Iron Flame: Part 2 – Chapter 54
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
A dark shape flies at us from the left, sweeping Cat and me into a spinning tangle of limbs and propelling us backward. I grab onto her in the chaos, forcing her body in front of mine as we come to a skidding halt, knowing the shelter of facing my back to Solas wonât be enough but trying anyway.
She has to live. Sheâs third in line to the throne of Poromiel. If she dies in Tyrrendor, Cordyn will hunt Xaden down and execute himâ¦if he survives my death.
I push the demand down every mental bond I have just in case we arenât out of range. Xadenâs too far, but Tairn will hear it, and Andarnaâgods, Tairn has to get here in time to save her.
Kiralair and Sloane fly into us next, swept in by an unseen force, pushing Sloane and me backward, toward Solas, but my back hits a hard, rough surface as the cave walls illuminate with the eerie glow of impending fire a heartbeat before weâre overtaken by darkness.
Andarna demands.
Not darkness. Wings. Itâs her belly at my back and sheâs wrapped her wings around us.
âBreathe in and hold it!â I shout, then fill my lungs with sulfur-scented air.
Heat blasts, roaring past us in a stream that shakes Andarnaâs wings, and the temperature soars. I force my eyes closed to keep them from cooking as my skin as though weâve been thrown into an oven. How can she survive this?
Tairn reminds me, but the panic in his voice doesnât do much to soothe the terror clamping down on my heart.
Andarna demands, and I know itâs because Iâll singe my lungs if I do, if of us do. I count my heartbeats. One. Two. Three.
The blast feels like it goes on forever, like itâs become my eternity, like my soul has done exactly what Sloane asked in the first part of the year and gone straight to the depths of hell without being commended to Malek. Eight. Nine.
On ten, it ends, and Andarnaâs wings fall away. Air rushes in, and I wait until I feel its cool brush across my cheek before I drag in a breath, hearing the others do the same.
I open my eyes and see Cat lunge in the torchlight across the small space, using her gloved hands to put out the burning tips of the feathers along Kiraâs far wing. It must have been exposed to the flames. Sloane races to help as Andarna gains her feet, and I narrowly avoid her tail as she faces down Solas.
I lift my hands and throw the floodgates open on Tairnâs power, letting it burn through me as Solasâs blast failed to do, until Iâm pure fire. But I canât wield in here, not when thereâs every chance I could hit one of us.
Andarnaâs roar fills the cave, and my heart stops when she goes for Solasâs throat. He bats her away like sheâs nothing but a nuisance, and I muffle a cry as she slides into the wall, right over the charred remains of Visiaâs bones.
Andarna shakes it off as Solas sizes me up.
Tairn tells me.
Three minutes. We can make it three minutes. But time isnât our issue. Tairn canât fit through the opening of the cave. Heâll have to find whatever entrance Solas used.
âLet me go!â Cat shouts. âYouâreâ¦youâre draining my power!â
What the fuck? I chance a look backward, but all I see is Cat disengaging from Sloaneâs panicked grip.
I order Andarna, and this time, she listens, scrambling back to my side as I grab two knives from their sheaths and flip them, pinching at the tips for a heartbeat before loosing them.
The first misses as he swivels, but the second finds the mark.
His bellow of pain is followed by rage, and he stumbles backward into the forked tunnel, leaving a small, precious opening between his head and the wall.
Cat and Sloane are closer. They can make it.
âGet her out!â I yell at Cat. âNow!â
âViolet!â Sloane shouts, but Kiraâs beak closes softly around her pack, and she hoists her into the air as Cat scrambles to mount.
They rush by on the left, making it through just before Solasâs claws come out swinging, his talons raking furrows into the stone of the cave.
I hit the floor, pain flaring up my shoulders. Thereâs no as talons swipe over us, but something bites into my palm. Glass from the conduit.
