Iron Flame: Part 2 – Chapter 57
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
The irony of meeting at Athebyne is not lost on me, nor is the fact that this is the second time Iâm visiting the outpost on the edge of the Esben mountain range after finding out Xaden Riorson has hidden pertinent information from me.
I spent last night in the library, which was probably in the best interest of everyone as I continue to muddle through my thoughts. Intentions. What-thefuck-ever.
Today, Iâm bleary-eyed and restless, with more questions than answers. But as I glance over at Xaden landing on Sgaeylâs back, his face tense and drawn, I can recognize that telling me, whether or not he wanted to, was the ultimate gesture of trust.
And this time, Iâm not the last to know. Iâm the first. Maybe it makes me completely, utterly foolish, but somehow that makes a difference, even if I havenât had the opportunity to tell him thatâ¦or the opportunity to interrogate his ass about how many of intentions heâs read.
Iâm just not sure how many I have in me, no matter how much I love him.
Our riot of ten lands in the clearing over the ridgeline from the outpost at noonâa full hour before weâre due to meetâand four of the dragons back into the cover of the forest immediately, hiding in the shelter of the enormous evergreen trees that surround the field. The other six stand wing to wing, ready to launch at a momentâs notice.
I ask Tairn, putting my flight goggles into my pack before sliding down Tairnâs foreleg. Landing on the frozen ground makes me wince. Iâd woken up this morning with a hundred-yearold text stuck to my cheek and a throbbing ache in my neck.
Especially given who insisted on traveling with us. I stretch my arms up at the sun and roll my neck carefully to ease the stiffness in my muscles. After fighting Solas yesterday and accidentally sleeping on a table in the library last night, my body has had it with me, and I canât blame it.
True, which only serves to remind me of the enraged adolescent I have waiting for me at home in Aretia. After telling her there would be no logical way to explain her presence even if Tairn carried her, which she was adamantly opposed to, Andarna cursed Tairnâs entire family line, then blocked us both and went to practice with the elders.
Tairnâs only response had been a muttered expletive about the moods of adolescents.
It doesnât escape my notice that Sgaeyl stands between Teine and Fann, Ulicesâs cantankerous Green Swordtail, not next to Tairn, which either explains or is a result of his surly mood this morning.
Mom and Dad are fighting, and everyone knows it.
Xaden crosses in front of Fann, completely unbothered by her snort of insult at his proximity, and peels off his gloves as he approaches me.
âYou didnât come to bed last night.â His brow furrows as he makes a quick study of my face, then shoves the gloves into his pocket, and I mirror his motions just in case weâll need to wield.
Then I reinforce my shields.
âI was in the library with Dain, poring over Warrickâs journal to see what I got wrong. We both fell asleep on one of the tables, until Jesinia and a few others joined us for more study.â I meet his gaze, then look away before I start pelting him with questions or do something even more foolish like forgive him before getting answers.
âI thought Jesinia didnât speak Old Lucerish?â He barely glances at the riders who walk by and gather in front of Fann. Weâve brought three from Miraâs unit in addition to members of the Assembly.
âShe doesnât, but Sawyerâs smitten, and the others were determined to help in any way they could.â Even Cat, Maren, and Trager had joined in a show of support.
âDid you find anything?â
The dragons raise their heads at a sound coming from the other side of the clearing, and the way they quickly lower them tells me everything I need to know. Early or not, this meeting is about to start.
âNo,â I answer, keeping my eyes on the trees and fighting the apprehension trying to knot in my throat.
. What did I miss? âIf I had, youâd know it.â
âWould I?â His tone tightens.
âYou would.â My gaze jumps to lock with his. âI appreciate you not trying to talk me out of coming.â
âI learned my lesson at Cordyn.â He searches my face but doesnât reach for me. âLet me in. If only for a second, please let me in.â
My chest tightens with every heartbeat as I hold his gaze. Exactly how much of this is mine to forgive? Itâs secret. But I canât help wondering how much heâs read into my own intentions. Thatâs the part that has me hesitant, no matter how much I love him.
âViolet?â Itâs the blatant plea in his tone that has me lowering my shields just enough to feel our bond connect, and the resulting relief on his face is palpable.
I lift my eyebrows at him.
His attention shifts to the trees, and Tairnâs shadow races across the brittle prairie grass, winding around us.
Our hands brush as we both turn to face whomever is coming through those trees.
He scowls but laces his fingers with mine.
Mira approaches from behind Xaden, her stride confident, though two lines of worry are etched between her brows.
I squeeze his hand, then let go.
I run my hands down my hips, counting the blades sheathed there, all six of them.
