ease the growing protest in my spine and check on Sloane. Sheâs climbing steadily a few feet in front of me, giving the gryphon ahead of her plenty of room to flick its lionlike tail.
Weâre climbing single file, with Fourth Wing leading the way. Only Claw Section is above us.
The trail itself is challenging although not unpassable, and while up to six feet wide at parts, it narrows to a quarter of that in places where the path has disintegrated, leaving gaping holes that have the humans hugging the cliff wall to get by. Every time we reach one, the gryphons stretch their grappling talons across while balancing on clawed back paws, and I find myself holding my breath that they make it. Considering the ones weâre walking with are easily a couple of feet wider than the path, Iâm surprised only two have fallen that I know of. Theyâre able to catch themselves for now, but at higher altitudes? It could get ugly.
I look back at Maren, the flier Iâve been paired with until evening, and her gryphon as we approach an already triggered trap, the battering-ram-size log now lying harmlessly along the cliff wall where the path narrows. âBe careful here.â
âRight at chest height. Nice.â She offers me a pressed-lipped smile. Sheâs petite for a flier, though still taller than me, with a heart-shaped face under dark hair woven into a long single braid that falls along the bronzed ochre skin of her neck. Her dark, hooded eyes meet mine without hesitance every time I look back to make sure sheâs still following, which earns my respect, but sheâs also Catâs best friend, which has me watching my back in more ways than one.
I look back again to make sure they pass safely.
âIâm not going to fall off the cliff,â she promises as we make the sharp turn of the fourth switchback. Or maybe itâs the fifth. The curves are the only places on the trail wide enough to walk in pairs. âNeither is Dajalair.â
The brown-and-white gryphonâs front left claw slips off the trail, and her talon screeches against rock with the most godsawful sound Iâve ever heard as she regains her balance.
Sloane and I trade a look thatâs surprisingly empty of hostility.
âAre you certain about that?â I ask Maren as all three of us pause, watching to see if any stones break off the rocky terrain. Anything that falls can be deadly to those climbing below us.
The gryphon arches over Maren and snaps its beak in my direction.
Yeah, that thing could definitely crush my head.
âGot it, youâre certain,â I say, putting up my hands and praying to Dunne that gryphons donât punish humans for speaking to them like dragons do.
Maren nods and scratches the feathered chest of the gryphon. âSheâs surefooted and a little temperamental.â
The gryphon makes a chortling sound, and we begin walking again.
The narrow ledge is exactly why they arenât allowed to fly any portion of the cliff. Thereâs no guarantee theyâll be able to stick a landing without causing a rockslide and killing everyone beneath them.
âEven if she fell from this height, weâd just have to fly down and start again,â Maren says like a peace offering. âItâs the upper portion of the trail that worries me. Another five thousand feet, and sheâll struggle to beat her wings. Sheâs not meant for the summitwing drifts.â
âSummitwing drifts?â I canât help but ask.
âThose best suited for altitude, for flying the summits of the Esben range,â
she explains. âDaja might not want to admit it, but sheâs a lowland girl.â Her smile brightens even as the gryphon snaps her beak rapidly a foot away from Marenâs ear. âLike you wouldnât rather be stationed with the seawing drifts after graduation?â She laughs softly, no doubt at something the gryphon said. âThatâs what I thought. Trust me, we donât want to be headed into Tyrrendor any more than you want us to be there.â
âSo why come?â Sloane asks, walking too close to the next gryphon and getting flicked in the face by its tail.
âLike Syrena said, itâs our best chance of survivalânot just for us but for our people, too.â
After another few minutes of tense silence, I ask, âSo where are you from?â
âDraithus,â Maren answers. âIâd ask about you, but everyone knows you grew up moving outpost to outpost until your mother was assigned to Basgiath.â
My footsteps almost falter.
Sloane glances back at me with raised eyebrows.
âYouâve been a hell of a ransom target,â Maren explains as we come to a series of carved steps meant to deter wagons. âHonestly, most of us figured Riorson would nab you after harvest his first year and gift you to us.â
âYou mean Cat figured.â Sloaneâs tone has suspicious bite.
âCat definitely figured,â Maren agrees.
âHarvest?â I ask, skipping over the whole Xaden-should-have-kidnappedme insinuation. âYou mean Threshing?â
âRight.â Maren checks on Dajaâs progress on the stairs before continuing upward. âWhatever it is you call it. When your dragons either kill you or choose you.â
âSo, our entire first year.â Sloane laughs.