I spread my bleeding fingers wide in the dim light of the dying torch, locating the remnants before it goes out. The top of the metal joint has broken, leaving four jagged prongs and one secured piece of alloy.
Andarna tells me, following my thoughts.
But I have power.
Itâs our only shot, and Iâm taking it.
she stubbornly argues.
Tairn announces.
How the hell am I going to get close enough to stab the remains of the conduit into him? Thereâs no time to tie it to a dagger, and the force of a throw isnât enough toâ
Solas roars in pain, his head swiveling back toward his shoulder, and through the opening, I see Cat poised in the dim light, nocking another arrow.
Thereâs no time to ruminate on her sticking around to save me. Iâm already moving, grabbing hold of the dying torch in my empty hand, then running toward the soft spot under Solasâs foreleg, where his scales separate a few inches at a time to allow the movement of the joint.
He roars again, fire illuminating the cave in a short blast as he aims without sight, hitting the wall in front of him instead of Cat. I race into the deadly space underneath him and change my target when I realize heâll crush me if he falls, charging toward his right shoulder.
I shove the prongs of the conduit into the soft joint between his scales as Andarna sinks her teeth between his neck and shoulder, distracting him, and then I Energy sizzles up my arm and into my fingertips where they meet the metal.
Control. This is all about With one hand raised, wielding the delicate strain of energy, I back away from Solas as quickly as I dare, feeding more and more power into the stream, and then I pour everythingâ
Solas roars, swinging his hind end around. A shape comes swinging for me, and I make out the thicker part of his tail in the dim light a second before it slams into my stomach, sending me flying and breaking the stream of lightning.
Iâm airborne, nothing more than a projectile as I fly backward, hitting my ass, then my back, and lastly my head against the ground with a crack. But I hold my power tight instead of striking, letting it burn me from the inside out. Better me than accidentally hitting Andarna.
The only sound is a loud ringing in my ears, and sight only comes in quick, flashing blasts. Fire. It flares as I struggle to sit up through the fog of my own heartbeat, revealing Andarna latched onto Solas, hanging on even as he thrashes, slamming her smaller body against the cave wall.
âNO!â I think I yell, but the incessant peal of bells in my head blocks it out, and suddenly Iâm moving, being dragged backward by a pair of arms. My head falls back, and I recognize those eyes.
Liam. I be dead.
âSheâs not clear!â someone shouts as the ringing fades slightly, and then another blast of fire shows two more arrows in the bloodied hole that used to be Solasâs shoulder.
Cat. Sheâs beside me, already drawing another arrow, and her lips move silently.
And the eyes above me arenât Liamâs. Theyâre Sloaneâs.
Weâre plunged back into darkness momentarily, and the ringing fades enough to hear Catâs voice clearly.
âNinety. One hundred. One hundred and one.â Her voice .
Light flares again as Iâm dragged backward, and Cat fires, hitting Solas in the same wound. Andarna flies free, taking a chunk of Solas with her as Iâm hauled from the returning darkness into the growing light from the mouth of the cave.
âAndarna!â I claw at Sloaneâs grip, but the harder I fight, the weaker I feel, and the insufferable heat of my power lessens as Sloane starts to scream, letting me fall to the ground.
I feel the steady beats of air at my back and know Tairn is there, hovering, but I canât rip my eyes away from the darkness of the cave as I stumble to my feet near the entrance.
A dragon , then falls horrifyingly silent.
She isnât. She canât be.
Tairn promises, but I donât breathe until I reach mentally and find my bond with Andarna gleaming and strong.
âI drained you.â Sloane holds up trembling hands, staring at them like they donât belong to her. âI drained you!â She grasps my shoulders, yanking my focus from the dark as my head .
âFor fuckâs sake, Sloane, give her a second. She just hit her head,â Cat barks, still aiming into the darkness as we stand in the glaring light but not firing an arrow without a target.