He shakes his head, but his hands clench at his sides and the muscle in his jaw pops.
Death would be preferable to the embarrassment that accompanies that revelation.
Tairn offers.
Heat flushes up my neck and stings my cheeks, reminding me of the times my scalp would prickle in his presence.
Gods, I canât even finish the question.
The tops of the trees begin to sway. Theyâve brought dragons.
He glances at me.
he shakes his headâ
I have to know.
Except Xaden hadnât brokered the information heâd stolen and been responsible for killing Liam and Soleil. Yet Iâve made some kind of peace with Dain, havenât I?
Maybe Iâm becoming complacent with betrayal because itâs fucking .
I say quickly, looking up at him as Mira comes within hearing distance.
I lift my brows.
The muscle in his jaw ticks like he wants to say more, but he only adds, âYou ready for this?â Mira asks, crossing in front of Xaden to stand beside me.
âNo,â I reply to Mira. âAre you?â
âNo.â She rests her hand on the pommel of the shortsword sheathed at her hip. âBut sheâll never know that.â
âI want to be you when I grow up.â A smile tugs at my lips despite the anxiety quickening my breaths.
âYouâll be better than me,â she counters, then looks over the top of my head to talk to Xaden. âBy the way, you couldnât convince him to stay in Aretia?â
âI donât wield emotions, and members of the Assembly donât take well to being tied down and restrained.â He reaches back over his shoulder and draws one of the swords strapped to his back with his left hand, leaving his right free to wield. âIf youâre looking to influence mindwork, find a flier.â
I barely keep myself from jabbing him at his clever semantics, because the man clearly specializes in mindwork.
âHere we go,â Mira mutters as seven figures dressed in black step into the clearing.
I palm a dagger in my right hand and crack open the door to the Archives, letting power trickle into me.
Melgren walks at the center, his beady eyes shifting down our line of Aretian riders. I donât need Catâs gift to heighten his anger. He wears rage like itâs a part of his uniform.
I force myself to glance at the other members of their chosen party, only recognizing three, two of whom were Momâs aides at one point or another.
I tell Xaden.
Shadows rise in front of the three of us, curling in blade-like fingers at the level of our knees.
Then my gaze falls on Mom.
She walks at Melgrenâs side, cutting through the field with quick, efficient steps, her attention split between Mira and me. The closer she comes, the more apparent her exhaustion. Deep bruises mark the space under her eyes, contrasting with her paler-than-normal complexion, even though the lines from her flight goggles indicate sheâs spending time in the sky.
Mira tilts her chin and smooths her expression into a mask I envy and do the best to emulate.
The dragons follow, led out of the forest by Melgrenâs dragon, Codagh. The utter nightmare of a black dragon immediately lowers his head as he stalks forward, and his golden eyes narrow at meâno, at Tairn standing behind me. Fuck, Iâd almost forgotten just how big he is, easily five feet taller than Tairn, numerous battle scars marking his chest scales and wings.
Momâs dragon, Aimsir, follows, prowling toward us at the same time the other five make their appearance, an orange, two redsâ¦and a blue.
Tairn steps forward and lifts his head to hover over mine, a menacing rumble working its way up his throat.
I joke, but it falls flat.
The Navarrian riders walk to the center of the field, and when Ulices moves, so do we, leaving ten feet of empty field between our lines. Swords and daggers gleam within easy reach on both sides.
âAnd here I was thinking you were dead, Ulices,â Melgren starts, forcing a smile thatâs mostly bared teeth.
âAnd here I was hoping were,â Ulices counters, using his height to look down his nose at Melgren.
âNo such luck,â Melgren replies. âWhat happened to meeting at the outpost?â He gestures back toward the trees. âWe have refreshments waiting if youâd care toââ
Tairn adds, but he sounds slightly distracted, as if holding more than one conversation at once, probably because he is.
âWe donât,â Xaden interrupts. âSpeak your piece, Melgren.â
Melgrenâs gaze jumps to Xaden. âWe never should have let you into the quadrant.â
âRegrets are truly a bitch, arenât they?â Xaden cocks his head. âLetâs get to it. You may have nothing better to do with your day, but weâre busy fighting for our Continent.â
âNothing better?â Melgren snaps, his face blotching. âDo you know the destruction you caused by dropping those wyvern on the outposts? The lengths we went to in order to keep it quiet? The civilians we had toââ He stops himself, breathing deeply and straightening his shoulders. âYou almost tore down centuries of work, of tightly woven defensive strategy designed to protect the people within our borders.â
âBut only the people within your borders,â Mira accuses. âFuck everyone else, right?â
Momâs eyes flash with barely leashed reprimand.