âImagine our surprise when he shows up ready to defend you to the death last year.â
I look back at her because I donât hear the animosity Iâd expect. Thereâs none of it in her eyes, either. âWere you disappointed?â
She shrugs, the metal rings at her shoulder catching the sunlight with the motion. âI was disappointed for Cat, but I wasnât exactly rooting for that toxicity any more than you would for your best friend. Sheâs the one up there with Cat, now, right? Your squad leader?â
I nod, moving forward along the narrowing stairs, keeping my body as close to the cliff wall as I can without scraping up my flight jacket. âRhiannon doesnât want Cat trying to hurl me off the trail.â
âShe probably would have,â Maren admits, a smile in her voice. âSheâs a littleâ¦â
âUnhinged?â Sloane offers, keeping a good ten feet between her and the gryphon ahead of her with Ridoc, Visia, and the flier. I think that one is Luella, but Iâm not completely sure. âHopefully she doesnât try any of her mindwork on Rhiannon, or she might find herself dangling off the edge. Rhi isnât someone to mess with.â
My eyebrows rise.
âShocked?â Sloane says over her shoulder at me, keeping her hand on the cliff wall as we reach the end of the stairs. âDonât be. Liam didnât hate many people, but Cat was on that list.â
Right. Because he and Xaden were fostered together. He would have met her.
âAngry,â Maren corrects her. âI was going to say âangry.â And relax, Sloaneâ none of us would dare channel power from our gryphons when they need to stay completely focused on not falling to their deaths.â
âAt least itâs not just me you hate.â I bite back a smile at Sloane.
âI donât hate you,â Sloane says so quietly that I almost question hearing it. âItâs hard to hate you when Liam didnât.â My confused look must be enough for her to continue. âIâm in the October letters now.â
âAh, when Xaden forced him to become my bodyguard.â We turn at the switchback and start the next ascent, this one cut a little steeper into the harsh gray rock of the cliffside. I look up and immediately regret the decision, my stomach churning at the view thatâs nearly identical to the one below. Itâs cliff and more cliff.
âWe both knew my brother well enough to say for certain that no one forced him,â Sloane replies, her shoulders dipping. âI just wish Xaden had asked someone else. Anyone else.â
âMe too,â I admit in a whisper, focusing on my footing where the path has crumbled to nothing more than a few yards.
âLook out!â Panicked voices call out above us.
Our attention jerks up.
The sky is gray and falling rapidly toward us.
Itâs not sky. Itâs a boulder.
Weâre about to become debris thanks to a triggered trap.
âTake cover!â I shout, throwing up my hands and pushing back against the cliff wall, making myself as small as possible while I reach for Tairnâs power as a boulder hits the edge of the ledge an ascent above and barrels toward us.
My heart beats in my ears.
With a boulder the size of a feathertail?
I envision the boulder changing course and twist my handsâ
Black streaks through my vision a second before an explosion sounds above me, and I cover my head with my hands as pebbles rain down.
Tairn pulverized the boulder with his tail.
I sag back against the rock wall and take a couple of deep breaths to slow my hammering heart.
âVi!â Rhiannon yells from up ahead.
âWeâre all right!â I shout back.
âHoly shit.â Maren leans next to me, her hand on her chest.
âMorningstartail?â Sloane asks.
âMorningstartail,â I confirm, watching Tairn level out, then fly back our direction.
Within seconds, heâs hovering in front of me with precise beats of his wings, his golden eyes narrowing.
Maren ducks her head, and Sloane looks away.
âHey, that wasnât my fault. I didnât slip.â I lift my brows at him.
I scoff. âNoted.â
He flexes his wings, air gusting against my cheeks before he dives again.
âIsâ¦umâ¦that normal?â Maren asks as we resume the trudge, my heart pounding through the surge of adrenaline.
âWhich part? Tairn saving my ass? Or being grumpy about it? Because yes, both are normal.â
âWhen you walk your parapet, there are rocks thrown at you?â she clarifies.
âOh.â I shake my head. âNo. You just have to cross it, which is harder than it sounds. What do you go through to be chosen?â
âWe walk to the edge of Cliffsbane, look out over the riverâitâs about thirty feet deep at that pointâand wait for the drifts to fly by.â Her tone lightens, and when I glance back, sheâs smiling. âWhen they approach, we jump.â
âYou jump?â Sloane whips her head back, her eyes wide.
