Iron Flame: Part 1 – Chapter 9
Iron Flame (The Empyrean Book 2)
The next morning, I wake in a cold sweat, the sky pale with early light through my east-facing window, my body flooded with adrenaline from the nightmare. Like every morning since Xaden left, I wrap my knees tight and dress quickly, pulling the flexible summer uniform meant for sparring over my armor and plaiting my hair in a single, loose braid as I head out of my room.
My heart still pounds as I jog down the spiral steps, my brain unable to shake the nightmares that come so vividly while I sleep.
I sleep.
I swallow back the bile rising in my throat. One of the venin got away in Resson, red veins spidering away from his malevolent eyes. Who knows how many more there are, making their way toward our border while we rest.
On the ground floor, first-years scurry to their newly assigned chore duties, but the courtyard is blissfully empty, the air thick with humidity yet mercifully cooler than yesterday thanks to the storm rolling in.
I hold the heel of my boot to the back of my thigh, stretching the muscle. Despite copious amounts of Winifredâs ointment, the skin of my back is still tender from yesterdayâs burn, but itâs a hundred times better than it was last night.
âHasnât anyone told you that a perk of being a second-year is the extra hour of sleep you get to have without chores?â Imogen asks as she approaches, her footsteps light on the gravel.
âYeah, which Iâm sure is great for people who can sleep.â I stretch the other leg. âWhat are you doing?â
âGoing with you.â She stretches, too, rolling her neck at the same time. âBut what I canât figure out is why the hell youâve been running every morning.â
My stomach hollows. âHow would you know that Iâve been running every morning? If Xaden thinks I need someone watching out for me this yearâ¦â I shake my head, unable to finish that sentence. He was supposed to visit yesterday but never showed, much to Tairnâs aggravationâ¦and my worry.
âRelax. Xaden doesnât know. My room is right above yours, and letâs just say Iâm not sleeping very well, either.â Her gaze darts toward the rotunda as a group of cadets walks out.
Dain. Sawyer. Rhiannon. Bodhi. I recognize most as Fourth Wing leadership.
Rhi and Sawyer spot us immediately and head our way.
âSo, why are we running, Sorrengail?â Imogen asks, finishing her stretches.
âBecause I generally suck at it,â I answer. âIâm good in short bursts, but anything longer than thatâand I wonât make it.â Not to mention itâs hell on my joints.
Imogenâs gaze snaps to mine, her eyes widening.
Bodhiâs farther back and starts our way. His walk is so similar to Xadenâs stride that I almost do a double take.
âWhat are you doing up?â Rhiannon asks, tucking a notebook under her arm as she and Sawyer reach us.
âI could ask you the same.â I force a smile. âBut Iâm guessing itâs a leadership meeting.â
âYes.â Concern creases her brow as she studies my face. âAre you all right?â
âAbsolutely. Good meeting?â Itâs a pathetic attempt at normal conversation, given the scenes from Resson still replaying through my head from my nightmare.
âIt was fine,â Sawyer answers. âThey moved Bodhi Durran from Tail Section to Flame.â
âWe had to do some restructuring, seeing as most of Third Squad was torched yesterday,â Rhiannon adds.
âRight. That makes sense.â I glance over her shoulder and gauge I have about five seconds before Bodhi reaches us. If he knows Iâm struggling, thereâs no doubt heâll tell Xaden, and I really donât need that conversation right now. âListen, I have to get going.â
âGoing where?â Rhiannon asks.
âRunning,â I answer truthfully.
She draws her head back, her brow furrowing deeper. âYou never run.â
âThen itâs a good time to start,â I try to joke.
She glances between Imogen and me. âWith Imogen?â
âYep,â Imogen replies. âApparently weâre runners now.â
Bodhi arrives in time to hear that, his eyebrows rising.
âTogether?â Rhiannonâs gaze keeps bouncingâto Imogen, me, and back again. âI donât understand.â
âNothing to understand. Weâre just running.â My smile is so tight I think my entire face might fracture with the effort it takes to keep it there.