âYes.â Melgren turns that unnerving stare on my sister. âWhen you abandon ship in the middle of a hurricane, you save those you can in the dinghy, then cut the hands off anyone else who tries to climb aboard so they donât pull you under.â
âYouâre a callous asshole,â she fires back.
âThank you.â
âAre we here for a reason?â Xaden asks. âYou know, besides the evil villain lecture?â Sunlight glints off the blade of his sword as he shifts his grip.
âWe you go,â Melgren answers, glancing between Ulices and Xaden. âLet you take half the Riders Quadrant cadets without so much as a fight. Let goââhis withering gaze slides over mine, and I lock my muscles to keep from shudderingââafter she brutally murdered the vice commandant. Ever stop to think about why?â
My stomach clenches.
âI personally try to think about you,â Xaden replies, outright lying, but damn does he pull it off.
âYou canât afford to lose the riders necessary to fight us,â Ulices answers. âWeâre too expensive to keep, especially with the number of ridersâand the riotâwho chose to leave you.â
âPerhaps.â Melgren tilts his head. âOr perhaps I let you.â
My grip tightens on my dagger.
âPerhapsââthe general draws out the wordââI knew weâd need you for a coming battle.â
Highly unlikely. Who would they possibly be fighting behind the wards?
âIâll meet Malek before I fight for Navarre again,â Ulices snarls.
âYou were always too quick to make important decisions,â Melgren says with a sigh, patting his chest. âThatâs why I didnât mourn your loss.â
That was harsh.
âThis meeting is overââ Ulices starts, red rising up his neck and splashing onto his cheeks.
âTheyâre going to overrun us at Samara,â Melgren interrupts.
Everyone quiets.
I struggle to draw my next breath. Surely he didnât mean to say that. I look at Mom, and my knees weaken at the subtle nod she gives me. Even Mira tenses.
âIâve seen it,â Melgren continues. âThey come for us on solstice, and they win.â
Shit, he said what he meant. A chill races up my spine as the blood drains from my face. If Samara falls, if of the outposts do, wyvern would have unfettered access to parts of Navarre the ward extensions have protected for the last six hundred years.
Without the outposts, Basgiathâs wards would rebound to their natural limits, only a few hoursâ flight, reaching nowhere near the border.
âHow?â Ulices challenges, and the riders from Miraâs unit exchange disbelieving looks.
I say to Xaden.
he answers, shifting so his hand brushes the back of mine.
Holy shit. No wonder inntinnsics arenât allowed to live. Xaden is both a jaw-dropping weapon and a frightening liability. I do as he suggests, only leaving space for Tairn and the opaque, glimmering bond I feel with Andarna, even at this distance.
â
isnât how it works.â Melgren folds his arms across his chest, and Codagh bares his dripping teeth. âAll that matters is that we lose on solstice.â
They . If the wards are breached, thereâs no way to estimate the death toll. Every Navarrian civilian between the border and the wardstoneâs natural limitations will be in mortal danger.
But Iâm not.
âIf youâve already seen the outcome, then what the hell do you expect us to do about it?â Ulices challenges, lifting his hands as he shrugs.
My head turns in his direction, but I bite my tongue before I can reply that he obviously expects us to .
âChange the outcome by fighting at our side.â Melgren frowns like heâs being forced to swallow rotten fruit. âIn the battle I see, none of you are there.â He glances at Xaden.
âAnd weâre not going to be.â Ulices shakes his head. âWe donât fly for you.â
No, we fly for⦠Wait, who we fly for? Not just Aretia, or even Tyrrendor. And if weâre willing to fight to defend the civilians of Poromiel, why wouldnât we fight to defend Navarrians, too?
âNo, but you do fly for the Empyrean,â Mom interjects. âDragonkind wonât stand aside if the hatching grounds in the Vale are compromised.â
Tairn mutters.
â
the hatching grounds are compromised. Losing one outpost wonât take down the entire system, and half your riot left with us,â I remind her.
âAnd youâre proud of that? What you caused may very well be the reason we lose this battle!â the box-framed captain beside Mom snarls, lifting his shortsword in my direction.
I flip my dagger, pinching the tip in readiness to throw, but shadows jolt forward, knocking the sword from the captainâs hand and putting him on his ass.
Xaden clicks his tongue and wiggles his pointer finger. âNo, no. Iâd hate to lose the spirit of civility, wouldnât you? We were all getting along so nicely.â
âGodsdamned traitor,â the captain spits out, fumbling for his sword before finding his feet. âMalek will meet you for your crimes.â
Mom sheathes a dagger I never saw her draw, her focus flicking between the captain and Xaden.