Maren nods, and a dimple forms in her cheek. âWe jump. And if we can land on a gryphon, climb into position, and hold on, they bond us.â She reaches up and scratches under Dajalairâs chin where beak turns to feather.
âThatâs pretty badass,â Sloane admits begrudgingly. âWhat happens if you miss? Do the bodies wash up on the shore?â
We both pause, turning fully to watch Maren respond. Have to admit, Iâm curious, too.
Maren blinks. âBodies? No one dies. Itâs just like cliff jumping. If we miss, we swim to shore, dry, and shake off the embarrassmentâand pick another branch for service. Infantry and artillery are popular.â
Sloane and I exchange another look. âYou justâ¦swim to shore,â I say slowly. âYeah.â Maren nods, then points between Sloane and me. âAnd before you ask, itâs you all who are the weird ones, killing cadets on your conscription day.â
I draw back, letting her words sink in.
âTechnically, theyâre candidates,â Sloane mutters. âWeâre only cadets once we cross.â
âWell, I guess that makes it better,â Maren quips sarcastically.
âHey, are we moving or what?â Sawyer calls from behind us.
âMoving!â I answer, then turn and keep hiking up the incline as a pulse of star-bright energy courses down the bond from Tairn.
âWhoa,â Sloane says, putting her hand over her heart. âWhat was that?â
âI felt it, too.â Maren blinks.
Tairn tells me, his tone clipped, considering the news.
I grin.
I glance around, noting that the others seem to be in conversation with their bonded ones, too.
My smile widens at the thought of an Aretian-born feathertail.
By late in the afternoon, Iâd rather commend my soul to Malek than take another fucking step up this never-ending trail. No wonder Tyrrendor never suffered an invasion from Poromiel. Their troops would either be exhausted or deadâpicked off by patrolling dragonsâby the time they reach the top.
Every muscle aches, somehow simultaneously burning with exertion yet stiff from how calculated my steps have become the higher weâve climbed, a result of the dizziness I canât quite shake. Even reciting facts in my head isnât making it feel connected to my body anymore. My heart beats at a humming, stressed pace, and I would give almost to lean against the cliff on my right, stop, and rest for an hour. Or two. Or four.
Weâve halted at least twice in the last hour. The gryphons are slowing to a pace thatâs starting to make me worry about reaching the top at all, but at least none have fallen to their deaths.
And the fights breaking out between fliers and riders arenât helping, either. Weâve had to stop the march three times just to switch up where certain cadets are walking. Brennan might be right that weâll respect the fliers for having climbed, but a daylong hike isnât going to solve the of hatred weâve borne for each other.
The afternoon is extra fun as we enter a thick layer of cloud that only allows a dozen feet of visibility and our progress slows to what feels like a crawl.
âHopefully these clouds mean that weâre close to the top, right?â Maren asks, glancing with concern at Daja, whose steps have grown slower with each ascent. Her head hangs and her feathered chest rises faster, shallower with every step. Hypoxia. Marenâs in the same condition, as is the pair in front of us, Cibbelair and his flier, Luella. His silver-specked wings arenât just tucked in at his side; theyâre drooping.
While we riders have been conditioned in the mountains surrounding Basgiath and often fly at twelve thousand feet, the fliers canât say the same. The highest mountain in Poromiel tops out around eight thousand feet, which explains why only the summitwing drifts would carry out the high-altitude village raids we heard about in Battle Brief.
Even Sloane looks worried.
âLet me check how much farther we have to go,â I tell Maren, softening my tone.
â
Tairn answers.
âI think we have less than an hour left.â I offer Maren what I hope is an encouraging smile but probably looks like a weary grimace.
I ask Tairn.
Right. Because they canât fly to Aretia. Not in this condition.
âWe can make it an hour,â Maren says between huffed breaths. âLuella,â she calls ahead. âIt should be about another hour! Are you holding up?â
âWeâll make it,â a weak voice responds ahead of the silver-specked gryphon.
Sloane braces a hand on the cliff and looks back at me. âShe and Visia have been arguing,â she whispers. âItâs getting quieter, but I canât tell if itâs because they worked out their differences or because Luella canât breathe. And I think she just threw up.â
âAltitude sickness,â I respond just as quietly.
