Iron Flame: Part 2 – Chapter 52
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
Rhiannon slides a mug of warm apple cider across her sisterâs dining room table the next day, then takes the empty seat between Ridoc and Sloane. The house has the same scent as most of the barracks in Riorson Houseânewly cut wood and a faint hint of stain. The carpenters have been working around the clock to turn out serviceable furniture.
I refuse to believe that it could all go up in flames if those dark wielders decide to test their wyvern at altitude. Four hours. Thatâs all it would take for them to reach us from Draithus.
âThanks.â I take the mug and lift it to my face, breathing in the comforting scent before drinking. Looking over my mug, into the connected living room of the townhouse, I smile at the sight of Sawyer sitting with Jesinia on a blanket near the fire, an intense look of concentration on his face as he signsâ
Shit, he might have just told her that he thinks her turtle is blue, but Iâm not getting in the middle of that.
Itâs the second time this week Raegan has opened her home to our squad at Rhiâs request, and the first time Jesiniaâs joined us. I have to give it to Rhiâher idea was genius. Getting our entire squadâeighteen of usâtogether outside the academic setting of Riorson House hasnât solved the tension between riders and fliers, but itâs a step in the right direction.
Even Cat, whoâs sitting as far away from me as possible in the corner of the living room, isnât sneering as she and Neve talk to Quinn. She still hates being in Second Squad, but at least sheâs civil about it to everyone but me.
Weâve fallen into a routine over the last couple of weeks of Novemberânow the first of Decemberâadjusting our formation to include the fliers, attending classes together within our years, and even making it through our first sparring session where no one spilled blood yesterday. Rhiannon laid down the law last week, and now we run together every morning and sit together at Battle Brief and meals. She even assigned us study partners hoping that proximity might lead to mutual understanding or at least tolerance. Thank gods Maren is my study partner, but I still feel shitty that Rhi took on Cat to spare me.
âAny chance you speak Old Lucerish?â I ask Aaric at the end of the table. His tutoring would only be second to mine, considering Markham was my mentor. Iâd feel better if someone else quadruple-checked the translation, someone other than rule-following Dain, but Iâm pretty sure we have it. Otherwise, why would we be here?
âAbsolutely not.â He shakes his head and focuses on his new ink pen, his forehead lined with concentration. All of our first-years are channeling, and though they have yet to manifest a signet, they have a bet going about who will be able to master the lesser magic needed to work the writing implement first. Pretty sure Kaiâthe lone first-year flier without Luellaâis going to beat them all.
Heâs currently on the couch between a couple of first-years, his spiky black hair bobbing, a dimple forming in his bronze cheek as he laughs at whatever story Bragenâthe driftleader and our new XOâis currently telling. Other than Maren, Bragen is the easiest of the fliers to get along with. He also spends a lot of time shooting longing looks Catâs way.
âWhy would Aaric speak Old Lucerish?â Visia asks from the opposite end of the table, looking up from her physics homework. âArenât you from Calldyr?â
My face freezes. Fuck, I need to be more careful.
âYep.â Aaric looks up at me, his features a perfect, polished mask. âYou have me confused with Lynx. Heâs from Luceras.â
âRight. Of course.â I nod, thankful for his quick cover.
âAt some point, youâre going to have to actually get to know the first-years. Theyâre people now,â Ridoc teases, his smile tight. He agrees with us about what weâre about to do, but heâs understandably worried about the fliersâ reactions.
âCanât blame her,â Imogen says, carrying a mug out of the kitchen with Maren following close behind. âWeâve added six first-years and six fliers to the squad in the last six weeks.â
âWeâve been in the squad since July,â Visia argues.
âYou didnât count before Threshing.â Imogen shrugs, glancing across the room. âGuess Iâll go save Quinn from Cat.â
âNo blood on my sisterâs floor.â Rhiannon shoots her a look that says she means it.
âYes, Mother.â Imogen mock salutes with her empty hand and then heads toward Quinn.