âTried that. He didnât want meâor any of us, remember?â Xaden scratches his relic with his empty hand.
âEnough,â Melgren shouts. âI donât expect you to ally yourself with us for nothing. Fight for us at Samara, and I have it on King Tauriâs word that we will respect the independence of your riotâ¦and the city youâve taken refuge in.â
The breath freezes in my lungs.
âWe will not conscript your citizens for our army, nor will we drag your people into a border war you have no chance of winning.â Melgren shrugs.
âIf you truly thought that, you would have invaded the second we left.â Mira sounds like sheâs bored. âUnless you saw the battle didnât go your way.â
âThis is the only offer.â Melgren ignores Mira, focusing on Ulices. âIf you are not our allies, then you are our enemies.â
Allies. Thatâs the logical answer.
âI think weâll sit this one out,â Ulices says dismissively, as though heâs rejecting an offer of tea. âA kingdom who never comes to the aid of others doesnât deserve aid in their time of need. Personally, I think you all deserve whatever the dark wielders do to you.â
I blink, everything in my body rebelling at the sentiment that civilians deserve to die because their leadership failed them, no matter who that leadership is.
âAnd you speak for your ?â Melgrenâs attention slides to Xaden. âOr does the heir apparent?â
Xaden doesnât rise to the bait, nor does he argue against Ulicesâs statement. But heâs going to, right?
The color drains from Momâs face as she looks between Mira and me, us, and for the first time in my life, I see her wobble, like someone has knocked her off her center.
Bootsteps sound behind me, but I canât tear my gaze away from the emotions crossing Momâs face in rapid succession long enough to look to see who it is, and honestly, I donât need to.
âWe rule by committee,â Brennan announces, his arm brushing mine as he stops between Mira and me. âAnd I think Iâm safe in speaking for the quorum when I say that we do not defend kingdoms who sacrifice neighboring civiliansââ his head turns toward Mom, and her eyes bulgeââlet alone their own so they can hide safely behind their wards. You will not escape the suffering youâve forced the rest of the Continent to endure.â
âBrennan?â Mom whispers, and the urge to cross the line and hold her upright is almost too strong to fight.
âFor fuckâs sake, Brennan,â Mira whispers.
âWhen all three of your children stand against you, perhaps the time has come for self-reflection. This is officially over,â Brennan states, his gaze locked on our mother. âYour hatching grounds are in danger, and our riot has their own to protect now.â He places his hand over his heart. âI mean this with every fiber of my body. We deny your offer of peace and happily accept war, since it sounds like you wonât survive another two weeks to fight it.â He pivots and walks away, leaving our mother to stare slack-jawed at his retreating back.
Is that all there is to it? With Suri and Kylynn in the woods behind us, the Assembly truly has a quorum, but Xaden hasnât spoken.
âRight.â Xaden nods, tension straining the muscles of his neck. âIf I were you, Iâd try calling on the allies who helped win the Great War in the first placeâ oh, wait. You cut off contact with them centuries ago. I suppose this really is farewell.â
I glance up at him and quickly school my features to mask my surprise. Theyâre really going to leave them to die.
are going to leave them to die.
Wrath shines in Melgrenâs narrowed eyes. âWeâre done here. Do what you need to say goodbye,â he says to my mother before leaving the field, walking toward the trees as Codagh moves with him, slinking backward and baring his teeth in warning for anyone foolish enough to attack his riderâs back.
All the Navarrian riders beside Mom follow.
âBrennan,â Mom whispers again, her shoulders folding inward as she covers her mouth with her hand. Her eyes water, and the pain I see there makes me look away.
Our riders make quick work of mounting, leaving only Xaden, Mira, and me on the field.
âWhy did you want to see Violet and Mira?â Xaden asks, his tone devoid of sympathy.
âHeâs alive?â Mom asks Mira, her voice faint in what I think has to be shock.
âObviously,â she replies, folding her arms.
Momâs gaze shifts to me, like Iâm going to give her a different answer. âHeâs the one who mended me after I took a venin blade in my side.â
Her eyes sharpen. âYouâve known for ?â
âItâs appalling to be left in the dark, isnât it, Mom?â Mira snaps. âTo feel lied to, perhaps even betrayed, by your own family no less.â
âMira,â I chastise.