âAnd you donât have to whisper,â Maren states. âGryphons have remarkable hearing.â
âJust like dragons,â I mutter. âNo privacy.â
âExactly.â Maren scratches just above Dajaâs beak, reminding me of that spot above her nostrils that Andarna likes. âGossiping busybodies,â she says with affection. âDonât worry, Luella will win her over. Sheâs the nicest of us.â
âI wouldnât be so sure.â Sloane slows, waiting for us to come up with her. âVisiaâs family was killed in the Sumerton raid last year.â
âLu wasnât even a cadet when that happened,â Maren argues between shallow breaths.
âIf riders torched Draithus,â Sloane quips, arching a brow, âwould you care if you were walking with someone from the Northern Wing? Or would you simply loathe all riders?â
âGood point,â Maren admits. âBut itâs hard to hate Luella. Plus, she bakes good cake. Sheâll win Visia over with butterscotch once we get to Aretiaâ just watch.â
A flash of dragon wing appears through the fog, cutting through the cloud like a knife before disappearing again.
âAt least theyâre still trying to do patrols,â Sloane says as we continue forward.
âBrave, considering they canât see the cliffâs edge,â I add.
A wave of tensionâ¦of awareness barrels down my bond with Tairn. Guess heâs not too happy about the lack of visibility, either.
âNot there!â a familiar voice shouts up ahead, and the line halts. âYouâll trigger it!â
Dain.
âWhat the fuck is he doing back here?â Sloane mutters. It doesnât matter how many times I explain that Dain didnât understand the consequences of stealing my memories; Sloane still despises him.
Thereâs an overwhelming part of me that still does, too.
Cibbelair begins moving, picking his way carefully up the path, and we follow, eventually coming to where Dain stands rigidly against the cliff wall, making himself as small as possible so the gryphon will be able to pass by.
âThereâs a pressure trigger,â he warns, gesturing to a section of the trail just ahead of him with a map clutched in one hand and holding out his other arm so Ridoc and Luella donât continue. âWe know it sends out arrows but donât know from , so we canât disarm it. Hence why Iâm standing here, warning everyone about that particular section.â
I glance up the cliff wall, noting the numerous cracks in the face that could hide any number of munitions, then back to the trail, where a rope has been laid across the rock to mark the untouchable area. It looks to be five, maybe six feet across, which would already give me a little pause on the ground, but jumping an area that big on an unforgiving ledge, at our level of fatigueâlet alone the gryphonsââis flat-out intimidating.
And I can barely see a damned thing past the rope in this fog.
âWe have to jump,â Ridoc says, eyeing the trail.
âEveryoneâs made it across so far.â Dain nods.
âLuella?â Maren leans out over the cliff to see past Cibbelair.
A small flier with pale, nearly white hair and freckles that remind me of Sawyer looks back. âI donât know. Itâs farther than Iâve ever jumped before.â
âSheâs the smallest of us.â Maren doesnât bother whispering.
âLike you,â Sloane adds, looking my way.
âRidoc, can you and Dain throw her across?â I ask.
âYou mean can I throw across?â Ridoc asks with his typical sarcasm.
I snort. âIâll be able to jump it.â Like hell is Ridoc going to throw .
Luellaâs head draws back in offense.
âIâm used to the altitude,â I remind her, hoping to cover my accidental insult. âWhat has everyone else done?â I ask Dain.
âRunning leap,â he answers. âWeâre just making sure whoeverâs on the other side is done recovering first so thereâs no impact.â
Gods, I wish Xaden were here. Heâd simply pluck Luella up with shadows and ferry her across. Then again, he just might let her fall. I never quite know when it comes to other people.
Rhiannon canât retrieve something as big as a person. Cianna, our executive officer from last year, is up there, but wind wielding isnât going to help here, either. Our signets are useless for this.
âYou jump first, Ridoc,â Dain orders.
âSo Iâm throwing Luella?â
âShe either makes it or she doesnât, just like Parapet,â Visia says, tying her shoulder-length hair back. âIâll go first.â
âCibbe says he goes first,â Luella announces, then all three flatten themselves against the cliff wall next to Dain so the gryphon can pass.
Sloaneâs right. Luellaâs physically similar to me, small and shorter than average. Sheâs even my age, since fliers start a year after riders. But sheâs suffering from altitude sickness, and Iâm not.
Iâm just lightheaded, which might be a death sentence up here.
The tip of another dragon wing appears in the mist, the flight pattern coming from the opposite direction. A brown, maybe? âIs that Aotrom?â I ask Ridoc. At this point, Iâm about to beg for his aid, flier pride be damned.