âAre my eyes red?â Sloane shakes me, or maybe shaking and simply holding on to me. âAre they red? I swear I didnât reach, Violet. I didnât take anything from you on purpose! Oh gods, am I turning venin?â
Tairn says.
âYouâre not turning.â I take her hands from my shoulders and stare into the darkness as footsteps sound, talons clicking along the rock.
âIâm not?â
âYour signet manifested,â I whisper, my eyes straining to see into the cave opening. âYouâre a siphon.â
Andarna walks into the light, but itâs not the blood covering her mouth that catches my attentionâitâs the blood dripping from the poisoned barb on her tail.
âYou killed him.â My shoulders dip in relief. âYou killed Solas.â
Pride and worry assault me at the same time, but I canât force my shields up before Tairnâs voice fills my very existence.
Xaden bursts into our room as the healer finishes checking my eyes, shading my vision, then exposing me to light.
âVioletââ He halts a few feet away from where I sit on the edge of our bed. âCat? What the hell are you doing in here?â
âShe saved my life. Making sure she was seen by a healer was the least I could do,â Cat answers.
âShe ?â Xaden moves forward as the healer stands upright.
âYou heard me. She put herself between that giant orange dragon and me.â She rises from her seatâthe same chair Xaden sat in while I slept in here for days after Resson, poisoned by the veninâs blade. âThank you, Sorrengail.â She chokes on the words a little before passing by Xaden on her way out.
âSolasââ I start to explain.
âOh, I already know,â he seethes. âSgaeyl told me.â
âYou were in a meeting. I didnât want to bother you.â I follow the healerâs fingers upon direction.
âBother me?â Shadows flood the floor.
The healer notices, blinking quickly. âYouâll be all right. I donât think youâre concussed, but thatâs quite a lump on the back of your head, and Iâll ask that you mind the stitches in your hand.â She arches a silver brow at me.
âOf course.â I lift my wrapped left hand. âThank you.â
She nods, then dismisses herself, disappearing into the hallway.
I stare at Xaden, and he stares right back, tension emanating from every line of his body. âIf you want to fight about the wards, thatâs fine, but Iâm not taking the blame for fighting my way out of a cave.â
He stalks forward, then bends down into my space and kisses me, soft and slow. âYouâre alive,â he whispers against my lips.
âSo my heartbeat says.â
âGood.â He stands, folding his arms. âNow we can fight. What the fuck were you thinking, saving ?â
I blink. âIâm sorry, youâre mad at ? I fight my way out of a cave against a dragon, and youâre mad at ? For saving a woman in the line of succession to the throne of Poromiel?â
He reels backward, horror flashing into his eyes a second before anger swamps them. âYou saved Cat because sheâs in line?â
âFirst, I would have fought to save anyoneââ
âYou selfless, recklessââ he accuses, backing away slowly.
âAnd second, her death would have triggered yours, so hell yes I saved her!â My feet hit the ground and my head swims for a heartbeat, but my pulse steadies as I breathe deeply. âTecarus would have had you executed if sheâd died under your care.â
âUn-fucking-believable.â He laces his hands on the top of his head. âYou hate her, and yet you refuse to raise the wards, no doubt so her power wonât be stripped away, and then you put your life in front of hersââ
âFor you!â
âAll I want is !â He flicks his hands, and shadows shut the door a little harder than necessary, sealing us in behind the sound shield. âIf she dies, then Iâll take the consequences. If they canât channel, Iâll take those consequences, too. But not you. Never you. Gods, Violet. Iâm doing everything in my power to both respect your freedom and keep you safe, and youâreâ¦â He shakes his head. âI donât even know what youâre doing.â
âKeep me safe.â I laugh, sarcasm biting into my eyes and making them sting. âIs that what you do? I get it all mixed up with just not killing me.â
âThere it is.â He retreats until his back hits the wall, and then he folds his arms and leans against it, crossing an ankle casually. âYou finally ready to ask me about the deal I made with your mother?â