âShe sacrificed you, too, Violet,â Mira reminds me. âMaybe she put you into the Riders Quadrant to save you from being killed as a scribe once you learned the truth, or maybe she did it to kill you before you could learn the truth and tear her precious war college to the groundââshe glances sideways at meââwhich you did, if you remember.â
Mom straightens her shoulders and lifts her chin, pulling herself together with astonishing, enviable speed. âI need a word with my daughters,â she says to Xaden.
He arches his scarred brow, then looks to me for my decision.
I nod. If what Melgren says is true and sheâs called to the front lines, this might be the last time I see her. The thought sickens my stomach. Itâs one thing to leave her, to cut any and all contact, and quite another to leave her to her .
Xaden backs away without another word, only offering his back once he passes by Tairnâs claw.
âWhat do you want?â Mira asks.
âIâm not sure that matters at the moment.â Mom unbuttons her flight jacket with trembling fingers. âBut I want mostâwhat Iâve always wantedâis for my children to live. Whatever wards youâve raised from the instructions in Warrickâs journal will fail.â
Mira stiffens. âOur wards are fine.â
She lies just as effortlessly as Xaden.
âTheyâre not.â Mom delivers a full lecture with a simple look. âCut open the bodies of the wyvern who died crossing your border yesterday.â
My lips part.
âWhyever would you think Iâd be ignorant of activities on your border, Violet? Ignorant of where my daughtâchildren are?â She shakes her head and dresses me down with a quick, cutting glance that makes me instantly feel like Iâm five again before turning to Mira. âYou remember what the carcasses of the wyvern looked like at Samara? The ones Riorson so kindly delivered?â
Mira nods.
âThe stones used to create them were nothing but cold, marked rocks.â Stones? Do dark wielders have ?
âYes. I was there.â Miraâs tone sharpens.
âIf you donât believe me, then check the wyvern you killed yesterday.â
âAnd then what?â I ask.
âFix your wards.â She pulls a leather notebook from her jacket, and my eyes widen with recognition. âIf you donât, theyâll decline over time to nothing. Your father told me once that his research showed that Warrick never wanted anyone else to hold the power of the wards. He wanted Navarre to eternally hold the upper hand. But Lyra thought the knowledge should be shared.â
âWarrick lied,â I whisper. But about ?
She hands me the journal Iâd been tortured for stealing, then nails my soul to the ground with the intensity of her gaze. âYou have the heart of a rider but the mind of a scribe, Violet. Iâm trusting you not only to protect yourself, but to protect Mira andââshe swallows hardââBrennan.â
I open the journal long enough to recognize the language as Morainian. My heart sinks for a second, but I close the journal, undo the buttons of my jacket, and slide it into my inner pocket. Translating this one will be all on Jesinia. Morainian is one of the dead languages I read.
She looks longingly over my shoulder, then glances at both Mira and me in turn. âYou donât have to understand my choices. You simply have to survive. I love you enough to bear the weight of your disappointment.â Before either of us responds, she turns on her heel and walks past Aimsir and disappears into the woods.
âThink sheâs full of shit?â Mira asks.
âI think the fliers can wield.â
âGood point.â
On the flight back to Aretia, Mira and I break away from formation and head for the nearest wyvern carcass within our borders. Xaden stays true to his lesson-learned proclamation and doesnât argue when we separate from the riot.
A half hourâand some creative knife work on Miraâs partâafter locating the pair of wyvern bodies, Mira draws back a polished chunk of what appears to be onyx marked with a complex rune I couldnât even begin to replicate.
And the damned thing is humming.
Oh Is this why wyvern have suddenly reappeared? Did someone give the venin runes?
As if the stone has called to its partner, the carcass twenty feet away shudders, and our heads whip toward the giant, golden eye that blinks open.
âFuck, no,â Mira whispers, drawing her sword.
But Iâm already an open gate to Tairnâs power, and when I throw out my palms, it rips free, unleashed by my panic. Lightning cracks, flashing my vision to white and hitting its mark.
The blast knocks Mira and me backward, slamming us against the cold, stiff body of the wyvern behind us. Pain ripples down my spine, but everything seems to be where itâs supposed to as my ass hits the ground beside my sister.
We both sit in stunned silence, watching the now-smoking, charred wyvern for signs of movement.
âYouâre sure lightning kills them?â Mira asks after a few tense minutes.
âCertain,â I answer. âThank Dunne the dark wielders didnât stick around longer to see that.â The cliffside would be littered with reanimating wyvern.
She slowly turns her head to look at me, keeping an eye on the body. âNo pressure, but if you donât figure out what Warrick lied about, weâre all fucked.â
âRight.â
. And I donât even know Morrainian. Iâll have to rely fully on Jesinia to translate and compare the two. I draw a shaky breath. âNo pressure.â