Maren takes the seat next to me, and Rhiannon lifts her brows at me in subtle question.
My throat tightens.
This is the whole reason we planned tonightâs get-together, so why am I suddenly anxious?
Because I havenât discussed my decision with Xaden, not that heâs been around more than one day a week since he and Brennan decided to reorganize how the combat squads operate.
Andarna says.
Tairn chimes in.
âDo it,â I say to Rhiannon, gripping my mug with both hands.
âListen up!â Rhi calls out as she stands, quieting the house, her gaze touching on every cadet. âFor riders, squads are more than a unit. Weâre family. In order to survive, we have to trust each other on the battlefieldâ¦and off it. And weâre trusting you to do with this information what you will.â She looks to me.
What weâre about to do is borderline treason, but I canât imagine doing this any other way.
I take a steadying breath. âIâve been translating Warrickâs journalâone of the First Six, who built Basgiathâs wards,â I clarify just in case theyâre not familiar with our history. âIn the hopes that we can get the wards up in Aretia before the approaching wyvern decide weâre the next target⦠And I think I know how to do it. But thatâs why we wanted to talk to you, because it will mean you fliers wouldnât be able to wield.â
The fliers stare, stunned. Even Catâs eyes flare wide with what almost looks like fear.
âWe know two other Poromish towns have fallen in the last two weeks, leaving Draithus vulnerable, and the Assembly wants the wards up and functional ,â Rhiannon continues. âWhich we think you deserve to know.â
âKnow what?â Cat stands, her chair screeching against the hardwood floor. âThat youâre about to kill our ability to channel? Our gryphons are still struggling to adjust to altitude, and now youâre going to make us ?â
âProtective wards were our goal long before you came here.â Imogen pushes off the wall and casually sets her hand on her hip, near her favorite dagger, angling her body toward Cat, and Quinn sidesteps to flank the angry flier.
âBut weâre here ,â Cat retorts. âIf my uncle had known you would tie a hand behind our back, he never would have made that deal!â
âControl yourself, Cat.â Bragen keeps his tone level, but his brown eyes are sharp as he stands, putting his left arm out to block Cat from advancing on us. âHow long until theyâre up?â he asks me.
âAs soon as I tell the Assembly what Iâve found.â As of this morning, the stone has a distinct hum, a vibration in that chamber that reminds me of the way Xaden described the armory at Samara, housing the alloy-hilted daggers.
âAnd when are you doing that?â Cat snaps.
âIf you werenât here, it would be done already,â I retort in the same tone sheâs giving. No doubt the majority of the Assembly will condemn me as a traitor for this, and maybe theyâll be right. âBut you here. You matter.â
Maren shifts in her seat beside me, and though I refuse to slip my hand toward my daggers, Ridoc doesnât hesitate, folding his arms to give him quick access to the sheath along his shoulder.
âAnd how long are you giving us?â Bragen asks me, tilting his chin and exposing the vertical silver scars down his neck that disappear into his collar.
Every gaze shifts in my direction.
âI wonât lie to Xaden. The moment heâs home, Iâll have to tell him,â I admit. Multiple curses ripple through the fliers. âBut Iâll also tell him that I think we should hold off as long as possible to give you a chance to decide if you still want to stay, knowing you wonât be able to channel.â
âAnd you honestly think heâll listen to you.â Catâs hands curl at her sides.
Thatâs what he said to me when he put my safety above the best interest of the movement. And he may want the wards up because Iâm here and he isnât, but he also has a province to think of.
âNo.â I shake my head slowly. âI think heâll act in the best interest of TyrrendorââI leave myself out of the equationââand want them up as soon as possible, but I can still try.â
âWeâre no good to our people if we canât channel,â Maren says, looking past Aaric to the window and drumming her fingers on the table.