âNo. Heâs up top with the others. They just finished carrying the crossbolts and complaining about being treated like packhorses.â
A corner of my mouth rises. âSounds about right.â
Cibbelair rocks back on his fawn-and-ochre haunches, then launches forward, clearing the trap and skidding on his landing.
Luella sucks in a breath as Cibbeâs talons skim the edge, but he quickly sags against the cliff, his back rising and falling with stuttered breaths.
Iâm torn between sighing with relief that the gryphon made it and acknowledging the growing pit in my stomach that tells me thereâs no way Luella will.
âMind asking him if heâd serve as a railing?â I ask the flier. âWeâre both going to have to run and leap, and heâd be good at keeping us both from falling off the cliff.â
Cibbeâs head cranes back at an unnatural angle, and he chortles aggressively in my direction.
âHeâ¦â A small smile tugs at Luellaâs mouth. âHe reluctantly agrees.â
âVisia and Ridoc, get over there,â Dain orders. âWe need to keep the line moving.â
Visia backs up to where we stand, bounces up on her toes, and runs, pumping her arms and legs, then launches herself across the roped-off area and lands cleanly on the other side.
âSee, if she can do it, weâre fine,â I assure Luella, hoping itâs not a lie.
âSheâs six inches taller than us and not nearly as winded.â Luella swallows. âAnd no offense, but you look like youâre about to pass out.â
âIâm not,â I lie, taking a second to adjust the slipping wrap on my left knee. I havenât had enough water or enough time off my feet today, and my body is more than happy to let me know about the neglect.
Gods, I never would have made it through Gauntlet if Iâd felt like that day.
Gauntlet. An idea takes hold.
âIâllââ Ridoc starts.
âWait a second.â I brace my right hand on the cliff to keep from losing my precarious balance and study the area above the trap, noting one of the thinnest cracks in the rock. Ridocâs the best climber we have, so it just might work.
âWhat are you thinking?â Dain asks. âDonât tell me nothing. You have those little lines between your eyebrows.â
âIâm wondering how attached Ridoc is to his sword.â I breathe through the nausea that always accompanies the dizziness.
âItâs standard issue,â Ridoc replies, then follows my line of sight. âOh. Youâre thinkingâ¦â
âYep.â I glance at Luella so he catches on, and he nods slowly.
âI canât guarantee it will hold.â
âTry.â I lift my brows.
Ridoc reaches for his sword.
âNo.â Dain draws his shortsword, leaving the long one sheathed. âUse this one. It has a longer pommel, and it will be easier to work in.â He hands the sword to Ridoc, then looks over at me. âI still know how your mind works.â
Sloane scoffs.
Ridoc takes Dainâs shortsword and sheathes it in the empty spot at his left, then climbs up a few feet before scrambling horizontally across the cliff face.
âWhat is he doing?â Luella asks.
âWatch,â I say quietly so I donât startle Ridoc.
Hand over hand, he carefully moves across the rock, then plants his feet on a foothold that I canât even see, let alone trust, about halfway across. He frees the shortsword, drawing his elbow back as far as he can without losing his balance, then jabs it into the cracked rock with full force. The screeching sound is worse than a pissed-off gryphon.
âRock,â he says to Dain, reaching back with his right hand.
Dain picks up a loose one the size of my fist, then stretches his long arms out toward Ridoc, handing it to him.
Ridoc slams the rock against the pommel, hammering it deeper into the cliff until almost every inch of the blade has disappeared, and I donât miss the slight flinch on Dainâs face. Ridoc grips the hilt and tests it with one palm, then two.
I hold my breath when he drops all his weight onto it, and thank Dunne, it doesnât give. He rocks his body backward, then swings forward, letting go at the height of his arc and landing on the other side of the rope.
This might work.
âAnd suddenly this is the Gauntlet, not Parapet,â Sloane mutters.
âEasy,â Ridoc says, then pivots to face me and holds out his arms. âLetâs go, Vi. Iâll even catch you.â
âFuck off.â I lift my middle finger but grin across the haze at him. âIâm really hoping youâre right-handed,â I say to Luella.
She nods.
âGood. That hilt is eight inchesââ
âSeven,â Dain corrects.
âImagine a man actually shortening a girlâs estimate,â Maren teases.
I canât help but smile. âRight. Seven inches. Just have to jump far enough to grab it, then swing across like Ridoc.â
Luella looks at me like I told her weâll be climbing the rest of this cliff by hand.