Bodhiâs gaze narrows.
âBut what if you donât make it in time for breakfast?â
âWe will,â Imogen promises. âIf we leave right now.â She glances at Bodhi. âIâve got this.â
âLet them go,â Bodhi says.
âButââ Rhiannon starts, her gaze searching mine as if she can see right through me. Imogenâs been training me since last year, but Rhi knows we arenât exactly friends.
âLet them go,â he repeats, and this time itâs not a suggestion but an order from her section leader.
âIâll see you later?â Rhi asks.
âLater,â I agree, unsure I mean it as I turn without another word and jog across the courtyard toward the tunnel. The gravel is shit for traction, making it harder, but thatâs fine. I need harder.
Imogen catches me within a few strides. âWhat do you mean you wonât make it?â
âWhat?â We pause at the doors.
âYou said you wonât make it.â Imogen gets to the handle before I do and holds the door shut. âWhen I asked you why youâre running. What did you mean?â
For a second, I debate not telling her, but she was there, too. Sheâs not sleeping, either.
âSoleil didnât.â My gaze locks with hers, but her expression doesnât change. Swear to the gods, nothing fazes her. I envy that. âShe was on the ground when killed her. The way she channeledâ¦it drained everything from the land. Everything the land. Including Soleil and Fuil. I watched it happen. I watch it happen every night when I close my eyes. It spread so quickly, and I knowâ¦I canât outrun it. Not if Iâm too far from Tairn. Iâm not fast enough for any considerable distance.â I try to swallow the tightness in my throat, but the knot seems to live there lately.
âYet,â Imogen says, yanking the door to the tunnel open. â
not fast enough yet. But we will be. Letâs go.â
***
âItâs weird as hell to be all the way up here,â Ridoc says from my left as we sit in the first Battle Brief of the academic year later that day, looking down at where the first-years take up more than a third of the room.
Itâs standing-room only in the giant, tiered classroom for the third-years behind us. This is the only place in the quadrant besides the gathering hall designed to hold all the rider cadets, but it will take a few weeks of death rolls before we can all sit in front of the stories-tall map of the Continent.
It reminds me of the one in Brennanâs briefing room in Aretia. He thinks we only have six months until venin challenge the wards, and yet thereâs not a single indication on this map.
âView is a little better,â Nadine remarks from his other side.
âDefinitely easier to see the higher portions of the map,â Rhiannon agrees at my right, taking out her supplies and setting them on the desktop before her. âDid you have a good this morning?â
âIâm not sure Iâd call it good, but it was effective.â I put my notebook and pen on the table, wincing at the pain shooting up my shins, and reinforce my shields. Keeping them up at all times is harder than I thought, and Tairn loves to remind me when they slip.
âLook at all those first-years with their quills and ink,â Ridoc remarks, leaning forward to look down at the underclassmen.
âThere once was a time we didnât have lesser magic to power ink pens,â Nadine retorts. âStop acting superior.â
âWe superior.â He grins.
Nadine rolls her eyes, and I canât fight my smile.
Professor Devera walks down the narrow set of stone steps on our left that follows the tiers of seats, her favorite longsword strapped to her back. Her black hair is a little shorter since I saw her last, and thereâs a fresh, jagged wound along the rich mahogany skin of her biceps.
âI heard she spent last week with the Southern Wing,â Rhiannon says quietly.
My stomach tenses and I wonder what, if anything, she saw.
âWelcome to your first Battle Brief,â Professor Devera announces. I tune out as she gives the same speech as last year and warns the first-years not to be surprised if the third-years are called into service early to man the mid-guard posts or shadow the forward wings. Her gaze rakes over them before she raises her attention to the seconds, her eyes crinkling for a heartbeat as she flashes a proud smile at me before continuing upward as she explains how necessary it is for us to understand the current affairs of our borders.
âThis is also the only class where you will not only answer to a rider as your professor, but a scribe, as well,â she finishes, lifting her hand toward the stairs.
Colonel Markham lifts the corner of his cream-colored robes as he descends, heading for the recessed floor of the lecture hall.