âYeah, well youâre no good to them if youâre dead, either,â Imogen counters, keeping an eye on Cat. âAnd by not raising those wards right now, weâre exposing all of Aretiaâthe riots, the driftsâhell, all of beyond Navarreâs wards to danger thatâs no longer necessary. So youâd better decide if youâre willing to stay, knowing that it can happen at any moment, or if youâre better off taking shelter in Cordyn, where youâll have power dark wielders.â
I donât envy them the choice, but at least we gave it to them.
âAnd if you stay, we wonât leave you powerless.â I reach under the table and retrieve my pack, then set the black leather bag on the table and unbutton the top. âTurns out alloy isnât the only thing we can imbue.â I take out the six conduits Felix gave me yesterday after I trusted him with the truth, each containing an arrowhead like the ones Iâve been imbuing for weeks.
âWhatâs in that?â Bragen asks, two lines etched between his brows.
âThe kind of ore we donât use to make the alloy. Itâs not quite as rare as Talladium but itâs about ten times as explosive. Trust me, Iâve seen this stuff blow sky-high raw, let alone imbued.â I glance at Sloane, who slowly smiles before she responds.
âMaorsite.â
Iâm suspended again over that sunburned field, the death wave a heartbeat from overtaking me once the Sage releases me from his hold, and he will. He does it every time.
I recognize the scenario for what it is nowâa recurring nightmareâand yet Iâm still held powerless, still too slow to reach Tairn, still canât force my consciousness to snap me awake.
âI grow weary of this. Now wield,â the Sage whispers, his robes purple tonight. âRip free. Show me the power you used to slay our forces above the trading post. Prove me right that you are a weapon worth watching, worth retrieving.â His hand hovers over mine but doesnât touch me. âThe one who watched thinks youâll never yield, that we should kill you before you grow into your full abilities.â
My stomach turns, my mouth watering with nausea as the bony hand drifts upward, pausing at my neck.
âUsually, jealousy sways the tongue of young wielders.â He drags a single, long fingernail down my throat, exposing an expanse of tan arm under his robes, and I twitch, fear accelerating my heartbeat.
I force my mouth to open, but no sound comes out. Touching me is new. Touching me is âThe rest turn for the power,â he whispers, coming so close I can smell a hint of something sweet on his breath. âBut you will turn for something much more dangerous, much more volatile.â He wraps his hand around my throat loosely.
I manage to shake my head in denial.
âYou will.â His dark, eyelash-less eyes narrow, and the jagged fingernails slice into my skin with an all-too-real bite of pain. âYouâll tear down the wards yourself when the time comes.â
The temperature plummets, and my next exhale is visible in the frozen air. I blink and snow covers the ground. The only warmth is a quickly cooling trickle along my neck.
âAnd you wonât do it for something as trite as power or as easily satiable as greed,â he promises in a whisper, âbut for the most illogical of mortal emotionsâ love. Or youâll die.â He shrugs. âYou both will.â
He flicks his wrist, and a bone-jarring crack tears me from my sleep.
I jolt upright in bed, reaching for my throat and gulping lungful after lungful of air, but thereâs no cut, no ache, and when I turn the mage light on with lesser magic and a twist of my hand, I see thereâs no blood, either.
âOf course there isnât,â I whisper aloud, the raw sound cutting through the silence of my bedroom as the first hints of sunlight lighten the sky to purple beyond my window. âItâs just a fucking nightmare.â
Thereâs nothing that can touch me here, Xaden asleep beside me.
Tairn grumbles, as though Iâve woken him.
He cuts off conversation before I can tell him that human dreams donât always work like that, and the bond dims, a sign that heâs already gone back to sleep.
So I lie back down, curling my body around Xadenâs, and his arm wraps around my back and pulls me closer like itâs a reflex, like this is the way weâll sleep for the next fifty years. I settle in against his warmth and lay my head on his chest, above the most comforting rhythm in the world besides Tairnâs and Andarnaâs wingbeatsâXadenâs heart.
Six days later, there are six new names on the death roll. The December snow makes flying absolutely miserable outside the valley, and at Basgiath, the dragons would simply refuse to train due to discomfortâtheirs, of course, not oursâbut we canât afford not to fly at every available opportunity, so here we are in the flight field, waiting for orders, facing off against Claw and Tail Sections for the squad exercises Devera and Trissa have organized.