âWant me to go first?â I offer.
She nods.
I pray to Dunne. But maybe that plea should be aimed at Zihnal, because damn do we need some luck. Butterflies attack my stomach.
âYouâre sure?â Dain asks.
I level a glare at him.
âYouâre sure.â He restates it as fact, then backs up to give me more room.
I bounce up on the balls of my feet, then spring forward, planting that last step just before the rope and leaping toward the hilt.
I feel every beat of my heart marking time as Iâm airborne.
My right hand makes contact first, and I grip hard, slamming my left into the available space and holding tight as my body swings so I donât fly forward and trigger the trap.
âYouâve got this!â Ridoc shouts, holding out his arms.
âI will kick you in the face if you try to catch me!â I warn.
He grins and backs up a few steps as I take breath after breath, pushing back the blackening edges of my vision with sheer will, refusing to let the dizziness win.
I will not fucking die today.
Rocking my body back, I start to swing just like Iâm on a Gauntlet obstacle, whipping my feet forward and back. When I have enough momentum, I mutter another prayer and let go, flying toward that rope line.
I hit the other side, and pain explodes in my knees as I fall forward, catching myself with my palms.
, I chant, forcing the pain into a neat little box and shoving a lid over it and stumbling to my feet. A quick sweep of hands tells me I havenât dislocated my kneecaps, though the left argues that it came damn close to abandoning ship.
âSee?â I force a smile to my face and turn. âYou can do it.â
Maren pats Luella on the shoulder, and whatever she says makes the smaller flier nod as I back up, moving toward the center of the ledge and giving her space to land.
She takes the obstacle just like I did, her feet kicking for distance before she reaches the hilt and holds tight.
âThere you go!â I shout. âNow swing until you feel you have the force to carry you.â
âI canât!â she cries out. âMy hands are slipping!â
Shit.
âYou can,â Dain encourages. âBut youâd better move .â
âMove, Luella!â Maren yells.
Luella starts the same rocking pattern Ridoc and I used, swinging her feet to gain momentum, then lets go.
I hold my breath as she hurtles toward the line of safety.
Her feet land just before the rope and her eyes lock on mine, widening with terror as she throws herself forward, like the trap wonât notice her misstep if sheâs quick enough.
Oh, Maybe Dainâs wrong. Maybe the trap is twelve inches the rope line. Maybe sheâs in the clear. Maybe we all are.
But clearly I have prayed to the wrong god.
Everything somehow slows and yet happens at once.
Luella dives forward, hurling her body where she was lookingâat me instead of Cibbelairâand I barely have time to open my arms before she impacts, driving me backward at an angle into Visiaâ¦toward the edge of the cliff.
âVi!â Ridoc shouts.
I try to pivot, to heave as much of our weight toward the safety of the wall as I can, but thereâs not enough time or strength, and we flounder, tangled in one another.
Feet trip other feet, and I start to fall. We all do.
A hand grasps the waistband of the back of my leathers and pulls, changing the direction of my fall.
My feet lose traction as my momentum shifts, and I hit my knees near the edge of the cliff just in time to see Visia and Luella start to slide over.
And I can no longer stop time.
âNo!â I scramble forward, rock scraping over my torso, and throw out my arms, reaching for whoever is closest as a sound like gushing wind rushes over my head.
Visia grabs hold of my left hand and Luella grips my right wrist, the weight of both women nearly taking me to join them. My right shoulder pops from the socket, and agony rips from my throat with a scream.
Visia fumbles for a handhold along the cliff wall, but Luella has both hands locked on my wrist, her feet kicking for purchase.
âPull me up!â Luella shrieks, and Iâm in too much pain to verbalize that I .
âRidoc!â I shout as the edges of my vision blur, then blacken. âHelp me!â
Feet pound, but Luellaâs grip slips from my wrist to my hand, and I chance a look back over my right shoulder, hoping for rescue as Visiaâs weight disappears, plucked from the side of the cliff by a giant beak.
Visia was in his way. The gryphon dumps the rider on the ledge and then cranes his enormous neck toward Luella as bootsteps race the ascent.
But all I see is Ridoc, staggering backward toward the wall, two arrows piercing the side of his abdomen.
âIâm all right.â He nods quickly, glancing down at the arrows, blood trickling from his mouth.
No. No. NO.
I scream up the cliff for the only person who can save him now.
âBRENNAN!â