My muscles lock, and I fight the urge to flick one of my daggers into his traitorous back. He knows everything. He has to. He wrote the fucking textbook on Navarrian history that all riders are taught from. And until last year, I was his star pupil, the one heâd handpicked to succeed in the Scribe Quadrant.
âYouâll respect Colonel Markham as you would any other professor,â Professor Devera says. âHe is the foremost authority at Basgiath when it comes to all matters not only of our history but current events as well. Some of you may not know this, but information from the front is actually received at Basgiath before itâs sent to the king in Calldyr, so youâll be hearing it first here.â
I glance down the tiers to where Aaric sits beside Sloane in the row with our squadâs first-years, and to his credit, he doesnât flinch or even fidget in his seat. One good look, and Markham will know who he is, but with that haircut, if he keeps his head down, heâs got a shot at blending in.
At least until his father sounds the alarm that heâs missing from his gold-plated bed in Calldyr.
âFirst discussion point,â Markham says when he reaches the floor of the hall, his silver eyebrows knitting. âThere were not one but two attacks on our border by drifts of gryphons in the past week.â
A murmur goes through the hall.
âThe first,â Professor Devera says as she lifts her hand and uses lesser magic to move one of the flag markers from the side of the map to the border we share with the Braevick province of Poromiel, âwas near the village of Sipene, high in the Esben Mountains.â
An hourâs flight from Montserrat.
The only sound is pen and quill against parchment as we take notes.
âHereâs what we can tell you,â Markham says, folding his hands behind his back. âThe drift attacked two hours past midnight, when all but a few villagers were asleep. It was unprovoked, and because Sipene is one of the villages that lies beyond the wards, the violence went undetected by the Eastern Wing for some matter of hours.â
My shoulders dip, but I keep writing, pausing only to look up at the map. That village is at eight-thousand feet, an altitude unpleasant for gryphons. What were they looking for? Maybe I should have spent last night reading about whatâs in those mountains instead of six-hundred-year-old political ramifications of establishing our war college here and not in Calldyr to the west.
âThe drift was routed by three dragons on patrol from the local outpost, but by the time they arrived, most of the damage had been done. Supplies were stolen, homes were burned. The last gryphon flier was found in some of the local caves above the village, though neither he nor his gryphon could tell us the motivation for attack, as they were both burned on sight.â
Hard for prisoners to talk about the venin theyâve been fighting if theyâre dead.
âThatâs what they get,â Ridoc mutters, shaking his head. âGoing after civilians.â
But were they? Markham didnât mention civilian casualties, only destruction.
I look up over my shoulder at where Imogen stands with Bodhi and Quinn, her arms folded over her chest. She glances down at me, her mouth tightening before she gives her attention back to Markham.
Shit. I want to be standing up there with them, asking what they really think, or even with Eya, whoâs with her third-year squad up in the corner. We might not be close, but at least she knows the truth. More than anything, I want to talk to Xaden. I want answers heâs not willing to give me.
âAs for the second,â Professor Devera continues, moving another flag, this one to the south. My breakfast churns in my stomach when she puts the flag in place. âThe outpost of Athebyne was attacked three days ago.â
I gasp and the pen falls from my hand, hitting the desk loudly in the quiet room.
âAre you all right?â Rhiannon whispers.
âSomething you have to say, Cadet Sorrengail?â Markham asks, cocking his head and looking at me in that characteristically unreadable expression heâs so fond of. But the challenge Iâve often seen when he used to try and dig a correct answer out of me is there in the simple lift of his brow.
I know heâs well aware of what is happening beyond our borders, but did Colonel Aetos tell him that know, too?
âNo, sir,â I answer, grabbing my pen before it can roll off my desk. âI was startled, thatâs all. As far as I know from what you taught me in preparation for the Scribe Quadrant, outposts are rarely ever attacked directly.â
âAnd?â He leans back against the desk in the center of the floor, tapping a finger along the side of his bulbous nose.