âYouâd think we were in the Barrens, itâs so fucking hot in this valley,â Ridoc mutters, unbuttoning his flight jacket to my right. âAnd itâs only eleven.â
A bead of sweat races from the hairline at the nape of my neck to the collar of my flight jacket, so itâs not like I can disagree with him. Winter flight leathers arenât exactly meant for the Valeâ¦or the valley.
âIt wonât be the second weâre in the air.â Sawyerâs eyes briefly narrow, staring ahead of us, where Rhiannon, Bragen, and the other squad leaders meet with Devera and Trissa.
âYou all right?â I ask quietly, so the first-years ahead of us canât hear.
âItâs for the good of the squad, right?â Sawyer forces a tight, closed-lipped smile. âIf they can stay and tolerate knowing we might strip their powers away at any second, I can deal with losing my position as executive officer.â
Andarna says for the tenth time in the last fifteen minutes, and I look over my shoulder to see her flexing her claws beside Tairn, her talons digging into the earth. Her black scales shine with a green hue this morning, reflecting the grass around her. Maybe itâs the result of lingering gold, and breathing fire will steal the last of the shimmer.
I keep my voice as gentle as possible.
Tairn adds.
Andarna argues, because is what she does now. Tairn could tell her the grass is green, and sheâd eviscerate yet another sheep on it just to change the color.
I lift my brows at Tairn, who simply huffsâwhatever the hell that means.
âTrouble in double dragon land?â Ridoc asks, and Cat glances my way from his other side, Maren following suit now that we stand in rows of four.
âShe wants to fly with us,â I answer.
am she insists, digging more than just her physical claws in.
Tairn grumbles.
he starts.
I interrupt, hoping to distract her. The last thing I want to do is climb to any altitude she canât handle and have her wing fail. Gods, the consequences of such a mistake would be incomprehensible.
do not I swear I can Tairn roll his eyes.
Shit, what do adolescent dragons do all day, anyway?
Rhiannon and Bragen head back our way, locked in discussion, both gesturing with their hands in motions that look like maneuvers. Thereâs a sheen of excitement in Rhiannonâs quick smile, and I find myself mirroring it. âShe looks happy.â
âMaybe theyâre finally going to let us fly farther than a half hourâ¦you know, without making us hike up the Cliffs of Dralor after,â Ridoc remarks. âGods, I miss .â
âThat would be nice,â Sawyer agrees, shooting me a teasing smirk. âNot all of us get to take a pleasure flight to Cordyn, you know.â
âHey, that joy ride got us a luminary.â I glance meaningfully at the sheath at his side, which holds an alloy-hilted dagger. One for one. That was the deal Brennan struck with the Assembly when it came to supplying the drifts, and weâve finally made enough to equip every rider in Aretia with multiple daggers.
âListen up, Second Squad,â Rhiannon says, looking over our group. âOur mission is simple. You know the summoning runes Trissa has been working on with us?â Even the first-years nod. They might not be able to weave runes, but at least they know what they are, which means theyâre a step ahead of where we were last year. âThere are thirty of them hidden within twenty miles along the western range. This isnât just a test for us, but for our dragons to sense them.â
Tairn growls in response.
Point made.
âWinner gets a weekend pass. No training. No homework. No limits.â She glances at Bragen, whose lips twitch into a smile.
âWeâve been given permission to fly wherever we want. If your gryphon feels comfortable flying the cliff wall, that means you can go anywhere.â He looks at Cat. âEven Cordyn, though youâd only have a few hours there before youâd have to start the flight back. If you win, of course.â
âOh, weâre winning,â Maren says, shoulder-bumping Cat the same way Rhiannon does me.
âGood. You want that pass? Weâll need to find and close more of those runed boxes than they do.â She nods back toward Claw and Tail Sections.
Tairn says as wingbeats fill the sky.