âAnd Montserrat was also directly attacked in the last year, so I canât help but wonder if this tactic is becoming more commonly used by our enemy?â
âInteresting thought. Itâs something weâre considering among scribes.â The smile on his face is anything but friendly as he pushes off the desk, clasping his hands behind his robes as he nods at me.
âWe usually start with first-years,â Professor Devera says, cutting a look at Colonel Markham. âFinishing the details we can give you about the Athebyne attack, it occurred a little before midnight, while nine of the twelve dragons stationed there were still out on their patrols. The enemy totals were around two dozen from what we can tell, and they were defeated by the three present dragons, with help from the infantry. Two gryphon riders made it into the lower level of the outpost before being caught and killed.â
Tairn growls, and I build them back up.
he lectures, snapping a little more than usual.
Point made.
âIsnât that where you guys were sent?â Rhiannon asks. âAthebyne?â
I nod, hoping none of those fliers were the ones who fought with us at Resson.
The first-years start when itâs time for questions.
What was the gryphonâs chosen formation for the attack on Athebyne?
A typical V.
Are the two attacks connected?
We have no reason to believe so.
The questions go on and on, and none of them are getting to the heart of the matter, which makes me look at the cadets below us with a healthy dose of skepticism that they arenât the critical thinkers they need to be. Then again, maybe the other years felt that way about us last year.
Finally, Devera opens the floor to the other years.
Rhiannonâs hand shoots up, and Devera calls on her.
âDo you think itâs possible that the enemy knew the outpost had been emptied for War Games and was trying to take advantage of the situation?â she asks.
Exactly.
Professors Devera and Markham share a look. âWe do,â Professor Devera finally answers.
âBut the delay would show a lag in the timing of their information, correct?â Rhiannon continues. âThe outpost was only empty for what? A few days?â
âFive days, to be precise,â Markham answers. âAnd this attack occurred eight days after it was reoccupied.â His gaze skates over mine, then lifts to the rows above. âThe Poromiel trading post nearby, Resson, was leveled by Poromish unrest a couple of weeks ago, and we think that may be helping disrupt their communication lines about our outpost.â
Power rises within me so quickly that my skin heats.
Devera glances sideways at Markham. âWe also donât usually give you the answers.â
Markham chuckles and dips his head. âMy apologies, Professor Devera. I must not be at my best today. Too little sleep in the last few days.â
âHappens to the best of us.â
I raise my hand, and Devera calls on me. âWhere in the outpost were the gryphon riders found?â
âNear the armory.â
I nod. They were raiding the outpost for weapons. Our wards might not reach that far, but Iâd bet my life a cache of daggers was moved there if leadership knew venin were in the vicinity. Brennan canât supply even a fraction of the drifts. Of course theyâre going to fight to steal weaponry. We need to smuggle more out.
âWhat would you do were you in command of the riot at the Athebyne outpost?â she asks the room, then calls on Caroline Ashton when she raises her hand.
âIâd double the patrol for the next few weeks in a show of force, and maybe consider razing a few Poromish border villages,â she suggests.
Rhiannon scoffs quietly.
âRemind me to never get on her bad side,â Ridoc mutters.
âIn retaliation?â Dain interrupts. âThatâs not our way. Read the Codex about the rules of engagement, Ashton.â
âHeâs right,â Devera agrees. âWe defend our borders with lethal force, but we donât take war to civilians.â We just donât bother saving them, either. But does she know that? Shit, can I trust around here?
Butâ¦maybe the whole report is wrong. Maybe it was wyvern and venin attacking, not gryphons. Maybe this entire presentation is a well-crafted lie.
âHow many riders were wounded in the Athebyne attack, given that one was killed?â I ask.
âFour of us,â Devera answers, pointing at her arm. âIncluding me. This is courtesy of a rider with an excellent aim of her bow.â
So much for the not-gryphon idea.
Weâre excused after another half hour of current events, and I ditch my squad in the crowd, searching out Bodhi.
Heâs nearly to the steps of the briefing room before I catch up to him.
âSorrengail?â he asks after we make it through the bottleneck of the doors.
âI want to help,â I whisper. Maybe I can do more than just read.
âFor fuckâs sake.â He takes my elbow and pulls me into an alcove, towering over me with a look of exasperation. âI have direct instructions to keep you as far away from as possible.â
âHeâs not even here, and heâs still giving you orders?â I adjust the strap of my bag on my shoulder as most of the quadrant funnels past.
âThat tactic isnât going to work on me, because yes.â He shrugs and scratches a pen into the cast on his arm.
âAnd I thought you were the most reasonable of the group.â I sigh. âLook, if I can help, then maybe we can prevent what Iâm assuming areâ¦supply runs.â Talking in code is ridiculous, but anyone could be listening. âGive me a job.â
âOh, I the most reasonable in the group.â He flashes a grin, leaning back on his heels. âI also donât have a death wish. Survive second year and strengthen your shields, Sorrengail. Thatâs your job.â
âShe trying to talk you into letting her join the shenanigans?â Imogen asks, stopping alongside us.
ââTryingâ is the precise word,â Bodhi says. âOnly trying.â He walks off into the crowd.
âHow are we expected to go back to class like nothing happened?â I ask Imogen as we walk out into the flow of cadets headed for the main staircase of the academic wing.
âYouâre supposed to like nothing happened,â Imogen says quietly, waving at Quinn, whoâs waiting ahead with Rhiannon. âThatâs the deal we all made when we came here.â She moves her bag, twisting her wrist so her rebellion relic is front and center between us. âAnd like it or not, youâre one of us now. Well, as close as you can get without one of these.â
I shift my heavy pack on my shoulder and nod, realizing I know too little to actually help the marked ones and too much to speak frankly to my friends.
âHey,â Imogen says to Quinn. âLunch?â
âAbsolutely,â Quinn answers.
The two walk ahead while Rhiannon falls back to keep pace with me.
âDoesnât Quinn usually eat lunch with her girlfriend?â Rhi asks.
âYes, but she graduated.â
âRight.â She sighs and lowers her voice. âI wanted to talk to you before breakfast but didnât get a chance. I think the school is hiding something from us.â
I nearly trip over my own boots but catch my balance before I can make a fool out of myself. âIâm sorry?â
She canât know. She just canât. I barely survived losing Liam⦠I canât fathom anything happening to her.
âI think thereâs something going on in the Healer Quadrant,â she says, lowering her voice. âI tried to take a first-year to see Nolon yesterday after formation turned into a firepit, and he looks like absolute shit. I mean, the man could barely stand. And when I went to ask him if he was all right, the new vice commandant said he had more important things to do than talk to cadets and basically escorted him to that little door in the back of the infirmary, which is now . I think theyâre hiding something back there.â
I open and shut my mouth a couple of times, torn between confusion and relief. âMaybe they brought some of the injured riders from one of the outposts for mending,â I offer. The backlog would explain why Bodhi is still in a cast.
She shakes her head. âSince when do a few broken bones wreck a mender?â
âMaybe they brought in a prisoner from Poromiel.â Ridoc forces his way in between us. âAnd Nolon keeps healing them as Varrish breaks them. I heard one of the third-years say thatâs what Varrish is known forâtorture.â
âAnd youâre known for eavesdropping.â Rhi shakes her head.
Instead of eating lunch with my friends, I make a quick excuse and take my tray to the little library alcove in commons to finish reading .
Sadly, after an hour hunched over the tome, I realize I already know most of the facts it regurgitates about the triumph of unification and the sacrifices made by both humans and dragons to establish peace. Disappointment stings like a paper cut. Naturally the secrets of ward-building werenât going to be in the first book I researched, but it would have been a pleasant surprise for to be easy.
I contemplate asking Jesinia for a volume more focused on the First Six riders as I change for assessment back in my room, then head to the gym and meet my squad on the edge of the mat.
âI hate assessment day,â I mutter, taking the spot between Rhi and Nadine.
âCanât blame you after the way yours went last year,â Ridoc teases as he steps up next to Sawyer.