I look up, a slow smile spreading at the sight of Sgaeyl soaring overhead with Chradh and eight other dragons, but I only recognize the three bonded to Heaton, Emery, and Cianna. Xadenâs homeâ¦with a full riot of ten.
I ask Xaden as they land behind our line of gryphons and dragons.
Tairn breaks away as if we arenât about to be sent on a training mission.
âBragen and I will divide you up into groups of four according to your abilities,â Rhiannon continues.
Xaden answers, executing a perfect dismount and walking toward us. My pulse leaps and the worry that seems to live in my chest lifts a fraction when I donât see any new injuries or blood.
âSorrengail, you paying attention?â Rhi calls me out.
My head swivels back to the front of formation, where sheâs arching an eyebrow at me.
âTeams of four. Split by ability,â I repeat with a nod, then give her a blatantly beseeching look that absolutely abuses her status as my best friend.
âWeâll have an hour once we launch,â Bragen says.
, Rhi mouths once the squadâs attention is on him.
I smile in thanks, then step out of formation and walk past Andarna and Feirge, over the trampled grass, straight to Xaden. The scruff on his jaw is thick with days of growth, and there are circles under his eyes as he reaches forward, surprising me by tugging me against his chest in front of all of Fourth Wing.
The cold beard tickles as he buries his icy face in my neck and breathes deeply. âIâve missed you.â
âSame.â I wind my arms around his torso, sliding my hands in the space between the swords he wears crossed at his back and his flight jacket, then hold tight to help warm him. âI need to talk to you.â
âBad news?â He pulls back and searches my eyes.
His brow knits.
âGood to see you, Vi,â Garrick says as he walks by, tapping me on the shoulder. âYou definitely need to make him tell you about the venin he took down just outside Draithus.â
âYou what?â My stomach pitches sideways.
âThanks for that, asshole.â Xaden glares at Garrick.
âJust doing my part to help your communication skills thrive in a stable relationship.â Garrick turns and walks backward, lifting his hands in a shrug.
âLike you have any room to talk about stable relationships,â Imogen counters from behind him, the squad formation obviously having broken to ready for the mission.
âIâm going to skip the obvious pun to be made about plenty of mares in my stable.â He flashes a grin, then turns and heads toward the path at the end of the valley. âSeeing as Iâm no longer a cadet but a mature, responsible officer.â
She scoffs as he walks by. âWe need to go, Sorrengail.â
âYou took down a venin?â I pivot, keeping my attention on Xaden. âOutside ?â Itâs the last Poromish stronghold before the Cliffs of Dralor.
âYou have lengthy news to discuss?â he replies, lifting his brows.
âAre you all right?â I slide my hands to his face, scanning him like that tiny bit of exposed skin will tell me if the other ninety-five percent is unharmed. Being able to raise the wards wonât mean anything if he isnât safeâat least it wonât mean anything to me.
âNews?â His eyes narrow.
âViolet!â Rhiannon calls.
âI have to fly out.â I drop my hands reluctantly, and he catches one in his as I retreat a step. âWeâll talk when I get back.â
âThe wingleader voice doesnât work on me.â I squeeze his hand and let go.
His eyes flare.
I blink, then scowl.
He looks toward the rocky path that leads down to Riorson House.
I shake my head and turn toward my squad, seeing Sloane, Visia, and Cat clearly waiting for me. Guess I donât need to ask where Iâve been assigned.
Xaden quickly catches up to me.
I pat Andarnaâs foreleg as we approach the trio of waiting cadets.
I shoot him a glare.
âAre you two fighting silently?â Cat asks, glancing between Xaden and me, her perfectly arched brows rising slowly.
âThey do that,â Sloane informs her.
Xaden ignores them both completely, keeping his gaze locked onto mine as we reach them.
I lean up and brush my lips over his cool cheek. âBecause youâll need Tairn. Now go warm up. I have a mission to fly.â Without another word to him, I turn to my squadmates. âLetâs go.â