The first match begins between two of our first-years, and I canât help but notice Rhi glancing my way every few minutes. By the end, Visiaâthe repeatâ has trampled the brutish girl with shocking red curls whoâd thrown up on Aaric yesterday, and Rhiâs all but frowning at me.
And sheâs not the only one. Sloane is staring like she might actually be capable of glaring me to death as she shifts her weight continuously on the left side of the mat.
âBaylor Norris and Mischa Levin!â Professor Emetterio, our squadâs combat teacher, shouts at the first-years beside Sloane, then tilts his shaved head down at the clipboard in his beefy hands.
Shit. I really didnât want to know their names. The stocky guy with nervous eyes faces off against the brunette who couldnât stop biting her nails yesterday.
âYou all right?â I ask Rhi as the brunette somehow flips the muscly one onto his back. Impressive.
âShould I be asking you that?â Rhi responds, lowering her voice to a whisper. âAre you mad at me?â
âWhat?â I rip my attention from the way the girl is handing that guy his ass to look at her. âWhy would I be mad at you?â
âBetween the running and not eating lunch with us, it kind of feels like youâre avoiding me. And itâs ridiculous, but all I can think is that maybe youâre pissed that I chose Sawyer as executive officer yesterday instead of you, and if thatâs the case, then letâs talk about itââ
âWait.
No.â I shake my head, my hand holding my stomach. âNot at all. I am the possible choice for executive officer, considering I have to fly off to Samara every two weeks so Tairn can see Sgaeyl.â
âRight?â She nods, relief softening her brown eyes. âThat was exactly my thought.â
âSawyer is a great choice, and I have zero aspirations to leadership.â Iâm only trying to get by unnoticed over here. âNot mad in the least.â
âSo youâre not avoiding me?â Rhi asks.
âI would have made a kick-ass executive officer,â Nadine interrupts, saving me from having to answer. âBut at least you didnât choose Ridoc. He would have seen the whole thing as a platform to crack more jokes.â
Guess weâre not being as quiet as we think we are.
Mischa firmly trounces Baylor, and Emetterio calls the next pair to the mat. âSloane Mairi andâ¦â he reads from his roll. âAaric Graycastle.â
âI want instead,â Sloane says, pointing a dagger at me.
She has to be kidding. But sheâs not. Sighing, I cross my arms and shake my head at Liamâs little sister.
âGods, Sloane.â Imogen snorts, laughing off to the right, where she watches with Quinn. âYou really feel like dying on your first day?â
âDid she compliment you?â Rhiannon whispers.
âOddly enough, I think so.â
âI can take her,â Sloane fires back, white-knuckling her knife. âFrom what your letter said last year, her joints pop right out. How hard can it be?â
âSeriously?â I shoot a reproachful look at Imogen.
âI can explain.â Imogen puts her hand over her heart. âYou see, I didnât like you last year, remember? Youâre kind of an acquired taste.â
âGreat. I appreciate that,â I quip back sarcastically.
âI couldnât care less about whatever grudge you think you hold against Sorrengail, Mairi.â Emetterio sighs like this year has already exhausted him. âI know who trained her, and Iâm not unleashing her on a first-year.â He lifts a dark brow at Imogen. âI, too, made an error last year.â He turns back to Sloane, the corners of his mouth slashing down. âNow disarm and take your place against Graycastle.â
Sloane hands off her weapons and faces Aaric, who easily has about five inches and years of private combat tutoring on her. But sheâs Liamâs sister, so thereâs a chance sheâll be able to hold her own.
âDid someone say Sorrengail?â a deep voice asks from behind us.
Our line of second-years all glance over shoulders at the bullish first-year who threw the scrawny one off the parapet. Thereâs a Second Wing patch on his shoulder as he lumbers forward, his hands at his sides.
âPopular today, arenât you?â Nadine whispers with a smile, pivoting playfully toward the first-year. âHi. Iâm Violet Sorrengail.â She points to her purple hair. âSee? Like my hair. Do you have a message forââ
He grabs hold of her head and twists, snapping her neck.